Loren R. Fisher

Genesis, A Royal Epic


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scene, and the birth of the twins is very much like the birth of Esau and Jacob. Yes, once again the elder will serve the younger. Now we have more questions: Why did the scribes need this Judah cycle? Why did they only use part of it?

      Later the elders of Israel came to David in Hebron, and they made him king over Israel. When David became king over both states, he moved to Jerusalem, and “he ruled over all Israel and Judah thirty-three years” (2 Sam 5:5). At this point the royal scribes had to integrate the stories of the two states and especially the stories of Joseph (from Israel) and Judah. David’s scribes were very talented and they included a lot of very important things. They stressed the importance of Joseph, but they also made Judah very important in the main part of the Joseph story. These scribes also put in the Stories of Judah (Genesis 38) that pointed to David. So all of this material was put into its present form at the time of the Davidic monarchy. It was a royal document, and it not only made David the legitimate heir, but it helped to unify both Israel and Judah.

      It is clear that Genesis 38 is very important for David’s kingdom. The scribes had to include this material. Perhaps they thought that in a narrative concerning Joseph where Judah is also a main character, the readers should know more about Judah and the line of David. It still bothers me that they put it where they did, as it interrupts the Joseph story. However the inclusion of the Judah material was necessary, and at least they did it with political taste; they did not give too much of the Judah story, and they were not hostile as scribes were in later materials. Note Ps 78:67–68:

      He [God] rejected the clan of Joseph;

      the tribe of Ephraim he did not choose.

      He chose the tribe of Judah,

      Mount Zion, which he loved.

      The royal scribes did not want to cause problems; they wanted to unite these states and show their world that the story points to David.

      Burial, Blessing, and Birth

      In the above discussion on the structure of these cycles, we were looking on the surface of these narratives and noting similar beginnings and conclusions. But within these similar elements, it is very interesting that there is a very real cycle of burial, blessing, and birth that keeps on turning. I say, “very real,” because it appears that a storyteller could start at any point on this circle. The blessing can come first, then birth and burial, and it goes on for another round or two. First, I want to look at a story from Ugarit as an example of this cycle.

      The Epic of Aqhat

      Abraham

      With the story of Aqhat in mind, we turn back to Genesis. The cycle that deals with Abraham is contained in Gen 11:27—25:11 (“These are the stories of Terah”). At the beginning of this material, we learn about the death of Abraham’s father, Terah. Since it is not mentioned, we are left to assume that indeed there was a burial. We have the post-funeral blessing in Gen 12:1–3. In this story we have to wait a long time for the next element or the birth story. In chapter 21, we have the story of the birth of Isaac. Sarah, with the help of Yahweh, produces a son for Abraham to help him in his old age, and more importantly to be his heir. In Gen 21:12, we catch a glimpse of how the heir (and his heirs) will “call forth” to Abraham at his grave. As the cycle turns, there should be another burial. Genesis 23 tells us about the burial of Sarah. In the Genesis cycles (as discussed above), the last three sections of each cycle deal with 1) death and burial, 2) another word concerning the heirs, and 3) another death and burial. Following the burial of Sarah, the second section from the end (Gen 24:1—25:6) mentions how Yahweh has blessed Abraham in every way, how Abraham arranged for the “right” wife for Isaac, and gives us some information concerning Abraham’s other children. The last section of the Abraham material is about his death. By this time, it should not surprise us to read in Gen 25:9 that “Isaac and Ishmael, his sons, buried him . . .” And the expected note in v. 11 reads, “It was after the death of Abraham that Elohim blessed Isaac, his son.”

      Jacob

      Joseph