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Genesis 29:6-12

Context
29:6 “Is he well?” 1  Jacob asked. They replied, “He is well. 2  Now look, here comes his daughter Rachel with the sheep.” 29:7 Then Jacob 3  said, “Since it is still the middle of the day, 4  it is not time for the flocks to be gathered. You should water the sheep and then go and let them graze some more.” 5  29:8 “We can’t,” they said, “until all the flocks are gathered and the stone is rolled off the mouth of the well. Then we water 6  the sheep.”

29:9 While he was still speaking with them, Rachel arrived with her father’s sheep, for she was tending them. 7  29:10 When Jacob saw Rachel, the daughter of his uncle Laban, 8  and the sheep of his uncle Laban, he 9  went over 10  and rolled the stone off the mouth of the well and watered the sheep of his uncle Laban. 11  29:11 Then Jacob kissed Rachel and began to weep loudly. 12  29:12 When Jacob explained 13  to Rachel that he was a relative of her father 14  and the son of Rebekah, she ran and told her father.

Genesis 29:18

Context
29:18 Since Jacob had fallen in love with 15  Rachel, he said, “I’ll serve you seven years in exchange for your younger daughter Rachel.”

1 tn Heb “and he said to them, ‘Is there peace to him?’”

2 tn Heb “peace.”

3 tn Heb “and he”; the referent (Jacob) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

4 tn Heb “the day is great.”

5 tn Heb “water the sheep and go and pasture [them].” The verbal forms are imperatives, but Jacob would hardly be giving direct orders to someone else’s shepherds. The nuance here is probably one of advice.

6 tn The perfect verbal forms with the vav (ו) consecutive carry on the sequence begun by the initial imperfect form.

7 tn Heb “was a shepherdess.”

8 tn Heb “Laban, the brother of his mother” (twice in this verse).

9 tn Heb “Jacob.” The proper name has been replaced by the pronoun (“he”) in the translation for stylistic reasons.

10 tn Heb “drew near, approached.”

11 tn Heb “Laban, the brother of his mother.” The text says nothing initially about the beauty of Rachel. But the reader is struck by the repetition of “Laban the brother of his mother.” G. J. Wenham is no doubt correct when he observes that Jacob’s primary motive at this stage is to ingratiate himself with Laban (Genesis [WBC], 2:231).

12 tn Heb “and he lifted up his voice and wept.” The idiom calls deliberate attention to the fact that Jacob wept out loud.

13 tn Heb “declared.”

14 tn Heb “that he [was] the brother of her father.”

15 tn Heb “Jacob loved.”



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