A preference for thematic ordering is often evident when components of two independent stories overlap in time. Tanakh will focus on each story individually rather than constantly switching back and forth between the two. As such, the same overall time period might be discussed from different vantage points in the textual equivalent of a split screen, with material grouped by varying protagonists, perspectives, literary genre or other factors.
Tanakh will often focus on one individual protagonist at a time, even if this means compromising on chronological order.
"לֶךְ לְךָ" (Bereshit 12:1) – R. Saadia, Ibn Ezra and Radak assert that Hashem's command of "לֶךְ לְךָ" was originally given to Avraham in Ur Kasdim when he was 70,
36 and is thus equivalent to the description of Terach and his family leaving to Charan in Bereshit 11:31.
37 It is mentioned out of order so as to group the stories of Terach together and those of Avraham together. [When opening the Avraham narrative, the text backtracks to the first significant event relating to him.] For further discussion, see
Avraham's Aliyah.
Births of Yaakov's Children (Bereshit 29-20) – A simple reading of
Bereshit 29-
30 might imply that Yaakov's twelve children were born consecutively. Yet as this would seem to leave just a little over 6 years for the births of all 12 children,
38 several commentators suggest that some of the births must have overlapped.
39 Tanakh, though, prefers to separate the stories of each mother, listing each of their births together and only then moving on to the next mother. See opinions in
The Births and Relative Ages of Yaakov's Children for elaboration and other approaches.
Preparation for revelation (Shemot 19 and 24) – According to
Rashi, the story of the covenant and ceremony described in
Shemot 24 took place during the three days of preparations discussed in
Shemot 19.
42 Despite this, the stories are distinguished because they have distinct foci; while Shemot 19 highlights the role of the nation and laymen, Shemot 24 focuses on the elders.
Bilam and Israel – See
Why Was Hashem Angry at Bilam for those who suggest that the interactions between Bilam and Balak in Bemidbar 22-24 take place at the same time as the story of the Sin of Baal Peor in Bemidbar 25. Here, too, the same time period is discussed from two vantage points, one focusing on what was occurring among Israel's enemies and the other on what was happening in the Israelite camp itself.
Yehoshua's Spies – As there would not seem to be enough time for the story of the sending of Yehoshua's spies and their escape to take place between Yehoshua 1 and 3, some have suggested that it overlaps with the events of Chapter 1.
43 Tanakh , though, opted for thematic order, first telling of Yehoshua's interactions with the nation and then focusing on the two spies.
The Shofetim – The book of Shofetim presents the tenures of each judge as being consecutive, yet, due to the dating given in
Shofetim 11:26, there is reason to suggest that they actually overlapped
44 and that parts of the book are achronological.
45 Here, too, Tanakh prefers thematic order, opting to tell the story of each judge individually.
Shaul and David – Shemuel I 30 and 31 appear to occur at the same time. David returns to Ziklag and fights the Amalekites while Shaul and the Israelite army are being defeated by the Philistines on the Mountains of Gilboa.
46 As Tanakh cannot describe both events at once, and prefers not to interweave the various events of each story line by line, it focuses on one protagonist at a time.
Reigns of the Judean and Israelite kings – The book of Melakhim alternates between the reigns of the kings of Yehuda and Yisrael, focusing on only one kingdom at a time, even though this means that certain elements of each king's reign are told out of order.
Prophecies of Yirmeyahu – See
Structure – Sefer Yirmeyahu for a discussion of how the prophecies of rebuke in Chapters 1-25 might be ordered based on the audience receiving the prophecies rather than when they were relayed. Yirmeyahu focuses first on the nation as a whole, then turns to the kings, then to the false prophets and finally to the other nations.
When a protagonist's interactions in two realms of his life (such as the personal / familial realm vs. the political /national realm) overlap, Tanakh will often separate the two strands of the story rather than constantly switching back and forth.
Banishment of Yishmael and covenant with Avimelekh (Bereshit 21) –
R. Saadia Gaon,
R"Y Kara and
Rashbam all imply that the story of the covenant with Avimelekh took place after Yitzchak's birth but before (or in the middle of) the story of Yishmael's banishment.
47 Tanakh might have relayed the events achronologically as it preferred to group the episodes that touch on Avraham's personal family life separately from those which relate to his interactions with outsiders.
48 Yitzchak stories (Bereshit 25-26) – Bereshit 25 tells of Yitzchak's marriage, the birth of Yaakov and Esav, and their upbringing. These events likely overlapped with those of Bereshit 26, with the first half of Bereshit 26 (the wife-sister story) occurring before the birth
49 and the second half (the covenant with Avimelekh) taking place later on. Rather than interweaving the various elements of each story as a strict chronology would dictate, Torah separates the personal and political strands of the Yitzchak narrative.
Yosef in Egypt (Bereshit 42-47) – After narrating the story of Yosef's interactions with his brothers in Bereshit 42-46, Chapter 47 speaks of how the Egyptians themselves fared throughout the famine. If
Bereshit 47:18's mention of the "שָּׁנָה הַשֵּׁנִית" refers to the second year of the famine
50 (rather than two years after the family's arrival in Egypt), then the events of the chapter overlap with those of the previous ones. Here, too Torah portrays the same time period from two perspectives, the personal and political, first focusing on Yosef and his family and then on Yosef and the Egyptians.
Search for a harpist (Shemuel I 16-17) – See
Chronology of Shemuel I 16 – 17 for an approach which suggests that the search for a musician to calm Shaul when overtaken by the "evil spirit" described in
Shemuel I 16 took place in the middle of the war with the Philistines described in Chapter 17.
51 Tanakh, though, tells of each event alone, with Chapter 16 focusing on events relating to the personal life of Shaul, and Chapter 17 focusing on those that relate to Shaul in the national realm.
David's sin and the war with Ammon (Shemuel II 11-12) – The story of David's sin with Batsheva and its aftermath spans Shemuel II 11-12 and takes place over at least two years. The events likely overlapped with the end of the war against Ammon described in
12:26-31, yet the two episodes are told as independent stories with Tanakh focusing on the personal and national spheres separately.
Shelomo's internal enemies – Melakhim I 2 describes how Shelomo took care of his internal enemies, Yoav, Shimi and Evyatar. Though it is likely that some of these stories overlapped with events that took place later,
52 they are grouped together in one unit as they all relate to the same aspect of Shelomo's reign, the securing of his throne. Sefer Melakhim preferred to separate its discussion of events related to the kingdom's security from those which relate to its administration.
53 Chizkiyahu's illness – Seder Olam Rabbah asserts that Chizkiyahu's sickness overlapped with Sancheriv's attack (suggesting that the incident took place three days before Sancheriv's defeat).
54 If so, it is likely that the story is told achronologically to separate the events relating to Chizkiyahu the person from those relating to Chizkiyahu the king.
Torah often separates material of different genres. Thus, even if a unit of laws was relayed over a period of time and other events occurred simultaneously, Torah might group the legal and narrative material separately. Similarly, when a book contains both prophecies and history, each might be grouped alone even if this creates achronology.
Yitro'a arrival –
Rashbam posits that all of Chapter 18 (Yitro's arrival, advice and its implementation) occurred after receiving the Decalogue but before the construction of the Tabernacle. It is placed earlier in order not to break up the continuity of the legal sections of Shemot 20-24 with an unrelated narrative. See
Chronology – Shemot 18 for more.
Revelation – R. Yehoshua in
Shir HaShirim Rabbah suggests that
Shemot 20:14-16, which describes the people's request that Moshe act as an intermediary rather than Hashem speaking to them directly, actually happened in the midst of Hashem's relaying of the Decalogue (after the second commandment) and not afterward where it is written.
Chizkuni explains that it is recorded out of order so as not to interrupt the Decalogue, thereby allowing the commandments to appear in one continuous list. For further discussion and the implications of this reading, see
The Decalogue: Direct From Hashem or Via Moshe.
"הַחֹדֶשׁ הַזֶּה לָכֶם" –
Chizkuni claims that the command of "הַחֹדֶשׁ הַזֶּה לָכֶם" in Shemot 12 was given before the warning about the Plague of Firstborns in Shemot 11,
55 but was recorded only afterwards since Torah wanted to group the narrative of the plagues together and the laws relating to the month of Nissan together.
Sefer Yirmeyahu – Some of the explicit achronology of Sefer Yirmeyahu might be explained if one posits that the book groups prophetic and history/narrative separately, first recording a series of prophecies and then returning to discuss relevant historical narrative. See
Structure – Sefer Yirmeyahu.
When an action occurs in the middle of a conversation, or an extended conversation occurs in the midst of a list of several actions, Tanakh might distinguish between the two.
Giving of jewelry –
Rashbam suggests that in reality the giving of the jewelry to Rivka took place in the middle of the servant's conversation with her (after asking her who she was but before she invited him to stay). The narrator reverses the order so as not to interrupt the conversation. For elaboration and how this understanding of the verse relates to the disagreement regarding what qualities the servant was looking for when searching for Yitzchak's wife, see
A Wife for Yitzchak.
Entry into Rachel's tent (Bereshit 31:33-35) – Though the opening of
Bereshit 31:33 implies that Lavan went straight from Leah's tent into that of the maidservants, several commentators
56 claim that really he went from Leah into Rachel's tent and only then into the tent of Bilhah and Zilpah.
57 However, due to the lengthy exchange between Lavan and Rachel, Tanakh preferred not to interrupt the initial list and left the description of the interaction for the end.