Difference between revisions of "Duration of the Egyptian Exile/2"
(Original Author: Yonatan Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
(Original Author: Yonatan Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
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<h1>The Duration of the Egyptian Exile</h1> | <h1>The Duration of the Egyptian Exile</h1> | ||
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<h2>Overview</h2> | <h2>Overview</h2> | ||
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<category name="Full 430 Years">Full 430 Years | <category name="Full 430 Years">Full 430 Years | ||
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<point><b>Duration of the slavery</b> – Theoretically, this approach could posit that the Israelites were enslaved for over 300 years. However, the Hoil Moshe maintains that the harsh decrees spanned only the reign of the two kings mentioned in Sefer Shemot, or a period of about a hundred years.<fn>For more on the Hoil Moshe's historical reconstruction, see <aht page="New King or Dynasty">Melekh Chadash</aht> and <a href="$">Egyptian Chronology</a>.</fn></point> | <point><b>Duration of the slavery</b> – Theoretically, this approach could posit that the Israelites were enslaved for over 300 years. However, the Hoil Moshe maintains that the harsh decrees spanned only the reign of the two kings mentioned in Sefer Shemot, or a period of about a hundred years.<fn>For more on the Hoil Moshe's historical reconstruction, see <aht page="New King or Dynasty">Melekh Chadash</aht> and <a href="$">Egyptian Chronology</a>.</fn></point> | ||
</category> | </category> | ||
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<category name="Plan Changed">Change in Plans | <category name="Plan Changed">Change in Plans | ||
<p>The Israelites were supposed to be in Egypt for a full 400-430 years, but Hashem shortened their stay.</p> | <p>The Israelites were supposed to be in Egypt for a full 400-430 years, but Hashem shortened their stay.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Israelite population growth</b> – The Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael,<fn>Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael Bo 12.</fn> Pesikta,<fn>Pesikta DeRav Kahana 11.</fn> and Tanchuma<fn>Tanchuma Shemot 5</fn> all explain that the growth was supernatural. See <a href="$">Fertility Rate</a> for more.</point> | <point><b>Israelite population growth</b> – The Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael,<fn>Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael Bo 12.</fn> Pesikta,<fn>Pesikta DeRav Kahana 11.</fn> and Tanchuma<fn>Tanchuma Shemot 5</fn> all explain that the growth was supernatural. See <a href="$">Fertility Rate</a> for more.</point> | ||
</category> | </category> | ||
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<category name="Never 430 Years">Never 430 Years | <category name="Never 430 Years">Never 430 Years | ||
<p>The Israelites were never supposed to be in Egypt for a full 400-430 years, and the verses which speak of a 400 or 430 year stay need to be reinterpreted as counting, not from the descent to Egypt, but rather from a different starting point.<fn>To some extent, the verse of Bereshit 15:13 poses less of a problem than the verses in Shemot 12:40-41, as it is vaguer – which land is not specified, the 400 is perhaps only a round number and not a precise figure, and the verse contains more possibilities for what the number is describing. [This is why the Rabbinic tradition about the emendation of the translators of the Torah into Greek appears only with regard to the verses in Shemot.] On the other hand, see below that the contrast to Bereshit 15:15-16 would appear to eliminate the option that 15:13 speaks of Avraham himself or of the land of Canaan.</fn> This option subdivides regarding the point from which the 430 years are counted:<fn>The categorization below is organized by how the approaches interpreted the 430 figure. However, some of the positions may have first established the starting point for the 400 number, and then worked backwards to explain the 430. See J. Heinemann, "210 Years of Egyptian Exile," JJS 22 (1971): 19-30 who attempts to reconstruct the historical development of the various Midrashic motifs.</fn></p> | <p>The Israelites were never supposed to be in Egypt for a full 400-430 years, and the verses which speak of a 400 or 430 year stay need to be reinterpreted as counting, not from the descent to Egypt, but rather from a different starting point.<fn>To some extent, the verse of Bereshit 15:13 poses less of a problem than the verses in Shemot 12:40-41, as it is vaguer – which land is not specified, the 400 is perhaps only a round number and not a precise figure, and the verse contains more possibilities for what the number is describing. [This is why the Rabbinic tradition about the emendation of the translators of the Torah into Greek appears only with regard to the verses in Shemot.] On the other hand, see below that the contrast to Bereshit 15:15-16 would appear to eliminate the option that 15:13 speaks of Avraham himself or of the land of Canaan.</fn> This option subdivides regarding the point from which the 430 years are counted:<fn>The categorization below is organized by how the approaches interpreted the 430 figure. However, some of the positions may have first established the starting point for the 400 number, and then worked backwards to explain the 430. See J. Heinemann, "210 Years of Egyptian Exile," JJS 22 (1971): 19-30 who attempts to reconstruct the historical development of the various Midrashic motifs.</fn></p> | ||
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<point><b>Duration of the slavery</b> – As Shemot 1:6 implies that the entire generation of Yosef and his brothers died before the oppression began, we must deduct the 94 years Levi lived in Egypt from the 210 year total. This leaves a maximum of 116 years of slavery.<fn>R. Saadia reduces this further and estimates a total of 80 years of bondage, but the text of his commentary is fragmentary, and it is hard to reconstruct his thought process.</fn></point> | <point><b>Duration of the slavery</b> – As Shemot 1:6 implies that the entire generation of Yosef and his brothers died before the oppression began, we must deduct the 94 years Levi lived in Egypt from the 210 year total. This leaves a maximum of 116 years of slavery.<fn>R. Saadia reduces this further and estimates a total of 80 years of bondage, but the text of his commentary is fragmentary, and it is hard to reconstruct his thought process.</fn></point> | ||
</subopinion> | </subopinion> | ||
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<subopinion name="Arrival at 75">Arrival at Age 75 | <subopinion name="Arrival at 75">Arrival at Age 75 | ||
<p>The 430 year count begins when Avraham arrived in the land of Canaan at age 75.<fn>This position most likely developed from an attempt to match the 430 figure with a Biblically recorded event. The explanation of the 400 is likely secondary.</fn></p> | <p>The 430 year count begins when Avraham arrived in the land of Canaan at age 75.<fn>This position most likely developed from an attempt to match the 430 figure with a Biblically recorded event. The explanation of the 400 is likely secondary.</fn></p> | ||
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</subopinion> | </subopinion> | ||
</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
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<opinion name="430 From Covenant">430 Years From Covenant | <opinion name="430 From Covenant">430 Years From Covenant | ||
<p>The 430 years are counted from the Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים). This possibility further subdivides regarding when the Covenant took place:</p> | <p>The 430 years are counted from the Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים). This possibility further subdivides regarding when the Covenant took place:</p> | ||
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<subopinion name="Covenant at 70">Covenant at Age 70 | <subopinion name="Covenant at 70">Covenant at Age 70 | ||
<p>The Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים) occurred when Avraham was 70 years old.<fn>It is likely that this position first established the birth of Yitzchak as the starting point for the 400 number and then dated the Covenant to thirty years earlier in order to account for the 430 figure.</fn></p> | <p>The Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים) occurred when Avraham was 70 years old.<fn>It is likely that this position first established the birth of Yitzchak as the starting point for the 400 number and then dated the Covenant to thirty years earlier in order to account for the 430 figure.</fn></p> | ||
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<ul> | <ul> | ||
<li>Achronology – As the events of Bereshit 12-14 and the first part of Bereshit 15 proceed sequentially from when Avraham was 75 years old, the story of the Covenant of the Pieces in Bereshit 15:7-21 cannot be in chronological order and is not a continuation of the first part of Bereshit 15.<fn>One difficulty with this theory is that the text gives no hint that it is going backwards in time. Additionally, the language of "וַיֹּאמֶר אֵלָיו" at the beginning of the Covenant of the Pieces appears to indicate that this story continues from where the preceding narrative left off. Were it an opening of a separate story, one would have expected the standard opening formula of ויאמר ה' אל אברהם to identify the participants in the conversation. Not all Rabbinic sources adopt the chronology of Seder Olam Rabbah – see Tanchuma Buber Chayyei Sarah 6 that he was 48, and see <multilink><aht source="BereshitRabbah46-2">Bereshit Rabbah</aht><aht source="BereshitRabbah46-2">46:2</aht><aht parshan="Bereshit Rabbah" /></multilink> that he was 85. See <aht page="BER15$">Covenant of the Pieces</aht>, and for more on the general issue, see <a href="LIT$">Chronology</a>.</fn></li> | <li>Achronology – As the events of Bereshit 12-14 and the first part of Bereshit 15 proceed sequentially from when Avraham was 75 years old, the story of the Covenant of the Pieces in Bereshit 15:7-21 cannot be in chronological order and is not a continuation of the first part of Bereshit 15.<fn>One difficulty with this theory is that the text gives no hint that it is going backwards in time. Additionally, the language of "וַיֹּאמֶר אֵלָיו" at the beginning of the Covenant of the Pieces appears to indicate that this story continues from where the preceding narrative left off. Were it an opening of a separate story, one would have expected the standard opening formula of ויאמר ה' אל אברהם to identify the participants in the conversation. Not all Rabbinic sources adopt the chronology of Seder Olam Rabbah – see Tanchuma Buber Chayyei Sarah 6 that he was 48, and see <multilink><aht source="BereshitRabbah46-2">Bereshit Rabbah</aht><aht source="BereshitRabbah46-2">46:2</aht><aht parshan="Bereshit Rabbah" /></multilink> that he was 85. See <aht page="BER15$">Covenant of the Pieces</aht>, and for more on the general issue, see <a href="LIT$">Chronology</a>.</fn></li> | ||
− | <li>Setting – Since according to Bereshit 12:4-5 Avraham arrived in Israel only after he was 75, one must posit either that the Covenant of the Pieces took place outside of Israel before Avraham came to Israel<fn>See Chizkuni Bereshit 15:7 that this possibility would appear to be contradicted by the words "הָאָרֶץ הַזֹּאת"‎ (15:7,18). However, R. | + | <li>Setting – Since according to Bereshit 12:4-5 Avraham arrived in Israel only after he was 75, one must posit either that the Covenant of the Pieces took place outside of Israel before Avraham came to Israel<fn>See Chizkuni Bereshit 15:7 that this possibility would appear to be contradicted by the words "הָאָרֶץ הַזֹּאת"‎ (15:7,18). However, R. Yaacov Medan in an article in מוסף השבת, מקור ראשון, פרשת לך לך תש"ע attempts to develop this option. According to him the words "הָאָרֶץ הַזֹּאת" and "הֵנָּה"‎ (15:16) refer to the land Avraham is viewing (Cf. Devarim 34:4).</fn> or that Avraham had made an earlier pilot trip to Israel before he was 70, left,<fn>See Ran in his commentary to Bereshit 12:5 that Avraham went back to pack up his "lift."</fn> and then returned at 75.<fn>Seder Olam Rabbah 1 takes this option. See also the opinions in Bavli Avodah Zarah 9a and Tosafot s.v. "וגמירי" (see also Tosafot Shabbat 10b s.v. "ושל") that Avraham was 52 when he came to Israel, and Tanchuma Buber Chayyei Sarah 6 that he was 48 at the time of the Covenant. <multilink><aht source="RalbagMilotBereshit15-13">Ralbag</aht><aht source="RalbagMilotBereshit15-13">Milot Bereshit 15:13</aht><aht parshan="Ralbag" /></multilink> argues against Seder Olam Rabbah and rejects the possibility that Avraham would have left the land of Israel without adequate reason (cf. Ramban Bereshit 12:10). For further discussion, see <aht page="BER12$">Avraham's Aliyah</aht> and <aht page="BER15$">Covenant of the Pieces</aht>.</fn></li> |
</ul> | </ul> | ||
</point> | </point> | ||
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<point><b>Israelite population growth</b> – The Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael<fn>Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael Bo 12.</fn> and Rashi Shemot 1:7 explain that the growth was supernatural. See <a href="$">Fertility Rate</a> for more.</point> | <point><b>Israelite population growth</b> – The Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael<fn>Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael Bo 12.</fn> and Rashi Shemot 1:7 explain that the growth was supernatural. See <a href="$">Fertility Rate</a> for more.</point> | ||
</subopinion> | </subopinion> | ||
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<subopinion name="Covenant at 80">Covenant at Age 80 | <subopinion name="Covenant at 80">Covenant at Age 80 | ||
<p>The Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים) occurred when Avraham was 80 years old.</p> | <p>The Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים) occurred when Avraham was 80 years old.</p> | ||
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<point><b>"וְדוֹר רְבִיעִי יָשׁוּבוּ הֵנָּה"</b> (Bereshit 15:16) and <b>Biblical genealogies</b> – Ramban Bereshit 15:16 explains that the fourth generation refers to the Amorites.<fn>See also Rashbam.</fn> In his commentary to Bereshit 46:15 he dismisses the difficulty arising from the advanced age at which children are born to Levi and/or Yocheved, noting that Tanakh is replete with miracles<fn>See <a href="$">Miracles</a> for more on Ramban's position.</fn> and that nature was different at that time.<fn>Ramban cites a similar example from the genealogy of David.</fn></point> | <point><b>"וְדוֹר רְבִיעִי יָשׁוּבוּ הֵנָּה"</b> (Bereshit 15:16) and <b>Biblical genealogies</b> – Ramban Bereshit 15:16 explains that the fourth generation refers to the Amorites.<fn>See also Rashbam.</fn> In his commentary to Bereshit 46:15 he dismisses the difficulty arising from the advanced age at which children are born to Levi and/or Yocheved, noting that Tanakh is replete with miracles<fn>See <a href="$">Miracles</a> for more on Ramban's position.</fn> and that nature was different at that time.<fn>Ramban cites a similar example from the genealogy of David.</fn></point> | ||
</subopinion> | </subopinion> | ||
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<subopinion name="Covenant at 85">Covenant at Age 85 | <subopinion name="Covenant at 85">Covenant at Age 85 | ||
<p>The Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים) occurred when Avraham was 85 years old.</p> | <p>The Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים) occurred when Avraham was 85 years old.</p> | ||
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<point><b>"וְדוֹר רְבִיעִי יָשׁוּבוּ הֵנָּה"</b> (Bereshit 15:16) and <b>Biblical genealogies</b> – Ralbag Shemot 2:1 suggests that Yocheved was born at the very end of Levi's life, which according to him was 87 years after the descent to Egypt<fn>Ralbag says that Levi was 50 when they came to Egypt, while other commentators assume that he was 43 (see Ramban Bereshit 46:15). This is consistent with his unique interpretation in his commentary to Bereshit 29:20 of when Yaakov's sons were born. See <a href="BRE$">Chronology of Bereshit 29-30</a>.</fn> and 138 years before the Exodus. This would make Yocheved only 58 when she gave birth to Moshe.</point> | <point><b>"וְדוֹר רְבִיעִי יָשׁוּבוּ הֵנָּה"</b> (Bereshit 15:16) and <b>Biblical genealogies</b> – Ralbag Shemot 2:1 suggests that Yocheved was born at the very end of Levi's life, which according to him was 87 years after the descent to Egypt<fn>Ralbag says that Levi was 50 when they came to Egypt, while other commentators assume that he was 43 (see Ramban Bereshit 46:15). This is consistent with his unique interpretation in his commentary to Bereshit 29:20 of when Yaakov's sons were born. See <a href="BRE$">Chronology of Bereshit 29-30</a>.</fn> and 138 years before the Exodus. This would make Yocheved only 58 when she gave birth to Moshe.</point> | ||
</subopinion> | </subopinion> | ||
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</opinion> | </opinion> | ||
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<opinion name="430 From Yitzchak">430 Years From Yitzchak's Birth | <opinion name="430 From Yitzchak">430 Years From Yitzchak's Birth | ||
<p>The 430 years are counted from the birth of Yitzchak, when Avraham was 100 years old.</p> | <p>The 430 years are counted from the birth of Yitzchak, when Avraham was 100 years old.</p> | ||
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<point><b>Duration of the slavery</b> – According to Jubilees 46, the oppression began after the deaths of Yosef and all of his brothers, and thus lasted 147 years. Abarbanel opts for a lower figure of 86 years for the most severe stage of the oppression (וְעִנּוּ אֹתָם)‎.<fn>See Seder Olam Rabbah and other sources cited above.</fn></point> | <point><b>Duration of the slavery</b> – According to Jubilees 46, the oppression began after the deaths of Yosef and all of his brothers, and thus lasted 147 years. Abarbanel opts for a lower figure of 86 years for the most severe stage of the oppression (וְעִנּוּ אֹתָם)‎.<fn>See Seder Olam Rabbah and other sources cited above.</fn></point> | ||
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Version as of 23:25, 25 June 2014
The Duration of the Egyptian Exile
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
Faced with the apparent contradictions between the explicit verses which speak of 400 or 430 years and the upper limit of 350 years derived from Moshe’s genealogy, different commentators chose to take some verses at face value while reinterpreting others. This yields a full spectrum of approaches regarding the total number of years the Israelites spent in Egypt.
Shadal and the Hoil Moshe maintain that the Children of Israel were in Egypt for the full 430 years. They propose that Moshe's genealogy omits several generations and includes only the more prominent personalities. Others view Moshe's genealogy as a full listing and therefore suggest that the nation was in Egypt for much less than 430 years. To do so, they reread the verses which speak of 430 or 400, suggesting that this time span does not begin with the descent to Egypt but with some other event such as Avraham's journey to Israel, the Covenant of the Pieces, or the birth of Yitzchak. Depending on which of these approaches is chosen, the Children of Israel might have been in Egypt anywhere between 210 and 240 years. There is also a compromise approach which suggests that though the original plan was for a full 400 year exile in Egypt, Hashem changed his mind and shortened the stay.1
Full 430 Years
The Israelites lived in Egypt for a full 430 years.
Shadal and the Hoil Moshe maintain that the Israelites were in Egypt for a full 430 years. To do so, they must posit that Moshe's genealogy in Shemot 6 omits several generations and includes only the more prominent personalities.
Change in Plans
The Israelites were supposed to be in Egypt for a full 400-430 years, but Hashem shortened their stay.
This approach resolves the discrepancy between four generations and 430/400 years by suggesting that there was a change in the Divine plan. Although Hashem originally decreed a longer exile in Egypt, He later shortened the stay to 210 years.
Never 430 Years
The Israelites were never supposed to be in Egypt for a full 400-430 years, and the verses which speak of a 400 or 430 year stay need to be reinterpreted as counting, not from the descent to Egypt, but rather from a different starting point.27 This option subdivides regarding the point from which the 430 years are counted:28
430 Years From Avraham's Aliyah
The 430 years are counted from the time when Avraham began his journey to the land of Israel. There are two variations of this possibility:
Departure at Age 70
The 430 year count begins when Avraham originally departed Ur Kasdim at the age of 70.29
This approach suggests that the 430 year count begins when Avraham departed Ur Kasdim at the age of 70 while the 400 years is counted from the birth of Yitzchak (the beginning of the sojourn of Avraham's "seed"). The exile in Egypt, then, lasted 210 years.
- Reinterpreting two of its terms – R. Saadia adopts this method. Thus he suggests that "בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל" can refer also to the Israelites' ancestors such as Avraham,34 and that "בְּמִצְרָיִם" encompasses not only Egypt proper, but all lands which were under Egyptian dominion.35 These broader definitions then allow him to explain that the 430 figure includes also the years from the time that the Patriarchs lived in Canaan and Haran (as those lands were then under Egyptian control).36
- Assuming that the verse is giving only the central facts and not the full details – R. Yosef Bekhor Shor thus explains that the verse mentions only the stay in Egypt because that was the main part of the exile.37
- Separating the 430 figure from the rest of the verse – R. Avraham b. HaRambam suggests that the verse is merely saying that the Israelites were in Egypt until the end of the 430 year Patriarchal era which began with Avraham.38
Arrival at Age 75
The 430 year count begins when Avraham arrived in the land of Canaan at age 75.45
Demetrius and Josephus propose that the 430 year count begins when Avraham arrived in the land of Canaan at age 75, and they apparently view the 400 as merely a round number. The nation was thus in Egypt for a total of 215 years.
430 Years From Covenant
The 430 years are counted from the Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים). This possibility further subdivides regarding when the Covenant took place:
Covenant at Age 70
The Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים) occurred when Avraham was 70 years old.56
This approach suggests that the 430 years began with the Covenant which happened when Avraham was 70 years old. It thus needs to rearrange the chronology of Sefer Bereshit and also assume either that the Covenant took place outside of Israel or that Avraham came to Israel only to leave and return again. The 400 years are counted from the birth of Yitzchak. This leaves 210 years for the sojourn in Egypt.
- Reinterpreting "בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל" to refer also to the Israelites' ancestors such as Avraham61 and "בְּמִצְרָיִם" to encompass not only Egypt proper, but all lands which were under Egyptian dominion62 – This appears to be the option adopted by the Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael and Mekhilta DeRashbi.
- Reading the 430 year figure as describing the duration of the Patriarchal period, whose endpoint coincided with the Exodus – R. Shemuel b. Chofni Gaon,63 R. Yonah ibn Janach.64
- Assuming that the verse is giving only the central facts and not the full details – R. Yosef Bekhor Shor thus explains that the verse mentions only the stay in Egypt because that was the main part of the exile.65
- Achronology – As the events of Bereshit 12-14 and the first part of Bereshit 15 proceed sequentially from when Avraham was 75 years old, the story of the Covenant of the Pieces in Bereshit 15:7-21 cannot be in chronological order and is not a continuation of the first part of Bereshit 15.69
- Setting – Since according to Bereshit 12:4-5 Avraham arrived in Israel only after he was 75, one must posit either that the Covenant of the Pieces took place outside of Israel before Avraham came to Israel70 or that Avraham had made an earlier pilot trip to Israel before he was 70, left,71 and then returned at 75.72
Covenant at Age 80
The Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים) occurred when Avraham was 80 years old.
Ramban suggests that the 430 years began with the Covenant which occurred when Avraham was 80, midway between the ages mentioned in the surrounding chapters. This leaves 220 years for the actual sojourn in Egypt. To reconcile the discrepancy between 400 and 430, Ramban suggests that the original plan included 400 years of wandering but an additional 30 were added later due to the sins of the nation.
- In his Commentary on the Torah, Ramban suggests that the verse is an elliptical construction and should be read as if the word "עַד" precedes the 430 years. Thus, he interprets the 430 as referring to the aforementioned period specified to Avraham at the Covenant of the Pieces,83 rather than to the time spent in Egypt.84
- In his Critique of the Rambam's Sefer HaMitzvot, Ramban posits that the verse is speaking generally about the majority of the 430 years, which was in fact spent in Egypt.85 Ramban also adds that the 430 year period began with Avraham's first exile from Canaan. Assuming that Ramban is referring to Avraham's descent to Egypt,86 the 430 years would then be bookended by two exiles to Egypt.
- Ramban explains that the verse is a מקרא מסורס and "אַרְבַּע מֵאוֹת שָׁנָה" is a dangling modifier which refers back to "גֵר יִהְיֶה זַרְעֲךָ בְּאֶרֶץ לֹא לָהֶם", rather than to the immediately preceding words of "וַעֲבָדוּם וְעִנּוּ אֹתָם".87
- Ramban maintains that the 400 years incorporate the years of Avraham himself from the time of the Covenant,88 in spite of the fact that the verse specifies "זַרְעֲךָ".89
- Ramban must argue that "בְּאֶרֶץ לֹא לָהֶם" includes Canaan.90
- The verses in Bereshit should be understood as saying that following the 400 years, there will be an additional period of thirty years until the Amorites are fully deserving of punishment and the Israelites will return to the land.
- The verse in Bereshit describes the original plan which called for only 400 years of wandering and oppression. Ultimately, however, their exile was prolonged by thirty years as a penalty for bad behavior,91 and thus Shemot speaks of 430 years.92
Covenant at Age 85
The Covenant of the Pieces (ברית בין הבתרים) occurred when Avraham was 85 years old.
According to Ralbag, the 430 years began with the Covenant of the Pieces which took place when Avraham was 85 years old, the age recorded in the very next chapter. The 400 years begin from the birth of Yaakov. In order to reconcile this number with the 430 which began 75 years earlier, Ralbag must suggest that Hashem decided to shorten this original decree by 45 years, leaving 225 years for the Egyptian exile.
- Ralbag says that "זַרְעֲךָ" refers to Yaakov and the 400 years are counted from his birth, as Yaakov spent much of his life wandering and was the first to dwell in Egypt on a permanent basis.101
- Ralbag suggests that this verse is also slightly elliptical, and is saying that the bondage will last until the end of the 400 year period which began with the birth of Yaakov.102
- Ralbag says that ultimately Hashem shortened the 400 year decree by 45 years.103 This allows him to reconcile it with the 430 count which began 75 years earlier.104
430 Years From Yitzchak's Birth
The 430 years are counted from the birth of Yitzchak, when Avraham was 100 years old.
This approach counts the 430 years from the birth of Yitzchak, according to which the actual stay in Egypt was 240 years. Abarbanel explains that the 400 years is either a round number or, like Ramban above, that 30 years were later added due to the nation's sins.