INTRODUCTION TO GENESIS
I.
NAME OF THE BOOK
A. In
Hebrew (i.e. the Masoretic Text) it is the first word of the book, bereshith,
"in the beginning" or "by way of beginning."
B. From
the Greek Bible (i.e. Septuagint translation), it is Genesis, which
means "beginning" or "origin," which was taken from Gen.
2:4a. This may be the author's key "outline-phrase" or colophon to
link the different theological biographies together as the Babylonian cuneiform
writers did. This key outline phrase functions as a summation, not an
introduction.
II. CANONIZATION
A. This
is the first book of the first section of the Hebrew canon called "The
Torah" or "teachings" or "Law."
B. This
section in the Septuagint is known as the Pentateuch (i.e. five scrolls).
C. It
is sometimes called "The Five Books of Moses" in English.
D. Genesis-Deuteronomy
is a continuous account by (or edited by) Moses concerning creation through
Moses' lifetime.
III. GENRE
- The book of Genesis is primarily theological, historical narrative but it
also includes other types of literary genre:
A. Historical
drama - examples: Gen. 1:1- 2:3
B. Poetry
- examples: Gen. 2:23; 4:23-24; 8:22
C. Prophecy
- examples: Gen. 3:15; 49:1ff (also poetic)
IV. AUTHORSHIP
A. The
Bible itself does not name the author (as is true of many OT books). Genesis
has no "I" sections like Ezra, Nehemiah, or "we" sections
like Acts. Ultimately the author is God!
B. Jewish
tradition:
a. Ben
Sirah's Ecclesiasticus, 24:23, written about 185 B.C.
b. The
Baba Bathra 14b, a part of the Talmud
c. Philo
of Alexandria, Egypt, a Jewish philosopher, living about 20 B.C. to A.D. 42
d. Flavius
Josephus, a Jewish historian, living about A.D.
37-100
2. This
was a revelation to Moses
a. Moses
is said to have written for the people:
(1) Exodus
17:14
(2) Exodus
24:4, 7
(3) Exodus
34:27, 28
(4) Numbers
33:2
(5) Deuteronomy
31:9, 22, 24-26
b. God
is said to have spoken through Moses to the people:
(1) Deuteronomy
5:4-5, 22
(2) Deuteronomy
6:1
(3) Deuteronomy
10:1
c. Moses
is said to have spoken the words of the Torah to the people:
(1) Deuteronomy
1:1, 3
(2) Deuteronomy
5:1
(3) Deuteronomy
27:1
(5) Deuteronomy
31:1, 30
(6) Deuteronomy
32:44
(7) Deuteronomy
33:1
3. OT
authors attribute it to Moses:
a. Joshua
8:31
b. 2
Kings 14:6
c. Ezra
6:18
d. Nehemiah
8:1; 13:1-2
e. 2
Chr. 25:4; 34:14; 35:12
f. Daniel
9:11
g. Malachi
4:4
C. Christian
tradition
1. Jesus
attributes quotes from the Torah to Moses:
a. Matthew
8:4; 19:8
b. Mark
1:44; 7:10; 10:5; 12:26
c. Luke
5:14; 16:31; 20:37; 24:27, 44
d. John
5:46-47; 7:19, 23
2. Other
N.T. authors attribute quotes from the Torah to Moses:
a. Luke
2:22
b. Acts
3:22; 13:39; 15:1, 15-21; 26:22; 28:23
c. Romans
10:5, 19
d. 1
Corinthians 9:9
e. 2
Corinthians 3:15
f. Hebrews
10:28
g. Revelation
15:3
3. Most
early Church Fathers accepted Mosaic authorship. However, Ireneaus, Clement of
Alexandria, Origen and Tertullian all had questions about Moses' relationship
to the current canonical form of Genesis (cf. D. 2.).
1. There
have obviously been some editorial additions to the Torah (seemingly, to make
the ancient work more understandable to contemporary readers, which was a
characteristic of Egyptian scribes):
a. Genesis
12:6; 13:7; 14:14; 21:34; 32:32; 36:31; 47:11
b. Exodus
11:3; 16:36
c. Numbers
12:3; 13:22; 15:22-23; 21:14-15; 32:33ff
d. Deuteronomy
3:14; 34:6
e. Ancient
scribes were highly trained and educated. Their techniques, however, differed
from country to country:
(1) In
Mesopotamia, they were careful not to change anything, and even checked their
works for accuracy. Here is an ancient Sumerian scribal footnote: "the
work is complete from beginning to end, has been copied, revised, compared, and
verified sign by sign" from about 1400 B.C.
(2) In
Egypt they freely revised ancient texts to update them for contemporary
readers. The scribes at Qumran (i.e. Dead Sea Scrolls) followed this approach.
2. Scholars
of the 19th century theorized that the Torah is a composite document from many
sources over an extended period of time (Graff-Wellhausen). This theory was
based on:
a. the
different names for God
b. apparent
doublets in the text
d. the
theology of the accounts
3. Supposed
sources and dates:
a. J
source (use of YHWH from southern Israel) - 950 B.C.
b. E
source (use of Elohim from northern Israel) - 850 B.C.
c. JE
combined - 750 B.C.
d. D
source ("The Book of the Law," 2 Kgs. 22:8, discovered during
Josiah's reform while remodeling the Temple was supposedly the book of
Deuteronomy, written by an unknown priest of Josiah's time to support his
reform.) - 621 B.C.
e. P
source (priestly rewrite of OT, especially ritual and procedure) - 400 B.C.
f. There
have obviously been editorial additions to the Torah. The Jews assert that it
was
(1) The
High Priest (or another of his family) at the time of the writing
(2) Jeremiah
the Prophet
(3) Ezra
the Scribe - IV Esdras says he rewrote it because the originals were destroyed
in the fall of Jerusalem in 586 B.C.
g. However,
the J. E. D. P. theory says more about our modern literary theories and
categories than evidence from the Torah (cf. R. K. Harrison, Introduction to
the Old Testament, pp. 495-541 and Tyndale's Commentaries,
"Leviticus" pp. 15-25).
h. Characteristics
of Hebrew Literature
(1) Doublets,
like Gen. 1 & 2, are common in Hebrew. Usually a general description is
given, followed by a specific account (i.e. the Ten Commandments and the
Holiness Code). This may have been a way to accent truths or help oral memory.
(2) The
ancient rabbis said the two most common names for God have theological
significance:
(a) YHWH
- the Covenant name for deity as He relates to Israel as Savior and Redeemer
(cf. Ps. 19:7-14; 103).
(b) Elohim
- deity as Creator, Provider, and Sustainer of all life on earth (cf. Ps.
19:1-6; 104).
(c) Other
ancient Near Eastern texts use several names to describe their high god (cf. Encyclopedia
of Bible Difficulties by Gleason L. Archer, p. 68).
(3) It
is common in non-biblical near eastern literature for a variety of styles and
vocabulary to occur in unified literary works (cf. Introduction to the Old
Testament, R. K. Harrison, pp. 522-526).
E. The
evidence from ancient near eastern literature implies that Moses used written
cuneiform documents or Mesopotamian style (patriarchal) oral traditions to
write Genesis. This in no way means to imply a lessening of inspiration but is
an attempt to explain the literary phenomenon of the book of Genesis (cf. P. J.
Wiseman's New Discoveries in Babylonia about Genesis). Beginning in Gen.
37, a marked Egyptian influence of style, form and vocabulary seems to indicate
Moses used either literary productions or oral traditions from the Israelites'
days in both Egypt and Mesopotamia. Moses' formal education was entirely
Egyptian! The exact literary formation of the Pentateuch is uncertain. I
believe that Moses is the compiler and author of the vast majority of the
Pentateuch, though he may have used scribes and/or written and oral
(patriarchal) traditions. His writings have been updated by later scribes. The
historicity and trustworthiness of these first few books of the OT have been
illustrated by modern archaeology.
F. There
is an emerging theory that there were scribes (in different parts of Israel)
working on different parts of the Pentateuch at the same time under the
direction of Samuel (cf. 1 Sam. 10:25). This theory was first proposed by E.
Robertson's The Old Testament Problem.
V. DATE
A. Genesis
covers the period from the creation of the cosmos to Abraham's family. It is
possible to date Abraham's life from secular literature of the period. The
approximate date would be 2000 B.C., the second
millennium B.C. The basis for this is
1. father
acted as priest to family (like Job)
2. life
was nomadic following herds and flocks
3. migration
of Semitic peoples during this period
B. The
early events of Genesis 1-11 are true historical events (possibly historical
drama) but undatable by current available knowledge.
1. I
personally have come to accept the earth's age as several billion years (i.e.
14.6 billion for the universe and 4.6 billion for the earth, cf. Hugh Ross' The
Genesis Question andCreation and Time).
2. However,
I also believe in the special creation of Adam and Eve at a much later period.
It seems to me that Genesis is presented in some type of "historical"
framework, but the historical aspect is fuzzy at the beginning (i.e. Gen. 1-3).
Adam and Eve's children begin the civilizations of Mesopotamia (i.e. chapter
4). If this framework is to be maintained then Adam is a modern (Homo sapien)
and not a more primitive Homo erectus. If this is true then there must
be an evolutionary development in hominids (cf. Tyndale O T Commentaries,
"Genesis" by Kidner and Who Was Adam? by Fazale Rana and Hugh
Ross) as well as a special creation by God at a much later point in time. I am
not completely comfortable with this, but it is the best I can do with my
current understanding of the Bible and science.
C. It
must be remembered when studying Genesis that the historical events are
recorded by Moses who led the people of God out of Egypt in either (1) 1445 B.C., based on 1 Kings 6:1; or (2) 1290 B.C., based on evidence from modern archaeology.
Therefore, either by oral tradition, unknown written sources, or direct divine
revelation, Moses records "how it all began" focusing on
"who" and "why," not "how" and "when"!
D. This
commentary (Genesis 1-11) was originally written in 2001. I struggled greatly
with the relationship between Gen. 1 and my own modern western culture. A new
book by John H. Walton, The Lost World of Genesis One, IVP (2009) has
helped me see just how influenced I was by my own existential setting. I
believe that proper hermeneutics begin with the original author's intent but it
is obvious to me that my hermeneutical theory was better than my practice. This
book by Walton is a paradigm shift in thinking about Genesis 1 as relating to
the origins of function, not the material origins of the universe. It is truly
an eye-opener. It has convinced me of a new way to view this crucial text that
bypasses the debate over science vs. faith, old earth vs. young earth,
evolution vs. creation of species. I highly recommend the book to you!
A. Other
Biblical books
1. Creation
- Psalms 8; 19; 33; 50; 104; 148 and the NT (cf. John 1:3; 1 Cor. 8:6; Col.
1:16; Heb. 1:2)
2. Abraham's
time - Job
B. Archaeological
sources
1. Earliest
known literary parallel of the cultural setting of Genesis 1-11 is the Ebla cuneiform
tablets from northern Syria dating about 2500 B.C.,
written in Akkadian.
2. Creation
a. The
closest Mesopotamian account dealing with creation, Enuma Elish, dating
from (1) NIV Study Bible, about 1900-1700 B.C. or
(2) John H. Walton's Ancient Israelite Literature in Its Cultural Context,
p. 21, about 1000 B.C. It was found in
Ashurbanipal's library at Nineveh and other copies were found at several other
places. There are seven cuneiform tablets written in Akkadian that describe
creation by Marduk.
(1) The
gods, Apsu (fresh water-male) and Tiamat (salt water-female) had
unruly, noisy children. These two gods tried to silence the younger gods.
(2) One
of Ea and Damkina's children, Marduk (the chief god of the
emerging city of Babylon), defeats Tiamat. He formed the earth and sky
from her body.
(3) Ea
formed humanity from another defeated god, Kingu, who was the male
consort of Tiamat after the death of Apsu. Humanity came from Kingu's
blood.
(4) Marduk
was made chief of the Babylonian pantheon.
b. "The
creation seal" is a cuneiform tablet which is a picture of a naked man and
woman beside a fruit tree with a snake wrapped around the tree's trunk and
positioned over the woman's shoulder as if talking to her.
The
conservative Professor of Archaeology at Wheaton College, Alfred J. Hoerth,
says that the seal is now interpreted as referring to prostitution. This is a
good example of how artifacts from the past are interpreted differently by
individuals and through time. This particular piece of evidence must be
re-evaluated.
3. Creation
and Flood - The Atrahasis Epic records the rebellion of the lesser gods
because of overwork and the creation of seven human couples (from clay, blood,
and saliva) to perform the duties of these lesser gods. Humans were destroyed because
of: (1) over population and (2) noise. Human beings were reduced in number by a
plague, two famines and finally a flood, planned by Enlil. Atrahasis
builds a boat and brings animals on board in order to save them from the
waters. These major events are seen in the same order in Genesis 1-8. This
cuneiform composition dates from about the same time as Enuma Elish
and the Gilgamesh Epic, about 1900-1700 B.C.
All are in Akkadian.
4. Noah's
flood
a. A
Sumerian tablet from Nippur, called Eridu Genesis, dating from about
1600 B.C., tells about Ziusudra and a coming
flood.
(2) Ziusudra,
a king-priest, believes this revelation and builds a huge square boat and
stocks it with all kinds of seeds.
(3) The
flood lasted seven days.
(4) Ziusudra
opened a window on the boat and released several birds to see if dry land had
appeared.
(5) He
also offered a sacrifice of an ox and sheep when he left the boat.
b. A
composite Babylonian flood account from four Sumerian tablets, known as the Gilgamesh
Epic originally dating from about 2500-2400 B.C.,
although the written composite form in cuneiform Akkadian, is much later (ca.
1900-1700 B.C.). It tells about a flood survivor, Utnapishtim,
who tells Gilgamesh, the king of Uruk, how he survived the great
flood and was granted eternal life.
(1) Ea,
the water god, warns of a coming flood and tells Utnapishtim (Babylonian
form of Ziusudra) to build a boat.
(2) Utnapishtim
and his family, along with selected healing plants, survived the flood.
(3) The
flood lasted seven days.
(4) The
boat came to rest in northern Persia, on Mt. Nisir.
(5) He
sent out 3 different birds to see if dry land had yet appeared.
5. The
Mesopotamian literature which describes an ancient flood are all drawing from
the same source. The names often vary, but the plot is the same. An example is
that Zivusudra, Atrahasis and Utnapishtim all represent the same
human king.
6. The
historical parallels to the early events of Genesis can be explained in light
of mankind's pre-dispersion (Genesis 1-11) knowledge and experience of God.
These true historical core memories have been elaborated and mythologicalized
into the current flood accounts common throughout the world. The same can also
be said not only of creation (Gen.1,2) and the Flood (Gen. 6-9) but also of
human and angelic unions (Genesis 6).
7. Patriarch's
Day (Middle Bronze)
a. Mari
tablets - cuneiform legal (Ammonite culture) and personal texts in Akkadian
from about 1700 B.C.
b. Nuzi
tablets - cuneiform archives of certain families (Horite or Hurrian culture)
written in Akkadian from about 100 miles SE of Nineveh about 1500-1300 B.C. They record family and business procedures. For
further specific examples, see John H. Walton's Ancient Israelite Literature
in its Cultural Context, pp. 52-58
c. Alalak
tablets - cuneiform texts from Northern Syria from about 2000 B.C.
d. Some
of the names found in Genesis are recorded as place names in the Mari Tablets:
Serug, Peleg, Terah, and Nahor. Other biblical names were also common: Abraham,
Isaac, Jacob, Laban, and Joseph. This shows that biblical names fit this time
and place.
8. "Comparative
historiographic studies have shown that, along with the Hittites, the ancient
Hebrews were the most accurate, objective and responsible recorders of near
eastern history." R. K Harrison, Biblical Criticism, p 5.
9. Archaeology
has proven to be so helpful in establishing the historicity of the Bible.
However, a word of caution is necessary. Archaeology is not an absolutely trustworthy
guide because of
a. poor
techniques in early excavations
b. various,
very subjective interpretations of the artifacts that have been discovered
c. no
agreed-upon chronology of the ancient Near East (although one is being
developed from tree rings and pottery).
C. Egyptian
creation accounts can be found in John H. Walton's, Ancient Israelite
Literature in Its Cultural Context (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1990) pp.
23-24, 32-34.
1. In
Egyptian literature, creation began with an unstructured, chaotic, primeval
water. Creation was seen as a developing structure (hill) out of watery chaos.
2. In
Egyptian literature from Memphis, creation occurred by the spoken word of Ptah.
3. Each
of the major cities of Egypt had separate traditions emphasizing their patron
deities.
D. A
new book by John H. Walton, The Lost World of Genesis One, IVP, 2009,
shows the relationship between the ANE beliefs about the divine and the cosmos
in a new light. He asserts (and I agree) that it is not so much who copied who
but the general cultural consensus of the whole ANE about the unity of the
"natural" and "supernatural." All cultures shared this
general perspective. Israel's was uniquely monotheistic but also shared the
cultural perspectives.
VII. LITERARY
UNITS (CONTEXT)
A. Outline
based on Moses' use of the phrase "the generations of" (toledoth):
1. origins
of heaven and earth, Gen. 1:1-2:3
2. origins
of humanity, Gen. 2:4-4:26
3. generations
of Adam, Gen. 5:1-6:8
4. generations
of Noah, Gen. 6:9-9:17
5. generations
of the sons of Noah, Gen. 10:1-11:9
6. generations
of Shem, Gen. 11:10-26
7. generations
of Terah (Abraham), Gen. 11:27-25:11
8. generations
of Ishmael, Gen. 25:12-18
9. generations
of Isaac, Gen. 25:19-35:29
10. generations
of Esau, Gen. 36:1-8
11. generations
of the sons of Esau, Gen. 36:9-43
12. generations
of Jacob, Gen. 37:1-50:26 (#1-11 have a Mesopotamian literary background but
#12 has an Egyptian literary flavor.)
B. Theological
outline:
1. creation
for humanity and of humanity, Gen. 1-2
2. mankind
and creation fall, Gen. 3
3. results
of the Fall, Gen. 4-11
a. evil
affects Cain and his family
b. evil
affects Seth and his family
c. evil
affects everyone
d. great
flood
e. evil
still present in Noah's family
f. mankind
still in rebellion; the tower of Babel
g. God's
dispersion
4. One
man for all humanity (Gen. 3:15), Gen. 12-50 (Rom. 5:12-21)
a. Abraham
(Gen. 12:1-3), Gen. 11:27-23:20
b. Isaac,
Gen. 24:1-26:35
c. Jacob,
Gen. 27:1-36:4
(1) Judah
(the line of the Messiah)
(2) Joseph
(double land inheritance), Gen. 37:1-50:26
VIII.
MAIN TRUTHS
A. How
did it all begin?
1. It
began with God (Genesis 1-2). The Bible's world-view is not polytheism but
monotheism. It does not focus on the "how" of creation but on the
"who." It is short, but so powerful in its presentation. The Bible's
theology was totally unique in its day though some of the words, patterns of
activities, and topics are found in other Mesopotamian literature.
2. God
wanted fellowship. The creation is only a stage for God to fellowship with man.
This is a "touched planet" (cf. C.S. Lewis).
3. There
is no possibility of understanding the rest of the Bible without Genesis 1,2-4
and 11-12.
4. Humans
must respond by faith to what they understand of God's will (Gen. 15:6 and Rom.
4).
B. Why
is the world so evil and unfair? It was "very good" (Gen. 1:31), but
Adam and Eve sinned (cf. Gen. 3; Rom. 3:9-18,23; 5:17-21). The terrible results
are obvious:
1. Cain
kills Abel (Gen. 4)
2. revenge
of Lamech (Gen. 4:23-24)
3. unlawful
unions (Gen. 6:1-4)
4. wickedness
of man (Gen. 6:5,11-12; 8:21)
5. the
drunkenness of Noah (Gen. 9)
6. descendants
of Noah's sons (Gen. 10)
7. Tower
of Babel (Gen. 11)
C. How
is God going to fix it?
1. Messiah
will come for all humans (Gen. 3:15)
2. God
calls one to call all (Gen. 12:1-3 and Exod. 19:5-6,
cf. Rom. 5:12-21)
3. God
is willing to work with fallen mankind (Adam, Eve, Cain, Noah, Abraham, the
Jews and Gentiles) and by His grace provides
a. promises
b. covenants
(unconditional and conditional)
c. sacrifice
d. worship
IX.
TERMS AND/OR PHRASES AND PERSONS TO BRIEFLY DEFINE
A.
Terms and phrases
1.
“God said. . .,†1:3,6,9,14,20,24 (NASB & NIV)
2.
“Let us. . .,†1:26; 3:22; 11:7 (NASB & NIV)
3.
“in our image,†1:26,27; 5:1,3; 9:6 (NASB & NIV)
4.
“Lord God walking†(anthropomorphism), 3:8 (NASB & NIV)
5.
Nephilim, 6:4 (NASB & NIV)
6.
covenant, 6:18; 9:9-17 (NASB & NIV)
7.
“Abraham believed in the Lord; and He reckoned it to him as righteousness,â€
15:6 (NIV, “Abram believed the Lord and he credited it to him as
righteousnessâ€)
8.
lovingkindness (hesed), 24:12,27; 32:10 (NIV, “kindnessâ€)
9.
household idols (teraphim), 31:19,30,34 (NIV, “household godsâ€)
10.
divination, 44:5 (NASB & NIV)
B.
Persons to briefly identify
1.
Seth 4:25 11. Hagar, 16:1
2.
Enoch, 5:21-24 12. Ishmael, 15:15; 25:12-19
3.
Methuselah, 5:22,25-27 13. Isaac, 21:3
4.
Shem, 9:18; 10:27-31 14. Laban, 24:29
5.
Canaan, 9:20-27 15. Keturah, 25:1
6.
Nimrod, 10:8-10 16. Jacob (Israel), 25:26; 32:28
7.
Terah, 11:24-32 17. Dinah, 30:21
8.
Lot, 11:31 18. Potiphar, 37:36
9.
Abraham, 12:18 19. Tamar, 38
10.
Melchizedek, 14:18 20. Manasseh & Ephraim, 41:51,52
X.
MAP LOCATIONS
A.
First Map – Genesis 1-11 (by number)
1.
Garden of Eden, 2:8 7. Nineveh, 10:12
2.
Tigris River, 2:14 8. Jebus, 10:16
3.
Euphrates River, 2:14 9. Sodom, 10:19; 13:10
4.
Mts. of Ararat, 8:4 10. Ur of the Chaldeans, 11:28
5.
Shinar, 10:10; 11:2 11. Haran, 11:31-32
6.
Babel, 10:10; 11:9
B.
Second Map for Genesis 12-50 (by number)
1.
Shechem, 12:6; 33:18 12. Moab, 19:37
2.
Bethel, 12:8; 13:3; 35:6 13. Ammon, 19:38
3.
Negev, 12:9; 13:1 14. Beersheba, 21:14; 26:33
4.
Jordan River, 13:10-11 15. Philistine Area, 21:32
5.
Hebron, 13:18; 23:2 16. Wilderness of Paran, 21:21
6.
Salt Sea, 14:3 17. Land of Moriah, 22:2
7.
Kadesh Barnea, 14:7; 16:14 18. Aram, 24:10
8.
Damascus, 14:15 19. Edom, 25:30; 36:1;8-9,19
9.
Salem, 14:18 20. Jabbok River, 32:22
10.
River of Egypt, 15:18 21. Bethlehem, 35:19
11.
Wilderness of Shur, 16:7 22. Land of Goshen, 45:10; 46:34
XI.
STUDENT CONTENT QUESTIONS
QUESTIONS
ON GENESIS 1-11
1.
Does the Bible discuss the origin of God?
2.
Does the Bible conflict with science about creation?
3. How
is Genesis 1 related to other Near Eastern, creation accounts?
4.
Define the terms fiat and ex nihilo.
5.
Why are there two different names for Deity in chapters 1 and 2?
6.
Are there two different accounts of the creation of man?
7.
What does it mean that man and woman are made in the image of God?
8.
Why is the plural used in relation to the One God? 1:26, 27; 3:22; 11:7
9.
Why is chapter 3 crucial in understanding the rest of the Bible?
10.
Do talking animals (3:1) prove this account is mythological?
11.
Why is 3:15 so important?
12.
How does 3:16 apply to modern life?
13.
Are there two special trees or one in the Garden of Eden?
14.
List the developments in society which come from Cain's line, 4:16-24.
15.
What was the purpose of the Flood?
16.
What was the purpose of man’s building the tower of Babel?
QUESTIONS
OF GENESIS 12-50
1.
How are the covenants between Noah and Abraham different?
2.
How does Abraham’s covenant relate to non-Jews?
3.
What two signs of weakness and lack of faith are seen in Abram in chapter 12?
5.
Why is 15:12-21 so significant?
6.
Who are the three men of chapter 18? (why and where)?
7.
Why did Abraham lie about being married to Sarah? To whom did he lie?
8.
Why did Rebekah and Jacob trick Isaac? (27)
9.
Explain why Reuben, Levi, and Simeon were rejected as far as the line of the
Messiah? (34 & 49)
10.
Describe Joseph’s dreams in your own words. (37)
11.
Why did Joseph pretend he did not recognize his brothers?
12.
Why did each of Joseph’s sons inherit equally with Jacob’s other children?








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