Chavoux Luyt:

1.  The word “molodet” is used 9 times in the Patriarchal narratives, and 9 out 
of 9 times, including at Genesis 12: 1, it means “one’s father’s descendants”.  
Genesis 11: 28 does not say that southern Mesopotamia is Haran’s “native land”. 
 Rather, Genesis 11: 28 says that Haran died in the presence of his father and 
in the presence of his father’s descendants/molodet in Ur of the 
Kassite-country-people.  The fact that Terah, Haran, Nahor and Abram are all 
west Semitic names in and of itself is inconsistent with the conventional, 
completely erroneous, view that the Patriarchal narratives present the Hebrews 
as being indigenous to Mesopotamia.  Not only is that historically false, but 
equally importantly, the Patriarchal narratives accurately portray the Hebrews 
as being indigenous to Canaan.

2.  The first time that the word “Hebrew” appears in the Bible is at Genesis 
14: 13, when Abram is in the process of forming an alliance (or “covenant”) 
with three princelings in Canaan, one of whom is a Hurrrian (A-ni-ir).  It is 
important in that context for Abram to assert that he himself is as strong and 
capable as a Hurrian princeling, whereas it would be senseless for Abram to 
tell the other princelings that he is a “wanderer” who has “crossed over the 
Euphrates River”, which are the conventional west Semitic misinterpretations of 
this Hurrian-based name.  The original pronunciation of (BR-Y was E-bi-ri-ya, 
where e-bi-ri means “lord” in Hurrian, and -ya is a Hurrian theophoric suffix.  
[The initial ayin is used to represent the Hurrian vowel E as its own separate 
syllable.]  (BR-Y/E-bi-ri-ya, as a Hurrian-based name that the Hebrews adopted 
for themselves when Hurrians dominated the ruling class of Canaan in the Amarna 
Age, means “God Is Lord”.  Yet a necessary implication of this fine name is 
that Abram himself is a “lord”, being the equivalent of a powerful “Hurrian 
lord”, with this name being based on the Hurrian word for “[Hurrian] lord”. 

(BR-Y has nothing whatsoever to do with “habiru” or with west Semitic words for 
“wanderer” or “across [the Euphrates River]”.

3.  The Hebrews are indigenous to Canaan, and are accurately portrayed that way 
in the Patriarchal narratives.  The name “Hebrew” is a Hurrian-based name that 
the Hebrews proudly applied to themselves, asserting that the new Hebrews were 
the equals of the Hurrian princelings who at that time historically [per the 
Amarna Letters] dominated the ruling class of Canaan.  The literal meaning of 
(BR-Y/E-bi-ri-ya/“Hebrew” is:  “God Is Lord”.

Jim Stinehart
Evanston, Illinois



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