The problem is that when groups of these large numbers are grouped together and 
added up by a writer, they are the sum of the large numbers. This suggests that 
the latest redactor (at least) thought that the numbers were to be read 
straight as we see them translated in English versions today. Whether this was 
the intention of the earliest writers is unknown without specific manuscript 
evidence.

Chavoux, you mentioned that 5 million inhabitants in ancient Canaan was not 
inconceivable. Actually, it is inconceivable. I can't recall who it was 
(Finkelstein?), but based on the apparent density across a number of settlement 
sites in the various Iron Ages, and taking into account the number of sites, 
and the arable land around them, it was calculated that ancient Canaan could 
accommodate an economy of no more than a million inhabitants. That would be the 
peak number and it was almost reached in the Roman Era.

This leaves us with a few options regarding the numbers:


  1.  The numbers have been misunderstood and miscalculated by a later redactor
  2.  The numbers are exaggerations
  3.  There may sometimes be a theological significance to the numbers

Either way, we have a problem. Even the texts themselves highlight the problem. 
For example, Deuteronomy has Moses telling the Israelites that YHWH did not 
choose them because they were more numerous than any other nation, for in fact 
they were the smallest of nations. And yet, if there were over 600,000 fighting 
men leaving Egypt, that would be the biggest army seen in the ANE until the 
Persians. So why were the Israelites cowering before the Egyptians who were 
chasing them, since the Egyptians seem never to have fielded any more than 
about 30,000 fighting men in the field? There's something going on with the 
numbers, but exactly what, is hard to say.


GEORGE ATHAS
Dean of Research,
Moore Theological College (moore.edu.au)
Sydney, Australia


From: "Sesamo m." <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Monday, 25 June 2012 6:06 PM
To: B-Hebrew <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [b-hebrew] The Confusion of Hebrew Numbers


Hello,
I've read an article by Damien Mackey some of whose conclusions seem very 
interesting at first sight, but I'd love to know your opinion.He quotes John 
Wenham, `The Large Numbers of the Old Testament', Tyndale Bulletin 18 (1967): 
19-23, and it tries to explain some perplexing numbers in the Hebrew Bible.The 
key paragraph is this:
"In the modern Hebrew Bible all numbers are written out in full, but for a long 
time the text was written without vowels [which] made it possible to confuse 
two words which are crucial to this problem: 'eleph and 'alluph. Without vowel 
points these words look identical: 'lp. 'Eleph' is the ordinary word for 
'thousand', but it can also be used in a variety of other senses: e.g. 'family' 
(Judges 6:15, Revised Version.) or 'clan' (Zechariah 9:7; 12:5,6, RSV) or 
perhaps a military unit. 'Alluph' is used for the 'chieftains' of Edom (Genesis 
36:15-43); probably for a commander of a military 'thousand'; and almost 
certainly for the professional, fully-armed soldier."
I think the most obvious problem here is when we can conclude there has been a 
confusion by a copist. But in some cases this explanation makes a lot of sense. 
For instance:
"David's feast in Hebron in 1 Chronicles 12 appears to be attended by enormous 
numbers, not of ordinary men, but of distinguished leaders - some 340,800 of 
them. In this case it looks as though in fact there were 'captains of 
thousands' and 'captains of hundreds', and that by metonomy or by abbrevation 
'thousand' has been used for 'captains of thousands' and 'hundreds' for 
'captains of hundreds'. 'Thousand' and 'hundred' have been treated as numerals 
and added together. When these figures are unscrambled, we get a total of 
roughly 2,000 'famous men', which seems eminently reasonable...."In 1 Kings 
20:27-30, the little Israelite army killed 100 (not 100,000) foot-soldiers, and 
the wall of Aphek [when it fell] killed 27 (not 27,000) more."The Ethiopian 
invasion had a thousand, not a million, warriors (2 Chronicles 14: 9).
"10 (not 10,000) were cast down from the top of the rock (2 Chronicles 
25:12).""...The total fighting force [of the Exodus Israelites] is some 18,000 
which would probably mean a figure of about 72,000 for the whole migration".
Do you think this is a plausible explanation?
This is the link: http://www.specialtyinterests.net/hebrew_numbers.html
Best,Sergio Saavedra (Spain)

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