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Genesis 9:1

Context
God’s Covenant with Humankind through Noah

9:1 Then God blessed Noah and his sons and said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth.

Genesis 9:7

Context

9:7 But as for you, 1  be fruitful and multiply; increase abundantly on the earth and multiply on it.”

Genesis 17:6

Context
17:6 I will make you 2  extremely 3  fruitful. I will make nations of you, and kings will descend from you. 4 

Genesis 41:52

Context
41:52 He named the second child Ephraim, 5  saying, 6  “Certainly 7  God has made me fruitful in the land of my suffering.”

1 sn The disjunctive clause (conjunction + pronominal subject + verb) here indicates a strong contrast to what has preceded. Against the backdrop of the warnings about taking life, God now instructs the people to produce life, using terms reminiscent of the mandate given to Adam (Gen 1:28).

2 tn This verb starts a series of perfect verbal forms with vav (ו) consecutive to express God’s intentions.

3 tn Heb “exceedingly, exceedingly.” The repetition is emphatic.

4 tn Heb “and I will make you into nations, and kings will come out from you.”

5 sn The name Ephraim (אֶפְרַיִם, ’efrayim), a form of the Hebrew verb פָּרָה (parah), means “to bear fruit.” The theme of fruitfulness is connected with this line of the family from Rachel (30:2) on down (see Gen 49:22, Deut 33:13-17, and Hos 13:15). But there is some difficulty with the name “Ephraim” itself. It appears to be a dual, for which F. Delitzsch simply said it meant “double fruitfulness” (New Commentary on Genesis, 2:305). G. J. Spurrell suggested it was a diphthongal pronunciation of a name ending in -an or -am, often thought to be dual suffixes (Notes on the text of the book of Genesis, 334). Many, however, simply connect the name to the territory of Ephraim and interpret it to be “fertile land” (C. Fontinoy, “Les noms de lieux en -ayim dans la Bible,” UF 3 [1971]: 33-40). The dual would then be an old locative ending. There is no doubt that the name became attached to the land in which the tribe settled, and it is possible that is where the dual ending came from, but in this story it refers to Joseph’s God-given fruitfulness.

6 tn The word “saying” has been supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

7 tn Or “for.”



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