Difference between revisions of "Yitro – Names/2"
(Original Author: Ariella Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
(Original Author: Ariella Novetsky, Rabbi Hillel Novetsky) |
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<p>The three variations of this opinion diverge as to whether Chovav is Yitro himself, Yitro's brother, or Yitro's son:</p> | <p>The three variations of this opinion diverge as to whether Chovav is Yitro himself, Yitro's brother, or Yitro's son:</p> | ||
<subopinion name="Chovav is Yitro">Chovav = Yitro and both are names of Zipporah's father, while Reuel is her grandfather | <subopinion name="Chovav is Yitro">Chovav = Yitro and both are names of Zipporah's father, while Reuel is her grandfather | ||
− | <mekorot><multilink><a href="SifreBemidbar78" data-aht="source"> | + | <mekorot>R. Shimon in <multilink><a href="SifreBemidbar78" data-aht="source">Sifre Bemidbar</a><a href="SifreBemidbar78" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 78</a><a href="Sifre Bemidbar" data-aht="parshan">About Sifre Bemidbar</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="RashiBemidbar10-29" data-aht="source">Rashi</a><a href="RashiBemidbar10-29" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 10:29</a><a href="R. Shelomo Yitzchaki (Rashi)" data-aht="parshan">About Rashi</a></multilink>,<fn>Rashi on Shemot 18:1 cites both the opinions of the Mekhilta DeRabbi Yishmael and the Sifre Bemidbar.</fn> <multilink><a href="Rashbam2-18" data-aht="source">Rashbam</a><a href="Rashbam2-18" data-aht="source">Shemot 2:18</a><a href="R. Shemuel b. Meir (Rashbam)" data-aht="parshan">About Rashbam</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="IbnEzra2-16" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra</a><a href="IbnEzra2-16" data-aht="source">Long Commentary Shemot 2:18</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About Ibn Ezra</a></multilink>,<fn>This is Ibn Ezra's approach in his Long Commentary (see also his Long Commentary Shemot 18:2). However, see below that in his Short Commentary Shemot 3:1 and his commentary on Bemidbar 10:29 he advances an alternative hypothesis that Yitro is Zipporah's brother. According to both of these approaches, though, Ibn Ezra maintains that Chovav = Yitro. This directly follows from his position in Shemot 18:1 (in both his Short and Long Commentaries) that Yitro came only in the second year – see Chronology Shemot 18. See Ibn Ezra for the relationship between Ibn Ezra's various commentaries.</fn> <multilink><a href="Radakxtn" data-aht="source">Radak</a><a href="Radakxtn" data-aht="source">Sefer HaShorashim "חתן"</a><a href="R. David Kimchi (Radak)" data-aht="parshan">About Radak</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="Ramban2-16" data-aht="source">Ramban</a><a href="Ramban2-16" data-aht="source">Shemot 2:16</a><a href="R. Moshe b. Nachman (Ramban, Nachmanides)" data-aht="parshan">About Ramban</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="IbnKaspi2-16" data-aht="source">Ibn Kaspi</a><a href="IbnKaspi2-16" data-aht="source">Shemot 2:16-21</a><a href="R. Yosef ibn Kaspi" data-aht="parshan">About Ibn Kaspi</a></multilink></mekorot> |
− | <point xmlid="Avihen"><b><i>Avihen</i></b> – The explicit impetus for the Sifre's position (in contrast to the Mekhilta) is to resolve the textual discrepancy regarding the identity of Moshe's father-in-law. See <a href="Commentators:Midrash/Identifications" data-aht="page">Midrash</a> for other examples. R. Shimon does so by identifying Chovav with Yitro, and by apparently adopting the anonymous interpretation in the Sifre that "<i>Reuel avihen</i>" ("אביהן") in Shemot 2:18 means that Reuel is Zipporah's "grandfather" or "ancestor," rather than the more common meaning of "father." See <a href="Dictionary:אַב" data-aht="page"><i>av</i></a> for a discussion of the semantic flexibility of the word and for other examples of its use in referring to a grandparent. Interestingly, there is no unique Biblical term for a grandparent, and thus it is not strange that <i>avihen</i> would be used to refer to their grandfather.</point> | + | <point xmlid="Avihen"><b><i>Avihen</i></b> – The explicit impetus for the Sifre's position (in contrast to the Mekhilta) is to resolve the textual discrepancy regarding the identity of Moshe's father-in-law. See <a href="Commentators:Midrash/Identifications" data-aht="page">Midrash</a> for other examples. R. Shimon does so by identifying Chovav with Yitro, and by apparently adopting the anonymous interpretation in the Sifre Bemidbar that "<i>Reuel avihen</i>" ("אביהן") in Shemot 2:18 means that Reuel is Zipporah's "grandfather" or "ancestor," rather than the more common meaning of "father." See <a href="Dictionary:אַב" data-aht="page"><i>av</i></a> for a discussion of the semantic flexibility of the word and for other examples of its use in referring to a grandparent. Interestingly, there is no unique Biblical term for a grandparent, and thus it is not strange that <i>avihen</i> would be used to refer to their grandfather.</point> |
<point><b>Reuel and Yitro in Shemot 2-3</b> – The opinion that Reuel is Zipporah's grandfather needs to explain why he (and not Yitro) is mentioned in Shemot 2, what the extent of his role is in that story, and why he disappears or is displaced by Yitro by the next chapter. There are two basic approaches: <a href="Ramban2-16" data-aht="source">Ramban</a> attempts to insert Yitro into Chapter 2. According to him, Yitro is the anonymous "priest of Midyan" referred to in 2:16, it is his flock that his daughters are shepherding, and it is Yitro who marries off his daughter Zipporah to Moshe.<fn>Ramban suggests that only Yitro's occupation is mentioned, but not his name, as the name Yitro was merely his priestly title.</fn> Reuel is thereby reduced to little more than a cameo appearance in which he answers the door when his granddaughters arrived home early, as Yitro was too busy ministering at his temple. The advantage of this reading is its consistency with 3:1 where it is explicit that Yitro is "the priest of Midyan" and the owner of a flock. However, one difficulty with this approach is that the same term <i>avihen</i> would be referring to Yitro in 2:16 but then to Reuel in 2:18. Additionally, it is hard to understand why the Torah would refer to Yitro anonymously throughout 2:16-21, but by name in 3:1.</point> | <point><b>Reuel and Yitro in Shemot 2-3</b> – The opinion that Reuel is Zipporah's grandfather needs to explain why he (and not Yitro) is mentioned in Shemot 2, what the extent of his role is in that story, and why he disappears or is displaced by Yitro by the next chapter. There are two basic approaches: <a href="Ramban2-16" data-aht="source">Ramban</a> attempts to insert Yitro into Chapter 2. According to him, Yitro is the anonymous "priest of Midyan" referred to in 2:16, it is his flock that his daughters are shepherding, and it is Yitro who marries off his daughter Zipporah to Moshe.<fn>Ramban suggests that only Yitro's occupation is mentioned, but not his name, as the name Yitro was merely his priestly title.</fn> Reuel is thereby reduced to little more than a cameo appearance in which he answers the door when his granddaughters arrived home early, as Yitro was too busy ministering at his temple. The advantage of this reading is its consistency with 3:1 where it is explicit that Yitro is "the priest of Midyan" and the owner of a flock. However, one difficulty with this approach is that the same term <i>avihen</i> would be referring to Yitro in 2:16 but then to Reuel in 2:18. Additionally, it is hard to understand why the Torah would refer to Yitro anonymously throughout 2:16-21, but by name in 3:1.</point> | ||
<point>Perhaps the simpler reading of 2:16-21 is that Reuel is "the priest of Midyan" referred to in 2:16, it is his flock that his granddaughters are shepherding, and it is Reuel who marries off his granddaughter Zipporah to Moshe (i.e. interpreting "daughter" in 2:21 as "granddaughter", see <a href="Dictionary:אַב" data-aht="page"><i>av</i></a>).<fn>Targum Pseudo-Jonathan and Ibn Ezra in his Long Commentary adopt a middle position, explaining like Ramban that 'the kohen of Midyan' in 2:16 is Yitro, but that it is Reuel who marries off Zipporah in 2:21.</fn> <a href="IbnKaspi2-16" data-aht="source">Ibn Kaspi</a> adopts this position, explaining that as the head of the household, Reuel signed off on all decisions, including who his granddaughter would marry. <a href="Shadal2-18" data-aht="source">Shadal 2:18</a> cites J.D. Michaelis who further explains that Reuel died by the end of Shemot 2 (and thus does not appear again), and by Chapter 3 Yitro has replaced him as both "the priest of Midyan" and the head of the household (which would also include ownership of the flock). See <a href="Chronology – Shemot 2" data-aht="page">Chronology of Chapters 2-4</a> for how much time elapsed between the chapters.<fn>See also <a href="http://www.tanach.org/shmot/yitro3.txt" rel="external">Menachem Leibtag</a> who develops an approach similar to that of Michaelis. In contrast, Ramban Shemot 2:23 maintains that Moshe arrived at Midyan when he was close to eighty, and that there was little time between Chapters 2 and 3.</fn></point> | <point>Perhaps the simpler reading of 2:16-21 is that Reuel is "the priest of Midyan" referred to in 2:16, it is his flock that his granddaughters are shepherding, and it is Reuel who marries off his granddaughter Zipporah to Moshe (i.e. interpreting "daughter" in 2:21 as "granddaughter", see <a href="Dictionary:אַב" data-aht="page"><i>av</i></a>).<fn>Targum Pseudo-Jonathan and Ibn Ezra in his Long Commentary adopt a middle position, explaining like Ramban that 'the kohen of Midyan' in 2:16 is Yitro, but that it is Reuel who marries off Zipporah in 2:21.</fn> <a href="IbnKaspi2-16" data-aht="source">Ibn Kaspi</a> adopts this position, explaining that as the head of the household, Reuel signed off on all decisions, including who his granddaughter would marry. <a href="Shadal2-18" data-aht="source">Shadal 2:18</a> cites J.D. Michaelis who further explains that Reuel died by the end of Shemot 2 (and thus does not appear again), and by Chapter 3 Yitro has replaced him as both "the priest of Midyan" and the head of the household (which would also include ownership of the flock). See <a href="Chronology – Shemot 2" data-aht="page">Chronology of Chapters 2-4</a> for how much time elapsed between the chapters.<fn>See also <a href="http://www.tanach.org/shmot/yitro3.txt" rel="external">Menachem Leibtag</a> who develops an approach similar to that of Michaelis. In contrast, Ramban Shemot 2:23 maintains that Moshe arrived at Midyan when he was close to eighty, and that there was little time between Chapters 2 and 3.</fn></point> | ||
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<point><b>No multiple names</b> – According to Demetrius, Reuel, Yitro, and Chovav are three different people. By not identifying unrelated names with the same person, he thereby avoids the difficulties inherent in that approach.</point> | <point><b>No multiple names</b> – According to Demetrius, Reuel, Yitro, and Chovav are three different people. By not identifying unrelated names with the same person, he thereby avoids the difficulties inherent in that approach.</point> | ||
<point><b><i>Choten</i></b> – To enable Chovav to be called a <i>choten</i> of Moshe, Demetrius would need to expand the definition of <i>choten</i> to include even an uncle of a wife. However, there is no Biblical precedent for such a meaning – see <a href="Dictionary:חֹתֵן – חֹתֶנֶת" data-aht="page"><i>choten</i></a>.</point> | <point><b><i>Choten</i></b> – To enable Chovav to be called a <i>choten</i> of Moshe, Demetrius would need to expand the definition of <i>choten</i> to include even an uncle of a wife. However, there is no Biblical precedent for such a meaning – see <a href="Dictionary:חֹתֵן – חֹתֶנֶת" data-aht="page"><i>choten</i></a>.</point> | ||
− | <point><b><i>Avihen</i></b> – Similar to the Sifre, Demetrius would interpret <i>avihen</i> in Shemot 2:18 as "grandfather" or "ancestor." See our discussion <a href="2#Avihen" data-aht="subpage">above</a> for more on <i>avihen</i>.</point> | + | <point><b><i>Avihen</i></b> – Similar to the Sifre Bemidbar, Demetrius would interpret <i>avihen</i> in Shemot 2:18 as "grandfather" or "ancestor." See our discussion <a href="2#Avihen" data-aht="subpage">above</a> for more on <i>avihen</i>.</point> |
<point><b>Genealogy</b> – Demetrius traces Zipporah's genealogy back to Yokshan, the son of Avraham and Keturah. According to him, Reuel is the great grandson of Avraham (Avraham -> Yokshan --> Dedan --> Reuel). The LXX Bereshit 25:3 preserves this tradition,<fn>See also Josephus, Antiquities 2:11:1 (257) who links Reuel to Keturah.</fn> however, the Masoretic text does not include Reuel among the sons of Dedan. <multilink><a href="RAvrahamShemot2-20" data-aht="source">R. Avraham b. HaRambam</a><a href="RAvrahamShemot2-20" data-aht="source">Shemot 2:20</a><a href="R. Avraham Maimonides" data-aht="parshan">About R. Avraham Maimonides</a></multilink> also links Zipporah's family to Avraham, but he does so (following the Masoretic text) through Midyan the son of Keturah. He highlights the hospitality Reuel shows to Moshe, noting that this is a hallmark of Abraham's descendants. The goal of both exegetes is apparently to explain Moshe's choice of Zipporah as a wife and to grant her Abrahamic lineage – see <a href="Moshe's Family Life" data-aht="page">Moshe's Family Life</a> and <a href="Zipporah" data-aht="page">Zipporah</a> for further discussion and <a href="$">the Matriarchs</a> for a parallel case.</point> | <point><b>Genealogy</b> – Demetrius traces Zipporah's genealogy back to Yokshan, the son of Avraham and Keturah. According to him, Reuel is the great grandson of Avraham (Avraham -> Yokshan --> Dedan --> Reuel). The LXX Bereshit 25:3 preserves this tradition,<fn>See also Josephus, Antiquities 2:11:1 (257) who links Reuel to Keturah.</fn> however, the Masoretic text does not include Reuel among the sons of Dedan. <multilink><a href="RAvrahamShemot2-20" data-aht="source">R. Avraham b. HaRambam</a><a href="RAvrahamShemot2-20" data-aht="source">Shemot 2:20</a><a href="R. Avraham Maimonides" data-aht="parshan">About R. Avraham Maimonides</a></multilink> also links Zipporah's family to Avraham, but he does so (following the Masoretic text) through Midyan the son of Keturah. He highlights the hospitality Reuel shows to Moshe, noting that this is a hallmark of Abraham's descendants. The goal of both exegetes is apparently to explain Moshe's choice of Zipporah as a wife and to grant her Abrahamic lineage – see <a href="Moshe's Family Life" data-aht="page">Moshe's Family Life</a> and <a href="Zipporah" data-aht="page">Zipporah</a> for further discussion and <a href="$">the Matriarchs</a> for a parallel case.</point> | ||
<more> | <more> | ||
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<point><b>No multiple names</b> – Like Demetrius, this approach views Reuel, Yitro, and Chovav as three different people, thereby avoiding the difficulties inherent in identifying unrelated names with the same character. Also, as Reuel, Yitro, and Chovav are three different generations, we can easily understand why they appear on the scene in three stages.</point> | <point><b>No multiple names</b> – Like Demetrius, this approach views Reuel, Yitro, and Chovav as three different people, thereby avoiding the difficulties inherent in identifying unrelated names with the same character. Also, as Reuel, Yitro, and Chovav are three different generations, we can easily understand why they appear on the scene in three stages.</point> | ||
<point><b><i>Choten</i></b> – This position would maintain, like Ibn Janach, that the term <i>choten</i> can mean both father-in-law and brother-in-law. See our discussion of <i>choten</i>.</point> | <point><b><i>Choten</i></b> – This position would maintain, like Ibn Janach, that the term <i>choten</i> can mean both father-in-law and brother-in-law. See our discussion of <i>choten</i>.</point> | ||
− | <point><b><i>Avihen</i></b> – Similar to the Sifre, "<i>avihen</i>" in Shemot 2:18 would mean "grandfather" or "ancestor." See our discussion above for more.</point> | + | <point><b><i>Avihen</i></b> – Similar to the Sifre Bemidbar, "<i>avihen</i>" in Shemot 2:18 would mean "grandfather" or "ancestor." See our discussion above for more.</point> |
<point><b>Who accompanied Yitro</b> – This opinion could explain 18:5 like the Zohar and Minchah Belulah (see <a href="Who Accompanied Yitro" data-aht="page">here</a>) that Yitro was accompanied by his own wife and sons, one of whom was Chovav. Even after Yitro's departure in Shemot 18, Chovav remained with the Jewish people, and is thus present in Bemidbar 10.</point> | <point><b>Who accompanied Yitro</b> – This opinion could explain 18:5 like the Zohar and Minchah Belulah (see <a href="Who Accompanied Yitro" data-aht="page">here</a>) that Yitro was accompanied by his own wife and sons, one of whom was Chovav. Even after Yitro's departure in Shemot 18, Chovav remained with the Jewish people, and is thus present in Bemidbar 10.</point> | ||
<point><b>"Chovav <i>ben</i> Reuel"</b> – According to this approach, the verse would mean Chovav, the grandson of Reuel, or a descendant of Reuel's clan (like <multilink><a href="RDZHoffmann2-18" data-aht="source">R. D"Z Hoffmann</a><a href="RDZHoffmann2-18" data-aht="source">Shemot 2:18</a><a href="R. David Zvi Hoffmann" data-aht="parshan">About R. D"Z Hoffmann</a></multilink> cited above). See <a href="Dictionary:בֵּן" data-aht="page"><i>ben</i></a>.</point> | <point><b>"Chovav <i>ben</i> Reuel"</b> – According to this approach, the verse would mean Chovav, the grandson of Reuel, or a descendant of Reuel's clan (like <multilink><a href="RDZHoffmann2-18" data-aht="source">R. D"Z Hoffmann</a><a href="RDZHoffmann2-18" data-aht="source">Shemot 2:18</a><a href="R. David Zvi Hoffmann" data-aht="parshan">About R. D"Z Hoffmann</a></multilink> cited above). See <a href="Dictionary:בֵּן" data-aht="page"><i>ben</i></a>.</point> | ||
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<subopinion name="Chovav = Yitro">Chovav = Yitro and both are names of Zipporah's brother, while Reuel is their father | <subopinion name="Chovav = Yitro">Chovav = Yitro and both are names of Zipporah's brother, while Reuel is their father | ||
<mekorot><multilink><a href="IbnEzraBemidbar10-29" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra</a><a href="IbnEzraBemidbar10-29" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 10:29</a><a href="IbnEzraShort3-1" data-aht="source">Short Commentary Shemot 3:1</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About Ibn Ezra</a></multilink></mekorot> | <mekorot><multilink><a href="IbnEzraBemidbar10-29" data-aht="source">Ibn Ezra</a><a href="IbnEzraBemidbar10-29" data-aht="source">Bemidbar 10:29</a><a href="IbnEzraShort3-1" data-aht="source">Short Commentary Shemot 3:1</a><a href="R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="parshan">About Ibn Ezra</a></multilink></mekorot> | ||
− | <point>See [[# | + | <point>See [[#ChovavisYitro|above]] that Ibn Ezra in his Long Commentary Shemot 2:18, 18:2 adopts the position of R. Shimon in the Sifre Bemidbar that Yitro is Zipporah's father. See <a href=":Commentators:R. Avraham ibn Ezra" data-aht="page">Ibn Ezra</a> for the relationship between Ibn Ezra's various commentaries.</point> |
<point><b><i>Choten</i> and <i>avihen</i></b> – Ibn Ezra's two positions are very similar. The relative advantage of the approach in the Long Commentary is that it obviates the need for saying that <i>choten</i> can also mean brother-in-law. On the other hand, the Short Commentary can interpret <i>avihen</i> using its regular meaning of father.</point> | <point><b><i>Choten</i> and <i>avihen</i></b> – Ibn Ezra's two positions are very similar. The relative advantage of the approach in the Long Commentary is that it obviates the need for saying that <i>choten</i> can also mean brother-in-law. On the other hand, the Short Commentary can interpret <i>avihen</i> using its regular meaning of father.</point> | ||
<point><b>Shemot 18 and Bemidbar 10</b> – Both of Ibn Ezra's approaches maintain that Yitro = Chovav. This directly follows from his position in Shemot 18:1 (in both his Short and Long Commentaries) that Yitro/Chovav came only in the second year – see <a href="Chronology – Shemot 18" data-aht="page">Chronology of Shemot 18</a>. See above for how Ibn Ezra explains the relationship between Shemot 18 and Bemidbar 10.</point> | <point><b>Shemot 18 and Bemidbar 10</b> – Both of Ibn Ezra's approaches maintain that Yitro = Chovav. This directly follows from his position in Shemot 18:1 (in both his Short and Long Commentaries) that Yitro/Chovav came only in the second year – see <a href="Chronology – Shemot 18" data-aht="page">Chronology of Shemot 18</a>. See above for how Ibn Ezra explains the relationship between Shemot 18 and Bemidbar 10.</point> | ||
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<more> | <more> | ||
<point><b>Reuel and Yitro in Shemot 2-3</b> – See the discussion above for the possible approaches to understanding Reuel's role in Chapter 2.</point> | <point><b>Reuel and Yitro in Shemot 2-3</b> – See the discussion above for the possible approaches to understanding Reuel's role in Chapter 2.</point> | ||
− | <point>Interestingly, Mendelssohn in his commentary on Shemot 2:18 does not explain like his position here, but rather like the approach of R. Shimon in | + | <point>Interestingly, Mendelssohn in his commentary on Shemot 2:18 does not explain like his position here, but rather like the approach of R. Shimon in Sifre Bemidbar.</point> |
</more> | </more> | ||
</subopinion> | </subopinion> |
Version as of 21:43, 14 January 2015
Was Yitro Really Moshe's Father-in-law?
Exegetical Approaches
Overview
Within a span of eleven verses in Shemot 2:16-3:1, the Torah introduces Zipporah's father / Moshe's choten, and the "priest of Midyan," first as Reuel, and then as Yitro. Shofetim 4:11 adds Chovav as another name for choten Moshe. To resolve these apparent contradictions, exegetes have suggested that either:
- The same person (Moshe's in-law) had multiple names.
- The same term (kohen Midyan or choten or avihen) describes multiple persons or relationships.
- A combination of these possibilities.
These suggestions lead to three main possibilities concerning the central question of the relationship between Reuel and Yitro: Yitro and Reuel are the same person, Yitro is Reuel's son, or Yitro is Reuel's father. Similarly, there are four options regarding the secondary question of the identity of Chovav: Yitro and Chovav are the same person, Yitro is Chovav's grandfather, Yitro is Chovav's father, or Yitro is Chovav's son. The analysis below will examine how these possibilities can be integrated:
Yitro = Reuel
According to this option, the Torah refers to the same person by more than one name, and Yitro, a.k.a. Reuel, is Zipporah's father (i.e. Moshe's father-in-law). There are two variations of this approach which differ regarding the secondary issue of Chovav's identity:
Yitro = Reuel = Chovav
According to this position, there is only a single character and Chovav is merely a third name of the father of Zipporah (i.e. Moshe's father-in-law)
Yitro = Reuel, but Chovav is Yitro's son and Zipporah's brother (i.e. Moshe's brother-in-law)
- Reuel is a family or tribal name – R. D"Z Hoffmann proposes this theory and draws a parallel to the name Keini in Shofetim 1:16 which he interprets similarly.
- Yitro is a title – Nahum Sarna7 suggests that Yeter/Yitro may be an honorific meaning "his Excellency" and not a proper name. As support he references Bereshit 49:3 as well as Akkadian and Ugaritic cognates.
- The names have two different connotations – This requires further development.8
Yitro = Reuel's Son
This position splits into two categories of opinions which disagree regarding whether it is Yitro or Reuel who is Zipporah's father. Each of these categories then further subdivides regarding the issue of Chovav's identity:
Yitro is Zipporah's father (i.e. Moshe's father-in-law) and Reuel is Zipporah's grandfather
The three variations of this opinion diverge as to whether Chovav is Yitro himself, Yitro's brother, or Yitro's son:
Chovav = Yitro and both are names of Zipporah's father, while Reuel is her grandfather
Chovav and Yitro are brothers, the sons of Reuel, meaning that Chovav is Zipporah's uncle
Chovav is Yitro's son and Zipporah's brother, while Reuel is her grandfather.
Yitro is Zipporah's brother (i.e. Moshe's brother-in-law) and Reuel is their father (i.e. Moshe's father-in-law)
The two variations of this position disagree as to whether Chovav is just another name for Yitro himself or is Yitro's brother:
Chovav = Yitro and both are names of Zipporah's brother, while Reuel is their father
Chovav, Yitro, and Zipporah are three siblings, the children of Reuel
Yitro = Reuel's Father
According to this possibility, Yitro is Zipporah's grandfather (i.e. Moshe's grandfather-in-law), Reuel is Zipporah's father (i.e. Moshe's father-in-law), and Chovav is Zipporah's brother (i.e. Moshe's brother-in-law).16