Page:A critical and exegetical commentary on Genesis (1910).djvu/233

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observe the prescribed form, and call for no detailed comment, except as regards the names.


6-8. Šēth: cf. 425. For the Jewish, Gnostic, and Mohammedan legends about this patriarch, see Lenorm. Orig.2 217-220, and Charles, Book of Jubilees, 33 ff.—'9-11. Ĕnôš: see on 426.—12-14. Ḳênān is obviously a fuller form of Ḳáyin in the parallel genealogy of 417ff.; and possibly, like it, means 'smith' or 'artificer' (cf. Syr. (Symbol missingSyriac characters): see on 41). Whether the longer or the shorter form is the more ancient, we have no means of judging. It is important to note that (Symbol missingHebrew characters) or (Symbol missingHebrew characters) is the name of a Sabæan deity, occurring several times in inscriptions: see Mordtmann, ZDMG, xxxi. 86; Baethgen, Beitr. 127 f., 152.—15-17. Mahălal'ēl (= 'Praise of God') is a compound with the (Symbol missingGreek characters) (Symbol missingHebrew characters) (Pr. 2721). But there the Vns. read the participle; and so G must have done here: (Symbol missingGreek characters) = (Symbol missingHebrew characters), i.e. 'Praising God.' Proper names compounded with a ptcp. are rare and late in OT (see Dri. Sam. 142; Gray, HPN, 201), but are common in Assyrian. Nestle's inference that the genealogy must be late (MM, 7 f.) is not certain, because the word might have been borrowed, or first borrowed and then hebraized: Hommel conjectures (not very plausibly) that it is a corruption of Amil-Arûru in the list of Berossus (see AOD, 29). (Symbol missingHebrew characters) is found as a personal or family name in Neh. 114.—18-20. Yéred (1 Ch. 418) would signify in Heb. 'Descent'; hence the Jewish legend that in his days the angels descended to the earth (Gen. 62): cf. Jub. iv. 15; En. vi. 6, cvi. 13. On Bu.'s interpretation, see p. 129 above. The question whether (Symbol missingHebrew characters) or (Symbol missingHebrew characters) be the older form must be left open. Hommel (30) traces both to an original Babylonian 'I-yarad = 'descent of fire.'


21-24. The account of Enoch contains three extraordinary features: (a) The twice repeated (Symbol missingHebrew characters). in the OT such an expression (used also of Noah, 69) signifies intimate companionship (1 Sa. 2515), and here denotes a fellowship with God morally and religiously perfect (cf. Mic. 68, Mal. 26 [(Symbol missingHebrew characters)]), hardly differing from the commoner 'walk before God' (171 2440) or 'after God' (Dt. 135, 1 Ki. 148). We shall see, however, that originally it included the idea of initiation into divine mysteries. (b) Instead of the usual (Symbol missingHebrew characters) we read (Symbol missingHebrew characters); i.e. he was


22. (Symbol missingHebrew characters)(Symbol missingHebrew characters)] G (Symbol missingGreek characters) (GL adds (Symbol missingGreek characters)), Σ (Symbol missingGreek characters), S (Symbol missingSyriac characters), TO (Symbol missingHebrew characters): Aq. and V render literally. The art. before (Symbol missingHebrew characters) is unusual in P (see 69. 11). The phrase must have been taken from a traditional source, and may retain an unobserved trace of the original polytheism ('with the gods').—23. (Symbol missingHebrew characters)] Rd (Symbol missingHebrew characters) (MSS, [E]G, etc.).—24. (Symbol missingHebrew characters)] indicating mysterious disappearance (3729f. 4213. 32. 36 [E] 1 Ki. 2040); see G-K. § 152 m.—(Symbol missingHebrew characters)] G (Symbol missingGreek characters),