Literary Devices – Bereshit 26/0
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This topic has not yet undergone editorial review
Literary Devices – Bereshit 26
Structure
Allusions At times, a story in Tanakh will allude to a previous one, calling on the reader to compare the two.
Yitzchak and Avraham Makbilot Bamikra points out multiple implicit and explicit allusions to the Avraham narrative in this chapter, presenting Yitzchak's life as mirroring that of his father's.: The chapter as a whole both explicitly and implicitly recalls the Avraham narratives, presenting Yitzchak's life as mirroring that of his father's. See Avraham and Yitzchak for discussion. See Rav Amnon Bazak’s essay The Differences Between Abraham and Isaac (published in Torah MiEtzion: New Readings in Tanach on Bereshit) for analysis of the differences among the parallels.
- Both Avraham and Yitzchak experience famine in the land of Israel.1
- Both Avraham and Yitzchak are granted Divine promises of land and offspring.
- Both Avraham and Yitzchak claim that their wives are their sisters, and are ultimately found out and confronted by the king.
- Yitzchak re-digs the wells previously dug by Avraham’s servants.
- Both Avraham and Yitzchak build altars.
- Both Avraham and Yitzchak give Beer Sheva its name.2
- Hashem’s command to “live in the land that I will say to you” echoes both Hashem's original command to Avraham to go to the land "that I will show you" (12:1) and the directive to sacrifice Yitzchak "on the mountain I will say to you" (22:2).