Genesis 19:30-38
Two daughters in a mountain cave. Two nights of wine. Two nations born. The narrator of Genesis 19:30-38 uses Noah's seed-preservation vocabulary to show that Lot's daughters have misread Sodom as the Flood — and the rest of the canon spends nine hundred years answering that mistake, until Ruth the Moabitess walks onto a threshing floor and the man wakes.
Genesis 19:1-29
Two angels arrive at Sodom's gate at evening; Lot welcomes them with the same hospitality verbs Abraham used at Mamre — prostration, foot-washing, unleavened bread — and the city replies with a sentence Judges 19 will quote back word-for-word. Fire and brimstone fall from Yahweh from Yahweh out of the heavens, coining the canonical vocabulary the Psalter abstracts, Ezekiel projects, Jesus quotes, and Revelation deploys six times for the lake of fire. The chapter closes with the formula that closed the Flood: God remembered Abraham, and Lot was sent out from the midst of the Overthrow.
Genesis 12:10-13:18
A heavy famine drives Abram down; a heavy wealth carries him back up. Between the two, Yahweh strikes Pharaoh with great plagues — the first plague-word in the canon. Then Lot lifts his eyes and chooses the plain that is about to burn, and Yahweh tells Abram to lift his eyes and see the land he will give to his seed forever. Gen 12:10–13:18 is the miniature Exodus that frames the covenant's first 'forever.'