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hebrew

12 исследований с тегом hebrew.

Torah16 min

The Wrestling at Peniel: The Grasper Becomes Israel

Genesis Genesis 32:1-32

At the night-ford of the Jabbok, the grasper meets the One he cannot supplant. A wordplay triangle, a saturating face-motif, and the new name Israel — he strives with God and prevails, blessed and limping at the dawn.

Torah15 min

The Angel of Bethel: I Am the God Who Met You

Genesis Genesis 31:1-21

The angel who appears in Jacob's dream at Genesis 31:11-13 names himself by his place — anokhi ha-El Beit-El — and reframes Jacob's earlier pouring of oil on the stone-pillar as an act of anointing. The verb that surfaces in Genesis only at this verse is the one that will name Israel's priests, kings, and Messiah.

Torah20 min

Jacob's Flocks: The Bethel Promise Begins to Burst Forth

Genesis Genesis 30:25-43

Genesis 30:25-43 is the Bethel promise beginning to come true in Hebrew. The verb parats that Yahweh swore over the sleeping Jacob at Bethel returns twice in fourteen verses to describe his Haran prosperity — same lemma, same stem, narrative-past tense. The chapter sets two readings against itself: peeled rods at the troughs in one section, the angel of God doing all of it in the next.

Torah20 min

God Remembered Rachel: The Verse Mary Inherits

Genesis Genesis 30:1-24

Genesis 30:22 is the canonical pivot of the matriarchal narrative — and-God-remembered-Rachel — and the four-fold formula that follows supplies the Lukan infancy hymns with four independent Greek lemmas. Mary inherits Rachel's vocabulary as closely as she inherits Hannah's.

Torah22 min

Leah and Rachel: The Hated Wife and the Line of Messiah

Genesis Genesis 29:1-35

Genesis 29 turns the deceiver into the deceived, names four foundational tribes through a hated wife, and lends the Septuagint a single Greek verb — apokuliō — that will reappear at exactly one other scene: the empty tomb.

Torah24 min

The Bethel Ladder: Jesus Is the Ladder

Genesis Genesis 28:1-22

Six canonical first-mentions in twenty-two verses. A single Hebrew root holds the ladder, the LORD, and the stone. The Greek of Genesis 28:12 in the Septuagint is the Greek of John 1:51 — with one substitution. Jesus is the ladder.

Torah22 min

The Stolen Blessing: The Densest Blessing Chapter in the Canon

Genesis Genesis 27:1-46

Genesis 27 is the densest blessing chapter in the canon. Hebrews places its faith on Isaac who blessed, not on Jacob who stole — and reads Esau's tears backward through the despised birthright. A forensic study of what a patriarchal blessing IS, the heel-trail from Jacob's birth-grasp to Judas's lifted heel, and the chapter that names the deception by its right Hebrew word.

Torah18 min

Isaac in Gerar: The Sinai Vocabulary Before Sinai and the Triad Seeded at Beersheba

Genesis Genesis 26:1-33

Genesis 26 is the only chapter in the Torah where Isaac is the active patriarch. The famine, the lie at Gerar, the hundredfold harvest, the four wells, the night theophany at Beersheba, and the treaty with Abimelech stage a deliberate replay of Abraham's life. But two verses make this chapter's contribution canonical: Genesis 26:5 (the fullest pre-Sinai cluster of Sinai-legal vocabulary in the canon — four legal nouns stacked together, citing the Akedah-oath) and Genesis 26:24 (the first installment of «I am the God of Abraham your father,» the formula Jesus deploys against the Sadducees and Stephen quotes at his death).

Torah23 min

Jacob and Esau: The Womb-Oracle, the Birthright, and the Verb of Contempt

Genesis Genesis 25:19-34

Two boys crush each other in the womb of Rebekah, an oracle inverts primogeniture before they are born, and a bowl of red stew costs Esau the birthright. The Septuagint of Genesis 25:23 becomes the verbatim five-word election text Paul quotes at Romans 9:12; the closing Hebrew verb of contempt at Genesis 25:34 returns at Obadiah on the nation Esau fathered.

Torah26 min

The Death of Abraham: Five Promises Kept in Eighteen Verses

Genesis Genesis 25:1-18

Eighteen verses close the Abraham cycle by collecting five outstanding promises and dispatching the overflow eastward. Abraham dies at one hundred seventy-five and is buried by his estranged sons together; Ishmael receives a twelve-prince fulfillment in the same words God spoke to Hagar; the death-formula closes a canonical set restricted to six covenant figures; and the eastward dispatch quietly seeds a vocabulary chain the canon will reverse at Isaiah 60 and Matthew 2.

Torah22 min

Isaac and Rebekah: The Akedah Blessing on Aramean Lips and the First Husband-Loves-Wife

Genesis Genesis 24:29-67

Bethuel and Laban speak the Akedah blessing back over Rebekah without knowing what they echo. Isaac brings her into Sarah's tent and loves her in the canon's first husband-loves-wife, and is comforted by a verb that runs forward into Isaiah's promise and the Paraclete.

Narrative30 min

From Shem to Terah: The Genealogy That Bridges Babel to Abram

Genesis 11:10-32

The Babel-builders said na'aseh-lanu shem — let us make for ourselves a name. Eight verses later the text answers them with a different shem entirely: eleh toledot Shem — these are the generations of Shem. The line through which the name-promise will travel is literally called Name. Ten generations descend from that line, then narrow into the toledot of Terah and stop in Ur Kasdim with a barren wife, an idol-serving father, and a brother dead in the family's birth-land. Out of those three impossibilities YHWH calls one man into a moledet he must leave for a patris he must seek.