Prof. George Athas:  

You wrote:  “I simply do not see all these mysteries that you see, Jim. It 
sounds to me like a convenient excuse to dismiss scholarship, not join in its 
conversation, and instead build isolated opinions with little relation to 
anything. It is, in other words, unscholarly sensationalism.”

1.  The word XRY at Genesis 40: 16 is invariably asserted to mean either (i)  
“white bread”, “bread”, “white stuff”, “cake”, etc., or (ii) “wicker” or 
“openwork”.  As to the latter set of meanings, there seems to be no linguistic 
basis for that at all.  As to both sets of meanings, isn’t it a mystery why the 
Baker’s dream of three innocuous baskets would portend that he would be impaled 
3 days hence?

2.  Shouldn’t we ask if XRY at Genesis 40: 16 has the same meaning as XRY at 
Genesis 14: 6?  If so, then if the Baker dreamed that dream in Year 13, such 
dream could well have been considered treasonous, because the prior year, in 
Year 12, Pharaoh had historically made the very controversial decision to break 
off relations with Egypt’s former best ally, the XRY state of Naharim.  That’s 
the Pharaoh who historically commissioned the cane head with that magnificent 
Asiatic, who looks for all the world like Joseph in chapter 40 of Genesis as of 
Year 13, wearing a coat of many colors.

3.  Why is a proposed Amarna Age historical time period for the Patriarchal 
narratives an “isolated opinion”?  Based on the Amarna Letters, the Amarna Age 
was the only time in 5,000 years of human history when the local ruling class 
of Canaan were not native west Semitic speakers.  As such, isn’t an Amarna Age 
time period for the Patriarchal Age the only logical explanation for the 
following plethora of non-west Semitic XRY names in the text?  (i) PRZ-Y, at 
Genesis 13: 7;  15: 20;  34: 30;  (ii) GR-G-$-Y, at Genesis 15: 21;  (iii)  
YBWS-Y, at Genesis 15: 21;  (iv) )RYWK at Genesis 14: 1, 9;  (v) BR-(, at 
Genesis 14: 2;  (vi) BR$-(, at Genesis 14: 2;  (vii) $N)B, at Genesis 14: 2;  
(viii) $M-)BR, at Genesis 14: 2;  (ix) $(YR, at Genesis 14: 6;  (x) )YL P)RN, 
at Genesis 14: 6;  (xi) ‘NR, at Genesis 14: 13;  (xii) QYN-Y, at Genesis 15: 
19;  (xiii) QNZ-Y, at Genesis 15: 19;  (xiv) XT-Y, at Genesis 15: 20;  23: 10;  
25: 9;  26: 34;  36: 2;  49: 29-30;  50: 13;  (xv) (PRWN, at Genesis 23: 8, 10, 
13-14, 16-17;  25: 9;  49: 29-30;  50: 13;  (xvi) XW-Y at Genesis 34: 2;  
(xvii) CXR, at Genesis 23: 8;  25: 9;  (xviii) YHW-DYT at Genesis 26: 34;  
(xix) B)R-Y at Genesis 26: 34;  (xx) B$-MT at Genesis 26: 34;  (xxi) )YLWN, at 
Genesis 26: 34.

CLY XRY at Genesis 40: 16, where XRY has the same meaning as at Genesis 14: 6, 
fits in perfectly here, where all of the 21 above-referenced names are XRY 
names.

What you term “a convenient excuse to dismiss scholarship” is in my view a 
polite, but heartfelt, request that mainstream scholarship should consider the 
plethora of XRY names in the received text of the Patriarchal narratives as 
indicating an Amarna Age time period for the Patriarchal narratives, with such 
composition having been done by an early Hebrew who lived through the troubled 
times of the Amarna Age.  Is there any other logical explanation for the above 
21 XRY names in this text?

If we can solve the mystery of why Joseph was able to divine from the Baker’s 
dream that the Baker would be impaled 3 days hence, and if we can understand 
the nature of the Baker’s treason, then we may be able to understand the 
entirety of the Patriarchal narratives.  It’s simply a question of asking 
whether the Hebrew author is or is not portraying the Baker as having that 
dream in Year 13.  To me, historical linguistics argues strongly in favor of an 
Amarna Age date for the Patriarchal narratives, because in no other time period 
would one expect to see such a great wealth of XRY names in Canaan.  The 
reference at Genesis 40: 16 to CLY XRY fits the Amarna Letters and Amarna Age 
Canaan perfectly, while being inexplicable in any other time period.

4.  Prof. Athas, don’t you think it’s a little odd that the scholarly 
profession has no explanation for the presence of the above 21 XRY names in the 
Patriarchal narratives,  a-n-d  scholars have never a-s-k-e-d  if XRY at 
Genesis 40: 16 may be the same as XRY at Genesis 14: 6?  When I point that out, 
why do you characterize me as engaging in “unscholarly sensationalism”?  When 
some scholars say that Esau’s wife YHW-DYT at Genesis 26: 34, who per Genesis 
27: 46 is a local woman in Canaan, was a “Hittite” from Anatolia whose name [in 
west Semitic, oddly enough] means “Jewess”, is that a scholarly joke?  For 
those of us who don’t get such jokes, how could any scholar assert such a 
thing?  

Although you criticize me for not “join[ing] in its conversation”, to what 
scholarly conversation do you refer as to the above 21 XRY names, and/or 
comparing XRY at Genesis 40: 16 to XRY at Genesis 14: 6?  I own many standard 
scholarly books on Genesis, and I frequently obtain scholarly works regarding 
Genesis on inter-library loan.  To the best of my informed knowledge, there is 
no scholarly “conversation” to “join” regarding these matters whatsoever.  Why 
is that?  How could JEP, as post-Bronze Age multiple authors, possibly be 
thought to have come up with those 21 XRY names?  Is that a reasonable theory 
of the case?

I myself see the Patriarchal narratives as being much older, and more 
historically accurate, than do university scholars.

Jim Stinehart
Evanston, Illinois



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