The Legends of the Jews

by Louis Ginzberg


TRANSLATED PROM THE GERMAN MANUSCRIPT BY
HENRIETTA SZOLD


VOLUME I
BIBLE TIMES AND CHARACTERS
FROM THE CREATION TO JACOB




To
MY BROTHER ASHER




Contents

 PREFACE

 I. THE CREATION OF THE WORLD
 The First Things Created
 The Alphabet
 The First Day
 The Second Day
 The Third Day
 The Fourth Day
 The Fifth Day
 The Sixth Day
 All Things Praise the Lord.

 II. ADAM
 Man and the World
 The Angels and the Creation of Man
 The Creation of Adam
 The Soul of Man
 The Ideal Man
 The Fall of Satan
 Woman
 Adam and Eve in Paradise
 The Fall of Man
 The Punishment
 Sabbath in Heaven
 Adam's Repentance
 The Book of Raziel
 The Sickness of Adam
 Eve's Story of the Fall
 The Death of Adam
 The Death of Eve.

 III. THE TEN GENERATIONS
 The Birth of Cain
 Fratricide
 The Punishment of Cain
 The Inhabitants of the Seven Earths
 The Descendants of Cain
 The Descendants of Adam and Lilith
 Seth and His Descendants
 Enosh
 The Fall of the Angels
 Enoch, Ruler and Teacher
 The Ascension of Enoch
 The Translation of Enoch
 Methuselah.

 IV. NOAH
 The Birth of Noah
 The Punishment of the Fallen Angels
 The Generation of the Deluge
 The Holy Book
 The Inmates of the Ark
 The Flood
 Noah Leaves the Ark
 The Curse of Drunkenness
 Noah's Descendants Spread Abroad
 The Depravity of Mankind
 Nimrod
 The Tower of Babel.

 V. ABRAHAM
 The Wicked Generations
 The Birth of Abraham
 The Babe Proclaims God
 Abraham's First Appearance in Public
 The Preacher of the True Faith
 In the Fiery Furnace
 Abraham Emigrates to Haran
 The Star in the East
 The True Believer
 The Iconoclast
 Abraham in Canaan
 His Sojourn in Egypt
 The First Pharaoh
 The War of the Kings
 The Covenant of the Pieces
 The Birth of Ishmael
 The Visit of the Angels
 The Cities of Sin
 Abraham Pleads for the Sinners
 The Destruction of the Sinful Cities
 Among the Philistines
 The Birth of Isaac
 Ishmael Cast Off
 The Two Wives of Ishmael
 The Covenant with Abimelech
 Satan Accuses Abraham
 The Journey to Moriah
 The Akedah
 The Death and Burial of Sarah
 Eliezer's Mission
 The Wooing of Rebekah
 The Last Years of Abraham
 A Herald of Death
 Abraham Views Earth and Heaven
 The Patron of Hebron.

 VI. JACOB
 The Birth of Esau and Jacob
 The Favorite of Abraham
 The Sale of the Birthright
 Isaac with the Philistines
 Isaac Blesses Jacob
 Esau's True Character Revealed
 Jacob Leaves His Father's House
 Jacob Pursued by Eliphaz and Esau
 The Day of Miracles
 Jacob with Laban
 The Marriage of Jacob
 The Birth of Jacob's Children
 Jacob Flees before Laban
 The Covenant with Laban
 Jacob and Esau Prepare to Meet
 Jacob Wrestles with the Angel
 The Meeting between Esau and Jacob
 The Outrage at Shechem
 A War Frustrated
 The War with the Ninevites
 The War with the Amorites
 Isaac Blesses Levi and Judah
 Joy and Sorrow in the House of Jacob
 Esau's Campaign against Jacob
 The Descendants of Esau.




PREFACE


Was sich nie und nirgends hat begeben, das allein veraltet nie.

The term Rabbinic was applied to the Jewish Literature of post-Biblical
times by those who conceived the Judaism of the later epoch to be
something different from the Judaism of the Bible, something actually
opposed to it. Such observers held that the Jewish nation ceased to
exist with the moment when its political independence was destroyed.
For them the Judaism of the later epoch has been a Judaism of the
Synagogue, the spokesmen of which have been the scholars, the Rabbis.
And what this phase of Judaism brought forth has been considered by
them to be the product of the schools rather than the product of
practical, pulsating life. Poetic phantasmagoria, frequently the
vaporings of morbid visionaries, is the material out of which these
scholars construct the theologic system of the Rabbis, and fairy tales,
the spontaneous creations of the people, which take the form of sacred
legend in Jewish literature, are denominated the Scriptural exegesis of
the Rabbis, and condemned incontinently as nugae rabbinorum.

As the name of a man clings to him, so men cling to names. For the
primitive savage the name is part of the essence of a person or thing,
and even in the more advanced stages of culture, judgments are not
always formed in agreement with facts as they are, but rather according
to the names by which they are called. The current estimate of Rabbinic
Literature is a case in point. With the label Rabbinic later ages
inherited from former ages a certain distorted view of the literature
so designated. To this day, and even among scholars that approach its
investigation with unprejudiced minds, the opinion prevails that it is
purely a learned product. And yet the truth is that the most prominent
feature of Rabbinic Literature is its popular character.

The school and the home are not mutually opposed to each other in the
conception of the Jews. They study in their homes, and they live in
their schools. Likewise there is no distinct class of scholars among
them, a class that withdraws itself from participation in the affairs
of practical life. Even in the domain of the Halakah, the Rabbis were
not so much occupied with theoretic principles of law as with the
concrete phenomena of daily existence. These they sought to grasp and
shape. And what is true of the Halakah is true with greater emphasis of
the Haggadah, which is popular in the double sense of appealing to the
people and being produced in the main by the people. To speak of the
Haggadah of the Tannaim and Amoraim is as far from fact as to speak of
the legends of Shakespeare and Scott. The ancient authors and their
modern brethren of the guild alike elaborate legendary material which
they found at hand.

It has been held by some that the Haggadah contains no popular legends,
that it is wholly a factitious, academic product. A cursory glance at
the pseudepigraphic literature of the Jews, which is older than the
Haggadah literature by several centuries, shows how untenable this view
is. That the one literature should have drawn from the other is
precluded by historical facts. At a very early time the Synagogue
disavowed the pseudepigraphic literature, which was the favorite
reading matter of the sectaries and the Christians. Nevertheless the
inner relation between them is of the closest kind. The only essential
difference is that the Midrashic form prevails in the Haggadah, and the
parenetic or apocalyptic form in the pseudepigrapha. The common element
must therefore depart from the Midrash on the one hand and from
parenesis on the other.

Folklore, fairy tales, legends, and all forms of story telling akin to
these are comprehended, in the terminology of the post-Biblical
literature of the Jews, under the inclusive description Haggadah, a
name that can be explained by a circumlocution, but cannot be
translated. Whatever it is applied to is thereby characterized first as
being derived from the Holy Scriptures, and then as being of the nature
of a story. And, in point of fact, this dualism sums up the
distinguishing features of Jewish Legend. More than eighteen centuries
ago the Jewish historian Josephus observed that "though we be deprived
of our wealth, of our cities, or of the other advantages we have, our
law continues immortal." The word he meant to use was not law, but
Torah, only he could not find an equivalent for it in Greek. A singer
of the Synagogue a thousand years after Josephus, who expressed his
sentiments in Hebrew, uttered the same thought: "The Holy City and all
her daughter cities are violated, they lie in ruins, despoiled of their
ornaments, their splendor darkened from sight. Naught is left to us
save one eternal treasure alone—the Holy Torah." The sadder the life of
the Jewish people, the more it felt the need of taking refuge in its
past. The Scripture, or, to use the Jewish term, the Torah, was the
only remnant of its former national independence, and the Torah was the
magic means of making a sordid actuality recede before a glorious
memory. To the Scripture was assigned the task of supplying nourishment
to the mind as well as the soul, to the intellect as well as the
imagination, and the result is the Halakah and the Haggadah.

The fancy of the people did not die out in the post-Biblical time, but
the bent of its activity was determined by the past.

Men craved entertainment in later times as well as in the earlier, only
instead of resorting for its subject-matter to what happened under
their eyes, they drew from the fountain-head of the past. The events in
the ancient history of Israel, which was not only studied, but lived
over again daily, stimulated the desire to criticize it. The religious
reflections upon nature laid down in the myths of the people, the fairy
tales, which have the sole object of pleasing, and the legends, which
are the people's verdict upon history—all these were welded into one
product. The fancy of the Jewish people was engaged by the past
reflected in the Bible, and all its creations wear a Biblical hue for
this reason. This explains the peculiar form of the Haggadah.

But what is spontaneously brought forth by the people is often
preserved only in the form impressed upon it by the feeling and the
thought of the poet, or by the speculations of the learned. Also Jewish
legends have rarely been transmitted in their original shape. They have
been perpetuated in the form of Midrash, that is, Scriptural exegesis.
The teachers of the Haggadah, called Rabbanan d'Aggadta in the Talmud,
were no folklorists, from whom a faithful reproduction of legendary
material may be expected. Primarily they were homilists, who used
legends for didactic purposes, and their main object was to establish a
close connection between the Scripture and the creations of the popular
fancy, to give the latter a firm basis and secure a long term of life
for them.

One of the most important tasks of the modern investigation of the
Haggadah is to make a clean separation between the original elements
and the later learned additions. Hardly a beginning has been made in
this direction. But as long as the task of distinguishing them has not
been accomplished, it is impossible to write out the Biblical legends
of the Jews without including the supplemental work of scholars in the
products of the popular fancy.

In the present work, "The Legends of the Jews," I have made the first
attempt to gather from the original sources all Jewish legends, in so
far as they refer to Biblical personages and events, and reproduce them
with the greatest attainable completeness and accuracy. I use the
expression Jewish, rather than Rabbinic, because the sources from which
I have levied contributions are not limited to the Rabbinic literature.
As I expect to take occasion elsewhere to enter into a description of
the sources in detail, the following data must suffice for the present.

The works of the Talmudic Midrashic literature are of the first
importance. Covering the period from the second to the fourteenth
century, they contain the major part of the Jewish legendary material.
Akin to this in content if not always in form is that derived from the
Targumim, of which the oldest versions were produced not earlier than
the fourth century, and the most recent not later than the tenth. The
Midrashic literature has been preserved only in fragmentary form. Many
Haggadot not found in our existing collections are quoted by the
authors of the Middle Ages. Accordingly, a not inconsiderable number of
the legends here printed are taken from medieval Bible commentators and
homilists. I was fortunate in being able to avail myself also of
fragments of Midrashim of which only manuscript copies are extant.

The works of the older Kabbalah are likewise treasuries of quotations
from lost Midrashim, and it was among the Kabbalists, and later among
the Hasidim, that new legends arose. The literatures produced in these
two circles are therefore of great importance for the present purpose.

Furthermore, Jewish legends can be culled not from the writings of the
Synagogue alone; they appear also in those of the Church. Certain
Jewish works repudiated by the Synagogue were accepted and mothered by
the Church. This is the literature usually denominated
apocryphal-pseudepigraphic. From the point of view of legends, the
apocryphal books are of subordinate importance, while the
pseudepigrapha are of fundamental value. Even quantitatively the latter
are an imposing mass. Besides the Greek writings of the Hellenist Jews,
they contain Latin, Syrian, Ethiopic, Aramean, Arabic, Persian, and Old
Slavic products translated directly or indirectly from Jewish works of
Palestinian or Hellenistic origin. The use of these pseudepigrapha
requires great caution. Nearly all of them are embellished with
Christian interpolations, and in some cases the inserted portions have
choked the original form so completely that it is impossible to
determine at first sight whether a Jewish or a Christian legend is
under examination. I believe, however, that the pseudepigraphic
material made use of by me is Jewish beyond the cavil of a doubt, and
therefore it could not have been left out of account in a work like the
present.

However, in the appreciation of Jewish Legends, it is the Rabbinic
writers that should form the point of departure, and not the
pseudepigrapha. The former represent the main stream of Jewish thought
and feeling, the latter only an undercurrent. If the Synagogue cast out
the pseudepigrapha, and the Church adopted them with a great show of
favor, these respective attitudes were not determined arbitrarily or by
chance. The pseudepigrapha originated in circles that harbored the
germs from which Christianity developed later on. The Church could thus
appropriate them as her own with just reason.

In the use of some of the apocryphal and pseudepigraphic writings, I
found it expedient to quote the English translations of them made by
others, in so far as they could be brought into accord with the general
style of the book, for which purpose I permitted myself the liberty of
slight verbal changes. In particulars, I was guided, naturally, by my
own conception of the subject, which the Notes justify in detail.

Besides the pseudepigrapha there are other Jewish sources in Christian
garb. In the rich literature of the Church Fathers many a Jewish legend
lies embalmed which one would seek in vain in Jewish books. It was
therefore my special concern to use the writings of the Fathers to the
utmost.

The luxuriant abundance of the material to be presented made it
impossible to give a verbal rendition of each legend. This would have
required more than three times the space at my disposal. I can
therefore claim completeness for my work only as to content. In form it
had to suffer curtailment. When several conflicting versions of the
same legend existed, I gave only one in the text, reserving the other
one, or the several others, for the Notes, or, when practicable, they
were fused into one typical legend, the component parts of which are
analyzed in the Notes. In other instances I resorted to the expedient
of citing one version in one place and the others in other appropriate
places, in furtherance of my aim, to give a smooth presentation of the
matter, with as few interruptions to the course of the narrative as
possible. For this reason I avoided such transitional phrases as "Some
say," "It has been maintained," etc. That my method sometimes separates
things that belong together cannot be considered a grave disadvantage,
as the Index at the end of the work will present a logical
rearrangement of the material for the benefit of the interested
student. I also did not hesitate to treat of the same personage in
different chapters, as, for instance, many of the legends bearing upon
Jacob, those connected with the latter years of the Patriarch, do not
appear in the chapter bearing his name, but will be found in the
sections devoted to Joseph, for the reason that once the son steps upon
the scene, he becomes the central figure, to which the life and deeds
of the father are subordinated. Again, in consideration of lack of
space the Biblical narratives underlying the legends had to be
omitted—surely not a serious omission in a subject with which
widespread acquaintance may be presupposed as a matter of course.

As a third consequence of the amplitude of the material, it was thought
advisable to divide it into several volumes. The references, the
explanations of the sources used, and the interpretations given, and,
especially, numerous emendations of the text of the Midrashim and the
pseudepigrapha, which determined my conception of the passages so
emended, will be found in the last volume, the fourth, which will
contain also an Introduction to the History of Jewish Legends, a number
of Excursuses, and the Index.

As the first three volumes are in the hands of the printer almost in
their entirety, I venture to express the hope that the whole work will
appear within measurable time, the parts following each other at short
intervals.

LOUIS GINZBERG.


NEW YORK, March 24, 1909




I
THE CREATION OF THE WORLD

THE FIRST THINGS CREATED

In the beginning, two thousand years before the heaven and the earth,
seven things were created: the Torah written with black fire on white
fire, and lying in the lap of God; the Divine Throne, erected in the
heaven which later was over the heads of the Hayyot; Paradise on the
right side of God, Hell on the left side; the Celestial Sanctuary
directly in front of God, having a jewel on its altar graven with the
Name of the Messiah, and a Voice that cries aloud, "Return, ye children
of men."[1]

When God resolved upon the creation of the world, He took counsel with
the Torah.[2] Her advice was this: "O Lord, a king without an army and
without courtiers and attendants hardly deserves the name of king, for
none is nigh to express the homage due to him." The answer pleased God
exceedingly. Thus did He teach all earthly kings, by His Divine
example, to undertake naught without first consulting advisers.[3]

The advice of the Torah was given with some reservations. She was
skeptical about the value of an earthly world, on account of the
sinfulness of men, who would be sure to disregard her precepts. But God
dispelled her doubts. He told her, that repentance had been created
long before, and sinners would have the opportunity of mending their
ways. Besides, the Temple service would be invested with atoning power,
and Paradise and hell were intended to do duty as reward and
punishment. Finally, the Messiah was appointed to bring salvation,
which would put an end to all sinfulness.[4]

Nor is this world inhabited by man the first of things earthly created
by God. He made several worlds before ours, but He destroyed them all,
because He was pleased with none until He created ours.[5] But even
this last world would have had no permanence, if God had executed His
original plan of ruling it according to the principle of strict
justice. It was only when He saw that justice by itself would undermine
the world that He associated mercy with justice, and made them to rule
jointly.[6] Thus, from the beginning of all things prevailed Divine
goodness, without which nothing could have continued to exist. If not
for it, the myriads of evil spirits had soon put an end to the
generations of men. But the goodness of God has ordained, that in every
Nisan, at the time of the spring equinox, the seraphim shall approach
the world of spirits, and intimidate them so that they fear to do harm
to men. Again, if God in His goodness had not given protection to the
weak, the tame animals would have been extirpated long ago by the wild
animals. In Tammuz, at the time of the summer solstice, when the
strength of behemot is at its height, he roars so loud that all the
animals hear it, and for a whole year they are affrighted and timid,
and their acts become less ferocious than their nature is. Again, in
Tishri, at the time of the autumnal equinox, the great bird ziz[7]
flaps his wings and utters his cry, so that the birds of prey, the
eagles and the vultures, blench, and they fear to swoop down upon the
others and annihilate them in their greed. And, again, were it not for
the goodness of God, the vast number of big fish had quickly put an end
to the little ones. But at the time of the winter solstice, in the
month of Tebet, the sea grows restless, for then leviathan spouts up
water, and the big fish become uneasy. They restrain their appetite,
and the little ones escape their rapacity.

Finally, the goodness of God manifests itself in the preservation of
His people Israel. It could not have survived the enmity of the
Gentiles, if God had not appointed protectors for it, the archangels
Michael and Gabriel.[8] Whenever Israel disobeys God, and is accused of
misdemeanors by the angels of the other nations, he is defended by his
designated guardians, with such good result that the other angels
conceive fear of them. Once the angels of the other nations are
terrified, the nations themselves venture not to carry out their wicked
designs against Israel.

That the goodness of God may rule on earth as in heaven, the Angels of
Destruction are assigned a place at the far end of the heavens, from
which they may never stir, while the Angels of Mercy encircle the
Throne of God, at His behest.[9]

THE ALPHABET

When God was about to create the world by His word, the twenty-two
letters of the alphabet[10] descended from the terrible and august
crown of God whereon they were engraved with a pen of flaming fire.
They stood round about God, and one after the other spake and
entreated, "Create the world through me!" The first to step forward was
the letter Taw. It said: "O Lord of the world! May it be Thy will to
create Thy world through me, seeing that it is through me that Thou
wilt give the Torah to Israel by the hand of Moses, as it is written,
'Moses commanded us the Torah.'" The Holy One, blessed be He, made
reply, and said, "No!" Taw asked, "Why not?" and God answered: "Because
in days to come I shall place thee as a sign of death upon the
foreheads of men." As soon as Taw heard these words issue from the
mouth of the Holy One, blessed be He, it retired from His presence
disappointed.

The Shin then stepped forward, and pleaded: "O Lord of the world,
create Thy world through me: seeing that Thine own name Shaddai begins
with me." Unfortunately, it is also the first letter of Shaw, lie, and
of Sheker, falsehood, and that incapacitated it. Resh had no better
luck. It was pointed out that it was the initial letter of Ra', wicked,
and Rasha' evil, and after that the distinction it enjoys of being the
first letter in the Name of God, Rahum, the Merciful, counted for
naught. The Kof was rejected, because Kelalah, curse, outweighs the
advantage of being the first in Kadosh, the Holy One. In vain did Zadde
call attention to Zaddik, the Righteous One; there was Zarot, the
misfortunes of Israel, to testify against it. Pe had Podeh, redeemer,
to its credit, but Pesha: transgression, reflected dishonor upon it.
'Ain was declared unfit, because, though it begins 'Anawah, humility,
it performs the same service for 'Erwah, immorality. Samek said: "O
Lord, may it be Thy will to begin the creation with me, for Thou art
called Samek, after me, the Upholder of all that fall." But God said:
"Thou art needed in the place in which thou art;[11] thou must continue
to uphold all that fall." Nun introduces Ner, "the lamp of the Lord,"
which is "the spirit of men," but it also introduces Ner, "the lamp of
the wicked," which will be put out by God. Mem starts Melek, king, one
of the titles of God. As it is the first letter of Mehumah, confusion,
as well, it had no chance of accomplishing its desire. The claim of
Lamed bore its refutation within itself. It advanced the argument that
it was the first letter of Luhot, the celestial tables for the Ten
Commandments; it forgot that the tables were shivered in pieces by
Moses. Kaf was sure of victory Kisseh, the throne of God, Kabod, His
honor, and Keter, His crown, all begin with it. God had to remind it
that He would smite together His hands, Kaf, in despair over the
misfortunes of Israel. Yod at first sight seemed the appropriate letter
for the beginning of creation, on account of its association with Yah,
God, if only Yezer ha-Ra' the evil inclination, had not happened to
begin with it, too. Tet is identified with Tob, the good. However, the
truly good is not in this world; it belongs to the world to come. Het
is the first letter of Hanun, the Gracious One; but this advantage is
offset by its place in the word for sin, Hattat. Zain suggests Zakor,
remembrance, but it is itself the word for weapon, the doer of
mischief. Waw and He compose the Ineffable Name of God; they are
therefore too exalted to be pressed into the service of the mundane
world. If Dalet had stood only for Dabar, the Divine Word, it would
have been used, but it stands also for Din, justice, and under the rule
of law without love the world would have fallen to ruin. Finally, in
spite of reminding one of Gadol, great, Gimel would not do, because
Gemul, retribution, starts with it.

After the claims of all these letters had been disposed of, Bet stepped
before the Holy One, blessed be He, and pleaded before Him: "O Lord of
the world! May it be Thy will to create Thy world through me, seeing
that all the dwellers in the world give praise daily unto Thee through
me, as it is said, 'Blessed be the Lord forever. Amen, and Amen.'" The
Holy One, blessed be He, at once granted the petition of Bet. He said,
"Blessed be he that cometh in the name of the Lord." And He created His
world through Bet, as it is said, "Bereshit God created the heaven and
the earth." The only letter that had refrained from urging its claims
was the modest Alef, and God rewarded it later for its humility by
giving it the first place in the Decalogue.[12]

THE FIRST DAY

On the first day of creation God produced ten things:[13] the heavens
and the earth, Tohu and Bohu, light and darkness, wind and water, the
duration of the day[14] and the duration of the night.[15]

Though the heavens and the earth consist of entirely different
elements,[16] they were yet created as a unit, "like the pot and its
cover."[17] The heavens were fashioned from the light of God's garment,
and the earth from the snow under the Divine Throne.[18] Tohu is a
green band which encompasses the whole world, and dispenses darkness,
and Bohu consists of stones in the abyss, the producers of the waters.
The light created at the very beginning is not the same as the light
emitted by the sun, the moon, and the stars, which appeared only on the
fourth day. The light of the first day was of a sort that would have
enabled man to see the world at a glance from one end to the other.
Anticipating the wickedness of the sinful generations of the deluge and
the Tower of Babel, who were unworthy to enjoy the blessing of such
light, God concealed it, but in the world to come it will appear to the
pious in all its pristine glory.[19]

Several heavens were created,[20] seven in fact,[21] each to serve a
purpose of its own. The first, the one visible to man, has no function
except that of covering up the light during the night time; therefore
it disappears every morning. The planets are fastened to the second of
the heavens; in the third the manna is made for the pious in the
hereafter; the fourth contains the celestial Jerusalem together with
the Temple, in which Michael ministers as high priest, and offers the
souls of the pious as sacrifices. In the fifth heaven, the angel hosts
reside, and sing the praise of God, though only during the night, for
by day it is the task of Israel on earth to give glory to God on high.
The sixth heaven is an uncanny spot; there originate most of the trials
and visitations ordained for the earth and its inhabitants. Snow lies
heaped up there and hail; there are lofts full of noxious dew,
magazines stocked with storms, and cellars holding reserves of smoke.
Doors of fire separate these celestial chambers, which are under the
supervision of the archangel Metatron. Their pernicious contents
defiled the heavens until David's time. The pious king prayed God to
purge His exalted dwelling of whatever was pregnant with evil; it was
not becoming that such things should exist near the Merciful One. Only
then they were removed to the earth.

The seventh heaven, on the other hand, contains naught but what is good
and beautiful: right, justice, and mercy, the storehouses of life,
peace, and blessing, the souls of the pious, the souls and spirits of
unborn generations, the dew with which God will revive the dead on the
resurrection day, and, above all, the Divine Throne, surrounded by the
seraphim, the ofanim, the holy Hayyot, and the ministering angels.[22]

Corresponding to the seven heavens, God created seven earths, each
separated from the next by five layers. Over the lowest earth, the
seventh, called Erez, lie in succession the abyss, the Tohu, the Bohu,
a sea, and waters.[23] Then the sixth[24] earth is reached, the Adamah,
the scene of the magnificence of God. In the same way the Adamah is
separated from the fifth earth, the Arka, which contains Gehenna, and
Sha'are Mawet, and Sha'are Zalmawet, and Beer Shahat, and Tit ha-Yawen,
and Abaddon, and Sheol,[25] and there the souls of the wicked are
guarded by the Angels of Destruction. In the same way Arka is followed
by Harabah, the dry, the place of brooks and streams in spite of its
name, as the next, called Yabbashah, the mainland, contains the rivers
and the springs. Tebel, the second earth, is the first mainland
inhabited by living creatures, three hundred and sixty-five
species,[26] all essentially different from those of our own earth.
Some have human heads set on the body of a lion, or a serpent, or an
ox; others have human bodies topped by the head of one of these
animals. Besides, Tebel is inhabited by human beings with two heads and
four hands and feet, in fact with all their organs doubled excepting
only the trunk.[27] It happens sometimes that the parts of these double
persons quarrel with each other, especially while eating and drinking,
when each claims the best and largest portions for himself. This
species of mankind is distinguished for great piety, another difference
between it and the inhabitants of our earth.

Our own earth is called Heled, and, like the others, it is separated
from the Tebel by an abyss, the Tohu, the Bohu, a sea, and waters.

Thus one earth rises above the other, from the first to the seventh,
and over the seventh earth the heavens are vaulted, from the first to
the seventh, the last of them attached to the arm of God. The seven
heavens form a unity, the seven kinds of earth form a unity, and the
heavens and the earth together also form a unity.[28]

When God made our present heavens and our present earth, "the new
heavens and the new earth"[29] were also brought forth, yea, and the
hundred and ninety-six thousand worlds which God created unto His Own
glory.[30]

It takes five hundred years to walk from the earth to the heavens, and
from one end of a heaven to the other, and also from one heaven to the
next,[31] and it takes the same length of time to travel from the east
to the west, or from the south to the north.[32] Of all this vast world
only one-third is inhabited, the other two-thirds being equally divided
between water and waste desert land.

Beyond the inhabited parts to the east is Paradise[33] with its seven
divisions, each assigned to the pious of a certain degree. The ocean is
situated to the west, and it is dotted with islands upon islands,
inhabited by many different peoples. Beyond it, in turn, are the
boundless steppes full of serpents and scorpions, and destitute of
every sort of vegetation, whether herbs or trees. To the north are the
supplies of hell-fire, of snow, hail, smoke, ice, darkness, and
windstorms, and in that vicinity sojourn all sorts of devils, demons,
and malign spirits. Their dwelling-place is a great stretch of land, it
would take five hundred years to traverse it. Beyond lies hell. To the
south is the chamber containing reserves of fire, the cave of smoke,
and the forge of blasts and hurricanes.[34] Thus it comes that the wind
blowing from the south brings heat and sultriness to the earth. Were it
not for the angel Ben Nez, the Winged, who keeps the south wind back
with his pinions, the world would be consumed.[35] Besides, the fury of
its blast is tempered by the north wind, which always appears as
moderator, whatever other wind may be blowing.[36]

In the east, the west, and the south, heaven and earth touch each
other, but the north God left unfinished, that any man who announced
himself as a god might be set the task of supplying the deficiency, and
stand convicted as a pretender.[37]

The construction of the earth was begun at the centre, with the
foundation stone of the Temple, the Eben Shetiyah,[38] for the Holy
Land is at the central point of the surface of the earth, Jerusalem is
at the central point of Palestine, and the Temple is situated at the
centre of the Holy City. In the sanctuary itself the Hekal is the
centre, and the holy Ark occupies the centre of the Hekal, built on the
foundation stone, which thus is at the centre of the earth.[39] Thence
issued the first ray of light, piercing to the Holy Land, and from
there illuminating the whole earth.[40] The creation of the world,
however, could not take place until God had banished the ruler of the
dark.[41] "Retire," God said to him, "for I desire to create the world
by means of light." Only after the light had been fashioned, darkness
arose, the light ruling in the sky, the darkness on the earth.[42] The
power of God displayed itself not only in the creation of the world of
things, but equally in the limitations which He imposed upon each. The
heavens and the earth stretched themselves out in length and breadth as
though they aspired to infinitude, and it required the word of God to
call a halt to their encroachments.[43]

THE SECOND DAY

On the second day God brought forth four creations, the firmament,
hell, fire, and the angels.[44] The firmament is not the same as the
heavens of the first day. It is the crystal stretched forth over the
heads of the Hayyot, from which the heavens derive their light, as the
earth derives its light from the sun. This firmament saves the earth
from being engulfed by the waters of the heavens; it forms the
partition between the waters above and the waters below.[45] It was
made to crystallize into the solid it is by the heavenly fire, which
broke its bounds, and condensed the surface of the firmament. Thus fire
made a division between the celestial and the terrestrial at the time
of creation, as it did at the revelation on Mount Sinai.[46] The
firmament is not more than three fingers thick,[47] nevertheless it
divides two such heavy bodies as the waters below, which are the
foundations for the nether world, and the waters above, which are the
foundations for the seven heavens, the Divine Throne, and the abode of
the angels.[48]

The separation of the waters into upper and lower waters was the only
act of the sort done by God in connection with the work of
creation.[49] All other acts were unifying. It therefore caused some
difficulties. When God commanded, "Let the waters be gathered together,
unto one place, and let the dry land appear," certain parts refused to
obey. They embraced each other all the more closely. In His wrath at
the waters, God determined to let the whole of creation resolve itself
into chaos again. He summoned the Angel of the Face, and ordered him to
destroy the world. The angel opened his eyes wide, and scorching fires
and thick clouds rolled forth from them, while he cried out, "He who
divides the Red Sea in sunder!"—and the rebellious waters stood. The
all, however, was still in danger of destruction. Then began the singer
of God's praises: "O Lord of the world, in days to come Thy creatures
will sing praises without end to Thee, they will bless Thee
boundlessly, and they will glorify Thee without measure. Thou wilt set
Abraham apart from all mankind as Thine own; one of his sons Thou wilt
call 'My first-born'; and his descendants will take the yoke of Thy
kingdom upon themselves. In holiness and purity Thou wilt bestow Thy
Torah upon them, with the words, 'I am the Lord your God,' whereunto
they will make answer, 'All that God hath spoken we will do.' And now I
beseech Thee, have pity upon Thy world, destroy it not, for if Thou
destroyest it, who will fulfil Thy will?" God was pacified; He withdrew
the command ordaining the destruction of the world, but the waters He
put under the mountains, to remain there forever.[50] The objection of
the lower waters to division and Separation[51] was not their only
reason for rebelling. The waters had been the first to give praise to
God, and when their separation into upper and lower was decreed, the
waters above rejoiced, saying, "Blessed are we who are privileged to
abide near our Creator and near His Holy Throne." Jubilating thus, they
flew upward, and uttered song and praise to the Creator of the world.
Sadness fell upon the waters below. They lamented: "Woe unto us, we
have not been found worthy to dwell in the presence of God, and praise
Him together with our companions." Therefore they attempted to rise
upward, until God repulsed them, and pressed them under the earth.[52]
Yet they were not left unrewarded for their loyalty. Whenever the
waters above desire to give praise to God, they must first seek
permission from the waters below.[53]

The second day of creation was an untoward day in more than the one
respect that it introduced a breach where before there had been nothing
but unity; for it was the day that saw also the creation of hell.
Therefore God could not say of this day as of the others, that He "saw
that it was good." A division may be necessary, but it cannot be called
good, and hell surely does not deserve the attribute of good.[54]
Hell[55] has seven divisions,[36] one beneath the other. They are
called Sheol, Abaddon, Beer Shahat, Tit ha-Yawen, Sha'are Mawet,
Sha'are Zalmawet: and Gehenna. It requires three hundred years to
traverse the height, or the width, or the depth of each division, and
it would take six thousand three hundred[37] years to go over a tract
of land equal in extent to the seven divisions.[38]

Each of the seven divisions in turn has seven subdivisions, and in each
compartment there are seven rivers of fire and seven of hail. The width
of each is one thousand ells, its depth one thousand, and its length
three hundred, and they flow one from the other, and are supervised by
ninety thousand Angels of Destruction. There are, besides, in every
compartment seven thousand caves, in every cave there are seven
thousand crevices, and in every crevice seven thousand scorpions. Every
scorpion has three hundred rings, and in every ring seven thousand
pouches of venom, from which flow seven rivers of deadly poison. If a
man handles it, he immediately bursts, every limb is torn from his
body, his bowels are cleft asunder, and he falls upon his face.[56]
There are also five different kinds of fire in hell. One devours and
absorbs, another devours and does not absorb, while the third absorbs
and does not devour, and there is still another fire, which neither
devours nor absorbs, and furthermore a fire which devours fire. There
are coals big as mountains, and coals big as hills, and coals as large
as the Dead Sea, and coals like huge stones, and there are rivers of
pitch and sulphur flowing and seething like live coals.[60]

The third creation of the second day was the angel hosts, both the
ministering angels and the angels of praise. The reason they had not
been called into being on the first day was, lest men believe that the
angels assisted God in the creation of the heavens and the earth.[61]
The angels that are fashioned from fire have forms of fire,[62] but
only so long as they remain in heaven. When they descend to earth, to
do the bidding of God here below, either they are changed into wind, or
they assume the guise of men.[63] There are ten ranks or degrees among
the angels.[64]

The most exalted in rank are those surrounding the Divine Throne on all
sides, to the right, to the left, in front, and behind, under the
leadership of the archangels Michael, Gabriel, Uriel, and Raphael.[65]

All the celestial beings praise God with the words, "Holy, holy, holy,
is the Lord of hosts," but men take precedence of the angels herein.
They may not begin their song of praise until the earthly beings have
brought their homage to God.[66] Especially Israel is preferred to the
angels. When they encircle the Divine Throne in the form of fiery
mountains and flaming hills, and attempt to raise their voices in
adoration of the Creator, God silences them with the words, "Keep quiet
until I have heard the songs, praises, prayers, and sweet melodies of
Israel." Accordingly, the ministering angels and all the other
celestial hosts wait until the last tones of Israel's doxologies rising
aloft from earth have died away, and then they proclaim in a loud
voice, "Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of hosts." When the hour for the
glorification of God by the angels draws nigh, the august Divine
herald, the angel Sham'iel, steps to the windows[67] of the lowest
heaven to hearken to the songs, prayers, and praises that ascend from
the synagogues and the houses of learning, and when they are finished,
he announces the end to the angels in all the heavens. The ministering
angels, those who come in contact with the sublunary world,[68] now
repair to their chambers to take their purification bath. They dive
into a stream of fire and flame seven times, and three hundred and
sixty-five times they examine themselves carefully, to make sure that
no taint clings to their bodies.[69] Only then they feel privileged to
mount the fiery ladder and join the angels of the seventh heaven, and
surround the throne of God with Hashmal and all the holy Hayyot.
Adorned with millions of fiery crowns, arrayed in fiery garments, all
the angels in unison, in the same words, and with the same melody,
intone songs of praise to God.[70]

THE THIRD DAY

Up to this time the earth was a plain, and wholly covered with water.
Scarcely had the words of God, "Let the waters be gathered together,"
made themselves heard, when mountains appeared all over and hills,[71]
and the water collected in the deep-lying basins. But the water was
recalcitrant, it resisted the order to occupy the lowly spots, and
threatened to overflow the earth, until God forced it back into the
sea, and encircled the sea with sand. Now, whenever the water is
tempted to transgress its bounds, it beholds the sand, and recoils.[72]

The waters did but imitate their chief Rahab, the Angel of the Sea, who
rebelled at the creation of the world. God had commanded Rahab to take
in the water. But he refused, saying, "I have enough." The punishment
for his disobedience was death. His body rests in the depths of the
sea, the water dispelling the foul odor that emanates from it.[73]

The main creation of the third day was the realm of plants, the
terrestrial plants as well as the plants of Paradise. First of all the
cedars of Lebanon and the other great trees were made. In their pride
at having been put first, they shot up high in the air. They considered
themselves the favored among plants. Then God spake, "I hate arrogance
and pride, for I alone am exalted, and none beside," and He created the
iron on the same day, the substance with which trees are felled down.
The trees began to weep, and when God asked the reason of their tears,
they said: "We cry because Thou hast created the iron to uproot us
therewith. All the while we had thought ourselves the highest of the
earth, and now the iron, our destroyer, has been called into
existence." God replied: "You yourselves will furnish the axe with a
handle. Without your assistance the iron will not be able to do aught
against you."[74]

The command to bear seed after their kind was given to the trees alone.
But the various sorts of grass reasoned, that if God had not desired
divisions according to classes, He would not have instructed the trees
to bear fruit after their kind with the seed thereof in it, especially
as trees are inclined of their own accord to divide themselves into
species. The grasses therefore reproduced themselves also after their
kinds. This prompted the exclamation of the Prince of the World, "Let
the glory of the Lord endure forever; let the Lord rejoice in His
works."[75]

The most important work done on the third day was the creation of
Paradise. Two gates of carbuncle form the entrance to Paradise,[76] and
sixty myriads of ministering angels keep watch over them. Each of these
angels shines with the lustre of the heavens. When the just man appears
before the gates, the clothes in which he was buried are taken off him,
and the angels array him in seven garments of clouds of glory, and
place upon his head two crowns, one of precious stones and pearls, the
other of gold of Parvaim,[77] and they put eight myrtles in his hand,
and they utter praises before him and say to him, "Go thy way, and eat
thy bread with joy." And they lead him to a place full of rivers,
surrounded by eight hundred kinds of roses and myrtles. Each one has a
canopy according to his merits,[78] and under it flow four rivers, one
of milk, the other of balsam, the third of wine, and the fourth of
honey. Every canopy is overgrown by a vine of gold, and thirty pearls
hang from it, each of them shining like Venus. Under each canopy there
is a table of precious stones and pearls, and sixty angels stand at the
head of every just man, saying unto him: "Go and eat with joy of the
honey, for thou hast busied thyself with the Torah, and she is sweeter
than honey, and drink of the wine preserved in the grape since the six
days of creation,[79] for thou hast busied thyself with the Torah, and
she is compared to wine." The least fair of the just is beautiful as
Joseph and Rabbi Johanan, and as the grains of a silver pomegranate
upon which fall the rays of the sun.[80] There is no light, "for the
light of the righteous is the shining light." And they undergo four
transformations every day, passing through four states. In the first
the righteous is changed into a child. He enters the division for
children, and tastes the joys of childhood. Then he is changed into a
youth, and enters the division for the youths, with whom he enjoys the
delights of youth. Next he becomes an adult, in the prime of life, and
he enters the division of men, and enjoys the pleasures of manhood.
Finally, he is changed into an old man. He enters the division for the
old, and enjoys the pleasures of age.

There are eighty myriads of trees in every corner of Paradise, the
meanest among them choicer than all the spice trees. In every corner
there are sixty myriads of angels singing with sweet voices, and the
tree of life stands in the middle and shades the whole of Paradise.[81]
It has fifteen thousand tastes, each different from the other, and the
perfumes thereof vary likewise. Over it hang seven clouds of glory, and
winds blow upon it from all four sides,[82] so that its odor is wafted
from one end of the world to the other. Underneath sit the scholars and
explain the Torah. Over each of them two canopies are spread, one of
stars, the other of sun and moon, and a curtain of clouds of glory
separates the one canopy from the other.[83] Beyond Paradise begins
Eden, containing three hundred and ten worlds[84] and seven
compartments for seven different classes of the pious. In the first are
"the martyr victims of the government," like Rabbi Akiba and his
colleagues;[85] in the second those who were drowned;[86] in the
third[87] Rabbi Johanan ben Zakkai and his disciples; in the fourth
those who were carried off in the cloud of glory;[88] in the fifth the
penitents, who occupy a place which even a perfectly pious man cannot
obtain; in the sixth are the youths[89] who have not tasted of sin in
their lives; in the seventh are those poor who studied Bible and
Mishnah, and led a life of self-respecting decency. And God sits in the
midst of them and expounds the Torah to them.[90]

As for the seven divisions of Paradise, each of them is twelve myriads
of miles in width and twelve myriads of miles in length. In the first
division dwell the proselytes who embraced Judaism of their own free
will, not from compulsion. The walls are of glass and the wainscoting
of cedar. The prophet Obadiah,[91] himself a proselyte, is the overseer
of this first division. The second division is built of silver, and the
wainscoting thereof is of cedar. Here dwell those who have repented,
and Manasseh, the penitent son of Hezekiah, presides over them. The
third division is built of silver and gold. Here dwell Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob, and all the Israelites who came out of Egypt, and the whole
generation that lived in the desert.[92] Also David is there, together
with all his sons[93] except Absalom, one of them, Chileab, still
alive. And all the kings of Judah are there, with the exception of
Manasseh, the son of Hezekiah, who presides in the second division,
over the penitents. Moses and Aaron preside over the third division.
Here are precious vessels of silver and gold and jewels and canopies
and beds and thrones and lamps, of gold, of precious stones, and of
pearls, the best of everything there is in heaven.[94] The fourth
division is built of beautiful rubies,[95] and its wainscoting is of
olive wood. Here dwell the perfect and the steadfast in faith, and
their wainscoting is of olive wood, because their lives were bitter as
olives to them. The fifth division is built of silver and gold and
refined gold,[96] and the finest of gold and glass and bdellium, and
through the midst of it flows the river Gihon. The wainscoting is of
silver and gold, and a perfume breathes through it more exquisite than
the perfume of Lebanon. The coverings of the silver and gold beds are
made of purple and blue, woven by Eve, and of scarlet and the hair of
goats, woven by angels. Here dwells the Messiah on a palanquin made of
the wood of Lebanon, "the pillars thereof of silver, the bottom of
gold, the seat of it purple." With him is Elijah. He takes the head of
Messiah, and places it in his bosom, and says to him, "Be quiet, for
the end draweth nigh." On every Monday and Thursday and on Sabbaths and
holidays, the Patriarchs come to him, and the twelve sons of Jacob, and
Moses, Aaron, David, Solomon, and all the kings of Israel and of Judah,
and they weep with him and comfort him, and say unto him, "Be quiet and
put trust in thy Creator, for the end draweth nigh." Also Korah and his
company, and Dathan, Abiram, and Absalom come to him on every
Wednesday, and ask him: "How long before the end comes full of wonders?
When wilt thou bring us life again, and from the abysses of the earth
lift us?" The Messiah answers them, "Go to your fathers and ask them";
and when they hear this, they are ashamed, and do not ask their
fathers.

In the sixth division dwell those who died in performing a pious act,
and in the seventh division those who died from illness inflicted as an
expiation for the sins of Israel.[97]

THE FOURTH DAY

The fourth day of creation produced the sun, the moon, and the stars.
These heavenly spheres were not actually fashioned on this day; they
were created on the first day, and merely were assigned their places in
the heavens on the fourth.[98] At first the sun and the moon enjoyed
equal powers and prerogatives.[99] The moon spoke to God, and said: "O
Lord, why didst Thou create the world with the letter Bet?" God
replied: "That it might be made known unto My creatures that there are
two worlds." The moon: "O Lord: which of the two worlds is the larger,
this world or the world to come?" God: "The world to come is the
larger." The moon: "O Lord, Thou didst create two worlds, a greater and
a lesser world; Thou didst create the heaven and the earth, the heaven
exceeding the earth; Thou didst create fire and water, the water
stronger than the fire, because it can quench the fire; and now Thou
hast created the sun and the moon, and it is becoming that one of them
should be greater than the other." Then spake God to the moon: "I know
well, thou wouldst have me make Thee greater than the sun. As a
punishment I decree that thou mayest keep but one-sixtieth of thy
light." The moon made supplication: "Shall I be punished so severely
for having spoken a single word?" God relented: "In the future world I
will restore thy light, so that thy light may again be as the light of
the sun." The moon was not yet satisfied. "O Lord," she said, "and the
light of the sun, how great will it be in that day?" Then the wrath of
God was once more enkindled: "What, thou still plottest against the
sun? As thou livest, in the world to come his light shall be sevenfold
the light he now sheds."[100] The Sun runs his course like a
bridegroom. He sits upon a throne with a garland on his head.[101]
Ninety-six angels accompany him on his daily journey, in relays of
eight every hour, two to the left of him, and two to the right, two
before Him, and two behind. Strong as he is, he could complete his
course from south to north in a single instant, but three hundred and
sixty-five angels restrain him by means of as many grappling-irons.
Every day one looses his hold, and the sun must thus spend three
hundred and sixty-five days on his course. The progress of the sun in
his circuit is an uninterrupted song of praise to God. And this song
alone makes his motion possible. Therefore, when Joshua wanted to bid
the sun stand still, he had to command him to be silent. His song of
praise hushed, the sun stood still.[102]

The sun is double-faced; one face, of fire, is directed toward the
earth, and one of hail, toward heaven, to cool off the prodigious heat
that streams from the other face, else the earth would catch afire. In
winter the sun turns his fiery face upward, and thus the cold is
produced.[103] When the sun descends in the west in the evening, he
dips down into the ocean and takes a bath, his fire is extinguished,
and therefore he dispenses neither light nor warmth during the night.
But as soon as he reaches the east in the morning, he laves himself in
a stream of flame, which imparts warmth and light to him, and these he
sheds over the earth. In the same way the moon and the stars take a
bath in a stream of hail before they enter upon their service for the
night.[104]

When the sun and the moon are ready to start upon their round of
duties, they appear before God, and beseech him to relieve them of
their task, so that they may be spared the sight of sinning mankind.
Only upon compulsion they proceed with their daily course. Coming from
the presence of God, they are blinded by the radiance in the heavens,
and they cannot find their way. God, therefore, shoots off arrows, by
the glittering light of which they are guided. It is on account of the
sinfulness of man, which the sun is forced to contemplate on his
rounds, that he grows weaker as the time of his going down approaches,
for sins have a defiling and enfeebling effect, and he drops from the
horizon as a sphere of blood, for blood is the sign of corruption.[105]
As the sun sets forth on his course in the morning, his wings touch the
leaves on the trees of Paradise, and their vibration is communicated to
the angels and the holy Hayyot, to the other plants, and also to the
trees and plants on earth, and to all the beings on earth and in
heaven. It is the signal for them all to cast their eyes upward. As
soon as they see the Ineffable Name, which is engraved in the sun, they
raise their voices in songs of praise to God. At the same moment a
heavenly voice is heard to say, "Woe to the sons of men that consider
not the honor of God like unto these creatures whose voices now rise
aloft in adoration."[106] These words, naturally, are not heard by men;
as little as they perceive the grating of the sun against the wheel to
which all the celestial bodies are attached, although the noise it
makes is extraordinarily loud.[107] This friction of the sun and the
wheel produces the motes dancing about in the sunbeams. They are the
carriers of healing to the sick,[108] the only health-giving creations
of the fourth day, on the whole an unfortunate day, especially for
children, afflicting them with disease.[109] When God punished the
envious moon by diminishing her light and splendor, so that she ceased
to be the equal of the sun as she had been originally,[110] she
fell,[111] and tiny threads were loosed from her body. These are the
stars.[112]

THE FIFTH DAY

On the fifth day of creation God took fire[118] and water, and out of
these two elements He made the fishes of the sea.[114] The animals in
the water are much more numerous than those on land. For every species
on land, excepting only the weasel, there is a corresponding species in
the water, and, besides, there are many found only in the water.[115]

The ruler over the sea-animals is leviathan.[116] With all the other
fishes he was made on the fifth day.[117] Originally he was created
male and female like all the other animals. But when it appeared that a
pair of these monsters might annihilate the whole earth with their
united strength, God killed the female.[119] So enormous is leviathan
that to quench his thirst he needs all the water that flows from the
Jordan into the sea.[119] His food consists of the fish which go
between his jaws of their own accord.[120] When he is hungry, a hot
breath blows from his nostrils, and it makes the waters of the great
sea seething hot. Formidable though behemot, the other monster, is, he
feels insecure until he is certain that leviathan has satisfied his
thirst.[121] The only thing that can keep him in check is the
stickleback, a little fish which was created for the purpose, and of
which he stands in great awe.[122] But leviathan is more than merely
large and strong; he is wonderfully made besides. His fins radiate
brilliant light, the very sun is obscured by it,[123] and also his eyes
shed such splendor that frequently the sea is illuminated suddenly by
it.[121] No wonder that this marvellous beast is the plaything of God,
in whom He takes His pastime.[124]

There is but one thing that makes leviathan repulsive, his foul smell:
which is so strong that if it penetrated thither, it would render
Paradise itself an impossible abode.[125]

The real purpose of leviathan is to be served up as a dainty to the
pious in the world to come. The female was put into brine as soon as
she was killed, to be preserved against the time when her flesh will be
needed.[126] The male is destined to offer a delectable sight to all
beholders before he is consumed. When his last hour arrives, God will
summon the angels to enter into combat with the monster. But no sooner
will leviathan cast his glance at them than they will flee in fear and
dismay from the field of battle. They will return to the charge with
swords, but in vain, for his scales can turn back steel like straw.
They will be equally unsuccessful when they attempt to kill him by
throwing darts and slinging stones; such missiles will rebound without
leaving the least impression on his body. Disheartened, the angels will
give up the combat, and God will command leviathan and behemot to enter
into a duel with each other. The issue will be that both will drop
dead, behemot slaughtered by a blow of leviathan's fins, and leviathan
killed by a lash of behemot's tail. From the skin of leviathan God will
construct tents to shelter companies of the pious while they enjoy the
dishes made of his flesh. The amount assigned to each of the pious will
be in proportion to his deserts, and none will envy or begrudge the
other his better share. What is left of leviathan's skin will be
stretched out over Jerusalem as a canopy, and the light streaming from
it will illumine the whole world, and what is left of his flesh after
the pious have appeased their appetite, will be distributed among the
rest of men, to carry on traffic therewith.[127]

On the same day with the fishes, the birds were created, for these two
kinds of animals are closely related to each other. Fish are fashioned
out of water, and birds out of marshy ground saturated with water.[128]

As leviathan is the king of fishes, so the ziz is appointed to rule
over the birds.[129] His name comes from the variety of tastes his
flesh has; it tastes like this, zeh, and like that, zeh.[130] The ziz
is as monstrous of size as leviathan himself. His ankles rest on the
earth, and his head reaches to the very sky.[121]

It once happened that travellers on a vessel noticed a bird. As he
stood in the water, it merely covered his feet, and his head knocked
against the sky. The onlookers thought the water could not have any
depth at that point, and they prepared to take a bath there. A heavenly
voice warned them: "Alight not here! Once a carpenter's axe slipped
from his hand at this spot, and it took it seven years to touch
bottom." The bird the travellers saw was none other than the ziz.[132]
His wings are so huge that unfurled they darken the sun.[133] They
protect the earth against the storms of the south; without their aid
the earth would not be able to resist the winds blowing thence.[134]
Once an egg of the ziz fell to the ground and broke. The fluid from it
flooded sixty cities, and the shock crushed three hundred cedars.
Fortunately such accidents do not occur frequently. As a rule the bird
lets her eggs slide gently into her nest. This one mishap was due to
the fact that the egg was rotten, and the bird cast it away carelessly.
The ziz has another name, Renanin,[135] because he is the celestial
singer.[136] On account of his relation to the heavenly regions he is
also called Sekwi, the seer, and, besides, he is called "son of the
nest,"[137] because his fledgling birds break away from the shell
without being hatched by the mother bird; they spring directly from the
nest, as it were.[138] Like leviathan, so ziz is a delicacy to be
served to the pious at the end of time, to compensate them for the
privations which abstaining from the unclean fowls imposed upon
them.[139]

THE SIXTH DAY

As the fish were formed out of water, and the birds out of boggy earth
well mixed with water, so the mammals were formed out of solid
earth,[140] and as leviathan is the most notable representative of the
fish kind, and ziz of the bird kind, so behemot is the most notable
representative of the mammal kind. Behemot matches leviathan in
strength, and he had to be prevented, like leviathan, from multiplying
and increasing, else the world could not have continued to exist; after
God had created him male and female, He at once deprived him of the
desire to propagate his kind.[141] He is so monstrous that he requires
the produce of a thousand mountains for his daily food. All the water
that flows through the bed of the Jordan in a year suffices him exactly
for one gulp. It therefore was necessary to give him one stream
entirely for his own use, a stream flowing forth from Paradise, called
Yubal.[142] Behemot, too, is destined to be served to the pious as an
appetizing dainty, but before they enjoy his flesh, they will be
permitted to view the mortal combat between leviathan and behemot, as a
reward for having denied themselves the pleasures of the circus and its
gladiatorial contests.[143]

Leviathan, ziz, and behemot are not the only monsters; there are many
others, and marvellous ones, like the reem, a giant animal, of which
only one couple, male and female, is in existence. Had there been more,
the world could hardly have maintained itself against them. The act of
copulation occurs but once in seventy years between them, for God has
so ordered it that the male and female reem are at opposite ends of the
earth, the one in the east, the other in the west. The act of
copulation results in the death of the male. He is bitten by the female
and dies of the bite. The female becomes pregnant and remains in this
state for no less than twelve years. At the end of this long period she
gives birth to twins, a male and a female. The year preceding her
delivery she is not able to move. She would die of hunger, were it not
that her own spittle flowing copiously from her mouth waters and
fructifies the earth near her, and causes it to bring forth enough for
her maintenance. For a whole year the animal can but roll from side to
side, until finally her belly bursts, and the twins issue forth. Their
appearance is thus the signal for the death of the mother reem. She
makes room for the new generation, which in turn is destined to suffer
the same fate as the generation that went before. Immediately after
birth, the one goes eastward and the other westward, to meet only after
the lapse of seventy years, propagate themselves, and perish.[144] A
traveller who once saw a reem one day old described its height to be
four parasangs, and the length of its head one parasang and a
half.[145] Its horns measure one hundred ells, and their height is a
great deal more.[146]

One of the most remarkable creatures is the "man of the mountain," Adne
Sadeh, or, briefly, Adam.[147] His form is exactly that of a human
being, but he is fastened to the ground by means of a navel-string,
upon which his life depends. The cord once snapped, he dies. This
animal keeps himself alive with what is produced by the soil around
about him as far as his tether permits him to crawl. No creature may
venture to approach within the radius of his cord, for he seizes and
demolishes whatever comes in his reach. To kill him, one may not go
near to him, the navel-string must be severed from a distance by means
of a dart, and then he dies amid groans and moans.[143] Once upon a
time a traveller happened in the region where this animal is found. He
overheard his host consult his wife as to what to do to honor their
guest, and resolve to serve "our man," as he said. Thinking he had
fallen among cannibals, the stranger ran as fast as his feet could
carry him from his entertainer, who sought vainly to restrain him.
Afterward, he found out that there had been no intention of regaling
him with human flesh, but only with the flesh of the strange animal
called "man."[146] As the "man of the mountain" is fixed to the ground
by his navel-string, so the barnacle-goose is grown to a tree by its
bill. It is hard to say whether it is an animal and must be slaughtered
to be fit for food, or whether it is a plant and no ritual ceremony is
necessary before eating it.[150]

Among the birds the phoenix is the most wonderful. When Eve gave all
the animals some of the fruit of the tree of knowledge, the phoenix was
the only bird that refused to eat thereof, and he was rewarded with
eternal life. When he has lived a thousand years, his body shrinks, and
the feathers drop from it, until he is as small as an egg. This is the
nucleus of the new bird.[151]

The phoenix is also called "the guardian of the terrestrial sphere." He
runs with the sun on his circuit, and he spreads out his wings and
catches up the fiery rays of the sun.[152] If he were not there to
intercept them, neither man nor any other animate being would keep
alive. On his right wing the following words are inscribed in huge
letters,[153] about four thousand stadia high: "Neither the earth
produces me, nor the heavens, but only the wings of fire." His food
consists of the manna of heaven and the dew of the earth. His excrement
is a worm, whose excrement in turn is the cinnamon used by kings and
princes.[152] Enoch, who saw the phoenix birds when he was translated,
describes them as flying creatures, wonderful and strange in
appearance, with the feet and tails of lions, and the heads of
crocodiles; their appearance is of a purple color like the rainbow;
their size nine hundred measures. Their wings are like those of angels,
each having twelve, and they attend the chariot of the sun and go with
him, bringing heat and dew as they are ordered by God. In the morning
when the sun starts on his daily course, the phoenixes and the
chalkidri[154] sing, and every bird flaps its wings, rejoicing the
Giver of light, and they sing a song at the command of the Lord.[155]
Among reptiles the salamander and the shamir are the most marvellous.
The salamander originates from a fire of myrtle wood[156] which has
been kept burning for seven years steadily by means of magic arts. Not
bigger than a mouse, it yet is invested with peculiar properties. One
who smears himself with its blood is invulnerable,[157] and the web
woven by it is a talisman against fire.[158] The people who lived at
the deluge boasted that, were a fire flood to come, they would protect
themselves with the blood of the salamander.[159]

King Hezekiah owes his life to the salamander. His wicked father, King
Ahaz, had delivered him to the fires of Moloch, and he would have been
burnt, had his mother not painted him with the blood of the salamander,
so that the fire could do him no harm.[160]

The shamir was made at twilight on the sixth day of creation together
with other extraordinary things.[161] It is about as large as a barley
corn, and it possesses the remarkable property of cutting the hardest
of diamonds. For this reason it was used for the stones in the
breastplate worn by the high priest. First the names of the twelve
tribes were traced with ink on the stones to be set into the
breastplate, then the shamir was passed over the lines, and thus they
were graven. The wonderful circumstance was that the friction wore no
particles from the stones. The shamir was also used for hewing into
shape the stones from which the Temple was built, because the law
prohibited iron tools to be used for the work in the Temple.[162] The
shamir may not be put in an iron vessel for safe-keeping, nor in any
metal vessel, it would burst such a receptacle asunder. It is kept
wrapped up in a woollen cloth, and this in turn is placed in a lead
basket filled with barley bran.[163] The shamir was guarded in Paradise
until Solomon needed it. He sent the eagle thither to fetch the
worm.[164] With the destruction of the Temple the shamir vanished.[165]
A similar fate overtook the tahash, which had been created only that
its skin might be used for the Tabernacle. Once the Tabernacle was
completed, the tahash disappeared. It had a horn on its forehead, was
gaily colored like the turkey-cock, and belonged to the class of clean
animals.[166] Among the fishes there are also wonderful creatures, the
sea-goats and the dolphins, not to mention leviathan. A sea-faring man
once saw a sea-goat on whose horns the words were inscribed: "I am a
little sea-animal, yet I traversed three hundred parasangs to offer
myself as food to the leviathan."[167] The dolphins are half man and
half fish; they even have sexual intercourse with human beings;
therefore they are called also "sons of the sea," for in a sense they
represent the human kind in the waters.[163]

Though every species in the animal world was created during the last
two days of the six of creation,[169] yet many characteristics of
certain animals appeared later. Cats and mice, foes now, were friends
originally. Their later enmity had a distinct cause. On one occasion
the mouse appeared before God and spoke: "I and the cat are partners,
but now we have nothing to eat." The Lord answered: "Thou art
intriguing against thy companion, only that thou mayest devour her. As
a punishment, she shall devour thee." Thereupon the mouse: "O Lord of
the world, wherein have I done wrong?" God replied: "O thou unclean
reptile, thou shouldst have been warned by the example of the moon, who
lost a part of her light, because she spake ill of the sun, and what
she lost was given to her opponent.[170] The evil intentions thou didst
harbor against thy companion shall be punished in the same way. Instead
of thy devouring her, she shall devour thee." The mouse: "O Lord of the
world! Shall my whole kind be destroyed?" God: "I will take care that a
remnant of thee is spared." In her rage the mouse bit the cat, and the
cat in turn threw herself upon the mouse, and hacked into her with her
teeth until she lay dead. Since that moment the mouse stands in such
awe of the cat that she does not even attempt to defend herself against
her enemy's attacks, and always keeps herself in hiding.[171] Similarly
dogs and cats maintained a friendly relation to each other, and only
later on became enemies. A dog and a cat were partners, and they shared
with each other whatever they had. It once happened that neither could
find anything to eat for three days. Thereupon the dog proposed that
they dissolve their partnership. The cat should go to Adam, in whose
house there would surely be enough for her to eat, while the dog should
seek his fortune elsewhere. Before they separated, they took an oath
never to go to the same master. The cat took up her abode with Adam,
and she found sufficient mice in his house to satisfy her appetite.
Seeing how useful she was in driving away and extirpating mice, Adam
treated her most kindly. The dog, on the other hand, saw bad times. The
first night after their separation he spent in the cave of the wolf,
who had granted him a night's lodging. At night the dog caught the
sound of steps, and he reported it to his host, who bade him repulse
the intruders. They were wild animals. Little lacked and the dog would
have lost his life. Dismayed, the dog fled from the house of the wolf,
and took refuge with the monkey. But he would not grant him even a
single night's lodging; and the fugitive was forced to appeal to the
hospitality of the sheep. Again the dog heard steps in the middle of
the night. Obeying the bidding of his host, he arose to chase away the
marauders, who turned out to be wolves. The barking of the dog apprised
the wolves of the presence of sheep, so that the dog innocently caused
the sheep's death. Now he had lost his last friend. Night after night
he begged for shelter, without ever finding a home. Finally, he decided
to repair to the house of Adam, who also granted him refuge for one
night. When wild animals approached the house under cover of darkness,
the dog began to bark, Adam awoke, and with his bow and arrow he drove
them away. Recognizing the dog's usefulness, he bade him remain with
him always. But as soon as the cat espied the dog in Adam's house, she
began to quarrel with him, and reproach him with having broken his oath
to her. Adam did his best to pacify the cat. He told her he had himself
invited the dog to make his home there, and he assured her she would in
no wise be the loser by the dog's presence; he wanted both to stay with
him. But it was impossible to appease the cat. The dog promised her not
to touch anything intended for her. She insisted that she could not
live in one and the same house with a thief like the dog. Bickerings
between the dog and the cat became the order of the day. Finally the
dog could stand it no longer, and he left Adam's house, and betook
himself to Seth's. By Seth he was welcomed kindly, and from Seth's
house, he continued to make efforts at reconciliation with the cat. In
vain. Yes, the enmity between the first dog and the first cat was
transmitted to all their descendants until this very day.[172]

Even the physical peculiarities of certain animals were not original
features with them, but owed their existence to something that occurred
subsequent to the days of creation. The mouse at first had quite a
different mouth from its present mouth. In Noah's ark, in which all
animals, to ensure the preservation of every kind, lived together
peaceably, the pair of mice were once sitting next to the cat. Suddenly
the latter remembered that her father was in the habit of devouring
mice, and thinking there was no harm in following his example, she
jumped at the mouse, who vainly looked for a hole into which to slip
out of sight. Then a miracle happened; a hole appeared where none had
been before, and the mouse sought refuge in it. The cat pursued the
mouse, and though she could not follow her into the hole, she could
insert her paw and try to pull the mouse out of her covert. Quickly the
mouse opened her mouth in the hope that the paw would go into it, and
the cat would be prevented from fastening her claws in her flesh. But
as the cavity of the mouth was not big enough, the cat succeeded in
clawing the cheeks of the mouse. Not that this helped her much, it
merely widened the mouth of the mouse, and her prey after all escaped
the cat.[173] After her happy escape, the mouse betook herself to Noah
and said to him, "O pious man, be good enough to sew up my cheek where
my enemy, the cat, has torn a rent in it." Noah bade her fetch a hair
out of the tail of the swine, and with this he repaired the damage.
Thence the little seam-like line next to the mouth of every mouse to
this very day.[174]

The raven is another animal that changed its appearance during its
sojourn in the ark. When Noah desired to send him forth to find out
about the state of the waters, he hid under the wings of the eagle.
Noah found him, however, and said to him, "Go and see whether the
waters have diminished." The raven pleaded: "Hast thou none other among
all the birds to send on this errand?" Noah: "My power extends no
further than over thee and the dove."[175] But the raven was not
satisfied. He said to Noah with great insolence: "Thou sendest me forth
only that I may meet my death, and thou wishest my death that my wife
may be at thy service."[176] Thereupon Noah cursed the raven thus: "May
thy mouth, which has spoken evil against me, be accursed, and thy
intercourse with thy wife be only through it."[177] All the animals in
the ark said Amen. And this is the reason why a mass of spittle runs
from the mouth of the male raven into the mouth of the female during
the act of copulation, and only thus the female is impregnated.[178]
Altogether the raven is an unattractive animal. He is unkind toward his
own young so long as their bodies are not covered with black
feathers,[179] though as a rule ravens love one another.[180] God
therefore takes the young ravens under His special protection. From
their own excrement maggots come forth,[181] which serve as their food
during the three days that elapse after their birth, until their white
feathers turn black and their parents recognize them as their offspring
and care for them.[182]

The raven has himself to blame also for the awkward hop in his gait. He
observed the graceful step of the dove, and envious of her tried to
enmulate it. The outcome was that he almost broke his bones without in
the least succeeding in making himself resemble the dove, not to
mention that he brought the scorn of the other animals down upon
himself. His failure excited their ridicule. Then he decided to return
to his own original gait, but in the interval he had unlearnt it, and
he could walk neither the one way nor the other properly. His step had
become a hop betwixt and between. Thus we see how true it is, that he
who is dissatisfied with his small portion loses the little he has in
striving for more and better things.[163]

The steer is also one of the animals that have suffered a change in the
course of time. Originally his face was entirely overgrown with hair,
but now there is none on his nose, and that is because Joshua kissed
him on his nose during the siege of Jericho. Joshua was an exceedingly
heavy man. Horses, donkeys, and mules, none could bear him, they all
broke down under his weight. What they could not do, the steer
accomplished. On his back Joshua rode to the siege of Jericho, and in
gratitude he bestowed a kiss upon his nose.[134]

The serpent, too, is other than it was at first. Before the fall of man
it was the cleverest of all animals created, and in form it resembled
man closely. It stood upright, and was of extraordinary size.[185]
Afterward, it lost the mental advantages it had possessed as compared
with other animals, and it degenerated physically, too; it was deprived
of its feet, so that it could not pursue other animals and kill them.
The mole and the frog had to be made harmless in similar ways; the
former has no eyes, else it were irresistible, and the frog has no
teeth, else no animal in the water were sure of its life.[186]

While the cunning of the serpent wrought its own undoing, the cunning
of the fox stood him in good stead in many an embarrassing situation.
After Adam had committed the sin of disobedience, God delivered the
whole of the animal world into the power of the Angel of Death, and He
ordered him to cast one pair of each kind into the water. He and
leviathan together thus have dominion over all that has life. When the
Angel of Death was in the act of executing the Divine command upon the
fox, he began to weep bitterly. The Angel of Death asked him the reason
of his tears, and the fox replied that he was mourning the sad fate of
his friend. At the same time he pointed to the figure of a fox in the
sea, which was nothing but his own reflection. The Angel of Death,
persuaded that a representative of the fox family had been cast into
the water, let him go free. The fox told his trick to the cat, and she
in turn played it on the Angel of Death.[187] So it happened that
neither cats nor foxes are represented in the water, while all other
animals are.[188]

When leviathan passed the animals in review, and missing the fox was
informed of the sly way in which he had eluded his authority, he
dispatched great and powerful fish on the errand of enticing the truant
into the water. The fox walking along the shore espied the large number
of fish, and he exclaimed, "How happy he who may always satisfy his
hunger with the flesh of such as these." The fish told him, if he would
but follow them, his appetite could easily be appeased. At the same
time they informed him that a great honor awaited him. Leviathan, they
said, was at death's door, and he had commissioned them to install the
fox as his successor. They were ready to carry him on their backs, so
that he had no need to fear the water, and thus they would convey him
to the throne, which stood upon a huge rock. The fox yielded to these
persuasions, and descended into the water. Presently an uncomfortable
feeling took possession of him. He began to suspect that the tables
were turned; he was being made game of instead of making game of others
as usual. He urged the fish to tell him the truth, and they admitted
that they had been sent out to secure his person for leviathan, who
wanted his heart,[189] that he might become as knowing as the fox,
whose wisdom he had heard many extol. The fox said reproachfully: "Why
did you not tell me the truth at once? Then I could have brought my
heart along with me for King Leviathan, who would have showered honors
upon me. As it is, you will surely suffer punishment for bringing me
without my heart. The foxes, you see," he continued, "do not carry
their hearts around with them. They keep them in a safe place, and when
they have need of them, they fetch them thence." The fish quickly swam
to shore, and landed the fox, so that he might go for his heart. No
sooner did he feel dry land under his feet than he began to jump and
shout, and when they urged him to go in search of his heart, and follow
them, he said: "O ye fools, could I have followed you into the water,
if I had not had my heart with me? Or exists there a creature able to
go abroad without his heart?" The fish replied: "Come, come, thou art
fooling us." Whereupon the fox: "O ye fools, if I could play a trick on
the Angel of Death, how much easier was it to make game of you?" So
they had to return, their errand undone, and leviathan could not but
confirm the taunting judgment of the fox: "In very truth, the fox is
wise of heart, and ye are fools."[190]

ALL THINGS PRAISE THE LORD

"Whatever God created has value." Even the animals and the insects that
seem useless and noxious at first sight have a vocation to fulfil. The
snail trailing a moist streak after it as it crawls, and so using up
its vitality, serves as a remedy for boils. The sting of a hornet is
healed by the house-fly crushed and applied to the wound. The gnat,
feeble creature, taking in food but never secreting it, is a specific
against the poison of a viper, and this venomous reptile itself cures
eruptions, while the lizard is the antidote to the scorpion.[191] Not
only do all creatures serve man, and contribute to his comfort, but
also God "teacheth us through the beasts of the earth, and maketh us
wise through the fowls of heaven." He endowed many animals with
admirable moral qualities as a pattern for man. If the Torah had not
been revealed to us, we might have learnt regard for the decencies of
life from the cat, who covers her excrement with earth; regard for the
property of others from the ants, who never encroach upon one another's
stores; and regard for decorous conduct from the cock, who, when he
desires to unite with the hen, promises to buy her a cloak long enough
to reach to the ground, and when the hen reminds him of his promise, he
shakes his comb and says, "May I be deprived of my comb, if I do not
buy it when I have the means." The grasshopper also has a lesson to
teach to man. All the summer through it sings, until its belly bursts,
and death claims it. Though it knows the fate that awaits it, yet it
sings on. So man should do his duty toward God, no matter what the
consequences. The stork should be taken as a model in two respects. He
guards the purity of his family life zealously, and toward his fellows
he is compassionate and merciful. Even the frog can be the teacher of
man. By the side of the water there lives a species of animals which
subsist off aquatic creatures alone. When the frog notices that one of
them is hungry, he goes to it of his own accord, and offers himself as
food, thus fulfilling the injunction, "If thine enemy be hungry, give
him bread to eat; and if he be thirsty, give him water to drink."[192]

The whole of creation was called into existence by God unto His
glory,[193] and each creature has its own hymn of praise wherewith to
extol the Creator. Heaven and earth, Paradise and hell, desert and
field, rivers and seas—all have their own way of paying homage to God.
The hymn of the earth is, "From the uttermost part of the earth have we
heard songs, glory to the Righteous." The sea exclaims, "Above the
voices of many waters, the mighty breakers of the sea, the Lord on high
is mighty."

Also the celestial bodies and the elements proclaim the praise of their
Creator—the sun, moon, and stars, the clouds and the winds, lightning
and dew. The sun says, "The sun and moon stood still in their
habitation, at the light of Thine arrows as they went, at the shining
of Thy glittering spear"; and the stars sing, "Thou art the Lord, even
Thou alone; Thou hast made heaven, the heaven of heavens, with all
their host, the earth and all things that are thereon, the seas and all
that is in them, and Thou preservest them all; and the host of heaven
worshippeth Thee."

Every plant, furthermore, has a song of praise. The fruitful tree
sings, "Then shall all the trees of the wood sing for joy, before the
Lord, for He cometh; for He cometh to judge the earth"; and the ears of
grain on the field sing, "The pastures are covered with flocks; the
valleys also are covered over with corn; they shout for joy, they also
sing."

Great among singers of praise are the birds, and greatest among them is
the cock. When God at midnight goes to the pious in Paradise, all the
trees therein break out into adoration, and their songs awaken the
cock, who begins in turn to praise God. Seven times he crows, each time
reciting a verse. The first verse is: "Lift up your heads, O ye gates;
and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors, and the King of glory shall
come in. Who is the King of glory? The Lord strong and mighty, the Lord
mighty in battle." The second verse: "Lift up your heads, O ye gates;
yea, lift them up, ye everlasting doors, and the King of glory shall
come in. Who is this King of glory? The Lord of hosts, He is the King
of glory." The third: "Arise, ye righteous, and occupy yourselves with
the Torah, that your reward may be abundant in the world hereafter."
The fourth: "I have waited for Thy salvation, O Lord!" The fifth: "How
long wilt thou sleep, O sluggard? When wilt thou arise out of thy
sleep?" The sixth: "Love not sleep, lest thou come to poverty; open
thine eyes, and thou shalt be satisfied with bread." And the seventh
verse sung by the cock runs: "It is time to work for the Lord, for they
have made void Thy law."

The song of the vulture is: "I will hiss for them, and gather them; for
I have redeemed them, and they shall increase as they have
increased"—the same verse with which the bird will in time to come
announce the advent of the Messiah, the only difference being, that
when he heralds the Messiah he will sit upon the ground and sing his
verse, while at all other times he is seated elsewhere when he sings
it.

Nor do the other animals praise God less than the birds. Even the
beasts of prey give forth adoration. The lion says: "The Lord shall go
forth as a mighty man; He shall stir up jealousy like a man of war; He
shall cry, yea, He shall shout aloud; He shall do mightily against his
enemies." And the fox exhorts unto justice with the words: "Woe unto
him that buildeth his house by unrighteousness, and his chambers by
injustice; that useth his neighbor's service without wages, and giveth
him not his hire."

Yea, the dumb fishes know how to proclaim the praise of their Lord.
"The voice of the Lord is upon the waters," they say, "the God of glory
thundereth, even the Lord upon many waters"; while the frog exclaims,
"Blessed be the name of the glory of His kingdom forever and ever."

Contemptible though they are, even the reptiles give praise unto their
Creator. The mouse extols God with the words: "Howbeit Thou art just in
all that is come upon me; for Thou hast dealt truly, but I have done
wickedly." And the cat sings: "Let everything that hath breath praise
the Lord. Praise ye the Lord."[194]




II
ADAM

MAN AND THE WORLD

With ten Sayings God created the world, although a single Saying would
have sufficed. God desired to make known how severe is the punishment
to be meted out to the wicked, who destroy a world created with as many
as ten Sayings, and how goodly the reward destined for the righteous,
who preserve a world created with as many as ten Sayings.[1]

The world was made for man, though he was the last-comer among its
creatures. This was design. He was to find all things ready for him.
God was the host who prepared dainty dishes, set the table, and then
led His guest to his seat. At the same time man's late appearance on
earth is to convey an admonition to humility. Let him beware of being
proud, lest he invite the retort that the gnat is older than he.[2]

The superiority of man to the other creatures is apparent in the very
manner of his creation, altogether different from theirs. He is the
only one who was created by the hand of God.[3] The rest sprang from
the word of God. The body of man is a microcosm, the whole world in
miniature, and the world in turn is a reflex of man. The hair upon his
head corresponds to the woods of the earth, his tears to a river, his
mouth to the ocean.[4] Also, the world resembles the ball of his eye:
the ocean that encircles the earth is like unto the white of the eye,
the dry land is the iris, Jerusalem the pupil, and the Temple the image
mirrored in the pupil of the eye.[5] But man is more than a mere image
of this world. He unites both heavenly and earthly qualities within
himself. In four he resembles the angels, in four the beasts. His power
of speech, his discriminating intellect, his upright walk, the glance
of his eye—they all make an angel of him. But, on the other hand, he
eats and drinks, secretes the waste matter in his body, propagates his
kind, and dies, like the beast of the field. Therefore God said before
the creation of man: "The celestials are not propagated, but they are
immortal; the beings on earth are propagated, but they die. I will
create man to be the union of the two, so that when he sins, when he
behaves like a beast, death shall overtake him; but if he refrains from
sin, he shall live forever."[6] God now bade all beings in heaven and
on earth contribute to the creation of man, and He Himself took part in
it. Thus they all will love man, and if he should sin, they will be
interested in his preservation.[7]

The whole world naturally was created for the pious, the God-fearing
man, whom Israel produces with the helpful guidance of the law of God
revealed to him.[8] It was, therefore, Israel who was taken into
special consideration at the time man was made. All other creatures
were instructed to change their nature, if Israel should ever need
their help in the course of his history. The sea was ordered to divide
before Moses, and the heavens to give ear to the words of the leader;
the sun and the moon were bidden to stand still before Joshua, the
ravens to feed Elijah, the fire to spare the three youths in the
furnace, the lion to do no harm to Daniel, the fish to spew forth
Jonah, and the heavens to open before Ezekiel.[9]

In His modesty, God took counsel with the angels, before the creation
of the world, regarding His intention of making man. He said: "For the
sake of Israel, I will create the world. As I shall make a division
between light and darkness, so I will in time to come do for Israel in
Egypt—thick darkness shall be over the land, and the children of Israel
shall have light in their dwellings; as I shall make a separation
between the waters under the firmament and the waters above the
firmament, so I will do for Israel—I will divide the waters for him
when he crosses the Red Sea; as on the third day I shall create plants,
so I will do for Israel—I will bring forth manna for him in the
wilderness; as I shall create luminaries to divide day from night, so I
will do for Israel—I will go before him by day in a pillar of cloud and
by night in a pillar of fire; as I shall create the fowl of the air and
the fishes of the sea, so I will do for Israel—I will bring quails for
him from the sea; and as I shall breathe the breath of life into the
nostrils of man, so I will do for Israel—I will give the Torah unto
him, the tree of life." The angels marvelled that so much love should
be lavished upon this people of Israel, and God told them: "On the
first day of creation, I shall make the heavens and stretch them out;
so will Israel raise up the Tabernacle as the dwelling-place of My
glory. On the second day, I shall put a division between the
terrestrial waters and the heavenly waters; so will he hang up a veil
in the Tabernacle to divide the Holy Place and the Most Holy. On the
third day, I shall make the earth put forth grass and herb; so will he,
in obedience to My commands, eat herbs on the first night of the
Passover, and prepare showbread for Me. On the fourth day, I shall make
the luminaries; so will he make a golden candlestick for Me. On the
fifth day, I shall create the birds; so will he fashion the cherubim
with outstretched wings. On the sixth day, I shall create man; so will
Israel set aside a man of the sons of Aaron as high priest for My
service."[10]

Accordingly, the whole of creation was conditional. God said to the
things He made on the first six days: "If Israel accepts the Torah, you
will continue and endure; otherwise, I shall turn everything back into
chaos again." The whole world was thus kept in suspense and dread until
the day of the revelation on Sinai, when Israel received and accepted
the Torah, and so fulfilled the condition made by God at the time when
He created the universe.[11]

THE ANGELS AND THE CREATION OF MAN

God in His wisdom hiving resolved to create man, He asked counsel of
all around Him before He proceeded to execute His purpose—an example to
man, be he never so great and distinguished, not to scorn the advice of
the humble and lowly. First God called upon heaven and earth, then upon
all other things He had created, and last upon the angels.

The angels were not all of one opinion. The Angel of Love favored the
creation of man, because he would be affectionate and loving; but the
Angel of Truth opposed it, because he would be full of lies. And while
the Angel of Justice favored it, because he would practice justice, the
Angel of Peace opposed it, because he would be quarrelsome.

To invalidate his protest, God cast the Angel of Truth down from heaven
to earth, and when the others cried out against such contemptuous
treatment of their companion, He said, "Truth will spring back out of
the earth."

The objections of the angels would have been much stronger, had they
known the whole truth about man. God had told them only about the
pious, and had concealed from them that there would be reprobates among
mankind, too. And yet, though they knew but half the truth, the angels
were nevertheless prompted to cry out: "What is man, that Thou art
mindful of him? And the son of man, that Thou visitest him?" God
replied: "The fowl of the air and the fish of the sea, what were they
created for? Of what avail a larder full of appetizing dainties, and no
guest to enjoy them?" And the angels could not but exclaim: "O Lord,
our Lord, how excellent is Thy name in all the earth! Do as is pleasing
in Thy sight."[12]

For not a few of the angels their opposition bore fatal consequences.
When God summoned the band under the archangel Michael, and asked their
opinion on the creation of man, they answered scornfully: "What is man,
that Thou art mindful of him? And the son of man, that Thou visitest
him?" God thereupon stretched forth His little finger, and all were
consumed by fire except their chief Michael. And the same fate befell
the band under the leadership of the archangel Gabriel; he alone of all
was saved from destruction.

The third band consulted was commanded by the archangel Labbiel. Taught
by the horrible fate of his predecessors, he warned his troop: "You
have seen what misfortune overtook the angels who said 'What is man,
that Thou art mindful of him?' Let us have a care not to do likewise,
lest we suffer the same dire punishment. For God will not refrain from
doing in the end what He has planned. Therefore it is advisable for us
to yield to His wishes." Thus warned, the angels spoke: "Lord of the
world, it is well that Thou hast thought of creating man. Do Thou
create him according to Thy will. And as for us, we will be his
attendants and his ministers, and reveal unto him all our secrets."
Thereupon God changed Labbiel's name to Raphael, the Rescuer, because
his host of angels had been rescued by his sage advice. He was
appointed the Angel of Healing, who has in his safe-keeping all the
celestial remedies, the types of the medical remedies used on
earth.[12]

THE CREATION OF ADAM

When at last the assent of the angels to the creation of man was given,
God said to Gabriel: "Go and fetch Me dust from the four corners of the
earth, and I will create man therewith." Gabriel went forth to do the
bidding of the Lord, but the earth drove him away, and refused to let
him gather up dust from it. Gabriel remonstrated: "Why, O Earth, dost
thou not hearken unto the voice of the Lord, who founded thee upon the
waters without props or pillars?" The earth replied, and said: "I am
destined to become a curse, and to be cursed through man, and if God
Himself does not take the dust from me, no one else shall ever do it."
When God heard this, He stretched out His hand, took of the dust of the
ground, and created the first man therewith.[14] Of set purpose the
dust was taken from all four corners of the earth, so that if a man
from the east should happen to die in the west, or a man from the west
in the east, the earth should not dare refuse to receive the dead, and
tell him to go whence he was taken. Wherever a man chances to die, and
wheresoever he is buried, there will he return to the earth from which
he sprang. Also, the dust was of various colors—red, black, white, and
green—red for the blood, black for the bowels, white for the bones and
veins, and green for the pale skin.

At this early moment the Torah interfered. She addressed herself to
God: "O Lord of the world! The world is Thine, Thou canst do with it as
seemeth good in Thine eyes. But the man Thou art now creating will be
few of days and full of trouble and sin. If it be not Thy purpose to
have forbearance and patience with him, it were better not to call him
into being." God replied, "Is it for naught I am called long-suffering
and merciful?"[15]

The grace and lovingkindness of God revealed themselves particularly in
His taking one spoonful of dust from the spot where in time to come the
altar would stand, saying, "I shall take man from the place of
atonement, that he may endure."[19]

THE SOUL OF MAN

The care which God exercised in fashioning every detail of the body of
man is as naught in comparison with His solicitude for the human soul.
The soul of man was created on the first day, for it is the spirit of
God moving upon the face of the waters. Thus, instead of being the
last, man is really the first work of creation.[17]

This spirit, or, to call it by its usual name, the soul of man,
possesses five different powers. By means of one of them she escapes
from the body every night, rises up to heaven, and fetches new life
thence for man.[18]

With the soul of Adam the souls of all the generations of men were
created. They are stored up in a promptuary, in the seventh of the
heavens, whence they are drawn as they are needed for human body after
human body.[19]

The soul and body of man are united in this way: When a woman has
conceived, the Angel of the Night, Lailah, carries the sperm before
God, and God decrees what manner of human being shall become of
it—whether it shall be male or female, strong or weak, rich or poor,
beautiful or ugly, long or short, fat or thin, and what all its other
qualities shall be. Piety and wickedness alone are left to the
determination of man himself. Then God makes a sign to the angel
appointed over the souls, saying, "Bring Me the soul so-and-so, which
is hidden in Paradise, whose name is so-and-so, and whose form is
so-and-so." The angel brings the designated soul, and she bows down
when she appears in the presence of God, and prostrates herself before
Him. At that moment, God issues the command, "Enter this sperm." The
soul opens her mouth, and pleads: "O Lord of the world! I am well
pleased with the world in which I have been living since the day on
which Thou didst call me into being. Why dost Thou now desire to have
me enter this impure sperm, I who am holy and pure, and a part of Thy
glory?" God consoles her: "The world which I shall cause thee to enter
is better than the world in which thou hast lived hitherto, and when I
created thee, it was only for this purpose." The soul is then forced to
enter the sperm against her will, and the angel carries her back to the
womb of the mother. Two angels are detailed to watch that she shall not
leave it, nor drop out of it, and a light is set above her, whereby the
soul can see from one end of the world to the other. In the morning an
angel carries her to Paradise, and shows her the righteous, who sit
there in their glory, with crowns upon their heads. The angel then says
to the soul, "Dost thou know who these are?" She replies in the
negative, and the angel goes on: "These whom thou beholdest here were
formed, like unto thee, in the womb of their mother. When they came
into the world, they observed God's Torah and His commandments.
Therefore they became the partakers of this bliss which thou seest them
enjoy. Know, also thou wilt one day depart from the world below, and if
thou wilt observe God's Torah, then wilt thou be found worthy of
sitting with these pious ones. But if not, thou wilt be doomed to the
other place."

In the evening, the angel takes the soul to hell, and there points out
the sinners whom the Angels of Destruction are smiting with fiery
scourges, the sinners all the while crying out Woe! Woe! but no mercy
is shown unto them. The angel then questions the soul as before, "Dost
thou know who these are?" and as before the reply is negative. The
angel continues: "These who are consumed with fire were created like
unto thee. When they were put into the world, they did not observe
God's Torah and His commandments. Therefore have they come to this
disgrace which thou seest them suffer. Know, thy destiny is also to
depart from the world. Be just, therefore, and not wicked, that thou
mayest gain the future world."

Between morning and evening the angel carries the soul around, and
shows her where she will live and where she will die, and the place
where she will buried, and he takes her through the whole world, and
points out the just and the sinners and all things. In the evening, he
replaces her in the womb of the mother, and there she remains for nine
months.

When the time arrives for her to emerge from the womb into the open
world, the same angel addresses the soul, "The time has come for thee
to go abroad into the open world." The soul demurs, "Why dost thou want
to make me go forth into the open world?" The angel replies: "Know that
as thou wert formed against thy will, so now thou wilt be born against
thy will, and against thy will thou shalt die, and against thy will
thou shalt give account of thyself before the King of kings, the Holy
One, blessed be He." But the soul is reluctant to leave her place. Then
the angel fillips the babe on the nose, extinguishes the light at his
head, and brings him forth into the world against his will. Immediately
the child forgets all his soul has seen and learnt, and he comes into
the world crying, for he loses a place of shelter and security and
rest.

When the time arrives for man to quit this world, the same angel
appears and asks him, "Dost thou recognize me?" And man replies, "Yes;
but why dost thou come to me to-day, and thou didst come on no other
day?" The angel says, "To take thee away from the world, for the time
of thy departure has arrived." Then man falls to weeping, and his voice
penetrates to all ends of the world, yet no creature hears his voice,
except the cock alone. Man remonstrates with the angel, "From two
worlds thou didst take me, and into this world thou didst bring me."
But the angel reminds him: "Did I not tell thee that thou wert formed
against thy will, and thou wouldst be born against thy will, and
against thy will thou wouldst die? And against thy will thou wilt have
to give account and reckoning of thyself before the Holy One, blessed
be He."[20]

THE IDEAL MAN

Like all creatures formed on the six days of creation, Adam came from
the hands of the Creator fully and completely developed. He was not
like a child, but like a man of twenty years of age.[21] The dimensions
of his body were gigantic, reaching from heaven to earth, or, what
amounts to the same, from east to west.[22] Among later generations of
men, there were but few who in a measure resembled Adam in his
extraordinary size and physical perfections. Samson possessed his
strength, Saul his neck, Absalom his hair, Asahel his fleetness of
foot, Uzziah his forehead, Josiah his nostrils, Zedekiah his eyes, and
Zerubbabel his voice. History shows that these physical excellencies
were no blessings to many of their possessors; they invited the ruin of
almost all. Samson's extraordinary strength caused his death; Saul
killed himself by cutting his neck with his own sword; while speeding
swiftly, Asahel was pierced by Abner's spear; Absalom was caught up by
his hair in an oak, and thus suspended met his death; Uzziah was
smitten with leprosy upon his forehead; the darts that killed Josiah
entered through his nostrils, and Zedekiah's eyes were blinded.[23]

The generality of men inherited as little of the beauty as of the
portentous size of their first father. The fairest women compared with
Sarah are as apes compared with a human being. Sarah's relation to Eve
is the same, and, again, Eve was but as an ape compared with Adam. His
person was so handsome that the very sole of his foot obscured the
splendor of the sun.[24]

His spiritual qualities kept pace with his personal charm, for God had
fashioned his soul with particular care. She is the image of God, and
as God fills the world, so the soul fills the human body; as God sees
all things, and is seen by none, so the soul sees, but cannot be seen;
as God guides the world, so the soul guides the body; as God in His
holiness is pure, so is the soul; and as God dwells in secret, so doth
the soul.[25]

When God was about to put a soul into Adam's clod-like body, He said:
"At which point shall I breathe the soul into him? Into the mouth? Nay,
for he will use it to speak ill of his fellow-man. Into the eyes? With
them he will wink lustfully. Into the ears? They will hearken to
slander and blasphemy. I will breathe her into his nostrils; as they
discern the unclean and reject it, and take in the fragrant, so the
pious will shun sin, and will cleave to the words of the Torah"[26]

The perfections of Adam's soul showed themselves as soon as he received
her, indeed, while he was still without life. In the hour that
intervened between breathing a soul into the first man and his becoming
alive, God revealed the whole history of mankind to him. He showed him
each generation and its leaders; each generation and its prophets; each
generation and its teachers; each generation and its scholars; each
generation and its statesmen; each generation and its judges; each
generation and its pious members; each generation and its average,
commonplace members; and each generation and its impious members. The
tale of their years, the number of their days, the reckoning of their
hours, and the measure of their steps, all were made known unto
him.[27]

Of his own free will Adam relinquished seventy of his allotted years.
His appointed span was to be a thousand years, one of the Lord's days.
But he saw that only a single minute of life was apportioned to the
great soul of David, and he made a gift of seventy years to her,
reducing his own years to nine hundred and thirty.'

The wisdom of Adam displayed itself to greatest advantage when he gave
names to the animals. Then it appeared that God, in combating the
arguments of the angels that opposed the creation of man, had spoken
well, when He insisted that man would possess more wisdom than they
themselves. When Adam was barely an hour old, God assembled the whole
world of animals before him and the angels. The latter were called upon
to name the different kinds, but they were not equal to the task. Adam,
however, spoke without hesitation: "O Lord of the world! The proper
name for this animal is ox, for this one horse, for this one lion, for
this one camel." And so he called all in turn by name, suiting the name
to the peculiarity of the animal. Then God asked him what his name was
to be, and he said Adam, because he had been created out of Adamah,
dust of the earth. Again, God asked him His own name, and he said:
"Adonai, Lord, because Thou art Lord over all creatures"—the very name
God had given unto Himself, the name by which the angels call Him, the
name that will remain immutable evermore.[29] But without the gift of
the holy spirit, Adam could not have found names for all; he was in
very truth a prophet, and his wisdom a prophetic quality.[30]

The names of the animals were not the only inheritance handed down by
Adam to the generations after him, for mankind owes all crafts to him,
especially the art of writing, and he was the inventor of all the
seventy languages.[31] And still another task he accomplished for his
descendants. God showed Adam the whole earth, and Adam designated what
places were to be settled later by men, and what places were to remain
waste.[32]

THE FALL OF SATAN

The extraordinary qualities with which Adam was blessed, physical and
spiritual as well, aroused the envy of the angels. They attempted to
consume him with fire, and he would have perished, had not the
protecting hand of God rested upon him, and established peace between
him and the heavenly host.[33] In particular, Satan was jealous of the
first man, and his evil thoughts finally led to his fall. After Adam
had been endowed with a soul, God invited all the angels to come and
pay him reverence and homage. Satan, the greatest of the angels in
heaven, with twelve wings, instead of six like all the others, refused
to pay heed to the behest of God, saying, "Thou didst create us angels
from the splendor of the Shekinah, and now Thou dost command us to cast
ourselves down before the creature which Thou didst fashion out of the
dust of the ground!" God answered, "Yet this dust of the ground has
more wisdom and understanding than thou." Satan demanded a trial of wit
with Adam, and God assented thereto, saying: "I have created beasts,
birds, and reptiles, I shall have them all come before thee and before
Adam. If thou art able to give them names, I shall command Adam to show
honor unto thee, and thou shalt rest next to the Shekinah of My glory.
But if not, and Adam calls them by the names I have assigned to them,
then thou wilt be subject to Adam, and he shall have a place in My
garden, and cultivate it." Thus spake God, and He betook Himself to
Paradise, Satan following Him. When Adam beheld God, he said to his
wife, "O come, let us worship and bow down; let us kneel before the
Lord our Maker." Now Satan attempted to assign names to the animals. He
failed with the first two that presented themselves, the ox and the
cow. God led two others before him, the camel and the donkey, with the
same result. Then God turned to Adam, and questioned him regarding the
names of the same animals, framing His questions in such wise that the
first letter of the first word was the same as the first letter of the
name of the animal standing before him. Thus Adam divined the proper
name, and Satan was forced to acknowledge the superiority of the first
man. Nevertheless he broke out in wild outcries that reached the
heavens, and he refused to do homage unto Adam as he had been
bidden.[34] The host of angels led by him did likewise, in spite of the
urgent representations of Michael, who was the first to prostrate
himself before Adam in order to show a good example to the other
angels. Michael addressed Satan: "Give adoration to the image of God!
But if thou doest it not, then the Lord God will break out in wrath
against thee." Satan replied: "If He breaks out in wrath against me, I
will exalt my throne above the stars of God, I will be like the Most
High!" At once God flung Satan and his host out of heaven, down to the
earth, and from that moment dates the enmity between Satan and man.'

WOMAN

When Adam opened his eyes the first time, and beheld the world about
him, he broke into praise of God, "How great are Thy works, O Lord!"
But his admiration for the world surrounding him did not exceed the
admiration all creatures conceived for Adam. They took him to be their
creator, and they all came to offer him adoration. But he spoke: "Why
do you come to worship me? Nay, you and I together will acknowledge the
majesty and the might of Him who hath created us all. 'The Lord
reigneth,'" he continued, "'He is apparelled with majesty.'"[36]

And not alone the creatures on earth, even the angels thought Adam the
lord of all, and they were about to salute him with "Holy, holy, holy,
is the Lord of hosts," when God caused sleep to fall upon him, and then
the angels knew that he was but a human being.[37]

The purpose of the sleep that enfolded Adam was to give him a wife, so
that the human race might develop, and all creatures recognize the
difference between God and man. When the earth heard what God had
resolved to do, it began to tremble and quake. "I have not the
strength," it said, "to provide food for the herd of Adam's
descendants." But God pacified it with the words, "I and thou together,
we will find food for the herd." Accordingly, time was divided between
God and the earth; God took the night, and the earth took the day.
Refreshing sleep nourishes and strengthens man, it affords him life and
rest, while the earth brings forth produce with the help of God, who
waters it. Yet man must work the earth to earn his food.[38]

The Divine resolution to bestow a companion on Adam met the wishes of
man, who had been overcome by a feeling of isolation when the animals
came to him in pairs to be named.[39] To banish his loneliness, Lilith
was first given to Adam as wife. Like him she had been created out of
the dust of the ground. But she remained with him only a short time,
because she insisted upon enjoying full equality with her husband. She
derived her rights from their identical origin. With the help of the
Ineffable Name, which she pronounced, Lilith flew away from Adam, and
vanished in the air. Adam complained before God that the wife He had
given him had deserted him, and God sent forth three angels to capture
her. They found her in the Red Sea, and they sought to make her go back
with the threat that, unless she went, she would lose a hundred of her
demon children daily by death. But Lilith preferred this punishment to
living with Adam. She takes her revenge by injuring babes—baby boys
during the first night of their life, while baby girls are exposed to
her wicked designs until they are twenty days old. The only way to ward
off the evil is to attach an amulet bearing the names of her three
angel captors to the children, for such had been the agreement between
them.[40]

The woman destined to become the true companion of man was taken from
Adam's body, for "only when like is joined unto like the union is
indissoluble."[41] The creation of woman from man was possible because
Adam originally had two faces, which were separated at the birth of
Eve.[42]

When God was on the point of making Eve, He said: "I will not make her
from the head of man, lest she carry her head high in arrogant pride;
not from the eye, lest she be wanton-eyed; not from the ear, lest she
be an eavesdropper; not from the neck, lest she be insolent; not from
the mouth, lest she be a tattler; not from the heart, lest she be
inclined to envy; not from the hand, lest she be a meddler; not from
the foot, lest she be a gadabout. I will form her from a chaste portion
of the body," and to every limb and organ as He formed it, God said,
"Be chaste! Be chaste!" Nevertheless, in spite of the great caution
used, woman has all the faults God tried to obviate. The daughters of
Zion were haughty and walked with stretched forth necks and wanton
eyes; Sarah was an eavesdropper in her own tent, when the angel spoke
with Abraham; Miriam was a talebearer, accusing Moses; Rachel was
envious of her sister Leah; Eve put out her hand to take the forbidden
fruit, and Dinah was a gadabout.[43]

The physical formation of woman is far more complicated than that of
man, as it must be for the function of child-bearing, and likewise the
intelligence of woman matures more quickly than the intelligence of
man.[44] Many of the physical and psychical differences between the two
sexes must be attributed to the fact that man was formed from the
ground and woman from bone. Women need perfumes, while men do not; dust
of the ground remains the same no matter how long it is kept; flesh,
however, requires salt to keep it in good condition. The voice of women
is shrill, not so the voice of men; when soft viands are cooked, no
sound is heard, but let a bone be put in a pot, and at once it
crackles. A man is easily placated, not so a woman; a few drops of
water suffice to soften a clod of earth; a bone stays hard, and if it
were to soak in water for days. The man must ask the woman to be his
wife, and not the woman the man to be her husband, because it is man
who has sustained the loss of his rib, and he sallies forth to make
good his loss again. The very differences between the sexes in garb and
social forms go back to the origin of man and woman for their reasons.
Woman covers her hair in token of Eve's having brought sin into the
world; she tries to hide her shame; and women precede men in a funeral
cortege, because it was woman who brought death into the world. And the
religious commands addressed to women alone are connected with the
history of Eve. Adam was the heave offering of the world, and Eve
defiled it. As expiation, all women are commanded to separate a heave
offering from the dough. And because woman extinguished the light of
man's soul, she is bidden to kindle the Sabbath light.[45]

Adam was first made to fall into a deep sleep before the rib for Eve
was taken from his side. For, had he watched her creation, she would
not have awakened love in him. To this day it is true that men do not
appreciate the charms of women whom they have known and observed from
childhood up. Indeed, God had created a wife for Adam before Eve, but
he would not have her, because she had been made in his presence.
Knowing well all the details of her formation, he was repelled by
her.[46] But when he roused himself from his profound sleep, and saw
Eve before him in all her surprising beauty and grace, he exclaimed,
"This is she who caused my heart to throb many a night!" Yet he
discerned at once what the nature of woman was. She would, he knew,
seek to carry her point with man either by entreaties and tears, or
flattery and caresses. He said, therefore, "This is my never-silent
bell!"[47]

The wedding of the first couple was celebrated with pomp never repeated
in the whole course of history since. God Himself, before presenting
her to Adam, attired and adorned Eve as a bride. Yea, He appealed to
the angels, saying: "Come, let us perform services of friendship for
Adam and his helpmate, for the world rests upon friendly services, and
they are more pleasing in My sight than the sacrifices Israel will
offer upon the altar." The angels accordingly surrounded the marriage
canopy, and God pronounced the blessings upon the bridal couple, as the
Hazan does under the Huppah. The angels then danced and played upon
musical instruments before Adam and Eve in their ten bridal chambers of
gold, pearls, and precious stones, which God had prepared for them.

Adam called his wife Ishah, and himself he called Ish, abandoning the
name Adam, which he had borne before the creation of Eve, for the
reason that God added His own name Yah to the names of the man and the
woman—Yod to Ish and He to Ishah—to indicate that as long as they
walked in the ways of God and observed His commandments, His name would
shield them against all harm. But if they went astray, His name would
be withdrawn, and instead of Ish there would remain Esh, fire, a fire
issuing from each and consuming the other.[48]

ADAM AND EVE IN PARADISE

The Garden of Eden was the abode of the first man and woman, and the
souls of all men must pass through it after death, before they reach
their final destination. For the souls of the departed must go through
seven portals before they arrive in the heaven 'Arabot. There the souls
of the pious are transformed into angels, and there they remain
forever, praising God and feasting their sight upon the glory of the
Shekinah. The first portal is the Cave of Machpelah, in the vicinity of
Paradise, which is under the care and supervision of Adam. If the soul
that presents herself at the portal is worthy, he calls out, "Make
room! Thou art welcome!" The soul then proceeds until she arrives at
the gate of Paradise guarded by the cherubim and the flaming sword. If
she is not found worthy, she is consumed by the sword; otherwise she
receives a pass-bill, which admits her to the terrestrial Paradise.
Therein is a pillar of smoke and light extending from Paradise to the
gate of heaven, and it depends upon the character of the soul whether
she can climb upward on it and reach heaven. The third portal, Zebul,
is at the entrance of heaven. If the soul is worthy, the guard opens
the portal and admits her 'to the heavenly Temple. Michael presents her
to God, and conducts her to the seventh portal, 'Arabot, within which
the souls of the pious, changed to angels, praise the Lord, and feed on
the glory of the Shekinah.[49]

In Paradise stand the tree of life and the tree of knowledge, the
latter forming a hedge about the former. Only he who has cleared a path
for himself through the tree of knowledge can come close to the tree of
life, which is so huge that it would take a man five hundred years to
traverse a distance equal to the diameter of the trunk, and no less
vast is the space shaded by its crown of branches. From beneath it
flows forth the water that irrigates the whole earth,[50] parting
thence into four streams, the Ganges, the Nile, the Tigris, and the
Euphrates.[51] But it was only during the days of creation that the
realm of plants looked to the waters of the earth for nourishment.
Later on God made the plants dependent upon the rain, the upper waters.
The clouds rise from earth to heaven, where water is poured into them
as from a conduit.[52] The plants began to feel the effect of the water
only after Adam was created. Although they had been brought forth on
the third day, God did not permit them to sprout and appear above the
surface of the earth, until Adam prayed to Him to give food unto them,
for God longs for the prayers of the pious.[53]

Paradise being such as it was, it was, naturally, not necessary for
Adam to work the land. True, the Lord God put the man into the Garden
of Eden to dress it and to keep it, but that only means he is to study
the Torah there and fulfil the commandments of God.[54] There were
especially six commandments which every human being is expected to
heed: man should not worship idols; nor blaspheme God; nor commit
murder, nor incest, nor theft and robbery; and all generations have the
duty of instituting measures of law and order.[55] One more such
command there was, but it was a temporary injunction. Adam was to eat
only the green things of the field. But the prohibition against the use
of animals for food was revoked in Noah's time, after the deluge.
Nevertheless, Adam was not cut off from the enjoyment of meat dishes.
Though he was not permitted to slaughter animals for the appeasing of
his appetite, the angels brought him meat and wine, serving him like
attendants.[56] And as the angels ministered to his wants, so also the
animals. They were wholly under his dominion, and their food they took
out of his hand and out of Eve's.[57] In all respects, the animal world
had a different relation to Adam from their relation to his
descendants. Not only did they know the language of man,[58] but they
respected the image of God, and they feared the first human couple, all
of which changed into the opposite after the fall of man.[59]

THE FALL OF MAN

Among the animals the serpent was notable. Of all of them he had the
most excellent qualities, in some of which he resembled man. Like man
he stood upright upon two feet, and in height he was equal to the
camel. Had it not been for the fall of man, which brought misfortune to
them, too, one pair of serpents would have sufficed to perform all the
work man has to do, and, besides, they would have supplied him with
silver, gold, gems, and pearls. As a matter of fact, it was the very
ability of the serpent that led to the ruin of man and his own ruin.
His superior mental gifts caused him to become an infidel. It likewise
explains his envy of man, especially of his conjugal relations. Envy
made him meditate ways and means of bringing about the death of
Adam.[60] He was too well acquainted with the character of the man to
attempt to exercise tricks of persuasion upon him, and he approached
the woman, knowing that women are beguiled easily. The conversation
with Eve was cunningly planned, she could not but be caught in a trap.
The serpent began, "Is it true that God hath said, Ye shall not eat of
every tree in the garden?" "We may," rejoined Eve, "eat of the fruit of
all the trees in the garden, except that which is in the midst of the
garden, and that we may not even touch, lest we be stricken with
death." She spoke thus, because in his zeal to guard her against the
transgressing of the Divine command, Adam had forbidden Eve to touch
the tree, though God had mentioned only the eating of the fruit. It
remains a truth, what the proverb says, "Better a wall ten hands high
that stands, than a wall a hundred ells high that cannot stand." It was
Adam's exaggeration that afforded the serpent the possibility of
persuading Eve to taste of the forbidden fruit. The serpent pushed Eve
against the tree, and said: "Thou seest that touching the tree has not
caused thy death. As little will it hurt thee to eat the fruit of the
tree. Naught but malevolence has prompted the prohibition, for as soon
as ye eat thereof, ye shall be as God. As He creates and destroys
worlds, so will ye have the power to create and destroy. As He doth
slay and revive, so will ye have the power to slay and revive.[61] He
Himself ate first of the fruit of the tree, and then He created the
world. Therefore doth He forbid you to eat thereof, lest you create
other worlds. Everyone knows that 'artisans of the same guild hate one
another.' Furthermore, have ye not observed that every creature hath
dominion over the creature fashioned before itself? The heavens were
made on the first day, and they are kept in place by the firmament made
on the second day. The firmament, in turn, is ruled by the plants, the
creation of the third day, for they take up all the water of the
firmament. The sun and the other celestial bodies, which were created
on the fourth day, have power over the world of plants. They can ripen
their fruits and flourish only through their influence. The creation of
the fifth day, the animal world, rules over the celestial spheres.
Witness the ziz, which can darken the sun with its pinions. But ye are
masters of the whole of creation, because ye were the last to be
created. Hasten now and eat of the fruit of the tree in the midst of
the garden, and become independent of God, lest He bring forth still
other creatures to bear rule over you."[62]

To give due weight to these words, the serpent began to shake the tree
violently and bring down its fruit. He ate thereof, saying: "As I do
not die of eating the fruit, so wilt thou not die." Now Eve could not
but say to herself, "All that my master"—so she called Adam—"commanded
me is but lies," and she determined to follow the advice of the
serpent.[63] Yet she could not bring herself to disobey the command of
God utterly. She made a compromise with her conscience. First she ate
only the outside skin of the fruit, and then, seeing that death did not
fell her, she ate the fruit itself.[64] Scarce had she finished, when
she saw the Angel of Death before her. Expecting her end to come
immediately, she resolved to make Adam eat of the forbidden fruit, too,
lest he espouse another wife after her death.[65] It required tears and
lamentations on her part to prevail upon Adam to take the baleful step.
Not yet satisfied, she gave of the fruit to all other living beings,
that they, too, might be subject to death.[66] All ate, and they all
are mortal, with the exception of the bird malham, who refused the
fruit, with the words: "Is it not enough that ye have sinned against
God, and have brought death to others? Must ye still come to me and
seek to persuade me into disobeying God's command, that I may eat and
die thereof? I will not do your bidding." A heavenly voice was heard
then to say to Adam and Eve: "To you was the command given. Ye did not
heed it; ye did transgress it, and ye did seek to persuade the bird
malham. He was steadfast, and he feared Me, although I gave him no
command. Therefore he shall never taste of death, neither he nor his
descendants—they all shall live forever in Paradise."[67]

Adam spoke to Eve: "Didst thou give me of the tree of which I forbade
thee to eat? Thou didst give me thereof, for my eyes are opened, and
the teeth in my mouth are set on edge." Eve made answer, "As my teeth
were set on edge, so may the teeth of all living beings be set on
edge."[68] The first result was that Adam and Eve became naked. Before,
their bodies had been overlaid with a horny skin, and enveloped with
the cloud of glory. No sooner had they violated the command given them
than the cloud of glory and the horny skin dropped from them, and they
stood there in their nakedness, and ashamed.[69] Adam tried to gather
leaves from the trees to cover part of their bodies, but he heard one
tree after the other say: "There is the thief that deceived his
Creator. Nay, the foot of pride shall not come against me, nor the hand
of the wicked touch me. Hence, and take no leaves from me!" Only the
fig-tree granted him permission to take of its leaves. That was because
the fig was the forbidden fruit itself. Adam had the same experience as
that prince who seduced one of the maid-ser vants in the palace. When
the king, his father, chased him out, he vainly sought a refuge with
the other maid-servants, but only she who had caused his disgrace would
grant him assistance.[70]

THE PUNISHMENT

As long as Adam stood naked, casting about for means of escape from his
embarrassment, God did not appear unto him, for one should not "strive
to see a man in the hour of his disgrace." He waited until Adam and Eve
had covered themselves with fig leaves.[71] But even before God spoke
to him, Adam knew what was impending. He heard the angels announce,
"God betaketh Himself unto those that dwell in Paradise." He heard
more, too. He heard what the angels were saying to one another about
his fall, and what they were saying to God. In astonishment the angels
exclaimed: "What! He still walks about in Paradise? He is not yet
dead?" Whereupon God: "I said to him, 'In the day that thou eatest
thereof, thou shalt surely die!' Now, ye know not what manner of day I
meant—one of My days of a thousand years, or one of your days. I will
give him one of My days. He shall have nine hundred and thirty years to
live, and seventy to leave to his descendants."[72]

When Adam and Eve heard God approaching, they hid among the trees—which
would not have been possible before the fall. Before he committed his
trespass, Adam's height was from the heavens to the earth, but
afterward it was reduced to one hundred ells.[73] Another consequence
of his sin was the fear Adam felt when he heard the voice of God:
before his fall it had not disquieted him in the least.[74] Hence it
was that when Adam said, "I heard Thy voice in the garden, and I was
afraid," God replied, "Aforetime thou wert not afraid, and now thou art
afraid?"[75]

God refrained from reproaches at first. Standing at the gate of
Paradise, He but asked, "Where art thou, Adam?" Thus did God desire to
teach man a rule of polite behavior, never to enter the house of
another without announcing himself.[76] It cannot be denied, the words
"Where art thou?" were pregnant with meaning. They were intended to
bring home to Adam the vast difference between his latter and his
former state—between his supernatural size then and his shrunken size
now; between the lordship of God over him then and the lordship of the
serpent over him now.[77] At the same time, God wanted to give Adam the
opportunity of repenting of his sin, and he would have received Divine
forgiveness for it. But so far from repenting of it, Adam slandered
God, and uttered blasphemies against Him.[78] When God asked him, "Hast
thou eaten of the tree whereof I commanded thee thou shouldst not eat?"
he did not confess his sin, but excused himself with the words: "O Lord
of the world! As long as I was alone, I did not fall into sin, but as
soon as this woman came to me, she tempted me." God replied: "I gave
her unto thee as a help, and thou art ungrateful when thou accusest
her, saying, 'She gave me of the tree.' Thou shouldst not have obeyed
her, for thou art the head, and not she."[79] God, who knows all
things, had foreseen exactly this, and He had not created Eve until
Adam had asked Him for a helpmate, so that he might not have apparently
good reason for reproaching God with having created woman.[80]

As Adam tried to shift the blame for his misdeed from himself, so also
Eve. She, like her husband, did not confess her transgression and pray
for pardon, which would have been granted to her.[81] Gracious as God
is, He did not pronounce the doom upon Adam and Eve until they showed
themselves stiff-necked. Not so with the serpent. God inflicted the
curse upon the serpent without hearing his defense; for the serpent is
a villain, and the wicked are good debaters. If God had questioned him,
the serpent would have answered: "Thou didst give them a command, and I
did contradict it. Why did they obey me, and not Thee?"[82] Therefore
God did not enter into an argument with the serpent, but straightway
decreed the following ten punishments: The mouth of the serpent was
closed, and his power of speech taken away; his hands and feet were
hacked off; the earth was given him as food; he must suffer great pain
in sloughing his skin; enmity is to exist between him and man; if he
eats the choicest viands, or drinks the sweetest beverages, they all
change into dust in his mouth; the pregnancy of the female serpent
lasts seven years; men shall seek to kill him as soon as they catch
sight of him; even in the future world, where all beings will be
blessed, he will not escape the punishment decreed for him; he will
vanish from out of the Holy Land if Israel walks in the ways of
God.[83]

Furthermore, God spake to the serpent: "I created thee to be king over
all animals, cattle and the beasts of the field alike; but thou wast
not satisfied. Therefore thou shalt be cursed above all cattle and
above every beast of the field. I created thee of upright posture; but
thou wast not satisfied. Therefore thou shalt go upon thy belly. I
created thee to eat the same food as man; but thou wast not satisfied.
Therefore thou shalt eat dust all the days of thy life. Thou didst seek
to cause the death of Adam in order to espouse his wife. Therefore I
will put enmity between thee and the woman." How true it is—he who
lusts after what is not his due, not only does he not attain his
desire, but he also loses what he has!

As angels had been present when the doom was pronounced upon the
serpent—for God had convoked a Sanhedrin of seventy-one angels when He
sat in judgment upon him—so the execution of the decree against him was
entrusted to angels. They descended from heaven, and chopped off his
hands and feet. His suffering was so great that his agonized cries
could be heard from one end of the world to the other.[84]

The verdict against Eve also consisted of ten curses, the effect of
which is noticeable to this day in the physical, spiritual, and social
state of woman.[85] It was not God Himself who announced her fate to
Eve. The only woman with whom God ever spoke was Sarah. In the case of
Eve, He made use of the services of an interpreter.[86]

Finally, also the punishment of Adam was tenfold: he lost his celestial
clothing—God stripped it off him; in sorrow he was to earn his daily
bread; the food he ate was to be turned from good into bad; his
children were to wander from land to land; his body was to exude sweat;
he was to have an evil inclination; in death his body was to be a prey
of the worms; animals were to have power over him, in that they could
slay him; his days were to be few and full of trouble; in the end he
was to render account of all his doings on earth.

These three sinners were not the only ones to have punishment dealt out
to them. The earth fared no better, for it had been guilty of various
misdemeanors. In the first place, it had not entirely heeded the
command of God given on the third day, to bring forth "tree of fruit."
What God had desired was a tree the wood of which was to be as pleasant
to the taste as the fruit thereof. The earth, however, produced a tree
bearing fruit, the tree itself not being edible.[88] Again, the earth
did not do its whole duty in connection with the sin of Adam. God had
appointed the sun and the earth witnesses to testify against Adam in
case he committed a trespass. The sun, accordingly, had grown dark the
instant Adam became guilty of disobedience, but the earth, not knowing
how to take notice of Adam's fall, disregarded it altogether.[89] The
earth also had to suffer a tenfold punishment: independent before, she
was hereafter to wait to be watered by the rain from above; sometimes
the fruits of the earth fail; the grain she brings forth is stricken
with blasting and mildew; she must produce all sorts of noxious vermin;
thenceforth she was to be divided into valleys and mountains; she must
grow barren trees, bearing no fruit; thorns and thistles sprout from
her; much is sown in the earth, but little is harvested; in time to
come the earth will have to disclose her blood, and shall no more cover
her slain; and, finally, she shall, one day, "wax old like a
garment."[90]

When Adam heard the words, "Thorns and thistles shall it bring forth,"
concerning the ground, a sweat broke out on his face, and he said:
"What! Shall I and my cattle eat from the same manger?" The Lord had
mercy upon him, and spoke, "In view of the sweat of thy face, thou
shalt eat bread."[91]

The earth is not the only thing created that was made to suffer through
the sin of Adam. The same fate overtook the moon. When the serpent
seduced Adam and Eve, and exposed their nakedness, they wept bitterly,
and with them wept the heavens, and the sun and the stars, and all
created beings and things up to the throne of God. The very angels and
the celestial beings were grieved by the trans gression of Adam. The
moon alone laughed, wherefore God grew wroth, and obscured her light.
Instead of shining steadily like the sun, all the length of the day,
she grows old quickly, and must be born and reborn, again and
again.[92] The callous conduct of the moon offended God, not only by
way of contrast with the compassion of all other creatures, but because
He Himself was full of pity for Adam and his wife. He made clothes for
them out of the skin stripped from the serpent.[93] He would have done
even more. He would have permitted them to remain in Paradise, if only
they had been penitent. But they refused to repent, and they had to
leave, lest their godlike understanding urge them to ravage the tree of
life, and they learn to live forever. As it was, when God dismissed
them from Paradise, He did not allow the Divine quality of justice to
prevail entirely. He associated mercy with it. As they left, He said:
"O what a pity that Adam was not able to observe the command laid upon
him for even a brief span of time!"

To guard the entrance to Paradise, God appointed the cherubim, called
also the ever-turning sword of flames, because angels can turn
themselves from one shape into another at need.[94] Instead of the tree
of life, God gave Adam the Torah, which likewise is a tree of life to
them that lay hold upon her, and he was permitted to take up his abode
in the vicinity of Paradise in the east.[95]

Sentence pronounced upon Adam and Eve and the serpent, the Lord
commanded the angels to turn the man and the woman out of Paradise.
They began to weep and supplicate bitterly, and the angels took pity
upon them and left the Divine command unfulfilled, until they could
petition God to mitigate His severe verdict. But the Lord was
inexorable, saying, "Was it I that committed a trespass, or did I
pronounce a false judgment?" Also Adam's prayer, to be given of the
fruit of the tree of life, was turned aside, with the promise, however,
that if he would lead a pious life, he would be given of the fruit on
the day of resurrection, and he would then live forever.

Seeing that God had resolved unalterably, Adam began to weep again and
implore the angels to grant him at least permission to take
sweet-scented spices with him out of Paradise, that outside, too, he
might be able to bring offerings unto God, and his prayers be accepted
before the Lord. Thereupon the angels came before God, and spake: "King
unto everlasting, command Thou us to give Adam sweet-scented spices of
Paradise," and God heard their prayer. Thus Adam gathered saffron,
nard, calamus, and cinnamon, and all sorts of seeds besides for his
sustenance. Laden with these, Adam and Eve left Paradise, and came upon
earth.[96] They had enjoyed the splendors of Paradise but a brief span
of time—but a few hours. It was in the first hour of the sixth day of
creation that God conceived the idea of creating man; in the second
hour, He took counsel with the angels; in the third, He gathered the
dust for the body of man; in the fourth, He formed Adam; in the fifth,
He clothed him with skin; in the sixth, the soulless shape was
complete, so that it could stand upright; in the seventh, a soul was
breathed into it; in the eighth, man was led into Paradise; in the
ninth, the Divine command prohibiting the fruit of the tree in the
midst of the garden was issued to him; in the tenth, he transgressed
the command; in the eleventh, he was judged; and in the twelfth hour of
the day, he was cast out of Paradise, in atonement for his sin.

This eventful day was the first of the month of Tishri. Therefore God
spoke to Adam: "Thou shalt be the prototype of thy children. As thou
hast been judged by Me on this day and absolved, so thy children Israel
shall be judged by Me on this New Year's Day, and they shall be
absolved."[97]

Each day of creation brought forth three things: the first, heaven,
earth, and light; the second, the firmament, Gehenna, and the angels;
the third, trees, herbs, and Paradise; the fourth, sun, moon, and
stars; and the fifth, fishes, birds, and leviathan. As God intended to
rest on the seventh day, the Sabbath, the sixth day had to do double
duty. It brought forth six creations: Adam, Eve, cattle, reptiles, the
beasts of the field, and demons. The demons were made shortly before
the Sabbath came in, and they are, therefore, incorporeal spirits—the
Lord had no time to create bodies for them.[98]

In the twilight, between the sixth day and the Sabbath, ten creations
were, brought forth: the rainbow, invisible until Noah's time; the
manna; watersprings, whence Israel drew water for his thirst in the
desert; the writing upon the two tables of stone given at Sinai; the
pen with which the writing was written; the two tables themselves; the
mouth of Balaam's she-ass; the grave of Moses; the cave in which Moses
and Elijah dwelt; and the rod of Aaron, with its blossoms and its ripe
almonds.[99]

SABBATH IN HEAVEN

Before the world was created, there was none to praise God and know
Him. Therefore He created the angels and the holy Hayyot, the heavens
and their host, and Adam as well. They all were to praise and glorify
their Creator. During the week of creation, however, there was no
suitable time to proclaim the splendor and praise of the Lord. Only on
the Sabbath, when all creation rested, the beings on earth and in
heaven, all together, broke into song and adoration when God ascended
His throne and sate upon it.[100] It was the Throne of Joy upon which
He sate, and He had all the angels pass before Him—the angel of the
water, the angel of the rivers, the angel of the mountains, the angel
of the hills, the angel of the abysses, the angel of the deserts, the
angel of the sun, the angel of the moon, the angel of the Pleiades, the
angel of Orion, the angel of the herbs, the angel of Paradise, the
angel of Gehenna, the angel of the trees, the angel of the reptiles,
the angel of the wild beasts, the angel of the domestic animals, the
angel of the fishes, the angel of the locusts, the angel of the birds,
the chief angel of the angels, the angel of each heaven, the chief
angel of each division of the heavenly hosts, the chief angel of the
holy Hayyot, the chief angel of the cherubim, the chief angel of the
ofanim, and all the other splendid, terrible, and mighty angel chiefs.
They all appeared before God with great joy, laved in a stream of joy,
and they rejoiced and danced and sang, and extolled the Lord with many
praises and many instruments. The ministering angels began, "Let the
glory of the Lord endure forever!" And the rest of the angels took up
the song with the words, "Let the Lord rejoice in His works!" 'Arabot,
the seventh heaven, was filled with joy and glory, splendor and
strength, power and might and pride and magnificence and grandeur,
praise and jubilation, song and gladness, steadfastness and
righteousness, honor and adoration.

Then God bade the Angel of the Sabbath seat himself upon a throne of
glory, and He brought before him the chiefs of the angels of all the
heavens and all the abysses, and bade them dance and rejoice, saying,
"Sabbath it is unto the Lord!" and the exalted princes of the heavens
responded, "Unto the Lord it is Sabbath!" Even Adam was permitted to
ascend to the highest heaven, to take part in the rejoicing over the
Sabbath.

By bestowing Sabbath joy upon all beings, not excepting Adam, thus did
the Lord dedicate His creation. Seeing the majesty of the Sabbath, its
honor and greatness, and the joy it conferred upon all, being the fount
of all joy, Adam intoned a song of praise for the Sabbath day. Then God
said to him, "Thou singest a song of praise to the Sabbath day, and
singest none to Me, the God of the Sabbath?" Thereupon the Sabbath rose
from his seat, and prostrated himself before God, saying, "It is a good
thing to give thanks unto the Lord," and the whole of creation added,
"And to sing praises unto Thy Name, O Most High!"[101]

This was the first Sabbath, and this its celebration in heaven by God
and the angels. The angels were informed at the same time that in days
to come Israel would hallow the day in similar manner. God told them:
"I will set aside for Myself a people from among all the peoples. This
people will observe the Sabbath, and I will sanctify it to be My
people, and I will be God unto it. From all that I have seen, I have
chosen the seed of Israel wholly, and I have inscribed him as My
first-born son, and I sanctified him unto Myself unto all eternity, him
and the Sabbath, that he keep the Sabbath and hallow it from all
work."[102]

For Adam the Sabbath had a peculiar significance. When he was made to
depart out of Paradise in the twilight of the Sabbath eve, the angels
called after him, "Adam did not abide in his glory overnight!" Then the
Sabbath appeared before God as Adam's defender, and he spoke: "O Lord
of the world! During the six working days no creature was slain. If
Thou wilt begin now by slaying Adam, what will become of the sanctity
and the blessing of the Sabbath?" In this way Adam was rescued from the
fires of hell, the meet punishment for his sins, and in gratitude he
composed a psalm in honor of the Sabbath, which David later embodied in
his Psalter.[103]

Still another opportunity was given to Adam to learn and appreciate the
value of the Sabbath. The celestial light, whereby Adam could survey
the world from end to end, should properly have been made to disappear
immediately after his sin. But out of consideration for the Sabbath,
God had let this light continue to shine, and the angels, at sundown on
the sixth day, intoned a song of praise and thanksgiving to God, for
the radiant light shining through the night. Only with the going out of
the Sabbath day the celestial light ceased, to the consternation of
Adam, who feared that the serpent would attack him in the dark. But God
illumined his understanding, and he learned to rub two stones against
each other and produce light for his needs.[104]

The celestial light was but one of the seven precious gifts enjoyed by
Adam before the fall and to be granted to man again only in the
Messianic time. The others are the resplendence of his countenance;
life eternal; his tall stature; the fruits of the soil; the fruits of
the tree; and the luminaries of the sky, the sun and the moon, for in
the world to come the light of the moon shall be as the light of the
sun, and the light of the sun shall be sevenfold.[105]

ADAM'S REPENTANCE

Cast out of Paradise, Adam and Eve built a hut for themselves, and for
seven days they sat in it in great distress, mourning and lamenting. At
the end of the seven days, tormented by hunger, they came forth and
sought food. For seven other days, Adam journeyed up and down in the
land, looking for such dainties as he had enjoyed in Paradise. In vain;
he found nothing. Then Eve spoke to her husband: "My lord, if it please
thee, slay me. Mayhap God will then take thee back into Paradise, for
the Lord God became wroth with thee only on account of me." But Adam
rejected her plan with abhorrence, and both went forth again on the
search for food. Nine days passed, and still they found naught
resembling what they had had in Paradise. They saw only food fit for
cattle and beasts. Then Adam proposed: "Let us do penance, mayhap the
Lord God will forgive us and have pity on us, and give us something to
sustain our life." Knowing that Eve was not vigorous enough to undergo
the mortification of the flesh which he purposed to inflict upon
himself, he prescribed a penance for her different from his own. He
said to her: "Arise, and go to the Tigris, take a stone and stand upon
it in the deepest part of the river, where the water will reach as high
as thy neck. And let no speech issue forth from thy mouth, for we are
unworthy to supplicate God, our lips are unclean by reason of the
forbidden fruit of the tree. Remain in the water for thirty-seven
days."

For himself Adam ordained forty days of fasting, while he stood in the
river Jordan in the same way as Eve was to take up her stand in the
waters of the Tigris. After he had adjusted the stone in the middle of
the Jordan, and mounted it, with the waters surging up to his neck, he
said: "I adjure thee, O thou water of the Jordan! Afflict thyself with
me, and gather unto me all swimming creatures that live in thee. Let
them surround me and sorrow with me, and let them not beat their own
breasts with grief, but let them beat me. Not they have sinned, only I
alone!" Very soon they all came, the dwellers in the Jordan, and they
encompassed him, and from that moment the water of the Jordan stood
still and ceased from flowing.

The penance which Adam and Eve laid upon themselves awakened misgivings
in Satan. He feared God might forgive their sin, and therefore essayed
to hinder Eve in her purpose. After a lapse of eighteen days he
appeared unto her in the guise of an angel. As though in distress on
account of her, he began to cry, saying: "Step up out of the river, and
weep no longer. The Lord God hath heard your mourning, and your
penitence hath been accepted by Him. All the angels supplicated the
Lord in your behalf, and He hath sent me to fetch you out of the water
and give you the sustenance that you enjoyed in Paradise, and for which
you have been mourning." Enfeebled as she was by her penances and
mortifications, Eve yielded to the solicitations of Satan, and he led
her to where her husband was. Adam recognized him at once, and amid
tears he cried out: "O Eve, Eve, where now is thy penitence? How
couldst thou let our adversary seduce thee again—him who robbed us of
our sojourn in Paradise and all spiritual joy?" Thereupon Eve, too,
began to weep and cry out: "Woe unto thee, O Satan! Why strivest thou
against us without any reason? What have we done unto thee that thou
shouldst pursue us so craftily?" With a deep-fetched sigh, Satan told
them how that Adam, of whom he had been jealous, had been the real
reason of his fall. Having lost his glory through him, he had intrigued
to have him driven from Paradise.

When Adam heard the confession of Satan, he prayed to God: "O Lord my
God! In Thy hands is my life. Remove from me this adversary, who seeks
to deliver my soul to destruction, and grant me the glory he has
forfeited." Satan disappeared forthwith, but Adam continued his
penance, standing in the waters of the Jordan for forty days.[106]

While Adam stood in the river, he noticed that the days were growing
shorter, and he feared the world might be darkened on account of his
sin, and go under soon. To avert the doom, he spent eight days in
prayer and fasting. But after the winter solstice, when he saw that the
days grew longer again, he spent eight days in rejoicing, and in the
following year he celebrated both periods, the one before and the one
after the solstice. This is why the heathen celebrate the calends and
the saturnalia in honor of their gods, though Adam had consecrated
those days to the honor of God.[107]

The first time Adam witnessed the sinking of the sun be was also seized
with anxious fears. It happened at the conclusion of the Sabbath, and
Adam said, "Woe is me! For my sake, because I sinned, the world is
darkened, and it will again become void and without form. Thus will be
executed the punishment of death which God has pronounced against me!"
All the night he spent in tears, and Eve, too, wept as she sat opposite
to him. When day began to dawn, he understood that what he had deplored
was but the course of nature, and he brought an offering unto God, a
unicorn whose horn was created before his hoofs,[108] and he sacrificed
it on the spot on which later the altar was to stand in Jerusalem.[109]

THE BOOK OF RAZIEL

After Adam's expulsion from Paradise, he prayed to God in these words:
"O God, Lord of the world! Thou didst create the whole world unto the
honor and glory of the Mighty One, and Thou didst as was pleasing unto
Thee. Thy kingdom is unto all eternity, and Thy reign unto all
generations. Naught is hidden from Thee, and naught is concealed from
Thine eyes. Thou didst create me as Thy handiwork, and didst make me
the ruler over Thy creatures, that I might be the chief of Thy works.
But the cunning, accursed serpent seduced me with the tree of desire
and lusts, yea, he seduced the wife of my bosom. But Thou didst not
make known unto me what shall befall my children and the generations
after me. I know well that no human being can be righteous in Thine
eyes, and what is my strength that I should step before Thee with an
impudent face? I have no mouth wherewith to speak and no eye wherewith
to see, for I did sin and commit a trespass, and, by reason of my sins,
I was driven forth from Paradise. I must plough the earth whence I was
taken, and the other inhabitants of the earth, the beasts, no longer,
as once, stand in awe and fear of me. From the time I ate of the tree
of knowledge of good and evil, wisdom departed from me, and I am a fool
that knoweth naught, an ignorant man that understandeth not. Now, O
merciful and gracious God, I pray to Thee to turn again Thy compassion
to the head of Thy works, to the spirit which Thou didst instil into
him, and the soul Thou didst breathe into him. Meet me with Thy grace,
for Thou art gracious, slow to anger, and full of love. O that my
prayer would reach unto the throne of Thy glory, and my supplication
unto the throne of Thy mercy, and Thou wouldst incline to me with
lovingkindness. May the words of my mouth be acceptable, that Thou turn
not away from my petition. Thou wert from everlasting, and Thou wilt be
unto everlasting; Thou wert king, and Thou wilt ever be king. Now, have
Thou mercy upon the work of Thy hands. Grant me knowledge and
understanding, that I may know what shall befall me, and my posterity,
and all the generations that come after me, and what shall befall me on
every day and in every month, and mayest Thou not withhold from me the
help of Thy servants and of Thy angels."

On the third day after he had offered up this prayer, while he was
sitting on the banks of the river that flows forth out of Paradise,
there appeared to him, in the heat of the day, the angel Raziel,
bearing a book in his hand. The angel addressed Adam thus: "O Adam, why
art thou so fainthearted? Why art thou distressed and anxious? Thy
words were heard at the moment when thou didst utter thy supplication
and entreaties, and I have received the charge to teach thee pure words
and deep understanding, to make thee wise through the contents of the
sacred book in my hand, to know what will happen to thee until the day
of thy death. And all thy descendants and all the later generations, if
they will but read this book in purity, with a devout heart and an
humble mind, and obey its precepts, will become like unto thee. They,
too, will foreknow what things shall happen, and in what month and on
what day or in what night. All will be manifest to them—they will know
and understand whether a calamity will come, a famine or wild beasts,
floods or drought; whether there will be abundance of grain or dearth;
whether the wicked will rule the world; whether locusts will devastate
the land; whether the fruits will drop from the trees unripe; whether
boils will afflict men; whether wars will prevail, or diseases or
plagues among men and cattle; whether good is resolved upon in heaven,
or evil; whether blood will flow, and the death-rattle of the slain be
heard in the city. And now, Adam, come and give heed unto what I shall
tell thee regarding the manner of this book and its holiness."

Raziel, the angel, then read from the book, and when Adam heard the
words of the holy volume as they issued from the mouth of the angel, he
fell down affrighted. But the angel encouraged him. "Arise, Adam," he
said, "be of good courage, be not afraid, take the book from me and
keep it, for thou wilt draw knowledge from it thyself and become wise,
and thou wilt also teach its contents to all those who shall be found
worthy of knowing what it contains."

In the moment when Adam took the book, a flame of fire shot up from
near the river, and the angel rose heavenward with it. Then Adam knew
that he who had spoken to him was an angel of God, and it was from the
Holy King Himself that the book had come, and he used it in holiness
and purity. It is the book out of which all things worth knowing can be
learnt, and all mysteries, and it teaches also how to call upon the
angels and make them appear before men, and answer all their questions.
But not all alike can use the book, only he who is wise and
God-fearing, and resorts to it in holiness. Such an one is secure
against all wicked counsels, his life is serene, and when death takes
him from this world, he finds repose in a place where there are neither
demons nor evil spirits, and out of the hands of the wicked he is
quickly rescued.[110]

THE SICKNESS OF ADAM

When Adam had lived to be nine hundred and thirty years old, a sickness
seized him, and he felt that his days were drawing to an end. He
summoned all his descendants, and assembled them before the door of the
house of worship in which he had always offered his prayers to God, to
give them his last blessing. His family were astonished to find him
stretched out on the bed of sickness, for they did not know what pain
and suffering were.[111] They thought he was overcome with longing
after the fruits of Paradise, and for lack of them was depressed. Seth
announced his willingness to go to the gates of Paradise and beg God to
let one of His angels give him of its fruits. But Adam explained to
them what sickness and pain are, and that God had inflicted them upon
him as a punishment for his sin.[112] Adam suffered violently; tears
and groans were wrung from him. Eve sobbed, and said, "Adam, my lord,
give me the half of thy sickness, I will gladly bear it. Is it not on
account of me that this hath come upon thee? On account of me thou
undergoest pain and anguish."

Adam bade Eve go with Seth to the gates of Paradise and entreat God to
have mercy upon him, and send His angel to catch up some of the oil of
life flowing from the tree of His mercy and give it to his messengers.
The ointment would bring him rest, and banish the pain consuming him.
On his way to Paradise, Seth was attacked by a wild beast. Eve called
out to the assailant, "How durst thou lay hand on the image of God?"
The ready answer came: "It is thine own fault. Hadst thou not opened
thy mouth to eat of the forbidden fruit, my mouth would not be opened
now to destroy a human being." But Seth remonstrated: "Hold thy tongue!
Desist from the image of God until the day of judgment." And the beast
gave way, saying, "See, I refrain myself from the image of God," and it
slunk away to its covert.[113]

Arrived at the gates of Paradise, Eve and Seth began to cry bitterly,
and they besought God with many lamentations to give them oil from the
tree of His mercy. For hours they prayed thus. At last the archangel
Michael appeared, and informed them that he came as the messenger of
God to tell them that their petition could not be granted. Adam would
die in a few days, and as he was subject to death, so would be all his
descendants. Only at the time of the resurrection, and then only to the
pious, the oil of life would be dispensed, together with all the bliss
and all the delights of Paradise.[114] Returned to Adam, they reported
what had happened, and he said to Eve: "What misfortune didst thou
bring upon us when thou didst arouse great wrath! See, death is the
portion of all our race! Call hither our children and our children's
children, and tell them the manner of our sinning." And while Adam lay
prostrate upon the bed of pain, Eve told them the story of their
fall.[115]

EVE'S STORY OF THE FALL

After I was created, God divided Paradise and all the animals therein
between Adam and me. The east and the north were assigned to Adam,
together with the male animals. I was mistress of the west and the
south and all the female animals. Satan, smarting under the disgrace of
having been dismissed from the heavenly host, resolved to bring about
our ruin and avenge himself upon the cause of his discomfiture. He won
the serpent over to his side, and pointed out to him that before the
creation of Adam the animals could enjoy all that grew in Paradise, and
now they were restricted to the weeds. To drive Adam from Paradise
would therefore be for the good of all. The serpent demurred, for he
stood in awe of the wrath of God. But Satan calmed his fears, and said,
"Do thou but become my vessel,[117] and I shall speak a word through
thy mouth wherewith thou wilt succeed in seducing man."

The serpent thereupon suspended himself from the wall surrounding
Paradise, to carry on his conversation with me from without. And this
happened at the very moment when my two guardian angels had betaken
themselves to heaven to supplicate the Lord. I was quite alone
therefore, and when Satan assumed the appearance of an angel, bent over
the wall of Paradise, and intoned seraphic songs of praise, I was
deceived, and thought him an angel. A conversation was held between us,
Satan speaking through the mouth of the serpent:

"Art thou Eve?"

"Yes, it is I."

"What art thou doing in Paradise?"

"The Lord has put us here to cultivate it and eat of its fruits."

"That is good. Yet you eat not of all the trees."

"That we do, excepting a single one, the tree that stands in the midst
of Paradise. Concerning it alone, God has forbidden us to eat of it,
else, the Lord said, ye will die."

The serpent made every effort to persuade me that I had naught to
fear—that God knew that in the day that Adam and I ate of the fruit of
the tree, we should be as He Himself. It was jealousy that had made Him
say,[118] "Ye shall not eat of it." In spite of all his urging, I
remained steadfast and refused to touch the tree. Then the serpent
engaged to pluck the fruit for me. Thereupon I opened the gate of
Paradise, and he slipped in. Scarcely was he within, when he said to
me, "I repent of my words, I would rather not give thee of the fruit of
the forbidden tree." It was but a cunning device to tempt me more. He
consented to give me of the fruit only after I swore to make my husband
eat of it, too. This is the oath he made me take: "By the throne of
God, by the cherubim, and by the tree of life, I shall give my husband
of this fruit, that he may eat, too." Thereupon the serpent ascended
the tree and injected his poison, the poison of the evil inclination,
into the fruit,[119] and bent the branch on which it grew to the
ground. I took hold of it, but I knew at once that I was stripped of
the righteousness in which I had been clothed.[120] I began to weep,
because of it and because of the oath the serpent had forced from me.

The serpent disappeared from the tree, while I sought leaves wherewith
to cover my nakedness, but all the trees within my reach had cast off
their leaves at the moment when I ate of the forbidden fruit.[121]
There was only one that retained its leaves, the fig-tree, the very
tree the fruit of which had been forbidden to me.[122] I summoned Adam,
and by means of blasphemous words I prevailed upon him to eat of the
fruit. As soon as it had passed his lips, he knew his true condition,
and he exclaimed against me: "Thou wicked woman, what bast thou brought
down upon me? Thou hast removed me from the glory of God."

At the same time Adam and I heard the archangel Michael[123] blow his
trumpet, and all the angels cried out: "Thus saith the Lord, Come ye
with Me to Paradise and hearken unto the sentence which I will
pronounce upon Adam."[124]

We hid ourselves because we feared the judgment of God. Sitting in his
chariot drawn by cherubim, the Lord, accompanied by angels uttering His
praise, appeared in Paradise. At His coming the bare trees again put
forth leaves.[125] His throne was erected by the tree of life, and God
addressed Adam: "Adam, where dost thou keep thyself in hiding? Thinkest
thou I cannot find thee? Can a house conceal itself from its
architect?"[126]

Adam tried to put the blame on me, who had promised to hold him
harmless before God. And I in turn accused the serpent. But God dealt
out justice to all three of us. To Adam He said: "Because thou didst
not obey My commands, but didst hearken unto the voice of thy wife,
cursed is the ground in spite of thy work. When thou dost cultivate it,
it will not yield thee its strength. Thorns and thistles shall it bring
forth to thee, and in the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread. Thou
wilt suffer many a hardship, thou wilt grow weary, and yet find no
rest. Bitterly oppressed, thou shalt never taste of any sweetness. Thou
shalt be scourged by heat, and yet pinched by cold. Thou shalt toil
greatly, and yet not gain wealth. Thou shalt grow fat, and yet cease to
live. And the animals over which thou art the master will rise up
against thee, because thou didst not keep my command."[127]

Upon me God pronounced this sentence: "Thou shalt suffer anguish in
childbirth and grievous torture. In sorrow shalt thou bring forth
children, and in the hour of travail, when thou art near to lose thy
life, thou wilt confess and cry, 'Lord, Lord, save me this time, and I
will never again indulge in carnal pleasure,' and yet thy desire shall
ever and ever be unto thy husband."[128]

At the same time all sorts of diseases were decreed upon us. God said
to Adam: "Because thou didst turn aside from My covenant, I will
inflict seventy plagues upon thy flesh. The pain of the first plague
shall lay hold on thy eyes; the pain of the second plague upon thy
hearing, and one after the other all the plagues shall come upon
thee."[129] The serpent God addressed thus: "Because thou becamest the
vessel of the Evil One,[130] deceiving the innocent, cursed art thou
above all cattle and above every beast of the field. Thou shalt be
robbed of the food thou wast wont to eat, and dust shalt thou eat all
the days of thy life. Upon thy breast and thy belly shalt thou go, and
of thy hands and thy feet thou shalt be deprived. Thou shalt not remain
in possession of thy ears, nor of thy wings, nor of any of thy limbs
wherewith thou didst seduce the woman and her husband, bringing them to
such a pass that they must be driven forth from Paradise. And I will
put enmity between thee and the seed of man. It shall bruise thy head,
and, thou shalt bruise his heel until the day of judgment."[131]

THE DEATH OF ADAM

On the last day of Adam's life, Eve said to him, "Why should I go on
living, when thou art no more? How long shall I have to linger on after
thy death? Tell me this!" Adam assured her she would not tarry long.
They would die together, and be buried together in the same place. He
commanded her not to touch his corpse until an angel from God had made
provision regarding it, and she was to begin at once to pray to God
until his soul escaped from his body.

While Eve was on her knees in prayer, an angel came,[132] and bade her
rise. "Eve, arise from thy penance," he commanded. "Behold, thy husband
hath left his mortal coil. Arise, and see his spirit go up to his
Creator, to appear before Him." And, lo, she beheld a chariot of light,
drawn by four shining eagles, and preceded by angels. In this chariot
lay the soul of Adam, which the angels were taking to heaven. Arrived
there, they burnt incense until the clouds of smoke enveloped the
heavens. Then they prayed to God to have mercy upon His image and the
work of His holy hands. In her awe and fright, Eve summoned Seth, and
she bade him look upon the vision and explain the celestial sights
beyond her understanding. She asked, "Who may the two Ethiopians be,
who are adding their prayers to thy father's?" Seth told her, they were
the sun and the moon, turned so black because they could not shine in
the face of the Father of light.[133] Scarcely had he spoken, when an
angel blew a trumpet, and all the angels cried out with awful voices,
"Blessed be the glory of the Lord by His creatures, for He has shown
mercy unto Adam, the work of His hands!" A seraph then seized Adam, and
carried him off to the river Acheron, washed him three times, and
brought him before the presence of God, who sat upon His throne, and,
stretching out His hand, lifted Adam up and gave him over to the
archangel Michael, with the words, "Raise him to the Paradise of the
third heaven, and there thou shalt leave him until the great and
fearful day ordained by Me." Michael executed the Divine behest, and
all the angels sang a song of praise, extolling God for the pardon He
had accorded Adam.

Michael now entreated God to let him attend to the preparation of
Adam's body for the grave. Permission being given, Michael repaired to
earth, accompanied by all the angels. When they entered the terrestrial
Paradise, all the trees blossomed forth, and the perfume wafted thence
lulled all men into slumber except Seth alone. Then God said to Adam,
as his body lay on the ground: "If thou hadst kept My commandment, they
would not rejoice who brought thee hither. But I tell thee, I will turn
the joy of Satan and his consorts into sorrow, and thy sorrow shall be
turned into joy. I will restore thee to thy dominion, and thou shalt
sit upon the throne of thy seducer, while he shall be damned, with
those who hearken unto him."[134]

Thereupon, at the bidding of God, the three great archangels[135]
covered the body of Adam with linen, and poured sweet-smelling oil upon
it. With it they interred also the body of Abel, which had lain
unburied since Cain had slain him, for all the murderer's efforts to
hide it had been in vain. The corpse again and again sprang forth from
the earth, and a voice issued thence, proclaiming, "No creature shall
rest in the earth until the first one of all has returned the dust to
me of which it was formed."[136] The angels carried the two bodies to
Paradise, Adam's and Abel's—the latter had all this time been lying on
a stone on which angels had placed it—and they buried them both on the
spot whence God had taken the dust wherewith to make Adam.[137]

God called unto the body of Adam, "Adam! Adam!" and it answered, "Lord,
here am I!" Then God said: "I told thee once, Dust thou art, and unto
dust shalt thou return. Now I promise thee resurrection. I will awaken
thee on the day of judgment, when all the generations of men that
spring from thy loins, shall arise from the grave." God then sealed up
the grave, that none might do him harm during the six days to elapse
until his rib should be restored to him through the death of Eve.[138]

THE DEATH OF EVE

The interval between Adam's death and her own Eve spent in weeping. She
was distressed in particular that she knew not what had become of
Adam's body, for none except Seth had been awake while the angel
interred it. When the hour of her death drew nigh, Eve supplicated to
be buried in the selfsame spot in which the remains of her husband
rested. She prayed to God: "Lord of all powers! Remove not Thy
maid-servant from the body of Adam, from which Thou didst take me, from
whose limbs Thou didst form me. Permit me, who am an unworthy and
sinning woman, to enter into his habitation. As we were together in
Paradise, neither separated from the other; as together we were tempted
to transgress Thy law, neither separated from the other, so, O Lord,
separate us not now." To the end of her prayer she added the petition,
raising her eyes heavenward, "Lord of the world! Receive my spirit!"
and she gave up her soul to God.

The archangel Michael came and taught Seth how to prepare Eve for
burial, and three angels descended and interred her body in the grave
with Adam and Abel. Then Michael spoke to Seth, "Thus shalt thou bury
all men that die until the resurrection day." And again, having given
him this command, he spoke: "Longer than six days ye shall not
mourn.[139] The repose of the seventh day is the token of the
resurrection in the latter day, for on the seventh day the Lord rested
from all the work which He had created and made."[140]

Though death was brought into the world through Adam, yet he cannot be
held responsible for the death of men. Once on a time he said to God:
"I am not concerned about the death of the wicked, but I should not
like the pious to reproach me and lay the blame for their death upon
me. I pray Thee, make no mention of my guilt." And God promised to
fulfil his wish. Therefore, when a man is about to die, God appears to
him, and bids him set down in writing all he has done during his life,
for, He tells him, "Thou art dying by reason of thy evil deeds." The
record finished, God orders him to seal it with his seal. This is the
writing God will bring out on the judgment day, and to each will be
made known his deeds.[141] As soon as life is extinct in a man, he is
presented to Adam, whom he accuses of having caused his death. But Adam
repudiates the charge: "I committed but one trespass. Is there any
among you, and be he the most pious, who has not been guilty of more
than one?"[142]




III
THE TEN GENERATIONS

THE BIRTH OF CAIN

There were ten generations from Adam to Noah, to show how
long-suffering is the Lord, for all the generations provoked Him unto
wrath, until He brought the deluge upon them.[1] By reason of their
impiousness God changed His plan of calling one thousand generations
into being between the creation of the world and the revelation of the
law at Mount Sinai; nine hundred and seventy-four He suppressed before
the flood.[2]

Wickedness came into the world with the first being born of woman,
Cain, the oldest son of Adam. When God bestowed Paradise upon the first
pair of mankind, He warned them particularly against carnal intercourse
with each other. But after the fall of Eve, Satan, in the guise of the
serpent, approached her, and the fruit of their union was Cain, the
ancestor of all the impious generations that were rebellious toward
God, and rose up against Him. Cain's descent from Satan, who is the
angel Samael, was revealed in his seraphic appearance. At his birth,
the exclamation was wrung from Eve, "I have gotten a man through an
angel of the Lord."[3]

Adam was not in the company of Eve during the time of her pregnancy
with Cain. After she had succumbed a second time to the temptations of
Satan, and permitted herself to be interrupted in her penance,[4] she
left her husband and journeyed westward, because she feared her
presence might continue to bring him misery. Adam remained in the east.
When the days of Eve to be delivered were fulfilled, and she began to
feel the pangs of travailing, she prayed to God for help. But He
hearkened not unto her supplications. "Who will carry the report to my
lord Adam?" she asked herself. "Ye luminaries in the sky, I beg you,
tell it to my master Adam when ye return to the east!" In that self
same hour, Adam cried out: "The lamentation of Eve has pierced to my
ear! Mayhap the serpent has again assaulted her," and he hastened to
his wife. Finding her in grievous pain, he besought God in her behalf,
and twelve angels appeared, together with two heavenly powers.[5] All
these took up their post to right of her and to left of her, while
Michael, also standing on her right side, passed his hand over her,
from her face downward to her breast, and said to her, "Be thou
blessed, Eve, for the sake of Adam. Because of his solicitations and
his prayers I was sent to grant thee our assistance. Make ready to give
birth to thy child!" Immediately her son was born, a radiant figure.[6]
A little while and the babe stood upon his feet, ran off, and returned
holding in his hands a stalk of straw, which he gave to his mother. For
this reason he was named Cain, the Hebrew word for stalk of straw.

Now Adam took Eve and the boy to his home in the east. God sent him
various kinds of seeds by the hand of the angel Michael, and he was
taught how to cultivate the ground and make it yield produce and
fruits, to sustain himself and his family and his posterity.[7]

After a while, Eve bore her second son, whom she named Hebel, because,
she said, he was born but to die.

FRATRICIDE

The slaying of Abel by Cain did not come as a wholly unexpected event
to his parents. In a dream Eve had seen the blood of Abel flow into the
mouth of Cain, who drank it with avidity, though his brother entreated
him not to take all. When she told her dream to Adam, he said,
lamenting, "O that this may not portend the death of Abel at the hand
of Cain!" He separated the two lads, assigning to each an abode of his
own, and to each he taught a different occupation. Cain became a tiller
of the ground, and Abel a keeper of sheep. It was all in vain. In spite
of these precautions, Cain slew his brother.[9]

His hostility toward Abel had more than one reason. It began when God
had respect unto the offering of Abel, and accepted it by sending
heavenly fire down to consume it, while the offering of Cain was
rejected.[10] They brought their sacrifices on the fourteenth day of
Nisan, at the instance of their father, who had spoken thus to his
sons: "This is the day on which, in times to come, Israel will offer
sacrifices. Therefore, do ye, too, bring sacrifices to your Creator on
this day, that He may take pleasure in you." The place of offering
which they chose was the spot whereon the altar of the Temple at
Jerusalem stood later.[11] Abel selected the best of his flocks for his
sacrifice, but Cain ate his meal first, and after he had satisfied his
appetite, he offered unto God what was left over, a few grains of flax
seed. As though his offense had not been great enough in offering unto
God fruit of the ground which had been cursed by God![12] What wonder
that his sacrifice was not received with favor! Besides, a chastisement
was inflicted upon him. His face turned black as smoke.[13]
Nevertheless, his disposition underwent no change, even when God spoke
to him thus: "If thou wilt amend thy ways, thy guilt will be forgiven
thee; if not, thou wilt be delivered into the power of the evil
inclination. It coucheth at the door of thy heart, yet it depends upon
thee whether thou shalt be master over it, or it shall be master over
thee."[14]

Cain thought he had been wronged, and a dispute followed between him
and Abel. "I believed," he said, "that the world was created through
goodness,[15] but I see that good deeds bear no fruit. God rules the
world with arbitrary power, else why had He respect unto thy offering,
and not unto mine also?" Abel opposed him; he maintained that God
rewards good deeds, without having respect unto persons. If his
sacrifice had been accepted graciously by God, and Cain's not, it was
because his deeds were good, and his brother's wicked.[16]

But this was not the only cause of Cain's hatred toward Abel. Partly
love for a woman brought about the crime. To ensure the propagation of
the human race, a girl, destined to be his wife, was born together with
each of the sons of Adam. Abel's twin sister was of exquisite beauty,
and Cain desired her.[17] Therefore he was constantly brooding over
ways and means of ridding himself of his brother.

The opportunity presented itself ere long. One day a sheep belonging to
Abel tramped over a field that had been planted by Cain. In a rage, the
latter called out, "What right hast thou to live upon my land and let
thy sheep pasture yonder?" Abel retorted: "What right hast thou to use
the products of my sheep, to make garments for thyself from their wool?
If thou wilt take off the wool of my sheep wherein thou art arrayed,
and wilt pay me for the flesh of the flocks which thou hast eaten, then
I will quit thy land as thou desirest, and fly into the air, if I can
do it." Cain thereupon said, "And if I were to kill thee, who is there
to demand thy blood of me?" Abel replied: "God, who brought us into the
world, will avenge me. He will require my blood at thine hand, if thou
shouldst slay me. God is the Judge, who will visit their wicked deeds
upon the wicked, and their evil deeds upon the evil. Shouldst thou slay
me, God will know thy secret, and He will deal out punishment unto
thee."

These words but added to the anger of Cain, and he threw himself upon
his brother.[18] Abel was stronger than he, and he would have got the
worst of it, but at the last moment he begged for mercy, and the gentle
Abel released his hold upon him. Scarcely did he feel himself free,
when he turned against Abel once more, and slew him. So true is the
saying, "Do the evil no good, lest evil fall upon thee."[19]

THE PUNISHMENT OF CAIN

The manner of Abel's death was the most cruel conceivable. Not knowing
what injury was fatal, Cain pelted all parts of his body with stones,
until one struck him on the neck and inflicted death.

After committing the murder, Cain resolved to flee, saying, "My parents
will demand account of me concerning Abel, for there is no other human
being on earth." This thought had but passed through his mind when God
appeared unto him, and addressed him in these words: "Before thy
parents thou canst flee, but canst thou go out from My presence, too?
'Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him?' Alas
for Abel that he showed thee mercy, and refrained from killing thee,
when he had thee in his power! Alas that he granted thee the
opportunity of slaying him!"

Questioned by God, "Where is Abel thy brother?" Cain answered: "Am I my
brother's keeper? Thou art He who holdest watch over all creatures, and
yet Thou demandest account of me! True, I slew him, but Thou didst
create the evil inclination in me. Thou guardest all things; why, then,
didst Thou permit me to slay him? Thou didst Thyself slay him, for
hadst Thou looked with a favorable countenance toward my offering as
toward his, I had had no reason for envying him, and I had not slain
him." But God said, "The voice of thy brother's blood issuing from his
many wounds crieth out against thee,[20] and likewise the blood of all
the pious who might have sprung from the loins of Abel."

Also the soul of Abel denounced the murderer, for she could find rest
nowhere. She could neither soar heavenward, nor abide in the grave with
her body, for no human soul had done either before.[21] But Cain still
refused to confess his guilt. He insisted that he had never seen a man
killed, and how was he to suppose that the stones which he threw at
Abel would take his life? Then, on account of Cain, God cursed the
ground, that it might not yield fruit unto him.[22] With a single
punishment both Cain and the earth were chastised, the earth because it
retained the corpse of Abel, and did not cast it above ground.[23]

In the obduracy of his heart, Cain spake: "O Lord of the world! Are
there informers who denounce men before Thee? My parents are the only
living human beings, and they know naught of my deed. Thou abidest in
the heavens, and how shouldst Thou know what things happen on earth?"
God said in reply: "Thou fool! I carry the whole world. I have made it,
and I will bear it"—a reply that gave Cain the opportunity of feigning
repentance. "Thou bearest the whole world," he said, "and my sin Thou
canst not bear?[24] Verily, mine iniquity is too great to be borne!
Yet, yesterday Thou didst banish my father from Thy presence, to-day
Thou dost banish me. In sooth, it will be said, it is Thy way to
banish."[25]

Although this was but dissimulation, and not true repentance, yet God
granted Cain pardon, and removed the half of his chastisement from him.
Originally, the decree had condemned him to be a fugitive and a
wanderer on the earth. Now he was no longer to roam about forever, but
a fugitive he was to remain. And so much was hard enough to have to
suffer, for the earth quaked under Cain, and all the animals, the wild
and the tame, among them the accursed serpent, gathered together and
essayed to devour him in order to avenge the innocent blood of Abel.
Finally Cain could bear it no longer, and, breaking out in tears, he
cried: "Whither shall I go from Thy spirit? Or whither shall I flee
from Thy presence?"[26] To protect him from the onslaught of the
beasts, God inscribed one letter of His Holy Name upon his forehead,
and furthermore He addressed the animals: "Cain's punishment shall not
be like unto the punishment of future murderers. He has shed blood, but
there was none to give him instruction. Henceforth, however, he who
slays another shall himself be slain." Then God gave him the dog as a
protection against the wild beasts, and to mark him as a sinner, He
afflicted him with leprosy.

Cain's repentance, insincere though it was, bore a good result. When
Adam met him, and inquired what doom had been decreed against him, Cain
told how his repentance had propitiated God, and Adam exclaimed, "So
potent is repentance, and I knew it not!" Thereupon he composed a hymn
of praise to God, beginning with the words, "It is a good thing to
confess thy sins unto the Lord!"[29]

The crime committed by Cain had baneful consequences, not for himself
alone, but for the whole of nature also. Before, the fruits which the
earth bore unto him when he tilled the ground had tasted like the
fruits of Paradise. Now his labor produced naught but thorns and
thistles.[29] The ground changed and deteriorated at the very moment of
Abel's violent end. The trees and the plants in the part of the earth
whereon the victim lived refused to yield their fruits, on account of
their grief over him, and only at the birth of Seth those that grew in
the portion belonging to Abel began to flourish and bear again. But
never did they resume their former powers. While, before, the vine had
borne nine hundred and twenty-six different varieties of fruit, it now
brought forth but one kind. And so it was with all other species. They
will regain their pristine powers only in the world to come.[30]

Nature was modified also by the burial of the corpse of Abel. For a
long time it lay there exposed, above ground, because Adam and Eve knew
not what to do with it. They sat beside it and wept, while the faithful
dog of Abel kept guard that birds and beasts did it no harm. On a
sudden, the mourning parents observed how a raven scratched the earth
away in one spot, and then hid a dead bird of his own kind in the
ground. Adam, following the example of the raven, buried the body of
Abel, and the raven was rewarded by God. His young are born with white
feathers, wherefore the old birds desert them, not recognizing them as
their offspring. They take them for serpents. God feeds them until
their plumage turns black, and the parent birds return to them. As an
additional reward, God grants their petition when the ravens pray for
rain.[31]

THE INHABITANTS OF THE SEVEN EARTHS

When Adam was cast out of Paradise, he first reached the lowest of the
seven earths, the Erez, which is dark, without a ray of light, and
utterly void. Adam was terrified, particularly by the flames of the
ever-turning sword, which is on this earth. After he had done penance,
God led him to the second earth, the Adamah, where there is light
reflected from its own sky and from its phantom-like stars and
constellations. Here dwell the phantom-like beings that issued from the
union of Adam with the spirits. They are always sad; the emotion of joy
is not known to them. They leave their own earth and repair to the one
inhabited by men, where they are changed into evil spirits. Then they
return to their abode for good, repent of their wicked deeds, and till
the ground, which, however, bears neither wheat nor any other of the
seven species.[34] In this Adamah, Cain, Abel, and Seth were born.
After the murder of Abel, Cain was sent back to the Erez, where he was
frightened into repentance by its darkness and by the flames of the
ever-turning sword. Accepting his penitence, God permitted him to
ascend to the third earth, the Arka, which receives some light from the
sun. The Arka was surrendered to the Cainites forever, as their
perpetual domain. They till the ground, and plant trees, but they have
neither wheat nor any other of the seven species.

Some of the Cainites are giants, some of them are dwarfs. They have two
heads, wherefore they can never arrive at a decision; they are always
at loggerheads with themselves.[34] It may happen that they are pious
now, only to be inclined to do evil the next moment.

In the Ge, the fourth earth, live the generation of the Tower of Babel
and their descendants. God banished them thither because the fourth
earth is not far from Gehenna, and therefore close to the flaming
fire.[35] The inhabitants of the Ge are skilful in all arts, and
accomplished in all departments of science and knowledge, and their
abode overflows with wealth. When an inhabitant of our earth visits
them, they give him the most precious thing in their possession, but
then they lead him to the Neshiah, the fifth earth, where he becomes
oblivious of his origin and his home. The Neshiah is inhabited by
dwarfs without noses; they breathe through two holes instead. They have
no memory; once a thing has happened, they forget it completely, whence
their earth is called Neshiah, "forgetting." The fourth and fifth
earths are like the Arka; they have trees, but neither wheat nor any
other of the seven species.

The sixth earth, the Ziah, is inhabited by handsome men, who are the
owners of abundant wealth, and live in palatial residences, but they
lack water, as the name of their territory, Ziah, "drought," indicates.
Hence vegetation is sparse with them, and their tree culture meets with
indifferent success. They hasten to any waterspring that is discovered,
and sometimes they succeed in slipping through it up to our earth,
where they satisfy their sharp appetite for the food eaten by the
inhabitants of our earth. For the rest, they are men of steadfast
faith, more than any other class of mankind.[36]

Adam remained in the Adamah until after the birth of Seth. Then,
passing the third earth, the Arka, the abiding place of the Cainites,
and the next three earths as well, the Ge, the Neshiah, and the Ziah,
God transported him to the Tebel, the seventh earth, the earth
inhabited by men.

THE DESCENDANTS OF CAIN

Cain knew only too well that his blood-guiltiness would be visited upon
him in the seventh generation. Thus had God decreed against him.[37] He
endeavored, therefore, to immortalize his name by means of
monuments,[38] and he became a builder of cities. The first of them he
called Enoch, after his son, because it was at the birth of Enoch that
he began to enjoy a measure of rest and peace.[39] Besides, he founded
six other cities.[40] This building of cities was a godless deed, for
he surrounded them with a wall, forcing his family to remain within.
All his other doings were equally impious. The punishment God had
ordained for him did not effect any improvement. He sinned in order to
secure his own pleasure, though his neighbors suffered injury thereby.
He augmented his household substance by rapine and violence; he excited
his acquaintances to procure pleasures and spoils by robbery, and he
became a great leader of men into wicked courses. He also introduced a
change in the ways of simplicity wherein men had lived before, and he
was the author of measures and weights. And whereas men lived
innocently and generously while they knew nothing of such arts, he
changed the world into cunning craftiness.[41]

Like unto Cain were all his descendants, impious and godless, wherefore
God resolved to destroy them.[42]

The end of Cain overtook him in the seventh generation of men, and it
was inflicted upon him by the hand of his great-grandson Lamech. This
Lamech was blind, and when he went a-hunting, he was led by his young
son, who would apprise his father when game came in sight, and Lamech
would then shoot at it with his bow and arrow. Once upon a time he and
his son went on the chase, and the lad discerned something horned in
the distance. He naturally took it to be a beast of one kind or
another, and he told the blind Lamech to let his arrow fly. The aim was
good, and the quarry dropped to the ground. When they came close to the
victim, the lad exclaimed: "Father, thou hast killed something that
resembles a human being in all respects, except it carries a horn on
its forehead!" Lamech knew at once what had happened—he had killed his
ancestor Cain, who had been marked by God with a horn.[43] In despair
he smote his hands together, inadvertently killing his son as he
clasped them. Misfortune still followed upon misfortune. The earth
opened her mouth and swallowed up the four generations sprung from
Cain—Enoch, Irad, Mehujael, and Methushael. Lamech, sightless as he
was, could not go home; he had to remain by the side of Cain's corpse
and his son's. Toward evening, his wives, seeking him, found him there.
When they heard what he had done, they wanted to separate from him, all
the more as they knew that whoever was descended from Cain was doomed
to annihilation. But Lamech argued, "If Cain, who committed murder of
malice aforethought, was punished only in the seventh generation, then
I, who had no intention of killing a human being, may hope that
retribution will be averted for seventy and seven generations." With
his wives, Lamech repaired to Adam, who heard both parties, and decided
the case in favor of Lamech.[44]

The corruptness of the times, and especially the depravity of Cain's
stock, appears in the fact that Lamech, as well as all the men in the
generation of the deluge, married two wives, one with the purpose of
rearing children, the other in order to pursue carnal indulgences, for
which reason the latter was rendered sterile by artificial means. As
the men of the time were intent upon pleasure rather than desirous of
doing their duty to the human race, they gave all their love and
attention to the barren women, while their other wives spent their days
like widows, joyless and in gloom.

The two wives of Lamech, Adah and Zillah, bore him each two children,
Adah two sons, Jabal and Jubal, and Zillah a son, Tubal-cain, and a
daughter, Naamah. Jabal was the first among men to erect temples to
idols, and Jubal invented the music sung and played therein. Tubal-cain
was rightly named, for he completed the work of his ancestor Cain. Cain
committed murder, and Tubal-cain, the first who knew how to sharpen
iron and copper, furnished the instruments used in wars and combats.
Naamah, "the lovely," earned her name from the sweet sounds which she
drew from her cymbals when she called the worshippers to pay homage to
idols.[45]

THE DESCENDANTS OF ADAM AND LILITH

When the wives of Lamech heard the decision of Adam, that they were to
continue to live with their husband, they turned upon him, saying, "O
physician, heal thine own lameness!" They were alluding to the fact
that he himself had been living apart from his wife since the death of
Abel, for he had said, "Why should I beget children, if it is but to
expose them to death?"[46]

Though he avoided intercourse with Eve, he was visited in his sleep by
female spirits, and from his union with them sprang shades and demons
of various kinds,[47] and they were endowed with peculiar gifts.

Once upon a time there lived in Palestine a very rich and pious man,
who had a son named Rabbi Hanina. He knew the whole of the Torah by
heart. When he was at the point of death, he sent for his son, Rabbi
Hanina, and bade him, as his last request, to study the Torah day and
night, fulfil the commands of the law, and be a faithful friend to the
poor. He also told him that he and his wife, the mother of Rabbi
Hanina, would die on the selfsame day, and the seven days of mourning
for the two would end on the eve of the Passover. He enjoined him not
to grieve excessively, but to go to market on that day, and buy the
first article offered to him, no matter how costly it might be. If it
happened to be an edible, he was to prepare it and serve it with much
ceremony. His expense and trouble would receive their recompense. All
happened as foretold: the man and his wife died upon the same day, and
the end of the week of mourning coincided with the eve of the Passover.
The son in turn carried out his father's behest: he repaired to market,
and there he met an old man who offered a silver dish for sale.
Although the price asked was exorbitant, yet he bought it, as his
father had bidden. The dish was set upon the Seder table, and when
Rabbi Hanina opened it, he found a second dish within, and inside of
this a live frog, jumping and hopping around gleefully. He gave the
frog food and drink, and by the end of the festival he was grown so big
that Rabbi Hanina made a cabinet for him, in which he ate and lived. In
the course of time, the cabinet became too small, and the Rabbi built a
chamber, put the frog within, and gave him abundant food and drink. All
this he did that he might not violate his father's last wish. But the
frog waxed and grew; he consumed all his host owned, until, finally,
Rabbi Hanina was stripped bare of all his possessions. Then the frog
opened his mouth and began to speak. "My dear Rabbi Hanina," he said,
"do not worry! Seeing thou didst raise me and care for me, thou mayest
ask of me whatever thy heart desireth, and it shall be granted thee."
Rabbi Hanina made reply, "I desire naught but that thou shouldst teach
me the whole of the Torah." The frog assented, and he did, indeed,
teach him the whole of the Torah, and the seventy languages of men
besides.[48] His method was to write a few words upon a scrap of paper,
which he had his pupil swallow. Thus he acquired not alone the Torah
and the seventy tongues, but also the language of beasts and birds.
Thereupon the frog spoke to the wife of Rabbi Hanina: "Thou didst tend
me well, and I have given thee no recompense. But thy reward will be
paid thee before I depart from you, only you must both accompany me to
the woods. There you shall see what I shall do for you." Accordingly,
they went to the woods with him. Arrived there, the frog began to cry
aloud, and at the sound all sorts of beasts and birds assembled. These
he commanded to produce precious stones, as many as they could carry.
Also they were to bring herbs and roots for the wife of Rabbi Hanina,
and he taught her how to use them as remedies for all varieties of
disease. All this they were bidden to take home with them. When they
were about to return, the frog addressed them thus: "May the Holy One,
blessed be He, have mercy upon you, and requite you for all the trouble
you took on my account, without so much as inquiring who I am. Now I
shall make my origin known to you. I am the son of Adam, a son whom he
begot during the hundred and thirty years of his separation from Eve.
God has endowed me with the power of assuming any form or guise I
desire." Rabbi Hanina and his wife departed for their home, and they
became very rich, and enjoyed the respect and confidence of the
king.[49]

SETH AND HIS DESCENDANTS

The exhortations of the wives of Lamech took effect upon Adam. After a
separation of one hundred and thirty years, he returned to Eve, and the
love he now bore her was stronger by far than in the former time. She
was in his thoughts even when she was not present to him bodily. The
fruit of their reunion was Seth, who was destined to be the ancestor of
the Messiah.[50]

Seth was so formed from birth that the rite of circumcision could be
dispensed with. He was thus one of the thirteen men born perfect in a
way.[51] Adam begot him in his likeness and image, different from Cain,
who had not been in his likeness and image. Thus Seth became, in a
genuine sense, the father of the human race, especially the father of
the pious, while the depraved and godless are descended from Cain.[52]

Even during the lifetime of Adam the descendants of Cain became
exceedingly wicked, dying successively, one after another, each more
wicked than the former. They were intolerable in war, and vehement in
robberies, and if any one were slow to murder people, yet was he bold
in his profligate behavior in acting unjustly and doing injury for
gain.

Now as to Seth. When he was brought up, and came to those years in
which he could discern what was good, he became a virtuous man, and as
he was himself of excellent character, so he left children behind him
who imitated his virtues. All these proved to be of good disposition.
They also inhabited one and the same country without dissensions, and
in a happy condition, without any misfortune's falling upon them, until
they died. They also were the inventors of that peculiar sort of wisdom
which is concerned with the heavenly bodies and their order. And that
their inventions might not be lost before they were sufficiently known,
they made two pillars, upon Adam's prediction that the world was to be
destroyed at one time by the force of fire and at another time by the
violence and quantity of water. The one was of brick, the other of
stone, and they inscribed their discoveries on both, that in case the
pillar of brick should be destroyed by the flood, the pillar of stone
might remain, and exhibit these discoveries to mankind, and also inform
them that there was another pillar, of brick, erected by them.[53]

ENOSH

Enosh was asked who his father was, and he named Seth. The questioners,
the people of his time, continued: "Who was the father of Seth?" Enosh:
"Adam."—"And who was the father of Adam?"—"He had neither father nor
mother, God formed him from the dust of the earth."—"But man has not
the appearance of dust!"—"After death man returns to dust, as God said,
'And man shall turn again unto dust;' but on the day of his creation,
man was made in the image of God."—"How was the woman created?"—"Male
and female He created them."—"But how?"—"God took water and earth, and
moulded them together in the form of man."—"But how?" pursued the
questioners.

Enosh took six clods of earth, mixed them, and moulded them, and formed
an image of dust and clay. "But," said the people, "this image does not
walk, nor does it possess any breath of life." He then essayed to show
them how God breathed the breath of life into the nostrils of Adam, but
when he began to blow his breath into the image he had formed, Satan
entered it, and the figure walked, and the people of his time who had
been inquiring these matters of Enosh went astray after it, saying,
"What is the difference between bowing down before this image and
paying homage to a man?"[54]

The generation of Enosh were thus the first idol worshippers, and the
punishment for their folly was not delayed long. God caused the sea to
transgress its bounds, and a portion of the earth was flooded. This was
the time also when the mountains became rocks, and the dead bodies of
men began to decay. And still another consequence of the sin of
idolatry was that the countenances of the men of the following
generations were no longer in the likeness and image of God, as the
countenances of Adam, Seth, and Enosh had been. They resembled centaurs
and apes, and the demons lost their fear of men.[55]

But there was a still more serious consequence from the idolatrous
practices introduced in the time of Enosh. When God drove Adam forth
from Paradise, the Shekinah remained behind, enthroned above a cherub
under the tree of life. The angels descended from heaven and repaired
thither in hosts, to receive their instructions, and Adam and his
descendants sat by the gate to bask in the splendor of the Shekinah,
sixty-five thousand times more radiant than the splendor of the sun.
This brightness of the Shekinah makes all upon whom it falls exempt
from disease, and neither insects nor demons can come nigh unto them to
do them harm.

Thus it was until the time of Enosh, when men began to gather gold,
silver, gems, and pearls from all parts of the earth, and made idols
thereof a thousand parasangs high. What was worse, by means of the
magic arts taught them by the angels Uzza and Azzael, they set
themselves as masters over the heavenly spheres, and forced the sun,
the moon, and the stars to be subservient to themselves instead of the
Lord. This impelled the angels to ask God: "'What is man, that Thou art
mindful of him?' Why didst Thou abandon the highest of the heavens, the
seat of Thy glory and Thy exalted Throne in 'Arabot, and descend to
men, who pay worship to idols, putting Thee upon a level with them?"
The Shekinah was induced to leave the earth and ascend to heaven, amid
the blare and flourish of the trumpets of the myriads of angel
hosts.[56]

THE FALL OF THE ANGELS

The depravity of mankind, which began to show itself in the time of
Enosh, had increased monstrously in the time of his grandson Jared, by
reason of the fallen angels. When the angels saw the beautiful,
attractive daughters of men, they lusted after them, and spoke: "We
will choose wives for ourselves only from among the daughters of men,
and beget children with them." Their chief Shemhazai said, "I fear me,
ye will not put this plan of yours into execution, and I alone shall
have to suffer the consequences of a great sin." Then they answered
him, and said: "We will all swear an oath, and we will bind ourselves,
separately and together, not to abandon the plan, but to carry it
through to the end."

Two hundred angels descended to the summit of Mount Hermon, which owes
its name to this very occurrence, because they bound themselves there
to fulfil their purpose, on the penalty of Herem, anathema. Under the
leadership of twenty captains they defiled themselves with the
daughters of men, unto whom they taught charms, conjuring formulas, how
to cut roots, and the efficacy of plants. The issue from these mixed
marriages was a race of giants, three thousand ells tall, who consumed
the possessions of men. When all had vanished, and they could obtain
nothing more from them, the giants turned against men and devoured many
of them, and the remnant of men began to trespass against the birds,
beasts, reptiles, and fishes, eating their flesh and drinking their
blood.

Then the earth complained about the impious evil-doers. But the fallen
angels continued to corrupt mankind. Azazel taught men how to make
slaughtering knives, arms, shields, and coats of mail. He showed them
metals and how to work them, and armlets and all sorts of trinkets, and
the use of rouge for the eyes, and how to beautify the eyelids, and how
to ornament themselves with the rarest and most precious jewels and all
sorts of paints. The chief of the fallen angels, Shemhazai, instructed
them in exorcisms and how to cut roots; Armaros taught them how to
raise spells; Barakel, divination from the stars; Kawkabel, astrology;
Ezekeel, augury from the clouds; Arakiel, the signs of the earth;
Samsaweel, the signs of the sun; and Seriel, the signs of the moon.[57]

While all these abominations defiled the earth, the pious Enoch lived
in a secret place. None among men knew his abode, or what had become of
him, for he was sojourning with the angel watchers and holy ones. Once
he heard the call addressed to him: "Enoch, thou scribe of justice, go
unto the watchers of the heavens, who have left the high heavens, the
eternal place of holiness, defiling themselves with women, doing as men
do, taking wives unto themselves, and casting themselves into the arms
of destruction upon earth. Go and proclaim unto them that they shall
find neither peace nor pardon. For every time they take joy in their
offspring, they shall see the violent death of their sons, and sigh
over the ruin of their children. They will pray and supplicate
evermore, but never shall they attain to mercy or peace."

Enoch repaired to Azazel and the other fallen angels, to announce the
doom uttered against them. They all were filled with fear. Trembling
seized upon them, and they implored Enoch to set up a petition for them
and read it to the Lord of heaven, for they could not speak with God as
aforetime, nor even raise their eyes heavenward, for shame on account
of their sins. Enoch granted their request, and in a vision he was
vouchsafed the answer which he was to carry back to the angels. It
appeared to Enoch that he was wafted into heaven upon clouds, and was
set down before the throne of God. God spake: "Go forth and say to the
watchers of heaven who have sent thee hither to intercede for them:
Verily, it is you who ought to plead in behalf of men, not men in
behalf of you I Why did ye forsake the high, holy, and eternal heavens,
to pollute yourselves with the daughters of men, taking wives unto
yourselves, doing like the races of the earth, and begetting giant
sons? Giants begotten by flesh and spirits will be called evil spirits
on earth, and on the earth will be their dwelling-place. Evil spirits
proceed from their bodies, because they are created from above, and
from the holy watchers is their beginning and primal origin; they will
be evil spirits on earth, and evil spirits they will be named. And the
spirits of heaven have their dwelling in heaven, but the spirits of the
earth, which were born upon the earth, have their dwelling on the
earth. And the spirits of the giants will devour, oppress, destroy,
attack, do battle, and cause destruction on the earth, and work
affliction. They will take no kind of food, nor will they thirst, and
they will be invisible. And these spirits will rise up against the
children of men and against the women, because they have proceeded from
them. Since the days of murder and destruction and the death of the
giants, when the spirits went forth from the soul of their flesh, in
order to destroy without incurring judgment—thus will they destroy
until the day when the great consummation of the great world be
consummated. And now as to the watchers who have sent thee to intercede
for them, who had been aforetime in heaven, say to them: You have been
in heaven, and though the hidden things had not yet been revealed to
you, you know worthless mysteries, and in the hardness of your hearts
you have recounted these to the women, and through these mysteries
women and men work much evil on earth. Say to them therefore: You have
no peace!"[58]

ENOCH, RULER AND TEACHER

After Enoch had lived a long time secluded from men, he once heard the
voice of an angel calling to him: "Enoch, Enoch, make thyself ready and
leave the house and the secret place wherein thou hast kept thyself
hidden, and assume dominion over men, to teach them the ways in which
they shall walk, and the deeds which they shall do, in order that they
may walk in the ways of God."

Enoch left his retreat and betook himself to the haunts of men. He
gathered them about him, and instructed them in the conduct pleasing to
God. He sent messengers all over to announce, "Ye who desire to know
the ways of God and righteous conduct, come ye to Enoch!" Thereupon a
vast concourse of people thronged about him, to hear the wisdom he
would teach and learn from his mouth what is good and right. Even kings
and princes, no less than one hundred and thirty in number, assembled
about him, and submitted themselves to his dominion, to be taught and
guided by him, as he taught and guided all the others. Peace reigned
thus over the whole world all the two hundred and forty-three years
during which the influence of Enoch prevailed.

At the expiration of this period, in the year in which Adam died, and
was buried with great honors by Seth, Enosh, Enoch, and Methuselah,
Enoch resolved to retire again from intercourse with men, and devote
himself wholly to the service of God. But he withdrew gradually. First
he would spend three days in prayer and praise of God, and on the
fourth day he would return to his disciples and grant them instruction.
Many years passed thus, then he appeared among them but once a week,
later, once a month, and, finally, once a year. The kings, princes, and
all others who were desirous of seeing Enoch and hearkening to his
words did not venture to come close to him during the times of his
retirement. Such awful majesty sat upon his countenance, they feared
for their very life if they but looked at him. They therefore resolved
that all men should prefer their requests before Enoch on the day he
showed himself unto them.

The impression made by the teachings of Enoch upon all who heard them
was powerful. They prostrated themselves before him, and cried "Long
live the king! Long live the king!" On a certain day, while Enoch was
giving audience to his followers, an angel appeared and made known unto
him that God had resolved to install him as king over the angels in
heaven, as until then he had reigned over men. He called together all
the inhabitants of the earth, and addressed them thus: "I have been
summoned to ascend into heaven, and I know not on what day I shall go
thither. Therefore I will teach you wisdom and righteousness before I
go hence." A few days yet Enoch spent among men, and all the time left
to him he gave instruction in wisdom, knowledge, God-fearing conduct,
and piety, and established law and order, for the regulation of the
affairs of men. Then those gathered near him saw a gigantic steed
descend from the skies, and they told Enoch of it, who said, "The steed
is for me, for the time has come and the day when I leave you, never to
be seen again." So it was. The steed approached Enoch, and he mounted
upon its back, all the time instructing the people, exhorting them,
enjoining them to serve God and walk in His ways. Eight hundred
thousand of the people followed a day's journey after him. But on the
second day Enoch urged his retinue to turn back: "Go ye home, lest
death overtake you, if you follow me farther." Most of them heeded his
words and went back, but a number remained with him for six days,
though he admonished them daily to return and not bring death down upon
themselves. On the sixth day of the journey, he said to those still
accompanying him, "Go ye home, for on the morrow I shall ascend to
heaven, and whoever will then be near me, he will die." Nevertheless,
some of his companions remained with him, saying: "Whithersoever thou
goest, we will go. By the living God, death alone shall part us."

On the seventh day Enoch was carried into the heavens in a fiery
chariot drawn by fiery chargers. The day thereafter, the kings who had
turned back in good time sent messengers to inquire into the fate of
the men who had refused to separate themselves from Enoch, for they had
noted the number of them. They found snow and great hailstones upon the
spot whence Enoch had risen, and, when they searched beneath, they
discovered the bodies of all who had remained behind with Enoch. He
alone was not among them; he was on high in heaven.[59]

THE ASCENSION OF ENOCH

This was not the first time Enoch had been in heaven. Once before,
while he sojourned among men, he had been permitted to see all there is
on earth and in the heavens. On a time when he was sleeping, a great
grief came upon his heart, and he wept in his dream, not knowing what
the grief meant, nor what would happen to him. And there appeared to
him two men, very tall. Their faces shone like the sun, and their eyes
were like burning lamps, and fire came forth from their lips; their
wings were brighter than gold, their hands whiter than snow. They stood
at the head of Enoch's bed, and called him by his name. He awoke from
his sleep, and hastened and made obeisance to them, and was terrified.
And these men said to him: "Be of good cheer, Enoch, be not afraid; the
everlasting God hath sent us to thee, and lo! to-day thou shalt ascend
with us into heaven. And tell thy sons and thy servants, and let none
seek thee, till the Lord bring thee back to them."

Enoch did as he was told, and after he had spoken to his sons, and
instructed them not to turn aside from God, and to keep His judgment,
these two men summoned him, and took him on their wings, and placed him
on the clouds, which moved higher and higher, till they set him down in
the first heaven. Here they showed him the two hundred angels who rule
the stars, and their heavenly service. Here he saw also the treasuries
of snow and ice, of clouds and dew.

From there they took him to the second heaven, where he saw the fallen
angels imprisoned, they who obeyed not the commandments of God, and
took counsel of their own will. The fallen angels said to Enoch, "O man
of God! Pray for us to the Lord," and he answered: "Who am I, a mortal
man, that I should pray for angels? Who knows whither I go, or what
awaits me?"

They took him from thence to the third heaven, where they showed him
Paradise, with all the trees of beautiful colors, and their fruits,
ripe and luscious, and all kinds of food which they produced, springing
up with delightful fragrance. In the midst of Paradise he saw the tree
of life, in that place in which God rests when He comes into Paradise.
This tree cannot be described for its excellence and sweet fragrance,
and it is beautiful, more than any created thing, and on all its sides
it is like gold and crimson in appearance, and transparent as fire, and
it covers everything. From its root in the garden there go forth four
streams, which pour out honey, milk, oil, and wine, and they go down to
the Paradise of Eden, that lies on the confines between the earthly
region of corruptibility and the heavenly region of incorruptibility,
and thence they go along the earth. He also saw the three hundred
angels who keep the garden, and with never-ceasing voices and blessed
singing they serve the Lord every day. The angels leading Enoch
explained to him that this place is prepared for the righteous, while
the terrible place prepared for the sinners is in the northern regions
of the third heaven. He saw there all sorts of tortures, and
impenetrable gloom, and there is no light there, but a gloomy fire is
always burning. And all that place has fire on all sides, and on all
sides cold and ice, thus it burns and freezes. And the angels, terrible
and without pity, carry savage weapons, and their torture is
unmerciful.

The angels took him then to the fourth heaven, and showed him all the
comings in and goings forth, and all the rays of the light of the sun
and the moon. He saw the fifteen myriads of angels who go out with the
sun, and attend him during the day, and the thousand angels who attend
him by night. Each angel has six wings, and they go before the chariot
of the sun, while one hundred angels keep the sun warm, and light it
up. He saw also the wonderful and strange creatures named phoenixes and
chalkidri, who attend the chariot of the sun, and go with him, bringing
heat and dew. They showed him also the six gates in the east of the
fourth heaven, by which the sun goes forth, and the six gates in the
west where he sets, and also the gates by which the moon goes out, and
those by which she enters. In the middle of the fourth heaven he saw an
armed host, serving the Lord with cymbals and organs and unceasing
voices.

In the fifth heaven he saw many hosts of the angels called Grigori.
Their appearance was like men, and their size was greater than the size
of the giants, their countenances were withered, and their lips silent.
On his question who they were, the angels leading him answered, "These
are the Grigori, who with their prince Salamiel rejected the holy
Lord." Enoch then said to the Grigori, "Why wait ye, brethren, and
serve ye not before the face of the Lord, and why perform ye not your
duties before the face of the Lord, and anger not your Lord to the
end?" The Grigori listened to the rebuke, and when the trumpets
resounded together with a loud call, they also began to sing with one
voice, and their voices went forth before the Lord with sadness and
tenderness.

In the seventh heaven he saw the seven bands of archangels who arrange
and study the revolutions of the stars and the changes of the moon and
the revolution of the sun, and superintend the good or evil conditions
of the world. And they arrange teachings and instructions and sweet
speaking and singing and all kinds of glorious praise. They hold in
subjection all living things, both in heaven and on earth. In the midst
of them are seven phoenixes, and seven cherubim, and seven six-winged
creatures, singing with one voice.

When Enoch reached the seventh heaven, and saw all the fiery hosts of
great archangels and incorporeal powers and lordships and
principalities and powers, he was afraid and trembled with a great
terror. Those leading him took hold of him, and brought him into the
midst of them, and said to him, "Be of good cheer, Enoch, be not
afraid," and they showed him the Lord from afar, sitting on His lofty
throne, while all the heavenly hosts, divided in ten classes, having
approached, stood on the ten steps according to their rank, and made
obeisance to the Lord. And so they proceeded to their places in joy and
mirth and boundless light, singing songs with low and gentle voices,
and gloriously serving Him. They leave not nor depart day or night,
standing before the face of the Lord, working His will, cherubim and
seraphim, standing around His throne. And the six-winged creatures
overshadow all His throne, singing with a soft voice before the face of
the Lord, "Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of hosts; heaven and earth are
full of His glory." When he had seen all these, the angels leading him
said to him, "Enoch, up to this time we were ordered to accompany
thee." They departed, and he saw them no more. Enoch remained at the
extremity of the seventh heaven, in great terror, saying to himself,
"Woe is me! What has come upon me!" But then Gabriel came and said unto
him, "Enoch, be not afraid, stand up and come with me, and stand up
before the face of the Lord forever." And Enoch answered: "O my lord,
my spirit has departed from me with fear and trembling. Call the men to
me who have brought me to the place! Upon them I have relied, and with
them I would go before the face of the Lord." And Gabriel hurried him
away like a leaf carried off by the wind, and set him before the face
of the Lord. Enoch fell down and worshipped the Lord, who said to him:
"Enoch, be not afraid! Rise up and stand before My face forever." And
Michael lifted him up, and at the command of the Lord took his earthly
robe from him, and anointed him with the holy oil, and clothed him, and
when he gazed upon himself, he looked like one of God's glorious ones,
and fear and trembling departed from him. God called then one of His
archangels who was more wise than all the others, and wrote down all
the doings of the Lord, and He said to him, "Bring forth the books from
My store-place, and give a reed to Enoch, and interpret the books to
him." The angel did as he was commanded, and he instructed Enoch thirty
days and thirty nights, and his lips never ceased speaking, while Enoch
was writing down all the things about heaven and earth, angels and men,
and all that is suitable to be instructed in. He also wrote down all
about the souls of men, those of them which are not born, and the
places prepared for them forever. He copied all accurately, and he
wrote three hundred and sixty-six books. After he had received all the
instructions from the archangel, God revealed unto him great secrets,
which even the angels do not know. He told him how, out of the lowest
darkness, the visible and the invisible were created, how He formed
heaven, light, water, and earth, and also the fall of Satan and the
creation and sin of Adam He narrated to him, and further revealed to
him that the duration of the world will be seven thousand years, and
the eighth millennium will be a time when there is no computation, no
end, neither years, nor months, nor weeks, nor days, nor hours.

The Lord finished this revelation to Enoch with the words: "And now I
give thee Samuil and Raguil, who brought thee to Me. Go with them upon
the earth, and tell thy sons what things I have said to thee, and what
thou hast seen from the lowest heaven up to My throne. Give them the
works written out by thee, and they shall read them, and shall
distribute the books to their children's children and from generation
to generation and from nation to nation. And I will give thee My
messenger Michael for thy writings and for the writings of thy fathers,
Adam, Seth, Enosh, Kenan, Mahalalel, and Jared thy father. And I shall
not require them till the last age, for I have instructed My two
angels, Ariuk and Mariuk, whom I have put upon the earth as their
guardians, and I have ordered them in time to guard them, that the
account of what I shall do in thy family may not be lost in the deluge
to come. For on account of the wickedness and iniquity of men, I will
bring a deluge upon the earth, and I will destroy all, but I will leave
a righteous man of thy race with all his house, who shall act according
to My will. From their seed will be raised up a numerous generation,
and on the extinction of that family, I will show them the books of thy
writings and of thy father, and the guardians of them on earth will
show them to the men who are true and please Me. And they shall tell to
another generation, and they, having read them, shall be glorified at
last more than before."

Enoch was then sent to earth to remain there for thirty days to
instruct his sons, but before he left heaven, God sent an angel to him
whose appearance was like snow, and his hands were like ice. Enoch
looked at him, and his face was chilled, that men might be able to
endure the sight of him. The angels who took him to heaven put him upon
his bed, in the place where his son Methuselah was expecting him by day
and by night. Enoch assembled his sons and all his household, and
instructed them faithfully about all things he had seen, heard, and
written down, and he gave his books to his sons, to keep them and read
them, admonishing them not to conceal the books, but tell them to all
desiring to know. When the thirty days had been completed, the Lord
sent darkness upon the earth, and there was gloom, and it hid the men
standing with Enoch. And the angels hasted and took Enoch, and carried
him to the highest heaven, where the Lord received him and set him
before His face, and the darkness departed from the earth, and there
was light. And the people saw, and did not understand how Enoch was
taken, and they glorified God.

Enoch was born on the sixth day of the month of Siwan, and he was taken
to heaven in the same month, Siwan, on the same day and in the same
hour when he was born. And Methuselah hasted and all his brethren, the
sons of Enoch, and built an altar in the place called Achuzan, whence
Enoch was taken up to heaven. The elders and all the people came to the
festivity and brought their gifts to the sons of Enoch, and made a
great festivity, rejoicing and being merry for three days, praising
God, who had given such a sign by means of Enoch, who had found favor
with them.[60]

THE TRANSLATION OF ENOCH

The sinfulness of men was the reason why Enoch was translated to
heaven. Thus Enoch himself told Rabbi Ishmael. When the generation of
the deluge transgressed, and spoke to God, saying, "Depart from us, for
we do not desire to know Thy ways," Enoch was carried to heaven, to
serve there as a witness that God was not a cruel God in spite of the
destruction decreed upon all living beings on earth.

When Enoch, under the guidance of the angel 'Anpiel, was carried from
earth to heaven, the holy beings, the ofanim, the seraphim, the
cherubim, all those who move the throne of God, and the ministering
spirits whose substance is of consuming fire, they all, at a distance
of six hundred and fifty million and three hundred parasangs, noticed
the presence of a human being, and they exclaimed: "Whence the odor of
one born of woman? How comes he into the highest heaven of the
fire-coruscating angels?" But God replied: "O My servants and hosts,
ye, My cherubim, ofanim, and seraphim, let this not be an offense unto
you, for all the children of men denied Me and My mighty dominion, and
they paid homage to the idols, so that I transferred the Shekinah from
earth to heaven. But this man Enoch is the elect of men. He has more
faith, justice, and righteousness than all the rest, and he is the only
reward I have derived from the terrestrial world."

Before Enoch could be admitted to service near the Divine throne, the
gates of wisdom were opened unto him, and the gates of understanding,
and of discernment, of life, peace, and the Shekinah, of strength and
power, of might, loveliness, and grace, of humility and fear of sin.
Equipped by God with extraordinary wisdom, sagacity, judgment,
knowledge, learning, compassionateness, love, kindness, grace,
humility, strength, power, might, splendor, beauty, shapeliness, and
all other excellent qualities, beyond the endowment of any of the
celestial beings, Enoch received, besides, many thousand blessings from
God, and his height and his breadth became equal to the height and the
breadth of the world, and thirty-six wings were attached to his body,
to the right and to the left, each as large as the world, and three
hundred and sixty-five thousand eyes were bestowed upon him, each
brilliant as the sun. A magnificent throne was erected for him beside
the gates of the seventh celestial palace, and a herald proclaimed
throughout the heavens concerning him, who was henceforth to be called
Metatron in the celestial regions: "I have appointed My servant
Metatron as prince and chief over all the princes in My realm, with the
exception only of the eight august and exalted princes that bear My
name. Whatever angel has a request to prefer to Me, shall appear before
Metatron, and what he will command at My bidding, ye must observe and
do, for the prince of wisdom and the prince of understanding are at his
service, and they will reveal unto him the sciences of the celestials
and the terrestrials, the knowledge of the present order of the world
and the knowledge of the future order of the world. Furthermore, I have
made him the guardian of the treasures of the palaces in the heaven
'Arabot, and of the treasures of life that are in the highest heaven."

Out of the love He bore Enoch, God arrayed him in a magnificent
garment, to which every kind of luminary in existence was attached, and
a crown gleaming with forty-nine jewels, the splendor of which pierced
to all parts of the seven heavens and to the four corners of the earth.
In the presence of the heavenly family, He set this crown upon the head
of Enoch, and called him "the little Lord." It bears also the letters
by means of which heaven and earth were created, and seas and rivers,
mountains and valleys, planets and constellations, lightning and
thunder, snow and hail, storm and whirlwind—these and also all things
needed in the world, and the mysteries of creation. Even the princes of
the heavens, when they see Metatron, tremble before him, and prostrate
themselves; his magnificence and majesty, the splendor and beauty
radiating from him overwhelm them, even the wicked Samael, the greatest
of them, even Gabriel the angel of the fire, Bardiel the angel of the
hail, Ruhiel the angel of the wind, Barkiel the angel of the lightning,
Za'miel the angel of the hurricane, Zakkiel the angel of the storm,
Sui'el the angel of the earthquake, Za'fiel the angel of the showers,
Ra'miel the angel of the thunder, Ra'shiel the angel of the whirlwind,
Shalgiel the angel of the snow, Matriel the angel of the rain,
Shamshiel the angel of the day, Leliel the angel of the night, Galgliel
the angel of the solar system, Ofaniel the angel of the wheel of the
moon, Kokabiel the angel of the stars, and Rahtiel the angel of the
constellations.

When Enoch was transformed into Metatron, his body was turned into
celestial fire—his flesh became flame, his veins fire, his bones
glimmering coals, the light of his eyes heavenly brightness, his
eyeballs torches of fire, his hair a flaring blaze, all his limbs and
organs burning sparks, and his frame a consuming fire. To right of him
sparkled flames of fire, to left of him burnt torches of fire, and on
all sides he was engirdled by storm and whirlwind, hurricane and
thundering.[61]

METHUSELAH

After the translation of Enoch, Methuselah was proclaimed ruler of the
earth by all the kings. He walked in the footsteps of his father,
teaching truth, knowledge, and fear of God to the children of men all
his life, and deviating from the path of rectitude neither to the right
nor the left.[62] He delivered the world from thousands of demons, the
posterity of Adam which he had begotten with Lilith, that she-devil of
she-devils. These demons and evil spirits, as often as they encountered
a man, had sought to injure and even slay him, until Methuselah
appeared, and supplicated the mercy of God. He spent three days in
fasting, and then God gave him permission to write the Ineffable Name
upon his sword, wherewith he slew ninety-four myriads of the demons in
a minute, until Agrimus, the first-born of them, came to him and
entreated him to desist, at the same time handing the names of the
demons and imps over to him. And so Methuselah placed their kings in
iron fetters, while the remainder fled away and hid themselves in the
innermost chambers and recesses of the ocean. And it is on account of
the wonderful sword by means of which the demons were killed that he
was called Methuselah.[63]

He was so pious a man that he composed two hundred and thirty parables
in praise of God for every word he uttered. When he died, the people
heard a great commotion in the heavens, and they saw nine hundred rows
of mourners corresponding to the nine hundred orders of the Mishnah
which he had studied, and tears flowed from the eyes of the holy beings
down upon the spot where he died. Seeing the grief of the celestials,
the people on earth also mourned over the demise of Methuselah, and God
rewarded them therefor. He added seven days to the time of grace which
He had ordained before bringing destruction upon the earth by a flood
of waters.[64]




IV
NOAH

THE BIRTH OF NOAH

Methuselah took a wife for his son Lamech, and she bore him a man
child. The body of the babe was white as snow and red as a blooming
rose, and the hair of his head and his long locks were white as wool,
and his eyes like the rays of the sun. When he opened his eyes, he
lighted up the whole house, like the sun, and the whole house was very
full of light.[1] And when he was taken from the hand of the midwife,
he opened his mouth and praised the Lord of righteousness.[2] His
father Lamech was afraid of him, and fled, and came to his own father
Methuselah. And he said to him: "I have begotten a strange son; he is
not like a human being, but resembles the children of the angels of
heaven, and his nature is different, and he is not like us, and his
eyes are as the rays of the sun, and his countenance is glorious.[3]
And it seems to me that he is not sprung from me, but from the angels,
and I fear that in his days a wonder may be wrought on the earth. And
now, my father, I am here to petition thee and implore thee, that thou
mayest go to Enoch, our father, and learn from him the truth, for his
dwelling place is among the angels."

And when Methuselah heard the words of his son, he went to Enoch, to
the ends of the earth, and he cried aloud, and Enoch heard his voice,
and appeared before him, and asked him the reason of his coming.
Methuselah told him the cause of his anxiety, and requested him to make
the truth known to him. Enoch answered, and said: "The Lord will do a
new thing in the earth. There will come a great destruction on the
earth, and a deluge for one year. This son who is born unto thee will
be left on the earth, and his three children will be saved with him,
when all mankind that are on the earth shall die. And there will be a
great punishment on the earth, and the earth will be cleansed from all
impurity. And now make known to thy son Lamech that he who was born is
in truth his son, and call his name Noah, for he will be left to you,
and he and his children will be saved from the destruction which will
come upon the earth." When Methuselah had heard the words of his
father, who showed him all the secret things, he returned home, and he
called the child Noah, for he would cause the earth to rejoice in
compensation for all destruction.[4]

By the name Noah he was called only by his grandfather Methuselah; his
father and all others called him Menahem. His generation was addicted
to sorcery, and Methuselah apprehended that his grandson might be
bewitched if his true name were known, wherefore he kept it a secret.
Menahem, Comforter, suited him as well as Noah; it indicated that he
would be a consoler, if but the evil-doers of his time would repent of
their misdeeds.[5] At his very birth it was felt that he would bring
consolation and deliverance. When the Lord said to Adam, "Cursed is the
ground for thy sake," he asked, "For how long a time?" and the answer
made by God was, "Until a man child shall be born whose conformation is
such that the rite of circumcision need not be practiced upon him."
This was fulfilled in Noah, he was circumcised from his mother's womb.

Noah had scarcely come into the world when a marked change was
noticeable. Since the curse brought upon the earth by the sin of Adam,
it happened that wheat being sown, yet oats would sprout and grow. This
ceased with the appearance of Noah: the earth bore the products planted
in it. And it was Noah who, when he was grown to manhood, invented the
plough, the scythe, the hoe, and other implements for cultivating the
ground. Before him men had worked the land with their bare hands.[6]

There was another token to indicate that the child born unto Lamech was
appointed for an extraordinary destiny. When God created Adam, He gave
him dominion over all things: the cow obeyed the ploughman, and the
furrow was willing to be drawn. But after the fall of Adam all things
rebelled against him: the cow refused obedience to the ploughman, and
also the furrow was refractory. Noah was born, and all returned to its
state preceding the fall of man.

Before the birth of Noah, the sea was in the habit of transgressing its
bounds twice daily, morning and evening, and flooding the land up to
the graves. After his birth it kept within its confines. And the famine
that afflicted the world in the time of Lamech, the second of the ten
great famines appointed to come upon it, ceased its ravages with the
birth of Noah.[7]

THE PUNISHMENT OF THE FALLEN ANGELS

Grown to manhood, Noah followed in the ways of his grandfather
Methuselah, while all other men of the time rose up against this pious
king. So far from observing his precepts, they pursued the evil
inclination of their hearts, and perpetrated all sorts of abominable
deeds.[8] Chiefly the fallen angels and their giant posterity caused
the depravity of mankind. The blood spilled by the giants cried unto
heaven from the ground, and the four archangels accused the fallen
angels and their sons before God, whereupon He gave the following
orders to them: Uriel was sent to Noah to announce to him that the
earth would be destroyed by a flood, and to teach him how to save his
own life. Raphael was told to put the fallen angel Azazel into chains,
cast him into a pit of sharp and pointed stones in the desert Dudael,
and cover him with darkness, and so was he to remain until the great
day of judgment, when he would be thrown into the fiery pit of hell,
and the earth would be healed of the corruption he had contrived upon
it. Gabriel was charged to proceed against the bastards and the
reprobates, the sons of the angels begotten with the daughters of men,
and plunge them into deadly conflicts with one another. Shemhazai's ilk
were handed over to Michael, who first caused them to witness the death
of their children in their bloody combat with each other, and then he
bound them and pinned them under the hills of the earth, where they
will remain for seventy generations, until the day of judgment, to be
carried thence to the fiery pit of hell.[9]

The fall of Azazel and Shemhazai came about in this way. When the
generation of the deluge began to practice idolatry, God was deeply
grieved. The two angels Shemhazai and Azazel arose, and said: "O Lord
of the world! It has happened, that which we foretold at the creation
of the world and of man, saying, 'What is man, that Thou art mindful of
him?'" And God said, "And what will become of the world now without
man?" Whereupon the angels: "We will occupy ourselves with it." Then
said God: "I am well aware of it, and I know that if you inhabit the
earth, the evil inclination will overpower you, and you will be more
iniquitous than ever men." The angels pleaded, "Grant us but permission
to dwell among men, and Thou shalt see how we will sanctify Thy Name."
God yielded to their wish, saying, "Descend and sojourn among men!"

When the angels came to earth, and beheld the daughters of men in all
their grace and beauty, they could not restrain their passion.
Shemhazai saw a maiden named Istehar, and he lost his heart to her. She
promised to surrender herself to him, if first he taught her the
Ineffable Name, by means of which he raised himself to heaven. He
assented to her condition. But once she knew it, she pronounced the
Name, and herself ascended to heaven, without fulfilling her promise to
the angel. God said, "Because she kept herself aloof from sin, we will
place her among the seven stars, that men may never forget her," and
she was put in the constellation of the Pleiades.

Shemhazai and Azazel, however, were not deterred from entering into
alliances with the daughters of men, and to the first two sons were
born. Azazel began to devise the finery and the ornaments by means of
which women allure men. Thereupon God sent Metatron to tell Shemhazai
that He had resolved to destroy the world and bring on a deluge. The
fallen angel began to weep and grieve over the fate of the world and
the fate of his two sons. If the world went under, what would they have
to eat, they who needed daily a thousand camels, a thousand horses, and
a thousand steers?

These two sons of Shemhazai, Hiwwa and Hiyya by name, dreamed dreams.
The one saw a great stone which covered the earth, and the earth was
marked all over with lines upon lines of writing. An angel came, and
with a knife obliterated all the lines, leaving but four letters upon
the stone. The other son saw a large pleasure grove planted with all
sorts of trees. But angels approached bearing axes, and they felled the
trees, sparing a single one with three of its branches.

When Hiwwa and Hiyya awoke, they repaired to their father, who
interpreted the dreams for them, saying, "God will bring a deluge, and
none will escape with his life, excepting only Noah and his sons." When
they heard this, the two began to cry and scream, but their father
consoled them: "Soft, soft! Do not grieve. As often as men cut or haul
stones, or launch vessels, they shall invoke your names, Hiwwa! Hiyya!"
This prophecy soothed them.

Shemhazai then did penance. He suspended himself between heaven and
earth, and in this position of a penitent sinner he hangs to this day.
But Azazel persisted obdurately in his sin of leading mankind astray by
means of sensual allurements. For this reason two he-goats were
sacrificed in the Temple on the Day of Atonement, the one for God, that
He pardon the sins of Israel, the other for Azazel, that he bear the
sins of Israel.[10]

Unlike Istehar, the pious maiden, Naamah, the lovely sister of
Tubal-cain, led the angels astray with her beauty, and from her union
with Shamdon sprang the devil Asmodeus.[11] She was as shameless as all
the other descendants of Cain, and as prone to bestial indulgences.
Cainite women and Cainite men alike were in the habit of walking abroad
naked, and they gave themselves up to every conceivable manner of lewd
practices. Of such were the women whose beauty and sensual charms
tempted the angels from the path of virtue. The angels, on the other
hand, no sooner had they rebelled against God and descended to earth
than they lost their transcendental qualities, and were invested with
sublunary bodies, so that a union with the daughters of men became
possible. The offspring of these alliances between the angels and the
Cainite women were the giants,[12] known for their strength and their
sinfulness; as their very name, the Emim, indicates, they inspired
fear. They have many other names. Sometimes they go by the name
Rephaim, because one glance at them made one's heart grow weak; or by
the name Gibborim, simply giants, because their size was so enormous
that their thigh measured eighteen ells; or by the name Zamzummim,
because they were great masters in war; or by the name Anakim, because
they touched the sun with their neck; or by the name Ivvim, because,
like the snake, they could judge of the qualities of the soil; or
finally, by the name Nephilim, because, bringing the world to its fall,
they themselves fell.[13]

THE GENERATION OF THE DELUGE

While the descendants of Cain resembled their father in his sinfulness
and depravity, the descendants of Seth led a pious, well-regulated
life, and the difference between the conduct of the two stocks was
reflected in their habitations. The family of Seth was settled upon the
mountains in the vicinity of Paradise, while the family of Cain resided
in the field of Damascus, the spot whereon Abel was slain by Cain.

Unfortunately, at the time of Methuselah, following the death of Adam,
the family of Seth became corrupted after the manner of the Cainites.
The two strains united with each other to execute all kinds of
iniquitous deeds. The result of the marriages between them were the
Nephilim, whose sins brought the deluge upon the world. In their
arrogance they claimed the same pedigree as the posterity of Seth, and
they compared themselves with princes and men of noble descent.[14]

The wantonness of this generation was in a measure due to the ideal
conditions under which mankind lived before the flood. They knew
neither toil nor care, and as a consequence of their extraordinary
prosperity they grew insolent. In their arrogance they rose up against
God. A single sowing bore a harvest sufficient for the needs of forty
years, and by means of magic arts they could compel the very sun and
moon to stand ready to do their service.[15] The raising of children
gave them no trouble. They were born after a few days' pregnancy, and
immediately after birth they could walk and talk; they themselves aided
the mother in severing the navel string. Not even demons could do them
harm. Once a new-born babe, running to fetch a light whereby his mother
might cut the navel string, met the chief of the demons, and a combat
ensued between the two. Suddenly the crowing of a cock was heard, and
the demon made off, crying out to the child, "Go and report unto thy
mother, if it had not been for the crowing of the cock, I had killed
thee!" Whereupon the child retorted, "Go and report unto thy mother, if
it had not been for my uncut navel string, I had killed thee!"[16]

It was their care-free life that gave them space and leisure for their
infamies. For a time God, in His long-suffering kindness, passed by the
iniquities of men, but His forbearance ceased when once they began to
lead unchaste lives, for "God is patient with all sins save only an
immoral life."[17]

The other sin that hastened the end of the iniquitous generation was
their rapacity. So cunningly were their depredations planned that the
law could not touch them. If a countryman brought a basket of
vegetables to market, they would edge up to it, one after the other,
and abstract a bit, each in itself of petty value, but in a little
while the dealer would have none left to sell.[18]

Even after God had resolved upon the destruction of the sinners, He
still permitted His mercy to prevail, in that He sent Noah unto them,
who exhorted them for one hundred and twenty years to amend their ways,
always holding the flood over them as a threat. As for them, they but
derided him. When they saw him occupying himself with the building of
the ark, they asked, "Wherefore this ark?"

Noah: "God will bring a flood upon you."

The sinners: "What sort of flood? If He sends a fire flood, against
that we know how to protect ourselves. If it is a flood of waters,
then, if the waters bubble up from the earth, we will cover them with
iron rods, and if they descend from above, we know a remedy against
that, too."

Noah: "The waters will ooze out from under your feet, and you will not
be able to ward them off."

Partly they persisted in their obduracy of heart because Noah had made
known to them that the flood would not descend so long as the pious
Methuselah sojourned among them. The period of one hundred and twenty
years which God had appointed as the term of their probation having
expired, Methuselah died, but out of regard for the memory of this
pious man God gave them another week's respite, the week of mourning
for him. During this time of grace, the laws of nature were suspended,
the sun rose in the west and set in the east. To the sinners God gave
the dainties that await man in the future world, for the purpose of
showing them what they were forfeiting.[19] But all this proved
unavailing, and, Methuselah and the other pious men of the generation
having departed this life, God brought the deluge upon the earth.[20]

THE HOLY BOOK

Great wisdom was needed for building the ark, which was to have space
for all beings on earth, even the spirits. Only the fishes did not have
to be provided for.[21] Noah acquired the necessary wisdom from the
book given to Adam by the angel Raziel, in which all celestial and all
earthly knowledge is recorded.

While the first human pair were still in Paradise, it once happened
that Samael, accompanied by a lad, approached Eve and requested her to
keep a watchful eye upon his little son until he should return. Eve
gave him the promise. When Adam came back from a walk in Paradise, he
found a howling, screaming child with Eve, who, in reply to his
question, told him it was Samael's. Adam was annoyed, and his annoyance
grew as the boy cried and screamed more and more violently. In his
vexation he dealt the little one a blow that killed him. But the corpse
did not cease to wail and weep, nor did it cease when Adam cut it up
into bits. To rid himself of the plague, Adam cooked the remains, and
he and Eve ate them. Scarcely had they finished, when Samael appeared
and demanded his son. The two malefactors tried to deny everything;
they pretended they had no knowledge of his son. But Samael said to
them: "What! You dare tell lies, and God in times to come will give
Israel the Torah in which it is said, 'Keep thee far from a false
word'?"

While they were speaking thus, suddenly the voice of the slain lad was
heard proceeding from the heart of Adam and Eve, and it addressed these
words to Samael: "Go hence! I have penetrated to the heart of Adam and
the heart of Eve, and never again shall I quit their hearts, nor the
hearts of their children, or their children's children, unto the end of
all generations."

Samael departed, but Adam was sore grieved, and he put on sackcloth and
ashes, and he fasted many, many days, until God appeared unto him, and
said: "My son, have no fear of Samael. I will give thee a remedy that
will help thee against him, for it was at My instance that he went to
thee." Adam asked, "And what is this remedy?" God: "The Torah." Adam:
"And where is the Torah?" God then gave him the book of the angel
Raziel, which he studied day and night. After some time had passed, the
angels visited Adam, and, envious of the wisdom he had drawn from the
book, they sought to destroy him cunningly by calling him a god and
prostrating themselves before him, in spite of his remonstrance, "Do
not prostrate yourselves before me, but magnify the Lord with me, and
let us exalt His Name together." However, the envy of the angels was so
great that they stole the book God had given Adam from him, and threw
it in the sea. Adam searched for it everywhere in vain, and the loss
distressed him sorely. Again he fasted many days, until God appeared
unto him, and said: "Fear not! I will give the book back to thee," and
He called Rahab, the Angel of the Sea, and ordered him to recover the
book from the sea and restore it to Adam. And so he did.[22]

Upon the death of Adam, the holy book disappeared, but later the cave
in which it was hidden was revealed to Enoch in a dream. It was from
this book that Enoch drew his knowledge of nature, of the earth and of
the heavens, and he became so wise through it that his wisdom exceeded
the wisdom of Adam. Once he had committed it to memory, Enoch hid the
book again.

Now, when God resolved upon bringing the flood on the earth, He sent
the archangel Raphael to Noah, as the bearer of the following message:
"I give thee herewith the holy book, that all the secrets and mysteries
written therein may be made manifest unto thee, and that thou mayest
know how to fulfil its injunction in holiness, purity, modesty, and
humbleness. Thou wilt learn from it how to build an ark of the wood of
the gopher tree, wherein thou, and thy sons, and thy wife shall find
protection."

Noah took the book, and when he studied it, the holy spirit came upon
him, and he knew all things needful for the building of the ark and the
gathering together of the animals. The book, which was made of
sapphires, he took with him into the ark, having first enclosed it in a
golden casket. All the time he spent in the ark it served him as a
time-piece, to distinguish night from day. Before his death, he
entrusted it to Shem, and he in turn to Abraham. From Abraham it
descended through Jacob, Levi, Moses, and Joshua to Solomon, who learnt
all his wisdom from it, and his skill in the healing art, and also his
mastery over the demons.[23]

THE INMATES OF THE ARK

The ark was completed according to the instructions laid down in the
Book of Raziel. Noah's next task was gathering in the animals. No less
than thirty-two species of birds and three hundred and sixty-five of
reptiles he had to take along with him. But God ordered the animals to
repair to the ark, and they trooped thither, and Noah did not have to
do so much as stretch out a finger.[24] Indeed, more appeared than were
required to come, and God instructed him to sit at the door of the ark
and note which of the animals lay down as they reached the entrance and
which stood. The former belonged in the ark, but not the latter. Taking
up his post as he had been commanded, Noah observed a lioness with her
two cubs. All three beasts crouched. But the two young ones began to
struggle with the mother, and she arose and stood up next to them. Then
Noah led the two cubs into the ark. The wild beasts, and the cattle,
and the birds which were not accepted remained standing about the ark
all of seven days, for the assembling of the animals happened one week
before the flood began to descend. On the day whereon they came to the
ark, the sun was darkened, and the foundations of the earth trembled,
and lightning flashed, and the thunder boomed, as never before. And yet
the sinners remained impenitent. In naught did they change their wicked
doings during those last seven days.

When finally the flood broke loose, seven hundred thousand of the
children of men gathered around the ark, and implored Noah to grant
them protection. With a loud voice he replied, and said: "Are ye not
those who were rebellious toward God, saying, 'There is no God'?
Therefore He has brought ruin upon you, to annihilate you and destroy
you from the face of the earth. Have I not been prophesying this unto
you these hundred and twenty years, and you would not give heed unto
the voice of God? Yet now you desire to be kept alive!" Then the
sinners cried out: "So be it! We all are ready now to turn back to God,
if only thou wilt open the door of thy ark to receive us, that we may
live and not die." Noah made answer, and said: "That ye do now, when
your need presses hard upon you. Why did you not turn to God during all
the hundred and twenty years which the Lord appointed unto you as the
term of repentance? Now do ye come, and ye speak thus, because distress
besets your lives. Therefore God will not hearken unto you and give you
ear; naught will you accomplish!"

The crowd of sinners tried to take the entrance to the ark by storm,
but the wild beasts keeping watch around the ark set upon them, and
many were slain, while the rest escaped, only to meet death in the
waters of the flood.[25] The water alone could not have made an end of
them, for they were giants in stature and strength. When Noah
threatened them with the scourge of God, they would make reply: "If the
waters of the flood come from above, they will never reach up to our
necks; and if they come from below, the soles of our feet are large
enough to dam up the springs." But God bade each drop pass through
Gehenna before it fell to earth, and the hot rain scalded the skin of
the sinners. The punishment that overtook them was befitting their
crime. As their sensual desires had made them hot, and inflamed them to
immoral excesses, so they were chastised by means of heated water.[26]

Not even in the hour of the death struggle could the sinners suppress
their vile instincts. When the water began to stream up out of the
springs, they threw their little children into them, to choke the
flood.[27]

It was by the grace of God, not on account of his merits, that Noah
found shelter in the ark before the overwhelming force of the
waters.[28] Although he was better than his contemporaries, he was yet
not worthy of having wonders done for his sake. He had so little faith
that he did not enter the ark until the waters had risen to his knees.
With him his pious wife Naamah, the daughter of Enosh, escaped the
peril, and his three sons, and the wives of his three sons.

Noah had not married until he was four hundred and ninety-eight years
old. Then the Lord had bidden him to take a wife unto himself. He had
not desired to bring children into the world, seeing that they would
all have to perish in the flood, and he had only three sons, born unto
him shortly before the deluge came.[30] God had given him so small a
number of offspring that he might be spared the necessity of building
the ark on an overlarge scale in case they turned out to be pious. And
if not, if they, too, were depraved like the rest of their generation,
sorrow over their destruction would but be increased in proportion to
their number.[31]

As Noah and his family were the only ones not to have a share in the
corruptness of the age, so the animals received into the ark were such
as had led a natural life. For the animals of the time were as immoral
as the men: the dog united with the wolf, the cock with the pea-fowl,
and many others paid no heed to sexual purity. Those that were saved
were such as had kept themselves untainted.[32]

Before the flood the number of unclean animals had been greater than
the number of the clean. Afterward the ratio was reversed, because
while seven pairs of clean animals were preserved in the ark, but two
pairs of the unclean were preserved.[33]

One animal, the reem, Noah could not take into the ark. On account of
its huge size it could not find room therein. Noah therefore tied it to
the ark, and it ran on behind.[34] Also, he could not make space for
the giant Og, the king of Bashan. He sat on top of the ark securely,
and in this way escaped the flood of waters. Noah doled out his food to
him daily, through a hole, because Og had promised that he and his
descendants would serve him as slaves in perpetuity.[35]

Two creatures of a most peculiar kind also found refuge in the ark.
Among the beings that came to Noah there was Falsehood asking for
shelter. He was denied admission, because he had no companion, and Noah
was taking in the animals only by pairs. Falsehood went off to seek a
partner, and he met Misfortune, whom he associated with himself on the
condition that she might appropriate what Falsehood earned. The pair
were then accepted in the ark. When they left it, Falsehood noticed
that whatever he gathered together disappeared at once, and he betook
himself to his companion to seek an explanation, which she gave him in
the following words, "Did we not agree to the condition that I might
take what you earn?" and Falsehood had to depart empty-handed.

THE FLOOD

The assembling of the animals in the ark was but the smaller part of
the task imposed upon Noah. His chief difficulty was to provide food
for a year and accommodations for them. Long afterward Shem, the son of
Noah, related to Eliezer, the servant of Abraham, the tale of their
experiences with the animals in the ark. This is what he said: "We had
sore troubles in the ark. The day animals had to be fed by day, and the
night animals by night. My father knew not what food to give to the
little zikta. Once he cut a pomegranate in half, and a worm dropped out
of the fruit, and was devoured by the zikta. Thenceforth my father
would knead bran, and let it stand until it bred worms, which were fed
to the animal. The lion suffered with a fever all the time, and
therefore he did not annoy the others, because he did not relish dry
food. The animal urshana my father found sleeping in a corner of the
vessel, and he asked him whether he needed nothing to eat. He answered,
and said: 'I saw thou wast very busy, and I did not wish to add to thy
cares.' Whereupon my father said, 'May it be the will of the Lord to
keep thee alive forever,' and the blessing was realized."[37]

The difficulties were increased when the flood began to toss the ark
from side to side. All inside of it were shaken up like lentils in a
pot. The lions began to roar, the oxen lowed, the wolves howled, and
all the animals gave vent to their agony, each through the sounds it
had the power to utter.

Also Noah and his sons, thinking that death was nigh, broke into tears.
Noah prayed to God: "O Lord, help us, for we are not able to bear the
evil that encompasses us. The billows surge about us, the streams of
destruction make us afraid, and death stares us in the face. O hear our
prayer, deliver us, incline Thyself unto us, and be gracious unto us!
Redeem us and save us!"[38]

The flood was produced by a union of the male waters, which are above
the firmament, and the female waters issuing from the earth.[39] The
upper waters rushed through the space left when God removed two stars
out of the constellation Pleiades. Afterward, to put a stop to the
flood, God had to transfer two stars from the constellation of the Bear
to the constellation of the Pleiades. That is why the Bear runs after
the Pleiades. She wants her two children back, but they will be
restored to her only in the future world.[40]

There were other changes among the celestial spheres during the year of
the flood. All the time it lasted, the sun and the moon shed no light,
whence Noah was called by his name, "the resting one," for in his life
the sun and the moon rested. The ark was illuminated by a precious
stone, the light of which was more brilliant by night than by day, so
enabling Noah to distinguish between day and night.[41]

The duration of the flood was a whole year. It began on the seventeenth
day of Heshwan, and the rain continued for forty days, until the
twenty-seventh of Kislew. The punishment corresponded to the crime of
the sinful generation. They had led immoral lives, and begotten bastard
children, whose embryonic state lasts forty days. From the twenty
seventh of Kislew until the first of Siwan, a period of one hundred and
fifty days, the water stood at one and the same height, fifteen ells
above the earth. During that time all the wicked were destroyed, each
one receiving the punishment due to him.[42] Cain was among those that
perished, and thus the death of Abel was avenged.[43] So powerful were
the waters in working havoc that the corpse of Adam was not spared in
its grave.[44]

On the first of Siwan the waters began to abate, a quarter of an ell a
day, and at the end of sixty days, on the tenth day of Ab, the summits
of the mountains showed themselves. But many days before, on the tenth
of Tammuz, Noah had sent forth the raven, and a week later the dove, on
the first of her three sallies, repeated at intervals of a week. It
took from the first of Ab until the first of Tishri for the waters to
subside wholly from the face of the earth. Even then the soil was so
miry that the dwellers in the ark had to remain within until the
twenty-seventh day of Heshwan, completing a full sun year, consisting
of twelve moons and eleven days.[45]

Noah had experienced difficulty all along in ascertaining the state of
the waters. When he desired to dispatch the raven, the bird said: "The
Lord, thy Master, hates me, and thou dost hate me, too. Thy Master
hates me, for He bade thee take seven pairs of the clean animals into
the ark, and but two pairs of the unclean animals, to which I belong.
Thou hatest me, for thou dost not choose, as a messenger, a bird of one
of the kinds of which there are seven pairs in the ark, but thou
sendest me, and of my kind there is but one pair. Suppose, now, I
should perish by reason of heat or cold, would not the world be the
poorer by a whole species of animals? Or can it be that thou hast cast
a lustful eye upon my mate, and desirest to rid thyself of me?" Where
unto Noah made answer, and said: "Wretch! I must live apart from my own
wife in the ark. How much less would such thoughts occur to my mind as
thou imputest to me!"[46]

The raven's errand had no success, for when he saw the body of a dead
man, he set to work to devour it, and did not execute the orders given
to him by Noah. Thereupon the dove was sent out. Toward evening she
returned with an olive leaf in her bill, plucked upon the Mount of
Olives at Jerusalem, for the Holy Land had not been ravaged by the
deluge. As she plucked it, she said to God: "O Lord of the world, let
my food be as bitter as the olive, but do Thou give it to me from Thy
hand, rather than it should be sweet, and I be delivered into the power
of men."[47]

NOAH LEAVES THE ARK

Though the earth assumed its old form at the end of the year of
punishment, Noah did not abandon the ark until he received the command
of God to leave it. He said to himself, "As I entered the ark at the
bidding of God, so I will leave it only at His bidding." Yet, when God
bade Noah go out of the ark, he refused, because he feared that after
he had lived upon the dry land for some time, and begotten children,
God would bring another flood. He therefore would not leave the ark
until God swore He would never visit the earth with a flood again.[48]

When he stepped out from the ark into the open, he began to weep
bitterly at sight of the enormous ravages wrought by the flood, and he
said to God: "O Lord of the world! Thou art called the Merciful, and
Thou shouldst have had mercy upon Thy creatures." God answered, and
said: "O thou foolish shepherd, now thou speakest to Me. Thou didst not
so when I addressed kind words to thee, saying: 'I saw thee as a
righteous man and perfect in thy generation, and I will bring the flood
upon the earth to destroy all flesh. Make an ark for thyself of gopher
wood.' Thus spake I to thee, telling thee all these circumstances, that
thou mightest entreat mercy for the earth. But thou, as soon as thou
didst hear that thou wouldst be rescued in the ark, thou didst not
concern thyself about the ruin that would strike the earth. Thou didst
but build an ark for thyself, in which thou wast saved. Now that the
earth is wasted, thou openest thy mouth to supplicate and pray."

Noah realized that he had been guilty of folly. To propitiate God and
acknowledge his sin, he brought a sacrifice.[49] God accepted the
offering with favor, whence he is called by his name Noah.[50] The
sacrifice was not offered by Noah with his own hands; the priestly
services connected with it were performed by his son Shem. There was a
reason for this. One day in the ark Noah forgot to give his ration to
the lion, and the hungry beast struck him so violent a blow with his
paw that he was lame forever after, and, having a bodily defect, he was
not permitted to do the offices of a priest.[51]

The sacrifices consisted of an ox, a sheep, a goat, two turtle doves,
and two young pigeons. Noah had chosen these kinds because he supposed
they were appointed for sacrifices, seeing that God had commanded him
to take seven pairs of them into the ark with him. The altar was
erected in the same place on which Adam and Cain and Abel had brought
their sacrifices, and on which later the altar was to be in the
sanctuary at Jerusalem.[52]

After the sacrifice was completed, God blessed Noah and his sons. He
made them to be rulers of the world as Adam had been,[53] and He gave
them a command, saying, "Be fruitful and multiply upon the earth," for
during their sojourn in the ark, the two sexes, of men and animals
alike, had lived apart from each other, because while a public calamity
rages continence is becoming even to those who are left unscathed. This
law of conduct had been violated by none in the ark except by Ham, by
the dog, and by the raven. They all received a punishment. Ham's was
that his descendants were men of dark-hued skin.[54]

As a token that He would destroy the earth no more, God set His bow in
the cloud. Even if men should be steeped in sin again, the bow
proclaims to them that their sins will cause no harm to the world.
Times came in the course of the ages when men were pious enough not to
have to live in dread of punishment. In such times the bow was not
visible.[55]

God accorded permission to Noah and his descendants to use the flesh of
animals for food, which had been forbidden from the time of Adam until
then. But they were to abstain from the use of blood. He ordained the
seven Noachian laws, the observance of which is incumbent upon all men,
not upon Israel alone. God enjoined particularly the command against
the shedding of human blood. Whoso would shed man's blood, his blood
would be shed. Even if human judges let the guilty man go free, his
punishment would overtake him. He would die an unnatural death, such as
he had inflicted upon his fellow-man. Yea, even beasts that slew men,
even of them would the life of men be required.[56]

THE CURSE OF DRUNKENNESS

Noah lost his epithet "the pious" when he began to occupy himself with
the growing of the vine. He became a "man of the ground," and this
first attempt to produce wine at the same time produced the first to
drink to excess, the first to utter curses upon his associates, and the
first to introduce slavery. This is the way it all came about. Noah
found the vine which Adam had taken with him from Paradise, when he was
driven forth. He tasted the grapes upon it, and, finding them
palatable, he resolved to plant the vine and tend it.[57] On the
selfsame day on which he planted it, it bore fruit, he put it in the
wine-press, drew off the juice, drank it, became drunken, and was
dishonored—all on one day. His assistant in the work of cultivating the
vine was Satan, who had happened along at the very moment when he was
engaged in planting the slip he had found. Satan asked him: "What is it
thou art planting here?"

Noah: "A vineyard."

Satan: "And what may be the qualities of what it produces?"

Noah: "The fruit it bears is sweet, be it dry or moist. It yields wine
that rejoiceth the heart of man."

Satan: "Let us go into partnership in this business of planting a
vineyard."

Noah: "Agreed!"

Satan thereupon slaughtered a lamb, and then, in succession, a lion, a
pig, and a monkey. The blood of each as it was killed he made to flow
under the vine. Thus he conveyed to Noah what the qualities of wine
are: before man drinks of it, he is innocent as a lamb; if he drinks of
it moderately, he feels as strong as a lion; if he drinks more of it
than he can bear, he resembles the pig; and if he drinks to the point
of intoxication, then he behaves like a monkey, he dances around,
sings, talks obscenely, and knows not what he is doing.[58]

This deterred Noah no more than did the example of Adam, whose fall had
also been due to wine, for the forbidden fruit had been the grape, with
which he had made himself drunk.[59]

In his drunken condition Noah betook himself to the tent of his wife.
His son Ham saw him there, and he told his brothers what he had
noticed, and said: "The first man had but two sons, and one slew the
other; this man Noah has three sons, yet he desires to beget a fourth
besides." Nor did Ham rest satisfied with these disrespectful words
against his father. He added to this sin of irreverence the still
greater outrage of attempting to perform an operation upon his father
designed to prevent procreation.

When Noah awoke from his wine and became sober, he pronounced a curse
upon Ham in the person of his youngest son Canaan. To Ham himself he
could do no harm, for God had conferred a blessing upon Noah and his
three sons as they departed from the ark. Therefore he put the curse
upon the last-born son of the son that had prevented him from begetting
a younger son than the three he had. The descendants of Ham through
Canaan therefore have red eyes, because Ham looked upon the nakedness
of his father; they have misshapen lips, because Ham spoke with his
lips to his brothers about the unseemly condition of his father; they
have twisted curly hair, because Ham turned and twisted his head round
to see the nakedness of his father; and they go about naked, because
Ham did not cover the nakedness of his father. Thus he was requited,
for it is the way of God to mete out punishment measure for measure.

Canaan had to suffer vicariously for his father's sin. Yet some of the
punishment was inflicted upon him on his own account, for it had been
Canaan who had drawn the attention of Ham to Noah's revolting
condition. Ham, it appears, was but the worthy father of such a
son.[61] The last will and testament of Canaan addressed to his
children read as follows: "Speak not the truth; hold not yourselves
aloof from theft; lead a dissolute life; hate your master with an
exceeding great hate; and love one another."[62]

As Ham was made to suffer requital for his irreverence, so Shem and
Japheth received a reward for the filial, deferential way in which they
took a garment and laid it upon both their shoulders, and walking
backward, with averted faces, covered the nakedness of their father.
Naked the descendants of Ham, the Egyptians and Ethiopians, were led
away captive and into exile by the king of Assyria, while the
descendants of Shem, the Assyrians, even when the angel of the Lord
burnt them in the camp, were not exposed, their garments remained upon
their corpses unsinged. And in time to come, when Gog shall suffer his
defeat, God will provide both shrouds and a place of burial for him and
all his multitude, the posterity of Japheth.

Though Shem and Japheth both showed themselves to be dutiful and
deferential, yet it was Shem who deserved the larger meed of praise. He
was the first to set about covering his father. Japheth joined him
after the good deed had been begun. Therefore the descendants of Shem
received as their special reward the tallit, the garment worn by them,
while the Japhethites have only the toga.[63] A further distinction
accorded to Shem was the mention of his name in connection with God's
in the blessing of Noah. "Blessed be the Lord, the God of Shem," he
said, though as a rule the name of God is not joined to the name of a
living person, only to the name of one who has departed this life.[64]

The relation of Shem to Japheth was expressed in the blessing their
father pronounced upon them: God will grant a land of beauty to
Japheth, and his sons will be proselytes dwelling in the academies of
Shem.[65] At the same time Noah conveyed by his words that the Shekinah
would dwell only in the first Temple, erected by Solomon, a son of
Shem, and not in the second Temple, the builder of which would be
Cyrus, a descendant of Japheth.[66]

NOAH'S DESCENDANTS SPREAD ABROAD

When it became known to Ham that his father had cursed him, he fled
ashamed, and with his family he settled in the city built by him, and
named Neelatamauk for his wife. Jealous of his brother, Japheth
followed his example. He likewise built a city which he named for his
wife, Adataneses. Shem was the only one of the sons of Noah who did not
abandon him. In the vicinity of his father's home, by the mountain, he
built his city, to which he also gave his wife's name, Zedeketelbab.
The three cities are all near Mount Lubar, the eminence upon which the
ark rested. The first lies to the south of it, the second to the west,
and the third to the east.

Noah endeavored to inculcate the ordinances and the commands known to
him upon his children and his children's children. In particular he
admonished them against the fornication, the uncleanness, and all the
iniquity which had brought the flood down upon the earth. He reproached
them with living apart from one another, and with their jealousies, for
he feared that, after his death, they might go so far as to shed human
blood. Against this he warned them impressively, that they be not
annihilated from the earth like those that went before. Another law
which he enjoined upon them, to observe it, was the law ordaining that
the fruit of a tree shall not be used the first three years it bears,
and even in the fourth year it shall be the portion of the priests
alone, after a part thereof has been offered upon the altar of God. And
having made an end of giving his teachings and injunctions, Noah said:
"For thus did Enoch, your ancestor, exhort his son Methuselah, and
Methuselah his son Lamech, and Lamech delivered all unto me as his
father had bidden him, and now I do exhort you, my children, as Enoch
exhorted his son. When he lived, in his generation, which was the
seventh generation of man, he commanded it and testified it unto his
children and his children's children, until the day of his death."[67]

In the year 1569 after the creation of the world, Noah divided the
earth by lot among his three sons, in the presence of an angel. Each
one stretched forth his hand and took a slip from the bosom of Noah.
Shem's slip was inscribed with the middle of the earth, and this
portion became the inheritance of his descendants unto all eternity.
Noah rejoiced that the lot had assigned it to Shem. Thus was fulfilled
his blessing upon him, "And God in the habitation of Shem," for three
holy places fell within his precincts—the Holy of Holies in the Temple,
Mount Sinai, the middle point of the desert, and Mount Zion, the middle
point of the navel of the earth.

The south fell to the lot of Ham, and the north became the inheritance
of Japheth. The land of Ham is hot, Japheth's cold, but Shem's is
neither hot nor cold, its temperature is hot and cold mixed.[68]

This division of the earth took place toward the end of the life of
Peleg, the name given to him by his father Eber, who, being a prophet,
knew that the division of the earth would take place in the time of his
son.[69] The brother of Peleg was called Joktan, because the duration
of the life of man was shortened in his time.[70]

In turn, the three sons of Noah, while they were still standing in the
presence of their father, divided each his portion among his children,
Noah threatening with his curse any who should stretch out his hand to
take a portion not assigned to him by lot. And they all cried, "So be
it! So be it!"[71]

Thus were divided one hundred and four lands and ninety-nine islands
among seventy-two nations, each with a language of its own, using
sixteen different sets of characters for writing. To Japheth were
allotted forty-four lands, thirty-three islands, twenty-two languages,
and five kinds of writing; Ham received thirty-four lands, thirty-three
islands, twenty-four languages, and five kinds of writing; and Shem
twenty-six lands, thirty-three islands, twenty-six languages, and six
kinds of writing—one set of written characters more to Shem than to
either of his brothers, the extra set being the Hebrew.[72]

The land appointed as the inheritance of the twelve sons of Jacob was
provisionally granted to Canaan, Zidon, Heth, the Jebusites, the
Amorites, the Girgashites, the Hivites, the Arkites, the Sinites, the
Arvadites, the Zemarites, and the Hamathites. It was the duty of these
nations to take care of the land until the rightful owners should
come.[73]

No sooner had the children of Noah and their children's children taken
possession of the habitations apportioned to them, than the unclean
spirits began to seduce men and torment them with pain and all sorts of
suffering leading to spiritual and physical death. Upon the entreaties
of Noah God sent down the angel Raphael, who banished nine-tenths of
the unclean spirits from the earth, leaving but one-tenth for Mastema,
to punish sinners through them. Raphael, supported by the chief of the
unclean spirits, at that time revealed to Noah all the remedies
residing in plants, that he might resort to them at need. Noah recorded
them in a book, which he transmitted to his son Shem.[74] This is the
source to which go back all the medical books whence the wise men of
India, Aram, Macedonia, and Egypt draw their knowledge. The sages of
India devoted themselves particularly to the study of curative trees
and spices; the Arameans were well versed in the knowledge of the
properties of grains and seeds, and they translated the old medical
books into their language. The wise men of Macedonia were the first to
apply medical knowledge practically, while the Egyptians sought to
effect cures by means of magic arts and by means of astrology, and they
taught the Midrash of the Chaldees, composed by Kangar, the son of Ur,
the son of Kesed. Medical skill spread further and further until the
time of aesculapius. This Macedonian sage, accompanied by forty learned
magicians, journeyed from country to country, until they came to the
land beyond India, in the direction of Paradise. They hoped there to
find some wood of the tree of life, and thus spread their fame abroad
over the whole world. Their hope was frustrated. When they arrived at
the spot, they found healing trees and wood of the tree of life, but
when they were in the act of stretching forth their hands to gather
what they desired, lightning darted out of the ever-turning sword,
smote them to the ground, and they were all burnt. With them
disappeared all knowledge of medicine, and it did not revive until the
time of the first Artaxerxes, under the Macedonian sage Hippocrates,
Dioscorides of Baala, Galen of Caphtor, and the Hebrew Asaph.[75]

THE DEPRAVITY OF MANKIND

With the spread of mankind corruption increased. While Noah was still
alive, the descendants of Shem, Ham, and Japheth appointed princes over
each of the three groups—Nimrod for the descendants of Ham, Joktan for
the descendants of Shem, and Phenech for the descendants of Japheth.
Ten years before Noah's death, the number of those subject to the three
princes amounted to millions. When this great concourse of men came to
Babylonia upon their journeyings, they said to one another: "Behold,
the time is coming when, at the end of days, neighbor will be separated
from neighbor, and brother from brother, and one will carry on war
against the other. Go to, let us build us a city, and a tower, whose
top may reach unto heaven, and let us make us a great name upon the
earth. And now let us make bricks, and each one write his name upon his
brick." All agreed to this proposal, with the exception of twelve pious
men, Abraham among them. They refused to join the others. They were
seized by the people, and brought before the three princes, to whom
they gave the following reason for their refusal: "We will not make
bricks, nor remain with you, for we know but one God, and Him we serve;
even if you burn us in the fire together with the bricks, we will not
walk in your ways." Nimrod and Phenech flew into such a passion over
the twelve men that they resolved to throw them into the fire. Joktan,
however, besides being a God-fearing man, was of close kin to the men
on trial, and he essayed to save them. He proposed to his two
colleagues to grant them a seven days' respite. His plan was accepted,
such deference being paid him as the primate among the three. The
twelve were incarcerated in the house of Joktan. In the night he
charged fifty of his attendants to mount the prisoners upon mules and
take them to the mountains. Thus they would escape the threatened
punishment. Joktan provided them with food for a month. He was sure
that in the meantime either a change of sentiment would come about, and
the people desist from their purpose, or God would help the fugitives.
Eleven of the prisoners assented to the plan with gratitude. Abraham
alone rejected it, saying: "Behold, to-day we flee to the mountains to
escape from the fire, but if wild beasts rush out from the mountains
and devour us, or if food is lacking, so that we die by famine, we
shall be found fleeing before the people of the land and dying in our
sins. Now, as the Lord liveth, in whom I trust, I will not depart from
this place wherein they have imprisoned me, and if I am to die through
my sins, then will I die by the will of God, according to His desire."

In vain Joktan endeavored to persuade Abraham to flee. He persisted in
his refusal. He remained behind alone in the prison house, while the
other eleven made their escape. At the expiration of the set term, when
the people returned and demanded the death of the twelve captives,
Joktan could produce only Abraham. His excuse was that the rest had
broken loose during the night. The people were about to throw
themselves upon Abraham and cast him into the lime kiln. Suddenly an
earthquake was felt, the fire darted from the furnace, and all who were
standing round about, eighty four thousand of the people, were
consumed, while Abraham remained untouched. Thereupon he repaired to
his eleven friends in the mountains, and told them of the miracle that
had befallen for his sake. They all returned with him, and, unmolested
by the people, they gave praise and thanks to God.[76]

NIMROD

The first among the leaders of the corrupt men was Nimrod.[77] His
father Cush had married his mother at an advanced age, and Nimrod, the
offspring of this belated union, was particularly dear to him as the
son of his old age. He gave him the clothes made of skins with which
God had furnished Adam and Eve at the time of their leaving Paradise.
Cush himself had gained possession of them through Ham. From Adam and
Eve they had descended to Enoch, and from him to Methuselah, and to
Noah, and the last had taken them with him into the ark. When the
inmates of the ark were about to leave their refuge, Ham stole the
garments and kept them concealed, finally passing them on to his
first-born son Cush. Cush in turn hid them for many years. When his son
Nimrod reached his twentieth year, he gave them to him.[78] These
garments had a wonderful property. He who wore them was both invincible
and irresistible. The beasts and birds of the woods fell down before
Nimrod as soon as they caught sight of him arrayed in them,[79] and he
was equally victorious in his combats with men.[80] The source of his
unconquerable strength was not known to them. They attributed it to his
personal prowess, and therefore they appointed him king over
themselves.[81] This was done after a conflict between the descendants
of Cush and the descendants of Japheth, from which Nimrod emerged
triumphant, having routed the enemy utterly with the assistance of a
handful of warriors. He chose Shinar as his capital. Thence he extended
his dominion farther and farther, until he rose by cunning and force to
be the sole ruler of the whole world, the first mortal to hold
universal sway, as the ninth ruler to possess the same power will be
the Messiah.[82]

His impiousness kept pace with his growing power. Since the flood there
had been no such sinner as Nimrod. He fashioned idols of wood and
stone, and paid worship to them. But not satisfied to lead a godless
life himself, he did all he could to tempt his subjects into evil ways,
wherein he was aided and abetted by his son Mardon. This son of his
outstripped his father in iniquity. It was their time and their life
that gave rise to the proverb, "Out of the wicked cometh forth
wickedness."[83]

The great success that attended all of Nimrod's undertakings produced a
sinister effect. Men no longer trusted in God, but rather in their own
prowess and ability,[84] an attitude to which Nimrod tried to convert
the whole world.[85] Therefore people said, "Since the creation of the
world there has been none like Nimrod, a mighty hunter of men and
beasts, and a sinner before God."[86]

And not all this sufficed unto Nimrod's evil desire. Not enough that he
turned men away from God, he did all he could to make them pay Divine
honors unto himself. He set himself up as a god, and made a seat for
himself in imitation of the seat of God. It was a tower built out of a
round rock, and on it he placed a throne of cedar wood, upon which
arose, one above the other, four thrones, of iron, copper, silver, and
gold. Crowning all, upon the golden throne, lay a precious stone, round
in shape and gigantic in size. This served him as a seat, and as he
sate upon it, all nations came and paid him Divine homage.[87]

THE TOWER OF BABEL

The iniquity and godlessness of Nimrod reached their climax in the
building of the Tower of Babel. His counsellors had proposed the plan
of erecting such a tower, Nimrod had agreed to it, and it was executed
in Shinar by a mob of six hundred thousand men. The enterprise was
neither more nor less than rebellion against God, and there were three
sorts of rebels among the builders. The first party spoke, Let us
ascend into the heavens and wage warfare with Him; the second party
spoke, Let us ascend into the heavens, set up our idols, and pay
worship unto them there; and the third party spoke, Let us ascend into
the heavens, and ruin them with our bows and spears.

Many, many years were passed in building the tower. It reached so great
a height that it took a year to mount to the top. A brick was,
therefore, more precious in the sight of the builders than a human
being. If a man fell down, and met his death, none took notice of it,
but if a brick dropped, they wept, because it would take a year to
replace it. So intent were they upon accomplishing their purpose that
they would not permit a woman to interrupt herself in her work of
brick-making when the hour of travail came upon her. Moulding bricks
she gave birth to her child, and, tying it round her body in a sheet,
she went on moulding bricks.

They never slackened in their work, and from their dizzy height they
constantly shot arrows toward heaven, which, returning, were seen to be
covered with blood. They were thus fortified in their delusion, and
they cried, "We have slain all who are in heaven." Thereupon God turned
to the seventy angels who encompass His throne, and He spake: "Go to,
let us go down, and there confound their language, that they may not
understand one another's speech." Thus it happened. Thenceforth none
knew what the other spoke. One would ask for the mortar, and the other
handed him a brick; in a rage, he would throw the brick at his partner
and kill him. Many perished in this manner, and the rest were punished
according to the nature of their rebellious conduct. Those who had
spoken, "Let us ascend into the heavens, set up our idols, and pay
worship unto them there," God transformed into apes and phantoms; those
who had proposed to assault the heavens with their arms, God set
against each other so that they fell in the combat; and those who had
resolved to carry on a combat with God in heaven were scattered
broadcast over the earth. As for the unfinished tower, a part sank into
the earth, and another part was consumed by fire; only one-third of it
remained standing.[88] The place of the tower has never lost its
peculiar quality. Whoever passes it forgets all he knows.[89]

The punishment inflicted upon the sinful generation of the tower is
comparatively lenient. On account of rapine the generation of the flood
were utterly destroyed, while the generation of the tower were
preserved in spite of their blasphemies and all their other acts
offensive to God. The reason is that God sets a high value upon peace
and harmony. Therefore the generation of the deluge, who gave
themselves up to depredation, and bore hatred to one another, were
extirpated, root and branch, while the generation of the Tower of Babel
dwelling amicably together, and loving one another, were spared alive,
at least a remnant of them.[90]

Beside the chastisement of sin and sinners by the confounding of
speech, another notable circumstance was connected with the descent of
God upon earth—one of only ten such descents to occur between the
creation of the world and the day of judgment. It was on this occasion
that God and the seventy angels that surround His throne cast lots
concerning the various nations. Each angel received a nation, and
Israel fell to the lot of God. To every nation a peculiar language was
assigned, Hebrew being reserved for Israel—the language made use of by
God at the creation of the world.[91]




V
ABRAHAM

THE WICKED GENERATIONS

Ten generations there were from Noah to Abraham, to show how great is
the clemency of God, for all the generations provoked His wrath, until
Abraham our father came and received the reward of all of them.[1] For
the sake of Abraham God had shown himself long-suffering and patient
during the lives of these ten generations. Yea, more, the world itself
had been created for the sake of his merits.[2] His advent had been
made manifest to his ancestor Reu, who uttered the following prophecy
at the birth of his son Serug: "From this child he shall be born in the
fourth generation that shall set his dwelling over the highest, and he
shall be called perfect and spotless, and shall be the father of
nations, and his covenant shall not be dissolved, and his seed shall be
multiplied forever."[3]

It was, indeed, high time that the "friend of God"[4] should make his
appearance upon earth. The descendants of Noah were sinking from
depravity to lower and lower depths of depravity. They were beginning
to quarrel and slay, eat blood, build fortified cities and walls and
towers, and set one man over the whole nation as king, and wage wars,
people against people, and nations against nations, and cities against
cities, and do all manner of evil, and acquire weapons, and teach
warfare unto their children. And they began also to take captives and
sell them as slaves. And they made unto themselves molten images, which
they worshipped, each one the idol he had molten for himself, for the
evil spirits under their leader Mastema led them astray into sin and
uncleanness. For this reason Reu called his son Serug, because all
mankind had turned aside unto sin and transgression. When he grew to
manhood, the name was seen to have been chosen fittingly, for he, too,
worshipped idols, and when he himself had a son, Nahor by name, he
taught him the arts of the Chaldees, how to be a soothsayer and
practice magic according to signs in the heavens. When, in time, a son
was born to Nahor, Mastema sent ravens and other birds to despoil the
earth and rob men of the proceeds of their work. As soon as they had
dropped the seed in the furrows, and before they could cover it over
with earth, the birds picked it up from the surface of the ground, and
Nahor called his son Terah, because the ravens and the other birds
plagued men, devoured their seed, and reduced them to destitution.[6]

THE BIRTH OF ABRAHAM

Terah married Emtelai, the daughter of Karnabo,[6] and the offspring of
their union was Abraham. His birth had been read in the stars by
Nimrod,[7] for this impious king was a cunning astrologer, and it was
manifest to him that a man would be born in his day who would rise up
against him and triumphantly give the lie to his religion. In his
terror at the fate foretold him in the stars, he sent for his princes
and governors, and asked them to advise him in the matter. They
answered, and said: "Our unanimous advice is that thou shouldst build a
great house, station a guard at the entrance thereof, and make known in
the whole of thy realm that all pregnant women shall repair thither
together with their midwives, who are to remain with them when they are
delivered. When the days of a woman to be delivered are fulfilled, and
the child is born, it shall be the duty of the midwife to kill it, if
it be a boy. But if the child be a girl, it shall be kept alive, and
the mother shall receive gifts and costly garments, and a herald shall
proclaim, 'Thus is done unto the woman who bears a daughter!'"

The king was pleased with this counsel, and he had a proclamation
published throughout his whole kingdom, summoning all the architects to
build a great house for him, sixty ells high and eighty wide. After it
was completed, he issued a second proclamation, summoning all pregnant
women thither, and there they were to remain until their confinement.
Officers were appointed to take the women to the house, and guards were
stationed in it and about it, to prevent the women from escaping
thence. He furthermore sent midwives to the house, and commanded them
to slay the men children at their mothers' breasts. But if a woman bore
a girl, she was to be arrayed in byssus, silk, and embroidered
garments, and led forth from the house of detention amid great honors.
No less than seventy thousand children were slaughtered thus. Then the
angels appeared before God, and spoke, "Seest Thou not what he doth,
yon sinner and blasphemer, Nimrod son of Canaarl, who slays so many
innocent babes that have done no harm?" God answered, and said: "Ye
holy angels, I know it and I see it, for I neither slumber nor sleep. I
behold and I know the secret things and the things that are revealed,
and ye shall witness what I will do unto this sinner and blasphemer,
for I will turn My hand against him to chastise him."[8]

It was about this time that Terah espoused the mother of Abraham, and
she was with child. When her body grew large at the end of three months
of pregnancy,[9] and her countenance became pale, Terah said unto her,
"What ails thee, my wife, that thy countenance is so pale and thy body
so swollen?" She answered, and said, "Every year I suffer with this
malady."[10] But Terah would not be put off thus. He insisted: "Show me
thy body. It seems to me thou art big with child. If that be so, it
behooves us not to violate the command of our god Nimrod."[11] When he
passed his hand over her body, there happened a miracle. The child rose
until it lay beneath her breasts, and Terah could feel nothing with his
hands. He said to his wife, "Thou didst speak truly," and naught became
visible until the day of her delivery.

When her time approached, she left the city in great terror and
wandered toward the desert, walking along the edge of a valley,[12]
until she happened across a cave. She entered this refuge, and on the
next day she was seized with throes, and she gave birth to a son. The
whole cave was filled with the light of the child's countenance as with
the splendor of the sun, and the mother rejoiced exceedingly. The babe
she bore was our father Abraham.

His mother lamented, and said to her son: "Alas that I bore thee at a
time when Nimrod is king. For thy sake seventy thousand men children
were slaughtered, and I am seized with terror on account of thee, that
he hear of thy existence, and slay thee. Better thou shouldst perish
here in this cave than my eye should behold thee dead at my breast."
She took the garment in which she was clothed, and wrapped it about the
boy. Then she abandoned him in the cave, saying, "May the Lord be with
thee, may He not fail thee nor forsake thee."[13]

THE BABE PROCLAIMS GOD

Thus Abraham was deserted in the cave, without a nurse, and he began to
wail. God sent Gabriel down to give him milk to drink, and the angel
made it to flow from the little finger of the baby's right hand, and he
sucked at it until he was ten days old.[14] Then he arose and walked
about, and he left the cave, and went along the edge of the valley.[15]
When the sun sank, and the stars came forth, he said, "These are the
gods!" But the dawn came, and the stars could be seen no longer, and
then he said, "I will not pay worship to these, for they are no gods."
Thereupon the sun came forth, and he spoke, "This is my god, him will I
extol." But again the sun set, and he said, "He is no god," and
beholding the moon, he called her his god to whom he would pay Divine
homage. Then the moon was obscured, and he cried out: "This, too, is no
god! There is One who sets them all in motion."[16]

He was still communing with himself when the angel Gabriel approached
him and met him with the greeting, "Peace be with thee," and Abraham
returned, "With thee be peace," and asked, "Who art thou?" And Gabriel
answered, and said, "I am the angel Gabriel, the messenger of God," and
he led Abraham to a spring of water near by, and Abraham washed his
face and his hands and feet, and he prayed to God, bowing down and
prostrating himself.

Meantime the mother of Abraham thought of him in sorrow and tears, and
she went forth from the city to seek him in the cave in which she had
abandoned him. Not finding her son, she wept bitterly, and said, "Woe
unto me that I bore thee but to become a prey of wild beasts, the bears
and the lions and the wolves!" She went to the edge of the valley, and
there she found her son. But she did not recognize him, for he had
grown very large. She addressed the lad, "Peace be with thee!" and he
returned, "With thee be peace!" and he continued, "Unto what purpose
didst thou come to the desert?" She replied, "I went forth from the
city to seek my son." Abraham questioned further, "Who brought thy son
hither?" and the mother replied thereto: "I had become pregnant from my
husband Terah, and when the days of my delivery were fulfilled, I was
in anxiety about my son in my womb, lest our king come, the son of
Canaan, and slay him as he had slain the seventy thousand other men
children. Scarcely had I reached the cave in this valley when the
throes of travailing seized me, and I bore a son, whom I left behind in
the cave, and I went home again. Now am I come to seek him, but I find
him not."

Abraham then spoke, "As to this child thou tellest of, how old was it?"

The mother: "It was about twenty days old."

Abraham: "Is there a woman in the world who would forsake her new-born
son in the desert, and come to seek him after twenty days?"

The mother: "Peradventure God will show Himself a merciful God!"

Abraham: "I am the son whom thou hast come to seek in this valley!"

The mother: "My son, how thou art grown! But twenty days old, and thou
canst already walk, and talk with thy mouth!"[17]

Abraham: "So it is, and thus, O my mother, it is made known unto thee
that there is in the world a great, terrible, living, and ever-existing
God, who doth see, but who cannot be seen. He is in the heavens above,
and the whole earth is full of His glory."

The mother: "My son, is there a God beside Nimrod?"

Abraham: "Yes, mother, the God of the heavens and the God of the earth,
He is also the God of Nimrod son of Canaan. Go, therefore, and carry
this message unto Nimrod."

The mother of Abraham returned to the city and told her husband Terah
how she had found their son. Terah, who was a prince and a magnate in
the house of the king, betook himself to the royal palace, and cast
himself down before the king upon his face. It was the rule that one
who prostrated himself before the king was not permitted to lift up his
head until the king bade him lift it up. Nimrod gave permission to
Terah to rise and state his request. Thereupon Terah related all that
had happened with his wife and his son. When Nimrod heard his tale,
abject fear seized upon him, and he asked his counsellors and princes
what to do with the lad. They answered, and said: "Our king and our
god! Wherefore art thou in fear by reason of a little child? There are
myriads upon myriads of princes in thy realm,[18] rulers of thousands,
rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens, and
overseers without number. Let the pettiest of the princes go and fetch
the boy and put him in prison." But the king interposed, "Have ye ever
seen a baby of twenty days walking with his feet, speaking with his
mouth, and proclaiming with his tongue that there is a God in heaven,
who is One, and none beside Him, who sees and is not seen?" All the
assembled princes were horror struck at these words.[19]

At this time Satan in human form appeared, clad in black silk garb, and
he cast himself down before the king. Nimrod said, "Raise thy head and
state thy request." Satan asked the king: "Why art thou terrified, and
why are ye all in fear on account of a little lad? I will counsel thee
what thou shalt do: Open thy arsenal and give weapons unto all the
princes, chiefs, and governors, and unto all the warriors, and send
them to fetch him unto thy service and to be under thy dominion."

This advice given by Satan the king accepted and followed. He sent a
great armed host to bring Abraham to him. When the boy saw the army
approach him, he was sore afraid, and amid tears he implored God for
help. In answer to his prayer, God sent the angel Gabriel to him, and
he said: "Be not afraid and disquieted, for God is with thee. He will
rescue thee out of the hands of all thine adversaries." God commanded
Gabriel to put thick, dark clouds between Abraham and his assailants.
Dismayed by the heavy clouds, they fled, returning to Nimrod, their
king, and they said to him, "Let us depart and leave this realm," and
the king gave money unto all his princes and his servants, and together
with the king they departed and journeyed to Babylon.[20]

ABRAHAM'S FIRST APPEARANCE IN PUBLIC

Now Abraham, at the command of God, was ordered by the angel Gabriel to
follow Nimrod to Babylon. He objected that he was in no wise equipped
to undertake a campaign against the king, but Gabriel calmed him with
the words: "Thou needest no provision for the way, no horse to ride
upon, no warriors to carry on war with Nimrod, no chariots, nor riders.
Do thou but sit thyself upon my shoulder, and I shall bear thee to
Babylon."

Abraham did as he was bidden, and in the twinkling of an eye he found
himself before the gates of the city of Babylon.[21] At the behest of
the angel, he entered the city, and he called unto the dwellers therein
with a loud voice: "The Eternal, He is the One Only God, and there is
none beside. He is the God of the heavens, and the God of the gods, and
the God of Nimrod. Acknowledge this as the truth, all ye men, women,
and children. Acknowledge also that I am Abraham His servant, the
trusted steward of His house."

Abraham met his parents in Babylon, and also he saw the angel Gabriel,
who bade him proclaim the true faith to his father and his mother.
Therefore Abraham spake to them, and said: "Ye serve a man of your own
kind, and you pay worship to an image of Nimrod. Know ye not that it
has a mouth, but it speaks not; an eye, but it sees not; an ear, but it
hears not; nor does it walk upon its feet, and there is no profit in
it, either unto itself or unto others?"

When Terah heard these words, he persuaded Abraham to follow him into
the house, where his son told him all that had happened—how in one day
he had completed a forty days' journey. Terah thereupon went to Nimrod
and reported to him that his son Abraham had suddenly appeared in
Babylon.[22] The king sent for Abraham, and he came before him with his
father. Abraham passed the magnates and the dignitaries until he
reached the royal throne, upon which he seized hold, shaking it and
crying out with a loud voice: "O Nimrod, thou contemptible wretch, that
deniest the essence of faith, that deniest the living and immutable
God, and Abraham His servant, the trusted steward of His house.
Acknowledge Him, and repeat after me the words: The Eternal is God, the
Only One, and there is none beside; He is incorporeal, living,
ever-existing; He slumbers not and sleeps not, who hath created the
world that men might believe in Him. And confess also concerning me,
and say that I am the servant of God and the trusted steward of His
house."[23]

While Abraham proclaimed this with a loud voice, the idols fell upon
their faces, and with them also King Nimrod.[24] For a space of two
hours and a half the king lay lifeless, and when his soul returned upon
him, he spoke and said, "Is it thy voice, O Abraham, or the voice of
thy God?" And Abraham answered, and said, "This voice is the voice of
the least of all creatures called into existence by God." Thereupon
Nimrod said, "Verily, the God of Abraham is a great and powerful God,
the King of all kings," and he commanded Terah to take his son and
remove him, and return again unto his own city, and father and son did
as the king had ordered.[25]

THE PREACHER OF THE TRUE FAITH

When Abraham attained the age of twenty years, his father Terah fell
ill. He spoke as follows to his sons Haran and Abraham, "I adjure you
by your lives, my sons, sell these two idols for me, for I have not
enough money to meet our expenses." Haran executed the wish of his
father, but if any one accosted Abraham, to buy an idol from him, and
asked him the price, he would answer, "Three manehs," and then question
in turn, "How old art thou?" "Thirty years," the reply would be. "Thou
art thirty years of age, and yet thou wouldst worship this idol which I
made but to-day?" The man would depart and go his way, and another
would approach Abraham, and ask, "How much is this idol?" and "Five
manehs" would be the reply, and again Abraham would put the question,
"How old art thou?"—"Fifty years."—"And dost thou who art fifty years
of age bow down before this idol which was made but to-day?" Thereupon
the man would depart and go his way. Abraham then took two idols, put a
rope about their necks, and, with their faces turned downward, he
dragged them along the ground, crying aloud all the time: "Who will buy
an idol wherein there is no profit, either unto itself or unto him that
buys it in order to worship it? It has a mouth, but it speaketh not;
eyes, but it seeth not; feet, but it walketh not; ears, but it heareth
not."

The people who heard Abraham were amazed exceedingly at his words. As
he went through the streets, he met an old woman who approached him
with the purpose of buying an idol, good and big, to be worshipped and
loved. "Old woman, old woman," said Abraham, "I know no profit therein,
either in the big ones or in the little ones, either unto themselves or
unto others. And," he continued to speak to her, "what has become of
the big image thou didst buy from my brother Haran, to worship it?"
"Thieves," she replied, "came in the night and stole it, while I was
still at the bath." "If it be thus," Abraham went on questioning her,
"how canst thou pay homage to an idol that cannot save itself from
thieves, let alone save others, like thyself, thou silly old woman, out
of misfortune? How is it possible for thee to say that the image thou
worshippest is a god? If it be a god, why did it not save itself out of
the hands of those thieves? Nay, in the idol there is no profit, either
unto itself or unto him that adores it."[26]

The old woman rejoined, "If what thou sayest be true, whom shall I
serve?" "Serve the God of all gods," returned Abraham, "the Lord of
lords, who hath created heaven and earth, the sea and all therein—the
God of Nimrod and the God of Terah, the God of the east, the west, the
south, and the north. Who is Nimrod, the dog, who calleth himself a
god, that worship be offered unto him?"

Abraham succeeded in opening the eyes of the old woman, and she became
a zealous missionary for the true God. When she discovered the thieves
who had carried off her idol, and they restored it to her, she broke it
in pieces with a stone, and as she wended her way through the streets,
she cried aloud, "Who would save his soul from destruction, and be
prosperous in all his doings, let him serve the God of Abraham." Thus
she converted many men and women to the true belief.

Rumors of the words and deeds of the old woman reached the king, and he
sent for her. When she appeared before him, he rebuked her harshly,
asking her how she dared serve any god but himself. The old woman
replied: "Thou art a liar, thou deniest the essence of faith, the One
Only God, beside whom there is no other god. Thou livest upon His
bounty, but thou payest worship to another, and thou dost repudiate
Him, and His teachings, and Abraham His servant."

The old woman had to pay for her zeal for the faith with her life.
Nevertheless great fear and terror took possession of Nimrod, because
the people became more and more attached to the teachings of Abraham,
and he knew not how to deal with the man who was undermining the old
faith. At the advice of his princes, he arranged a seven days'
festival, at which all the people were bidden to appear in their robes
of state, their gold and silver apparel. By such display of wealth and
power he expected to intimidate Abraham and bring him back to the faith
of the king. Through his father Terah, Nimrod invited Abraham to come
before him, that he might have the opportunity of seeing his greatness
and wealth, and the glory of his dominion, and the multitude of his
princes and attendants. But Abraham refused to appear before the king.
On the other hand, he granted his father's request that in his absence
he sit by his idols and the king's, and take care of them.

Alone with the idols, and while he repeated the words, "The Eternal He
is God, the Eternal He is God!" he struck the king's idols from their
thrones, and began to belabor them with an axe. With the biggest he
started, and with the smallest he ended. He hacked off the feet of one,
and the other he beheaded. This one had his eyes struck out, the other
had his hands crushed.[27] After all were mutilated, he went away,
having first put the axe into the hand of the largest idol.

The feast ended, the king returned, and when he saw all his idols
shivered in pieces, he inquired who had perpetrated the mischief.
Abraham was named as the one who had been guilty of the outrage, and
the king summoned him and questioned him as to his motive for the deed.
Abraham replied: "I did not do it; it was the largest of the idols who
shattered all the rest. Seest thou not that he still has the axe in his
hand? And if thou wilt not believe my words, ask him and he will tell
thee."

IN THE FIERY FURNACE

Now the king was exceedingly wroth at Abraham, and ordered him to be
cast into prison, where he commanded the warden not to give him bread
or water.[28] But God hearkened unto the prayer of Abraham, and sent
Gabriel to him in his dungeon. For a year the angel dwelt with him, and
provided him with all sorts of food, and a spring of fresh water welled
up before him, and he drank of it. At the end of a year, the magnates
of the realm presented themselves before the king, and advised him to
cast Abraham into the fire, that the people might believe in Nimrod
forever. Thereupon the king issued a decree that all the subjects of
the king in all his provinces, men and women, young and old, should
bring wood within forty days, and he caused it to be thrown into a
great furnace and set afire.[29] The flames shot up to the skies, and
the people were sore afraid of the fire. Now the warden of the prison
was ordered to bring Abraham forth and cast him in the flames. The
warden reminded the king that Abraham had not had food or drink a whole
year, and therefore must be dead, but Nimrod nevertheless desired him
to step in front of the prison and call his name. If he made reply, he
was to be hauled out to the pyre. If he had perished, his remains were
to receive burial, and his memory was to be wiped out henceforth.

Greatly amazed the warden was when his cry, "Abraham, art thou alive?"
was answered with "I am living." He questioned further, "Who has been
bringing thee food and drink all these many days?" and Abraham replied:
"Food and drink have been bestowed upon me by Him who is over all
things, the God of all gods and the Lord of all lords, who alone doeth
wonders, He who is the God of Nimrod and the God of Terah and the God
of the whole world. He dispenseth food and drink unto all beings. He
sees, but He cannot be seen, He is in the heavens above, and He is
present in all places, for He Himself superviseth all things and
provideth for all."

The miraculous rescue of Abraham from death by starvation and thirst
convinced the prison-keeper of the truth of God and His prophet
Abraham, and he acknowledged his belief in both publicly. The king's
threat of death unless he recanted could not turn him away from his new
and true faith. When the hangman raised his sword and set it at his
throat to kill him, he exclaimed, "The Eternal He is God, the God of
the whole world as well as of the blasphemer Nimrod." But the sword
could not cut his flesh. The harder it was pressed against his throat,
the more it broke into pieces.[30]

Nimrod, however, was not to be turned aside from his purpose, to make
Abraham suffer death by fire. One of the princes was dispatched to
fetch him forth. But scarcely did the messenger set about the task of
throwing him into the fire, when the flame leapt forth from the furnace
and consumed him. Many more attempts were made to cast Abraham into the
furnace, but always with the same success—whoever seized him to pitch
him in was himself burnt, and a large number lost their lives. Satan
appeared in human shape, and advised the king to place Abraham in a
catapult and sling him into the fire. Thus no one would be required to
come near the flame. Satan himself constructed the catapult. Having
proved it fit three times by means of stones put in the machine, they
bound Abraham, hand and foot, and were about to consign him to the
flames. At that moment Satan, still disguised in human shape,
approached Abraham, and said, "If thou desirest to deliver thyself from
the fire of Nimrod, bow down before him and believe in him." But
Abraham rejected the tempter with the words, "May the Eternal rebuke
thee, thou vile, contemptible, accursed blasphemer!" and Satan departed
from him.

Then the mother of Abraham came to him and implored him to pay homage
to Nimrod and escape the impending misfortune. But he said to her: "O
mother, water can extinguish Nimrod's fire, but the fire of God will
not die out for evermore. Water cannot quench it."[31] When his mother
heard these words, she spake, "May the God whom thou servest rescue
thee from the fire of Nimrod!"

Abraham was finally placed in the catapult, and he raised his eyes
heavenward, and spoke, "O Lord my God, Thou seest what this sinner
purposes to do unto me!"[32] His confidence in God was unshakable. When
the angels received the Divine permission to save him, and Gabriel
approached him, and asked, "Abraham, shall I save thee from the fire?"
he replied, "God in whom I trust, the God of heaven and earth, will
rescue me," and God, seeing the submissive spirit of Abraham, commanded
the fire, "Cool off and bring tranquillity to my servant Abraham."[33]

No water was needed to extinguish the fire. The logs burst into buds,
and all the different kinds of wood put forth fruit, each tree bearing
its own kind. The furnace was transformed into a royal pleasance, and
the angels sat therein with Abraham. When the king saw the miracle, he
said: "Great witchcraft! Thou makest it known that fire hath no power
over thee, and at the same time thou showest thyself unto the people
sitting in a pleasure garden." But the princes of Nimrod interposed all
with one voice, "Nay, our lord, this is not witchcraft, it is the power
of the great God, the God of Abraham, beside whom there is no other
god, and we acknowledge that He is God, and Abraham is His servant."
All the princes and all the people believed in God at this hour, in the
Eternal, the God of Abraham, and they all cried out, "The Lord He is
God in heaven above and upon the earth beneath; there is none
else."[34]

Abraham was the superior, not only of the impious king Nimrod and his
attendants, but also of the pious men of his time, Noah, Shem, Eber,
and Asshur.[35] Noah gave himself no concern whatsoever in the matter
of spreading the pure faith in God. He took an interest in planting his
vineyard, and was immersed in material pleasures. Shem and Eber kept in
hiding, and as for Asshur, he said, "How can I live among such
sinners?" and departed out of the land.[36] The only one who remained
unshaken was Abraham. "I will not forsake God," he said, and therefore
God did not forsake him, who had hearkened neither unto his father nor
unto his mother.

The miraculous deliverance of Abraham from the fiery furnace, together
with his later fortunes, was the fulfilment and explanation of what his
father Terah had read in the stars. He had seen the star of Haran
consumed by fire, and at the same time fill and rule the whole world.
The meaning was plain now. Haran was irresolute in his faith, he could
not decide whether to adhere to Abraham or the idolaters. When it
befell that those who would not serve idols were cast into the fiery
furnace, Haran reasoned in this manner: "Abraham, being my elder, will
be called upon before me. If he comes forth out of the fiery trial
triumphant, I will declare my allegiance to him; otherwise I will take
sides against him." After God Himself had rescued Abraham from death,
and Haran's turn came to make his confession of faith, he announced his
adherence to Abraham. But scarcely had he come near the furnace,[37]
when he was seized by the flames and consumed, because he was lacking
in firm faith in God. Terah had read the stars well, it now appeared:
Haran was burnt, and his daughter Sarah[38] became the wife of Abraham,
whose descendants fill the earth.[39] In another way the death of Haran
was noteworthy. It was the first instance, since the creation of the
world, of a son's dying while his father was still alive.[40]

The king, the princes, and all the people, who had been witnesses of
the wonders done for Abraham, came to him, and prostrated themselves
before him. But Abraham said: "Do not bow down before me, but before
God, the Master of the universe, who hath created you. Serve Him and
walk in His ways, for He it was who delivered me from the flames, and
He it is who hath created the soul and the spirit of every human being,
who formeth man in the womb of his mother, and bringeth him into the
world. He saveth from all sickness those who put their trust in Him."

The king then dismissed Abraham, after loading him down with an
abundance of precious gifts, among them two slaves who had been raised
in the royal palace. 'Ogi was the name of the one, Eliezer the name of
the other. The princes followed the example of the king, and they gave
him silver, and gold, and gems. But all these gifts did not rejoice the
heart of Abraham so much as the three hundred followers that joined him
and became adherents of his religion.

ABRAHAM EMIGRATES TO HARAN

For a period of two years Abraham could devote himself undisturbed to
his chosen task of turning the hearts of men to God and His
teachings.[41] In his pious undertaking he was aided by his wife Sarah,
whom he had married in the meantime. While he exhorted the men and
sought to convert them, Sarah addressed herself to the women.[42] She
was a helpmeet worthy of Abraham. Indeed, in prophetical powers she
ranked higher than her husband.[43] She was sometimes called Iscah,
"the seer," on that account.[44]

At the expiration of two years it happened that Nimrod dreamed a dream.
In his dream he found himself with his army near the fiery furnace in
the valley into which Abraham had been cast. A man resembling Abraham
stepped out of the furnace, and he ran after the king with drawn sword,
the king fleeing before him in terror. While running, the pursuer threw
an egg at Nimrod's head, and a mighty stream issued therefrom, wherein
the king's whole host was drowned. The king alone survived, with three
men. When Nimrod examined his companions, he observed that they wore
royal attire, and in form and stature they resembled himself. The
stream changed back into an egg again, and a little chick broke forth
from it, and it flew up, settled upon the head of the king, and put out
one of his eyes.

The king was confounded in his sleep, and when he awoke, his heart beat
like a trip-hammer, and his fear was exceeding great. In the morning,
when he arose, he sent and called for his wise men and his magicians,
and told them his dream. One of his wise men, Anoko by name, stood up,
and said: "Know, O king, this dream points to the misfortune which
Abraham and his descendants will bring upon thee. A time will come when
he and his followers will make war upon thy army, and they will
annihilate it. Thou and the three kings, thy allies, will be the only
ones to escape death. But later thou wilt lose thy life at the hands of
one of the descendants of Abraham. Consider, O king, that thy wise men
read this fate of thine in the stars, fifty-two years ago, at the birth
of Abraham. As long as Abraham liveth upon the ground, thou shalt not
be stablished, nor thy kingdom." Nimrod took Anoko's words to heart,
and dispatched some of his servants to seize Abraham and kill him. It
happened that Eliezer, the slave whom Abraham had received as a present
from Nimrod, was at that time at the royal court. With great haste he
sped to Abraham to induce him to flee before the king's bailiffs. His
master accepted his advice, and took refuge in the house of Noah and
Shem, where he lay in hiding a whole month. The king's officers
reported that despite zealous efforts Abraham was nowhere to be found.
Thenceforth the king did not concern himself about Abraham.

When Terah visited his son in his hiding-place, Abraham proposed that
they leave the land and take up their abode in Canaan, in order to
escape the pursuit of Nimrod. He said: "Consider that it was not for
thy sake that Nimrod overloaded thee with honors, but for his own
profit. Though he continue to confer the greatest of benefactions upon
thee, what are they but earthly vanity? for riches and possessions
profit not in the day of wrath and fury. Hearken unto my voice, O my
father, let us depart for the land of Canaan, and serve the God that
hath created thee, that it may be well with thee."

Noah and Shem aided and abetted the efforts of Abraham to persuade
Terah, whereupon Terah consented to leave his country, and he, and
Abraham, and Lot, the son of Haran, departed for Haran with their
households. They found the land pleasant, and also the inhabitants
thereof, who readily yielded to the influence of Abraham's humane
spirit and his piety. Many of them obeyed his precepts and became
God-fearing and good.[45]

Terah's resolve to quit his native land for the sake of Abraham and
take up his abode in strange parts, and his impulse to do it before
even the Divine call visited Abraham himself—this the Lord accounted a
great merit unto Terah, and he was permitted to see his son Abraham
rule as king over the whole world. For when the miracle happened, and
Isaac was born unto his aged parents, the whole world repaired to
Abraham and Sarah, and demanded to know what they had done that so
great a thing should be accomplished for them. Abraham told them all
that had happened between Nimrod and himself, how he had been ready to
be burnt for the glory of God, and how the Lord had rescued him from
the flames. In token of their admiration for Abraham and his teachings,
they appointed him to be their king, and in commemoration of Isaac's
wondrous birth, the money coined by Abraham bore the figures of an aged
husband and wife on the obverse side, and of a young man and his wife
on the reverse side, for Abraham and Sarah both were rejuvenated at the
birth of Isaac, Abraham's white hair turned black, and the lines in
Sarah's face were smoothed out.

For many years Terah continued to live a witness of his son's glory,
for his death did not occur until Isaac was a youth of thirty-five.[46]
And a still greater reward waited upon his good deed. God accepted his
repentance, and when he departed this life, he entered into Paradise,
and not into hell, though he had passed the larger number of his days
in sin. Indeed, it had been his fault that Abraham came near losing his
life at the hands of Nimrod.[47]

THE STAR IN THE EAST

Terah had been a high official at the court of Nimrod, and he was held
in great consideration by the king and his suite. A son was born unto
him whom he called Abram, because the king had raised him to an exalted
place. In the night of Abraham's birth, the astrologers and the wise
men of Nimrod came to the house of Terah, and ate and drank, and
rejoiced with him that night. When they left the house, they lifted up
their eyes toward heaven to look at the stars, and they saw, and,
behold, one great star came from the east and ran athwart the heavens
and swallowed up the four stars at the four corners. They all were
astonished at the sight, but they understood this matter, and knew its
import. They said to one another: "This only betokens that the child
that hath been born unto Terah this night will grow up and be fruitful,
and he will multiply and possess all the earth, he and his children
forever, and he and his seed will slay great kings and inherit their
lands."

They went home that night, and in the morning they rose up early, and
assembled in their meeting-house. They spake, and said to one another:
"Lo, the sight that we saw last night is hidden from the king, it has
not been made known to him, and should this thing become known to him
in the latter days, he will say to us, Why did you conceal this matter
from me? and then we shall all suffer death. Now, let us go and tell
the king the sight which we saw, and the interpretation thereof, and we
shall be clear from this thing." And they went to the king and told him
the sight they had seen, and their interpretation thereof, and they
added the advice that he pay the value of the child to Terah, and slay
the babe.

Accordingly, the king sent for Terah, and when he came, he spake to
him: "It hath been told unto me that a son was born to thee
yesternight, and a wondrous sign was observed in the heavens at his
birth. Now give me the boy, that we may slay him before evil comes upon
us from him, and I will give thee thy house full of silver and gold in
exchange for him." Terah answered: "This thing which thou promisest
unto me is like the words which a man spoke to a mule, saying, 'I will
give thee a great heap of barley, a houseful thereof, on condition that
I cut off thy head!' The mule replied, 'Of what use will all the barley
be to me, if thou cuttest off my head? Who will eat it when thou givest
it to me?' Thus also do I say: What shall I do with silver and gold
after the death of my son? Who shall inherit me?" But when Terah saw
how the king's anger burned within him at these words, he added,
"Whatever the king desireth to do unto his servant, that let him do,
even my son is at the king's disposal, without value or exchange, he
and his two older brethren."

The king spake, however, saying, "I will purchase thy youngest son for
a price." And Terah made answer, "Let my king give me three days' time
to consider the matter and consult about it with my family." The king
agreed to this condition, and on the third day he sent to Terah,
saying, "Give me thy son for a price, as I spoke unto thee, and if thou
wilt not do this, I will send and slay all thou hast in thy house,
there shall not be a dog left unto thee."

Then Terah took a child which his handmaid had borne unto him that day,
and he brought the babe to the king, and received value for him, and
the king took the child and dashed his head against the ground, for he
thought it was Abraham. But Terah took his son Abraham, together with
the child's mother and his nurse, and concealed them in a cave, and
thither he carried provisions to them once a month, and the Lord was
with Abraham in the cave, and he grew up, but the king and all his
servants thought that Abraham was dead.

And when Abraham was ten years old, he and his mother and his nurse
went out from the cave, for the king and his servants had forgotten the
affair of Abraham.

In that time all the inhabitants of the earth, with the exception of
Noah and his household, transgressed against the Lord, and they made
unto themselves every man his god, gods of wood and stone, which could
neither speak, nor hear, nor deliver from distress. The king and all
his servants, and Terah with his household, were the first to worship
images of wood and stone. Terah made twelve gods of large size, of wood
and of stone, corresponding to the twelve months of the year, and he
paid homage to them monthly in turn.[48]

THE TRUE BELIEVER

Once Abraham went into the temple of the idols in his father's house,
to bring sacrifices to them, and he found one of them, Marumath by
name, hewn out of stone, lying prostrate on his face before the iron
god of Nahor. The idol was too heavy for him to raise it alone, and he
called his father to help him put Marumath back in his place. While
they were handling the image, its head dropped off, and Terah took a
stone, and chiselled another Marumath, setting the head of the first
upon the new body. Then Terah continued and made five more gods, and
all these he delivered to Abraham, and bade him sell them in the
streets of the city.

Abraham saddled his mule, and went to the inn where merchants from
Fandana in Syria put up on their way to Egypt. He hoped to dispose of
his wares there. When he reached the inn, one of the camels belonging
to the merchants belched, and the sound frightened his mule so that it
ran off pell-mell and broke three of the idols. The merchants not only
bought the two sound idols from him, they also gave him the price of
the broken ones, for Abraham had told them how distressed he was to
appear before his father with less money than he had expected to
receive for his handiwork.

This incident made Abraham reflect upon the worthlessness of idols, and
he said to himself: "What are these evil things done by my father? Is
not he the god of his gods, for do they not come into being by reason
of his carving and chiselling and contriving? Were it not more seemly
that they should pay worship to him than he to them, seeing they are
the work of his hands?" Meditating thus, he reached his father's house,
and he entered and handed his father the money for the five images, and
Terah rejoiced, and said, "Blessed art thou unto my gods, because thou
didst bring me the price of the idols, and my labor was not in vain."
But Abraham made reply: "Hear, my father Terah, blessed are thy gods
through thee, for thou art their god, since thou didst fashion them,
and their blessing is destruction and their help is vanity. They that
help not themselves, how can they help thee or bless me?"

Terah grew very wrathful at Abraham, that he uttered such speech
against his gods, and Abraham, thinking upon his father's anger, left
him and went from the house. But Terah called him back, and said,
"Gather together the chips of the oak wood from which I made images
before thou didst return, and prepare my dinner for me." Abraham made
ready to do his father's bidding, and as he took up the chips he found
a little god among them, whose forehead bore the inscription "God
Barisat." He threw the chips upon the fire, and set Barisat up next to
it, saying: "Attention! Take care, Barisat, that the fire go not out
until I come back. If it burns low, blow into it, and make it flame up
again." Speaking thus, he went out. When he came in again, he found
Barisat lying prone upon his back, badly burnt. Smiling, he said to
himself, "In truth, Barisat, thou canst keep the fire alive and prepare
food," and while he spoke, the idol was consumed to ashes. Then he took
the dishes to his father, and he ate and drank and was glad and blessed
his god Marumath. But Abraham said to his father, "Bless not thy god
Marumath, but rather thy god Barisat, for he it was who, out of his
great love for thee, threw himself into the fire that thy meal might be
cooked." "Where is he now?" exclaimed Terah, and Abraham answered, "He
hath become ashes in the fierceness of the fire." Terah said, "Great is
the power of Barisat! I will make me another this day, and to-morrow he
will prepare my food for me."

These words of his father made Abraham laugh in his mind, but his soul
was grieved at his obduracy, and he proceeded to make clear his views
upon the idols, saying: "Father, no matter which of the two idols thou
blessest, thy behavior is senseless, for the images that stand in the
holy temple are more to be worshipped than thine. Zucheus, the god of
my brother Nahor, is more venerable than Marumath, because he is made
cunningly of gold, and when he grows old, he will be worked over again.
But when thy Marumath becomes dim, or is shivered in pieces, he will
not be renewed, for he is of stone. And the god Joauv, who stands above
the other gods with Zucheus, is more venerable than Barisat, made of
wood, because he is hammered out of silver, and ornamented by men, to
show his magnificence. But thy Barisat, before thou didst fashion him
into a god with thy axe, was rooted in the earth, standing there great
and wonderful, with the glory of branches and blossoms. Now he is dry,
and gone is his sap. From his height he has fallen to the earth, from
grandeur he came to pettiness, and the appearance of his face has paled
away, and he himself was burnt in the fire, and he was consumed unto
ashes, and he is no more. And thou didst then say, 'I will make me
another this day, and to-morrow he will prepare my food for me.'
Father," Abraham continued, and said, "the fire is more to be
worshipped than thy gods of gold and silver and wood and stone, because
it consumes them. But also the fire I call not god, because it is
subject to the water, which quenches it. But also the water I call not
god, because it is sucked up by the earth, and I call the earth more
venerable, because it conquers the water. But also the earth I call not
god, because it is dried out by the sun, and I call the sun more
venerable than the earth, because he illumines the whole world with his
rays. But also the sun I call not god, because his light is obscured
when darkness cometh up. Nor do I call the moon and the stars gods,
because their light, too, is extinguished when their time to shine is
past. But hearken unto this, my father Terah, which I will declare unto
thee, The God who hath created all things, He is the true God, He hath
empurpled the heavens, and gilded the sun, and given radiance to the
moon and also the stars, and He drieth out the earth in the midst of
many waters, and also thee hath He put upon the earth, and me hath He
sought out in the confusion of my thoughts."[49]

THE ICONOCLAST

But Terah could not be convinced, and in reply to Abraham's question,
who the God was that had created heaven and earth and the children of
men, he took him to the hall wherein stood twelve great idols and a
large number of little idols, and pointing to them he said, "Here are
they who have made all thou seest on earth, they who have created also
me and thee and all men on the earth," and he bowed down before his
gods, and left the hall with his son.

Abraham went thence to his mother, and he spoke to her, saying:
"Behold, my father has shown those unto me who made heaven and earth
and all the sons of men. Now, therefore, hasten and fetch a kid from
the flock, and make of it savory meat, that I may bring it to my
father's gods, perhaps I may thereby become acceptable to them." His
mother did according to his request, but when Abraham brought the
offering to the gods, he saw that they had no voice, no hearing, no
motion, and not one of them stretched forth his hand to eat. Abraham
mocked them, and said, "Surely, the savory meat that I prepared doth
not please you, or perhaps it is too little for you! Therefore I will
prepare fresh savory meat to-morrow, better and more plentiful than
this, that I may see what cometh therefrom." But the gods remained mute
and without motion before the second offering of excellent savory meat
as before the first offering, and the spirit of God came over Abraham,
and he cried out, and said: "Woe unto my father and his wicked
generation, whose hearts are all inclined to vanity, who serve these
idols of wood and stone, which cannot eat, nor smell, nor hear, nor
speak, which have mouths without speech, eyes without sight, ears
without hearing, hands without feeling, and legs without motion!"

Abraham then took a hatchet in his hand, and broke all his father's
gods, and when he had done breaking them he placed the hatchet in the
hand of the biggest god among them all, and he went out. Terah, having
heard the crash of the hatchet on the stone, ran to the room of the
idols, and he reached it at the moment when Abraham was leaving it, and
when he saw what had happened, he hastened after Abraham, and he said
to him, "What is this mischief thou hast done to my gods?" Abraham
answered: "I set savory meat before them, and when I came nigh unto
them, that they might eat, they all stretched out their hands to take
of the meat, before the big one had put forth his hand to eat. This
one, enraged against them on account of their behavior, took the
hatchet and broke them all, and, behold, the hatchet is yet in his
hands, as thou mayest see."

Then Terah turned in wrath upon Abraham, and he said: "Thou speakest
lies unto me! Is there spirit, soul, or power in these gods to do all
thou hast told me? Are they not wood and stone? and have I not myself
made them? It is thou that didst place the hatchet in the hand of the
big god, and thou sayest he smote them all." Abraham answered his
father, and said: "How, then, canst thou serve these idols in whom
there is no power to do anything? Can these idols in which thou
trustest deliver thee? Can they hear thy prayers when thou callest upon
them?" After having spoken these and similar words, admonishing his
father to mend his ways and refrain from worshipping idols, he leapt up
before Terah, took the hatchet from the big idol, broke it therewith,
and ran away.

Terah hastened to Nimrod, bowed down before him, and besought him to
hear his story, about his son who had been born to him fifty years
back, and how he had done to his gods, and how he had spoken. "Now,
therefore, my lord and king," he said, "send for him that he may come
before thee, and do thou judge him according to the law, that we may be
delivered from his evil." When Abraham was brought before the king, he
told him the same story as he had told Terah, about the big god who
broke the smaller ones, but the king replied, "Idols do neither speak,
nor eat, nor move." Then Abraham reproached him for worshipping gods
that can do nothing, and admonished him to serve the God of the
universe. His last words were, "If thy wicked heart will not hearken to
my words, to cause thee to forsake thy evil ways and serve the Eternal
God, then wilt thou die in shame in the latter days, thou, thy people,
and all that are connected with thee, who hear thy words, and walk in
thy evil ways."

The king ordered Abraham to be put into prison, and at the end of ten
days he caused all the princes and great men of the realm to appear
before him, and to them he put the case of Abraham. Their verdict was
that he should be burnt, and, accordingly, the king had a fire prepared
for three days and three nights, in his furnace at Kasdim, and Abraham
was to be carried thither from prison to be burnt.

All the inhabitants of the land, about nine hundred thousand men, and
the women and the children besides, came to see what would be done with
Abraham. And when he was brought forth, the astrologers recognized him,
and they said to the king, "Surely, this is the man whom we knew as a
child, at whose birth the great star swallowed the four stars. Behold,
his father did transgress thy command, and he made a mockery of thee,
for he did bring thee another child, and him didst thou kill."

Terah was greatly terrified, for he was afraid of the king's wrath, and
he admitted that he had deceived the king, and when the king said,
"Tell me who advised thee to do this. Hide naught, and thou shalt not
die," he falsely accused Haran, who had been thirty-two years old at
the time of Abraham's birth, of having advised him to deceive the king.
At the command of the king, Abraham and Haran, stripped of all their
clothes except their hosen, and their hands and feet bound with linen
cords, were cast into the furnace. Haran, because his heart was not
perfect with the Lord, perished in the fire, and also the men who cast
them into the furnace were burnt by the flames which leapt out over
them, and Abraham alone was saved by the Lord, and he was not burnt,
though the cords with which he was bound were consumed. For three days
and three nights Abraham walked in the midst of the fire, and all the
servants of the king came and told him, "Behold, we have seen Abraham
walking about in the midst of the fire."[50]

At first the king would not believe them, but when some of his faithful
princes corroborated the words of his servants, he rose up and went to
see for himself. He then commanded his servants to take Abraham from
the fire, but they could not, because the flames leapt toward them from
the furnace, and when they tried again, at the king's command, to
approach the furnace, the flames shot out and burnt their faces, so
that eight of their number died. The king then called unto Abraham, and
said: "O servant of the God who is in heaven, go forth from the midst
of the fire, and come hither and stand before me," and Abraham came and
stood before the king. And the king spoke to Abraham, and said, "How
cometh it that thou wast not burnt in the fire?" And Abraham made
answer, "The God of heaven and earth in whom I trust, and who hath all
things in His power, He did deliver me from the fire into which thou
didst cast me."[51]

ABRAHAM IN CANAAN

With ten temptations Abraham was tempted, and he withstood them all,
showing how great was the love of Abraham.[52] The first test to which
he was subjected was the departure from his native land. The hardships
were many and severe which he encountered, and he was loth to leave his
home, besides. He spoke to God, and said, "Will not the people talk
about me, and say, 'He is endeavoring to bring the nations under the
wings of the Shekinah, yet he leaves his old father in Haran, and he
goes away.'" But God answered him, and said: "Dismiss all care
concerning thy father and thy kinsmen from thy thoughts. Though they
speak words of kindness to thee, yet are they all of one mind, to ruin
thee."[53]

Then Abraham forsook his father in Haran, and journeyed to Canaan,
accompanied by the blessing of God, who said unto him, "I will make of
thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great."
These three blessings were to counteract the evil consequences which,
he feared, would follow emigration, for travelling from place to place
interferes with the growth of the family, it lessens one's substance,
and it diminishes the consideration one enjoys.[54] The greatest of all
blessings, however, was the word of God, "And be thou a blessing." The
meaning of this was that whoever came in contact with Abraham was
blessed. Even the mariners on the sea were indebted to him for
prosperous voyages.[55] Besides, God held out the promise to him that
in time to come his name would be mentioned in the Benedictions, God
would be praised as the Shield of Abraham, a distinction accorded to no
other mortal except David.[56] But the words, "And be thou a blessing,"
will be fulfilled only in the future world, when the seed of Abraham
shall be known among the nations and his offspring among the peoples as
"the seed which the Lord hath blessed."[57]

When Abraham first was bidden to leave his home, he was not told to
what land he was to journey—all the greater would be his reward for
executing the command of God.[58] And Abraham showed his trust in God,
for he said, "I am ready to go whithersoever Thou sendest me." The Lord
then bade him go to a land wherein He would reveal Himself, and when he
went to Canaan later, God appeared to him, and he knew that it was the
promised land.[59]

On entering Canaan, Abraham did not yet know that it was the land
appointed as his inheritance. Nevertheless he rejoiced when he reached
it. In Mesopotamia and in Aramnaharaim, the inhabitants of which he had
seen eating, drinking, and acting wantonly, he had always wished, "O
that my portion may not be in this land," but when he came to Canaan,
he observed that the people devoted themselves industriously to the
cultivation of the land, and he said, "O that my portion may be in this
land!" God then spoke to him, and said, "Unto thy seed will I give this
land."[60] Happy in these joyous tidings, Abraham erected an altar to
the Lord to give thanks unto Him for the promise, and then he journeyed
on, southward, in the direction of the spot whereon the Temple was once
to stand. In Hebron he again erected an altar, thus taking possession
of the land in a measure. And likewise he raised an altar in Ai,
because he foresaw that a misfortune would befall his offspring there,
at the conquest of the land under Joshua. The altar, he hoped, would
obviate the evil results that might follow.

Each altar raised by him was a centre for his activities as a
missionary. As soon as he came to a place in which he desired to
sojourn, he would stretch a tent first for Sarah, and next for himself,
and then he would proceed at once to make proselytes and bring them
under the wings of the Shekinah. Thus he accomplished his purpose of
inducing all men to proclaim the Name of God.[61]

For the present Abraham was but a stranger in his promised land. After
the partition of the earth among the sons of Noah, when all had gone to
their allotted portions, it happened that Canaan son of Ham saw that
the land extending from the Lebanon to the River of Egypt was fair to
look upon, and he refused to go to his own allotment, westward by the
sea. He settled in the land upon Lebanon, eastward and westward from
the border of the Jordan and the border of the sea. And Ham, his
father, and his brothers Cush and Mizraim spoke to him, and said: "Thou
livest in a land that is not thine, for it was not assigned unto us
when the lots were drawn. Do not thus! But if thou persistest, ye, thou
and thy children, will fall, accursed, in the land, in a rebellion. Thy
settling here was rebellion, and through rebellion thy children will be
felled down, and thy seed will be destroyed unto all eternity. Sojourn
not in the land of Shem, for unto Shem and unto the children of Shem
was it apportioned by lot. Accursed art thou, and accursed wilt thou be
before all the children of Noah on account of the curse, for we took an
oath before the holy Judge and before our father Noah."

But Canaan hearkened not unto the words of his father and his brothers.
He dwelt in the land of the Lebanon from Hamath even unto the entrance
of Egypt, he and his sons.[62] Though the Canaanites had taken unlawful
possession of the land, yet Abraham respected their rights; he provided
his camels with muzzles, to prevent them from pasturing upon the
property of others.[63]

HIS SOJOURN IN EGYPT

Scarcely had Abraham established himself in Canaan, when a devastating
famine broke out—one of the ten God appointed famines for the
chastisement of men. The first of them came in the time of Adam, when
God cursed the ground for his sake; the second was this one in the time
of Abraham; the third compelled Isaac to take up his abode among the
Philistines; the ravages of the fourth drove the sons of Jacob into
Egypt to buy grain for food; the fifth came in the time of the Judges,
when Elimelech and his family had to seek refuge in the land of Moab;
the sixth occurred during the reign of David, and it lasted three
years; the seventh happened in the day of Elijah, who had sworn that
neither rain nor dew should fall upon the earth; the eighth was the one
in the time of Elisha, when an ass's head was sold for fourscore pieces
of silver; the ninth is the famine that comes upon men piecemeal, from
time to time; and the tenth will scourge men before the advent of
Messiah, and this last will be "not a famine of bread, nor a thirst for
water, but of hearing the words of the Lord."[64]

The famine in the time of Abraham prevailed only in Canaan, and it had
been inflicted upon the land in order to test his faith. He stood this
second temptation as he had the first. He murmured not, and he showed
no sign of impatience toward God, who had bidden him shortly before to
abandon his native land for a land of starvation.[65] The famine
compelled him to leave Canaan for a time, and he repaired to Egypt, to
become acquainted there with the wisdom of the priests and, if
necessary, give them instruction in the truth.[66]

On this journey from Canaan to Egypt, Abraham first observed the beauty
of Sarah. Chaste as he was, he had never before looked at her, but now,
when they were wading through a stream, he saw the reflection of her
beauty in the water like the brilliance of the sun.[67] Wherefore he
spoke to her thus, "The Egyptians are very sensual, and I will put thee
in a casket that no harm befall me on account of thee." At the Egyptian
boundary, the tax collectors asked him about the contents of the
casket, and Abraham told them he had barley in it. "No," they said, "it
contains wheat." "Very well," replied Abraham, "I am prepared to pay
the tax on wheat." The officers then hazarded the guess, "It contains
pepper!" Abraham agreed to pay the tax on pepper, and when they charged
him with concealing gold in the casket, he did not refuse to pay the
tax on gold, and finally on precious stones. Seeing that he demurred to
no charge, however high, the tax collectors, made thoroughly
suspicious, insisted upon his unfastening the casket and letting them
examine the contents. When it was forced open, the whole of Egypt was
resplendent with the beauty of Sarah. In comparison with her, all other
beauties were like apes compared with men. She excelled Eve
herself.[68] The servants of Pharaoh outbid one another in seeking to
obtain possession of her, though they were of opinion that so radiant a
beauty ought not to remain the property of a private individual. They
reported the matter to the king,[69] and Pharaoh sent a powerful armed
force to bring Sarah to the palace,[70] and so bewitched was he by her
charms that those who had brought him the news of her coming into Egypt
were loaded down with bountiful gifts.[71]

Amid tears, Abraham offered up a prayer. He entreated God in these
words: "Is this the reward for my confidence in Thee? For the sake of
Thy grace and Thy lovingkindness, let not my hope be put to shame."[72]
Sarah also implored God, saying: "O God, Thou didst bid my lord Abraham
leave his home, the land of his fathers, and journey to Canaan, and
Thou didst promise him to do good unto him if he fulfilled Thy
commands. And now we have done as Thou didst command us to do. We left
our country and our kindred, and we journeyed to a strange land, unto a
people which we knew not heretofore. We came hither to save our people
from starvation, and now hath this terrible misfortune befallen. O
Lord, help me and save me from the hand of this enemy, and for the sake
of Thy grace show me good."

An angel appeared unto Sarah while she was in the presence of the king,
to whom he was not visible, and he bade her take courage, saying, "Fear
naught, Sarah, for God hath heard thy prayer." The king questioned
Sarah as to the man in the company of whom she had come to Egypt, and
Sarah called Abraham her brother. Pharaoh pledged himself to make
Abraham great and powerful, to do for him whatever she wished. He sent
much gold and silver to Abraham, and diamonds and pearls, sheep and
oxen, and men slaves and women slaves, and he assigned a residence to
him within the precincts of the royal palace.[73] In the love he bore
Sarah, he wrote out a marriage contract, deeding to her all he owned in
the way of gold and silver, and men slaves and women slaves, and the
province of Goshen besides, the province occupied in later days by the
descendants of Sarah, because it was their property. Most remarkable of
all, he gave her his own daughter Hagar as slave, for he preferred to
see his daughter the servant of Sarah to reigning as mistress in
another harem.[74]

His free-handed generosity availed naught. During the night, when he
was about to approach Sarah, an angel appeared armed with a stick, and
if Pharaoh but touched Sarah's shoe to remove it from her foot, the
angel planted a blow upon his hand, and when he grasped her dress, a
second blow followed. At each blow he was about to deal, the angel
asked Sarah whether he was to let it descend, and if she bade him give
Pharaoh a moment to recover himself, he waited and did as she desired.
And another great miracle came to pass. Pharaoh, and his nobles, and
his servants, the very walls of his house and his bed were afflicted
with leprosy, and he could not indulge his carnal desires.[75] This
night in which Pharaoh and his court suffered their well deserved
punishment was the night of the fifteenth of Nisan, the same night
wherein God visited the Egyptians in a later time in order to redeem
Israel, the descendants of Sarah.[76]

Horrified by the plague sent upon him, Pharaoh inquired how he could
rid himself thereof. He applied to the priests, from whom he found out
the true cause of his affliction, which was corroborated by Sarah. He
then sent for Abraham and returned his wife to him, pure and untouched,
and excused himself for what had happened, saying that he had had the
intention of connecting himself in marriage with him, whom he had
thought to be the brother of Sarah.[77] He bestowed rich gifts upon the
husband and the wife, and they departed for Canaan, after a three
months' sojourn in Egypt.[78]

Arrived in Canaan they sought the same night-shelters at which they had
rested before, in order to pay their accounts, and also to teach by
their example that it is not proper to seek new quarters unless one is
forced to it.[79]

Abraham's sojourn in Egypt was of great service to the inhabitants of
the country, because he demonstrated to the wise men of the land how
empty and vain their views were, and also he taught them astronomy and
astrology, unknown in Egypt before his time.[80]

THE FIRST PHARAOH

The Egyptian ruler, whose meeting with Abraham had proved so untoward
an event, was the first to bear the name Pharaoh. The succeeding kings
were named thus after him. The origin of the name is connected with the
life and adventures of Rakyon, Have-naught, a man wise, handsome, and
poor, who lived in the land of Shinar. Finding himself unable to
support himself in Shinar, he resolved to depart for Egypt, where he
expected to display his wisdom before the king, Ashwerosh, the son of
'Anam. Perhaps he would find grace in the eyes of the king, who would
give Rakyon the opportunity of supporting himself and rising to be a
great man. When he reached Egypt, he learnt that it was the custom of
the country for the king to remain in retirement in his palace, removed
from the sight of the people. Only on one day of the year he showed
himself in public, and received all who had a petition to submit to
him. Richer by a disappointment, Rakyon knew not how he was to earn a
livelihood in the strange country. He was forced to spend the night in
a ruin, hungry as he was. The next day he decided to try to earn
something by selling vegetables. By a lucky chance he fell in with some
dealers in vegetables, but as he did not know the customs of the
country, his new undertaking was not favored with good fortune.
Ruffians assaulted him, snatched his wares from him, and made a
laughing-stock of him. The second night, which he was compelled to
spend in the ruin again, a sly plan ripened in his mind. He arose and
gathered together a crew of thirty lusty fellows. He took them to the
graveyard, and bade them, in the name of the king, charge two hundred
pieces of silver for every body they buried. Otherwise interment was to
be prevented. In this way he succeeded in amassing great wealth within
eight months. Not only did he acquire silver, gold, and precious gems,
but also he attached a considerable force, armed and mounted, to his
person.

On the day on which the king appeared among the people, they began to
complain of this tax upon the dead. They said: "What is this thou art
inflicting upon thy servants—permitting none to be buried unless they
pay thee silver and gold! Has a thing like this come to pass in the
world since the days of Adam, that the dead should not be interred
unless money be paid therefor! We know well that it is the privilege of
the king to take an annual tax from the living. But thou takest tribute
from the dead, too, and thou exactest it day by day. O king, we cannot
endure this any longer, for the whole of the city is ruined thereby."

The king, who had had no suspicion of Rakyon's doings, fell into a
great rage when the people gave him information about them. He ordered
him and his armed force to appear before him. Rakyon did not come
empty-handed. He was preceded by a thousand youths and maidens, mounted
upon steeds and arrayed in state apparel. These were a present to the
king. When he himself stepped before the king, he delivered gold,
silver, and diamonds to him in great abundance, and a magnificent
charger. These gifts and the display of splendor did not fail of taking
effect upon the king, and when Rakyon, in well-considered words and
with a pliant tongue, described the undertaking, he won not only the
king to his side, but also the whole court, and the king said to him,
"No longer shalt thou be called Rakyon, Have-naught, but Pharaoh,
Paymaster, for thou didst collect taxes from the dead."

So profound was the impression made by Rakyon that the king, the
grandees, and the people, all together resolved to put the guidance of
the realm in the hands of Pharaoh. Under the suzerainty of Ashwerosh he
administered law and justice throughout the year; only on the one day
when he showed himself to the people did the king himself give judgment
and decide cases. Through the power thus conferred upon him and through
cunning practices, Pharaoh succeeded in usurping royal authority, and
he collected taxes from all the inhabitants of Egypt. Nevertheless he
was beloved of the people, and it was decreed that every ruler of Egypt
should thenceforth bear the name Pharaoh.[81]

THE WAR OF THE KINGS

On his return from Egypt Abraham's relations to his own family were
disturbed by annoying circumstances. Strife developed between the
herdmen of his cattle and the herdmen of Lot's cattle. Abraham
furnished his herds with muzzles, but Lot made no such provision, and
when the shepherds that pastured Abraham's flocks took Lot's shepherds
to task on account of the omission, the latter replied: "It is known of
a surety that God said unto Abraham, 'To thy seed will I give the
land.' But Abraham is a sterile mule. Never will he have children. On
the morrow he will die, and Lot will be his heir. Thus the flocks of
Lot are but consuming what belongs to them or their master." But God
spoke: "Verily, I said unto Abraham I would give the land unto his
seed, but only after the seven nations shall have been destroyed from
out of the land. To-day the Canaanites are therein, and the Perizzites.
They still have the right of habitation."

Now, when the strife extended from the servants to the masters, and
Abraham vainly called his nephew Lot to account for his unbecoming
behavior, Abraham decided he would have to part from his kinsman,
though he should have to compel Lot thereto by force. Lot thereupon
separated himself not from Abraham alone, but from the God of Abraham
also, and he betook himself to a district in which immorality and sin
reigned supreme, wherefore punishment overtook him, for his own flesh
seduced him later unto sin.

God was displeased with Abraham for not living in peace and harmony
with his own kindred, as he lived with all the world beside. On the
other hand, God also took it in ill part that Abraham was accepting Lot
tacitly as his heir, though He had promised him, in clear, unmistakable
words, "To thy seed will I give the land." After Abraham had separated
himself from Lot, he received the assurance again that Canaan should
once belong to his seed, which God would multiply as the sand which is
upon the sea-shore. As the sand fills the whole earth, so the offspring
of Abraham would be scattered over the whole earth, from end to end;
and as the earth is blessed only when it is moistened with water, so
his offspring would be blessed through the Torah, which is likened unto
water; and as the earth endures longer than metal, so his offspring
would endure forever, while the heathen would vanish; and as the earth
is trodden upon, so his offspring would be trodden upon by the four
kingdoms.[82]

The departure of Lot had a serious consequence, for the war waged by
Abraham against the four kings is intimately connected with it. Lot
desired to settle in the well-watered circle of the Jordan, but the
only city of the plain that would receive him was Sodom, the king of
which admitted the nephew of Abraham out of consideration for the
latter.[83] The five impious kings planned first to make war upon Sodom
on account of Lot and then advance upon Abraham.[84] For one of the
five, Amraphel, was none other than Nimrod, Abraham's enemy from of
old. The immediate occasion for the war was this: Chedorlaomer, one of
Nimrod's generals, rebelled against him after the builders of the tower
were dispersed, and he set himself up as king of Elam. Then he
subjugated the Hamitic tribes living in the five cities of the plain of
the Jordan, and made them tributary. For twelve years they were
faithful to their sovereign ruler Chedorlaomer, but then they refused
to pay the tribute, and they persisted in their insubordination for
thirteen years. Making the most of Chedorlaomer's embarrassment, Nimrod
led a host of seven thousand warriors against his former general. In
the battle fought between Elam and Shinar, Nimrod suffered a disastrous
defeat, he lost six hundred of his army, and among the slain was the
king's son Mardon. Humiliated and abased, he returned to his country,
and he was forced to acknowledge the suzerainty of Chedorlaomer, who
now proceeded to form an alliance with Arioch king of Ellasar, and
Tidal, the king of several nations, the purpose of which was to crush
the cities of the circle of the Jordan. The united forces of these
kings, numbering eight hundred thousand, marched upon the five cities,
subduing whatever they encountered in their course,[85] and
annihilating the descendants of the giants. Fortified places, unwalled
cities, and flat, open country, all fell in their hands.[86] They
pushed on through the desert as far as the spring issuing from the rock
at Kadesh, the spot appointed by God as the place of pronouncing
judgment against Moses and Aaron on account of the waters of strife.
Thence they turned toward the central portion of Palestine, the country
of dates, where they encountered the five godless kings, Bera, the
villain, king of Sodom; Birsha, the sinner, king of Gomorrah; Shinab,
the father-hater, king of Admah; Shemeber, the voluptuary, king of
Zeboiim; and the king of Bela, the city that devours its inhabitants.
The five were routed in the fruitful Vale of Siddim, the canals of
which later formed the Dead Sea. They that remained of the rank and
file fled to the mountains, but the kings fell into the slime pits and
stuck there. Only the king of Sodom was rescued, miraculously, for the
purpose that he might convert those heathen to faith in God that had
not believed in the wonderful deliverance of Abraham from the fiery
furnace.[87]

The victors despoiled Sodom of all its goods and victuals, and took
Lot, boasting, "We have taken the son of Abraham's brother captive," so
betraying the real object of their undertaking; their innermost desire
was to strike at Abraham.[88]

It was on the first evening of the Passover, and Abraham was eating of
the unleavened bread,[89] when the archangel Michael brought him the
report of Lot's captivity. This angel bears another name besides,
Palit, the escaped, because when God threw Samael and his host from
their holy place in heaven, the rebellious leader held on to Michael
and tried to drag him along downward, and Michael escaped falling from
heaven only through the help of God.[90]

When the report of his nephew's evil state reached Abraham, he
straightway dismissed all thought of his dissensions with Lot from his
mind, and only considered ways and means of deliverance.[91] He
convoked his disciples to whom he had taught the true faith, and who
all called themselves by the name Abraham.[92] He gave them gold and
silver, saying at the same time: "Know that we go to war for the
purpose of saving human lives. Therefore, do ye not direct your eyes
upon money, here lie gold and silver before you." Furthermore he
admonished them in these words: "We are preparing to go to war. Let
none join us who hath committed a trespass, and fears that Divine
punishment will descend upon him." Alarmed by his warning, not one
would obey his call to arms, they were fearful on account of their
sins. Eliezer alone remained with him, wherefore God spake, and said:
"All forsook thee save only Eliezer. Verily, I shall invest him with
the strength of the three hundred and eighteen men whose aid thou didst
seek in vain."[93]

The battle fought with the mighty hosts of the kings, from which
Abraham emerged victorious, happened on the fifteenth of Nisan, the
night appointed for miraculous deeds.[94] The arrows and stones hurled
at him effected naught,[95] but the dust of the ground, the chaff, and
the stubble which he threw at the enemy were transformed into
death-dealing javelins and swords.[96] Abraham, as tall as seventy men
set on end, and requiring as much food and drink as seventy men,
marched forward with giant strides, each of his steps measuring four
miles, until he overtook the kings, and annihilated their troops.
Further he could not go, for he had reached Dan, where Jeroboam would
once raise the golden calves, and on this ominous spot Abraham's
strength diminished.[97]

His victory was possible only because the celestial powers espoused his
side. The planet Jupiter made the night bright for him, and an angel,
Lailah by name, fought for him.[98] In a true sense, it was a victory
of God. All the nations acknowledged his more than human achievement,
and they fashioned a throne for Abraham, and erected it on the field of
battle. When they attempted to seat him upon it, amid exclamations of
"Thou art our king! Thou art our prince! Thou art our god!" Abraham
warded them off, and said, "The universe has its King, and it has its
God!" He declined all honors, and returned his property unto each man.
Only the little children he kept by himself. He reared them in the
knowledge of God, and later they atoned for the disgrace of their
parents.

Somewhat arrogantly the king of Sodom set out to meet Abraham. He was
proud that a great miracle, his rescue from the slime pit, had been
performed for him, too. He made Abraham the proposition that he keep
the despoiled goods for himself.[99] But Abraham refused them, and
said: "I have lift up mine hand unto the Lord, God Most High, who hath
created the world for the sake of the pious, that I will not take a
thread nor a shoe-latchet nor aught that is thine. I have no right upon
any goods taken as spoils,[100] save only that which the young men have
eaten, and the portion of the men who tarried by the stuff, though they
went not down to the battle itself." The example of Abraham in giving a
share in the spoils even unto the men not concerned directly in the
battle, was followed later by David, who heeded not the protest of the
wicked men and the base fellows with him, that the watchers who staid
by the stuff were not entitled to share alike with the warriors that
had gone down to the battle.[101]

In spite of his great success, Abraham nevertheless was concerned about
the issue of the war. He feared that the prohibition against shedding
the blood of man had been transgressed, and he also dreaded the
resentment of Shem, whose descendants had perished in the encounter.
But God reassured him, and said: "Be not afraid! Thou hast but
extirpated the thorns, and as to Shem, he will bless thee rather than
curse thee." So it was. When Abraham returned from the war, Shem, or,
as he is sometimes called, Melchizedek, the king of righteousness,
priest of God Most High, and king of Jerusalem, came forth to meet him
with bread and wine.[102] And this high priest instructed Abraham in
the laws of the priesthood and in the Torah, and to prove his
friendship for him he blessed him, and called him the partner of God in
the possession of the world, seeing that through him the Name of God
had first been made known among men.[103] But Melchizedek arranged the
words of his blessing in an unseemly way. He named Abraham first and
then God. As a punishment, he was deposed by God from the priestly
dignity, and instead it was passed over to Abraham, with whose
descendants it remained forever.[104]

As a reward for the sanctification of the Holy Name, which Abraham had
brought about when he refused to keep aught of the goods taken in
battle,[105] his descendants received two commands, the command of the
threads in the borders of their garments, and the command of the
latchets to be bound upon their hands and to be used as frontlets
between their eyes. Thus they commemorate that their ancestor refused
to take so much as a thread or a latchet. And because he would not
touch a shoe-latchet of the spoils, his descendants cast their shoe
upon Edom.[106]

THE COVENANT OF THE PIECES

Shortly after the war, God revealed Himself unto Abraham, to soothe his
conscience as to the spilling of innocent blood, for it was a scruple
that gave him much anguish of spirit. God assured him at the same time
that He would cause pious men to arise among his descendants, who, like
himself, would be a shield unto their generation.[107] As a further
distinction, God gave him leave to ask what he would have, rare grace
accorded to none beside, except Jacob, Solomon, Ahaz, and the Messiah.
Abraham spoke, and said: "O Lord of the world, if in time to come my
descendants should provoke Thy wrath, it were better I remained
childless. Lot, for the sake of whom I journeyed as far as Damascus,
where God was my protection, would be well pleased to be my heir.
Moreover, I have read in the stars, 'Abraham, thou wilt beget no
children.'" Thereupon God raised Abraham above the vault of the skies,
and He said, "Thou art a prophet, not an astrologer!"[108] Now Abraham
demanded no sign that he would be blessed with offspring. Without
losing another word, he believed in the Lord, and he was rewarded for
his simple faith by a share in this world and a share in the world to
come as well, and, besides, the redemption of Israel from the exile
will take place as a recompense for his firm trust.[109]

But though he believed the promise made him with a full and abiding
faith, he yet desired to know by what merit of theirs his descendants
would maintain themselves. Therefore God bade him bring Him a sacrifice
of three heifers, three she-goats, three rams, a turtle dove, and a
young pigeon, thus indicating to Abraham the various sacrifices that
should once be brought in the Temple, to atone for the sins of Israel
and further his welfare.[110] "But what will become of my descendants,"
asked Abraham, "after the Temple is destroyed?" God replied, and said,
"If they read the order of sacrifices as they will be set down in the
Scriptures, I will account it unto them as though they had offered the
sacrifices, and I will forgive all their sins."[111] And God continued
and revealed to Abraham the course of Israel's history and the history
of the whole world: The heifer of three years indicates the dominion of
Babylon, the she-goat of three years stands for the empire of the
Greeks, the ram of three years for the Medo-Persian power, the rule of
Ishmael is represented by the ram, and Israel is the innocent dove.

Abraham took him these animals and divided them in the midst. Had he
not done so, Israel would not have been able to resist the power of the
four kingdoms. But the birds he divided not, to indicate that Israel
will remain whole. And the birds of prey came down upon the carcasses,
and Abraham drove them away. Thus was announced the advent of the
Messiah, who will cut the heathen in pieces, but Abraham bade Messiah
wait until the time appointed unto him.[112] And as the Messianic time
was made known unto Abraham, so also the time of the resurrection of
the dead. When he laid the halves of the pieces over against each
other, the animals became alive again, as the bird flew over them.[112]

While he was preparing these sacrifices, a vision of great import was
granted to Abraham. The sun sank, and a deep sleep fell upon him, and
he beheld a smoking furnace, Gehenna, the furnace that God prepares for
the sinner; and he beheld a flaming torch, the revelation on Sinai,
where all the people saw flaming torches; and he beheld the sacrifices
to be brought by Israel; and an horror of great darkness fell upon him,
the dominion of the four kingdoms. And God spake to him: "Abraham, as
long as thy children fulfil the two duties of studying the Torah and
performing the service in the Temple, the two visitations, Gehenna and
alien rule, will be spared them. But if they neglect the two duties,
they will have to suffer the two chastisements; only thou mayest choose
whether they shall be punished by means of Gehenna or by means of the
dominion of the stranger." All the day long Abraham wavered, until God
called unto him: "How long wilt thou halt between two opinions? Decide
for one of the two, and let it be for the dominion of the stranger!"
Then God made known to him the four hundred years' bondage of Israel in
Egypt, reckoning from the birth of Isaac, for unto Abraham himself was
the promise given that he should go to his fathers in peace, and feel
naught of the arrogance of the stranger oppressor. At the same time, it
was made known to Abraham that his father Terah would have a share in
the world to come, for he had done penance for his sinful deeds.
Furthermore it was revealed to him that his son Ishmael would turn into
the path of righteousness while yet his father was alive, and his
grandson Esau would not begin his impious way of life until he himself
had passed away. And as he received the promise of their deliverance
together with the announcement of the slavery of his seed, in a land
not theirs, so it was made known to him that God would judge the four
kingdoms and destroy them.[114]

THE BIRTH OF ISHMAEL

The covenant of the pieces, whereby the fortunes of his descendants
were revealed to Abraham, was made at a time when he was still
childless.[115] As long as Abraham and Sarah dwelt outside of the Holy
Land, they looked upon their childlessness as a punishment for not
abiding within it. But when a ten years' sojourn in Palestine found her
barren as before, Sarah perceived that the fault lay with her.[116]
Without a trace of jealousy she was ready to give her slave Hagar to
Abraham as wife,[117] first making her a freed woman.[118] For Hagar
was Sarah's property, not her husband's. She had received her from
Pharaoh, the father of Hagar. Taught and bred by Sarah, she walked in
the same path of righteousness as her mistress,[119] and thus was a
suitable companion for Abraham, and, instructed by the holy spirit, he
acceded to Sarah's proposal.

No sooner had Hagar's union with Abraham been consummated, and she felt
that she was with child, than she began to treat her former mistress
contemptuously, though Sarah was particularly tender toward her in the
state in which she was. When noble matrons came to see Sarah, she was
in the habit of urging them to pay a visit to "poor Hagar," too. The
dames would comply with her suggestion, but Hagar would use the
opportunity to disparage Sarah. "My lady Sarah," she would say, "is not
inwardly what she appears to be outwardly. She makes the impression of
a righteous, pious woman, but she is not, for if she were, how could
her childlessness be explained after so many years of marriage, while I
became pregnant at once?"

Sarah scorned to bicker with her slave, yet the rage she felt found
vent in these words to Abraham:[120] "It is thou who art doing me
wrong. Thou hearest the words of Hagar, and thou sayest naught to
oppose them, and I hoped that thou wouldst take my part. For thy sake
did I leave my native land and the house of my father, and I followed
thee into a strange land with trust in God. In Egypt I pretended to be
thy sister, that no harm might befall thee. When I saw that I should
bear no children, I took the Egyptian woman, my slave Hagar, and gave
her unto thee for wife, contenting myself with the thought that I would
rear the children she would bear. Now she treats me disdainfully in thy
presence. O that God might look upon the injustice which hath been done
unto me, to judge between thee and me, and have mercy upon us, restore
peace to our home, and grant us offspring, that we have no need of
children from Hagar, the Egyptian bondwoman of the generation of the
heathen that cast thee in the fiery furnace!"[121]

Abraham, modest and unassuming as he was, was ready to do justice to
Sarah, and he conferred full power upon her to dispose of Hagar
according to her pleasure. He added but one caution, "Having once made
her a mistress, we cannot again reduce her to the state of a
bondwoman." Unmindful of this warning, Sarah exacted the services of a
slave from Hagar. Not alone this, she tormented her, and finally she
cast an evil eye upon her, so that the unborn child dropped from her,
and she ran away. On her flight she was met by several angels, and they
bade her return, at the same time making known to her that she would
bear a son who should be called Ishmael—one of the six men who have
been given a name by God before their birth, the others being Isaac,
Moses, Solomon, Josiah, and the Messiah.[122]

Thirteen years after the birth of Ishmael the command was issued to
Abraham that he put the sign of the covenant upon his body and upon the
bodies of the male members of his household. Abraham was reluctant at
first to do the bidding of God, for he feared that the circumcision of
his flesh would raise a barrier between himself and the rest of
mankind. But God said unto him, "Let it suffice thee that I am thy God
and thy Lord, as it sufficeth the world that I am its God and its
Lord."[123]

Abraham then consulted with his three true friends, Aner, Eshcol, and
Mamre, regarding the command of the circumcision. The first one spoke,
and said, "Thou art nigh unto a hundred years old, and thou considerest
inflicting such pain upon thyself?" The advice of the second was also
against it. "What," said Eshcol, "thou choosest to mark thyself so that
thy enemies may recognize thee without fail?" Mamre, the third, was the
only one to advise obedience to the command of God. "God succored thee
from the fiery furnace," he said, "He helped thee in the combat with
the kings, He provided for thee during the famine, and thou dost
hesitate to execute His behest concerning the circumcision?"[124]
Accordingly, Abraham did as God had commanded, in bright daylight,
bidding defiance to all, that none might say, "Had we seen him attempt
it, we should have prevented him."[125]

The circumcision was performed on the tenth day of Tishri, the Day of
Atonement, and upon the spot on which the altar was later to be erected
in the Temple, for the act of Abraham remains a never-ceasing atonement
for Israel.[126]

THE VISIT OF THE ANGELS

On the third day after his circumcision, when Abraham was suffering
dire pain,[127] God spoke to the angels, saying, "Go to, let us pay a
visit to the sick." The angels refused, and said: "What is man, that
Thou art mindful of him? And the son of man, that Thou visitest him?
And Thou desirest to betake Thyself to a place of uncleanness, a place
of blood and filth?" But God replied unto them, "Thus do ye speak. As
ye live, the savor of this blood is sweeter to me than myrrh and
incense, and if you do not desire to visit Abraham, I will go
alone."[128]

The day whereon God visited him was exceedingly hot, for He had bored a
hole in hell, so that its heat might reach as far as the earth, and no
wayfarer venture abroad on the highways, and Abraham be left
undisturbed in his pain.[129] But the absence of strangers caused
Abraham great vexation, and he sent his servant Eliezer forth to keep a
lookout for travellers. When the servant returned from his fruitless
search, Abraham himself, in spite of his illness and the scorching
heat, prepared to go forth on the highway and see whether he would not
succeed where failure had attended Eliezer, whom he did not wholly
trust at any rate, bearing in mind the well-known saying, "No truth
among slaves."[130] At this moment God appeared to him, surrounded by
the angels. Quickly Abraham attempted to rise from his seat, but God
checked every demonstration of respect, and when Abraham protested that
it was unbecoming to sit in the presence of the Lord, God said, "As
thou livest, thy descendants at the age of four and five will sit in
days to come in the schools and in the synagogues while I reside
therein."[131]

Meantime Abraham beheld three men. They were the angels Michael,
Gabriel, and Raphael. They had assumed the form of human beings to
fulfil his wish for guests toward whom to exercise hospitality. Each of
them had been charged by God with a special mission, besides, to be
executed on earth. Raphael was to heal the wound of Abraham, Michael
was to bring Sarah the glad tidings that she would bear a son, and
Gabriel was to deal destruction to Sodom and Gomorrah. Arrived at the
tent of Abraham, the three angels noticed that he was occupied in
nursing himself, and they withdrew.[132] Abraham, however, hastened
after them through another door of the tent, which had wide open
entrances on all sides.[133] He considered the duty of hospitality more
important than the duty of receiving the Shekinah. Turning to God, he
said, "O Lord, may it please Thee not to leave Thy servant while he
provides for the entertainment of his guests."[134] Then he addressed
himself to the stranger walking in the middle between the other two,
whom by this token he considered the most distinguished,—it was the
archangel Michael—and he bade him and his companions turn aside into
his tent. The manner of his guests, who treated one another politely,
made a good impression upon Abraham. He was assured that they were men
of worth whom he was entertaining.[135] But as they appeared outwardly
like Arabs, and the people worshipped the dust of their feet, he bade
them first wash their feet, that they might not defile his tent.[136]

He did not depend upon his own judgment in reading the character of his
guests. By his tent a tree was planted, which spread its branches out
over all who believed in God, and afforded them shade. But if idolaters
went under the tree, the branches turned upward, and cast no shade upon
the ground. Whenever Abraham saw this sign, he would at once set about
the task of converting the worshippers of the false gods. And as the
tree made a distinction between the pious and the impious, so also
between the clean and the unclean. Its shade was denied them as long as
they refrained from taking the prescribed ritual bath in the spring
that flowed out from its roots, the waters of which rose at once for
those whose uncleanness was of a venial character and could be removed
forthwith, while others had to wait seven days for the water to come
up. Accordingly, Abraham bade the three men lean against the trunk of
the tree. Thus he would soon learn their worth or their
unworthiness.[137]

Being of the truly pious, "who promise little, but perform much,"[133]
Abraham said only: "I will fetch a morsel of bread, and comfort ye your
heart, seeing that ye chanced to pass my tent at dinner time. Then,
after ye have given thanks to God, ye may pass on."[139] But when the
meal was served to the guests, it was a royal banquet, exceeding
Solomon's at the time of his most splendid magnificence. Abraham
himself ran unto the herd, to fetch cattle for meat. He slaughtered
three calves, that he might be able to set a "tongue with mustard"
before each of his guests.[140] In order to accustom Ishmael to
God-pleasing deeds, he had him dress the calves,[141] and he bade Sarah
bake the bread. But as he knew that women are apt to treat guests
niggardly, he was explicit in his request to her. He said, "Make ready
quickly three measures of meal, yea, fine meal." As it happened, the
bread was not brought to the table, because it had accidentally become
unclean, and our father Abraham was accustomed to eat his daily bread
only in a clean state.[142] Abraham himself served his guests, and it
appeared to him that the three men ate. But this was an illusion. In
reality the angels did not eat,[143] only Abraham, his three friends,
Aner, Eshcol, and Mamre, and his son Ishmael partook of the banquet,
and the portions set before the angels were devoured by a heavenly
fire.[144]

Although the angels remained angels even in their human disguise,
nevertheless the personality of Abraham was so exalted that in his
presence the archangels felt insignificant.[145]

After the meal the angels asked after Sarah, though they knew that she
was in retirement in her tent, but it was proper for them to pay their
respects to the lady of the house and send her the cup of wine over
which the blessing had been said.[146] Michael, the greatest of the
angels, thereupon announced the birth of Isaac. He drew a line upon the
wall, saying, "When the sun crosses this point, Sarah will be with
child, and when he crosses the next point, she will give birth to a
child." This communication, which was intended for Sarah and not for
Abraham, to whom the promise had been revealed long before,[147] the
angels made at the entrance to her tent, but Ishmael stood between the
angel and Sarah, for it would not have been seemly to deliver the
message in secret, with none other by. Yet, so radiant was the beauty
of Sarah that a beam of it struck the angel, and made him look up. In
the act of turning toward her, he heard her laugh within herself:[148]
"Is it possible that these bowels can yet bring forth a child, these
shrivelled breasts give suck? And though I should be able to bear, yet
is not my lord Abraham old?"[149]

And the Lord said unto Abraham: "Am I too old to do wonders? And
wherefore doth Sarah laugh, saying, Shall I of a surety bear a child,
which am old?"[150] The reproach made by God was directed against
Abraham as well as against Sarah, for he, too, had showed himself of
little faith when he was told that a son would be born unto him. But
God mentioned only Sarah's incredulity, leaving Abraham to become
conscious of his defect himself.[151]

Regardful of the peace of their family life, God had not repeated
Sarah's words accurately to Abraham. Abraham might have taken amiss
what his wife had said about his advanced years, and so precious is the
peace between husband and wife that even the Holy One, blessed be He,
preserved it at the expense of truth.[152]

After Abraham had entertained his guests, he went with them to bring
them on their way, for, important as the duty of hospitality is, the
duty of speeding the parting guest is even more important.[153] Their
way lay in the direction of Sodom, whither two of the angels were
going, the one to destroy it, and the second to save Lot, while the
third, his errand to Abraham fulfilled, returned to heaven.[154]

THE CITIES OF SIN

The inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah and the three other cities of the
plain were sinful and godless. In their country there was an extensive
vale, where they foregathered annually with their wives and their
children and all belonging to them, to celebrate a feast lasting
several days and consisting of the most revolting orgies. If a stranger
merchant passed through their territory, he was besieged by them all,
big and little alike, and robbed of whatever he possessed. Each one
appropriated a bagatelle, until the traveller was stripped bare. If the
victim ventured to remonstrate with one or another, he would show him
that he had taken a mere trifle, not worth talking about. And the end
was that they hounded him from the city.

Once upon a time it happened that a man journeying from Elam arrived in
Sodom toward evening. No one could be found to grant him shelter for
the night. Finally a sly fox named Hedor invited him cordially to
follow him to his house. The Sodomite had been attracted by a rarely
magnificent carpet, strapped to the stranger's ass by means of a rope.
He meant to secure it for himself. The friendly persuasions of Hedor
induced the stranger to remain with him two days, though he had
expected to stay only overnight. When the time came for him to continue
on his journey, he asked his host for the carpet and the rope. Hedor
said: "Thou hast dreamed a dream, and this is the interpretation of thy
dream: the rope signifies that thou wilt have a long life, as long as a
rope; the varicolored carpet indicates that thou wilt own an orchard
wherein thou wilt plant all sorts of fruit trees." The stranger
insisted that his carpet was a reality, not a dream fancy, and he
continued to demand its return. Not only did Hedor deny having taken
anything from his guest, he even insisted upon pay for having
interpreted his dream to him. His usual price for such services, he
said, was four silver pieces, but in view of the fact that he was his
guest, he would, as a favor to him, content himself with three pieces
of silver.

After much wrangling, they put their case before one of the judges of
Sodom, Sherek by name, and he said to the plaintiff, "Hedor is known in
this city as a trustworthy interpreter of dreams, and what he tells
thee is true." The stranger declared himself not satisfied with the
verdict, and continued to urge his side of the case. Then Sherek drove
both the plaintiff and the defendant from the court room. Seeing this,
the inhabitants gathered together and chased the stranger from the
city, and lamenting the loss of his carpet, he had to pursue his way.

As Sodom had a judge worthy of itself, so also had the other
cities—Sharkar in Gomorrah, Zabnak in Admah, and Manon in Zeboiim.
Eliezer, the bondman of Abraham, made slight changes in the names of
these judges, in accordance with the nature of what they did: the first
he called Shakkara, Liar; the second Shakrura, Arch-deceiver; the third
Kazban, Falsifier; and the fourth, Mazle-Din, Perverter of Judgment. At
the suggestion of these judges, the cities set up beds on their
commons. When a stranger arrived, three men seized him by his head, and
three by his feet, and they forced him upon one of the beds. If he was
too short to fit into it exactly, his six attendants pulled and
wrenched his limbs until he filled it out; if he was too long for; it,
they tried to jam him in with all their combined strength, until the
victim was on the verge of death. Hit outcrles were met with the words,
"Thus will be done to any man that comes into our land."

After a while travellers avoided these cities, but if some poor devil
was betrayed occasionally into entering them, they would give him gold
and silver, but never any bread, so that he was bound to die of
starvation. Once he was dead, the residents of the city came and took
back the marked gold and silver which they had given him, and they
would quarrel about the distribution of his clothes, for they would
bury him naked.

Once Eliezer, the bondman of Abraham, went to Sodom, at the bidding of
Sarah, to inquire after the welfare of Lot. He happened to enter the
city at the moment when the people were robbing a stranger of his
garments. Eliezer espoused the cause of the poor wretch, and the
Sodomites turned against him; one threw a stone at his forehead and
caused considerable loss of blood. Instantly, the assailant, seeing the
blood gush forth, demanded payment for having performed the operation
of cupping. Eliezer refused to pay for the infliction of a wound upon
him, and he was haled before the judge Shakkara. The decision went
against him, for the law of the land gave the assailant the right to
demand payment. Eliezer quickly picked up a stone and threw it at the
judge's forehead. When he saw that the blood was flowing profusely, he
said to the judge, "Pay my debt to the man and give me the balance."

The cause of their cruelty was their exceeding great wealth. Their soil
was gold, and in their miserliness and their greed for more and more
gold, they wanted to prevent strangers from enjoying aught of their
riches. Accordingly, they flooded the highways with streams of water,
so that the roads to their city were obliterated, and none could find
the way thither. They were as heartless toward beasts as toward men.
They begrudged the birds what they ate, and therefore extirpated
them.[155] They behaved impiously toward one another, too, not
shrinking back from murder to gain possession of more gold. If they
observed that a man owned great riches, two of them would conspire
against him. They would beguile him to the vicinity of ruins, and while
the one kept him on the spot by pleasant converse, the other would
undermine the wall near which he stood, until it suddenly crashed down
upon him and killed him. Then the two plotters would divide his wealth
between them.

Another method of enriching themselves with the property of others was
in vogue among them. They were adroit thieves. When they made up their
minds to commit theft, they would first ask their victim to take care
of a sum of money for them, which they smeared with strongly scented
oil before handing it over to him. The following night they would break
into his house, and rob him of his secret treasures, led to the place
of concealment by the smell of the oil.

Their laws were calculated to do injury to the poor. The richer a man,
the more was he favored before the law. The owner of two oxen was
obliged to render one day's shepherd service, but if he had but one ox,
he had to give two days' service. A poor orphan, who was thus forced to
tend the flocks a longer time than those who were blessed with large
herds, killed all the cattle entrusted to him in order to take revenge
upon his oppressors, and he insisted, when the skins were assigned,
that the owner of two head of cattle should have but one skin, but the
owner of one head should receive two skins, in correspondence to the
method pursued in assigning the work. For the use of the ferry, a
traveller had to pay four zuz, but if he waded through the water, he
had to pay eight zuz.[156]

The cruelty of the Sodomites went still further. Lot had a daughter,
Paltit, so named because she had been born to him shortly after he
escaped captivity through the help of Abraham. Paltit lived in Sodom,
where she had married. Once a beggar came to town, and the court issued
a proclamation that none should give him anything to eat, in order that
he might die of starvation. But Paltit had pity upon the unfortunate
wretch, and every day when she went to the well to draw water, she
supplied him with a piece of bread, which she hid in her water pitcher.
The inhabitants of the two sinful cities, Sodom and Gomorrah, could not
understand why the beggar did not perish, and they suspected that some
one was giving him food in secret. Three men concealed themselves near
the beggar, and caught Paltit in the act of giving him something to
eat. She had to pay for her humanity with death; she was burnt upon a
pyre.

The people of Admah were no better than those of Sodom. Once a stranger
came to Admah, intending to stay overnight and continue his journey the
next morning. The daughter of a rich man met the stranger, and gave him
water to drink and bread to eat at his request. When the people of
Admah heard of this infraction of the law of the land, they seized the
girl and arraigned her before the judge, who condemned her to death.
The people smeared her with honey from top to toe, and exposed her
where bees would be attracted to her. The insects stung her to death,
and the callous people paid no heed to her heartrending cries. Then it
was that God resolved upon the destruction of these sinners.[157]

ABRAHAM PLEADS FOR THE SINNERS

When God saw that there was no righteous man among the inhabitants of
the sinful cities, and there would be none among their descendants, for
the sake of whose merits the rest might be treated with lenient
consideration, He resolved to annihilate them one and all.[158] But
before judgment was executed, the Lord made known unto Abraham what He
would do to Sodom, Gomorrah, and the other cities of the plain, for
they formed a part of Canaan, the land promised unto Abraham, and
therefore did God say, "I will not destroy them without the consent of
Abraham."[159]

Like a compassionate father, Abraham importuned the grace of God in
behalf of the sinners. He spoke to God, and said: "Thou didst take an
oath that no more should all flesh be cut off by the waters of a flood.
Is it meet that Thou shouldst evade Thy oath and destroy cities by
fire? Shall the Judge of all the earth not do right Himself? Verily, if
Thou desirest to maintain the world, Thou must give up the strict line
of justice. If Thou insistest upon the right alone, there can be no
world." Whereupon God said to Abraham: "Thou takest delight in
defending My creatures, and thou wouldst not call them guilty.
Therefore I spoke with none but thee during the ten generations since
Noah."[160] Abraham ventured to use still stronger words in order to
secure the safety of the godless. "That be far from Thee," he said, "to
slay the righteous with the wicked, that the dwellers on the earth say
not, 'It is His trade to destroy the generations of men in a cruel
manner; for He destroyed the generation of Enosh, then the generation
of the flood, and then He sent the confusion of tongues. He sticks ever
to His trade.'"

God made reply: "I will let all the generations I have destroyed pass
before thee, that thou mayest see they have not suffered the extreme
punishment they deserved. But if thou thinkest that I did not act
justly, then instruct thou Me in what I must do, and I will endeavor to
act in accordance with thy words." And Abraham had to admit that God
had not diminished in aught the justice due to every creature in this
world or the other world.[161] Nevertheless he continued to speak, and
he said: "Wilt Thou consume the cities, if there be ten righteous men
in each?" And God said, "No, if I find fifty righteous therein, I will
not destroy the cities."[162]

Abraham: "I have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord, I who would have
been turned long since into dust of the ground by Amraphel and into
ashes by Nimrod, had it not been for Thy grace.[163] Peradventure there
shall lack five of the fifty righteous for Zoar, the smallest of the
five cities. Wilt Thou destroy all the city for lack of five?"

God: "I will not destroy it, if I find there forty and five."

Abraham: "Peradventure there be ten pious in each of the four cities,
then forgive Zoar in Thy grace, for its sins are not so great in number
as the sins of the others."

God granted his petition, yet Abraham continued to plead, and he asked
whether God would not be satisfied if there were but thirty righteous,
ten in each of the three larger cities, and would pardon the two
smaller ones, even though there were no righteous therein, whose merits
would intercede for them. This, too, the Lord granted, and furthermore
He promised not to destroy the cities if but twenty righteous were
found therein; yes, God conceded that He would preserve the five cities
for the sake of ten righteous therein.[164] More than this Abraham did
not ask, for he knew that eight righteous ones, Noah and his wife, and
his three sons and their wives, had not sufficed to avert the doom of
the generation of the flood, and furthermore he hoped that Lot, his
wife, and their four daughters, together with the husbands of their
daughters, would make up the number ten. What he did not know was that
even the righteous in these sin-laden cities, though better than the
rest, were far from good.[165]

Abraham did not cease to pray for the deliverance of the sinners even
after the Shekinah had removed from him. But his supplications and his
intercessions were in vain.[166] For fifty-two years God had warned the
godless; He had made mountains to quake and tremble. But they hearkened
not unto the voice of admonition. They persisted in their sins, and
their well-merited punishment overtook them.[167] God forgives all
sins, only not an immoral life. And as all these sinners led a life of
debauchery, they were burnt with fire.[168]

THE DESTRUCTION OF THE SINFUL CITIES

The angels left Abraham at noon time, and they reached Sodom at the
approach of evening. As a rule, angels proclaim their errand with the
swiftness of lightning, but these were angels of mercy, and they
hesitated to execute their work of destruction, ever hoping that the
evil would be turned aside from Sodom.[169] With nightfall, the fate of
Sodom was sealed irrevocably, and the angels arrived there.[170]

Bred in the house of Abraham, Lot had learnt from him the beautiful
custom of extending hospitality, and when he saw the angels before him
in human form, thinking they were wayfarers, he bade them turn aside
and tarry all night in his house. But as the entertainment of strangers
was forbidden in Sodom on penalty of death, he dared invite them only
under cover of the darkness of night,[171] and even then he had to use
every manner of precaution, bidding the angels to follow him by devious
ways.

The angels, who had accepted Abraham's hospitality without delay, first
refused to comply with Lot's request, for it is a rule of good breeding
to show reluctance when an ordinary man invites one, but to accept the
invitation of a great man at once. Lot, however, was insistent, and
carried them into his house by main force.[172] At home he had to
overcome the opposition of his wife, for she said, "If the inhabitants
of Sodom hear of this, they will slay thee."

Lot divided his dwelling in two parts, one for himself and his guests,
the other for his wife, so that, if aught happened, his wife would be
spared.[173] Nevertheless it was she who betrayed him. She went to a
neighbor and borrowed some salt, and to the question, whether she could
not have supplied herself with salt during daylight hours, she replied,
"We had enough salt, until some guests came to us; for them we needed
more." In this way the presence of strangers was bruited abroad in the
city.[174]

In the beginning the angels were inclined to hearken to the petition of
Lot in behalf of the sinners, but when all the people of the city, big
and little, crowded around the house of Lot with the purpose of
committing a monstrous crime, the angels warded off his prayers,
saying, "Hitherto thou couldst intercede for them, but now no longer."
It was not the first time that the inhabitants of Sodom wanted to
perpetrate a crime of this sort. They had made a law some time before
that all strangers were to be treated in this horrible way. Lot, who
was appointed chief judge on the very day of the angels' coming, tried
to induce the people to desist from their purpose, saying to them, "My
brethren, the generation of the deluge was extirpated in consequence of
such sins as you desire to commit, and you would revert to them?" But
they replied: "Back! And though Abraham himself came hither, we should
have no consideration for him. Is it possible that thou wouldst set
aside a law which thy predecessors administered?"[175]

Even Lot's moral sense was no better than it should have been. It is
the duty of a man to venture his life for the honor of his wife and his
daughters, but Lot was ready to sacrifice the honor of his daughters,
wherefor he was punished severely later on.[176]

The angels told Lot who they were, and what the mission that had
brought them to Sodom, and they charged him to flee from the city with
his wife and his four daughters, two of them married, and two
betrothed.[177] Lot communicated their bidding to his sons-in-law, and
they mocked at him, and said: "O thou fool! Violins, cymbals, and
flutes resound in the city, and thou sayest Sodom will be destroyed!"
Such scoffing but hastened the execution of the doom of Sodom.[178] The
angel Michael laid hold upon the hand of Lot, and his wife and his
daughters, while with his little finger the angel Gabriel touched the
rock whereon the sinful cities were built, and overturned them. At the
same time the rain that was streaming down upon the two cities was
changed into brimstone.[179]

When the angels had brought forth Lot and his family and set them
without the city, he bade them run for their lives, and not look
behind, lest they behold the Shekinah, which had descended to work the
destruction of the cities. The wife of Lot could not control herself.
Her mother love made her look behind to see if her married daughters
were following. She beheld the Shekinah, and she became a pillar of
salt. This pillar exists unto this day. The cattle lick it all day
long, and in the evening it seems to have disappeared, but when morning
comes it stands there as large as before.[180]

The savior angel had urged Lot himself to take refuge with Abraham. But
he refused, and said: "As long as I dwelt apart from Abraham, God
compared my deeds with the deeds of my fellow-citizens, and among them
I appeared as a righteous man. If I should return to Abraham, God will
see that his good deeds outweigh mine by far."[181] The angel then
granted his plea that Zoar be left undestroyed. This city had been
founded a year later than the other four; it was only fifty-one years
old, and therefore the measure of its sins was not so full as the
measure of the sins of the neighboring cities.[182]

The destruction of the cities of the plain took place at dawn of the
sixteenth day of Nisan, for the reason that there were moon and sun
worshippers among the inhabitants. God said: "If I destroy them by day,
the moon worshippers will say, Were the moon here, she would prove
herself our savior; and if I destroy them by night, the sun worshippers
will say, Were the sun here, he would prove himself our savior. I will
therefore let their chastisement overtake them on the sixteenth day of
Nisan at an hour at which the moon and the sun are both in the
skies."[183]

The sinful inhabitants of the cities of the plain not only lost their
life in this world, but also their share in the future world. As for
the cities themselves, however, they will be restored in the Messianic
time.[184]

The destruction of Sodom happened at the time at which Abraham was
performing his morning devotions, and for his sake it was established
as the proper hour for the morning prayer unto all times.[185] When he
turned his eyes toward Sodom and beheld the rising smoke, he prayed for
the deliverance of Lot, and God granted his petition—the fourth time
that Lot became deeply indebted to Abraham. Abraham had taken him with
him to Palestine, he had made him rich in flocks, herds, and tents, he
had rescued him from captivity, and by his prayer he saved him from the
destruction of Sodom. The descendants of Lot, the Ammonites and the
Moabites, instead of showing gratitude to the Israelites, the posterity
of Abraham, committed four acts of hostility against them. They sought
to compass the destruction of Israel by means of Balaam's curses, they
waged open war against him at the time of Jephthah, and also at the
time of Jehoshaphat, and finally they manifested their hatred against
Israel at the destruction of the Temple. Hence it is that God appointed
four prophets, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Zephaniah, to proclaim
punishment unto the descendants of Lot, and four times their sin is
recorded in Holy Writ.[186]

Though Lot owed his deliverance to the petition of Abraham, yet it was
at the same time his reward for not having betrayed Abraham in Egypt,
when he pretended to be the brother of Sarah.[187] But a greater reward
still awaits him. The Messiah will be a descendant of his, for the
Moabitess Ruth is the great-grandmother of David, and the Ammonitess
Naamah is the mother of Rehoboam, and the Messiah is of the line of
these two kings.[188]

AMONG THE PHILISTINES

The destruction of Sodom induced Abraham to journey to Gerar.
Accustomed to extend hospitality to travellers and wayfarers, he no
longer felt comfortable in a district in which all traffic had ceased
by reason of the ruined cities. There was another reason for Abraham's
leaving his place; the people spoke too much about the ugly incident
with Lot's daughters.[189]

Arrived in the land of the Philistines, he again, as aforetime in
Egypt, came to an understanding with Sarah, that she was to call
herself his sister. When the report of her beauty reached the king, he
ordered her to be brought before him, and he asked her who her
companion was, and she told him that Abraham was her brother. Entranced
by her beauty, Abimelech the king took Sarah to wife, and heaped marks
of honor upon Abraham in accordance with the just claims of a brother
of the queen. Toward evening, before retiring, while he was still
seated upon his throne, Abimelech fell into a sleep, and he slept until
the morning, and in the dream he dreamed he saw an angel of the Lord
raising his sword to deal him a death blow. Sore frightened, he asked
the cause, and the angel replied, and said: "Thou wilt die on account
of the woman thou didst take into thy house this day, for she is the
wife of Abraham, the man whom thou didst cite before thee. Return his
wife unto him! But if thou restore her not, thou shalt surely die, thou
and all that are thine."

In that night the voice of a great crying was heard in the whole land
of the Philistines, for they saw the figure of a man walking about,
with sword in hand, slaying all that came in his way. At the same time
it happened that in men and beasts alike all the apertures of the body
closed up, and the land was seized with indescribable excitement. In
the morning, when the king awoke, in agony and terror, he called all
his servants and told his dream in their ears. One of their number
said: "O lord and king! Restore this woman unto the man, for he is her
husband. It is but his way in a strange land to pretend that she is his
sister. Thus did he with the king of Egypt, too, and God sent heavy
afflictions upon Pharaoh when he took the woman unto himself. Consider,
also, O lord and king, what hath befallen this night in the land; great
pain, wailing, and confusion there was, and we know that it came upon
us only because of this woman."[190]

There were some among his servants who spake: "Be not afraid of dreams!
What dreams make known to man is but falsehood." Then God appeared unto
Abimelech again and commanded him to let Sarah go free, otherwise he
would be a dead man.[191] Abimelech replied: "Is this Thy way? Then, I
ween, the generation of the flood and the generation of the confusion
of tongues were innocent, too! The man himself did say unto me, She is
my sister, and she, even she herself said, He is my brother, and all
the people of their household said the same words." And God said unto
him: "Yea, I know that thou hast not yet committed a trespass, for I
withheld thee from sinning. Thou didst not know that Sarah was a man's
wife.[192] But is it becoming to question a stranger, no sooner does he
set foot upon thy territory, about the woman accompanying him, whether
she be his wife or his sister? Abraham, who is a prophet, knew
beforehand the danger to himself if he revealed the whole truth.[193]
But, being a prophet, he also knows that thou didst not touch his wife,
and he shall pray for thee, and thou shalt live."

The smoke was still rising from the ruins of Sodom, and Abimelech and
his people, seeing it, feared that a like fate might overtake
them.[194] The king called Abraham and reproached him for having caused
such great misfortune through his false statements concerning Sarah.
Abraham excused his conduct by his apprehension that, the fear of God
not being in the place, the inhabitants of the land slay him for his
wife.[195] Abraham went on and told the history of his whole life, and
he said: "When I dwelt in the house of my father, the nations of the
world sought to do me harm, but God proved Himself my Redeemer. When
the nations of the world tried to lead me astray to idolatry, God
revealed Himself to me, and He said, 'Get thee out of thy country, and
from thy kindred, and from thy father's house.' And when the nations of
the world were about to go astray, God sent two prophets, my kinsmen
Shem and Eber, to admonish them."[196]

Abimelech gave rich gifts to Abraham, wherein he acted otherwise than
Pharaoh in similar circumstances. The Egyptian king gave gifts to
Sarah, but Abimelech was God fearing, and desired that Abraham pray for
him.[197] To Sarah he gave a costly robe that covered her whole person,
hiding her seductive charms from the view of beholders. At the same
time it was a reproach to Abraham, that he had not fitted Sarah out
with the splendor due to his wife.[198]

Though Abimelech had done him great injury, Abraham not only granted
him the forgiveness he craved, but also he prayed for him to God. Thus
he is an exemplar unto all. "Man should be pliant as a reed, not hard
like the cedar." He should be easily appeased, and slow to anger, and
as soon as he who has sinned against him asks for pardon, he should
forgive him with all his heart. Even if deep and serious injury has
been done to him, he should not be vengeful, nor bear his brother a
grudge in his heart.[199]

Abraham prayed thus for Abimelech: "O Lord of the world! Thou hast
created man that he may increase and propagate his kind. Grant that
Abimelech and his house may multiply and increase!"[200] God fulfilled
Abraham's petition in behalf of Abimelech and his people, and it was
the first time it happened in the history of mankind that God fulfilled
the prayer of one human being for the benefit of another.[201]
Abimelech and his subjects were healed of all their diseases, and so
efficacious was the prayer offered by Abraham that the wife of
Abimelech, barren hitherto, bore a child.[202]

THE BIRTH OF ISAAC

When the prayer of Abraham for Abimelech was heard, and the king of the
Philistines recovered, the angels raised a loud cry, and spoke to God
thus: "O Lord of the world! All these years hath Sarah been barren, as
the wife of Abimelech was. Now Abraham prayed to Thee, and the wife of
Abimelech hath been granted a child. It is just and fair that Sarah
should be remembered and granted a child." These words of the angels,
spoken on the New Year's Day, when the fortunes of men are determined
in heaven for the whole year, bore a result. Barely seven months later,
on the first day of the Passover, Isaac was born.

The birth of Isaac was a happy event, and not in the house of Abraham
alone. The whole world rejoiced, for God remembered all barren women at
the same time with Sarah. They all bore children. And all the blind
were made to see, all the lame were made whole, the dumb were made to
speak, and the mad were restored to reason. And a still greater miracle
happened: on the day of Isaac's birth the sun shone with such splendor
as had not been seen since the fall of man, and as he will shine again
only in the future world.[203]

To silence those who asked significantly, "Can one a hundred years old
beget a son?" God commanded the angel who has charge over the embryos,
to give them form and shape, that he fashion Isaac precisely according
to the model of Abraham, so that all seeing Isaac might exclaim,
"Abraham begot Isaac."[204]

That Abraham and Sarah were blessed with offspring only after they had
attained so great an age, had an important reason. It was necessary
that Abraham should bear the sign of the covenant upon his body before
he begot the son who was appointed to be the father of Israel.[205] And
as Isaac was the first child born to Abraham after he was marked with
the sign, he did not fail to celebrate his circumcision with much pomp
and ceremony on the eighth day.[206] Shem, Eber, Abimelech king of the
Philistines, and his whole retinue, Phicol the captain of his host in
it—they all were present, and also Terah and his son Nahor, in a word,
all the great ones round about.[207] On this occasion Abraham could at
last put a stop to the talk of the people, who said, "Look at this old
couple! They picked up a foundling on the highway, and they pretend he
is their own son, and to make their statement seem credible, they
arrange a feast in his honor." Abraham had invited not only men to the
celebration, but also the wives of the magnates with their infants, and
God permitted a miracle to be done. Sarah had enough milk in her
breasts to suckle all the babes there,[208] and they who drew from her
breasts had much to thank her for. Those whose mothers had harbored
only pious thoughts in their minds when they let them drink the milk
that flowed from the breasts of the pious Sarah, they became proselytes
when they grew up; and those whose mothers let Sarah nurse them only in
order to test her, they grew up to be powerful rulers, losing their
dominion only at the revelation on Mount Sinai, because they would not
accept the Torah. All proselytes and pious heathen are the descendants
of these infants.[209]

Among the guests of Abraham were the thirty-one kings and thirty-one
viceroys of Palestine who were vanquished by Joshua at the conquest of
the Holy Land. Even Og king of Bashan was present, and he had to suffer
the teasing of the other guests, who rallied him upon having called
Abraham a sterile mule, who would never have offspring. Og, on his
part, pointed at the little boy with contempt, and said, "Were I to lay
my finger upon him, he would be crushed." Whereupon God said to him:
"Thou makest mock of the gift given to Abraham! As thou livest, thou
shalt look upon millions and myriads of his descendants, and in the end
thou shalt fall into their hands."[210]

ISHMAEL CAST OFF

When Isaac grew up, quarrels broke out between him and Ishmael, on
account of the rights of the first-born. Ishmael insisted he should
receive a double portion of the inheritance after the death of Abraham,
and Isaac should receive only one portion. Ishmael, who had been
accustomed from his youth to use the bow and arrow, was in the habit of
aiming his missiles in the direction of Isaac, saying at the same time
that he was but jesting.[211] Sarah, however, insisted that Abraham
make over to Isaac all he owned, that no disputes might arise after his
death,[212] "for," she said, "Ishmael is not worthy of being heir with
my son, nor with a man like Isaac, and certainly not with my son
Isaac."[213] Furthermore, Sarah insisted that Abraham divorce himself
from Hagar, the mother of Ishmael, and send away the woman and her son,
so that there be naught in common between them and her own son, either
in this world or in the future world.

Of all the trials Abraham had to undergo, none was so hard to bear as
this, for it grieved him sorely to separate himself from his son. God
appeared to him in the following night, and said to him: "Abraham,
knowest thou not that Sarah was appointed to be thy wife from her
mother's womb? She is thy companion and the wife of thy youth, and I
named not Hagar as thy wife, nor Sarah as thy bondwoman. What Sarah
spoke unto thee was naught but truth, and let it not be grievous in thy
sight because of the lad, and because of thy bondwoman." The next
morning Abraham rose up early, gave Hagar her bill of divorcement, and
sent her away with her son, first binding a rope about her loins that
all might see she was a bondwoman.[214]

The evil glance cast upon her stepson by Sarah made him sick and
feverish, so that Hagar had to carry him, grown-up as he was. In his
fever he drank often of the water in the bottle given her by Abraham as
she left his house, and the water was quickly spent. That she might not
look upon the death of her child, Hagar cast Ishmael under the willow
shrubs growing on the selfsame spot whereon the angels had once spoken
with her and made known to her that she would bear a son. In the
bitterness of her heart, she spoke to God, and said, "Yesterday Thou
didst say to me, I will greatly multiply thy seed, that it shall not be
numbered for multitude, and to-day my son dies of thirst." Ishmael
himself cried unto God, and his prayer and the merits of Abraham
brought them help in their need, though the angels appeared against
Ishmael before God. They said, "Wilt Thou cause a well of water to
spring up for him whose descendants will let Thy children of Israel
perish with thirst?" But God replied, and said, "What is Ishmael at
this moment—righteous or wicked?" and when the angels called him
righteous, God continued, "I treat man according to his deserts at each
moment."[215]

At that moment Ishmael was pious indeed, for he was praying to God in
the following words: "O Lord of the world! If it be Thy will that I
shall perish, then let me die in some other way, not by thirst, for the
tortures of thirst are great beyond all others." Hagar, instead of
praying to God, addressed her supplications to the idols of her youth.
The prayer of Ishmael was acceptable before God, and He bade Miriam's
well spring up, the well created in the twilight of the sixth day of
creation.[216] Even after this miracle Hagar's faith was no stronger
than before. She filled the bottle with water, because she feared it
might again be spent, and no other would be nigh. Thereupon she
journeyed to Egypt with her son, for "Throw the stick into the air as
thou wilt, it will always land on its point." Hagar had come from
Egypt, and to Egypt she returned, to choose a wife for her son.[217]

THE TWO WIVES OF ISHMAEL

The wife of Ishmael bore four sons and a daughter, and afterward
Ishmael, his mother, and his wife and children went and returned to the
wilderness. They made themselves tents in the wilderness in which they
dwelt, and they continued to encamp and journey, month by month and
year by year. And God gave Ishmael flocks, and herds, and tents, on
account of Abraham his father, and the man increased in cattle. And
some time after, Abraham said to Sarah, his wife, "I will go and see my
son Ishmael; I yearn to look upon him, for I have not seen him for a
long time." And Abraham rode upon one of his camels to the wilderness,
to seek his son Ishmael, for he heard that he was dwelling in a tent in
the wilderness with all belonging to him. And Abraham went to the
wilderness, and he reached the tent of Ishmael about noon, and he asked
after him. He found the wife of Ishmael sitting in the tent with her
children, and her husband and his mother were not with them. And
Abraham asked the wife of Ishmael, saying, "Where has Ishmael gone?"
And she said, "He has gone to the field to hunt game." And Abraham was
still mounted upon the camel, for he would not alight upon the ground,
as he had sworn to his wife Sarah that he would not get off from the
camel. And Abraham said to Ishmael's wife, "My daughter, give me a
little water, that I may drink, for I am fatigued and tired from the
journey." And Ishmael's wife answered, and said to Abraham, "We have
neither water nor bread," and she was sitting in the tent, and did not
take any notice of Abraham. She did not even ask him who he was. But
all the while she was beating her children in the tent, and she was
cursing them, and she also cursed her husband Ishmael, and spoke evil
of him, and Abraham heard the words of Ishmael's wife to her children,
and it was an evil thing in his eyes. And Abraham called to the woman
to come out to him from the tent, and the woman came out, and stood
face to face with Abraham, while Abraham was still mounted upon the
camel. And Abraham said to Ishmael's wife, "When thy husband Ishmael
returns home, say these words to him: A very old man from the land of
the Philistines came hither to seek thee, and his appearance was thus
and so, and thus was his figure. I did not ask him who he was, and
seeing thou wast not here, he spoke unto me, and said, When Ishmael thy
husband returns, tell him, Thus did the man say, When thou comest home,
put away this tent-pin which thou hast placed here, and place another
tent-pin in its stead." And Abraham finished his instructions to the
woman, and he turned and went off on the camel homeward. And when
Ishmael returned to the tent, he heard the words of his wife, and he
knew that it was his father, and that his wife had not honored him. And
Ishmael understood his father's words that he had spoken to his wife,
and he hearkened to the voice of his father, and he divorced his wife,
and she went away. And Ishmael afterward went to the land of Canaan,
and he took another wife, and he brought her to his tent, to the place
where he dwelt.

And at the end of three years, Abraham said, "I will go again and see
Ishmael my son, for I have not seen him for a long time." And he rode
upon his camel, and went to the wilderness, and he reached the tent of
Ishmael about noon. And he asked after Ishmael, and his wife came out
of the tent, and she said, "He is not here, my lord, for he has gone to
hunt in the fields and feed the camels," and the woman said to Abraham,
"Turn in, my lord, into the tent, and eat a morsel of bread, for thy
soul must be wearied on account of the journey." And Abraham said to
her, "I will not stop, for I am in haste to continue my journey, but
give me a little water to drink, for I am thirsty," and the woman
hastened and ran into the tent, and she brought out water and bread to
Abraham, which she placed before him, urging him to eat and drink, and
he ate and drank, and his heart was merry, and he blessed his son
Ishmael. And he finished his meal, and he blessed the Lord, and he said
to Ishmael's wife: "When Ishmael comes home, say these words to him: A
very old man from the land of the Philistines came hither, and asked
after thee, and thou wast not here, and I brought him out bread and
water, and he ate and drank, and his heart was merry. And he spoke
these words to me, When Ishmael thy husband comes home, say unto him,
The tent-pin which thou hast is very good, do not put it away from the
tent." And Abraham finished commanding the woman, and he rode off to
his home, to the land of the Philistines, and when Ishmael came to his
tent, his wife went forth to meet him with joy and a cheerful heart,
and she told him the words of the old man. Ishmael knew that it was his
father, and that his wife had honored him, and he praised the Lord. And
Ishmael then took his wife and his children and his cattle and all
belonging to him, and he journeyed from there, and he went to his
father in the land of the Philistines. And Abraham related to Ishmael
all that had happened between him and the first wife that Ishmael had
taken, according to what she had done. And Ishmael and his children
dwelt with Abraham many days in that land, and Abraham dwelt in the
land of the Philistines a long time.[218]

THE COVENANT WITH ABIMELECH

After a sojourn of twenty-six years in the land of the Philistines,
Abraham departed thence, and he settled in the neighborhood of Hebron.
There he was visited by Abimelech with twenty of his grandees,[219] who
requested him to make an alliance with the Philistines.

As long as Abraham was childless, the heathen did not believe in his
piety, but when Isaac was born, they said to him, "God is with thee."
But again they entertained doubt of his piety when he cast off Ishmael.
They said, "Were he a righteous man, he would not drive his first-born
forth from his house." But when they observed the impious deeds of
Ishmael, they said, "God is with thee in all thou doest." That Abraham
was the favorite of God, they saw in this, too, that although Sodom was
destroyed and all traffic had come to a standstill in that region, yet
Abraham's treasure chambers were filled. For these reasons, the
Philistines sought to form an alliance with him, to remain in force for
three generations to come, for it is to the third generation that the
love of a father extends.

Before Abraham concluded the covenant with Abimelech, king of the
Philistines, he reproved him on account of a well, for "Correction
leads to love," and "There is no peace without correction." The herdmen
of Abraham and those of Abimelech had left their dispute about the well
to decision by ordeal: the well was to belong to the party for whose
sheep the waters would rise so that they could drink of them. But the
shepherds of Abimelech disregarded the agreement, and they wrested the
well for their own use.[220] As a witness and a perpetual sign that the
well belonged to him, Abraham set aside seven sheep, corresponding to
the seven Noachian laws binding upon all men alike.[221] But God said,
"Thou didst give him seven sheep. As thou livest, the Philistines shall
one day slay seven righteous men, Samson, Hophni, Phinehas, and Saul
with his three sons, and they will destroy seven holy places, and they
will keep the holy Ark in their country as booty of war for a period of
seven months, and furthermore only the seventh generation of thy
descendants will be able to rejoice in the possession of the land
promised to them."[222] After concluding the alliance with Abimelech,
who acknowledged Abraham's right upon the well, Abraham called the
place Beer-sheba, because there they swore both of them unto a covenant
of friendship.

In Beer-sheba Abraham dwelt many years, and thence he endeavored to
spread the law of God. He planted a large grove there, and he made four
gates for it, facing the four sides of the earth, east, west, north,
and south, and he planted a vineyard therein. If a traveller came that
way, he entered by the gate that faced him, and he sat in the grove,
and ate, and drank, until he was satisfied, and then he departed. For
the house of Abraham was always open for all passers-by, and they came
daily to eat and drink there. If one was hungry, and he came to
Abraham, he would give him what he needed, so that he might eat and
drink and be satisfied; and if one was naked, and he came to Abraham,
he would clothe him with the garments of the poor man's choice, and
give him silver and gold, and make known to him the Lord, who had
created him and set him on earth.[223] After the wayfarers had eaten,
they were in the habit of thanking Abraham for his kind entertainment
of them, whereto he would reply: "What, ye give thanks unto me! Rather
return thanks to your host, He who alone provides food and drink for
all creatures." Then the people would ask, "Where is He?" and Abraham
would answer them, and say: "He is the Ruler of heaven and earth. He
woundeth and He healeth, He formeth the embryo in the womb of the
mother and bringeth it forth into the world, He causeth the plants and
the trees to grow, He killeth and He maketh alive, He bringeth down to
Sheol and bringeth up." When the people heard such words, they would
ask, "How shall we return thanks to God and manifest our gratitude unto
Him?" And Abraham would instruct them in these words: "Say, Blessed be
the Lord who is blessed! Blessed be He that giveth bread and food unto
all flesh!" In this manner did Abraham teach those who had enjoyed his
hospitality how to praise and thank God.[224] Abraham's house thus
became not only a lodging-place for the hungry and thirsty, but also a
place of instruction where the knowledge of God and His law were
taught.[225]

SATAN ACCUSES ABRAHAM

In spite of the lavish hospitality practiced in the house of Abraham,
it happened once that a poor man, or rather an alleged poor man, was
turned away empty-handed, and this was the immediate reason for the
last of Abraham's temptations, the sacrifice of his favorite son Isaac.
It was the day on which Abraham celebrated the birth of Isaac with a
great banquet, to which all the magnates of the time were bidden with
their wives. Satan, who always appears at a feast in which no poor
people participate, and keeps aloof from those to which poor guests are
invited, turned up at Abraham's banquet in the guise of a beggar asking
alms at the door. He had noticed that Abraham had invited no poor man,
and he knew that his house was the right place for him.

Abraham was occupied with the entertainment of his distinguished
guests, and Sarah was endeavoring to convince their wives, the matrons,
that Isaac was her child in very truth, and not a spurious child. No
one concerned himself about the beggar at the door, who thereupon
accused Abraham before God.[226]

Now, there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves
before the Lord, and Satan came also among them.[227] And the Lord said
unto Satan, "From whence comest thou?" and Satan answered the Lord, and
said, "From going to and fro on the earth, and from walking up and down
in it." And the Lord said unto Satan, "What hast thou to say concerning
all the children of the earth?" and Satan answered the Lord, and said:
"I have seen all the children of the earth serving Thee and remembering
Thee, when they require aught from Thee. And when Thou givest them what
they require from Thee, then they forsake Thee, and they remember Thee
no more. Hast Thou seen Abraham, the son of Terah, who at first had no
children, and he served Thee and erected altars to Thee wherever he
came, and he brought offerings upon them, and he proclaimed Thy name
continually to all the children of the earth? And now his son Isaac is
born to him, he has forsaken Thee. He made a great feast for all the
inhabitants of the land, and the Lord he has forgotten. For amidst all
that he has done, he brought Thee no offering, neither burnt offering
nor peace offering, neither one lamb nor goat of all that he had killed
in the day that his son was weaned. Even from the time of his son's
birth till now, being thirty-seven years, he built no altar before
Thee, nor brought up any offering to Thee, for he saw that Thou didst
give what he requested before Thee, and he therefore forsook Thee." And
the Lord said to Satan: "Hast thou considered My servant Abraham? For
there is none like him in the earth, a perfect and an upright man
before Me for a burnt offering, and that feareth God and escheweth
evil. As I live, were I to say unto him, Bring up Isaac thy son before
Me, he would not withhold him from Me, much less if I told him to bring
up a burnt offering before Me from his flocks or herds." And Satan
answered the Lord, and said, "Speak now unto Abraham as Thou hast said,
and Thou wilt see whether he will not transgress and cast aside Thy
words this day."[228]

God wished to try Isaac also. Ishmael once boasted to Isaac, saying, "I
was thirteen years old when the Lord spoke to my father to circumcise
us, and I did not transgress His word, which He commanded my father."
And Isaac answered Ishmael, saying, "What dost thou boast to me about
this, about a little bit of thy flesh which thou didst take from thy
body, concerning which the Lord commanded thee? As the Lord liveth, the
God of my father Abraham, if the Lord should say unto my father, Take
now thy son Isaac and bring him up as an offering before Me, I would
not refrain, but I would joyfully accede to it."

THE JOURNEY TO MORIAH

And the Lord thought to try Abraham and Isaac in this matter.[229] And
He said to Abraham, "Take now thy son."

Abraham: "I have two sons, and I do not know which of them Thou
commandest me to take."

God: "Thine only son."

Abraham: "The one is the only son of his mother, and the other is the
only son of his mother."

God: "Whom thou lovest."

Abraham: "I love this one and I love that one."

God: "Even Isaac."[230]

Abraham: "And where shall I go?"

God: "To the land I will show thee, and offer Isaac there for a burnt
offering."

Abraham: "Am I fit to perform the sacrifice, am I a priest? Ought not
rather the high priest Shem to do it?"

God: "When thou wilt arrive at that place, I will consecrate thee and
make thee a priest."[231]

And Abraham said within himself, "How shall I separate my son Isaac
from Sarah his mother?" And he came into the tent, and he sate before
Sarah his wife, and he spake these words to her: "My son Isaac is grown
up, and he has not yet studied the service of God. Now, to-morrow I
will go and bring him to Shem and Eber his son, and there he will learn
the ways of the Lord, for they will teach him to know the Lord, and to
know how to pray unto the Lord that He may answer him, and to know the
way of serving the Lord his God." And Sarah said, "Thou hast spoken
well. Go, my lord, and do unto him as thou hast said, but remove him
not far from me, neither let him remain there too long, for my soul is
bound within his soul." And Abraham said unto Sarah, "My daughter, let
us pray to the Lord our God that He may do good with us." And Sarah
took her son Isaac, and he abode with her all that night, and she
kissed and embraced him, and she laid injunctions upon him till
morning, and she said to Abraham: "O my lord, I pray thee, take heed of
thy son, and place thine eyes over him, for I have no other son nor
daughter but him. O neglect him not. If he be hungry, give him bread,
and if he be thirsty, give him water to drink; do not let him go on
foot, neither let him sit in the sun, neither let him go by himself on
the road, neither turn him from whatever he may desire, but do unto him
as he may say to thee."

After spending the whole night in weeping on account of Isaac, she got
up in the morning and selected a very fine and beautiful garment from
those that Abimelech had given to her. And she dressed Isaac therewith,
and she put a turban upon his head, and she fastened a precious stone
in the top of the turban, and she gave them provisions for the road.
And Sarah went out with them, and she accompanied them upon the road to
see them off, and they said to her, "Return to the tent." And when
Sarah heard the words of her son Isaac, she wept bitterly, and Abraham
wept with her, and their son wept with them, a great weeping, also
those of their servants who went with them wept greatly. And Sarah
caught hold of Isaac, and she held him in her arms, and she embraced
him, and continued to weep with him, and Sarah said, "Who knoweth if I
shall ever see thee again after this day?"

Abraham departed with Isaac amid great weeping, while Sarah and the
servants returned to the tent.[232] He took two of his young men with
him, Ishmael and Eliezer, and while they were walking in the road, the
young men spoke these words to each other. Said Ishmael to Eliezer:
"Now my father Abraham is going with Isaac to bring him up for a burnt
offering to the Lord, and when he returneth, he will give unto me all
that he possesses, to inherit after him, for I am his first-born."
Eliezer answered: "Surely, Abraham did cast thee off with thy mother,
and swear that thou shouldst not inherit anything of all he possesses.
And to whom will he give all that he has, all his precious things, but
unto his servant, who has been faithful in his house, to me, who have
served him night and day, and have done all that he desired me?" The
holy spirit answered, "Neither this one nor that one will inherit
Abraham."[233]

And while Abraham and Isaac were proceeding along the road, Satan came
and appeared to Abraham in the figure of a very aged man, humble and of
contrite spirit, and said to him: "Art thou silly or foolish, that thou
goest to do this thing to thine only son? God gave thee a son in thy
latter days, in thine old age, and wilt thou go and slaughter him, who
did not commit any violence, and wilt thou cause the soul of thine only
son to perish from the earth? Dost thou not know and understand that
this thing cannot be from the Lord? For the Lord would not do unto man
such evil, to command him, Go and slaughter thy son." Abraham, hearing
these words, knew that it was Satan, who endeavored to turn him astray
from the way of the Lord, and he rebuked him that he went away. And
Satan returned and came to Isaac, and he appeared unto him in the
figure of a young man, comely and well-favored, saying unto him: "Dost
thou not know that thy silly old father bringeth thee to the slaughter
this day for naught? Now, my son, do not listen to him, for he is a
silly old man, and let not thy precious soul and beautiful figure be
lost from the earth." And Isaac told these words to his father, but
Abraham said to him, "Take heed of him, and do not listen to his words,
for he is Satan endeavoring to lead us astray from the commands of our
God." And Abraham rebuked Satan again, and Satan went from them, and,
seeing he could not prevail over them, he transformed himself into a
large brook of water in the road, and when Abraham, Isaac, and the two
young men reached that place, they saw a brook large and powerful as
the mighty waters. And they entered the brook, trying to pass it, but
the further they went, the deeper the brook, so that the water reached
up to their necks, and they were all terrified on account of the water.
But Abraham recognized the place, and he knew that there had been no
water there before, and he said to his son: "I know this place, on
which there was no brook nor water. Now, surely, it is Satan who doth
all this to us, to draw us aside this day from the commands of God."
And Abraham rebuked Satan, saying unto him: "The Lord rebuke thee, O
Satan. Begone from us, for we go by the command of God." And Satan was
terri fied at the voice of Abraham, and he went away from them, and the
place became dry land again as it was at first. And Abraham went with
Isaac toward the place that God had told him.[234]

Satan then appeared unto Sarah in the figure of an old man, and said
unto her, "Where did thine husband go?" She said, "To his work." "And
where did thy son Isaac go?" he inquired further, and she answered, "He
went with his father to a place of study of the Torah." Satan said: "O
thou poor old woman, thy teeth will be set on edge on account of thy
son, as thou knowest not that Abraham took his son with him on the road
to sacrifice him." In this hour Sarah's loins trembled, and all her
limbs shook. She was no more of this world. Nevertheless she aroused
herself, and said, "All that God hath told Abraham, may he do it unto
life and unto peace."[235]

On the third day of his journey, Abraham lifted up his eyes and saw the
place at a distance, which God had told him. He noticed upon the
mountain a pillar of fire reaching from the earth to heaven, and a
heavy cloud in which the glory of God was seen. Abraham said to Isaac,
"My son, dost thou see on that mountain which we perceive at a distance
that which I see upon it?" And Isaac answered, and said unto his
father, "I see, and, lo, a pillar of fire and a cloud, and the glory of
the Lord is seen upon the cloud." Abraham knew then that Isaac was
accepted before the Lord for an offering. He asked Ishmael and Eliezer,
"Do you also see that which we see upon the mountain?" They answered,
"We see nothing more than like the other mountains," and Abraham knew
that they were not accepted before the Lord to go with them.[236]
Abraham said to them, "Abide ye here with the ass, you are like the
ass—as little as it sees, so little do you see.[237] I and Isaac my son
go to yonder mount, and worship there before the Lord, and this eve we
will return to you."[238] An unconscious prophecy had come to Abraham,
for he prophesied that he and Isaac would both return from the
mountain.[239] Eliezer and Ishmael remained in that place, as Abraham
had commanded, while he and Isaac went further.

THE 'AKEDAH

And while they were walking along, Isaac spake unto his father,
"Behold, the fire and the wood, but where then is the lamb for a burnt
offering before the Lord?" And Abraham answered Isaac, saying, "The
Lord hath chosen thee, my son, for a perfect burnt offering, instead of
the lamb." And Isaac said unto his father, "I will do all that the Lord
hath spoken to thee with joy and cheerfulness of heart." And Abraham
again said unto Isaac his son, "Is there in thy heart any thought or
counsel concerning this which is not proper? Tell me, my son, I pray
thee! O my son, conceal it not from me." And Isaac answered, "As the
Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, there is nothing in my heart to
cause me to deviate either to the right or the left from the word that
He hath spoken unto thee. Neither limb nor muscle hath moved or stirred
on account of this, nor is there in my heart any thought or evil
counsel concerning this. But I am joyful and cheerful of heart in this
matter, and I say, Blessed is the Lord who has this day chosen me to be
a burnt offering before Him."

Abraham greatly rejoiced at the words of Isaac, and they went on and
came together to that place that the Lord had spoken of.[240] And
Abraham approached to build the altar in that place, and Abraham did
build, while Isaac handed him stones and mortar, until they finished
erecting the altar. And Abraham took the wood and arranged it upon the
altar, and he bound Isaac, to place him upon the wood which was upon
the altar, to slay him for a burnt offering before the Lord.[241] Isaac
spake hereupon: "Father, make haste, bare thine arm, and bind my hands
and feet securely, for I am a young man, but thirty-seven years of age,
and thou art an old man. When I behold the slaughtering knife in thy
hand, I may perchance begin to tremble at the sight and push against
thee, for the desire unto life is bold. Also I may do myself an injury
and make myself unfit to be sacrificed. I adjure thee, therefore, my
father, make haste, execute the will of thy Creator, delay not. Turn up
thy garment, gird thy loins, and after that thou hast slaughtered me,
burn me unto fine ashes. Then gather the ashes, and bring them to
Sarah, my mother, and place them in a casket in her chamber. At all
hours, whenever she enters her chamber, she will remember her son Isaac
and weep for him."

And again Isaac spoke: "As soon as thou hast slaughtered me, and hast
separated thyself from me, and returnest to Sarah my mother, and she
asketh thee, Where is my son Isaac? what wilt thou answer her, and what
will you two do in your old age?" Abraham answered, and said, "We know
we can survive thee by a few days only. He who was our Comfort before
thou wast born, will comfort us now and henceforth."

After he had laid the wood in order, and bound Isaac on the altar, upon
the wood, Abraham braced his arms, rolled up his garments, and leaned
his knees upon Isaac with all his strength. And God, sitting upon His
throne, high and exalted, saw how the hearts of the two were the same,
and tears were rolling down from the eyes of Abraham upon Isaac, and
from Isaac down upon the wood, so that it was submerged in tears. When
Abraham stretched forth his hand, and took the knife to slay his son,
God spoke to the angels: "Do you see how Abraham my friend proclaims
the unity of My Name in the world? Had I hearkened unto you at the time
of the creation of the world, when ye spake, What is man, that Thou art
mindful of him? And the son of man, that Thou visitest him? who would
there have been to make known the unity of My Name in this world?" The
angels then broke into loud weeping, and they exclaimed: "The highways
lie waste, the wayfaring man ceaseth, he hath broken the covenant.
Where is the reward of Abraham, he who took the wayfarers into his
house, gave them food and drink, and went with them to bring them on
the way? The covenant is broken, whereof Thou didst speak to him,
saying, 'For in Isaac shall thy seed be called,' and saying, 'My
covenant will I establish with Isaac,' for the slaughtering knife is
set upon his throat."

The tears of the angels fell upon the knife, so that it could not cut
Isaac's throat, but from terror his soul escaped from him. Then God
spoke to the archangel Michael, and said: "Why standest thou here? Let
him not be slaughtered." Without delay, Michael, anguish in his voice,
cried out: "Abraham! Abraham! Lay not thine hand upon the lad, neither
do thou any thing unto him!" Abraham made answer, and he said: "God did
command me to slaughter Isaac, and thou dost command me not to
slaughter him! The words of the Teacher and the words of the
disciple—unto whose words doth one hearken?"[242] Then Abraham heard it
said: "By Myself have I sworn, saith the Lord, because thou hast done
this thing, and hast not withheld thy son, thine only son, that in
blessing I will bless thee, and in multiplying I will multiply thy seed
as the stars of the heaven, and as the sand which is upon the
sea-shore; and thy seed shall possess the gate of his enemies, and in
thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed, because thou
hast obeyed My voice."

At once Abraham left off from Isaac, who returned to life, revived by
the heavenly voice admonishing Abraham not to slaughter his son.
Abraham loosed his bonds, and Isaac stood upon his feet, and spoke the
benediction, "Blessed art Thou, O Lord, who quickenest the dead."[243]

Then spake Abraham to God, "Shall I go hence without having offered up
a sacrifice?" Whereunto God replied, and said, "Lift up thine eyes, and
behold the sacrifice behind thee."[244] And Abraham lifted up his eyes,
and, behold, behind him a ram caught in the thicket, which God had
created in the twilight of Sabbath eve in the week of creation, and
prepared since then as a burnt offering instead of Isaac. And the ram
had been running toward Abraham, when Satan caught hold of him and
entangled his horns in the thicket, that he might not advance to
Abraham. And Abraham, seeing this, fetched him from the thicket, and
brought him upon the altar as an offering in the place of his son
Isaac. And Abraham sprinkled the blood of the ram upon the altar, and
he exclaimed, and said, "This is instead of my son, and may this be
considered as the blood of my son before the Lord." And whatsoever
Abraham did by the altar, he exclaimed, and said, "This is instead of
my son, and may it be considered before the Lord in place of my son."
And God accepted the sacrifice of the ram, and it was accounted as
though it had been Isaac.[245]

As the creation of this ram had been extraordinary, so also was the use
to which all parts of his carcass were put. Not one thing went to
waste. The ashes of the parts burnt upon the altar formed the
foundation of the inner altar, whereon the expiatory sacrifice was
brought once a year, on the Day of Atonement, the day on which the
offering of Isaac took place. Of the sinews of the ram, David made ten
strings for his harp upon which he played. The skin served Elijah for
his girdle, and of his two horns, the one was blown at the end of the
revelation on Mount Sinai, and the other will be used to proclaim the
end of the Exile, when the "great horn shall be blown, and they shall
come which were ready to perish in the land of Assyria, and they that
were outcasts in the land of Egypt, and they shall worship the Lord in
the holy mountain at Jerusalem."[246]

When God commanded the father to desist from sacrificing Isaac, Abraham
said: "One man tempts another, because he knoweth not what is in the
heart of his neighbor. But Thou surely didst know that I was ready to
sacrifice my son!"

God: "It was manifest to Me, and I foreknew it, that thou wouldst
withhold not even thy soul from Me."

Abraham: "And why, then, didst Thou afflict me thus?"

God: "It was My wish that the world should become acquainted with thee,
and should know that it is not without good reason that I have chosen
thee from all the nations. Now it hath been witnessed unto men that
thou fearest God."[247]

Hereupon God opened the heavens, and Abraham heard the words, "By
Myself I swear!"

Abraham: "Thou swearest, and also I swear, I will not leave this altar
until I have said what I have to say."

God: "Speak whatsoever thou hast to speak!"

Abraham: "Didst Thou not promise me Thou wouldst let one come forth out
of mine own bowels, whose seed should fill the whole world?"

God: "Yes."

Abraham: "Whom didst Thou mean?"

God: "Isaac."

Abraham: "Didst Thou not promise me to make my seed as numerous as the
sand of the sea-shore?"

God: "Yes."

Abraham: "Through which one of my children?"

God: "Through Isaac."

Abraham: "I might have reproached Thee, and said, O Lord of the world,
yesterday Thou didst tell me, In Isaac shall Thy seed be called, and
now Thou sayest, Take thy son, thine only son, even Isaac, and offer
him for a burnt offering. But I refrained myself, and I said nothing.
Thus mayest Thou, when the children of Isaac commit trespasses and
because of them fall upon evil times, be mindful of the offering of
their father Isaac, and forgive their sins and deliver them from their
suffering."

God: "Thou hast said what thou hadst to say, and I will now say what I
have to say. Thy children will sin before me in time to come, and I
will sit in judgment upon them on the New Year's Day. If they desire
that I should grant them pardon, they shall blow the ram's horn on that
day, and I, mindful of the ram that was substituted for Isaac as a
sacrifice, will forgive them for their sins."[248]

Furthermore, the Lord revealed unto Abraham that the Temple, to be
erected on the spot of Isaac's offering, would be destroyed,[249] and
as the ram substituted for Isaac extricated himself from one tree but
to be caught in another, so his children would pass from kingdom to
kingdom—delivered from Babylonia they would be subjugated by Media,
rescued from Media they would be enslaved by Greece, escaped from
Greece they would serve Rome—yet in the end they would be redeemed in a
final redemption, at the sound of the ram's horn, when "the Lord God
shall blow the trumpet, and shall go with whirlwinds of the
south."[250]

The place on which Abraham had erected the altar was the same whereon
Adam had brought the first sacrifice, and Cain and Abel had offered
their gifts to God—the same whereon Noah raised an altar to God after
he left the ark;[251] and Abraham, who knew that it was the place
appointed for the Temple, called it Yireh, for it would be the abiding
place of the fear and the service of God.[252] But as Shem had given it
the name Shalem, Place of Peace, and God would not give offence to
either Abraham or Shem, He united the two names, and called the city by
the name Jerusalem.[253]

After the sacrifice on Mount Moriah, Abraham returned to Beer-sheba,
the scene of so many of his joys.[254] Isaac was carried to Paradise by
angels, and there he sojourned for three years. Thus Abraham returned
home alone, and when Sarah beheld him, she exclaimed, "Satan spoke
truth when he said that Isaac was sacrificed," and so grieved was her
soul that it fled from her body.[255]

THE DEATH AND BURIAL OF SARAH

While Abraham was engaged in the sacrifice, Satan went to Sarah, and
appeared to her in the figure of an old man, very humble and meek, and
said to her: "Dost thou not know all that Abraham has done unto thine
only son this day? He took Isaac, and built an altar, slaughtered him,
and brought him up as a sacrifice. Isaac cried and wept before his
father, but he looked not at him, neither did he have compassion upon
him." After saying these words to Sarah, Satan went away from her, and
she thought him to be an old man from amongst the sons of men who had
been with her son. Sarah lifted up her voice, and cried bitterly,
saying: "O my son, Isaac, my son, O that I had this day died instead of
thee I It grieves me for thee! After that I have reared thee and have
brought thee up, my joy is turned into mourning over thee. In my
longing for a child, I cried and prayed, till I bore thee at ninety.
Now hast thou served this day for the knife and the fire. But I console
myself, it being the word of God, and thou didst perform the command of
thy God, for who can transgress the word of our God, in whose hands is
the soul of every living creature? Thou art just, O Lord our God, for
all Thy works are good and righteous, for I also rejoice with the word
which Thou didst command, and while mine eye weepeth bitterly, my heart
rejoiceth." And Sarah laid her head upon the bosom of one of her
handmaids, and she became as still as a stone.

She rose up afterward and went about making inquiries concerning her
son, till she came to Hebron, and no one could tell her what had
happened to her son. Her servants went to seek him in the house of Shem
and Eber, and they could not find him, and they sought throughout the
land, and he was not there. And, behold, Satan came to Sarah in the
shape of an old man, and said unto her, "I spoke falsely unto thee, for
Abraham did not kill his son, and he is not dead," and when she heard
the word, her joy was so exceedingly violent that her soul went out
through joy.

When Abraham with Isaac returned to Beer-sheba, they sought for Sarah
and could not find her, and when they made inquiries concerning her,
they were told that she had gone as far as Hebron to seek them. Abraham
and Isaac went to her to Hebron, and when they found that she was dead,
they cried bitterly over her, and Isaac said: "O my mother, my mother,
how hast thou left me, and whither hast thou gone? O whither hast thou
gone, and how hast thou left me?" And Abraham and all his servants wept
and mourned over her a great and heavy mourning, even that Abraham did
not pray, but spent his time in mourning and weeping over Sarah.[257]
And, indeed, he had great reason to mourn his loss, for even in her old
age Sarah had retained the beauty of her youth and the innocence of her
childhood.[258]

The death of Sarah was a loss not only for Abraham and his family, but
for the whole country. So long as she was alive, all went well in the
land. After her death confusion ensued. The weeping, lamenting, and
wailing over her going hence was universal, and Abraham, instead of
receiving consolation, had to offer consolation to others. He spoke to
the mourning people, and said: "My children, take not the going hence
of Sarah too much to heart. There is one event unto all, to the pious
and the impious alike. I pray you now, give me a burying-place with
you, not as a gift, but for money."[259]

In these last few words Abraham's unassuming modesty was expressed. God
had promised him the whole land, yet when he came to bury his dead, he
had to pay for the grave, and it did not enter his heart to cast
aspersions upon the ways of God. In all humility he spake to the people
of Hebron, saying, "I am a stranger and a sojourner with you."
Therefore spake God to him, and said, "Thou didst bear thyself
modestly. As thou livest, I will appoint thee lord and prince over
them."[260]

To the people themselves he appeared an angel, and they answered his
words, saying: "Thou art a prince of God among us. In the choice of our
sepulchres bury thy dead, among the rich if thou wilt, or among the
poor if thou wilt."[261]

Abraham first of all gave thanks to God for the friendly feeling shown
to him by the children of Heth, and then he continued his negotiations
for the Cave of Machpelah.[262] He had long known the peculiar value of
this spot. Adam had chosen it as a burial-place for himself. He had
feared his body might be used for idolatrous purposes after his death;
he therefore designated the Cave of Machpelah as the place of his
burial, and in the depths his corpse was laid, so that none might find
it.[263] When he interred Eve there, he wanted to dig deeper, because
he scented the sweet fragrance of Paradise, near the entrance to which
it lay, but a heavenly voice called to him, Enough! Adam himself was
buried there by Seth, and until the time of Abraham the place was
guarded by angels, who kept a fire burning near it perpetually, so that
none dared approach it and bury his dead therein.[264] Now, it happened
on the day when Abraham received the angels in his house, and he wanted
to slaughter an ox for their entertainment, that the ox ran away, and
in his pursuit of him Abraham entered the Cave of Machpelah. There he
saw Adam and Eve stretched out upon couches, candles burning at the
head of their resting-places, while a sweet scent pervaded the cave.

Therefore Abraham wished to acquire the Cave of Machpelah from the
children of Heth, the inhabitants of the city of Jebus. They said to
him. "We know that in time to come God will give these lands unto thy
seed, and now do thou swear a covenant with us that Israel shall not
wrest the city of Jebus from its inhabitants without their consent."
Abraham agreed to the condition, and he acquired the field from Ephron,
in whose possession it lay.[265]

This happened the very day on which Ephron had been made the chief of
the children of Heth, and he had been raised to the position so that
Abraham might not have to have dealings with a man of low rank. It was
of advantage to Abraham, too, for Ephron at first refused to sell his
field, and only the threat of the children of Heth to depose him from
his office, unless he fulfilled the desire of Abraham, could induce him
to change his disposition.[266]

Dissembling deceitfully, Ephron then offered to give Abraham the field
without compensation, but when Abraham insisted upon paying for it,
Ephron said: "My lord, hearken unto me. A piece of land worth four
hundred shekels of silver, what is that betwixt me and thee?" showing
only too well that the money was of the greatest consequence to him.
Abraham understood his words, and when he came to pay for the field, he
weighed out the sum agreed upon between them in the best of current
coin.[267] A deed, signed by four witnesses, was drawn up, and the
field of Ephron, which was in Machpelah, the field, and the cave which
was therein, were made sure unto Abraham and his descendants for all
times.

The burial of Sarah then took place, amid great magnificence and the
sympathy of all. Shem and his son Eber, Abimelech king of the
Philistines, Aner, Eshcol, and Mamre, as well as all the great of the
land, followed her bier. A seven days' mourning was kept for her, and
all the inhabitants of the land came to condole with Abraham and
Isaac.[268]

When Abraham entered the cave to place the body of Sarah within, Adam
and Eve refused to remain there, "because," they said, "as it is, we
are ashamed in the presence of God on account of the sin we committed,
and now we shall be even more ashamed on account of your good deeds."
Abraham soothed Adam. He promised to pray to God for him, that the need
for shame be removed from him. Adam resumed his place, and Abraham
entombed Sarah, and at the same time he carried Eve, resisting, back to
her place.[269]

One year after the death of Sarah, Abimelech king of the Philistines
died, too, at the age of one hundred and ninety-three years. His
successor upon the throne was his twelve-year old son Benmelek, who
took the name of his father after his accession. Abraham did not fail
to pay a visit of condolence at the court of Abimelech.

Lot also died about this time, at the age of one hundred and forty-two.
His sons, Moab and Ammon, both married Canaanitish wives. Moab begot a
son, and Ammon had six sons, and the descendants of both were numerous
exceedingly.

Abraham suffered a severe loss at the same time in the death of his
brother Nahor, whose days ended at Haran, when he had reached the age
of one hundred and seventy two years.[270]

ELIEZER'S MISSION

The death of Sarah dealt Abraham a blow from which he did not recover.
So long as she was alive, he felt himself young and vigorous, but after
she had passed away, old age suddenly overtook him.[271] It was he
himself who made the plea that age be betrayed by suitable signs and
tokens. Before the time of Abraham an old man was not distinguishable
externally from a young man, and as Isaac was the image of his father,
it happened frequently that father and son were mistaken for each
other, and a request meant for the one was preferred to the other.
Abraham prayed therefore that old age might have marks to distinguish
it from youth, and God granted his petition, and since the time of
Abraham the appearance of men changes in old age. This is one of the
seven great wonders that have occurred in the course of history.[272]

The blessing of God did not forsake Abraham in old age, either. That it
might not be said it had been granted to him only for the sake of
Sarah, God prospered him after her death, too. Hagar bore him a
daughter, and Ishmael repented of his evil ways and subordinated
himself to Isaac. And as Abraham enjoyed undisturbed happiness in his
family, so also outside, in the world. The kings of the east and the
west eagerly besieged the door of his house in order to derive benefit
from his wisdom. From his neck a precious stone was suspended, which
possessed the power of healing the sick who looked upon it. On the
death of Abraham, God attached it to the wheel of the sun. The greatest
blessing enjoyed by him, and by none beside except his son Isaac and
Jacob the son of Isaac, was that the evil inclination had no power over
him, so that in this life he had a foretaste of the future world.[273]

But all these Divine blessings showered upon Abraham were not
undeserved. He was clean of hand, and pure of heart, one that did not
lift up his soul unto vanity.[274]

He fulfilled all the commands that were revealed later, even the
Rabbinical injunctions, as, for instance, the one relating to the
limits of a Sabbath day's journey, wherefor his reward was that God
disclosed to him the new teachings which He expounded daily in the
heavenly academy.[275]

But one thing lacked to complete the happiness of Abraham, the marriage
of Isaac. He therefore called his old servant Eliezer unto himself.
Eliezer resembled his master not only externally, in his appearance,
but also spiritually. Like Abraham he possessed full power over the
evil inclination,[276] and like the master, the servant was an adept in
the law.[277] Abraham spake the following words to Eliezer: "I am
stricken in age, and I know not the day of my death. Therefore prepare
thyself, and go unto my country, and to my kindred, and fetch hither a
wife for my son."[278] Thus he spake by reason of the resolution he had
taken immediately after the sacrifice of Isaac on Moriah, for he had
there said within himself, that if the sacrifice had been executed,
Isaac would have gone hence childless. He was even ready to choose a
wife for his son from among the daughters of his three friends, Aner,
Eshcol, and Mamre, because he knew them to be pious, and he did not
attach much importance to aristocratic stock. Then spake God to him,
and said: "Concern thyself not about a wife for Isaac.[279] One has
already been provided for him," and it was made known to Abraham that
Milcah, the wife of his brother Nahor, childless until the birth of
Isaac, had then been remembered by God and made fruitful. She bore
Bethuel, and he in turn, at the time of Isaac's sacrifice, begot the
daughter destined to be the wife of Isaac.[280]

Mindful of the proverb, "Even if the wheat of thine own place be
darnel, use it for seed," Abraham determined to take a wife for Isaac
from his own family. He argued that as any wife he chose would have to
become a proselyte, it would be best to use his own stock, which had
the first claim upon him.[281]

Eliezer now said to his master: "Peradventure no woman will be willing
to follow me unto this land. May I then marry my own daughter to
Isaac?" "No," replied Abraham, "thou art of the accursed race, and my
son is of the blessed race, and curse and blessing cannot be
united.[282] But beware thou that thou bring not my son again unto the
land from whence I came, for if thou broughtest him thither again, it
were as though thou tookest him to hell. God who sets the heavens in
motion, He will set this matter right, too,[283] and He that took me
from my father's house, and that spake unto me, and that swore unto me
in Haran, and at the covenant of the pieces, that He would give this
land unto my seed, He shall send His excellent angel before thee, and
thou shalt take a wife for my son from thence." Eliezer then swore to
his master concerning the matter, and Abraham made him take the oath by
the sign of the covenant.[284]

THE WOOING OF REBEKAH

Attended by ten men,[285] mounted upon ten camels laden with jewels and
trinkets, Eliezer betook himself to Haran under the convoy of two
angels, the one appointed to keep guard over Eliezer, the other over
Rebekah.[286]

The journey to Haran took but a few hours, at evening of the same day
he reached there, because the earth hastened to meet him in a wonderful
way.[287] He made a halt at the well of water, and he prayed to God to
permit him to distinguish the wife appointed for Isaac among the
damsels that came to draw water, by this token, that she alone, and not
the others, would give him drink.[288] Strictly speaking, this wish of
his was unseemly, for suppose a bondwoman had given him water to
drink![289] But God granted his request. All the damsels said they
could not give him of their water, because they had to take it home.
Then appeared Rebekah, coming to the well contrary to her wont, for she
was the daughter of a king, Bethuel her father being king of Haran.
When Eliezer addressed his request for water to drink to this young
innocent child, not only was she ready to do his bidding, but she
rebuked the other maidens on account of their discourtesy to a
stranger.[290] Eliezer noticed, too, how the water rose up to her of
its own accord from the bottom of the well, so that she needed not to
exert herself to draw it. Having scrutinized her carefully, he felt
certain that she was the wife chosen for Isaac. He gave her a nose
ring, wherein was set a precious stone, half a shekel in weight,
foreshadowing the half-shekel which her descendants would once bring to
the sanctuary year by year. He gave her also two bracelets for her
hands, of ten shekels weight in gold, in token of the two tables of
stone and the Ten Commandments upon them.[291]

When Rebekah, bearing the jewels, came to her mother and to her brother
Laban, this one hastened to Eliezer in order to slay him and take
possession of his goods. Laban soon learnt that he would not be able to
do much harm to a giant like Eliezer. He met him at the moment when
Eliezer seized two camels and bore them across the stream.[292]
Besides, on account of Eliezer's close resemblance to Abraham, Laban
thought he saw Abraham before him, and he said: "Come in, thou blessed
of the Lord! It is not becoming that thou shouldst stand without, I
have cleansed my house of idols."[293]

But when Eliezer arrived at the house of Bethuel, they tried to kill
him with cunning. They set poisoned food before him. Luckily, he
refused to eat before he had discharged himself of his errand. While he
was telling his story, it was ordained by God that the dish intended
for him should come to stand in front of Bethuel, who ate of it and
died.[294]

Eliezer showed the document he had in which Abraham deeded all his
possessions to Isaac, and he made it known to the kindred of Abraham,
how deeply attached to them his master was, in spite of the long years
of separation.[295] Yet he let them know at the same time that Abraham
was not dependent wholly upon them. He might seek a wife for his son
among the daughters of Ishmael or Lot. At first the kindred of Abraham
consented to let Rebekah go with Eliezer, but as Bethuel had died in
the meantime, they did not want to give Rebekah in marriage without
consulting her. Besides, they deemed it proper that she should remain
at home at least during the week of mourning for her father.[296] But
Eliezer, seeing the angel wait for him, would brook no delay, and he
said, "The man who came with me and prospered my way, waits for me
without," and as Rebekah professed herself ready to go at once with
Eliezer, her mother and brother granted her wish and dismissed her with
their blessings.[297] But their blessings did not come from the bottom
of their hearts. Indeed, as a rule, the blessing of the impious is a
curse, wherefore Rebekah remained barren for years.

Eliezer's return to Canaan was as wonderful as his going to Haran had
been. A seventeen days' journey he accomplished in three hours. He left
Haran at noon, and he arrived at Hebron[299] at three o'clock in the
afternoon, the time for the Minhah Prayer, which had been introduced by
Isaac. He was in the posture of praying when Rebekah first laid eyes
upon him, wherefore she asked Eliezer what man this was. She saw he was
not an ordinary individual. She noticed the unusual beauty of Isaac,
and also that an angel accompanied him. Thus her question was not
dictated by mere curiosity.[300] At this moment she learnt through the
holy spirit, that she was destined to be the mother of the godless
Esau. Terror seized her at the knowledge, and, trembling, she fell from
the camel and inflicted an injury upon herself.[301]

After Isaac had heard the wonderful adventures of Eliezer, he took
Rebekah to the tent of his mother Sarah, and she showed herself worthy
to be her successor. The cloud appeared again that had been visible
over the tent during the life of Sarah, and had vanished at her death;
the light shone again in the tent of Rebekah that Sarah had kindled at
the coming in of the Sabbath, and that had burnt miraculously
throughout the week; the blessing returned with Rebekah that had
hovered over the dough kneaded by Sarah; and the gates of the tent were
opened for the needy, wide and spacious, as they had been during the
lifetime of Sarah.[302]

For three years Isaac had mourned for his mother, and he could find no
consolation in the academy of Shem and Eber, his abiding-place during
that period. But Rebekah comforted him after his mother's death,[303]
for she was the counterpart of Sarah in person and in spirit.[304]

As a reward for having executed to his full satisfaction the mission
with which he had charged him, Abraham set his bondman free.[305] The
curse resting upon Eliezer, as upon all the descendants of Canaan, was
transformed into a blessing, because he ministered unto Abraham
loyally.[306] Greatest reward of all, God found him worthy of entering
Paradise alive, a distinction that fell to the lot of very few.[307]

THE LAST YEARS OF ABRAHAM

Rebekah first saw Isaac as he was coming from the way of
Beer-lahai-roi, the dwelling-place of Hagar, whither he had gone after
the death of his mother, for the purpose of reuniting his father with
Hagar,[308] or, as she is also called, Keturah.[309]

Hagar bore him six sons, who, however, did scant honor to their father,
for they all were idolaters.[310] Abraham, therefore, during his own
lifetime, sent them away from the presence of Isaac, that they might
not be singed by Isaac's flame, and gave them the instruction to
journey eastward as far as possible.[311] There he built a city for
them, surrounded by an iron wall, so high that the sun could not shine
into the city. But Abraham provided them with huge gems and pearls,
their lustre more brilliant than the light of the sun, which will be
used in the Messianic time when "the moon shall be confounded and the
sun ashamed."[312] Also Abraham taught them the black art, wherewith
they held sway over demons and spirits. It is from this city in the
east that Laban, Balaam, and Balaam's father Beor derived their
sorceries.[313]

Epher, one of the grandsons of Abraham and Keturah, invaded Lybia with
an armed force, and took possession of the country. From this Epher the
whole land of Africa has its name.[314] Aram is also a country made
habitable by a kinsman of Abraham. In his old age Terah contracted a
new marriage with Pelilah, and from this union sprang a son Zoba, who
was the father in turn of three sons. The oldest of these, Aram, was
exceedingly rich and powerful, and the old home in Haran sufficed not
for him and his kinsmen, the sons of Nahor, the brother of Abraham.
Aram and his brethren and all that belonged to him therefore departed
from Haran, and they settled in a vale, and they built themselves a
city there which they called Aram-Zoba, to perpetuate the name of the
father and his first-born son. Another Aram, Aram-naharaim, on the
Euphrates, was built by Aram son of Kemuel, a nephew of Abraham. Its
real name was Petor, after the son of Aram, but it is better known as
Aram-naharaim. The descendants of Kesed, another nephew of Abraham, a
son of his brother Nahor, established themselves opposite to Shinar,
where they founded the city of Kesed, the city whence the Chaldees are
called Kasdim.[315]

Though Abraham knew full well that Isaac deserved his paternal blessing
beyond all his sons, yet he withheld it from him, that no hostile
feelings be aroused among his descendants. He spake, and said: "I am
but flesh and blood, here to-day, to-morrow in the grave. What I was
able to do for my children I have done. Henceforth let come what God
desires to do in His world," and it happened that immediately after the
death of Abraham God Himself appeared unto Isaac, and gave him His
blessing.[316]

A HERALD OF DEATH

When the day of the death of Abraham drew near, the Lord said to
Michael, "Arise and go to Abraham and say to him, Thou shalt depart
from life!" so that he might set his house in order before he died. And
Michael went and came to Abraham and found him sitting before his oxen
for ploughing. Abraham, seeing Michael, but not knowing who he was,
saluted him and said to him, "Sit down a little while, and I will order
a beast to be brought, and we will go to my house, that thou mayest
rest with me, for it is toward evening, and arise in the morning and go
whithersoever thou wilt." And Abraham called one of his servants, and
said to him: "Go and bring me a beast, that the stranger may sit upon
it, for he is wearied with his journey." But Michael said, "I abstain
from ever sitting upon any fourfooted beast, let us walk therefore,
till we reach the house."

On their way to the house they passed a huge tree, and Abraham heard a
voice from its branches, singing, "Holy art thou, because thou hast
kept the purpose for which thou wast sent." Abraham hid the mystery in
his heart, thinking that the stranger did not hear it. Arrived at his
house, he ordered the servants to prepare a meal, and while they were
busy with their work, he called his son Isaac, and said to him, "Arise
and put water in the vessel, that we may wash the feet of the
stranger." And he brought it as he was commanded, and Abraham said, "I
perceive that in this basin I shall never again wash the feet of any
man coming to us as a guest." Hearing this, Isaac began to weep, and
Abraham, seeing his son weep, also wept, and Michael, seeing them weep,
wept also, and the tears of Michael fell into the water, and became
precious stones.

Before sitting down to the table, Michael arose, went out for a moment,
as if to ease nature, and ascended to heaven in the twinkling of an
eye, and stood before the Lord, and said to Him: "Lord and Master, let
Thy power know that I am unable to remind that righteous man of his
death, for I have not seen upon the earth a man like him,
compassionate, hospitable, righteous, truthful, devout, refraining from
every evil deed." Then the Lord said to Michael, "Go down to My friend
Abraham, and whatever he may say to thee, that do thou also, and
whatever he may eat, eat thou also with him, and I will cast the
thought of the death of Abraham into the heart of Isaac, his son, in a
dream, and Isaac will relate the dream, and thou shalt interpret it,
and he himself will know his end." And Michael said, "Lord, all the
heavenly spirits are incorporeal, and neither eat nor drink, and this
man has set before me a table with an abundance of all good things
earthly and corruptible. Now, Lord, what shall I do?" The Lord answered
him, "Go down to him and take no thought for this, for when thou
sittest down with him, I will send upon thee a devouring spirit, and it
will consume out of thy hands and through thy mouth all that is on the
table."

Then Michael went into the house of Abraham, and they ate and drank and
were merry. And when the supper was ended, Abraham prayed after his
custom, and Michael prayed with him, and each lay down to sleep upon
his couch in one room, while Isaac went to his chamber, lest he be
troublesome to the guest. About the seventh hour of the night, Isaac
awoke and came to the door of his father's chamber, crying out and
saying, "Open, father, that I may touch thee before they take thee away
from me." And Abraham wept together with his son, and when Michael saw
them weep, he wept likewise. And Sarah, hearing the weeping, called
forth from her bedchamber, saying: "My lord Abraham, why this weeping?
Has the stranger told thee of thy brother's son Lot, that he is dead?
or has aught befallen us?" Michael answered, and said to her, "Nay, my
sister Sarah, it is not as thou sayest, but thy son Isaac, methinks,
beheld a dream, and came to us weeping, and we, seeing him, were moved
in our hearts and wept." Sarah, hearing Michael speak, knew straightway
that it was an angel of the Lord, one of the three angels whom they had
entertained in their house once before, and therefore she made a sign
to Abraham to come out toward the door, to inform him of what she knew.
Abraham said: "Thou hast perceived well, for I, too, when I washed his
feet, knew in my heart that they were the feet that I had washed at the
oak of Mamre, and that went to save Lot." Abraham, returning to his
chamber, made Isaac relate his dream, which Michael interpreted to
them, saying: "Thy son Isaac has spoken truth, for thou shalt go and be
taken up into the heavens, but thy body shall remain on earth, until
seven thousand ages are fulfilled, for then all flesh shall arise. Now,
therefore, Abraham, set thy house in order, for thou wast heard what is
decreed concerning thee." Abraham answered, "Now I know thou art an
angel of the Lord, and wast sent to take my soul, but I will not go
with thee, but do thou whatever thou art commanded." Michael returned
to heaven and told God of Abraham's refusal to obey his summons, and he
was again commanded to go down and admonish Abraham not to rebel
against God, who had bestowed many blessings upon him, and he reminded
him that no one who has come from Adam and Eve can escape death, and
that God in His great kindness toward him did not permit the sickle of
death to meet him, but sent His chief captain, Michael, to him.
"Wherefore, then," he ended, "hast thou said to the chief captain, I
will not go with thee?" When Michael delivered these exhortations to
Abraham, he saw that it was futile to oppose the will of God, and he
consented to die, but wished to have one desire of his fulfilled while
still alive. He said to Michael: "I beseech thee, lord, if I must
depart from my body, I desire to be taken up in my body, that I may see
the creatures that the Lord has created in heaven and on earth."
Michael went up into heaven, and spake before the Lord concerning
Abraham, and the Lord answered Michael, "Go and take up Abraham in the
body and show him all things, and whatever he shall say to thee, do to
him as to My friend."

ABRAHAM VIEWS EARTH AND HEAVEN

The archangel Michael went down, and took Abraham upon a chariot of the
cherubim, and lifted him up into the air of heaven, and led him upon
the cloud, together with sixty angels, and Abraham ascended upon the
chariot over all the earth, and saw all things that are below on the
earth, both good and bad. Looking down upon the earth, he saw a man
committing adultery with a wedded woman, and turning to Michael he
said, "Send fire from heaven to consume them." Straightway there came
down fire and consumed them, for God had commanded Michael to do
whatsoever Abraham should ask him to do. He looked again, and he saw
thieves digging through a house, and Abraham said, "Let wild beasts
come out of the desert, and tear them in pieces," and immediately wild
beasts came out of the desert and devoured them. Again he looked down,
and he saw people preparing to commit murder, and he said, "Let the
earth open and swallow them," and, as he spoke, the earth swallowed
them alive. Then God spoke to Michael: "Turn away Abraham to his own
house and let him not go round the whole earth, because he has no
compassion on sinners, but I have compassion on sinners, that they may
turn and live and repent of their sins, and be saved."

So Michael turned the chariot, and brought Abraham to the place of
judgment of all souls. Here he saw two gates, the one broad and the
other narrow, the narrow gate that of the just, which leads to life,
they that enter through it go into Paradise. The broad gate is that of
sinners, which leads to destruction and eternal punishment. Then
Abraham wept, saying, "Woe is me, what shall I do? for I am a man big
of body, and how shall I be able to enter by the narrow gate?" Michael
answered, and said to Abraham, "Fear not, nor grieve, for thou shalt
enter by it unhindered, and all they who are like thee." Abraham,
perceiving that a soul was adjudged to be set in the midst, asked
Michael the reason for it, and Michael answered, "Because the judge
found its sins and its righteousness equal, he neither committed it to
judgment nor to be saved." Abraham said to Michael, "Let us pray for
this soul, and see whether God will hear us," and when they rose up
from their prayer, Michael informed Abraham that the soul was saved by
the prayer, and was taken by an angel and carried up to Paradise.
Abraham said to Michael, "Let us yet call upon the Lord and supplicate
His compassion and entreat His mercy for the souls of the sinners whom
I formerly, in my anger, cursed and destroyed, whom the earth devoured,
and the wild beasts tore in pieces, and the fire consumed, through my
words. Now I know that I have sinned before the Lord our God."

After the joint prayer of the archangel and Abraham, there came a voice
from heaven, saying, "Abraham, Abraham, I have hearkened to thy voice
and thy prayer, and I forgive thee thy sin, and those whom thou
thinkest that I destroyed, I have called up and brought them into life
by My exceeding kindness, because for a season I have requited them in
judgment, and those whom I destroy living upon earth, I will not
requite in death."

When Michael brought Abraham back to his house, they found Sarah dead.
Not seeing what had become of Abraham, she was consumed with grief and
gave up her soul. Though Michael had fulfilled Abraham's wish, and had
shown him all the earth and the judgment and recompense, he still
refused to surrender his soul to Michael, and the archangel again
ascended to heaven, and said unto the Lord: "Thus speaks Abraham, I
will not go with thee, and I refrain from laying my hands on him,
because from the beginning he was Thy friend, and he has done all
things pleasing in Thy sight. There is no man like him on earth, not
even Job, the wondrous man." But when the day of the death of Abraham
drew nigh, God commanded Michael to adorn Death with great beauty and
send him thus to Abraham, that he might see him with his eyes.

While sitting under the oak of Mamre, Abraham perceived a flashing of
light and a smell of sweet odor, and turning around he saw Death coming
toward him in great glory and beauty. And Death said unto Abraham:
"Think not, Abraham, that this beauty is mine, or that I come thus to
every man. Nay, but if any one is righteous like thee, I thus take a
crown and come to him, but if he is a sinner, I come in great
corruption, and out of their sins I make a crown for my head, and I
shake them with great fear, so that they are dismayed." Abraham said to
him, "And art thou, indeed, he that is called Death?" He answered, and
said, "I am the bitter name," but Abraham answered, "I will not go with
thee." And Abraham said to Death, "Show us thy corruption." And Death
revealed his corruption, showing two heads, the one had the face of a
serpent, the other head was like a sword. All the servants of Abraham,
looking at the fierce mien of Death, died, but Abraham prayed to the
Lord, and he raised them up. As the looks of Death were not able to
cause Abraham's soul to depart from him, God removed the soul of
Abraham as in a dream, and the archangel Michael took it up into
heaven. After great praise and glory had been given to the Lord by the
angels who brought Abraham's soul, and after Abraham bowed down to
worship, then came the voice of God, saying thus: "Take My friend
Abraham into Paradise, where are the tabernacles of My righteous ones
and the abodes of My saints Isaac and Jacob in his bosom, where there
is no trouble, nor grief, nor sighing, but peace and rejoicing and life
unending."[317]

Abraham's activity did not cease with his death, and as he interceded
in this world for the sinners, so will he intercede for them in the
world to come. On the day of judgment he will sit at the gate of hell,
and he will not suffer those who kept the law of circumcision to enter
therein.[318]

THE PATRON OF HEBRON

Once upon a time some Jews lived in Hebron, few in number, but pious
and good, and particularly hospitable. When strangers came to the Cave
of Machpelah to pray there, the inhabitants of the place fairly
quarrelled with each other for the privilege of entertaining the
guests, and the one who carried off the victory rejoiced as though he
had found great spoil.

On the eve of the Day of Atonement, it appeared that, in spite of all
their efforts, the dwellers at Hebron could not secure the tenth man
needed for public Divine service, and they feared they would have none
on the holy day. Toward evening, when the sun was about to sink, they
descried an old man with silver white beard, bearing a sack upon his
shoulder, his raiment tattered, and his feet badly swollen from much
walking. They ran to meet him, took him to one of the houses, gave him
food and drink, and, after supplying him with new white garments, they
all together went to the synagogue for worship. Asked what his name
was, the stranger replied, Abraham.

At the end of the fast, the residents of Hebron cast lots for the
privilege of entertaining the guest. Fortune favored the beadle, who,
the envy of the rest, bore his guest away to his house. On the way, he
suddenly disappeared, and the beadle could not find him anywhere. In
vain all the Jews of the place went on a quest for him. Their sleepless
night, spent in searching, had no result. The stranger could not be
found. But no sooner had the beadle lain down, toward morning, weary
and anxious, to snatch some sleep, than he saw the lost guest before
him, his face luminous as lightning, and his garments magnificent and
studded with gems radiant as the sun. Before the beadle, stunned by
fright, could open his mouth, the stranger spake, and said: "I am
Abraham the Hebrew, your ancestor, who rests here in the Cave of
Machpelah. When I saw how grieved you were at not having the number of
men prescribed for a public service, I came forth to you. Have no fear!
Rejoice and be merry of heart!"[319]

On another occasion Abraham granted his assistance to the people of
Hebron. The lord of the city was a heartless man, who oppressed the
Jews sorely. One day he commanded them to pay a large sum of money into
his coffers, the whole sum in uniform coins, all stamped with the same
year. It was but a pretext to kill the Jews. He knew that his demand
was impossible of fulfilment.

The Jews proclaimed a fast and day of public prayer, on which to
supplicate God that He turn aside the sword suspended above them. The
night following, the beadle in a dream saw an awe-inspiring old man,
who addressed him in the following words: "Up, quickly! Hasten to the
gate of the court, where lies the money you need. I am your father
Abraham. I have beheld the affliction wherewith the Gentiles oppress
you, but God has heard your groans." In great terror the beadle arose,
but he saw no one, yet he went to the spot designated by the vision,
and he found the money and took it to the congregation, telling his
dream at the same time. Amazed, they counted the gold, precisely the
amount required of them by the prince, no more and no less. They
surrendered the sum to him, and he who had considered compliance with
his demand impossible, recognized now that God is with the Jews, and
thenceforth they found favor in his eyes.[320]




VI
JACOB

THE BIRTH OF ESAU AND JACOB

Isaac was the counterpart of his father in body and soul. He resembled
him in every particular—"in beauty, wisdom, strength, wealth, and noble
deeds."[1] It was, therefore, as great an honor for Isaac to be called
the son of his father as for Abraham to be called the father of his
son, and though Abraham was the progenitor of thirty nations, he is
always designated as the father of Isaac.[2]

Despite his many excellent qualities, Isaac married late in life. God
permitted him to meet the wife suitable to him only after he had
successfully disproved the mocking charges of Ishmael, who was in the
habit of taunting him with having been circumcised at the early age of
eight days, while Ishmael had submitted himself voluntarily to the
operation when he was thirteen years old. For this reason God demanded
Isaac as a sacrifice when he had attained to full manhood, at the age
of thirty-seven, and Isaac was ready to give up his life. Ishmael's
jibes were thus robbed of their sting, and Isaac was permitted to
marry. But another delay occurred before his marriage could take place.
Directly after the sacrifice on Mount Moriah, his mother died, and he
mourned her for three years.[3] Finally he married Rebekah, who was
then a maiden of fourteen.[4]

Rebekah was "a rose between thorns." Her father was the Aramean
Bethuel, and her brother was Laban, but she did not walk in their
ways.[5] Her piety was equal to Isaac's.[6] Nevertheless their marriage
was not entirely happy, for they lived together no less than twenty
years without begetting children.[7] Rebekah besought her husband to
entreat God for the gift of children, as his father Abraham had done.
At first Isaac would not do her bidding. God had promised Abraham a
numerous progeny, and he thought their childlessness was probably
Rebekah's fault, and it was her duty to supplicate God, and not his.
But Rebekah would not desist, and husband and wife repaired to Mount
Moriah together to pray to God there. And Isaac said: "O Lord God of
heaven and earth, whose goodness and mercies fill the earth, Thou who
didst take my father from his father's house and from his birthplace,
and didst bring him unto this land, and didst say unto him, To thee and
thy seed will I give the land, and didst promise him and declare unto
him, I will multiply thy seed as the stars of heaven and as the sand of
the sea, now may Thy words be verified which Thou didst speak unto my
father. For Thou art the Lord our God, our eyes are toward Thee, to
give us seed of men as Thou didst promise us, for Thou art the Lord our
God, and our eyes are upon Thee."[8] Isaac prayed furthermore that all
children destined for him might be born unto him from this pious wife
of his, and Rebekah made the same petition regarding her husband Isaac
and the children destined for her.

Their united prayer was heard.[9] Yet it was chiefly for the sake of
Isaac that God gave them children. It is true, Rebekah's piety equalled
her husband's, but the prayer of a pious man who is the son of a pious
man is far more efficacious than the prayer of one who, though pious
himself, is descended from a godless father.

The prayer wrought a great miracle, for Isaac's physique was such that
he could not have been expected to beget children, and equally it was
not in the course of nature that Rebekah should bear children.[10]

When Rebekah had been pregnant seven months,[11] she began to wish that
the curse of childlessness had not been removed from her.[12] She
suffered torturous pain, because her twin sons began their lifelong
quarrels in her womb. They strove to kill each other. If Rebekah walked
in the vicinity of a temple erected to idols, Esau moved in her body,
and if she passed a synagogue or a Bet ha-Midrash, Jacob essayed to
break forth from her womb.[13] The quarrels of the children turned upon
such differences as these. Esau would insist that there was no life
except the earthly life of material pleasures, and Jacob would reply:
"My brother, there are two worlds before us, this world and the world
to come. In this world, men eat and drink, and traffic and marry, and
bring up sons and daughters, but all this does not take place in the
world to come. If it please thee, do thou take this world, and I will
take the other."[14] Esau had Samael as his ally, who desired to slay
Jacob in his mother's womb. But the archangel Michael hastened to
Jacob's aid. He tried to burn Samael, and the Lord saw it was necessary
to constitute a heavenly court for the purpose of arbitrating the case
of Michael and Samael.[15] Even the quarrel between the two brothers
regarding the birthright had its beginning before they emerged from the
womb of their mother. Each desired to be the first to come into the
world. It was only when Esau threatened to carry his point at the
expense of his mother's life that Jacob gave way.[16]

Rebekah asked other women whether they, too, had suffered such pain
during their pregnancy, and when they told her they had not heard of a
case like hers, except the pregnancy of Nimrod's mother, she betook
herself to Mount Moriah, whereon Shem and Eber had their Bet
ha-Midrash. She requested them as well as Abraham to inquire of God
what the cause of her dire suffering was.[17] And Shem replied: "My
daughter, I confide a secret to thee. See to it that none finds it out.
Two nations are in thy womb, and how should thy body contain them,
seeing that the whole world will not be large enough for them to exist
in it together peaceably? Two nations they are, each owning a world of
its own, the one the Torah, the other sin. From the one will spring
Solomon, the builder of the Temple, from the other Vespasian, the
destroyer thereof. These two are what are needed to raise the number of
nations to seventy. They will never be in the same estate. Esau will
vaunt lords, while Jacob will bring forth prophets, and if Esau has
princes, Jacob will have kings.[18] They, Israel and Rome, are the two
nations destined to be hated by all the world.[19] One will exceed the
other in strength. First Esau will subjugate the whole world, but in
the end Jacob will rule over all.[20] The older of the two will serve
the younger, provided this one is pure of heart, otherwise the younger
will be enslaved by the older."[21]

The circumstances connected with the birth of her twin sons were as
remarkable as those during the period of Rebekah's pregnancy. Esau was
the first to see the light, and with him all impurity came from the
womb;[22] Jacob was born clean and sweet of body. Esau was brought
forth with hair, beard, and teeth, both front and back,[23] and he was
blood-red, a sign of his future sanguinary nature.[24] On account of
his ruddy appearance he remained uncircumcised. Isaac, his father,
feared that it was due to poor circulation of the blood, and he
hesitated to perform the circumcision. He decided to wait until Esau
should attain his thirteenth year, the age at which Ishmael had
received the sign of the covenant. But when Esau grew up, he refused to
give heed to his father's wish, and so he was left uncircumcised.[25]
The opposite of his brother in this as in all respects, Jacob was born
with the sign of the covenant upon his body, a rare distinction.[26]
But Esau also bore a mark upon him at birth, the figure of a serpent,
the symbol of all that is wicked and hated of God.[27]

The names conferred upon the brothers are pregnant with meaning. The
older was called Esau, because he was 'Asui, fully developed when he
was born, and the name of the younger was given to him by God, to point
to some important events in the future of Israel by the numerical value
of each letter. The first letter in Ya'akob, Yod, with the value of
ten, stands for the decalogue; the second, 'Ayin, equal to seventy, for
the seventy elders, the leaders of Israel; the third, Kof, a hundred,
for the Temple, a hundred ells in height; and the last, Bet, for the
two tables of stone.[28]

THE FAVORITE OF ABRAHAM

While Esau and Jacob were little, their characters could not be judged
properly. They were like the myrtle and the thorn-bush, which look
alike in the early stages of their growth. After they have attained
full size, the myrtle is known by its fragrance, and the thorn-bush by
its thorns.

In their childhood, both brothers went to school, but when they reached
their thirteenth year, and were of age, their ways parted. Jacob
continued his studies in the Bet ha Midrash of Shem and Eber, and Esau
abandoned himself to idolatry and an immoral life.[29] Both were
hunters of men, Esau tried to capture them in order to turn them away
from God, and Jacob, to turn them toward God.[30] In spite of his
impious deeds, Esau possessed the art of winning his father's love. His
hypocritical conduct made Isaac believe that his first-born son was
extremely pious. "Father," he would ask Isaac, "what is the tithe on
straw and salt?" The question made him appear God-fearing in the eyes
of his father, because these two products are the very ones that are
exempt from tithing.[31] Isaac failed to notice, too, that his older
son gave him forbidden food to eat. What he took for the flesh of young
goats was dog's meat.[32]

Rebekah was more clear-sighted. She knew her sons as they really were,
and therefore her love for Jacob was exceeding great. The oftener she
heard his voice, the deeper grew her affection for him.[33] Abraham
agreed with her. He also loved his grandson Jacob, for he knew that in
him his name and his seed would be called. And he said unto Rebekah,
"My daughter, watch over my son Jacob, for he shall be in my stead on
the earth and for a blessing in the midst of the children of men, and
for the glory of the whole seed of Shem." Having admonished Rebekah
thus to keep guard over Jacob, who was destined to be the bearer of the
blessing given to Abraham by God, he called for his grandson, and in
the presence of Rebekah he blessed him, and said: "Jacob, my beloved
son, whom my soul loveth, may God bless thee from above the firmament,
and may He give thee all the blessing wherewith He blessed Adam, and
Enoch, and Noah, and Shem, and all the things of which He told me, and
all the things which He promised to give me may He cause to cleave to
thee and to thy seed forever, according to the days of the heavens
above the earth. And the spirit of Mastema shall not rule over thee or
over thy seed, to turn thee from the Lord, who is thy God from
henceforth and forever. And may the Lord God be a father to thee, and
mayest thou be His first-born son, and may He be a father to thy people
always. Go in peace, my son."[34]

And Abraham had good reason to be particularly fond of Jacob, for it
was due to the merits of his grandson that he had been rescued from the
fiery furnace.[35]

Isaac and Rebekah, knowing of Abraham's love for their young son, sent
their father a meal by Jacob on the last Feast of Pentecost which
Abraham was permitted to celebrate on earth, that he might eat and
bless the Creator of all things before he died. Abraham knew that his
end was approaching, and he thanked the Lord for all the good He had
granted him during the days of his life, and blessed Jacob and bade him
walk in the ways of the Lord, and especially he was not to marry a
daughter of the Canaanites. Then Abraham prepared for death. He placed
two of Jacob's fingers upon his eyes, and thus holding them closed he
fell into his eternal sleep, while Jacob lay beside him on the bed. The
lad did not know of his grandfather's death, until he called him, on
awakening next morning, "Father, father," and received no answer.[36]

THE SALE OF THE BIRTHRIGHT

Though Abraham reached a good old age, beyond the limit of years
vouchsafed later generations, he yet died five years before his
allotted time. The intention was to let him live to be one hundred and
eighty years old, the same age as Isaac's at his death, but on account
of Esau God brought his life to an abrupt close. For some time Esau had
been pursuing his evil inclinations in secret. Finally he dropped his
mask, and on the day of Abraham's death he was guilty of five crimes:
he ravished a betrothed maiden, committed murder, doubted the
resurrection of the dead, scorned the birthright, and denied God. Then
the Lord said: "I promised Abraham that he should go to his fathers in
peace. Can I now permit him to be a witness of his grandson's rebellion
against God, his violation of the laws of chastity, and his shedding of
blood? It is better for him to die now in peace."[37]

The men slain by Esau on this day were Nimrod and two of his adjutants.
A long-standing feud had existed between Esau and Nimrod, because the
mighty hunter before the Lord was jealous of Esau, who also devoted
himself assiduously to the chase. Once when he was hunting it happened
that Nimrod was separated from his people, only two men were with him.
Esau, who lay in ambush, noticed his isolation, and waited until he
should pass his covert. Then he threw himself upon Nimrod suddenly, and
felled him and his two companions, who hastened to his succor. The
outcries of the latter brought the attendants of Nimrod to the spot
where he lay dead, but not before Esau had stripped him of his
garments, and fled to the city with them.[38]

These garments of Nimrod had an extraordinary effect upon cattle,
beasts, and birds. Of their own accord they would come and prostrate
themselves before him who was arrayed in them. Thus Nimrod and Esau
after him were able to rule over men and beasts.[39]

After slaying Nimrod, Esau hastened cityward in great fear of his
victim's followers. Tired and exhausted he arrived at home to find
Jacob busy preparing a dish of lentils. Numerous male and female slaves
were in Isaac's household. Nevertheless Jacob was so simple and modest
in his demeanor that, if he came home late from the Bet ha-Midrash, he
would disturb none to prepare his meal, but would do it himself.[40] On
this occasion he was cooking lentils for his father, to serve to him as
his mourner's meal after the death of Abraham. Adam and Eve had eaten
lentils after the murder of Abel, and so had the parents of Haran, when
he perished in the fiery furnace. The reason they are used for the
mourner's meal is that the round lentil symbolizes death: as the lentil
rolls, so death, sorrow, and mourning constantly roll about among men,
from one to the other.[41]

Esau accosted Jacob thus, "Why art thou preparing lentils?"

Jacob: "Because our grandfather passed away; they shall be a sign of my
grief and mourning, that he may love me in the days to come."

Esau: "Thou fool! Dost thou really think it possible that man should
come to life again after he has been dead and has mouldered in the
grave?"[42] He continued to taunt Jacob. "Why dost thou give thyself so
much trouble?" he said. "Lift up thine eyes, and thou wilt see that all
men eat whatever comes to hand—fish, creeping and crawling creatures,
swine's flesh, and all sorts of things like these, and thou vexest
thyself about a dish of lentils."

Jacob: "If we act like other men, what shall we do on the day of the
Lord, the day on which the pious will receive their reward, when a
herald will proclaim: Where is He that weigheth the deeds of men, where
is He that counteth?"

Esau: "Is there a future world? Or will the dead be called back to
life? If it were so, why hath not Adam returned? Hast thou heard that
Noah, through whom the world was raised anew, hath reappeared? Yea,
Abraham, the friend of God, more beloved of Him than any man, hath he
come to life again?"

Jacob: "If thou art of opinion that there is no future world, and that
the dead do not rise to new life, then why dost thou want thy
birthright? Sell it to me, now, while it is yet possible to do so. Once
the Torah is revealed, it cannot be done. Verily, there is a future
world, in which the righteous receive their reward. I tell thee this,
lest thou say later I deceived thee."[43]

Jacob was little concerned about the double share of the inheritance
that went with the birthright. What he thought of was the priestly
service, which was the prerogative of the first-born in ancient times,
and Jacob was loth to have his impious brother Esau play the priest, he
who despised all Divine service.[44]

The scorn manifested by Esau for the resurrection of the dead he felt
also for the promise of God to give the Holy Land to the seed of
Abraham. He did not believe in it, and therefore he was willing to cede
his birthright and the blessing attached thereto in exchange for a mess
of pottage.[45] In addition, Jacob paid him in coin,[46] and, besides,
he gave him what was more than money, the wonderful sword of
Methuselah, which Isaac had inherited from Abraham and bestowed upon
Jacob.[47]

Esau made game of Jacob. He invited his associates to feast at his
brother's table, saying, "Know ye what I did to this Jacob? I ate his
lentils, drank his wine, amused myself at his expense, and sold my
birthright to him." All that Jacob replied was, "Eat and may it do thee
good!" But the Lord said, "Thou despisest the birthright, therefore I
shall make thee despised in all generations." And by way of punishment
for denying God and the resurrection of the dead, the descendants of
Esau were cut off from the world.[48]

As naught was holy to Esau, Jacob made him swear, concerning the
birthright, by the life of their father, for he knew Esau's love for
Isaac, that it was strong.[49] Nor did he fail to have a document made
out, duly signed by witnesses, setting forth that Esau had sold him the
birthright together with his claim upon a place in the Cave of
Machpelah.[50]

Though no blame can attach to Jacob for all this, yet he secured the
birthright from him by cunning, and therefore the descendants of Jacob
had to serve the descendants of Esau.[51]

ISAAC WITH THE PHILISTINES

The life of Isaac was a faithful reflex of the life of his father.
Abraham had to leave his birthplace; so also Isaac. Abraham was exposed
to the risk of losing his wife; so also Isaac. The Philistines were
envious of Abraham; so also of Isaac. Abraham long remained childless;
so also Isaac. Abraham begot one pious son and one wicked son; so also
Isaac. And, finally, as in the time of Abraham, so also in the time of
Isaac, a famine came upon the land.[52]

At first Isaac intended to follow the example of his father and remove
to Egypt, but God appeared unto him, and spake: "Thou art a perfect
sacrifice, without a blemish, and as a burnt offering is made unfit if
it is taken outside of the sanctuary, so thou wouldst be profaned if
thou shouldst happen outside of the Holy Land. Remain in the land, and
endeavor to cultivate it. In this land dwells the Shekinah, and in days
to come I will give unto thy children the realms possessed by mighty
rulers, first a part thereof, and the whole in the Messianic time."[53]

Isaac obeyed the command of God, and he settled in Gerar. When he
noticed that the inhabitants of the place began to have designs upon
his wife, he followed the example of Abraham, and pretended she was his
sister.[54] The report of Rebekah's beauty reached the king himself,
but he was mindful of the great danger to which he had once exposed
himself on a similar occasion, and he left Isaac and his wife
unmolested.[55] After they had been in Gerar for three months,
Abimelech noticed that the manner of Isaac, who lived in the outer
court of the royal palace, was that of a husband toward Rebekah.[56] He
called him to account, saying, "It might have happened to the king
himself to take the woman thou didst call thy sister."[57] Indeed,
Isaac lay under the suspicion of having illicit intercourse with
Rebekah, for at first the people of the place would not believe that
she was his wife. When Isaac persisted in his statement,[58] Abimelech
sent his grandees for them, ordered them to be arrayed in royal
vestments, and had it proclaimed before them, as they rode through the
city: "These two are man and wife. He that toucheth this man or his
wife shall surely be put to death."

Thereafter the king invited Isaac to settle in his domains, and he
assigned fields and vineyards to him for cultivation, the best the land
afforded.[59] But Isaac was not self-interested. The tithe of all he
possessed he gave to the poor of Gerar. Thus he was the first to
introduce the law of tithing for the poor, as his father Abraham had
been the first to separate the priests' portion from his fortune.[60]
Isaac was rewarded by abundant harvests; the land yielded a hundred
times more than was expected, though the soil was barren and the year
unfruitful. He grew so rich that people wished to have "the dung from
Isaac's she-mules rather than Abimelech's gold and silver."[61] But his
wealth called forth the envy of the Philistines, for it is
characteristic of the wicked that they begrudge their fellow-men the
good, and rejoice when they see evil descend upon them, and envy brings
hatred in its wake, and so the Philistines first envied Isaac, and then
hated him. In their enmity toward him, they stopped the wells which
Abraham had had his servants dig. Thus they broke their covenant with
Abraham and were faithless, and they have only themselves to blame if
they were exterminated later on by the Israelites.

Isaac departed from Gerar, and began to dig again the wells of water
which they had digged in the days of Abraham his father, and which the
Philistines had stopped. His reverence for his father was so great that
he even restored the names by which Abraham had called the wells. To
reward him for his filial respect, the Lord left the name of Isaac
unchanged, while his father and his son had to submit to new names.[62]

After four attempts to secure water, Isaac was successful; he found the
well of water that followed the Patriarchs. Abraham had obtained it
after three diggings. Hence the name of the well, Beer-sheba, "the well
of seven diggings," the same well that will supply water to Jerusalem
and its environs in the Messianic time.[63]

Isaac's success with his wells but served to increase the envy of the
Philistines, for he had come upon water in a most unlikely spot and,
besides, in a year of drouth. But "the Lord fulfils the desire of them
that fear Him." As Isaac executed the will of his Creator, so God
accomplished his desire.[64] And Abimelech, the king of Gerar, speedily
came to see that God was on the side of Isaac, for, to chastise him for
having instigated Isaac's removal from Gerar, his house was ravaged by
robbers in the night, and he himself was stricken with leprosy.[65] The
wells of the Philistines ran dry as soon as Isaac left Gerar, and also
the trees failed to yield their fruit. None could be in doubt but that
these things were the castigation for their unkindness.

Now Abimelech entreated his friends, especially the administrator of
his kingdom, to accompany him to Isaac and help him win back his
friendship.[66] Abimelech and the Philistines spake thus to Isaac: "We
have convinced ourselves that the Shekinah is with thee, and therefore
we desire thee to renew the covenant which thy father made with us,
that thou wilt do us no hurt, as we also did not touch thee." Isaac
consented. It illustrates the character of the Philistines strikingly
that they took credit unto themselves for having done him no hurt. It
shows that they would have been glad to inflict harm upon him, for "the
soul of the wicked desireth evil."

The place in which the covenant was made between Isaac and the
Philistines was called Shib'ah, for two reasons, because an oath was
"sworn" there, and as a memorial of the fact that even the heathen are
bound to observe the "seven" Noachian laws.[67]

For all the wonders executed by God for Isaac, and all the good he
enjoyed throughout his life, he is indebted to the merits of his
father. For his own merits he will be rewarded in future.[68] On the
great day of judgment it will be Isaac who will redeem his descendants
from Gehenna. On that day the Lord will speak to Abraham, "Thy children
have sinned," and Abraham will make reply, "Then let them be wiped out,
that Thy Name be sanctified." The Lord will turn to Jacob, thinking
that he who had suffered so much in bringing his sons to manhood's
estate would display more love for his posterity. But Jacob will give
the same answer as Abraham. Then God will say: "The old have no
understanding, and the young no counsel. I will now go to Isaac.
Isaac," God will address him, "thy children have sinned," and Isaac
will reply: "O Lord of the world, sayest Thou my children, and not
THINE? When they stood at Mount Sinai and declared themselves ready to
execute all Thy bidding before even they heard it, Thou didst call
Israel 'My first-born,' and now they are MY children, and not THINE!
Let us consider. The years of a man are seventy. From these twenty are
to be deducted, for Thou inflictest no punishment upon those under
twenty. Of the fifty years that are left, one-half are to be deducted
for the nights passed in sleep. There remain only twenty-five years,
and these are to be diminished by twelve and a half, the time spent in
praying, eating, and attending to other needs in life, during which men
commit no sins. That leaves only twelve years and a half. If Thou wilt
take these upon Thyself, well and good. If not, do Thou take one-half
thereof, and I will take the other half." The descendants of Isaac will
then say, "Verily, thou art our true father!" But he will point to God,
and admonish them, "Nay, give not your praises to me, but to God
alone," and Israel, with eyes directed heavenward, will say, "Thou, O
Lord, art our Father; our Redeemer from everlasting is Thy name."[69]

It was Isaac, or, as he is sometimes called, Elihu the son of Barachel,
who revealed the wonderful mysteries of nature in his arguments with
Job.[70]

At the end of the years of famine, God appeared unto Isaac, and bade
him return to Canaan. Isaac did as he was commanded, and he settled in
Hebron. At this time he sent his younger son Jacob to the Bet
ha-Midrash of Shem and Eber, to study the law of the Lord. Jacob
remained there thirty-two years. As for Esau, he refused to learn, and
he remained in the house of his father. The chase was his only
occupation, and as he pursued beasts, so he pursued men, seeking to
capture them with cunning and deceit.

On one of his hunting expeditions, Esau came to Mount Seir, where he
became acquainted with Judith, of the family of Ham, and he took her
unto himself as his wife, and brought her to his father at Hebron.

Ten years later, when Shem his teacher died, Jacob returned home, at
the age of fifty. Another six years passed, and Rebekah received the
joyful news that her sister-in-law 'Adinah, the wife of Laban, who,
like all the women of his house, had been childless until then, had
given birth to twin daughters, Leah and Rachel.[71] Rebekah, weary of
her life on account of the woman chosen by her older son, exhorted
Jacob not to marry one of the daughters of Canaan, but a maiden of the
family of Abraham. He assured his mother that the words of Abraham,
bidding him to marry no woman of the Canaanites, were graven upon his
memory, and for this reason he was still unmarried, though he had
attained the age of sixty-two, and Esau had been urging him for
twenty-two years past to follow his example and wed a daughter of the
people of the land in which they lived. He had heard that his uncle
Laban had daughters, and he was resolved to choose one of them as his
wife. Deeply moved by the words of her son, Rebekah thanked him and
gave praise unto God with the words: "Blessed be the Lord God, and may
His Holy Name be blessed for ever and ever, who hath given me Jacob as
a pure son and a holy seed; for he is Thine, and Thine shall his seed
be continually and throughout all the generations for evermore. Bless
him, O Lord, and place in my mouth the blessing of righteousness, that
I may bless him."

And when the spirit of the Lord came over her, she laid her hands upon
the head of Jacob and gave him her maternal blessing. It ended with the
words, "May the Lord of the world love thee, as the heart of thy
affectionate mother rejoices in thee, and may He bless thee."[72]

ISAAC BLESSES JACOB

Esau's marriage with the daughters of the Canaanites was an abomination
not only in the eyes of his mother, but also in the eyes of his father.
He suffered even more than Rebekah through the idolatrous practices of
his daughters in-law. It is the nature of man to oppose less resistance
than woman to disagreeable circumstances. A bone is not harmed by a
collision that would shiver an earthen pot in pieces. Man, who is
created out of the dust of the ground, has not the endurance of woman
formed out of bone. Isaac was made prematurely old by the conduct of
his daughters-in-law, and he lost the sight of his eyes. Rebekah had
been accustomed in the home of her childhood to the incense burnt
before idols, and she could therefore bear it under her own roof-tree.
Unlike her, Isaac had never had any such experience while he abode with
his parents, and he was stung by the smoke arising from the sacrifices
offered to their idols by his daughters-in-law in his own house.[73]
Isaac's eyes had suffered earlier in life, too. When he lay bound upon
the altar, about to be sacrificed by his father, the angels wept, and
their tears fell upon his eyes, and there they remained and weakened
his sight.

At the same time he had brought the scourge of blindness down upon
himself by his love for Esau. He justified the wicked for a bribe, the
bribe of Esau's filial love, and loss of vision is the punishment that
follows the taking of bribes. "A gift," it is said, "blinds the eyes of
the wise."

Nevertheless his blindness proved a benefit for Isaac as well as Jacob.
In consequence of his physical ailments, Isaac had to keep at home, and
so he was spared the pain of being pointed out by the people as the
father of the wicked Esau.[74] And, again, if his power of vision had
been unimpaired, he would not have blessed Jacob. As it was, God
treated him as a physician treats a sick man who is forbidden to drink
wine, for which, however, he has a strong desire. To placate him, the
physician orders that warm water be given him in the dark, and he be
told that it is wine.[75]

When Isaac reached the age of one hundred and twenty three, and was
thus approaching the years attained by his mother, he began to meditate
upon his end. It is proper that a man should prepare for death when he
comes close to the age at which either of his parents passed out of
life. Isaac reflected that he did not know whether the age allotted to
him was his mother's or his father's, and he therefore resolved to
bestow his blessing upon his older son, Esau, before death should
overtake him.[76] He summoned Esau, and he said, "My son," and Esau
replied, "Here am I," but the holy spirit interposed: "Though he
disguises his voice and makes it sound sweet, put no confidence in him.
There are seven abominations in his heart. He will destroy seven holy
places—the Tabernacle, the sanctuaries at Gilgal, Shiloh, Nob, and
Gibeon, and the first and the second Temple."

Gently though Esau continued to speak to his father, he yet longed for
his end to come.[77] But Isaac was stricken with spiritual as well as
physical blindness. The holy spirit deserted him, and he could not
discern the wickedness of his older son. He bade him sharpen his
slaughtering knives and beware of bringing him the flesh of an animal
that had died of itself, or had been torn by a beast, and he was to
guard also against putting an animal before Isaac that had been stolen
from its rightful owner. "Then," continued Isaac, "will I bless him who
is worthy of being blessed."[78]

This charge was laid upon Esau on the eve of the Passover, and Isaac
said to him: "To-night the whole world will sing the Hallel unto God.
It is the night when the storehouses of dew are unlocked. Therefore
prepare dainties for me, that my soul may bless thee before I die." But
the holy spirit interposed, "Eat not the bread of him that hath an evil
eye."[79] Isaac's longing for tidbits was due to his blindness. As the
sightless cannot behold the food they eat, they do not enjoy it with
full relish, and their appetite must be tempted with particularly
palatable morsels.

Esau sallied forth to procure what his father desired, little recking
the whence or how, whether by robbery or theft.[80] To hinder the quick
execution of his father's order, God sent Satan on the chase with Esau.
He was to delay him as long as possible. Esau would catch a deer and
leave him lying bound, while he pursued other game. Immediately Satan
would come and liberate the deer, and when Esau returned to the spot,
his victim was not to be found. This was repeated several times. Again
and again the quarry was run down, and bound, and liberated, so that
Jacob was able meanwhile to carry out the plan of Rebekah whereby he
would be blessed instead of Esau.

Though Rebekah had not heard the words that had passed between Isaac
and Esau, they nevertheless were revealed to her through the holy
spirit,[81] and she resolved to restrain her husband from taking a
false step. She was not actuated by love for Jacob, but by the wish of
keeping Isaac from committing a detestable act.[82] Rebekah said to
Jacob: "This night the storehouses of dew are unlocked; it is the night
during which the celestial beings chant the Hallel unto God, the night
set apart for the deliverance of thy children from Egypt, on which
they, too, will sing the Hallel. Go now and prepare savory meat for thy
father, that he may bless thee before his death.[83] Do as I bid thee,
obey me as thou art wont, for thou art my son whose children, every
one, will be good and God-fearing—not one shall be graceless."

In spite of his great respect for his mother,[84] Jacob refused at
first to heed her command. He feared he might commit a sin,[85]
especially as he might thus bring his father's curse down upon him. As
it was, Isaac might still have a blessing for him, after giving Esau
his. But Rebekah allayed his anxieties, with the words: "When Adam was
cursed, the malediction fell upon his mother, the earth, and so shall
I, thy mother, bear the imprecation, if thy father curses thee.
Moreover, if the worst comes to the worst, I am prepared to step before
thy father and tell him, 'Esau is a villain, and Jacob is a righteous
man.'"

Thus constrained by his mother, Jacob, in tears and with body bowed,
went off to execute the plan made by Rebekah.[86] As he was to provide
a Passover meal, she bade him get two kids, one for the Passover
sacrifice and one for the festival sacrifice.[87] To soothe Jacob's
conscience, she added that her marriage contract entitled her to two
kids daily. "And," she continued, "these two kids will bring good unto
thee, the blessing of thy father, and they will bring good unto thy
children, for two kids will be the atoning sacrifice offered on the Day
of Atonement."

Jacob's hesitation was not yet removed. His father, he feared, would
touch him and convince himself that he was not hairy, and therefore not
his son Esau. Accordingly, Rebekah tore the skins of the two kids into
strips and sewed them together, for Jacob was so tall a giant that
otherwise they would not have sufficed to cover his hands.[88] To make
Jacob's disguise complete, Rebekah felt justified in putting Esau's
wonderful garments on him. They were the high priestly raiment in which
God had clothed Adam, "the first-born of the world," for in the days
before the erection of the Tabernacle all the first-born males
officiated as priests. From Adam these garments descended to Noah, who
transmitted them to Shem, and Shem bequeathed them to Abraham, and
Abraham to his son Isaac, from whom they reached Esau as the older of
his two sons. It was the opinion of Rebekah that as Jacob had bought
the birthright from his brother, he had thereby come into possession of
the garments as well.[89] There was no need for her to go and fetch
them from the house of Esau. He knew his wives far too well to entrust
so precious a treasure to them; they were in the safe-keeping of his
mother. Besides, he used them most frequently in the house of his
parents. As a rule, he did not lay much stress upon decent apparel. He
was willing to appear on the street clad in rags, but he considered it
his duty to wait upon his father arrayed in his best. "My father," Esau
was in the habit of saying, "is a king in my sight, and it would ill
become me to serve before him in any thing but royal apparel." To the
great respect he manifested toward his father, the descendants of Esau
owe all their good fortune on earth. Thus doth God reward a good deed.

Rebekah led Jacob equipped and arrayed in this way to the door of
Isaac's chamber. There she parted from him with the words,
"Henceforward may thy Creator assist thee."[90] Jacob entered,
addressing Isaac with "Father," and receiving the response, "Here am I!
Who art thou, my son?" he replied equivocally, "It is I, thy first-born
son is Esau." He sought to avoid a falsehood, and yet not betray that
he was Jacob.[91] Isaac then said: "Thou art greatly in haste to secure
thy blessing. Thy father Abraham was seventy-five years old when he was
blessed, and thou art but sixty-three." Jacob replied awkwardly,
"Because the Lord thy God sent me good speed." Isaac concluded at once
that this was not Esau, for he would not have mentioned the name of
God, and he made up his mind to feel the son before him and make sure
who he was. Terror seized upon Jacob at the words of Isaac, "Come near,
I pray thee, that I may feel thee, my son." A cold sweat covered his
body, and his heart melted like wax. Then God caused the archangels
Michael and Gabriel to descend. The one seized his right hand, the
other his left hand, while the Lord God Himself supported him, that his
courage might not fail him. Isaac felt him, and, finding his hands
hairy, he said, "The voice is Jacob's voice, but the hands are the
hands of Esau," words in which he conveyed the prophecy that so long as
the voice of Jacob is heard in the houses of prayer and of learning,
the hands of Esau will not be able to prevail against him. "Yes," he
continued, "it is the voice of Jacob, the voice that imposes silence
upon those on earth and in heaven," for even the angels may not raise
their voices in praise of God until Israel has finished his prayers.

Isaac's scruples about blessing the son before him were not yet
removed, for with his prophetical eye he foresaw that this one would
have descendants who would vex the Lord. At the same time, it was
revealed to him that even the sinners in Israel would turn penitents,
and then he was ready to bless Jacob. He bade him come near and kiss
him, to indicate that it would be Jacob who would imprint the last kiss
upon Isaac before he was consigned to the grave—he and none other. When
Jacob stood close to him, he discerned the fragrance of Paradise
clinging to him, and he exclaimed, "See, the smell of my son is as the
smell of the field which the Lord hath blessed."[92]

The fragrance emanating from Jacob was not the only thing about him
derived from Paradise. The archangel Michael had fetched thence the
wine which Jacob gave his father to drink,[93] that an exalted mood
might descend upon him, for only when a man is joyously excited the
Shekinah rests upon him.[94] The holy spirit filled Isaac, and he gave
Jacob his tenfold blessing: "God give thee of the dew of heaven," the
celestial dew wherewith God will awaken the pious to new life in days
to come; "and of the fatness of the earth," the goods of this world;
"and plenty of corn and wine," the Torah and the commandments which
bestow the same joy upon man as abundant harvests;[95] "peoples shall
serve thee," the Japhethites and the Hamites; "nations shall bow down
to thee," the Shemite nations; "thou wilt be lord over thy brethren,"
the Ishmaelites and the descendants of Keturah; "thy mother's sons will
bow down to thee," Esau and his princes; "cursed be every one that
curseth thee," like Balaam; "and blessed be every one that blesseth
thee," like Moses.[96]

For each blessing invoked upon Jacob by his father Isaac, a similar
blessing was bestowed upon him by God Himself in the same words. As
Isaac blessed him with dew, so also God: "And the remnant of Jacob
shall be in the midst of many peoples as dew from the Lord." Isaac
blessed him with the fatness of the earth, so also God: "And he shall
give the rain of thy seed, that thou shalt sow the ground withal; and
bread of the increase of the ground, and it shall be fat and
plenteous." Isaac blessed him with plenty of corn and wine, so also
God: "I will send you corn and wine." Isaac said, "Peoples shall serve
thee," so also God: "Kings shall be thy nursing fathers, and their
queens thy nursing mothers; they shall bow down to thee with their
faces to the earth, and lick the dust of thy feet." Isaac said,
"Nations shall bow down to thee," so also God: "And He will make thee
high above all nations which He hath made, in praise, and in name, and
in honor."

To this double blessing his mother Rebekah joined hers: "For He shall
give His angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways. They
shall bear thee up in their hands, lest thou dash thy feet against a
stone. Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder; the young lion and the
serpent shalt thou trample under feet. Because he hath set his love
upon me, therefore will I deliver him; I will set him on high, because
he hath known my name."

The holy spirit added in turn: "He shall call upon me, and I will
answer him; I will be with him in trouble; I will deliver him, and
honor him. With long life will I satisfy him, and show him my
salvation."[97]

Jacob left the presence of his father crowned like a bridegroom,
adorned like a bride, and bathed in celestial dew, which filled his
bones with marrow, and transformed him into a hero and a giant.[98]

Of a miracle done for him at that very moment Jacob himself was not
aware. Had he tarried with his father an instant longer, Esau would
have met him there, and would surely have slain him. It happened that
exactly as Jacob was on the point of leaving the tent of his father,
carrying in his hands the plates off which Isaac had eaten, he noticed
Esau approaching, and he concealed himself behind the door.
Fortunately, it was a revolving door, so that though he could see Esau,
he could not be seen by him.

ESAU'S TRUE CHARACTER REVEALED

Esau arrived after a delay of four hours.[99] In spite of all the
efforts he had put forth, he had not succeeded in catching any game,
and he was compelled to kill a dog and prepare its flesh for his
father's meal.[100] All this had made Esau ill-humored, and when he
bade his father partake of the meal, the invitation sounded harsh. "Let
my father arise," he said, "and eat of his son's venison." Jacob had
spoken differently; he had said, "Arise, I pray thee, sit and eat of my
venison." The words of Esau terrified Isaac greatly. His fright
exceeded that which he had felt when his father was about to offer him
as a sacrifice, and he cried out, "Who then is he that hath been the
mediator between me and the Lord, to make the blessing reach
Jacob?"—words meant to imply that he suspected Rebekah of having
instigated Jacob's act.

Isaac's alarm was caused by his seeing hell at the feet of Esau.
Scarcely had he entered the house when the walls thereof began to get
hot on account of the nearness of hell, which he brought along with
him. Isaac could not but exclaim, "Who will be burnt down yonder, I or
my son Jacob?" and the Lord answered him, "Neither thou nor Jacob, but
the hunter."

Isaac told Esau that the meat set before him by Jacob had had
marvellous qualities. Any savor that one desired it possessed, it was
even endowed with the taste of the food that God will grant the pious
in the world to come. "I know not," he said, "what the meat was. But I
had only to wish for bread, and it tasted like bread, or fish, or
locusts, or flesh of animals, in short, it had the taste of any dainty
one could wish for." When Esau heard the word "flesh," he began to
weep, and he said: "To me Jacob gave no more than a dish of lentils,
and in payment for it he took my birthright. What must he have taken
from thee for flesh of animals?" Hitherto Isaac had been in great
anguish on account of the thought that he had committed a wrong in
giving his blessing to his younger son instead of the first-born, to
whom it belonged by law and custom. But when he heard that Jacob had
acquired the birthright from Esau, he said, "I gave my blessing to the
right one!"

In his dismay, Isaac had had the intention of cursing Jacob for having
wrested the blessing from him through cunning. God prevented him from
carrying out his plan. He reminded him that he would but curse himself,
seeing that his blessing contained the words, "Cursed be every one that
curseth thee." But Isaac was not willing to acknowledge his blessing
valid as applied to Jacob, until he was informed that his second son
was the possessor of the birthright. Only then did he say, "Yea, he
shall be blessed," whereat Esau cried with an exceeding great and
bitter cry. By way of punishment for having been the cause of such
distress, a descendant of Jacob, Mordecai, was also made to cry with a
loud and bitter cry, and his grief was brought forth by the Amalekite
Haman, the descendant of Esau. At the words of Isaac, "Thy brother came
with wisdom, and hath taken away thy blessing," Esau spat out in
vexation, and said, "He took away my birthright, and I kept silence,
and now that he takes away my blessing, should I also keep
silence?[101] Is not he rightly named Jacob? for he hath supplanted me
these two times."[102]

Isaac continued to speak to Esau: "Behold, I have made him thy lord, he
is thy king, and do what thou wilt, thy blessings will still belong to
him; all his brethren have I given to him for slaves, and what slaves
possess belongs to their owner. There is nothing for it, thou must be
content that thou wilt receive thy bread baked from thy master." The
Lord took it ill of Isaac that he cheered him with such kind words. "To
Mine enemy," He reproached him, "thou sayest, 'What shall I do for
thee, my son?'" Isaac replied, "O that he might find grace with Thee!"
God: "He is a recreant." Isaac: "Doth he not act righteously when he
honors his parents?" God: "In the land of uprightness will he deal
wrongfully, he will stretch his hand forth in days to come against the
Temple." Isaac: "Then let him enjoy much good in this world, that he
may not behold the abiding-place of the Lord in the world to
come."[103]

When it became plain to Esau that he could not induce his father to
annul the blessing bestowed upon Jacob, he tried to force a blessing
for himself by an underhand trick. He said: "Hast thou but one
blessing, my father? bless me, even me also, O my father, else it will
be said thou hast but one blessing to bestow. Suppose both Jacob and I
had been righteous men, had not then thy God had two blessings, one for
each?" The Lord Himself made reply: "Silence! Jacob will bless the
twelve tribes, and each blessing will be different from every other."
But Isaac felt great pity for his older son, and he wanted to bless
him, but the Shekinah forsook him, and he could not carry out what he
purposed. Thereupon Esau began to weep. He shed three tears—one ran
from his right eye, the second from his left eye, and the third
remained hanging from his eyelash. God said, "This villain cries for
his very life, and should I let him depart empty-handed?" and then He
bade Isaac bless his older son.[104]

The blessing of Isaac ran thus: "Behold, of the fat of the earth shall
be thy dwelling," by which he meant Greater Greece, in Italy; "and of
the dew of heaven from above," referring to Bet-Gubrin; "and by thy
sword shalt thou live, and thou shalt serve thy brother," but when he
casts off the yoke of the Lord, then shalt thou "shake his yoke from
off thy neck," and thou wilt be his master.[105]

The blessing which Isaac gave to his older son was bound to no
condition whatsoever. Whether he deserved them or not, Esau was to
enjoy the goods of this world. Jacob's blessing, however, depended upon
his pious deeds; through them he would have a just claim upon earthly
prosperity. Isaac thought: "Jacob is a righteous man, he will not
murmur against God, though it should come to pass that suffering be
inflicted upon him in spite of his upright life. But that reprobate
Esau, if he should do a good deed, or pray to God and not be heard, he
would say, 'As I pray to the idols for naught, so it is in vain to pray
to God.'" For this reason did Isaac bestow an unconditional blessing
upon Esau.[106]

JACOB LEAVES HIS FATHER'S HOUSE

Esau hated his brother Jacob on account of the blessing that his father
had given him, and Jacob was very much afraid of his brother Esau, and
he fled to the house of Eber, the son of Shem, and he concealed himself
there fourteen years on account of his brother Esau, and he continued
there to learn the ways of the Lord and His commandments. When Esau saw
that Jacob had fled and escaped from him, and Jacob had cunningly
obtained the blessing, then Esau grieved exceedingly, and he was also
vexed at his father and mother. He also rose up and took his wife, and
went away from his father and mother to the land of Seir. There he
married his second wife, Basemath, the daughter of Elon the Hittite,
and he called her name Adah, saying that the blessing had in that time
passed from him. After dwelling in Seir for six months, Esau returned
to the land of Canaan, and placed his two wives in his father's house
in Hebron. And the wives of Esau vexed and provoked Isaac and Rebekah
with their works, for they walked not in the ways of the Lord, but
served their fathers' gods of wood and stone, as their fathers had
taught them, and they were more wicked than their fathers. They
sacrificed and burnt incense to the Baalim, and Isaac and Rebekah
became weary of them. And at the end of fourteen years of Jacob's
residing in the house of Eber, Jacob desired to see his father and his
mother, and he returned home. Esau had forgotten in those days what
Jacob had done to him, in having taken the blessing from him, but when
Esau saw Jacob returning to his parents, he remembered what Jacob had
done to him, and he was greatly incensed against him, and he sought to
slay him.[107]

But Esau would not kill Jacob while his father was yet alive, lest
Isaac beget another son. He wanted to be sure of being the only
heir.[108] However, his hatred against Jacob was so great that he
determined to hasten the death of his father and then dispatch Jacob.
Such murderous plans Esau cherished in his heart, though he denied that
he was harboring them. But God spoke, "Probably thou knowest not that I
examine the hearts of men, for I am the Lord that searcheth the heart."
And not God alone knew the secret desires of Esau. Rebekah, like all
the Mothers, was a prophetess, and she delayed not to warn Jacob of the
danger that hung over him. "Thy brother," she said to him, "is as sure
of accomplishing his wicked purpose as though thou wert dead. Now
therefore, my son, obey my voice, and arise, flee thou to Laban my
brother, to Haran, and tarry with him for seven years, until thy
brother's fury turn away." In the goodness of her heart, Rebekah could
not but believe that the anger of Esau was only a fleeting passion, and
would disappear in the course of time. But she was mistaken, his hate
persisted until the end of his life.[109]

Courageous as he was, Jacob would not run away from danger. He said to
his mother, "I am not afraid; if he wishes to kill me, I will kill
him," to which she replied, "Let me not be bereaved of both my sons in
one day."[110] By words Rebekah again showed her prophetic gift. As she
spoke, so it happened—when their time came, Esau was slain while the
burial of Jacob was taking place.[111]

And Jacob said to Rebekah: "Behold, thou knowest that my father has
become old and does not see, and if I leave him and go away, he will be
angry and will curse me. I will not go; if he sends me, only then will
I go."[112]

Accordingly, Rebekah went to Isaac, and amid tears she spoke to him
thus: "If Jacob take a wife of the daughters of Heth, what good shall
my life do me?"[113] And Isaac called Jacob, and charged him, and said
unto him: "Thou shalt not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan, for
thus did our father Abraham command us according to the word of the
Lord, which He had commanded him, saying, 'Unto thy seed will I give
the land; if thy children keep My covenant that I have made with thee,
then will I also perform to thy children that which I have spoken unto
thee, and I will not forsake them.' Now therefore, my son, hearken to
my voice, to all that I shall command thee, and refrain from taking a
wife from amongst the daughters of Canaan. Arise, go to Haran, to the
house of Bethuel, thy mother's father, and take thee a wife from thence
of the daughters of Laban, thy mother's brother. Take heed lest thou
shouldst forget the Lord thy God and all His ways in the land to which
thou goest, and shouldst join thyself to the people of the land, and
pursue vanity, and forsake the Lord thy God. But when thou comest to
the land, serve the Lord. Do not turn to the right or to the left from
the way which I commanded thee, and which thou didst learn. And may the
Almighty God grant thee favor before the people of the land, that thou
mayest take a wife there according to thy choice, one who is good and
upright in the way of the Lord. And may God give unto thee and thy seed
the blessing of thy father Abraham and make thee fruitful and multiply
thee, and mayest thou become a multitude of people in the land whither
thou goest, and may God cause thee to return to thy land, the land of
thy father's dwelling, with children and with great riches, with joy
and with pleasure."[114]

As the value of a document is attested by its concluding words, the
signature of the witnesses, so Isaac confirmed the blessing he had
bestowed upon Jacob.[116] That none might say Jacob had secured it by
intrigue and cunning, he blessed him again with three blessings, in
these words, "In so far as I am endowed with the power of blessing, I
bestow blessing upon thee. May God, with whom there is endless
blessing, give thee His, and also the blessing wherewith Abraham
desired to bless me, desisting only in order not to provoke the
jealousy of Ishmael."[116]

Seeing with his prophetic eye that the seed of Jacob would once be
compelled to go into exile, Isaac offered up one more petition, that
God would bring the exiles back again. He said, "He shall deliver thee
in six troubles, and in the seventh there shall no evil touch thee."
And also Rebekah prayed to God in behalf of Jacob: "O Lord of the
world, let not the purpose prosper which Esau harbors against Jacob.
Put a bridle upon him, that he accomplish not all he wills to do."[117]

When Esau observed that even his father's love had passed from him to
Jacob, he went away, to Ishmael, and he addressed him as follows: "Lo,
as thy father gave all his possessions to thy brother Isaac, and
dismissed thee with empty hands, so my father purposeth to do to me.
Make thyself ready then, go forth and slay thy brother, and I will slay
mine, and then we two shall divide the whole world between us." And
Ishmael replied: "Why dost thou want me to slay thy father? thou canst
do it thyself." Esau said: "It hath happened aforetime that a man
killed his brother—Cain murdered Abel. But that a son should kill his
father is unheard of."

Esau did not really shrink back from parricide, only it chanced not to
fit the plan he had hatched. "If Ishmael slays my father," he said to
himself, "I am the rightful redeemer, and I shall kill Ishmael to
avenge my father, and if, then, I murder Jacob, too, everything will
belong to me, as the heir of my father and my uncle."[118] This shows
that Esau's marriage with Mahalath, the daughter of Ishmael and
grandchild of Abraham, was not concluded out of regard for his parents,
who were opposed to his two other wives, daughters of the Canaanites.
All he desired was to enter into amicable relations with Ishmael in
order to execute his devilish plan.[119]

But Esau reckoned without his host. The night before his wedding with
Mahalath Ishmael died, and Nebaioth, the son of Ishmael, stepped into
his father's place, and gave away his sister.[120] How little it had
been in Esau's mind to make his parents happy by taking a granddaughter
of Abraham to wife, appears from the fact that he kept his two other
wives, the Canaanitish women. The daughter of Ishmael followed the
example of her companions, and thus she but added to the grief caused
the parents of Esau by their daughters-in-law.[121] And the opportunity
might have been a most favorable one for Esau to turn aside from his
godless ways and amend his conduct, for the bridegroom is pardoned on
his wedding day for all his sins committed in years gone by.[122]

Scarcely had Jacob left his father's house, when Rebekah began to weep,
for she was sorely distressed about him. Isaac comforted her, saying:
"Weep not for Jacob! In peace doth he depart, and in peace will he
return. The Lord, God Most High, will guard him against all evil and be
with him. He will not forsake him all the days of his life. Have no
fear for him, for he walketh on the right path, he is a perfect man,
and he hath faith in God—he will not perish."[123]

JACOB PURSUED BY ELIPHAZ AND ESAU

When Jacob went away to go to Haran, Esau called his son Eliphaz, and
secretly spoke unto him, saying: "Now hasten, take thy sword in thy
hand and pursue Jacob, and pass before him in the road, and lurk for
him and slay him with thy sword in one of the mountains, and take all
belonging unto him, and come back." And Eliphaz was dexterous and
expert with the bow, as his father had taught him, and he was a noted
hunter in the field and a valiant man. And Eliphaz did as his father
had commanded him. And Eliphaz was at that time thirteen years old, and
he arose and went and took ten of his mother's brothers with him, and
pursued Jacob. And he followed Jacob closely, and when he overtook him,
he lay in ambush for him on the borders of the land of Canaan, opposite
to the city of Shechem. And Jacob saw Eliphaz and his men pursuing
after him, and Jacob stood in the place in which he was going in order
to know what it was, for he did not understand their purpose. Eliphaz
drew his sword and went on advancing, he and his men, toward Jacob, and
Jacob said unto them, "Wherefore have you come hither, and why do you
pursue with your swords?" Eliphaz came near to Jacob, and answered as
follows, "Thus did my father command me, and now therefore I will not
deviate from the orders which my father gave me." And when Jacob saw
that Esau had impressed his command urgently upon Eliphaz, he
approached and supplicated Eliphaz and his men, saying, "Behold, all
that I have, and that which my father and mother gave unto me, that
take unto thee and go from me, and do not slay me, and may this thing
that thou wilt do with me be accounted unto thee as righteousness." And
the Lord caused Jacob to find favor in the sight of Eliphaz and his
men, and they hearkened to the voice of Jacob, and they did not put him
to death, but took all his belongings, together with the silver and
gold that he had brought with him from Beer-sheba. They left him
nothing. When Eliphaz and his men returned to Esau, and told him all
that had happened to them with Jacob, he was wroth with his son Eliphaz
and with his men, because they had not put Jacob to death. And they
answered, and said unto Esau, "Because Jacob supplicated us in this
matter, not to slay him, our pity was moved toward him, and we took all
belonging to him, and we came back." Esau then took all the silver and
gold which Eliphaz had taken from Jacob, and he put them by in his
house.[124]

Nevertheless Esau did not give up the hope of intercepting Jacob on his
flight and slaying him. He pursued him, and with his men occupied the
road along which he had to journey to Haran. There a great miracle
happened to Jacob. When he observed what Esau's intention was, he
turned off toward the Jordan river, and, with eyes directed to God, he
cleft the waters with his wanderer's staff, and succeeded in crossing
to the other side. But Esau was not to be deterred. He kept up the
pursuit, and reached the hot springs at Baarus before his brother, who
had to pass by there. Jacob, not knowing that Esau was on the watch for
him, decided to bathe in the spring, saying, "I have neither bread nor
other things needful, so I will at least warm my body in the waters of
the well." While he was in the bath, Esau occupied every exit, and
Jacob would surely have perished in the hot water, if the Lord had not
caused a miracle to come to pass. A new opening formed of itself, and
through it Jacob escaped. Thus were fulfilled the words, "When thou
passest through the waters, I will be with thee; when thou walkest
through the fire, thou shalt not be burnt," for Jacob was saved from
the waters of the Jordan and from the fire of the hot spring.

At the same time with Jacob, a rider, leaving his horse and his clothes
on the shore, had stepped into the river to cool off, but he was
overwhelmed by the waves, and he met his death. Jacob put on the dead
man's clothes, mounted his horse, and went off. It was a lucky chance,
for Eliphaz had stripped him of everything, even his clothes, and the
miracle of the river had happened only that he might not be forced to
appear naked among men.[125]

Though Jacob was robbed of all his possessions, his courage did not
fail him. He said: "Should I lose hope in my Creator? I set my eyes
upon the merits of my fathers. For the sake of them the Lord will give
me His aid." And God said: "Jacob, thou puttest thy trust in the merits
of thy fathers, therefore I will not suffer thy foot to be moved; He
that keepeth thee will not slumber. Yea, still more! While a keeper
watcheth only by day as a rule, and sleepeth by night, I will guard
thee day and night, for, behold, He that keepeth Israel shall neither
slumber nor sleep. The Lord will keep thee from all evil, from Esau as
well as Laban; He will keep thy soul, that the Angel of Death do thee
no hurt; He will keep thy going out and thy coming in, He will support
thee now thou art leaving Canaan, and when thou returnest to
Canaan."[126]

Jacob was reluctant to leave the Holy Land before he received direct
permission from God. "My parents," he reflected, "bade me go forth and
sojourn outside of the land, but who knows whether it be the will of
God that I do as they say, and beget children outside of the Holy
Land?"[127] Accordingly, he betook himself to Beer-sheba. There, where
the Lord had given permission to Isaac to depart from Canaan and go to
Philistia, he would learn the will of the Lord concerning himself.

He did not follow the example of his father and grandfather and take
refuge with Abimelech, because he feared the king might force also him
into a covenant, and make it impossible for his descendants of many
generations to take possession of the Philistine land. Nor could he
stay at home, because of his fear that Esau might wrest the birthright
and the blessing from him, and to that he would not and could not
agree.[128] He was as little disposed to take up the combat with Esau,
for he knew the truth of the maxim, "He who courts danger will be
overcome by it; he who avoids danger will overcome it." Both Abraham
and Isaac had lived according to this rule. His grandfather had fled
from Nimrod, and his father had gone away from the Philistines.[129]

THE DAY OF MIRACLES

Jacob's journey to Haran was a succession of miracles. The first of the
five that befell for his sake in the course of it was that the sun sank
while Jacob was passing Mount Moriah, though it was high noon at the
time. He was following the spring that appeared wherever the Patriarchs
went or settled. It accompanied Jacob from Beer-sheba to Mount Moriah,
a two days' journey. When he arrived at the holy hill, the Lord said to
him: "Jacob, thou hast bread in thy wallet, and the spring of waters is
near by to quench thy thirst. Thus thou hast food and drink, and here
thou canst lodge for the night." But Jacob replied: "The sun has barely
passed the fifth of its twelve day stages, why should I lie down to
sleep at so unseemly an hour?" But then Jacob perceived that the sun
was about to sink, and he prepared to make ready his bed.[130] It was
the Divine purpose not to let Jacob pass the site of the future Temple
without stopping; he was to tarry there at least one night. Also, God
desired to appear unto Jacob, and He shows Himself unto His faithful
ones only at night.[131] At the same time Jacob was saved from the
pursuit of Esau, who had to desist on account of the premature
darkness.[132]

Jacob took twelve stones from the altar on which his father Isaac had
lain bound as a sacrifice, and he said: "It was the purpose of God to
let twelve tribes arise, but they have not been begotten by Abraham or
Isaac. If, now, these twelve stones will unite into a single one, then
shall I know for a certainty that I am destined to become the father of
the twelve tribes." At this time the second miracle came to pass, the
twelve stones joined themselves together and made one, which he put
under his head, and at once it became soft and downy like a pillow. It
was well that he had a comfortable couch. He was in great need of rest,
for it was the first night in fourteen years that he did not keep
vigils. During all those years, passed in Eber's house of learning, he
had devoted the nights to study. And for twenty years to come he was
not to sleep, for while he was with his uncle Laban, he spent all the
night and every night reciting the Psalms.[133]

On the whole it was a night of marvels. He dreamed a dream in which the
course of the world's history was unfolded to him. On a ladder set up
on the earth, with the top of it reaching to heaven, he beheld the two
angels who had been sent to Sodom. For one hundred and thirty-eight
years they had been banished from the celestial regions, because they
had betrayed their secret mission to Lot. They had accompanied Jacob
from his father's house thither, and now they were ascending
heavenward. When they arrived there, he heard them call the other
angels, and say, "Come ye and see the countenance of the pious Jacob,
whose likeness appears on the Divine throne, ye who yearned long to see
it," and then he beheld the angels descend from heaven to gaze upon
him.[134] He also saw the angels of the four kingdoms ascending the
ladder. The angel of Babylon mounted seventy rounds, the angel of
Media, fifty-two, that of Greece, one hundred and eighty, and that of
Edom mounted very high, saying, "I will ascend above the heights of the
clouds, I will be like the Most High," and Jacob heard a voice
remonstrating, "Yet thou shalt be brought down to hell, to the
uttermost parts of the pit." God Himself reproved Edom, saying, "Though
thou mount on high as the eagle, and though thy nest be set among the
stars, I will bring thee down from thence."[135]

Furthermore, God showed unto Jacob the revelation at Mount Sinai, the
translation of Elijah, the Temple in its glory and in its spoliation,
Nebuchadnezzar's attempt to burn the three holy children in the fiery
furnace, and Daniel's encounter with Bel.[136]

In this, the first prophetic dream dreamed by Jacob,[137] God made him
the promise that the land upon which he was lying would be given to
him, but the land he lay upon was the whole of Palestine, which God had
folded together and put under him. "And," the promise continued, "thy
seed will be like unto the dust of the earth. As the earth survives all
things, so thy children will survive all the nations of the earth. But
as the earth is trodden upon by all, so thy children, when they commit
trespasses, will be trodden upon by the nations of the earth."[138]
And, furthermore, God promised that Jacob should spread out to the west
and to the east, a greater promise than that given to his fathers
Abraham and Isaac, to whom He had allotted a limited land. Jacob's was
an unbounded possession.[139]

From this wondrous dream Jacob awoke with a start of fright, on account
of the vision he had had of the destruction of the Temple.[140] He
cried out, "How dreadful is this place! this is none other but the
house of God, wherein is the gate of heaven through which prayer
ascends to Him." He took the stone made out of the twelve, and set it
up for a pillar, and poured oil upon the top of it, which had flowed
down from heaven for him, and God sank this anointed stone unto the
abyss, to serve as the centre of the earth, the same stone, the Eben
Shetiyah,[141] that forms the centre of the sanctuary, whereon the
Ineffable Name is graven, the knowledge of which makes a man master
over nature, and over life and death.[142]

Jacob cast himself down before the Eben Shetiyah, and entreated God to
fulfil the promise He had given him, and also he prayed that God grant
him honorable sustenance. For God had not mentioned bread to eat and
raiment to put on, that Jacob might learn to have faith in the Lord.
Then he vowed to give the tenth of all he owned unto God, if He would
but grant his petition. Thus Jacob was the first to take a vow upon
himself,[143] and the first, too, to separate the tithe from his
income.[144]

God had promised him almost all that is desirable, but he feared he
might forfeit the pledged blessings through his sinfulness,[145] and
again he prayed earnestly that God bring him back to his father's house
unimpaired in body, possessions, and knowledge,[146] and guard him, in
the strange land whither he was going, against idolatry, an immoral
life, and bloodshed.[147]

His prayer at an end, Jacob set out on his way to Haran, and the third
wonder happened. In the twinkling of an eye he arrived at his
destination. The earth jumped from Mount Moriah to Haran. A wonder like
this God has executed only four times in the whole course of
history.[148]

The first thing to meet his eye in Haran was the well whence the
inhabitants drew their supply of water. Although it was a great city,
Haran suffered from dearth of water, and therefore the well could not
be used by the people free of charge. Jacob's sojourn in the city
produced a change. By reason of his meritorious deeds the water springs
were blessed, and the city had water enough for its needs.

Jacob saw a number of people by the well, and he questioned them, "My
brethren, whence be ye?" He thus made himself a model for all to
follow. A man should be companionable, and address others like brothers
and friends, and not wait for them to greet him. Each one should strive
to be the first to give the salutation of peace, that the angels of
peace and compassion may come to meet him. When he was informed that
the by-standers hailed from Haran, he made inquiry about the character
and vocation of his uncle Laban, and whether they were on terms of
friendly intercourse with him. They answered briefly: "There is peace
between us, but if thou art desirous of inquiring further, here comes
Rachel the daughter of Laban. From her thou canst learn all thou hast a
mind to learn." They knew that women like to talk, wherefore they
referred him to Rachel.[149]

Jacob found it strange that so many should be standing idle by the
well, and he questioned further: "Are you day laborers? then it is too
early for you to put by your work. But if you are pasturing your own
sheep, why do you not water your flocks and let them feed?"[150] They
told him they were waiting until all the shepherds brought their flocks
thither, and together rolled the stone from the mouth of the well.
While he was yet speaking with them, Rachel came with her father's
sheep, for Laban had no sons, and a pest having broken out shortly
before among his cattle, so few sheep were left that a maiden like
Rachel could easily tend them. Now, when Jacob saw the daughter of his
mother's brother approaching, he rolled the great stone from the mouth
of the well as easily as a cork is drawn from a bottle—the fourth
wonder of this extraordinary day. Jacob's strength was equal to the
strength of all the shepherds; with his two arms alone he accomplished
what usually requires the united forces of a large assemblage of men.
He had been divinely endowed with this supernatural strength on leaving
the Holy Land. God had caused the dew of the resurrection to drop down
upon him, and his physical strength was so great that even in a combat
with the angels he was victorious.[152]

The fifth and last wonder of the day was that the water rose from the
depths of the well to the very top, there was no need to draw it up,
and there it remained all the twenty years that Jacob abode in
Haran.[153]

JACOB WITH LABAN

Rachel's coming to the well at the moment when Jacob reached the
territory belonging to Haran was an auspicious omen. To meet young
maidens on first entering a city is a sure sign that fortune is
favorable to one's undertakings. Experience proves this through
Eliezer, Jacob, Moses, and Saul. They all encountered maidens when they
approached a place new to them, and they all met with success.[154]

Jacob treated Rachel at once as his cousin, which caused significant
whispering among the by-standers. They censured Jacob for his demeanor
toward her, for since God had sent the deluge upon the world, on
account of the immoral life led by men, great chastity had prevailed,
especially among the people of the east. The talk of the men reduced
Jacob to tears. Scarcely had he kissed Rachel when he began to weep,
for he repented of having done it.

There was reason enough for tears. Jacob could not but remember sadly
that Eliezer, his grandfather's slave, had brought ten camels laden
with presents with him to Haran, when he came to sue for a bride for
Isaac, while he had not even a ring to give to Rachel. Moreover, he
foresaw that his favorite wife Rachel would not lie beside him in the
grave, and this, too, made him weep.

As soon as Rachel heard that Jacob was her cousin, she ran home to tell
her father about his coming. Her mother was no longer among the living,
else she would naturally have gone to her. In great haste Laban ran to
receive Jacob. He reflected, if Eliezer, the bondman, had come with ten
camels, what would not the favorite son of the family bring with him,
and when he saw that Jacob was unattended, he concluded that he carried
great sums of money in his girdle, and he threw his arms about his
waist to find out whether his supposition was true. Disappointed in
this, he yet did not give up hope that his nephew Jacob was a man of
substance. Perhaps he concealed precious stones in his mouth, and he
kissed him in order to find out whether he had guessed aright. But
Jacob said to him: "Thou thinkest I have money. Nay, thou art mistaken,
I have but words."[155] Then he went on to tell him how it had come
about that he stood before him empty-handed. He said that his father
Isaac had sent him on his way provided with gold, silver, and money,
but he had encountered Eliphaz, who had threatened to slay him. To this
assailant Jacob had spoken thus: "Know that the descendants of Abraham
have an obligation to meet, they will have to serve four hundred years
in a land that is not theirs. If thou slayest me, then you, the seed of
Esau, will have to pay the debt. It were better, therefore, to take all
I have, and spare my life, so that what is owing may be paid by me.
Hence," Jacob continued, "I stand before thee bare of all the substance
carried off by Eliphaz."[156]

This tale of his nephew's poverty filled Laban with dismay. "What," he
exclaimed, "shall I have to give food and drink for a month or,
perhaps, even a year to this fellow, who has come to me empty-handed!"
He betook himself to his teraphim, to ask them for counsel upon the
matter, and they admonished him, saying: "Beware of sending him away
from thy house. His star and his constellation are so lucky that good
fortune will attend all his undertakings, and for his sake the blessing
of the Lord will rest upon all thou doest, in thy house or in thy
field."

Laban was satisfied with the advice of the teraphim, but he was
embarrassed as to the way in which he was to attach Jacob to his house.
He did not venture to offer him service, lest Jacob's conditions be
impossible of fulfilment. Again he resorted to the teraphim, and asked
them with what reward to tempt his nephew, and they replied: "A wife is
his wage; he will ask nothing else of thee but a wife. It is his nature
to be attracted by women, and whenever he threatens to leave thee, do
but offer him another wife, and he will not depart."

Laban went back to Jacob, and said, "Tell me, what shall thy wages be?"
and he replied, "Thinkest thou I came hither to make money? I came only
to get me a wife,"[158] for Jacob had no sooner beheld Rachel than he
fell in love with her and made her a proposal of marriage. Rachel
consented, but added the warning: "My father is cunning, and thou art
not his match." Jacob: "I am his brother in cunning." Rachel: "But is
deception becoming unto the pious?" Jacob: "Yes, 'with the righteous
righteousness is seemly, and with the deceiver deception.' But,"
continued Jacob, "tell me wherein he may deal cunningly with me."
Rachel: "I have an older sister, whom he desires to see married before
me, and he will try to palm her off on thee instead of me." To be
prepared for Laban's trickery, Jacob and Rachel agreed upon a sign by
which he would recognize her in the nuptial night.[159]

Thus warned to be on his guard against Laban, Jacob worded his
agreement with him regarding his marriage to Rachel with such precision
that no room was left for distortion or guile. Jacob said: "I know that
the people of this place are knaves, therefore I desire to put the
matter very clearly to thee. I will serve thee seven years for Rachel,
hence not Leah; for thy daughter, that thou bringest me not some other
woman likewise named Rachel; for the younger daughter, that thou
exchangest not their names in the meantime."

Nothing of all this availed: "It profits not if a villain is cast into
a sawmill"—neither force nor gentle words can circumvent a rascal.
Laban deceived not only Jacob, but also the guests whom he invited to
the wedding.

THE MARRIAGE OF JACOB

After Jacob had served Laban seven years, he said to his uncle: "The
Lord destined me to be the father of twelve tribes. I am now
eighty-four years old, and if I do not take thought of the matter now,
when can I?"[160] Thereupon Laban consented to let him have his
daughter Rachel to wife, and he was married forty-four years after his
brother Esau. The Lord often defers the happiness of the pious, while
He permits the wicked to enjoy the fulfilment of their desires
soon.[161] Esau, however, had purposely chosen his fortieth year for
his marriage; he had wanted to indicate that he was walking in the
footsteps of his father Isaac, who had likewise married at forty years
of age. Esau was like a swine that stretches out its feet when it lies
down, to show that it is cloven-footed like the clean animals, though
it is none the less one of the unclean animals. Until his fortieth year
Esau made a practice of violating the wives of other men, and then at
his marriage he acted as though he were following the example of his
pious father. Accordingly, the woman he married was of his own kind,
Judith, a daughter of Heth, for God said: "This one, who is designed
for stubble, to be burnt by fire, shall take unto wife one of a people
also destined for utter destruction." They, Esau and his wife,
illustrated the saying, "Not for naught does the raven consort with the
crow; they are birds of a feather."[162]

Far different it was with Jacob. He married the two pious and lovely
sisters, Leah and Rachel, for Leah, like her younger sister, was
beautiful of countenance, form, and stature. She had but one defect,
her eyes were weak, and this malady she had brought down upon herself,
through her own action. Laban, who had two daughters, and Rebekah, his
sister, who had two sons, had agreed by letter, while their children
were still young, that the older son of the one was to marry the older
daughter of the other, and the younger son the younger daughter. When
Leah grew to maidenhood, and inquired about her future husband, all her
tidings spoke of his villainous character, and she wept over her fate
until her eyelashes dropped from their lids. But Rachel grew more and
more beautiful day by day, for all who spoke of Jacob praised and
extolled him, and "good tidings make the bones fat."

In view of the agreement between Laban and Rebekah, Jacob refused to
marry the older daughter Leah. As it was, Esau was his mortal enemy, on
account of what had happened regarding the birthright and the paternal
blessing. If, now, Jacob married the maiden appointed for him, Esau
would never forgive his younger brother. Therefore Jacob resolved to
take to wife Rachel, the younger daughter of his uncle.[163]

Laban was of another mind. He purposed to marry of his older daughter
first, for he knew that Jacob would consent to serve him a second
period of seven years for love of Rachel. On the day of the wedding he
assembled the inhabitants of Haran, and addressed them as follows: "Ye
know well that we used to suffer from lack of water, and as soon as
this pious man Jacob came to dwell among us, we had water in
abundance." "What hast thou in mind to do?" they asked Laban. He
replied: "If ye have naught to say against it, I will deceive him and
give him Leah to wife. He loves Rachel with an exceeding great love,
and for her sake he will tarry with us yet seven other years." "Do as
it pleaseth thee," his friends said. "Well, then," said Laban, "let
each one of you give me a pledge that ye will not betray my purpose."

With the pledges they left with him, Laban bought wine, oil, and meat
for the wedding feast, and he set a meal before them which they had
themselves paid for. Because he deceived his fellow-citizens thus,
Laban is called Arami, "the deceiver." They feasted all day long, until
late at night, and when Jacob expressed his astonishment at the
attention shown him, they said to him: "Through thy piety thou didst a
great service of lovingkindness unto us, our supply of water was
increased unto abundance, and we desire to show our gratitude
therefor." And, indeed, they tried to give him a hint of Laban's
purpose. In the marriage ode which they sang they used the refrain
"Halia," in the hope that he would understand it as Ha Leah, "This is
Leah." But Jacob was unsuspicious and noticed nothing.

When the bride was led into the nuptial chamber, the guests
extinguished all the candles, much to Jacob's amazement. But their
explanation satisfied him. "Thinkest thou," they said, "we have as
little sense of decency as thy countrymen?" Jacob therefore did not
discover the deception practiced upon him until morning. During the
night Leah responded whenever he called Rachel, for which he reproached
her bitterly when daylight came. "O thou deceiver, daughter of a
deceiver, why didst thou answer me when I called Rachel's name?" "Is
there a teacher without a pupil?" asked Leah, in return. "I but
profited by thy instruction. When thy father called thee Esau, didst
thou not say, Here am I?"[164]

Jacob was greatly enraged against Laban, and he said to him: "Why didst
thou deal treacherously with me? Take back thy daughter, and let me
depart, seeing thou didst act wickedly toward me."[165] Laban pacified
him, however, saying, "It is not so done in our place, to give the
younger before the first-born," and Jacob agreed to serve yet seven
other years for Rachel, and after the seven days of the feast of Leah's
wedding were fulfilled, he married Rachel.[166]

With Leah and Rachel, Jacob received the handmaids Zilpah and Bilhah,
two other daughters of Laban, whom his concubines had borne unto
him.[167]

THE BIRTH OF JACOB'S CHILDREN

The ways of God are not like unto the ways of men. A man clings close
to his friend while he has riches, and forsakes him when he falls into
poverty. But when God sees a mortal unsteady and faltering, He reaches
a hand out to him, and raises him up. Thus it happened with Leah. She
was hated by Jacob, and God visited her in mercy. Jacob's aversion to
Leah began the very morning after their wedding, when his wife taunted
him with not being wholly free from cunning and craft himself. Then God
said, "Help can come to Leah only if she gives birth to a child; then
the love of her husband will return to her."[168] God remembered the
tears she had shed when she prayed that her doom, chaining her to that
recreant Esau, be averted from her, and so wondrous are the uses of
prayer that Leah, besides turning aside the impending decree, was
permitted to marry Jacob before her sister and be the first to bear him
a child. There was another reason why the Lord was compassionately
inclined toward Leah. She had gotten herself talked about. The sailors
on the sea, the travellers along the highways, the women at their
looms, they all gossiped about Leah, saying, "She is not within what
her seeming is without. She appears to be pious, but if she were, she
would not have deceived her sister."[169] To put an end to all this
tattle, God granted her the distinction of bearing a son at the end of
seven months after her marriage. He was one of a pair of twins, the
other child being a daughter. So it was with eleven of the sons of
Jacob, all of them except Joseph were born twins with a girl, and the
twin sister and brother married later on.[170] Altogether it was an
extraordinary childbirth, for Leah was barren, not formed by nature to
bear children.

She called her first-born son Reuben, which means "See the normal man,"
for he was neither big nor little, neither dark nor fair, but exactly
normal.[171] In calling her oldest child Reuben, "See the son," Leah
indicated his future character. "Behold the difference," the name
implied, "between my first-born son and the first-born son of my father
in-law. Esau sold his birthright to Jacob of his own free will, and yet
he hated him. As for my first-born son, although his birthright was
taken from him without his consent, and given to Joseph, it was
nevertheless he who rescued Joseph from the hands of his
brethren."[172]

Leah called her second son Shime'on, "Yonder is sin," for one of his
descendants was that Zimri who was guilty of vile trespasses with the
daughters of Moab.[173]

The name of her third son, Levi, was given him by God Himself, not by
his mother. The Lord summoned him through the angel Gabriel, and
bestowed the name upon him as one who is "crowned" with the twenty-four
gifts that are the tribute due to the priests.[174]

At the birth of her fourth son, Leah returned thanks to God for a
special reason. She knew that Jacob would beget twelve sons, and if
they were distributed equally among his four wives, each would bear
three. But now it appeared that she had one more than her due share,
and she called him Jehudah, "thanks unto God." She was thus the first
since the creation of the world to give thanks to God,[175] and her
example was followed by David and Daniel, the descendants of her son
Judah.

When Rachel saw that her sister had borne Jacob four sons, she envied
Leah. Not that she begrudged her the good fortune she enjoyed, she only
envied her for her piety, saying to herself that it was to her
righteous conduct that she owed the blessing of many children.[176]
Then she besought Jacob: "Pray unto God for me, that He grant me
children, else my life is no life. Verily, there are four that may be
regarded as though they were dead, the blind, the leper, the childless,
and he who was once rich and has lost his fortune." Jacob's anger was
kindled against Rachel, and he said: "It were better thou shouldst
address thy petition to God, and not to me, for am I in God's stead,
who hath withheld from thee the fruit of the womb?"[177] God was
displeased with this answer that Jacob made to his sad wife. He rebuked
him with the words: "Is it thus thou wouldst comfort a grief-stricken
heart? As thou livest, the day will come when thy children will stand
before the son of Rachel, and he will use the same words thou hast but
now used, saying, 'Am I in the place of the Lord?'"

Rachel also made reply to Jacob, saying: "Did not thy father, too,
entreat God for thy mother with earnest words, beseeching Him to remove
her barrenness?" Jacob: "It is true, but Isaac had no children, and I
have several." Rachel: "Remember thy grandfather Abraham, thou canst
not deny that he had children when he supplicated God in behalf of
Sarah!" Jacob: "Wouldst thou do for me what Sarah did for my
grandfather?" Rachel: "Pray, what did she?" Jacob: "She herself brought
a rival into her house." Rachel: "If that is all that is necessary, I
am ready to follow the example of Sarah, and I pray that as she was
granted a child for having invited a rival, so may I be blessed,
too."[178] Thereupon Rachel gave Jacob Bilhah, her freed handmaid, to
wife, and she bore him a son, whom Rachel called Dan, saying, "As the
Lord was gracious unto me and gave me a son according to my petition,
so He will permit Samson, the descendant of Dan, to judge his people,
that it fall not into the hands of the Philistines."[179] Bilhah's
second son Rachel named Naphtali, saying, "Mine is the bond that binds
Jacob to this place, for it was for my sake that he came to Laban." At
the same time she wanted to convey by this name that the Torah, which
is as sweet as Nofet, "honeycomb," would be taught in the territory of
Naphtali.[180] And the name had still a third meaning: "As God hath
heard my fervent prayer for a son, so He will hearken unto the fervent
prayer of the Naphtalites when they are beset by their enemies."[181]

Leah, seeing that she had left bearing, while Bilhah, her sister's
handmaid, bore Jacob two sons, concluded that it was Jacob's destiny to
have four wives, her sister and herself, and their half-sisters Bilhah
and Zilpah. Therefore she also gave him her handmaid to wife.[182]
Zilpah was the youngest of the four women. It was the custom of that
time to give the older daughter the older handmaid, and the younger
daughter the younger handmaid, as their dowry, when they got married.
Now, in order to make Jacob believe that his wife was the younger
daughter he had served for, Laban had given Leah the younger handmaid
as her marriage portion. This Zilpah was so young that her body
betrayed no outward signs of pregnancy, and nothing was known of her
condition until her son was born. Leah called the boy Gad, which means
"fortune," or it may mean "the cutter," for from Gad was descended the
prophet Elijah, who brings good fortune to Israel, and he also cuts
down the heathen world.[183] Leah had other reasons, too, for choosing
this name of double meaning. The tribe of Gad had the good fortune of
entering into possession of its allotment in the Holy Land before any
of the others,[184] and, also, Gad the son of Jacob was born
circumcised.[185]

To Zilpah's second son Leah gave the name of Asher, "praise," for, she
said, "Unto me all manner of praise is due, for I brought my handmaid
into the house of my husband as wife. Sarah did likewise, but only
because she had no children, and so it was also with Rachel. But as for
me, I had children, and nevertheless I subdued my passion, and without
jealousy I gave my handmaid to my husband for wife. Verily, all will
praise and extol me."[186] Furthermore she spoke: "As the women will
praise me, so the sons of Asher will in time to come praise God for
their fruitful possession in the Holy Land."[187]

The next son born unto Jacob was Issachar, "a reward," and once more it
was Leah who was permitted to bring forth the child, as a reward from
God for her pious desire to have the twelve tribes come into the world.
To secure this result, she left no means untried.[188]

It happened once that her oldest son Reuben was tending his father's
ass during the harvest, and he bound him to a root of dudaim, and went
his way. On returning, he found the dudaim torn out of the ground, and
the ass lying dead beside it. The beast had uprooted it in trying to
get loose, and the plant has a peculiar quality, whoever tears it up
must die.[189] As it was the time of the harvest, when it is permitted
for any one to take a plant from a field, and as dudaim is, besides, a
plant which the owner of a field esteems lightly, Reuben carried it
home. Being a good son, he did not keep it for himself, but gave it to
his mother. Rachel desired the dudaim, and she asked the plant of Leah,
who parted with it to her sister, but on the condition that Jacob, when
he returned from work in the evening, should tarry with her for a
while. It was altogether unbecoming conduct in Rachel to dispose thus
of her husband. She gained the dudaim, but she lost two tribes. If she
had acted otherwise, she would have borne four sons instead of two. And
she suffered another punishment, her body was not permitted to rest in
the grave beside her husband's.

Jacob came home from the field after night had fallen, for he observed
the law obliging a day laborer to work until darkness sets in, and
Jacob's zeal in the affairs of Laban was as great in the last seven
years, after his marriage, as in the first seven, while he was serving
for the hand of Rachel.[190] When Leah heard the braying of Jacob's
ass, she ran to meet her husband,[191] and without giving him time to
wash his feet, she insisted upon his turning aside into her tent.[192]
At first Jacob refused to go, but God compelled him to enter, for unto
God it was known that Leah acted from pure, disinterested motives.[193]
Her dudaim secured two sons for her, Issachar, the father of the tribe
that devotes itself to the study of the Torah, whence his name meaning
"reward," and Zebulon, whose descendants carried on commerce, using
their profits to enable their brethren of Issachar to keep at their
studies.[194] Leah called this last-born son of hers Zebulon,
"dwelling-place," for she said, "Now will my husband dwell with me,
seeing that I have borne him six sons, and, also, the sons of Zebulon
will have a goodly dwelling-place in the Holy Land."[195]

Leah bore once more, and this last time it was a daughter, a man child
turned into a woman by her prayer. When she conceived for the seventh
time, she spake as follows: "God promised Jacob twelve sons. I bore him
six, and each of the two handmaids has borne him two. If, now, I were
to bring forth another son, my sister Rachel would not be equal even
unto the handmaids." Therefore she prayed to God to change the male
embryo in her womb into a female, and God hearkened unto her
prayer.[196]

Now all the wives of Jacob, Leah, Rachel, Zilpah, and Bilhah, united
their prayers with the prayer of Jacob, and together they besought God
to remove the curse of barrenness from Rachel. On New Year's Day, the
day whereon God sits in judgment upon the inhabitants of the earth, He
remembered Rachel, and granted her a son.[197] And Rachel spake, "God
hath taken away my reproach," for all the people had said that she was
not a pious woman, else had she borne children, and now that God had
hearkened to her, and opened her womb, such idle talk no longer had any
reason.[198]

By bearing a son, she had escaped another disgrace. She had said to
herself: "Jacob hath a mind to return to the land of his birth, and my
father will not be able to hinder his daughters who have borne him
children from following their husband thither with their children. But
he will not let me, the childless wife, go, too, and he will keep me
here and marry me to one of the uncircumcised."[199] She said
furthermore, "As my son hath removed my reproach, so Joshua, his
descendant, will roll away a reproach from the Israelites, when he
circumcises them beyond Jordan."[200]

Rachel called her son Joseph, "increase," saying, "God will give me an
additional son." Prophetess as she was, she foresaw she would have a
second son. But an increase added on by God is larger than the original
capital itself. Benjamin, the second son, whom Rachel regarded merely
as a supplement, had ten sons, while Joseph begot only two. These
twelve together may be considered the twelve tribes borne by
Rachel.[201] Had Rachel not used the form of expression, "The Lord add
to me another son," she herself would have begotten twelve tribes with
Jacob.[202]

JACOB FLEES BEFORE LABAN

Jacob had only been waiting for Joseph to be born to begin preparations
for his journey home. The holy spirit had revealed to him that the
house of Joseph would work the destruction of the house of Esau, and,
therefore, Jacob exclaimed at the birth of Joseph, "Now I need not fear
Esau or his legions."[203]

About this time, Rebekah sent her nurse Deborah, the daughter of Uz,
accompanied by two of Isaac's servants, to Jacob, to urge him to return
to his father's house, now that his fourteen years of service had come
to an end. Then Jacob approached Laban, and spoke, "Give me my wives
and my children, that I may go unto mine own place, and to my country,
for my mother has sent messengers unto me, bidding me to return to my
father's house."[204] Laban answered, saying, "O that I might find
favor in thine eyes! By a sign it was made known unto me that God
blesseth me for thy sake." What Laban had in mind was the treasure he
had found on the day Jacob came to him, and he considered that a token
of his beneficent powers.[205] Indeed, God had wrought many a thing in
the house of Laban that testified to the blessings spread abroad by the
pious. Shortly before Jacob came, a pest had broken out among Laban's
cattle, and with his arrival it ceased.[206] And Laban had had no son,
but during Jacob's sojourn in Haran sons were born unto him.[207]

All the hire he asked in return for his labor and for the blessings he
had brought Laban was the speckled and spotted among the goats of his
herd, and the black among the sheep. Laban assented to his conditions,
saying, "Behold, I would it might be according to thy word." The
arch-villain Laban, whose tongue wagged in all directions, and who made
all sorts of promises that were never kept, judged others by himself,
and therefore suspected Jacob of wanting to deceive him.[208] And yet,
in the end, it was Laban himself who broke his word. No less than a
hundred times he changed the agreement between them. Nevertheless his
unrighteous conduct was of no avail. Though a three days' journey had
been set betwixt Laban's flocks and Jacob's, the angels were wont to
bring the sheep belonging to Laban down to Jacob's sheep, and Jacob's
droves grew constantly larger and better.[209] Laban had given only the
feeble and sick to Jacob, yet the young of the flock, raised under
Jacob's tendance, were so excellent in quality that people bought them
at a heavy price.[210] And Jacob had no need to resort to the peeled
rods. He had but to speak, and the flocks bare according to his
desire.[211] What Laban deserved was utter ruin, for having permitted
the pious Jacob to work for him without hire, and after his wages had
been changed ten times, and ten times Laban had tried to overreach him,
God rewarded him in this way.[212] But his good luck with the flocks
was only what Jacob deserved. Every faithful laborer is rewarded by God
in this world, quite regardless of what awaits him in the world to
come.[213] With empty hands Jacob had come to Laban, and he left him
with herds numbering six hundred thousand. Their increase had been
marvellous, an increase that will be equalled only in the Messianic
time.[214]

The wealth and good fortune of Jacob called forth the envy of Laban and
his sons, and they could not hide their vexation in their intercourse
with him. And the Lord said unto Jacob, "Thy father-in-law's
countenance is not toward thee as beforetime, and yet thou tarriest
with him? Do thou rather return unto the land of thy fathers, and there
I will let My Shekinah rest upon thee, for I cannot permit the Shekinah
to reside outside of the Holy Land."[215] Immediately Jacob sent the
fleet messenger Naphtali[216] to Rachel and Leah to summon them to a
consultation, and he chose as the place of meeting the open field,
where none could overhear what was said.[217]

His two wives approved the plan of returning to his home, and Jacob
resolved at once to go away with all his substance, without as much as
acquainting Laban with his intention. Laban was gone to shear his
sheep, and so Jacob could execute his plan without delay.

That her father might not learn about their flight from his teraphim,
Rachel stole them, and she took them and concealed them upon the camel
upon which she sat, and she went on. And this is the manner they used
to make the images: They took a man who was the first-born, slew him
and took the hair off his head, then salted the head, and anointed it
with oil, then they wrote "the Name" upon a small tablet of copper or
gold, and placed it under his tongue. The head with the tablet under
the tongue was then put in a house where lights were lighted before it,
and at the time when they bowed down to it, it spoke to them on all
matters that they asked of it, and that was due to the power of the
Name which was written upon it.[218]

THE COVENANT WITH LABAN

Jacob departed and crossed the Euphrates, and set his face toward
Gilead, for the holy spirit revealed to him that God would bring help
there to his children in the days of Jephthah. Meantime the shepherds
of Haran observed that the well, which had been filled to overflowing
since the arrival of Jacob in their place, ran dry suddenly. For three
days they watched and waited, in the hope that the waters would return
in the same abundance as before. Disappointed, they finally told Laban
of the misfortune, and he divined at once that Jacob had departed
thence, for he knew that the blessing had been conferred upon Haran
only for the sake of his son-in-law's merits.[219]

On the morrow Laban rose early, assembled all the people of the city,
and pursued Jacob with the intention of killing him when he overtook
him. But the archangel Michael appeared unto him, and bade him take
heed unto himself, that he do not the least unto Jacob, else would he
suffer death himself.[220] This message from heaven came to Laban
during the night, for when, in extraordinary cases, God finds it
necessary to reveal Himself unto the heathen, He does it only in the
dark, clandestinely as it were, while He shows Himself to the prophets
of the Jews openly, during daylight.

Laban accomplished the journey in one day for which Jacob had taken
seven,[221] and he overtook him at the mountain of Gilead. When he came
upon Jacob, he found him in the act of praying and giving praise unto
God.[222] Immediately Laban fell to remonstrating with his son-in-law
for having stolen away unawares to him. He showed his true character
when he said, "It is in the power of my hand to do thee hurt, but the
God of thy father spake unto me yesternight, saying, Take heed to
thyself that thou speak not to Jacob either good or bad." That is the
way of the wicked, they boast of the evil they can do. Laban wanted to
let Jacob know that only the dream warning him against doing aught that
was harmful to Jacob prevented him from carrying out the wicked design
he had formed against him.[223]

Laban continued to take Jacob to task, and he concluded with the words,
"And now, though thou wouldst needs be gone, because thou sore longedst
after thy father's house, yet wherefore hast thou stolen my gods?" When
he pronounced the last words, his grandchildren interrupted him,
saying, "We are ashamed of thee, grandfather, that in thy old age thou
shouldst use such words as 'my gods.'" Laban searched all the tents for
his idols, going first to the tent of Jacob, which was Rachel's at the
same time, for Jacob always dwelt with his favorite wife. Finding
nothing, he went thence to Leah's tent, and to the tents of the two
handmaids, and, noticing that Rachel was feeling about here and there,
his suspicions were aroused, and he entered her tent a second time. He
would now have found what he was looking for, if a miracle had not come
to pass. The teraphim were transformed into drinking vessels, and Laban
had to desist from his fruitless search.

Now Jacob, who did not know that Rachel had stolen her father's
teraphim in order to turn him aside from his idolatrous ways, was wroth
with Laban, and began to chide with him. In the quarrel between them,
Jacob's noble character manifested itself. Notwithstanding his
excitement, he did not suffer a single unbecoming word to escape him.
He only reminded Laban of the loyalty and devotion with which he had
served him, doing for him what none other would or could have done. He
said: "I dealt wrongfully with the lion, for God had appointed of
Laban's sheep for the lion's daily sustenance, and I deprived him
thereof. Could another shepherd have done thus? Yes, the people abused
me, calling me robber and sneak thief, for they thought that only by
stealing by day and stealing by night could I replace the animals torn
by wild beasts. And as to my honesty," he continued, "is it likely
there is another son-in-law who, having lived with his father-in-law,
hath not taken some little thing from the household of his
father-in-law, a knife, or other trifle? But thou hast felt about all
my stuff, what hast thou found of all thy household stuff? Not so much
as a needle or a nail."

In his indignation, and conscious of his innocence, Jacob exclaimed,
"With whomsoever thou findest thy gods, he shall not live," words which
contained a curse—the thief was cursed with premature death, and
therefore Rachel had to die in giving birth to Benjamin. Indeed, the
curse would have taken effect at once, had it not been the wish of God
that Rachel should bear Jacob his youngest son.[224]

After the quarrel, the two men made a treaty, and with his gigantic
strength Jacob set up a huge rock as a memorial, and a heap of stones
as a sign of their covenant. In this matter Jacob followed the example
of his fathers, who likewise had covenanted with heathen nations,
Abraham with the Jebusites, and Isaac with the Philistines. Therefore
Jacob did not hesitate to make a treaty with the Arameans.[225] Jacob
summoned his sons, calling them brethren, for they were his peers in
piety and strength, and he bade them cast up heaps of stones. Thereupon
he swore unto his father-in-law that he would take no wives beside his
four daughters, either while they were alive or after their death, and
Laban, on his part, swore that he would not pass over the heaps or over
the pillar unto Jacob with hostile intent,[226] and he took the oath by
the God of Abraham, and the God of Nahor, while Jacob made mention of
the Fear of Isaac. He refrained from using the term "the God of Isaac,"
because God never unites His name with that of a living person, for the
reason that so long as a man has not ended his years, no trust may be
put in him, lest he be seduced by the evil inclination. It is true,
when He appeared unto Jacob at Beth-el, God called Himself "the God of
Isaac." There was a reason for the unusual phrase. Being blind, Isaac
led a retired life, within his tent, and the evil inclination had no
power over him any more. But though God had full confidence in Isaac,
yet Jacob could not venture to couple the name of God with the name of
a living man, wherefore he took his oath by "the Fear of Isaac."[227]

Early in the morning after the day of covenanting, Laban rose up, and
kissed his grandchildren and his daughters, and blessed them. But these
acts and words of his did not come from the heart; in his innermost
thoughts he regretted that Jacob and his family and his substance had
escaped him.[228] His true feelings he betrayed in the message which he
sent to Esau at once upon his return to Haran, by the hand of his son
Beor and ten companions of his son. The message read: "Hast thou heard
what Jacob thy brother has done unto me, who first came to me naked and
bare, and I went to meet him, and took him to my house with honor, and
brought him up, and gave him my two daughters for wives, and also two
of my maids? And God blessed him on my account, and he increased
abundantly, and had sons and daughters and maid-servants, and also an
uncommon stock of flocks and herds, camels and asses, also silver and
gold in abundance. But when he saw that his wealth increased, he left
me while I went to shear my sheep, and he rose up and fled in secrecy.
And he put his wives and children upon camels, and he led away all his
cattle and substance which he acquired in my land, and he resolved to
go to his father Isaac, to the land of Canaan. And he did not suffer me
to kiss my sons and daughters, and he carried away my daughters as
captives of the sword, and he also stole my gods, and he fled. And now
I have left him in the mountain of the brook of Jabbok, he and all
belonging to him, not a jot of his substance is lacking. If it be thy
wish to go to him, go, and there wilt thou find him, and thou canst do
unto him as thy soul desireth."[229]

Jacob had no need to fear either Laban or Esau, for on his journey he
was accompanied by two angel hosts, one going with him from Haran to
the borders of the Holy Land, where he was received by the other host,
the angels of Palestine.[230] Each of these hosts consisted of no less
than six hundred thousand angels,[231] and when he beheld them, Jacob
said: "Ye belong neither to the host of Esau, who is preparing to go
out to war against me, nor the host of Laban, who is about to pursue me
again. Ye are the hosts of the holy angels sent by the Lord." And he
gave the name Mahanaim, Double-Host, to the spot on which the second
army relieved the first.[232]

JACOB AND ESAU PREPARE TO MEET

The message of Laban awakened Esau's old hatred toward Jacob with
increased fury, and he assembled his household, consisting of sixty
men. With them and three hundred and forty inhabitants of Seir, he went
forth to do battle with Jacob and kill him. He divided his warriors
into seven cohorts, giving to his son Eliphaz his own division of
sixty, and putting the other six divisions under as many of the
Horites.

While Esau was hastening onward to meet Jacob, the messengers which
Laban had sent to Esau came to Rebekah and told her that Esau and his
four hundred men were about to make war upon Jacob, with the purpose of
slaying him and taking possession of all he had. Anxious lest Esau
should execute his plan while yet Jacob was on the journey, she hastily
dispatched seventy-two of the retainers of Isaac's household, to give
him help. Jacob, tarrying on the banks of the brook Jabbok, rejoiced at
the sight of these men, and he greeted them with the words, "This is
God's helping host," wherefore he called the place of their meeting
Mahanaim, Host.

After the warriors sent by Rebekah had satisfied his questions
regarding the welfare of his parents, they delivered his mother's
message unto him, thus: "I have heard, my son, that thy brother Esau
hath gone forth against thee on the road, with men of the children of
Seir the Horite, and therefore, my son, hearken to my voice, and take
counsel with thyself what thou wilt do, and when he cometh up to thee,
supplicate him, and do not speak roughly to him, and give him a present
from what thou possessest, and from what God has favored thee with. And
when he asketh thee concerning thy affairs, conceal nothing from him,
perhaps he may turn from his anger against thee, and thou wilt thereby
save thy soul, thou and all belonging to thee, for it is thy duty to
honor him, since he is thy elder brother."

And when Jacob heard the words of his mother which the messengers had
spoken to him, he lifted up his voice and wept bitterly, and did as his
mother commanded him.

He sent messengers to Esau to placate him, and they said unto him:
"Thus speaketh thy servant Jacob: My lord, think not that the blessing
which my father bestowed upon me profited me. Twenty years I served
Laban, and he deceived me, and changed my hire ten times, as thou well
knowest. Yet did I labor sorely in his house, and God saw my
affliction, my labor, and the work of my hands, and afterward He caused
me to find grace and favor in the sight of Laban. And through God's
great mercy and kindness, I acquired oxen and asses and cattle and
men-servants and maid servants. And now I am coming to my country and
to my home, to my father and mother, who are in the land of Canaan. And
I have sent to let my lord know all this in order to find favor in the
eyes of my lord, so that he may not imagine that I have become a man of
substance, or that the blessing with which my father blessed me has
benefited me."[233]

Furthermore spake the messengers: "Why dost thou envy me in respect to
the blessing wherewith my father blessed me? Is it that the sun shineth
in my land, and not in thine? Or doth the dew and the rain fall only
upon my land, and not upon thine? If my father blessed me with the dew
of heaven, he blessed thee with the fatness of the earth, and if he
spoke to me, Peoples will serve thee, he hath said unto thee, By thy
sword shalt thou live. How long, then, wilt thou continue to envy me?
Come, now, let us set up a covenant between us, that we will share
equally all the vexations that may occur."

Esau would not agree to this proposal, his friends dissuaded him
therefrom, saying, "Accept not these conditions, for God hath said to
Abraham, Know of a surety that thy seed shall be a stranger in a land
that is not theirs, and shall serve the people thereof, and the aliens
shall afflict them four hundred years. Wait, therefore, until Jacob and
his family go down into Egypt to pay off this debt."

Jacob also sent word to Esau, saying: "Though I dwelt with that heathen
of the heathen, Laban, yet have I not forgotten my God, but I fulfil
the six hundred and thirteen commandments of the Torah.[234] If thy
mind be set upon peace, thou wilt find me ready for peace. But if thy
desire be war, thou wilt find me ready for war. I have with me men of
valor and strength, they have but to utter a word, and God fulfils it.
I tarried with Laban until Joseph should be born, he who is destined to
subdue thee.[235] And though my descendants be held in bondage in this
world, yet a day will come when they will rule over their rulers."[236]

In reply to all these gentle words, Esau spoke with arrogance: "Surely
I have heard, and truly it has been told unto me what Jacob has been to
Laban, who brought him up in his house, and gave him his daughters for
wives, and he begot sons and daughters, and abundantly increased in
wealth and riches in Laban's house and with his help. And when he saw
that his wealth was abundant and his riches were great, he fled with
all belonging to him from Laban's house, and he carried away Laban's
daughters from their father as captives of the sword, without telling
him of it. And not only to Laban hath Jacob done thus, but also unto me
hath he done so, and he hath twice supplanted me, and shall I be
silent? Now, I have this day come with my camp to meet him, and I will
do unto him according to the desire of my heart."

The messengers dispatched by Jacob now returned to him, and reported
these words of Esau unto him.[237] They also told him that his brother
was advancing against him with an army consisting of four hundred
crowned heads, each leading a host of four hundred men.[238] "It is
true, thou art his brother, and thou treatest him as a brother should,"
they said to Jacob, "but he is an Esau, thou must be made aware of his
villainy."[239]

Jacob bore in mind the promise of God, that He would bring him back to
his father's house in peace, yet the report about his brother's purpose
alarmed him greatly. A pious man may never depend upon promises of
earthly good. God does not keep the promise if he is guilty of the
smallest conceivable trespass, and Jacob feared that he might have
forfeited happiness by reason of a sin committed by him. Moreover, he
was anxious lest Esau be the one favored by God, inasmuch as he had
these twenty years been fulfilling two Divine commands that Jacob had
had to disregard. Esau had been living in the Holy Land, Jacob outside
of it; the former had been in attendance upon his parents, the latter
dwelling at a distance from them. And much as he feared defeat, Jacob
also feared the reverse, that he might be victorious over Esau, or
might even slay his brother, which would be as bad as to be slain by
him. And he was depressed by another apprehension, that his father had
died, for he reasoned that Esau would not take such warlike steps
against his own brother, were his father still alive.[240]

When his wives saw the anxiety that possessed Jacob, they began to
quarrel with him, and reproach him for having taken them away from
their father's house, though he knew that such danger threatened from
Esau.[241] Then Jacob determined to apply the three means that might
save him from the fate impending: he would cry to God for help, appease
Esau's wrath with presents, and hold himself in readiness for war if
the worst came to the worst.[242]

He prayed to God: "O Thou God of my father Abraham, and God of my
father Isaac, God of all who walk in the ways of the pious and do like
unto them! I am not worthy of the least of all the mercies, and of all
the truth, which Thou hast showed unto Thy servant. O Lord of the
world, as Thou didst not suffer Laban to execute his evil designs
against me, so also bring to naught the purpose of Esau, who desireth
to slay me. O Lord of the world, in Thy Torah which Thou wilt give us
on Mount Sinai it is written, And whether it be cow or ewe, ye shall
not kill it and her young both in one day. If this wretch should come
and murder my children and their mothers at the same time, who would
then desire to read Thy Torah which Thou wilt give us on Mount Sinai?
And yet Thou didst speak, For the sake of thy merits and for the merits
of thy fathers I will do good unto thee, and in the future world thy
children shall be as numerous as the sand of the sea."

As Jacob prayed for his own deliverance, so also he prayed for the
salvation of his descendants, that they might not be annihilated by the
descendants of Esau.

Such was the prayer of Jacob when he saw Esau approaching from afar,
and God heard his petition and looked upon his tears, and He gave him
the assurance that for his sake his descendants, too, would be redeemed
from all distress.[243]

Then the Lord sent three angels, and they went before Esau, and they
appeared unto Esau and his people as hundreds and thousands of men
riding upon horses. They were furnished with all sorts of weapons, and
divided into four columns. And one division went on, and they found
Esau coming with four hundred men, and the division ran toward them,
and terrified them. Esau fell off his horse in alarm, and all his men
separated from him in great fear, while the approaching column shouted
after them, "Verily, we are the servants of Jacob, the servant of God,
and who can stand against us?" Esau then said unto them, "O, then my
lord and brother Jacob is your lord, whom I have not seen these twenty
years, and now that I have this day come to see him, do you treat me in
this manner?" The angels answered, "As the Lord liveth, were not Jacob
thy brother, we had not left one remaining of thee and thy people, but
on account of Jacob we will do nothing to thee." This division passed
from Esau, and when he had gone from there about a league, the second
division came toward him, and they also did unto Esau and his men as
the first had done to them, and when they permitted him to go on, the
third came and did like the first, and when the third had passed also,
and Esau still continued with his men on the road to Jacob, the fourth
division came and did to them as the others had done. And Esau was
greatly afraid of his brother, because he thought that the four columns
of the army which he had encountered were the servants of Jacob.

After Jacob had made an end of praying, he divided all that journeyed
with him into two companies, and he set over them Damesek and Alinus,
the two sons of Eliezer, the bondman of Abraham, and their sons.[244]
Jacob's example teaches us not to conceal the whole of our fortune in
one hiding-place, else we run the danger of losing everything at one
stroke.

Of his cattle he sent a part to Esau as a present, first dividing it
into three droves in order to impress his brother more. When Esau
received the first drove, he would think he had the whole gift that had
been sent to him, and suddenly he would be astonished by the appearance
of the second portion, and again by the third. Jacob knew his brother's
avarice only too well.[245]

The men who were the bearers of Jacob's present to Esau were charged
with the following message, "This is an offering to my lord Esau from
his slave Jacob." But God took these words of Jacob in ill part,
saying, "Thou profanest what is holy when thou callest Esau lord."
Jacob excused himself; he was but flattering the wicked in order to
escape death at his hands.[246]

JACOB WRESTLES WITH THE ANGEL

The servants of Jacob went before him with the present for Esau, and he
followed with his wives and his children. As he was about to pass over
the ford of Jabbok, he observed a shepherd, who likewise had sheep and
camels. The stranger approached Jacob and proposed that they should
ford the stream together, and help each other move their cattle over,
and Jacob assented, on the condition that his possessions should be put
across first. In the twinkling of an eye Jacob's sheep were transferred
to the other side of the stream by the shepherd. Then the flocks of the
shepherd were to be moved by Jacob, but no matter how many he took over
to the opposite bank, always there remained some on the hither shore.
There was no end to the cattle, though Jacob labored all the night
through. At last he lost patience, and he fell upon the shepherd and
caught him by the throat, crying out, "O thou wizard, thou wizard, at
night no enchantment succeeds!" The angel thought, "Very well, let him
know once for all with whom he has had dealings," and with his finger
he touched the earth, whence fire burst forth. But Jacob said, "What!
thou thinkest thus to affright me, who am made wholly of fire?"[247]

The shepherd was no less a personage than the archangel Michael, and in
his combat with Jacob he was assisted by the whole host of angels under
his command. He was on the point of inflicting a dangerous wound upon
Jacob, when God appeared, and all the angels, even Michael himself,
felt their strength ooze away. Seeing that he could not prevail against
Jacob, the archangel touched the hollow of his thigh, and injured him,
and God rebuked him, saying, "Dost thou act as is seemly, when thou
causest a blemish in My priest Jacob?" Michael said in astonishment,
"Why, it is I who am Thy priest!" But God said, "Thou art My priest in
heaven, and he is My priest on earth." Thereupon Michael summoned the
archangel Raphael, saying, "My comrade, I pray thee, help me out of my
distress, for thou art charged with the healing of all disease," and
Raphael cured Jacob of the injury Michael had inflicted.

The Lord continued to reproach Michael, saying, "Why didst thou do harm
unto My first-born son?" and the archangel answered, "I did it only to
glorify Thee," and then God appointed Michael as the guardian angel of
Jacob and his seed unto the end of all generations, with these words:
"Thou art a fire, and so is Jacob a fire; thou art the head of the
angels, and he is the head of the nations; thou art supreme over all
the angels, and he is supreme over all the peoples. Therefore he who is
supreme over all the angels shall be appointed unto him who is supreme
over all the peoples, that he may entreat mercy for him from the
Supreme One over all."

Then Michael said unto Jacob, "How is it possible that thou who couldst
prevail against me, the most distinguished of the angels, art afraid of
Esau?"

When the day broke, Michael said to Jacob, "Let me go, for the day
breaketh," but Jacob held him back, saying, "Art thou a thief, or a
gambler with dice, that thou fearest the daylight?" At that moment
appeared many different hosts of angels, and they called unto Michael:
"Ascend, O Michael, the time of song hath come, and if thou art not in
heaven to lead the choir, none will sing." And Michael entreated Jacob
with supplications to let him go, for he feared the angels of 'Arabot
would consume him with fire, if he were not there to start the songs of
praise at the proper time. Jacob said, "I will not let thee go, except
thou bless me," whereto Michael made reply: "Who is greater, the
servant or the son? I am the servant, and thou art the son. Why, then,
cravest thou my blessing?"[248] Jacob urged as an argument, "The angels
that visited Abraham did not leave without blessing him," but Michael
held, "They were sent by God for that very purpose, and I was not." Yet
Jacob insisted upon his demand, and Michael pleaded with him, saying,
"The angels that betrayed a heavenly secret were banished from their
place for one hundred and thirty eight years. Dost thou desire that I
should acquaint thee with what would cause my banishment likewise?" In
the end the angel nevertheless had to yield; Jacob could not be moved,
and Michael took counsel with himself thus: "I will reveal a secret to
him, and if God demands to know why I revealed it, I will make answer,
Thy children stand upon their wishes with Thee, and Thou dost yield to
them. How, then, could I have left Jacob's wish unfulfilled?"

Then Michael spoke to Jacob, saying: "A day will come when God will
reveal Himself unto thee, and He will change thy name, and I shall be
present when He changeth it.[249] Thy name shall be called no more
Jacob, but Israel, for happy thou, of woman born, who didst enter the
heavenly palace, and didst escape thence with thy life." And Michael
blessed Jacob with the words, "May it be the will of God that thy
descendants be as pious as thou art."[250]

At the same time the archangel reminded Jacob that he had promised to
give a tithe of his possessions unto God, and at once Jacob separated
five hundred and fifty head of cattle from his herds, which counted
fifty-five hundred. Then Michael went on, "But thou hast sons, and of
them thou hast not set apart the tenth." Jacob proceeded to pass his
sons in review: Reuben, Joseph, Dan, and Gad being the first-born, each
of his mother, were exempt, and there remained but eight sons, and when
he had named them, down to Benjamin, he had to go back and begin over
again with Simon, the ninth, and finish with Levi as the tenth.

Michael took Levi with him into heaven, and presented him before God,
saying, "O Lord of the world, this one is Thy lot, and the tenth
belonging unto Thee," and God stretched forth His hand and blessed Levi
with the blessing that his children should be the servants of God on
earth as the angels were His servants on high. Michael spoke again,
"Doth not a king provide for the sustenance of his servants?" whereupon
God appointed for the Levites all that was holy unto the Lord.[251]

Then Jacob spoke to the angel: "My father conferred the blessing upon
me that was intended for Esau, and now I desire to know whether thou
wilt acknowledge the blessing as mine, or wilt bring charges against me
on account of it." And the angel said: "I acknowledge the blessing to
be thine by right. Thou didst not gain it by craft and cunning, and I
and all the heavenly powers recognize it to be valid, for thou hast
shown thyself master over the mighty powers of the heavens as over Esau
and his legions."[252]

And even then Jacob would not let the angel depart, he had to reveal
his name to him first, and the angel made known to him that it was
Israel, the same name that Jacob would once bear.[253]

At last the angel departed, after Jacob had blessed him, and Jacob
called the place of wrestling Penuel, the same place to which before he
had given the name Mahanaim, for both words have but one meaning, the
place of encounter with angels.[254]

THE MEETING BETWEEN ESAU AND JACOB

At the break of day the angel left off from wrestling with Jacob. The
dawn on that day was of particularly short duration. The sun rose two
hours before his time, by way of compensation for having set early, on
the day on which Jacob passed Mount Moriah on his journey to Haran, to
induce him to turn aside and lodge for a night on the future Temple
place.[255] Indeed, the power of the sun on this same day was
altogether remarkable. He shone with the brilliance and ardor with
which he was invested during the six days of the creation, and as he
will shine at the end of days, to make whole the halt and the blind
among the Jews and to consume the heathen. This same healing and
devastating property he had on that day, too, for Jacob was cured,
while Esau and his princes were all but burnt up by his terrible
heat.[256]

Jacob was in dire need of healing lotions for the injury he had
sustained in the encounter with the angel. The combat between them had
been grim, the dust whirled up by the scuffle rose to the very throne
of God.[257] Though Jacob prevailed against his huge opponent, as big
as one-third of the whole world, throwing him to the ground and keeping
him pinned down, yet the angel had injured him by clutching at the
sinew of the hip which is upon the hollow of the thigh, so that it was
dislocated, and Jacob halted upon his thigh.[258] The healing power of
the sun restored him, nevertheless his children took it upon themselves
not to eat the sinew of the hip which is upon the hollow of the thigh,
for they reproached themselves with having been the cause of his
mishap, they should not have left him alone in that night.[259]

Now, although Jacob had prepared for the worst, for open hostilities
even, yet when he saw Esau and his men, he thought it discreet to make
separate divisions of the households of Leah, Rachel, and the
handmaids, and divide the children unto each of them. And he put the
handmaids and their children foremost, and Leah and her children after,
and Rachel and Joseph hindermost. It was the stratagem which the fox
used with the lion. Once upon a time the king of beasts was wroth with
his subjects, and they looked hither and thither for a spokesman who
mastered the art of appeasing their ruler. The fox offered himself for
the undertaking, saying, "I know three hundred fables which will allay
his fury." His offer was accepted with joy. On the way to the lion, the
fox suddenly stood still, and in reply to the questions put to him, he
said, "I have forgotten one hundred of the three hundred fables."
"Never mind," said those accompanying him, "two hundred will serve the
purpose." A little way further on the fox again stopped suddenly, and,
questioned again, he confessed that he had forgotten half of the two
hundred remaining fables. The animals with him still consoled him that
the hundred he knew would suffice. But the fox halted a third time, and
then he admitted that his memory had failed him entirely, and he had
forgotten all the fables he knew, and he advised that every animal
approach the king on his own account and endeavor to appease his anger.
At first Jacob had had courage enough to enter the lists with Esau in
behalf of all with him. Now he came to the conclusion to let each one
try to do what he could for himself.

However, Jacob was too fond a father to expose his family to the first
brunt of the danger. He himself passed over before all the rest,
saying, "It is better that they attack me than my children."[260] After
him came the handmaids and their children. His reason for placing them
there was that, if Esau should be overcome by passion for the women,
and try to violate them, he would thus meet the handmaids first, and in
the meantime Jacob would have the chance of preparing for more
determined resistance in the defense of the honor of his wives.[261]
Joseph and Rachel came last, and Joseph walked in front of his mother,
though Jacob had ordered the reverse. But the son knew both the beauty
of his mother and the lustfulness of his uncle, and therefore he tried
to hide Rachel from the sight of Esau.[262]

In the vehemence of his rage against Jacob, Esau vowed that he would
not slay him with bow and arrow, but would bite him dead with his
mouth, and suck his blood. But he was doomed to bitter disappointment,
for Jacob's neck turned as hard as ivory, and in his helpless fury Esau
could but gnash his teeth.[263] The two brothers were like the ram and
the wolf. A wolf wanted to tear a ram in pieces, and the ram defended
himself with his horns, striking them deep into the flesh of the wolf.
Both began to howl, the wolf because he could not secure his prey, and
the ram from fear that the wolf renew his attacks. Esau bawled because
his teeth were hurt by the ivory-like flesh of Jacob's neck, and Jacob
feared that his brother would make a second attempt to bite him.[264]

Esau addressed a question to his brother. "Tell me," he said, "what was
the army I met?" for on his march against Jacob he had had a most
peculiar experience with a great host of forty thousand warriors. It
consisted of various kinds of troops, armor-clad soldiers walking on
foot, mounted on horses, and seated in chariots, and they all threw
themselves upon Esau when they met. He demanded to know whence they
came, and the strange soldiers hardly interrupted their savage
onslaught to reply that they belonged to Jacob. Only when Esau told
them that Jacob was his brother did they leave off, saying, "Woe to us
if our master hears that we did thee harm." This was the army and the
encounter Esau inquired about as soon as he met his brother. But the
army was a host of angels, who had the appearance of warriors to Esau
and his men.[265] Also the messengers sent by Jacob to Esau had been
angels, for no mere human being could be induced to go forth and face
the recreant.[266]

Jacob now gave Esau the presents intended for him, a tenth of all his
cattle,[267] and also pearls and precious stones,[268] and, besides, a
falcon for the chase.[269] But even the animals refused to give up
their gentle master Jacob and become the property of the villain Esau.
They all ran away when Jacob wanted to hand them over to his brother,
and the result was that the only ones that reached Esau were the feeble
and the lame, all that could not make good their escape.[270]

At first Esau declined the presents offered to him. Naturally, that was
a mere pretense. While refusing the gifts with words, he held his hand
outstretched ready to receive them.[271] Jacob took the hint, and
insisted that he accept them, saying: "Nay, I pray thee, if now I have
found grace in thy sight, then receive my present at my hand, forasmuch
as I have seen thy face, as I have seen the face of angels, and thou
art pleased with me." The closing words were chosen with
well-calculated purpose. Jacob wanted Esau to derive the meaning that
he had intercourse with angels, and to be inspired with awe. Jacob was
like the man invited to a banquet by his mortal enemy who has been
seeking an opportunity to slay him. When the guest divines the purpose
for which he has been brought thither, he says to the host: "What a
magnificent and delicious meal this is! But once before in my life did
I partake of one like it, and that was when I was bidden by the king to
his table"—enough to drive terror to the heart of the would-be slayer.
He takes good care not to harm a man on such intimate terms with the
king as to be invited to his table![272]

Jacob had valid reason for recalling his encounter with the angel, for
it was the angel of Esau who had measured his strength with Jacob's,
and had been overcome.[273]

As Esau accepted the presents of Jacob willingly on this first
occasion, so he continued to accept them for a whole year; daily Jacob
gave him presents as on the day of their meeting, for, he said, "'A
gift doth blind the eyes of the wise,' and how much more doth it blind
the wicked! Therefore will I give him presents upon presents, perhaps
he will let me alone." Besides, he did not attach much value to the
possessions he had acquired outside of the Holy Land. Such possessions
are not a blessing, and he did not hesitate to part with them.

Beside the presents which Jacob gave Esau, he also paid out a large sum
of money to him for the Cave of Machpelah. Immediately upon his arrival
in the Holy Land he sold all he had brought with him from Haran, and a
pile of gold was the proceeds of the sale. He spoke to Esau, saying:
"Like me thou hast a share in the Cave of Machpelah, wilt thou take
this pile of gold for thy portion therein?" "What care I for the Cave?"
returned Esau. "Gold is what I want," and for his share in Machpelah he
took the gold realized from the sale of the possessions Jacob had
accumulated outside of the Holy Land. But God "filled the vacuum
without delay," and Jacob was as rich as before.[274]

Wealth was not an object of desire to Jacob. He would have been well
content, in his own behalf and in behalf of his family, to resign all
earthly treasures in favor of Esau and his family. He said to Esau: "I
foresee that in future days suffering will be inflicted by thy children
upon mine. But I do not demur, thou mayest exercise thy dominion and
wear thy crown until the time when the Messiah springs from my loins,
and receives the rule from thee." These words spoken by Jacob will be
realized in days to come, when all the nations will rise up against the
kingdom of Edom, and take away one city after another from him, one
realm after another, until they reach Bet-Gubrin, and then the Messiah
will appear and assume his kingship. The angel of Edom will flee for
refuge to Bozrah, but God will appear there, and slay him, for though
Bozrah is one of the cities of refuge, yet will the Lord exercise the
right of the avenger therein. He will seize the angel by his hair, and
Elijah will slaughter him, letting the blood spatter the garments of
God.[275] All this Jacob had in mind when he said to Esau, "Let my
lord, I pray thee, pass over before his servant, until I come unto my
lord unto Seir." Jacob himself never went to Seir. What he meant was
the Messianic time when Israel shall go to Seir, and take possession
thereof.[276]

Jacob tarried in Succoth a whole year, and he opened a house of
learning there.[277] Then he journeyed on to Shechem, while Esau betook
himself to Seir, saying to himself, "How long shall I be a burden to my
brother?" for it was during Jacob's sojourn at Succoth that Esau
received daily presents from Jacob.[278]

And Jacob, after abiding these many years in a strange land, came to
Shechem in peace, unimpaired in mind and body. He had forgotten none of
the knowledge he had acquired before; the gifts he gave to Esau did not
encroach upon his wealth; the injury inflicted by the angel that
wrestled with him had been healed, and likewise his children were sound
and healthy.[279]

Jacob entered Shechem on a Friday, late in the afternoon, and his first
concern was to lay out the boundaries of the city, that the laws of the
Sabbath might not be transgressed. As soon as he was settled in the
place, he sent presents to the notables. A man must be grateful to a
city from which he derives benefits. No less did the common people
enjoy his bounty. For them he opened a market where he sold all wares
at low prices.[280]

Also he lost no time in buying a parcel of ground, for it is the duty
of every man of substance who comes to the Holy Land from outside to
make himself the possessor of land there.[281] He gave a hundred lambs
for his estate, a hundred yearling sheep, and a hundred pieces of
money, and received in return a bill of sale, to which he attached his
signature, using the letters Yod-He for it. And then he erected an
altar to God upon his land, and he said, "Thou art the Lord of all
celestial things, and I am the lord of all earthly things." But God
said, "Not even the overseer of the synagogue arrogates privileges in
the synagogue, and thou assumest lordship with a high hand? Forsooth,
on the morrow thy daughter will go abroad, and she shall be
humbled."[282]

THE OUTRAGE AT SHECHEM

While Jacob and his sons were sitting in the house of learning,
occupied with the study of the Torah,[283] Dinah went abroad to see the
dancing and singing women, whom Shechem had hired to dance and play in
the streets in order to entice her forth.[284] Had she remained at
home, nothing would have happened to her. But she was a woman, and all
women like to show themselves in the street.[285] When Shechem caught
sight of her, he seized her by main force, young though she was,[286]
and violated her in beastly fashion.[287]

This misfortune befell Jacob as a punishment for his excessive
self-confidence. In his negotiations with Laban, he had used the
expression, "My righteousness shall answer for me hereafter." Besides,
on his return to Palestine, when he was preparing to meet his brother,
he concealed his daughter Dinah in a chest, lest Esau desire to have
her for wife, and he be obliged to give her to him. God spoke to him,
saying: "Herein hast thou acted unkindly toward thy brother, and
therefore Dinah will have to marry Job, one that is neither circumcised
nor a proselyte. Thou didst refuse to give her to one that is
circumcised, and one that is uncircumcised will take her. Thou didst
refuse to give her to Esau in lawful wedlock, and now she will fall a
victim to the ravisher's illicit passion."[288]

When Jacob heard that Shechem had defiled his daughter, he sent twelve
servants to fetch Dinah from Shechem's house, but Shechem went out to
them with his men, and drove them from his house, and he would not
suffer them to come unto Dinah, and he kissed and embraced her before
their eyes. Jacob then sent two maidens of his servants' daughters to
remain with Dinah in the house of Shechem. Shechem bade three of his
friends go to his father Hamor, the son of Haddakum, the son of Pered,
and say, "Get me this damsel to wife." Hamor tried at first to persuade
his son not to take a Hebrew woman to wife, but when Shechem persisted
in his request, he did according to the word of his son, and went forth
to communicate with Jacob concerning the matter. In the meanwhile the
sons of Jacob returned from the field, and, kindled with wrath, they
spoke unto their father, saying, "Surely death is due to this man and
his household, because the Lord God of the whole earth commanded Noah
and his children that man shall never rob nor commit adultery. Now,
behold, Shechem has ravaged and committed fornication with our sister,
and not one of all the people of the city spake a word to him." And
whilst they were speaking, Hamor came to speak to Jacob the words of
his son concerning Dinah, and after he ceased to speak, Shechem himself
came to Jacob and repeated the request made by his father. Simon and
Levi answered Hamor and Shechem deceitfully, saying: "All you have
spoken unto us we will do. And, behold, our sister is in your house,
but keep away from her until we send to our father Isaac concerning
this matter, for we can do nothing without his counsel. He knows the
ways of our father Abraham, and whatever he saith unto us we will tell
you, we will conceal nothing from you."

Shechem and his father went home thereafter, satisfied with the result
achieved, and when they had gone, the sons of Jacob asked him to seek
counsel and pretext in order to kill all the inhabitants of the city,
who had deserved this punishment on account of their wickedness. Then
Simon said to them: "I have good counsel to give you. Bid them be
circumcised. If they consent not, we shall take our daughter from them,
and go away. And if they consent to do this, then, when they are in
pain, we shall attack them and slay them." The next morning Shechem and
his father came again to Jacob, to speak concerning Dinah, and the sons
of Jacob spoke deceitfully to them, saying: "We told our father Isaac
all your words, and your words pleased him, but he said, that thus did
Abraham his father command him from God, that any man that is not of
his descendants, who desireth to take one of his daughters to wife,
shall cause every male belonging to him to be circumcised."

Shechem and his father hastened to do the wishes of the sons of Jacob,
and they persuaded also the men of the city to do likewise, for they
were greatly esteemed by them, being the princes of the land.

On the next day, Shechem and his father rose up early in the morning,
and they assembled all the men of the city, and they called for the
sons of Jacob, and they circumcised Shechem, his father, his five
brothers, and all the males in the city, six hundred and forty-five men
and two hundred and seventy-six lads. Haddakum, the grandfather of
Shechem, and his six brothers would not be circumcised, and they were
greatly incensed against the people of the city for submitting to the
wishes of the sons of Jacob.

In the evening of the second day, Shechem and his father sent to have
eight little children whom their mothers had concealed brought to them
to be circumcised. Haddakum and his six brothers sprang at the
messengers, and sought to slay them, and sought to slay also Shechem,
Hamor, and Dinah. They chided Shechem and his father for doing a thing
that their fathers had never done, which would raise the ire of the
inhabitants of the land of Canaan against them, as well as the ire of
all the children of Ham, and that on account of a Hebrew woman.
Haddakum and his brothers finished by saying: "Behold, to-morrow we
will go and assemble our Canaanitish brethren, and we will come and
smite you and all in whom you trust, that there shall not be a remnant
left of you or them."

When Hamor and his son Shechem and all the people of the city heard
this, they were sore afraid, and they repented what they had done, and
Shechem and his father answered Haddakum and his brothers: "Because we
saw that the Hebrews would not accede to our wishes concerning their
daughter, we did this thing, but when we shall have obtained our
request from them, we will then do unto them that which is in your
hearts and in ours, as soon as we shall become strong."

Dinah, who heard their words, hastened and dispatched one of her
maidens whom her father had sent to take care of her in Shechem's
house, and informed Jacob and his sons of the conspiracy plotted
against them. When the sons of Jacob heard this, they were filled with
wrath, and Simon and Levi swore, and said, "As the Lord liveth, by
to-morrow there shall not be a remnant left In the whole city."

They began the extermination by killing eighteen of the twenty young
men who had concealed themselves and were not circumcised, and two of
them fled and escaped to some lime pits that were in the city. Then
Simon and Levi slew all the city, not leaving a male over, and while
they were looking for spoils outside of the city, three hundred women
rose against them and threw stones and dust upon them, but Simon
single-handed slew them all, and returned to the city, where he joined
Levi. Then they took away from the people outside of the city their
sheep, their oxen, their cattle, and also the women and the little
children, and they led all these away, and took them to the city to
their father Jacob. The number of women whom they did not slay, but
only took captive, was eighty-five virgins, among them a young damsel
of great beauty by the name of Bunah, whom Simon took to wife. The
number of the males which they took captive and did not slay was
forty-seven, and all these men and women were servants to the sons of
Jacob, and to their children after them, until the day they left Egypt.

A WAR FRUSTRATED

When Simon and Levi had gone from the city, the two young men who had
concealed themselves in the lime pits, and were not slain amongst the
people of the city, rose up, and they found the city desolate, without
a man, only weeping women, and they cried out, saying, "Behold, this is
the evil which the sons of Jacob did who destroyed one of the Canaanite
cities, and were not afraid of all the land of Canaan."

They left the city and went to Tappuah, and told the inhabitants all
that the sons of Jacob had done to the city of Shechem. Jashub, the
king of Tappuah, sent to Shechem to see whether these young men told
the truth, for he did not believe them, saying, "How could two men
destroy a large city like Shechem?" The messengers of Jashub returned,
and they reported, "The city is destroyed, not a man is left there,
only weeping women, neither are there flocks and cattle there, for all
that was in the city was taken away by the sons of Jacob."

Jashub wondered thereat, for the like had not been heard from the days
of Nimrod, and not even from the remotest times, that two men should be
able to destroy so large a city, and he decided to go to war against
the Hebrews, and avenge the cause of the people of Shechem. His
counsellors said to him: "If two of them laid waste a whole city,
surely if thou goest against them, they all will rise up against us,
and destroy us. Therefore, send to the kings round about, that we all
together fight against the sons of Jacob, and prevail against them."

The seven kings of the Amorites, when they heard the evil that the sons
of Jacob had done to the city of Shechem, assembled together, with all
their armies, ten thousand men, with drawn swords, and they came to
fight against the sons of Jacob. And Jacob was greatly afraid, and he
said to Simon and Levi, "Why have you brought such evil upon me? I was
at rest, and you provoked the inhabitants of the land against me by
your acts."

Then Judah spoke to his father: "Was it for naught that Simon and Levi
killed the inhabitants of Shechem? Verily, it was because Shechem
dishonored our sister, and transgressed the command of our God to Noah
and his children, and not one of the inhabitants of the city interfered
in the matter. Now, why art thou afraid, and why art thou displeased at
my brethren? Surely, our God, who delivered the city of Shechem and its
people into their hand, He will also deliver into our hands all the
Canaanitish kings who are coming against us. Now cast away thy fears,
and pray to God to assist us and deliver us."

Judah then addressed his brethren, saying: "The Lord our God is with
us! Fear naught, then! Stand ye forth, each man girt with his weapons
of war, his bow and his sword, and we will go and fight against the
uncircumcised. The Lord is our God, He will save us."

Jacob, his eleven sons, and one hundred servants belonging to Isaac,
who had come to their assistance, marched forward to meet the Amorites,
a people exceedingly numerous, like unto the sand upon the sea-shore.
The sons of Jacob sent unto their grandfather Isaac, at Hebron,
requesting him to pray unto the Lord to protect them from the hand of
the Canaanites, and he prayed as follows: "O Lord God, Thou didst
promise my father, saying, I will multiply thy seed as the stars of
heaven, and also me Thou didst promise that Thou wouldst establish Thy
word to my father. Now, O Lord, God of the whole world, pervert, I pray
Thee, the counsel of these kings, that they may not fight against my
sons, and impress the hearts of their kings and their people with the
terror of my sons, and bring down their pride that they turn away from
my sons. Deliver my sons and their servants from them with Thy strong
hand and outstretched arm, for power and might are in Thy hands to do
all this."

Jacob also prayed unto God, and said: "O Lord God, powerful and exalted
God, who hast reigned from days of old, from then until now and
forever! Thou art He who stirreth up wars and causeth them to cease. In
Thy hand are power and might to exalt and to bring low. O may my prayer
be acceptable unto Thee, that Thou mayest turn to me with Thy mercies,
to impress the hearts of these kings and their people with the terror
of my sons, and terrify them and their camps, and with Thy great
kindness deliver all those that trust in Thee, for Thou art He who
subdues the peoples under us, and the nations under our feet."

God heard the prayers of Isaac and Jacob, and He filled the hearts of
all the advisers of the Canaanite kings with great fear and terror, and
when the kings, who were undecided whether to undertake a campaign
against the sons of Jacob, consulted them, they said: "Are you silly,
or is there no understanding in you, that you propose to fight with the
Hebrews? Why do you take delight in your own destruction this day?
Behold, two of them came to the city of Shechem without fear or terror,
and they put all the inhabitants of the city to the sword, no man stood
up against them, and how will you be able to fight with them all?"

The royal counsellors then proceeded to enumerate all the mighty things
God had done for Abraham, Jacob, and the sons of Jacob, such as had not
been done from days of old and by any of the gods of the nations. When
the kings heard all the words of their advisers, they were afraid of
the sons of Jacob, and they would not fight against them. They turned
back with their armies on that day, each to his own city. But the sons
of Jacob kept their station that day till evening, and seeing that the
kings did not advance to do battle with them in order to avenge the
inhabitants of Shechem whom they had killed, they returned home.[289]

The wrath of the Lord descended upon the inhabitants of Shechem to the
uttermost on account of their wickedness. For they had sought to do
unto Sarah and Rebekah as they did unto Dinah, but the Lord had
prevented them. Also they had persecuted Abraham when he was a
stranger, and they had vexed his flocks when they were big with young,
and Eblaen, one born in his house, they had handled most shamefully.
And thus they did to all strangers, taking away their wives by
force.[290]

THE WAR WITH THE NINEVITES

The destruction of Shechem by Simon and Levi terrified the heathen all
around. If two sons of Jacob had succeeded in ruining a great city like
Shechem, they argued, what would Jacob and all his sons accomplish
acting together? Jacob meanwhile left Shechem, hindered by none, and
with all his possessions he set out, to betake himself to his father
Isaac. But after an eight days' march he encountered a powerful army,
which had been dispatched from Nineveh to levy tribute upon the whole
world and subjugate it. On coming in the vicinity of Shechem, this army
heard to what the city had been exposed at the hands of the sons of
Jacob, and fury seized the men, and they resolved to make war upon
Jacob.

But Jacob said to his sons: "Fear not, God will be your helper, and He
will fight for you against your enemies. Only you must put away from
you the strange gods in your possession, and you must purify
yourselves, and wash your garments clean."

Girt with his sword, Jacob advanced against the enemy, and in the first
onslaught he slew twelve thousand of the weak in the army. Then Judah
spake to him, and said, "Father, thou art tired and exhausted, let me
fight the enemy alone." And Jacob replied, saying, "Judah, my son, I
know thy strength and thy bravery, that they are exceeding great, so
that none in the world is like unto thee therein." His countenance like
a lion's and inflamed with wrath, Judah attacked the army, and slew
twelve myriads of tried and famous warriors. The battle raged hot in
front and in the rear, and Levi his brother hastened to his aid, and
together they won a victory over the Ninevites. Judah alone slew five
thousand more soldiers, and Levi dealt blows right and left with such
vigor that the men of the enemy's army fell like grain under the scythe
of the reaper.

Alarmed about their fate, the people of Nineveh said: "How long shall
we fight with these devils? Let us return to our land, lest they
exterminate us root and branch, without leaving a remnant." But their
king desired to restrain them, and he said: "O ye heroes, ye men of
might and valor, have you lost your senses that you ask to return to
your land? Is this your bravery? After you have subdued many kingdoms
and countries, ye are not able to hold out against twelve men? If the
nations and the kings whom we have made tributary to ourselves hear of
this, they will rise up against us as a man, and make a laughing-stock
of us, and do with us according to their desire. Take courage, ye men
of the great city of Nineveh, that your honor and your name be exalted,
and you become not a mockery in the mouth of your enemies."

These words of their king inspired the warriors to continue the
campaign. They sent messengers to all the lands to ask for help, and,
reinforced by their allies, the Ninevites assaulted Jacob a second
time. He spoke to his sons, saying, "Take courage and be men, fight
against your enemies." His twelve sons then took up their stand in
twelve different places, leaving considerable intervals between one and
another, and Jacob, a sword in his right hand and a bow in his left,
advanced to the combat. It was a desperate encounter for him. He had to
ward off the enemy to the right and the left. Nevertheless he inflicted
a severe blow, and when a band of two thousand men beset him, he leapt
up in the air and over them and vanished from their sight. Twenty-two
myriads he slew on this day, and when evening came he planned to flee
under cover of darkness. But suddenly ninety thousand men appeared, and
he was compelled to continue the fight. He rushed at them with his
sword, but it broke, and he had to defend himself by grinding huge
rocks into lime powder, and this he threw at the enemy and blinded them
so that they could see nothing. Luckily, darkness was about to fall,
and he could permit himself to take rest for the night.

In the morning, Judah said to Jacob, "Father, thou didst fight the
whole of yesterday, and thou art weary and exhausted. Let me fight this
day." When the warriors caught sight of Judah's lion face and his lion
teeth, and heard his lion voice, they were greatly afraid. Judah hopped
and jumped over the army like a flea, from one warrior to the next,
raining blows down upon them incessantly, and by evening he had slain
eighty thousand and ninety-six men, armed with swords and bows. But
fatigue overcame him, and Zebulon took up his station at his brother's
left hand, and mowed down eighty thousand of the enemy. Meantime Judah
regained some of his strength, and, rising up in wrath and fury, and
gnashing his teeth with a noise like unto thunder claps in midsummer,
he put the army to flight. It ran a distance of eighteen miles, and
Judah could enjoy a respite that night.

But the army reappeared on the morrow, ready for battle again, to take
revenge on Jacob and his children. They blew their trumpets, whereupon
Jacob spake to his sons, "Go forth and fight with your enemies."
Issachar and Gad said that this day they would take the combat upon
themselves, and their father bade them do it while their brothers kept
guard and held themselves in readiness to aid and relieve the two
combatants when they showed signs of weariness and exhaustion.

The leaders of the day slew forty-eight thousand warriors, and put to
flight twelve myriads more, who concealed themselves in a cave.
Issachar and Gad fetched trees from the woods, piled the trunks up in
front of the opening of the cave, and set fire to them. When the fire
blazed with a fierce flame, the warriors spoke, saying: "Why should we
stay in this cave and perish with the smoke and the heat? Rather will
we go forth and fight with our enemies, then we may have a chance of
saving ourselves." They left the cave, going through openings at the
side, and they attacked Issachar and Gad in front and behind. Dan and
Naphtali saw the plight of their brothers and ran to their assistance.
They laid about with their swords, hewing a way for themselves to
Issachar and Gad, and, united with them, they, too, opposed the foe.

It was the third day of the conflict, and the Ninevites were reinforced
by an army as numerous as the sand on the sea-shore. All the sons of
Jacob united to oppose it, and they routed the host. But when they
pursued after the enemy, the fugitives faced about and resumed the
battle, saying: "Why should we run away? Let us rather fight them,
perhaps we may be victorious, now they are weary." A stubborn combat
ensued, and when Jacob saw the vehement attack upon his children, he
himself sprang into the thick of the battle and dealt blows right and
left. Nevertheless the heathen were victorious, and succeeded in
separating Judah from his brethren. As soon as Jacob was aware of the
peril of his son, he whistled, and Judah responded, and his brethren
hastened to his aid. Judah was fatigued and parched with thirst, and
there was no water for him to drink, but he dug his finger into the
ground with such force that water gushed out in the sight of the whole
army. Then said one warrior to another, "I will flee before these
devils, for God fights on their side," and he and all the army fled
precipitately, pursued by the sons of Jacob. Soldiers without number
they slew, and then they went back to their tents. On their return they
noticed that Joseph was missing, and they feared he had been killed or
taken captive. Naphtali ran after the retreating enemy, to make search
for Joseph, and he found him still fighting against the Ninevite army.
He joined Joseph, and killed countless soldiers, and of the fugitives
many drowned, and the men that were besetting Joseph ran off and left
him in safety.

At the end of the war Jacob continued his journey, unhindered, to his
father Isaac.[291]

THE WAR WITH THE AMORITES

At first the people that lived round about Shechem made no attempt to
molest Jacob, who had returned thither after a while, together with his
household, to take up his abode there and establish himself. But at the
end of seven years the heathen began to harass him. The kings of the
Amorites assembled together against the sons of Jacob to slay them in
the Valley of Shechem. "Is it not enough," they said, "that they have
slain all the men of Shechem? Should they be permitted now to take
possession of their land, too?" and they advanced to render battle.

Judah leapt into the midst of the ranks of the foot soldiers of the
allied kings, and slew first of all Jashub, the king of Tappuah, who
was clad in iron and brass from top to toe. The king was mounted, and
from his horse he cast his spears downward with both hands, in front of
him and in back, without ever missing his aim, for he was a mighty
warrior, and he could throw javelins with one hand or the other.
Nevertheless Judah feared neither him nor his prowess. He ran toward
him, snatching a stone of sixty sela'im from the ground and hurling it
at him. Jashub was at a distance of one hundred and seventy-seven ells
and one-third of an ell, and, protected with iron armor and throwing
spears, he moved forward upon Judah. But Judah struck him on his shield
with the stone, and unhorsed him. When the king attempted to rise,
Judah hastened to his side to slay him before he could get on his feet.
But Jashub was nimble, he stood ready to attack Judah, shield to
shield, and he drew his sword to cut off Judah's head. Quickly Judah
raised his shield to catch the blow upon it, but it broke in pieces.
What did Judah now? He wrested the shield of his opponent away from
him, and swung his sword against Jashub's feet, cutting them off above
the ankles. The king fell prostrate, his sword slipped from his grasp,
and Judah hastened to him and severed his head from his body.

While Judah was removing the armor of his slain adversary, nine of
Jashub's followers appeared. Judah slung a stone against the head of
the first of them that approached him, with such force that he dropped
his shield, which Judah snatched from the ground and used to defend
himself against his eight assailants. His brother Levi came and stood
next to him, and shot off an arrow that killed Elon, king of Gaash, and
then Judah killed the eight men. And his father Jacob came and killed
Zerori king of Shiloh. None of the heathen could prevail against these
sons of Jacob, they had not the courage to stand up before them, but
took to flight, and the sons of Jacob pursued after them, and each slew
a thousand men of the Amorites on that day, before the going down of
the sun. And the other sons of Jacob set forth from the Hill of
Shechem, where they had taken up their stand, and they also pursued
after them as far as Hazor. Before this city they had another severe
encounter with the enemy, more severe than that in the Valley of
Shechem. Jacob let his arrows fly, and slew Pirathon king of Hazor, and
then Pasusi king of Sartan, Laban king of Aram, and Shebir king of
Mahanaim.

Judah was the first to mount the walls of Hazor. As he approached the
top, four warriors attacked him, but he slew them without stopping in
his ascent, and before his brother Naphtali could bring him succor.
Naphtali followed him, and the two stood upon the wall, Judah to the
right and Naphtali to the left, and thence they dealt out death to the
warriors. The other sons of Jacob followed their two brothers in turn,
and made an end of exterminating the heathen host on that day. They
subjugated Hazor, slew the warriors thereof, let no man escape with his
life, and despoiled the city of all therein.

On the day following they went to Sartan, and again a bloody battle
took place. Sartan was situated upon high land, and the hill before the
city was likewise very high, so that none could come near unto it, and
also none could come near unto the citadel, because the wall thereof
was high. Nevertheless they made themselves masters of the city. They
scaled the walls of the citadel, Judah on the east side being the first
to ascend, then Gad on the west side, Simon and Levi on the north, and
Reuben and Dan on the south, and Naphtali and Issachar set fire to the
hinges upon which the gates of the city were hung.

In the same way the sons of Jacob subdued five other cities, Tappuah,
Arbel, Shiloh, Mahanaim, and Gaash, making an end of all of them in
five days. On the sixth day all the Amorites assembled, and they came
to Jacob and his sons unarmed, bowed down before them, and sued for
peace. And the sons of Jacob made peace with the heathen, who ceded
Timna to them, and all the land of Harariah. In that day also Jacob
concluded peace with them, and they made restitution to the sons of
Jacob for all the cattle they had taken, two head for one, and they
restored all the spoil they had carried off. And Jacob turned to go to
Timna, and Judah went to Arbel, and thenceforth the Amorites troubled
them no more.[292]

ISAAC BLESSES LEVI AND JUDAH

If a man voweth a vow, and he does not fulfil it in good time, he will
stumble through three grave sins, idolatry, unchastity, and bloodshed.
Jacob had been guilty of not accomplishing promptly the vow he had
taken upon himself at Beth-el, and therefore punishment overtook
him—his daughter was dishonored, his sons slew men, and they kept the
idols found among the spoils of Shechem.[293] Therefore, when Jacob
prostrated himself before God after the bloody outrage at Shechem, He
bade him arise, and go to Beth-el and accomplish the vow he had vowed
there.[294] Before Jacob set out for the holy place to do the bidding
of God, he took the idols which were in the possession of his sons, and
the teraphim which Rachel had stolen from her father, and he shivered
them in pieces, and buried[295] the bits under an oak upon Mount
Gerizim,[296] uprooting the tree with one hand, concealing the remains
of the idols in the hollow left in the earth, and planting the oak
again with one hand.[297]

Among the destroyed idols was one in the form of a dove, and this the
Samaritans dug up later and worshipped.

On reaching Beth-el he erected an altar to the Lord, and on a pillar he
set up the stone whereon he had rested his head during the night which
he had passed there on his journey to Haran.[298] Then he bade his
parents come to Beth-el and take part in his sacrifice. But Isaac sent
him a message, saying, "O my son Jacob, that I might see thee before I
die," whereupon Jacob hastened to his parents, taking Levi and Judah
with him. When his grandchildren stepped before Isaac, the darkness
that shrouded his eyes dropped away, and he said, "My son, are these
thy children, for they resemble thee?" And the spirit of prophecy
entered his mouth, and he grasped Levi with his right hand and Judah
with his left in order to bless them, and he spoke these words to Levi:
"May the Lord bring thee and thy seed nigh unto Him before all flesh,
that ye serve in His sanctuary like the Angel of the Face and the Holy
Angels. Princes, judges, and rulers shall they be unto all the seed of
the children of Jacob. The word of God they will proclaim in
righteousness, and all His judgments they will execute in justice, and
they will make manifest His ways unto the children of Jacob, and unto
Israel His paths." And unto Judah he spake, saying: "Be ye princes,
thou and one of thy sons, over the sons of Jacob. In thee shall be the
help of Jacob, and the salvation of Israel shall be found in thee. And
when thou sittest upon the throne of the glory of thy justice, perfect
peace shall reign over all the seed of the children of my beloved
Abraham."

On the morrow, Isaac told his son that he would not accompany him to
Beth-el on account of his great age, but he bade him not delay longer
to fulfil his vow, and gave him permission to take his mother Rebekah
with him to the holy place. And Rebekah and her nurse Deborah went to
Beth-el with Jacob.[299]

JOY AND SORROW IN THE HOUSE OF JACOB

Deborah, the nurse of Rebekah, and some of the servants of Isaac had
been sent to Jacob by his mother, while he still abode with Laban, to
summon him home at the end of his fourteen years' term of service. As
Jacob did not at once obey his mother's behest, the two servants of
Isaac returned to their master, but Deborah remained with Jacob then
and always. Therefore, when Deborah died in Beth-el, Jacob mourned for
her, and he buried her below Beth-el under the palm-tree,[300] the same
under which the prophetess Deborah sat later, when the children of
Israel came to her for judgment.[301]

But a short time elapsed after the death of the nurse Deborah, and
Rebekah died, too. Her passing away was not made the occasion for
public mourning. The reason was that, as Abraham was dead, Isaac blind,
and Jacob away from home, there remained Esau as the only mourner to
appear in public and represent her family, and beholding that villain,
it was feared, might tempt a looker-on to cry out, "Accursed be the
breasts that gave thee suck." To avoid this, the burial of Rebekah took
place at night.

God appeared unto Jacob to comfort him in his grief,[302] and with Him
appeared the heavenly family. It was a sign of grace, for all the while
the sons of Jacob had been carrying idols with them the Lord had not
revealed Himself to Jacob.[303] At this time God announced to Jacob the
birth of Benjamin soon to occur, and the birth of Manasseh and Ephraim,
who also were to be founders of tribes, and furthermore He told him
that these three would count kings among their descendants, Saul and
Ish-bosheth, of the seed of Benjamin, Jeroboam the Ephraimite, and Jehu
of the tribe of Manasseh. In this vision, God confirmed the change of
his name from Jacob to Israel, promised him by the angel with whom he
had wrestled on entering the Holy Land, and finally God revealed to him
that he would be the last of the three with whose names the Name of God
would appear united, for God is called only the God of Abraham, the God
of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, and never the God of any one else.[304]

In token of this revelation from God, Jacob set up a pillar of stone,
and he poured out a drink offering thereon, as in a later day the
priests were to offer libations in the Temple on the Feast of
Tabernacles,[305] and the libation brought by Jacob at Beth-el was as
much as all the waters in the Sea of Tiberias.[306]

At the time when Deborah and Rebekah died, occurred also the death of
Rachel, at the age of thirty-six,[307] but not before her prayer was
heard, that she bear Jacob a second son, for she died in giving birth
to Benjamin. Twelve years she had borne no child, then she fasted
twelve days, and her petition was granted her. She brought forth the
youngest son of Jacob, whom he called Benjamin, the son of days,
because he was born in his father's old age,[308] and with him a twin
sister was born.[309]

Rachel was buried in the way to Ephrath, because Jacob, gifted with
prophetic spirit, foresaw that the exiles would pass this place on
their march to Babylon, and as they passed, Rachel would entreat God's
mercy for the poor outcasts.[310]

Jacob journeyed on to Jerusalem.[311]

During Rachel's lifetime, her couch had always stood in the tent of
Jacob. After her death, he ordered the couch of her handmaid Bilhah to
be carried thither. Reuben was sorely vexed thereat, and he said, "Not
enough that Rachel alive curtailed the rights of my mother, she must
needs give her annoyance also after death!" He went and took the couch
of his mother Leah and placed it in Jacob's tent instead of Bilhah's
couch.[312] Reuben's brothers learned of his disrespectful act from
Asher. He had found it out in one way or another, and had told it to
his brethren, who ruptured their relations with him, for they would
have nothing to do with an informer, and they did not become reconciled
with Asher until Reuben himself confessed his transgression.[313] For
it was not long before Reuben recognized that he had acted
reprehensibly toward his father, and he fasted and put on sackcloth,
and repented of his misdeed. He was the first among men to do penance,
and therefore God said to him: "Since the beginning of the world it
hath not happened that a man hath sinned and then repented thereof.
Thou art the first to do penance, and as thou livest, a prophet of thy
seed, Hosea, shall be the first to proclaim, 'O Israel, return.' "[314]

ESAU'S CAMPAIGN AGAINST JACOB

When Isaac felt his end approaching, he called his two sons to him, and
charged them with his last wish and will, and gave them his blessing.
He said: "I adjure you by the exalted Name, the praised, honored,
glorious, immutable, and mighty One, who hath made heaven and earth and
all things together, that ye fear Him, and serve Him, and each shall
love his brother in mercy and justice, and none wish evil unto the
other, now and henceforth unto all eternity, all the days of your life,
that ye may enjoy good fortune in all your undertakings, and that ye
perish not."

Furthermore he commanded them to bury him in the Cave of Machpelah, by
the side of his father Abraham, in the grave which he had dug for
himself with his own hands. Then he divided his possessions between his
two sons, giving Esau the larger portion, and Jacob the smaller. But
Esau said, "I sold my birthright to Jacob, and I ceded it to him, and
it belongs unto him." Isaac rejoiced greatly that Esau acknowledged the
rights of Jacob of his own accord, and he closed his eyes in
peace.[315]

The funeral of Isaac was not disturbed by any unseemly act, for Esau
was sure of his heritage in accordance with the last wishes expressed
by his father. But when the time came to divide Isaac's possessions
between the two brothers, Esau said to Jacob, "Divide the property of
our father into two portions, but I as the elder claim the right of
choosing the portion I desire." What did Jacob do? He knew well that
"the eye of the wicked never beholds treasures enough to satisfy it,"
so he divided their common heritage in the following way: all the
material possessions of his father formed one portion, and the other
consisted of Isaac's claim upon the Holy Land, together with the Cave
of Machpelah, the tomb of Abraham and Isaac. Esau chose the money and
the other things belonging to Isaac for his inheritance, and to Jacob
were left the Cave and the title to the Holy Land. An agreement to this
effect was drawn up in writing in due form, and on the strength of the
document Jacob insisted upon Esau's leaving Palestine. Esau acquiesced,
and he and his wives and his sons and daughters journeyed to Mount
Seir, where they took up their abode.[316]

Though Esau gave way before Jacob for the nonce, he returned to the
land to make war upon his brother. Leah had just died, and Jacob and
the sons borne by Leah were mourning for her, and the rest of his sons,
borne unto him by his other wives, were trying to comfort them, when
Esau came upon them with a powerful host of four thousand men, well
equipped for war, clad in armor of iron and brass, all furnished with
bucklers, bows, and swords. They surrounded the citadel wherein Jacob
and his sons dwelt at that time with their servants and children and
households, for they had all assembled to console Jacob for the death
of Leah, and they sat there unconcerned, none entertained a suspicion
that an assault upon them was meditated by any man. And the great army
had already encircled their castle, and still none within suspected any
harm, neither Jacob and his children nor the two hundred servants. Now
when Jacob saw that Esau presumed to make war upon them, and sought to
slay them in the citadel, and was shooting darts at them, he ascended
the wall of the citadel and spake words of peace and friendship and
brotherly love to Esau. He said: "Is this the consolation which thou
hast come to bring me, to comfort me for my wife, who hath been taken
by death? Is this in accordance with the oath thou didst swear twice
unto thy father and thy mother before they died? Thou hast violated thy
oath, and in the hour when thou didst swear unto thy father, thou wast
judged." But Esau made reply: "Neither the children of men nor the
beasts of the field swear an oath to keep it unto all eternity, but on
every day they devise evil against one another, when it is directed
against an enemy, or when they seek to slay an adversary. If the boar
will change his skin and make his bristles as soft as wool, or if he
can cause horns to sprout forth on his head like the horns of a stag or
a ram, then shall I observe the tie of brotherhood with thee."

Then spoke Judah to his father Jacob, saying: "How long wilt thou stand
yet wasting words of peace and friendship upon him? And he attacks us
unawares, like an enemy, with his mail-clad warriors, seeking to slay
us." Hearing these words, Jacob grasped his bow and killed Adoram the
Edomite, and a second time he bent his bow, and the arrow struck Esau
upon the right thigh. The wound was mortal, and his sons lifted Esau up
and put him upon his ass, and he came to Adora, and there he died.

Judah made a sally to the south of the citadel, and with him were
Naphtali and Gad, aided by fifty of Jacob's servants; to the east Levi
and Dan went forth with fifty servants; Reuben, Issachar, and Zebulon
with fifty servants, to the north; and Simon, Benjamin, and Enoch, the
last the son of Reuben, with fifty servants, to the west. Judah was
exceedingly brave in battle. Together with Naphtali and Gad he pressed
forward into the ranks of the enemy, and captured one of their iron
towers. On their bucklers they caught the sharp missiles hurled against
them in such numbers that the light of the sun was darkened by reason
of the rocks and darts and stones. Judah was the first to break the
ranks of the enemy, of whom he killed six valiant men, and he was
accompanied on the right by Naphtali and by Gad on the left. They also
hewed down two soldiers each, while their troop of servants killed one
man each. Nevertheless they did not succeed in forcing the army away
from the south of the citadel, not even when all together, Judah and
his brethren, made an united attack upon the enemy, each of them
picking out a victim and slaying him. And they were still unsuccessful
in a third combined attack, though this time each killed two men.

When Judah saw now that the enemy remained in possession of the field,
and it was impossible to dislodge them, he girded himself with
strength, and an heroic spirit animated him. Judah, Naphtali, and Gad
united, and together they pierced the ranks of the enemy, Judah slaying
ten of them, and his brothers each eight. Seeing this, the servants
took courage, and they joined their leaders and fought at their side.
Judah laid about him to right and to left, always aided by Naphtali and
Gad, and so they succeeded in forcing the enemy one ris further to the
south, away from the citadel. But the hostile army recovered itself,
and maintained a brave stand against all the sons of Jacob, who were
faint from the hardships of the combat, and could not continue to
fight. Thereupon Judah turned to God in prayer, and God hearkened unto
his petition, and He helped them. He set loose a storm from one of His
treasure chambers, and it blew into the faces of the enemy, and filled
their eyes with darkness, and they could not see how to fight. But
Judah and his brothers could see clearly, for the wind blew upon their
backs. Now Judah and his two brothers wrought havoc among them, they
hewed the enemy down as the reaper mows down the stalks of grain and
heaps them up for sheaves.

After they had routed the division of the army assigned to them on the
south, they hastened to the aid of their brothers, who were defending
the east, north, and west of the citadel with three companies. On each
side the wind blew into the faces of the enemy, and so the sons of
Jacob succeeded in annihilating their army. Four hundred were slain in
battle, and six hundred fled, among the latter Esau's four sons, Reuel,
Jeush, Lotan, and Korah. The oldest of his sons, Eliphaz, took no part
in the war, because he was a disciple of Jacob, and therefore would not
bear arms against him.

The sons of Jacob pursued after the fleeing remnant of the army as far
as Adora. There the sons of Esau abandoned the body of their father,
and continued their flight to Mount Seir. But the sons of Jacob
remained in Adora over night, and out of respect for their father they
buried the remains of his brother Esau. In the morning they went on in
pursuit of the enemy, and besieged them on Mount Seir. Now the sons of
Esau and all the other fugitives came and fell down before them, bowed
down, and entreated them without cease, until they concluded peace with
them. But the sons of Jacob exacted tribute from them.[317]

THE DESCENDANTS OF ESAU

The worthiest among the sons of Esau was his first-born Eliphaz. He had
been raised under the eyes of his grandfather Isaac, from whom he had
learnt the pious way of life.[318] The Lord had even found him worthy
of being endowed with the spirit of prophecy, for Eliphaz the son of
Esau is none other than the prophet Eliphaz, the friend of Job. It was
from the life of the Patriarchs that he drew the admonitions which he
gave unto Job in his disputes with him. Eliphaz spake: "Thou didst ween
thyself the equal of Abraham, and thou didst marvel, therefore, that
God should deal with thee as with the generation of the confusion of
tongues. But Abraham stood the test of ten temptations, and thou
faintest when but one toucheth thee. When any that was not whole came
to thee, thou wouldst console him. To the blind thou wouldst say, If
thou didst build thyself a house, thou wouldst surely put windows in
it, and if God hath denied thee light, it is but that He may be
glorified through thee in the day when 'the eyes of the blind shall be
opened.' To the deaf thou wouldst say, If thou didst fashion a water
pitcher, thou wouldst surely not forget to make ears for it, and if God
created thee without hearing, it is but that He may be glorified
through thee in the day when 'the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped.'
In such wise thou didst endeavor to console the feeble and the maimed.
But now it is come unto thee, and thou art troubled. Thou sayest, I am
an upright man, why doth He chastise me? But who, I pray thee, ever
perished, being innocent? Noah was saved from the flood, Abraham from
the fiery furnace, Isaac from the slaughtering knife, Jacob from
angels, Moses from the sword of Pharaoh, and Israel from the Egyptians
that were drowned in the Sea. Thus shall all the wicked fare."

Job answered Eliphaz, and said, "Look at thy father Esau!"

But Eliphaz returned: "I have nothing to do with him, the son should
not bear the iniquity of the father. Esau will be destroyed, because he
executed no good deeds, and likewise his dukes will perish. But as for
me, I am a prophet, and my message is not unto Esau, but unto thee, to
make thee render account of thyself." But God rebuked Eliphaz, and
said: "Thou didst speak harsh words unto My servant Job. Therefore
shall Obadiah, one of thy descendants, utter a prophecy of denunciation
against thy father's house, the Edomites."[319]

The concubine of Eliphaz was Timna, a princess of royal blood, who had
asked to be received into the faith of Abraham and his family, but they
all, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, had rejected her, and she said, "Rather
will I be a maid servant unto the dregs of this nation, than mistress
of another nation," and so she was willing to be concubine to Eliphaz.
To punish the Patriarchs for the affront they had offered her, she was
made the mother of Amalek, who inflicted great injury upon Israel.[320]

Another one of Esau's descendants, Anah, had a most unusual experience.
Once when he was pasturing his father's asses in the wilderness, he led
them to one of the deserts on the shores of the Red Sea, opposite the
wilderness of the nations, and while he was feeding the beasts, a very
heavy storm came from the other side of the sea, and the asses could
not move. Then about one hundred and twenty great and terrible animals
came out from the wilderness at the other side of the sea, and they all
came to the place where the asses were, and they placed themselves
there. From the middle down, these animals were in the shape of a man,
and from the middle up some had the likeness of bears, some of apes,
and they all had tails behind them like the tail of the dukipat, from
between their shoulders reaching down to the earth. The animals mounted
the asses, and they rode away with them, and unto this day no eye hath
seen them. One of them approached Anah, and smote him with its tail,
and then ran off.

When Anah saw all this, he was exceedingly afraid on account of his
life, and he fled to the city, where he related all that had happened
to him. Many sallied forth to seek the asses, but none could find them.
Anah and his brothers went no more to the same place from that day
forth, for they were greatly afraid on account of their lives.[321]

This Anah was the offspring of an incestuous marriage; his mother was
at the same time the mother of his father Zibeon. And as he was born of
an unnatural union, so he tried to bring about unnatural unions among
animals. He was the first to mix the breed of the horse and the ass and
produce the mule. As a punishment, God crossed the snake and the
lizard, and they brought forth the habarbar, whose bite is certain
death, like the bite of the white she-mule.[322]

The descendants of Esau had eight kings before there reigned any king
over the descendants of Jacob. But a time came when the Jews had eight
kings during whose reign the Edomites had none and were subject to the
Jewish kings. This was the time that intervened between Saul, the first
Israelitish king, who ruled over Edom, and Jehoshaphat, for Edom did
not make itself independent of Jewish rule until the time of Joram, the
son of Jehoshaphat. There was a difference between the kings of Esau's
seed and the kings of Jacob's seed. The Jewish people always produced
their kings from their own midst, while the Edomites had to go to alien
peoples to secure theirs.[323] The first Edomite king was the Aramean
Balaam,[324] called Bela in his capacity as ruler of Edom. His
successor Job, called Jobab also, came from Bozrah, and for furnishing
Edom with a king this city will be chastised in time to come. When God
sits in judgment on Edom, Bozrah will be the first to suffer
punishment.[325]

The rule of Edom was of short duration, while the rule of Israel will
be unto all times, for the standard of the Messiah shall wave forever
and ever.[326]