Genesis 18:1-15
Yahweh comes to the door of Abraham's tent at midday and eats a meal of fine flour cakes and curds under a tree. The Hebrew names the visitor singular; the eyes see three men; the speaker is Yahweh; two leave for Sodom as angels. Sarah laughs inside the tent and the divine voice draws the laugh into the open. The vocabulary of her cakes is the vocabulary of the altar that does not yet exist; the formula of her birth-promise is the formula Elisha will speak to the Shunammite; her inner question about pleasure (ednah) is preserved by the Hebrew and erased by the Greek. At Mamre God comes to a domestic table and names the time of Isaac's life.
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.'