Page:A critical and exegetical commentary on Genesis (1910).djvu/184

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their allegiance to their Creator. And that is very much the light in which serpent-worship must have appeared to a believer in the holy and righteous God of the OT.—The conjecture of Gu., that originally the 'seed of the woman' and the 'seed of the serpent' may have been mythological personages (cf. ATLO2, 217 f.), even if confirmed by Assyriology, would have little bearing on the thought of the biblical narrator.


16. The doom of the woman: consisting in the hardships incident to her sex, and social position in the East. The pains of childbirth, and the desire which makes her the willing slave of the man, impressed the ancient mind as at once mysterious and unnatural; therefore to be accounted for by a curse imposed on woman from the beginning.—I will multiply, etc.] More strictly, 'I will cause thee to have much suffering and pregnancy' (see Dav. § 3, R. (2)). It is, of course, not an intensification of pain to which she is already subject that is meant.—For (Symbol missingHebrew characters), G read some word meaning 'groaning' (v.i.); but to prefer this reading on the ground that Hebrew women esteemed frequent pregnancy a blessing (Gu.) makes a too general statement. It is better (with Ho.) to assume a hendiadys: 'the pain of thy conception' (as in the explanatory clause which follows).—in pain . . . children] The pangs of childbirth are proverbial in OT for the extremity of human anguish (Is. 213 138, Mic. 49, Ps. 486, and oft.: Ex. 119 cannot be cited to the contrary).—to thy


16. (Symbol missingHebrew characters)] Read (Symbol missingHebrew characters), with [E]GS.—(Symbol missingHebrew characters)] So 1610 2217. On the irreg. form of inf. abs., see G-K. § 75 ff.—(Symbol missingHebrew characters)] (317) 529† [J]). G (Symbol missingGreek characters) (= (Symbol missingHebrew characters) ?).—(Symbol missingHebrew characters)] ([root] (Symbol missingHebrew characters)): [E] (Symbol missingHebrew characters) (Ru. 413, Ho. 911). Ols. (MBA, 1870, 380) conj. (Symbol missingHebrew characters), to avoid the harsh use of (Symbol missingHebrew characters). G (Symbol missingGreek characters) probably = (Symbol missingHebrew characters); (Symbol missingHebrew characters) ('sorrow') has also been suggested (Gu.); and (Symbol missingHebrew characters) (Di. Ho. al.). The other Vns. follow MT.—(Symbol missingHebrew characters)] [E] (Symbol missingHebrew characters); G likewise repeats (Symbol missingGreek characters).—(Symbol missingHebrew characters)] Probably connected with Ar. šauḳ, 'ardent desire' (Rahlfs "(Symbol missingHebrew characters) und (Symbol missingHebrew characters)," p. 71); cf. (Symbol missingHebrew characters), Is. 298, Ps. 1079. Aq. (Symbol missingGreek characters), Σ. (Symbol missingGreek characters). Although it recurs only 47 and Ca. 711, it is found in NH and should not be suspected. G (Symbol missingGreek characters) and S (Symbol missingSyriac characters) point to the reading (Symbol missingHebrew characters), preferred by many, and defended by Nestle (MM, 6) as a technical expression for the relation here indicated, on the basis of G's text of 2 Sa. 173. His parallel between the return of the woman to her source (the man) and the return of the man to his source (the ground, v.19) is perhaps fanciful.