Difference between revisions of "Literary Devices – Bereshit 17/0"
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<li><span style="color: #339966;"><b>Elokim </b></span>– This is the name used for Hashem throughout most of the chapter.</li> | <li><span style="color: #339966;"><b>Elokim </b></span>– This is the name used for Hashem throughout most of the chapter.</li> | ||
<li><b><span style="color: #339966;">Hashem</span> </b>– The narrator refers to Hashem by His proper name Hashem in verse 1.</li> | <li><b><span style="color: #339966;">Hashem</span> </b>– The narrator refers to Hashem by His proper name Hashem in verse 1.</li> | ||
− | <li><b><span style="color: #339966;">El Shaddai</span></b> – Hashem identifies Himself as “אֵל שַׁדַּי ” in 17:1. See the <a href="https://mg.alhatorah.org/Concordance/7706">concordance</a> and R. Yosef Ibn Kaspi that in almost every context in which this name for Hashem appears in Sefer Bereshit, it is associated with a divine blessing of offspring and land.<fn>Interestingly, the one verse in Bereshit in which the name is not explicitly associated with this promise is 43:14, in which Yaakov agrees to send Binyamin to Egypt despite his fear of losing him and expresses his hope that Binyamin and his brother will return. Perhaps the use of this name for Hashem expresses Yaakov’s hope that all of his descendants survive.</fn> </li> | + | <li><b><span style="color: #339966;">El Shaddai</span></b> – Hashem identifies Himself as “אֵל שַׁדַּי ” in 17:1. See the <a href="https://mg.alhatorah.org/Concordance/7706">concordance</a> and R. Yosef Ibn Kaspi that in almost every context in which this name for Hashem appears in Sefer Bereshit, it is associated with a divine blessing of offspring and land.<fn>Interestingly, the one verse in Bereshit in which the name is not explicitly associated with this promise is 43:14, in which Yaakov agrees to send Binyamin to Egypt despite his fear of losing him and expresses his hope that Binyamin and his brother will return. Perhaps the use of this name for Hashem expresses Yaakov’s hope that all of his descendants survive.</fn></li> |
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Version as of 01:59, 2 July 2023
Literary Devices – Bereshit 17
Structure
Parallels and Contrasts
Key Words
Character Titles
God
- Elokim – This is the name used for Hashem throughout most of the chapter.
- Hashem – The narrator refers to Hashem by His proper name Hashem in verse 1.
- El Shaddai – Hashem identifies Himself as “אֵל שַׁדַּי ” in 17:1. See the concordance and R. Yosef Ibn Kaspi that in almost every context in which this name for Hashem appears in Sefer Bereshit, it is associated with a divine blessing of offspring and land.1