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GraciousCall.org - Calvin's Commentary on Genesis
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CHAPTER 23.
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Genesis 23:1-20
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1.
And Sarah was an hundred and seven and twenty
years old: (these were) the years of the life of Sarah.
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1.
Fuit autem vita Sarah centum anni et viginti anni
et septem anni: anni vitae Sarah.
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2.
And Sarah died in Kirjatharba; the same (is)
Hebron in the land of Canaan: and Abraham came to mourn for Sarah, and to
weep for her.
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2.
Et mortua Sarah in Cirjath — arbah: ipsa est
Hebron in terra Chenaan. Et venit Abraham ad plangendum super Sarah, et ad
lugendam eam.
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3.
And Abraham stood up from before his dead, and
spake unto the sons of Heth, saying,
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3.
Deinde surrexit Abraham a facie mortui sui, et
loquutus est ad filios Heth, dicendo,
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4.
I (am) a stranger and a sojourner with
you: give me a possession of a buryingplace with you, that I may bury my dead
out of my sight.
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4.
Peregrinus et advena sum vobiscum: date mihi
haereditatem sepulchri vobiscum: et sepeliam mortuum meum a facie mea.
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5.
And the children of Heth answered Abraham, saying
unto him,
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5.
Et responderunt filii Heth ad Abraham, dicendo
ei,
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6.
Hear us, my lord: thou (art) a mighty
prince among us: in the choice of our sepulchres bury thy dead; none of us
shall withhold from thee his sepulcher, but that thou mayest bury thy dead.
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6.
Audi nos, domine mi, Princeps Dei es in medio
nostri: in electis sepulchris nostris sepeli mortuum tuum: nemo e nobis
sepulchrum suum prohibebit a to, ne sepelias mortuum tuum.
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7.
And Abraham stood up, and bowed himself to the
people of the land, (even) to the children of Heth.
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7.
Tunc surrexit Abraham, et incurvavit se populo
terrae, filiis Heth.
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8.
And he communed with them, saying, If it be your
mind that I should bury my dead out of my sight; hear me, and intreat for me
to Ephron the son of Zohar,
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8.
Et loquutus est cum eis, dicendo, Si est in
animis vestris, ut sepeliam mortuum meum a facie mae, audite me, et
intercedite pro me apud Ephron filium Sohar:
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9.
That he may give me the cave of Machpelah, which
he hath, which (is) in the end of his field; for as much money as it
is worth he shall give it me for a possession of a buryingplace amongst you.
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9.
Ut det mihi speluncam duplicem quae est ei in
fine agri sui: argento pleno det eam mihi in medio vestri in haereditatem
sepulchri.
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10. And Ephron dwelt among the
children of Heth: and Ephron the Hittite answered Abraham in the audience of
the children of Heth, (even) of all that went in at the gate of his
city, saying,
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10. Et Ephron habitabat in medio
filiorum Heth: et respondit Ephron Hitthaeus ad Abraham in auribus Heth, in
auribus omnium ingredientum portam civitatis suae, dicendo,
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11. Nay, my lord, hear me: the field
give I thee, and the cave that (is) therein, I give it thee; in the
presence of the sons of my people give I it thee: bury thy dead.
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11. non, domine mi, audi me, Agrum
dedi tibi, et speluncam, quae est in eo, tibi dedi eam in oculis filiorum
populi mei, dedi tibi: sepeli mortuum tuum.
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12. And Abraham bowed down himself
before the people of the land.
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12. Et incurvavit se Abraham coram
populi terrae:
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13. And he spake unto Ephron in the
audience of the people of the land, saying, But if thou (wilt give it), I
pray thee, hear me: I will give thee money for the field; take (it) of
me, and I will bury my dead there.
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13. Et loquutus est ad Ephron in
auribus populi terrae, dicendo, Veruntamen si tu: utinam audias me: dabo
argentum agri, cape a me, et sepliam mortuum meum ibi.
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14. And Ephron answered Abraham,
saying unto him,
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14. Et respondit Ephron and Abraham,
dicendo ei,
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15. My lord, hearken unto me: the
land (is worth) four hundred shekels of silver; what (is) that betwixt
me and thee? bury therefore thy dead.
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15. Domine mi, audi me, terra
quadringentorum siclorum argenteorum est inter me et to, quid est? et mortuum
tuum sepeli.
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16. And Abraham hearkened unto
Ephron; and Abraham weighed to Ephron the silver, which he had named in the
audience of the sons of Heth, four hundred shekels of silver, current (money)
with the merchant.
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16. Et obedivit Abraham ipsi Ephron,
et appendit Abraham ipsi Ephron argentum quod loquutus fuerat in auribus
filiorum Heth, quadringentos siclos argenteos transeuntes per mercatores.
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17. And the field of Ephron, which (was)
in Machpelah, which (was) before Mamre, the field, and the cave which (was)
therein, and all the trees that (were) in the field, that (were)
in all the borders round about, were made sure
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17. Et confirmatus est ager Ephron,
qui erat in spelunca duplici, qui erat coram Mamre: ager et spelunca, quae
erat in eo, et omnis arbor, quae erat in agro, quae erat in omni termino ejus
per circuitum:
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18. Unto Abraham for a possession in
the presence of the children of Heth, before all that went in at the gate of
his city.
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18. Ipsi Abraham in possessionem, in
oculis filiorum Heth, omnium ingredientum portam civitatis ejus.
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19. And after this, Abraham buried
Sarah his wife in the cave of the field of Machpelah before Mamre: the same (is)
Hebron in the land of Canaan.
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19. Et postea sepelivit Abraham Sarah
uxorem suam in spelunca agri duplici coram Mamre: haec est Hebron in terra
Chenaan.
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20. And the field, and the cave that (is)
therein, were made sure unto Abraham for a possession of a buryingplace by
the sons of Heth.
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20. Et confirmatus est ager, et spelunca que erat
in eo, ipsi Abraham in haereditatem sepulchri a filiis Heth.
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1. And Sarah was an
hundred and seven and twenty years old. ft448 It is
remarkable that Moses, who relates the death of Sarah in a single word, uses so
many in describing her burial: but we shall soon see that the latter record is
not superfluous. Why he so briefly alludes to her death, I know not, except
that he leaves more to be reflected upon by his readers than he expresses. The
holy fathers saw that they in common with reprobates, were subject to death.
Nevertheless, they were not deterred, While painfully leading a life full of
suffering, from advancing with intrepidity towards the goal. Whence it follows,
that they, being animated by the hope of a better life, did not give way to
fatigue. Moses says that Sarah lived a hundred and twenty-seven years, and
since he repeats the word years after each of the numbers, the Jews
feign that this was done because she had been as beautiful in her hundredth, as
in her twentieth year, and as modest in the flower of her age, as when she was
seven years old. This is their custom; while they wish to prove themselves
skillful in doing honor to their nations they invent frivolous trifles, which
betray a shameful ignorance: as, for instance, in this place, who would not say
that they were entirely ignorant of their own languages in which this kind of
repetition is most usual? The discussion of others also, on the word µyj
,
(lives,) is without solidity. The reason why the Hebrews use the word lives
in the plural number, for life, cannot be better explained, as it
appears to me, than the reason why the Latins express some things which are
singular in plural forms. ft449 I know that the life of men is manifold, because, beyond
merely vegetative life, and beyond the sense which they have in common with
brute animals, they are also endued with mind and intelligence. This reasoning,
therefore, is plausible without being solid. There is more color of truth in
the opinion of those who think that the various events of human life are
signified; which life, since it has nothing stable, but is agitated by
perpetual vicissitudes, is rightly divided into many lives. I am, however,
contented to refer simply to the idiom of the language; the reason of which is
not always to be curiously investigated.
2. And Sarah died in
Kirjath-arba. It appears from Joshua
15:54, that this was the more ancient name of the city, which afterwards began
to be called Hebron. But there is a difference of opinion respecting the
etymology. Some think the name is derived from the fact, that the city
consisted of four parts; as the Greeks call the city divided into three orders,
Tripoli, and a given region, Decapolis, from the ten cities it
contained. Others suppose that Arba is the name of a giant, whom they believe
to have been the king or the founder of the city. Others again prefer the
notion, that the name was given to the place from four ft450 of the
Fathers, Adam, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, who were buried there with their
wives. I willingly suspend my judgment on a matter of uncertainty, and not very
necessary to be known. It more concerns the present history to inquire, how it
happened that Sarah died in a different place from that in which Abraham dwelt.
If any one should reply, that they had both changed their abode, the words of
Moses are opposed to that, for he says that Abraham came to bury his dead. It
is hence easily inferred, that he was not present at her death; nor is it
probable that they were separated, merely by being in different tents; so that
he might walk ten or twenty paces for the sake of mourning, while a more
important duty had been neglected. For this reason, some suspect that he was on
a journey at the time. But to me it seems more likely that their abode was then
at Heron, or at least in the vale of Mamre, which adjoins the city. For, after
a little breathing time had been granted him he was soon compelled to return to
his accustomed wanderings. And although Moses does not say, that Abraham had
paid to his wife while yet alive, the due attentions of a husband; I think that
he omits it, as a thing indubitably certain, and that he speaks particularly of
the mourning, as a matter connected with the care of sepulture. That they dwelt
separately we shall afterwards see: not as being in different regions, but
because each inhabited separate, though contiguous, tents. And this was no sign
of dissension or of strife, but is rather to be ascribed to the size of the family.
For as Abraham had much trouble in governing so large a herd of servants; so
his wife would have equal difficulty to retain her maids under chaste and
honest custody. Therefore the great number of domestics which it was not safe
to mingle together, compelled them to divide the family.
But it may be asked, what end
could it answer to approach the body for the sake of mourning over it? Was not
the death of his wife sufficiently sad and bitter to call forth his grief,
without this additional means of excitement? It would have been better to seek
the alleviation of his sorrow, than to cherish and even augment it, by
indulgence. I answer; if Abraham came to his dead wife, in order to produce
excessive weeping, and to pierce his heart afresh with new wounds, his example
is not to be approved. But if he both privately wept over the death of his
wife, so far as humanity prescribed, exercising self-government in doing it;
and also voluntarily mourned over the common curse of mankind; there is no
fault in either of these. For to feel no sadness at the contemplation of death,
is rather barbarism and stupor than fortitude of mind. Nevertheless, as Abraham
was a man, it might be, that his grief was excessive. And yet, what Moses soon
after subjoins, that he rose up from his dead, is spoken in praise of his
moderation; whence Ambrose prudently infers, that we are taught by this
example, how perversely they act, who occupy themselves too much in mourning
for the dead. Now, if Abraham at that time, assigned a limit to his grief; and
put a restraint on his feelings, when the doctrine of the resurrection was yet
obscure; they are without excuse, who, at this day, give the reins to
impatience, since the most abundant consolation is supplied to us in the
resurrection cf Christ.
3. And spake unto the
sons of Heth. Moses is silent respecting
the rite used by Abraham in the burial of the body of his wife: but he
proceeds, at great length, to recite the purchasing of the sepulcher. For what
reason he did this, we shall see presently, when I shall briefly allude to the
custom of burial. How religiously this has been observed in all ages, and among
all people, is well known. Ceremonies have indeed been different, and men have
endeavored to outdo each other in various superstitions; meanwhile, to bury the
dead has been common to all. And this practice has not arisen either from
foolish curiosity, or from the desire of fruitless consolation, or from
superstition, but from the natural sense with which God has imbued the minds of
men; a sense he has never suffered to perish, in order that men might be
witnesses to themselves of a future life. It is also incredible that they, who
have disseminated certain outrageous expressions in contempt of sepulture,
could have spoken from the heart. Truly it behaves us, with magnanimity, so far
to disregard the rites of sepulture, — as we would riches and honors, and the
other conveniences of life, — that we should bear with equanimity to be
deprived of them; yet it cannot be denied that religion carries along with it
the care of burial. And certainly (as I have said) it has been divinely
engraven on the minds of all people, from the beginning, that they should bury
the dead; whence also they have ever regarded sepulchres as sacred. It has not,
I confess, always entered into the minds of heathens that souls survived
death, and that the hope of a resurrection remained even for their bodies;
nor have they been accustomed to exercise themselves in a pious meditation of
this kind, whenever they had laid their dead in the grave; but this
inconsideration of theirs does not disprove the fact; that they had such a
representation of a future life placed before their eyes, as left them
inexcusable. Abraham however, seeing he has the hope of a resurrection deeply
fixed in his heart, sedulously cherished, as was meet, its visible symbol. The
importance he attached to it appears hence, that he thought he should be guilty
of pollution, if he mingled the body of his wife with strangers after death.
For he bought a cave, in order that he might possess for himself and his
family, a holy and pure sepulcher. He did not desire to have a foot of earth
whereon to fix his tent; he only took care about his grave: and he especially
wished to have his own domestic tomb in that land, which had been promised him
for an inheritance, for the purpose of bearing testimony to posterity, that the
promise of God was not extinguished either by his own death, or by that of his
family; but that it then rather began to flourish; and that they who were
deprived of the light of the sun, and of the vital air, yet always remained
joint-partakers of the promised inheritance. For while they themselves were
silent and speechless, the sepulcher cried aloud, that death formed no obstacle
to their entering on the possession of it. A thought like this could have had
no place, unless Abraham by faith had looked up to heaven. And when he calls
the corpse of his wife his dead; he intimates that death is a divorce of
that kind, which still leaves some remaining conjunction. Moreover, nothing but
a future restoration cherishes and preserves the law of mutant connection
between the living and the dead. But it is better briefly to examine each
particular, in its order.
4. I am a stranger and a
sojourner with you. This introductory
sentence tends to one or other of these points; either that he may more easily
gain what he desires by suppliantly asking for it; or that he may remove all
suspicion of cupidity on his part. He therefore confesses, that, since he had
only a precarious abode among them, he could possess no sepulcher, unless by
their permission. And because, during life, they have permitted him to dwell
within their territory, it was the part of humanity, not to deny him a
sepulcher for his dead. If this sense be approved, then Abraham both
conciliates their favor to himself, by his humility, and in declaring that the
children of Heth had dealt kindly with him, he stimulates them, by this praise,
to proceed in the exercise of the same liberality with which they had begun.
The other sense, however, is not incongruous; namely, that Abraham, to avert
the odium which might attach to him as a purchaser, declares that he desires
the possession, not for the advantage of the present life, not from ambition or
avarice, but only in order that his dead may not lie unburied; as if he had
said, I do not refuse to continue to live a stranger among you, as I have
hitherto done; I do not desire your possessions, in order that I may have
something of my own, which may enable me hereafter to contend for equality with
you; it is enough for me to have a place where we may be buried.
6. Thou art a mighty
prince among us. ft451 The Hittites
gratuitously offer a burying-place to Abraham wherever he might please to
choose one. They testify that they do this, as a tribute to his virtues. We
have before seen, that the Hebrews give a divine title to anything which
excels. Therefore we are to understand by the expression, ‘a prince of God,’ a
person of great and singular excellency. And they properly signalize him whom
they reverence for his virtues, with this eulogium; thereby testifying, that
they ascribe to God alone, whatever virtues in men are deserving of praise and
reverence. Now some seed of piety manifests itself in the Hittites, by thus doing
honor to Abraham, whom they acknowledge to be adorned with rare gifts of the
Spirit of God. For profane and brutal men tread under foot, with barbarous
contempt, every excellent gift of God, as swine do pearls. And yet we know with
how many vices those nations were defiled; how much greater then, and more
disgraceful is our ingratitude, if we give no honor to the image of God, when
it shines before our eyes? Abraham’s sanctity of manners procures him such
favor with the Hittites, that they do not envy his preeminence among them; what
excuse then is there for us, if we hold in less esteem those virtues in which
the majesty of God is conspicuous? Truly their madness is diabolical, who not
only despise the favors of God, but even ferociously oppose them.
7. And Abraham stood up. He declines the favor offered by the Hittites, as, some
suppose, with this design, that he might not lay himself under obligation to
them in so small a matter. But he rather wished to show, in this way, that he
would receive no gratuitous possession from those inhabitants who were to be
ejected by the hand of Gods in order that he might succeed in their place: for
he always kept all his thoughts fixed on God, so that he far preferred His bare
promise, to present dominion over the land. Moses also commends the modesty of
the holy man, when he says that he ‘rose up to do reverence to the people of
the land.’ ft452 As to the use of the word signifying ‘to adore,’ it is
simply taken for the reverence, which any one declares, either by bowing the
knee, or any other gesture of the body. This may be paid to men, as well as to
God, but for a different end; men mutually either bend the knee, or bow the
head, before each other, for the sake of civil honor; but if the same thing be
done to them, for the sake of religion, it is profanation. For religion allows
of no other worship them that of the true God. And they childishly trifle who
make a pretext for their idolatry, in the words dulia and latria, ft453 since the
Scripture, in general terms, forbids adoration to be transferred to men. But
lest any one should be surprised that Abraham acted so suppliantly, and so
submissively, we must be aware that it was done from common custom and use. For
it is well known that the Orientals were immoderate in their use of ceremonies.
If we compare the Greeks or Italians with ourselves, we are more sparing in the
use of them than they. But Aristotle, in speaking of the Asiatics and other
barbarians notes this fault, that they abound too much in adorations. Wherefore
we must not measure the honor which Abraham paid to the princes of the land by
our customs.
8. If it be in your mind. Abraham constitutes them his advocates with Ephron, to
persuade him to sell the double cave. ft454 Some suppose the cave to have been
so formed that one part was above, and the other below. Let every one be at
liberty to adopt what opinion he pleases; I, however, rather suppose, that
there was one entrance, but that within, the cave was divided by a middle
partition. It is more pertinent to remarks that Abraham, by offering a full
price, cultivated and maintained equity. Where is there one to be found, who,
in buying, and in other business, does not eagerly pursue his own advantage at
another’s cost? For while the seller sets the price at twice the worth of a
thing, that he may extort as much as possible from the buyer, and the buyers in
return, by shuffling, attempts to reduce it to a low price, there is no end of
bargaining. And although avarice has specious pretexts, it yet causes those who
make contracts with each other, to forget the claims of equity and justice.
This also, finally deserves to be noticed; that Abraham often declares that he
was buying the field for a place of sepulture. And Moses is the more minute in
this matter, that we may learn, with our father Abraham, to raise our minds to
the hope of the resurrection. He saw the half of himself taken away; but
because he was certain that his wife was not exiled from the kingdom of God, he
hides her dead body in the tomb, until he and she should be gathered together.
11. Hear me. Although
Ephron earnestly insisted upon giving the field freely to Abraham, the holy man
adheres to his purpose, and at length compels him, by his entreaties, to sell
the field. Ephron, in excusing himself, says that the price was too small for
Abraham to insist upon giving; yet he estimates it at four hundred shekels.
Now, since Josephus says that the shekel of the sanctuary was worth four Attic
drachms, if he is speaking of these, we gather from the computation of Budaeus
that the price of the field was about two hundred and fifty pounds of French
money; if we understand the common shekel, it will be half that amount. Abraham
was not so scrupulous but that he would have received a greater gift, if there
had not been a sufficient reason to prevent him. He had been presented with
considerable gifts both by the king of Egypt and the king of Gerar, but he
observed this rule; that he would neither receive all things, nor in all
places, nor from all persons. And I have lately explained, that
he bought the field, in order that he might not possess a foot of land, by the
gift of any man.
16. And Abraham weighed to Ephron the silver. I know not what had come into Jerome’s mind, when he
says, that one letter was abstracted from Ephron’s name, after he had been
persuaded, by Abraham’s entreaties, to receive money for the field; because, by
the sale of the sepulcher, his virtue was maimed or diminished: for, in fact,
the name of Ephron is found written in the very same manner, after that event,
as before. Nor ought it to be imputed to Ephron as a fault, that, being
pressed, he took the lawful price for his estate; when he had been prepared
liberally to give it. If there was any sin in the case, Abraham must bear the
whole blame. But who shall dare to condemn a just sale, in which, on both
sides, religion, good faith, and equity, are maintained? Abraham, it is argued,
bought the field for the sake of having a sepulcher. But ought Ephron on that
account to give it freely, and under the pretext of a sepulcher, to be
defrauded of his right? We see here, then, nothing but mere trifling. The
Canonists, however, — preposterous and infatuated as they are, — rashly laying
hold of the expressions of Jerome, have determined that it is a prodigious
sacrilege to sell sepulchres. Yet, in the meantime, all the Papal sacrificers
securely exercise this traffic: and while they acknowledge the cemetery to be a
common sepulcher, they suffer no grave to be dug, unless the price be paid.
Current money with the
merchant. Moses speaks thus, because money
is a medium of mutual communication between men. It is principally employed in
buying and selling merchandise. Whereas Moses says, in the close of the
chapter, that the field was confirmed by the Hittites to Abraham for a
possession; the sense is, that the purchase was publicly attested; for although
a private person sold it, yet the people were present, and ratified the
contract between the two parties.
Footnotes
ft448Literally, “The lives of
Sarah were a hundred years, and twenty years, and seven years.”
ft449Quam quod Latini
quadrigas dicant non quadrigam.”
ft450The word [bra
(arba) signifies four.
ft451Princeps es Dei.” See margin of English version. Heb., a prince of God. — Ed.
ft452Ut adoraret populum
terrae.” This is not a correct
quotation from his own version of the chapter, which is, “Incurvavit se populo
terrae,” as in our version, “bowed himself to the people of the land.” — Ed.
ft453Ac pueriliter nugantur
qui in vocibus duliae et latriae fucum faciunt.” — “Qui pensent farder leur
idolatrie par ces mots de Dulie et Latrie.” — French Tr.
ft454Hebrews hlpkmh jr[m
, (mearath
hummakpelah,) ‘ the double cave.’ See
Septuagint. Our translators have
preferred rendering the word Machpelah as a proper name. — Ed.
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