Nir Cohen:

I see $RX as being in basically the same situation as $RY.  The similarity of 
their names is obvious.  Neither name makes sense in west Semitic.  Each 
woman’s non-Semitic parents used a well-attested non-Semitic custom to insist 
that before a native west Semitic-speaking man would be allowed to marry their 
daughter, his father would have to adopt the young woman first and, most 
importantly, sign a written contract that the adopted daughter would in due 
course marry the father’s blood son and be such blood son’s sole main wife.  In 
particular, the entire inheritance from that blood son would eventually pass 
solely to any son or sons borne to that blood son by the adopted daughter.

So in both cases, $RY was adopted by Terah, and $RX was adopted by Asher, for 
the express purpose of marrying the man’s blood son.  That’s why Terah 
naturally thought of $RY as being his “daughter-in-law”, per Genesis 11: 31, 
not as being his daughter.  Likewise, Beriah like Abraham could refer to his 
wife as being his “sister”, per Genesis 46: 17, but Asher did not think of $RX 
as being his “daughter”, because he had adopted her for the express purpose of 
becoming the sole main wife of his blood son Beriah.  I see the pattern as 
being identical.  This type of adoption sequence is well-attested in 
non-Semitic customs from the Late Bronze Age.  [By contrast, despite earlier 
reports to the contrary, there is in fact no documented tradition of a husband 
adopting his non-Semitic wife as his sister.  Rather, the husband’s father 
adopted the prospective bride, with the husband’s father paying an adoption fee 
now instead of a bride’s-price later.  Of critical importance, the written 
contract specifying property rights was between the husband’s father and the 
bride’s parents, rather than being a unilateral act by the husband.]

The reason why $RX is the only woman named in chapter 46 of Genesis in addition 
to Jacob’s daughter Dinah is not because Jacob had no other female descendants. 
 No, it’s because these are the only two female descendants of Jacob who were 
greatly important in their own individual right.  $RX is important because she 
shows that Terah had not done wrong at the beginning of the Patriarchal 
narratives when Terah, a native west Semitic speaker who was indigenous to 
Canaan, adopted a non-Semitic young woman, pursuant to a written contract that 
specified that $RY would in due course marry Terah’s blood son )BRM as his sole 
main wife.  Note that even though polygamy was commonplace in the Patriarchal 
Age [for example Jacob marrying two sisters and Esau having multiple main 
wives], nevertheless Abraham is always 100% committed to having his inheritance 
pass solely to either a son borne by $RY, or perhaps to a son borne on behalf 
of $RY at $RY’s behest.  Abraham  n-e-v-e-r  contemplates what would ordinarily 
be thought of as an obvious option here in the face of a long-barren wife:  
marrying a second main wife with the hope that such second main wife would bear 
the man a proper male heir.

Modern audiences misunderstand the situation completely, and think that Abraham 
was so romantically in love with Sarah that he could never bear the thought of 
siring his heir by another woman.  Perhaps Abraham was romantically in love 
with Sarah, perhaps not, but that’s largely irrelevant here.  The actual 
situation was that all the parties involved -- Abraham, Sarah, Terah, and 
Sarah’s non-Semitic parents -- were obligated by a written contract that 
Abraham’s entire inheritance would pass solely to a son to be borne by [or 
perhaps on behalf of] $RY.  Setting aside anachronistic modern notions of 
romantic love and monogamy, the #1 story in the Patriarchal narratives simply 
does not make sense unless all parties are fully committed, both legally and 
morally, to the irrevocable proposition that Abraham’s proper heir could only 
be by $RY.  $RY’s non-Semitic parents had driven a hard bargain, and all 
parties always fully complied with their written contractual obligations.

Two additional points are very important here:

1.  We should be brave enough to ask if $RY is an attested non-Semitic woman’s 
name from the Late Bronze Age, namely $aru-ya, instead of being an unattested 
west Semitic name.  That fact fits perfectly with the non-Semitic 
adoption/marriage custom so prominently on display here.

2.  We now realize the critically important fact that Abraham was thus required 
to deal with  w-r-i-t-i-n-g .  It may well be that Abraham never used writing 
regarding his flock of sheep and goats.  But if he married a woman with a 
non-Semitic name that was his “sister” but was not viewed by Terah as being 
Terah’s “daughter”, then it’s certain that the arrangements here for adoption 
and marriage were done pursuant to a  w-r-i-t-t-e-n  contract, which would have 
been insisted upon by his bride’s non-Semitic parents.  Anyone who could 
compose such a story would automatically know the great importance of reducing 
important compositions to  w-r-i-t-i-n-g .  And the only way that the 
Patriarchal narratives could feature dozens of non-Semitic names with accurate 
Late Bronze Age spellings is if the Patriarchal narratives were not only 
composed way back in the Late Bronze Age, but equally importantly, these 
ancient names in the Patriarchal narratives must have been committed to  
w-r-i-t-i-n-g  from day #1.  The claim that the Patriarchal narratives started 
out for centuries as being an oral tradition told around innumerable campfires 
is demonstrably false.  The only way to get accurate Late Bronze Age spellings 
of dozens of non-Semitic names is by virtue of the fact that those names were 
committed to  w-r-i-t-i-n-g  in the Late Bronze Age.  That was the non-Semitic 
way as to adoptions/marriages, and that is how we know that both Abraham and 
the Hebrew author of the Patriarchal narratives were very well aware of the 
critical importance of “putting it in writing”.

Jim Stinehart
Evanston, Illinois



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