Angaben zur Quelle [Bearbeiten]
Titel | The interpreter's Bible: the Holy Scriptures in the King James and Revised Standard Versions with general articles and introduction, exegesis, exposition for each book of the Bible. Volumes 1 and 2 of 12. |
Herausgeber | George Arthur Buttrick |
Ort | New York |
Verlag | Abingdon Press |
Ausgabe | 2nd edition |
Jahr | 1970 |
Seiten | XXX, 1099 pages |
ISBN | 0687192137 |
Literaturverz. |
no |
Fußnoten | no |
Fragmente | 2 |
Fragmente der Quelle:
[1.] Oop/Fragment 047 06 - Diskussion Zuletzt bearbeitet: 2024-01-24 20:34:09 Schumann | Buttrick 1970, Fragment, Oop, SMWFragment, Schutzlevel, Unfertig, Verschleierung |
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Untersuchte Arbeit: Seite: 47, Zeilen: 6-10 |
Quelle: Buttrick 1970 Seite(n): 1:678 (??), Zeilen: ? |
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When Esau married two Hittite girls, what offended Isaac and Rubekah [sic] was not that they were two, but that they were Hittites. Plural marriages were at that time neither uncommon nor unacceptable to the standards of the time, but to marry outside the clan was to mix its blood and to break its solidarity. That is why these Hittite daughters were a grief of mind unto Isaac and to Rubekah [sic]. | When Esau married two Hittite girls, what offended Isaac and Rebekah was not that they were two, but that they were Hittites. Plural marriages were neither uncommon nor unacceptable to the standards of the time, but to marry outside the clan was to mix its blood and to break its solidarity. That is why these Hittite daughters-in-law were a grief of mind unto Isaac and to Rebekah. |
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[2.] Oop/Fragment 049 13 - Diskussion Zuletzt bearbeitet: 2024-01-24 20:31:24 Schumann | Buttrick 1970, Fragment, Oop, SMWFragment, Schutzlevel, Unfertig, Verschleierung |
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Untersuchte Arbeit: Seite: 49, Zeilen: 13-20 |
Quelle: Buttrick 1970 Seite(n): 2:200 (??), Zeilen: ? |
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According to the present text, Miriam and Aron [sic] complain in vs. 1 that Moses has married a Cushite woman, though in vs. 2 they turn to an attack upon Moses' unique position as intermediary between Israel and God. It would seem best to regard vs. 1b as an insertion for it raises many difficulties. The chapter as a whole is concerned with the challenge raised in vs. 2, not with the complaint made in vs. 1.
According to Exod. 2:21, Moses had long since married Zipporah, a Midianite. |
According to the present text, Miriam and Aaron complain in vs. 1 that Moses has married a Cushite woman, though in vs. 2 they turn to an attack upon Moses' unique position as intermediary between Israel and God. It would seem best to regard vs. 1b as an insertion, for it raises many difficulties. The chapter as a whole is concerned with the challenge raised in vs. 2, not with the complaint made in vs. 1. Then, according to Exod. 2:21, Moses had long since married Zipporah, a Midianite. |
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