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<h2>Introduction</h2>
 
<h2>Introduction</h2>
<p>When deciding how to arrange a historical narrative, an author must balance the competing elements of chronology and thematic order.&#160; Should events be told in the order that they occurred or based on their relationship to one another?&#160; When should one component be preferred over the other?</p>
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<p>When recording history an author must always balance the competing demands of chronological and thematic order.&#160; The Biblical text sets chronological order as the norm, but in a number of instances it is willing to sacrifice it for literary reasons.&#160; In several places in Torah this achronology is explicit in the text.&#160; Time or location markers such as people's ages, a switch of locale, or more rarely, definitive dates, clue the reader into the phenomenon.&#160; More often, though, the true timing of scenes is ambiguous.&#160; For textual or conceptual reasons a case might be made for achronology, but no definitive proof can be found in the text.</p>
<p>The Biblical text sets chronological order as the norm, but in many places it is willing to sacrifice it for literary reasons. In several places in Torah, the achronology is explicit in the text.&#160; Time or location markers such as people's ages, a switch of locale, or more rarely, definitive dates, clue the reader into the phenomenon.&#160; More often, though, the true timing of scenes is ambiguous, and for textual or conceptual reasons a case might be made for achronology, but no definitive proof can be found in the text.</p>
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<p>&#160;</p>
  
<h2>Two Units Reversed</h2>
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<h2>Explicit Cases</h2>
<p>At times, two textual units completely swap places with one another, appearing in reverse order.&#160; This might occur when an event or law's import for future generations differs from its import for the generation when it happened.<b> </b></p>
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<p>&#160;</p>
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<p><b>1)&#160; Displacement of minor details </b>– When a textual unit takes place over an extended period of time, some of its components might overlap with the events of surrounding stories. Instead of constantly switching back and forth between the two, the Torah might complete one narrative unit before moving to the other.&#160; In the following cases, the majority of each story is recorded in its proper chronological place, and it is just one or two additional details which are moved earlier to provide closure.&#160; These details take the form of an epilogue at the end of the unit (השלמת העניין):<br/><b> </b></p>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li><b>Laws of Sacrifices in Vayikra 1-5 and 6-7 </b>–&#160;<a href="Vayikra1-1-3" data-aht="source">Vayikra 1:1</a> teaches that the national laws of sacrifices discussed in Chapters 1-5 were all said to Moshe in the Tent of Meeting.&#160; In contrast, the directives of Chapters 6-7, aimed at the priests, were given earlier at Mt. Sinai (see&#160;<a href="Vayikra7-37-38" data-aht="source">Vayikra 7:37</a>) and relate to to the sacrificial ceremonies surrounding the Tabernacle's consecration.<fn>As such, they are really an extension of the discussion of the Miluim ceremony relayed in Shemot 29.&#160; See R. D"Z Hoffmann who makes this point.</fn>&#160; It is possible that the written account flips the true chronology due to the differing needs of the desert generation and the future nation.&#160; In the desert, Moshe first transmitted the laws relating to priests since these were necessary for them to fulfill their immediate tasks.&#160; When writing for generations, however, it was more important to begin with those laws which are relevant for all times, and only afterwards to include directives related to the one time event of the Mishkan's consecration.</li>
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<li><b>Death notices</b> – The lives of main protagonists always overlap with those of the surrounding generations.&#160; Nevertheless, the text is arranged so that it focuses on only one figure at a time and does not interrupt a particular cycle of stories with the death notices of earlier characters.&#160; As a result, the deaths of the various characters in Sefer Bereshit are recorded already when they fade from the scene, rather then in the middle of later narratives when they chronologically occurred.<fn>For examples, see mention of the death of Noach in <a href="Bereshit9-29" data-aht="source">Bereshit 9:29</a>, Terach in <a href="Bereshit11-31-32" data-aht="source">Bereshit 11:31-32</a>, Avraham in <a href="Bereshit25-8" data-aht="source">Bereshit 25:8</a>, and Yitzchak in <a href="Bereshit35-29" data-aht="source">Bereshit 35:29</a>.</fn>&#160;</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 
<h2>Overlapping Units – Explicit Cases</h2>
 
<p>When a narrative unit takes place over an extended period of time, often some of its components might overlap with the events of surrounding stories.&#160; Instead of constantly switching back and forth between the two, the Torah often completes one narrative unit before moving to the other. This might take the form of a short epilogue in which a later event is brought forward to provide closure to an earlier one, or an introduction where an event is moved from its proper place to provide necessary background to another text. Alternatively, verses might be moved in either direction simply so as not to interrupt the earlier/later story.<fn>Thus, the focal point of any unit tends to remain in its chronological place while supporting information and elaborations might be moved either forward or back.</fn>&#160; Several examples follow:</p>
 
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li><b>Events which are brought forward</b></li>
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<li><b>The manna</b> –&#160;<a href="Shemot16-32-36" data-aht="source">Shemot 16</a> focuses on the story of the manna's initial arrival in the first year in the wilderness, but it also mentions its later preservation near the Ark and its being eaten throughout the forty years of wandering.<fn>As such, the story basically overlaps with the rest of Torah.</fn>&#160; Despite the fact that these added details occur only later, they are placed here both to provide closure to the unit and so as not to interrupt later narratives with unrelated information.<fn>For a spectrum of opinions regarding the timing of the specific events mentioned in the epilogue, see <a href="Epilogue to the Manna Story" data-aht="page">Epilogue to the Manna Story</a>.</fn></li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 +
<p>&#160;</p>
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<p><b>2)&#160; Displacement of major units </b>– Sometimes entire stories are recorded out of chronological order.&#160; This displacement is motivated by a desire to juxtapose related material, but in contrast to the above cases, in these incidents both the chronological and achronological components are of equal import.&#160; In the following two examples, the displaced unit is moved to serve as an introduction:</p>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
 +
<li><b>Laws of Sacrifices in Vayikra 1-5 and 6-7</b> – According to <a href="Vayikra1-1-3" data-aht="source">Vayikra 1:1</a> the laws of sacrifices discussed in Vayikra 1-5 were all said to Moshe in the Tent of Meeting.&#160; In contrast, the directives of Chapters 6-7, aimed at the priests, were given earlier at Mt. Sinai.<fn>See&#160;<a href="Vayikra7-37-38" data-aht="source">Vayikra 7:37</a>.</fn> &#160; As such, the two units appear in reverse chronological order.&#160; In this case, it is possible that the written account flips the true chronology due to its nature as a guide book for future generations.&#160; The laws relayed in Chapters 6-7 relate to to the sacrificial ceremonies surrounding the Tabernacle's consecration<fn>As such, they are really an extension of the discussion of the Miluim ceremony relayed in Shemot 29.&#160; See R. D"Z Hoffmann who makes this point.</fn> and were important for the time (הוראות שעה) but less so for future generations.&#160; Thus, when writing for posterity, Moshe delayed these and instead began with the laws of Chapters 1-5 which are relevant for all times.<fn>In the desert, in contrast, practical considerations took precedence.&#160; Moshe first transmitted the laws relating to priests since these were necessary for them to fulfill their immediate tasks and only afterwards relayed the laws for future generations..</fn></li>
 +
</ul>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li><b>Death notices</b> – The lives of the main protagonists discussed in Sefer Bereshit often overlap with those of subsequent characters.&#160; Nonetheless, the text is organized so that it focuses on only one leader/forefather at a time, and tries not to interrupt his story with events that relate only to other figures.<fn>This is not to say that Avraham may not play a role in any Yitzchak narrative, but only that if a certain event relates only to the life of Avraham, even if it happened at the same time as events being told that concern Yitzchak, it would not appear there in the text but rather earlier during the "Avraham cycle" of narratives.</fn>&#160; As a result, even though the death of each character might only happen during the life of the next protagonist discussed, it is consistently mentioned earlier together with the original cycle of stories relating to him.<fn>For examples, see mention of the death of Noach in Bereshit 9:29, Terach in Bereshit 11:32, Avraham in Bereshit 25:8, and Yitzchak in Bereshit 35:19.</fn>&#160;</li>
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<li><b>Census and Camp in Bemidbar 1-4</b> – Sefer Bemidbar opens with a series of dated, and explicitly non-chronological events. <a href="Bemidbar1-1-3" data-aht="source">Chapters 1-4</a> speak of the census taken in the second month of the second year, while <a href="Bemidbar7-1-3" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 7:1-3</a> goes back in time to the dedication of the altar in the first month.&#160; <a href="Bemidbar9-1-2" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 9:1-2</a> continues with the Pesach in the first month, and <a href="Bemidbar10-11-12" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 10</a> brings the reader back to the middle of the second month with the nations' travels.<fn>In other words, to reflect the true chronology, the chapters should have been ordered: a) Chapters 7-9 b) Chapters 1-6 c) Chapters 10ff.</fn>&#160; Though the opening census really occurs in between the events of Chapters 9 and 10, placing such an extensive list of numbers there would break up the main narrative of the book. As such, the Torah preferred to incorporate the non-narrative material as an introduction to the book,<fn>Chapters 5-6 comprise undated legal material and are thus appended to the census.</fn> and start the main plot line in Chapter 7.</li>
<li><b>The Manna Story</b> –&#160;<a href="Shemot16-32-36" data-aht="source">Shemot 16</a> focuses on the story of the manna's first arrival in the first year, but also mentions its later preservation in the Ark, and its being eaten throughout the forty years of wandering.<fn>As such, the story basically overlaps with the rest of Torah.</fn> Rather than interrupting later narratives to share these events in their chronological place, the text concludes the story here.&#160; For a spectrum of opinions regarding the timing of the specific events mentioned in the epilogue, see <a href="Epilogue to the Manna Story" data-aht="page">Epilogue to the Manna Story</a>.</li>
 
<li><b>Moshe on the Mountain</b> – The end of Chapter 24 describes Moshe's ascent to Mt. Sinai to receive the Tablets of Law.&#160; Already there the text shares that he stayed on the mountain for forty days, even though the next chapters in which Moshe receives the commandments regarding the building of the Tabernacle occurred in the interrum.<fn>See below that this itself is a source of contention among commentators, and&#160; some assume that the command to build the Tabernacle only happened after the Sin of the Golden Calf.&#160; Nonetheless, the simple reading of the story is that these commandments were given on the mountain when Moshe ascended the first time.</fn>&#160; It is even possible that the forty days did not end until the middle of the story of the Golden Calf.<fn>Though Rashi suggests that the nation began to worry about Moshe only on the fortieth day due to a miscalculation regarding the length of his absence, in reality it is very possible that the nation never knew how long Moshe was to supposed to stay on the mountain.&#160; That information is only given to the reader in advance; the nation living at the time, though, had no way of knowing.&#160; Ibn Ezra and Ralbag thus suggest that the fears regarding Moshe discussed in Shemot 32 began way before the fortieth day and the nation's interactions with Aharon and the building of the Golden Calf took place over many days rather than a few hours.</fn>&#160; The information is likely moved up so as to not confuse narrative and legal material.<fn>Though the fact could have also been told as part of the narrative of the story of the Golden Calf, inserting it in the middle that might have ruined the drama of the moment.&#160;</fn>&#160;</li>
 
<li><b>The Censuses of Sefer Bemidbar</b> – The beginning of Sefer Bemidbar contains several explicit time markers, openly displaying its achronology. The censuses of&#160;<a href="Bemidbar1-1-3" data-aht="source">Chapters 1-4</a> take place in the second month of the second year, while&#160;<a href="Bemidbar7-1-3" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 7:1-3</a> brings the reader back to the dedication of the altar in the first month.&#160;<a href="Bemidbar10-11-12" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 10</a> resumes where the first unit ended, describing the travels of the second month. In other words, to reflect the true chronology, the chapters should have been ordered: a) Chapters 7-9 b) Chapters 1-6 c) Chapters 10ff.&#160; Presenting the material in this order, however, would break up the main narrative of the book.&#160; Since the events told in Chapters 7-9 are intricately connected with Chapter 10 and the travels of the rest of the book, the extensive list of censuses would have been an intrusion had they been placed in the middle.<fn>Cf. Ramban who views the entire unit from 1-8 as an epilogue to Sefer Vayikra, as it deals with odds and ends relating to the Mishkan.&#160; According to him, the true narrative of the book begins only in Chapter 9, when the nation begins to prepare for its travels, and that is where chronological order takes over.&#160; <br/>Rashi, in contrast, suggests that one should view this change in order not as a bringing forward of that which occurred later, but a pushing off of that which occurred earlier.&#160; He claims that Hashem did not want to begin Sefer Bemidbar with information that reflected derogatorily on the nation and thus delayed discussion of the Paschal sacrifice.&#160; [Following -- , he asserts that this is negative because it highlights how the nation only brought the sacrifice once in the forty years of wandering.] It is difficult, however, to view the actual fulfillment of the commandment as negative.<br/>Finally, see Abarbanel who tries to clai, that in reality there is no achronology in the text at all.&#160; <br/>[[??Cf. Cassuot and Censuses in teh Wilderness who suggests thatt he census described in Chapter 1 is really identical to that described in Ki Tisa which took place in the first yearad theverses are simply describing its conslusion.He would still have to provide a literary reason to expalin why the conlusion appears here rather than after chater 9.]&#160; Seforno<br/> &#160; <br/><br/><br/></fn></li>
 
</ul>
 
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
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 +
<h2>Ambiguous Cases</h2>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li><b>Events which are pushed off</b></li>
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<li><b>"לֶךְ לְךָ מֵאַרְצְךָ וּמִמּוֹלַדְתְּךָ"</b> – Hashem's command to Avraham that he leave his birthplace is found in <a href="Bereshit12-1" data-aht="source">Bereshit 12:1</a>, yet Avraham and his family already uproot from&#160;Ur Kasdim at the end of <a href="Bereshit11-31-32" data-aht="source">Chapter 11</a>.&#160; This leads commentators to question whether Hashem's command is really in its chronological place, or if it was delayed so as to first finish the Terach cycle of stories before opening the Avraham narratives. For a full discussion of the issue and its implications for understanding Avraham's move as a whole, see <a href="Avraham's Aliyah" data-aht="page">Avraham's Aliyah</a>.</li>
 +
<li><b>Covenant of the Pieces</b>&#160;– In order to resolve the discrepancy between Hashem's promise in Bereshit 15 that the exile would be 400 years and Shemot 12 which states that the bondage lasted 430 years, many commentators<fn>See Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael Bo 14, Seder Olam Rabbah 1, Baraita of 32 Middot: 22, Rashi Shemot 12:40, Rashbam Shemot 12:40, and Chizkuni Bereshit 15:1-7.</fn>&#160; maintains that the 400 years started from the birth of Yitzchak, while the 430 count began thirty years earlier, at the Covenant of the Pieces.&#160; According to this, Avraham was seventy when the Covenant took place,<fn>Since Avraham was 100 when Yitzchak was born, and the Covenant took place thirty years prior to that, Avraham would have been 70.</fn> and had not yet moved to Canaan.<fn>Bereshit 12 sets his age at seventy five when he left Charan for Israel.</fn> As such, these exegetes are forced to say that the Covenant is recorded out of place.&#160; See&#160;<a href="Bereshit 15 – One Prophecy or Two" data-aht="page">Bereshit 15 – One Prophecy or Two?</a> and&#160;<a href="Avraham's Aliyah" data-aht="page">Avraham's Aliyah</a> for elaboration and attempts to explain the reason for the misplacement.</li>
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<li><b>Avraham's marriage to Ketura</b> -&#160;<a href="Bereshit25-1-2" data-aht="source">Bereshit 25:1</a> describes Avraham's marriage to&#160; Ketura, which appears to take place after Sarah's death and Yitzchak's marriage, when Avraham is over 140 years old!<fn>We know from Bereshit 25:20 that Yitzchak was 40 when he married Rivka. Thus, since Avraham was 100 when Yitzchak was born, Avraham would be at least 140 when he married Keturah.</fn>&#160; The incongruity of his marrying and bearing children at such an advanced age makes readers question the chronology of the incident.&#160; Is it possible that here too, the event occurred earlier, but is only recorded as part of the epilogue to the Avraham stories so as not to interrupt the main narrative?&#160; See <a href="Avraham's Many Wives" data-aht="page">Avraham's Many Wives</a> for a variety of opinions.</li>
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<li><b>Yitzchak in Gerar</b></li>
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<li><b>Birth of Yaakov's children</b> – Bereshit 39-30 speaks of the births of Yaakov's first 12 children, including seven from Leah alone.&#160; A simple read of the story allocates slightly more than six years for all these births,<fn>Yaakov appears to marry Leah after completing his first seven years of labor for Lavan (see Bereshit 29:20-23 ), and Yosef, the twelfth child, is born at the end of his second seven year stint .</fn> but also includes a hiatus in which Leah was not able to conceive at all.&#160; This makes one question the chronology of the story as a whole and the relationship between the births of each mother. It is possible that some of the pregnancies/births overlapped, but so as not to confuse the reader, the Torah presented them as consecutive events.&#160; See&#160;<a href="The Births and Relative Ages of Yaakov's Children" data-aht="page">The Births and Relative Ages of Yaakov's Children</a> for this and other opinions, and for how the issue relates to the ages of Shimon and Levi during the <a href="Sin and Slaughter of Shekhem" data-aht="page">Slaughter of Shekhem</a>.<fn>Since the story of Shechem appears to have occurred soon after Yaakov made his way back to Canaan,&#160; Shimon and Levi would seem to be but 12 and 13 during the massacre!</fn></li>
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<li><b>Yehuda and Tamar</b> – Both the Yosef saga and the story of Yehuda's marriage to Bat Shua and relationship with Tamar span many years and overlap with each other.&#160; The chronological order of the various events appears to be:</li>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li><b>Tower of Bavel </b>–&#160;<a href="Bereshit10-21-32" data-aht="source">Bereshit 10</a> lists the descendants of Noach.&#160; In the middle of the genealogy list of Shem, it mentions that the dispersal took place in the time of Peleg.&#160; Rather than breaking off the list in the middle to elaborate further, the story of the Tower and the ensuing dispersal is first told in <a href="Bereshit11-1-26" data-aht="source">Bereshit 11</a>, after completing the list of Shem's offspring.</li>
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<li>Yehuda's marriage to Bat Shua (<a href="Bereshit38" data-aht="source">Chapter 38:1-11</a>)<fn>Among the people listed in Bereshit 42 as going to Egypt are Yehuda's great-grandchildren, Chezron and Chamul.&#160; As there are only 22 years between the sale of Yosef and the descent [Yosef is 17 when sold, 30 when he stands before Paroh, and 39 when the family comes down (seven years of plenty and two years of famine pass)], it would be very hard to assert that Yehuda's marriage is in its chronological place.&#160; See Ibn Ezr ad Ralbag who suggest that the opening of the chapter "וַיְהִי בָּעֵת הַהִוא" hints to the reader that the events actually happened earlier.&#160; Cf.Seder Olam Rabbah who nonetheless does attempt to maintain chronological order and suggests that each generation bore children at the age of seven.</fn></li>
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<li>The sale of Yosef (<a href="Bereshit37-1-2" data-aht="source">Chapter 37</a>)</li>
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<li>Yosef's rise to power in Potiphar's house (<a href="Bereshit39-1" data-aht="source">Chapter 39</a>)<fn>See how&#160;<a href="Bereshit39-1" data-aht="source">Bereshit 39:1</a> resumes right where&#160;<a href="Bereshit37-36" data-aht="source">Bereshit 37:36</a> left off.</fn></li>
 +
<li>Yehuda and Tamar (<a href="Bereshit38" data-aht="source">Chapter 38:12ff</a>)&#160;</li>
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<li>the rest of the Yosef story.&#160;</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 +
To preserve continuity in each story, the Torah separates the two sagas rather than interweaving one into the other.<fn>undefined</fn>&#160; It opens with the events which occurred in Canaan, telling of the sale and Yehuda<fn>One might have thought that the Torah should separate the two stories totally, first telling the Yehuda and Tamar tale and only afterwards speaking of the sale and the rest of the Yosef narratives. It is possible that the Torah did not open with Yehuda's marriage since the Bat-Shua story is not important in and of itself, and only comes to serve as an introduction to the main story of Yehuda and Tamar which occurred later. As such, the Torah begins chronologically, with the first event of import, the sale of Yosef.<br/>Others suggest that the Torah had other calculations.&#160; Ibn Ezra posits that the Torah wanted to juxtapose the story of Yehuda and Tamar with that of Yosef and Mrs. Potiphar so the reader can compare how each character dealt with the attempted seduction.</fn> and then moves to those events which happened in Egypt.<fn>As such, the events in Potiphar's house are only told after the Yehdua and Tamar story, despite their occurring earlier.&#160; Otherwise the narrative of Yosef's life in Egypt would be interrupted.</fn>&#160;
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li><b>Elements moved in both directions</b></li>
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<li><b>"כְּתֹב זֹאת זִכָּרוֹן בַּסֵּפֶר" </b>– In <a href="Shemot17-14" data-aht="source">Shemot 17</a>, after the battle of Amalek, Hashem tells Moshe to record the event for posterity in "the book" and to speak to Yehoshua about wiping out Amalek.&#160; <multilink><a href="IbnEzraShemotShortCommentary17-14" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra </a><a href="IbnEzraShemotShortCommentary17-14" data-aht="source">Shemot Short Commentary 17:14</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About R. Avraham ibn Ezra</a></multilink>posits that this was first commanded in the fortieth year, by which point it was known that Yehoshua alone was to head the conquest, and that the "book" refers to the Sefer Torah which was by then extant.<fn>Cf.<multilink><a href="RashiShemot17-14" data-aht="source"> Rashi</a><a href="RashiShemot17-14" data-aht="source">Shemot 17:14</a><a href="R. Shelomo Yitzchaki (Rashi)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Shelomo Yitzchaki</a></multilink> who disagrees and maintains chronological order, asserting instead that Hashem hinted here to Moshe that he was not to enter the land and Yehoshua was to lead after him.&#160; Alternatively, Yehoshua is mentioned due to the role he played in the present battle, and not because of his future position of leadership.</fn>&#160; In order to finish the story, however, the command is recorded here.</li>
<ul>
 
<li><b>Yehuda and Tamar</b> – Both the Yosef saga and the story of Yehuda's initial marriage and relationship with Tamar span many years, and overlap with each other.&#160; The chronological order of the various events appears to be: a)&#160; Yehuda's marriage to Bat Shua (Chapter 38:1-11)<fn>Among the people listed in Bereshit 42 as going to Egypt are Yehuda's great-grandchildren, Chezron and Chamul.&#160; As there are only 22 years between the sale of Yosef and the descent [Yosef is 17 when sold, 30 when he stands before Paroh, and 39 when the family comes down (seven years of plenty and two years of famine pass)], it would be very hard to assert that Yehuda's marriage is in its chronological place.&#160; See Ibn Ezr ad Ralbag who suggest that the opening of the chapter "וַיְהִי בָּעֵת הַהִוא" hints to the reader that the events actually happened earlier.&#160; Cf.Seder Olam Rabbah who nonetheless does attempt to maintain chronological order and suggests that each generation bore children at the age of seven.</fn> b) the sale of Yosef (Chapter 37) c) Yosef's rise to power in Potiphar's house (Chapter 39)<fn>See how&#160;<a href="Bereshit39-1" data-aht="source">Bereshit 39:1</a> resumes right where&#160;<a href="Bereshit37-36" data-aht="source">Bereshit 37:36</a> left off.</fn> d) Yehuda and Tamar (Bereshit 38:12ff)&#160; e) the rest of the Yosef story.&#160; The Torah </li>
 
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
</ul>
 
 
<h2>Overlapping Units&#160;– Ambiguous Cases</h2>
 
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li>Avraham's exit from charan</li>
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<li><b>Yitro's arrival and advice</b> –&#160;<a href="Shemot18" data-aht="source">Shemot 18</a> speaks of Yitro's arrival at Sinai before the revelation and his subsequent advice to Moshe.&#160; Several textual issues lead commentators to question if the incident is recorded in its proper chronological place.&#160; Yitro offers sacrifices "לִפְנֵי הָאֱלֹהִים", a term often used to refer to the Mishkan, yet at this point the Tabernacle has not been built.&#160; Moshe tells Yitro that he teaches the people "the statutes of God and His laws", yet the Decalogue has not been given. In addition, the parallel story in Devarim appears in the midst of Moshe's account of the events of the second year rather than the first!&#160; As such, many have attempted to reconstruct the actual order of events and explain why the story, or parts thereof,<fn>While some posit that the entire story is misplaced, others suggest that it is entirely chronological.&#160; Many also take middle positions, claiming that the story of Yitro's arrival might be in its proper place, but the advising of Moshe is not.&#160; Finally, some claim that just the final verse discussing Yitro's return home is out of order and found here only to complete the story.</fn> was moved here. To see the full array of opinions and issues, see <a href="Chronology – Shemot 18" data-aht="page">Chronology – Shemot 18</a>.</li>
<li>Covenant between the pieces</li>
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<li>Shemot 24 – Shemot 24 describes the Covenant at Sinai.&#160; As some of its content overlaps with the events of Shemot 19 and the preparation for revelation described there</li>
<li>Avraham's marriage to Ketura</li>
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<li>Mishkan –</li>
<li>Yitzchak in Gerar</li>
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<li>Bemidbar 21</li>
<li>Birth of Yaakov's Children</li>
+
<li></li>
<li>Story of Shechem</li>
 
<li></li>
 
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
  
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<notes>
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_
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</notes>
 
</page>
 
</page>
 
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Latest revision as of 01:47, 1 November 2019

Chronological and Thematic Order

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Introduction

When recording history an author must always balance the competing demands of chronological and thematic order.  The Biblical text sets chronological order as the norm, but in a number of instances it is willing to sacrifice it for literary reasons.  In several places in Torah this achronology is explicit in the text.  Time or location markers such as people's ages, a switch of locale, or more rarely, definitive dates, clue the reader into the phenomenon.  More often, though, the true timing of scenes is ambiguous.  For textual or conceptual reasons a case might be made for achronology, but no definitive proof can be found in the text.

 

Explicit Cases

 

1)  Displacement of minor details – When a textual unit takes place over an extended period of time, some of its components might overlap with the events of surrounding stories. Instead of constantly switching back and forth between the two, the Torah might complete one narrative unit before moving to the other.  In the following cases, the majority of each story is recorded in its proper chronological place, and it is just one or two additional details which are moved earlier to provide closure.  These details take the form of an epilogue at the end of the unit (השלמת העניין):

  • Death notices – The lives of main protagonists always overlap with those of the surrounding generations.  Nevertheless, the text is arranged so that it focuses on only one figure at a time and does not interrupt a particular cycle of stories with the death notices of earlier characters.  As a result, the deaths of the various characters in Sefer Bereshit are recorded already when they fade from the scene, rather then in the middle of later narratives when they chronologically occurred.1 
  • The manna – Shemot 16 focuses on the story of the manna's initial arrival in the first year in the wilderness, but it also mentions its later preservation near the Ark and its being eaten throughout the forty years of wandering.2  Despite the fact that these added details occur only later, they are placed here both to provide closure to the unit and so as not to interrupt later narratives with unrelated information.3

 

2)  Displacement of major units – Sometimes entire stories are recorded out of chronological order.  This displacement is motivated by a desire to juxtapose related material, but in contrast to the above cases, in these incidents both the chronological and achronological components are of equal import.  In the following two examples, the displaced unit is moved to serve as an introduction:

  • Laws of Sacrifices in Vayikra 1-5 and 6-7 – According to Vayikra 1:1 the laws of sacrifices discussed in Vayikra 1-5 were all said to Moshe in the Tent of Meeting.  In contrast, the directives of Chapters 6-7, aimed at the priests, were given earlier at Mt. Sinai.4   As such, the two units appear in reverse chronological order.  In this case, it is possible that the written account flips the true chronology due to its nature as a guide book for future generations.  The laws relayed in Chapters 6-7 relate to to the sacrificial ceremonies surrounding the Tabernacle's consecration5 and were important for the time (הוראות שעה) but less so for future generations.  Thus, when writing for posterity, Moshe delayed these and instead began with the laws of Chapters 1-5 which are relevant for all times.6
  • Census and Camp in Bemidbar 1-4 – Sefer Bemidbar opens with a series of dated, and explicitly non-chronological events. Chapters 1-4 speak of the census taken in the second month of the second year, while Bemidbar 7:1-3 goes back in time to the dedication of the altar in the first month.  Bemidbar 9:1-2 continues with the Pesach in the first month, and Bemidbar 10 brings the reader back to the middle of the second month with the nations' travels.7  Though the opening census really occurs in between the events of Chapters 9 and 10, placing such an extensive list of numbers there would break up the main narrative of the book. As such, the Torah preferred to incorporate the non-narrative material as an introduction to the book,8 and start the main plot line in Chapter 7.

Ambiguous Cases

  • "לֶךְ לְךָ מֵאַרְצְךָ וּמִמּוֹלַדְתְּךָ" – Hashem's command to Avraham that he leave his birthplace is found in Bereshit 12:1, yet Avraham and his family already uproot from Ur Kasdim at the end of Chapter 11.  This leads commentators to question whether Hashem's command is really in its chronological place, or if it was delayed so as to first finish the Terach cycle of stories before opening the Avraham narratives. For a full discussion of the issue and its implications for understanding Avraham's move as a whole, see Avraham's Aliyah.
  • Covenant of the Pieces – In order to resolve the discrepancy between Hashem's promise in Bereshit 15 that the exile would be 400 years and Shemot 12 which states that the bondage lasted 430 years, many commentators9  maintains that the 400 years started from the birth of Yitzchak, while the 430 count began thirty years earlier, at the Covenant of the Pieces.  According to this, Avraham was seventy when the Covenant took place,10 and had not yet moved to Canaan.11 As such, these exegetes are forced to say that the Covenant is recorded out of place.  See Bereshit 15 – One Prophecy or Two? and Avraham's Aliyah for elaboration and attempts to explain the reason for the misplacement.
  • Avraham's marriage to KeturaBereshit 25:1 describes Avraham's marriage to  Ketura, which appears to take place after Sarah's death and Yitzchak's marriage, when Avraham is over 140 years old!12  The incongruity of his marrying and bearing children at such an advanced age makes readers question the chronology of the incident.  Is it possible that here too, the event occurred earlier, but is only recorded as part of the epilogue to the Avraham stories so as not to interrupt the main narrative?  See Avraham's Many Wives for a variety of opinions.
  • Yitzchak in Gerar
  • Birth of Yaakov's children – Bereshit 39-30 speaks of the births of Yaakov's first 12 children, including seven from Leah alone.  A simple read of the story allocates slightly more than six years for all these births,13 but also includes a hiatus in which Leah was not able to conceive at all.  This makes one question the chronology of the story as a whole and the relationship between the births of each mother. It is possible that some of the pregnancies/births overlapped, but so as not to confuse the reader, the Torah presented them as consecutive events.  See The Births and Relative Ages of Yaakov's Children for this and other opinions, and for how the issue relates to the ages of Shimon and Levi during the Slaughter of Shekhem.14
  • Yehuda and Tamar – Both the Yosef saga and the story of Yehuda's marriage to Bat Shua and relationship with Tamar span many years and overlap with each other.  The chronological order of the various events appears to be:

To preserve continuity in each story, the Torah separates the two sagas rather than interweaving one into the other.17  It opens with the events which occurred in Canaan, telling of the sale and Yehuda18 and then moves to those events which happened in Egypt.19 

  • "כְּתֹב זֹאת זִכָּרוֹן בַּסֵּפֶר" – In Shemot 17, after the battle of Amalek, Hashem tells Moshe to record the event for posterity in "the book" and to speak to Yehoshua about wiping out Amalek.  Ibn Ezra Shemot Short Commentary 17:14About R. Avraham ibn Ezraposits that this was first commanded in the fortieth year, by which point it was known that Yehoshua alone was to head the conquest, and that the "book" refers to the Sefer Torah which was by then extant.20  In order to finish the story, however, the command is recorded here.
  • Yitro's arrival and advice – Shemot 18 speaks of Yitro's arrival at Sinai before the revelation and his subsequent advice to Moshe.  Several textual issues lead commentators to question if the incident is recorded in its proper chronological place.  Yitro offers sacrifices "לִפְנֵי הָאֱלֹהִים", a term often used to refer to the Mishkan, yet at this point the Tabernacle has not been built.  Moshe tells Yitro that he teaches the people "the statutes of God and His laws", yet the Decalogue has not been given. In addition, the parallel story in Devarim appears in the midst of Moshe's account of the events of the second year rather than the first!  As such, many have attempted to reconstruct the actual order of events and explain why the story, or parts thereof,21 was moved here. To see the full array of opinions and issues, see Chronology – Shemot 18.
  • Shemot 24 – Shemot 24 describes the Covenant at Sinai.  As some of its content overlaps with the events of Shemot 19 and the preparation for revelation described there
  • Mishkan –
  • Bemidbar 21
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