The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible
Jacob Blesses His Sons
Genesis 49:1–28 — Jacob Blesses His Sons. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.
1Then Jacob called for his sons and said, “Gather around so that I can tell you what will happen to you in the days to come:
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ya·‘ă·qōḇ ’el- way·yiq·rā bā·nāw way·yō·mer hê·’ā·sə·p̄ū wə·’ag·gî·ḏāh lā·ḵem ’êṯ ’ă·šer- yiq·rā ’eṯ·ḵem hay·yā·mîm bə·’a·ḥă·rîṯ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-called Jacob to his-sons and-said, "Be-gathered, that-I-may-tell to-you that-which will-befall you in-the-latter-part-of the-days."
Where the English smooths the original
When Jacob had adopted and blessed the two sons of Joseph, he called his twelve sons, to make known to them his spiritual bequest. In an elevated and solemn tone he said, "Gather yourselves together, that I may tell you that which shall befall you (יקרא for יקרה, as in Genesis 42:4 , Genesis 42:38 ) at the end of the days!
It is not to the sayings of the dying saint, so much as of the inspired prophet, that attention is called in this chapter. Under the immediate influence of the Holy Spirit he pronounced his prophetic benediction and described the condition of their respective descendants in the last days, or future times.
When God will bring you out of Egypt, and because he speaks of the Messiah, he calls it the last days.The Geneva marginal note (a), quoted without its bracketed letter.
This dying song of Jacob has been regarded alike by Jews and Christians as a prophetic hymn spoken by the patriarch under the influence of the Holy Spirit.
2Come together and listen, O sons of Jacob; listen to your father Israel.
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hiq·qā·ḇə·ṣū wə·šim·‘ū bə·nê ya·‘ă·qōḇ wə·šim·‘ū ’el- ’ă·ḇî·ḵem yiś·rā·’êl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Assemble-yourselves and-hear, O-sons-of Jacob; and-hearken to Israel your-father.
Where the English smooths the original
The occurrence of the same Hebrew word for “hear” in the first clause, and for “hearken” in the second, is metrically a violation of the parallelism of Hebrew poetry. In English it is not apparent, as our rendering “hearken” avoids the repetition.
the repetition indicates at once the elevation of the speaker's soul, and the importance, in his mind, of the impending revelation
This chapter calls for our strictest attention, for it contains a number of predictions which were to be fulfilled at distant periods, through a long succession of ages
3Reuben, you are my firstborn, my might, and the beginning of my strength, excelling in honor, excelling in power.
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rə·’ū·ḇên ’at·tāh bə·ḵō·rî kō·ḥî wə·rê·šîṯ ’ō·w·nî ye·ṯer śə·’êṯ wə·ye·ṯer ‘āz
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Reuben, my-firstborn thou, my-might and-beginning-of my-strength; excess-of dignity and-excess-of power.
Where the English smooths the original
As the first-born, the first sprout of the full virile power of Jacob, Reuben, according to natural right, was entitled to the first rank among his brethren, the leadership of the tribes, and a double share of the inheritance
In Genesis 35:18 , the word oni means “my sorrow,” and it is so translated here by the Vulg., Aquila, and Symmachus. But in this verse Jacob magnifies the prerogatives of the firstborn
As first-born thou hadst the right of precedency before all thy brethren in point of dignity and power or privilege; the double portion, the priesthood, the dominion over thy brethren were thine.
4Uncontrolled as the waters, you will no longer excel, because you went up to your father’s bed, onto my couch, and defiled it.
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pa·ḥaz kam·ma·yim ’al- tō·w·ṯar kî ‘ā·lî·ṯā ’ā·ḇî·ḵā miš·kə·ḇê ‘ā·lāh yə·ṣū·‘î ’āz ḥil·lal·tā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Boiling-over like-the-waters, thou-shalt-not excel; because thou-wentest-up to-thy-father's bed — then thou-defiledst — onto my-couch he-went-up.
Where the English smooths the original
Notice the change from the second to the third person, as if the speaker had turned away in loathing
Reuben's sin left a lasting infamy upon his family. Let us never do evil, then we need not fear being told of it.
for it is its nature to seek a dull level, and while yielding to every impression to retain none
But Reuben had forfeited this prerogative.
5Simeon and Levi are brothers; their swords are weapons of violence.
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šim·‘ō·wn wə·lê·wî ’a·ḥîm mə·ḵê·rō·ṯê·hem kə·lê ḥā·mās
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Simeon and-Levi (are) brothers; weapons-of violence (are) their-swords.
Where the English smooths the original
emphatically brethren in the full sense of the word; not merely as having the same parents, but in their modes of thought and action.
The Hebrew word ( m’khêrâh ) occurs only here. Its similarity in sound to the Greek μάχαιρα , “a sword,” has suggested the English rendering.
their swords, which should have been only weapons of defence, were (as the margin reads it) weapons of violence, to do wrong to others, not to save themselves from wrong.
6May I never enter their council; may I never join their assembly. For they kill men in their anger, and hamstring oxen on a whim.
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nap̄·šî ’al- tā·ḇō bə·sō·ḏām kə·ḇō·ḏî ’al- tê·ḥaḏ biq·hā·lām kî hā·rə·ḡū ’îš ḇə·’ap·pām ‘iq·qə·rū- šō·wr ū·ḇir·ṣō·nām
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Into-their-council let-not my-soul come; with-their-assembly let-not my-glory be-joined; for in-their-anger they-slew a-man, and-in-their-self-will they-hamstrung an-ox.
Where the English smooths the original
Our soul is our honour; by its powers we are distinguished from, and raised above, the beasts that perish. We ought, from our hearts, to abhor all bloody and mischievous men.
Consequently, for two persons to sit upon the same carpet marks a high degree of friendship and familiarity. It would therefore be more exactly translated alliance, or intimacy.
meaning that he neither consented to them in word or thought.
7Cursed be their anger, for it is strong, and their wrath, for it is cruel! I will disperse them in Jacob and scatter them in Israel.
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’ā·rūr ’ap·pām kî ‘āz wə·‘eḇ·rā·ṯām kî qā·šā·ṯāh ’ă·ḥal·lə·qêm bə·ya·‘ă·qōḇ wa·’ă·p̄î·ṣêm bə·yiś·rā·’êl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Cursed (be) their-anger, for (it is) fierce; and-their-wrath, for (it is) cruel! I-will-divide-them in-Jacob, and-scatter-them in-Israel.
Where the English smooths the original
We ought always, in the expressions of our zeal, carefully to distinguish between the sinner and the sin, so as not to love or bless the sin for the sake of the person, nor to hate or curse the person for the sake of the sin.
It was sinful anger in the nature of it, and so criminal and detestable; it was strong, fierce, and furious in its operation and effects, and so justly cursed; not their persons, but their passions
On account of their zeal against idolatry, they were honorably "divided in Jacob"; whereas the tribe of Simeon, which was guilty of the grossest idolatry and the vices inseparable from it, were ignominiously "scattered."
Prophets are said to do what they foretell that God will do
8Judah, your brothers shall praise you. Your hand shall be on the necks of your enemies; your father’s sons shall bow down to you.
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yə·hū·ḏāh ’at·tāh ’a·ḥe·ḵā yō·w·ḏū·ḵā yā·ḏə·ḵā bə·‘ō·rep̄ ’ō·yə·ḇe·ḵā ’ā·ḇî·ḵā bə·nê yiš·ta·ḥăw·wū lə·ḵā
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Judah, thou — thee-shall-praise thy-brothers; thy-hand (shall be) on-the-neck-of thine-enemies; thy-father's sons shall-bow-down to-thee.
Where the English smooths the original
Judah, according to Genesis 29:35 , signifies: he for whom Jehovah is praised, not merely the praised one.
Judah thou, will praise thee thy brethren , the word יְהוּדָה being a palpable play on יודוך
As was verified in David and Christ.
taking the foremost place by reason of the disqualification of Reuben, Simeon, and Levi, finally was destined to win freedom and empire for Israel
9Judah is a young lion—my son, you return from the prey. Like a lion he crouches and lies down; like a lioness, who dares to rouse him?
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yə·hū·ḏāh gūr ’ar·yêh bə·nî ‘ā·lî·ṯā miṭ·ṭe·rep̄ kə·’ar·yêh kā·ra‘ rā·ḇaṣ ū·ḵə·lā·ḇî mî yə·qî·men·nū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
A-lion's-whelp (is) Judah; from-the-prey, my-son, thou-art-gone-up. He-crouched, he-couched like-a-lion, and-like-a-lioness — who shall-rouse-him?
Where the English smooths the original
Jacob compares Judah to a young, i.e., growing lion, ripening into its full strength, as being the "ancestor of the lion-tribe."
The lioness is brought into the comparison with propriety, as in defense of her cubs she is even more dangerous than the male to the unwary assailant.
For the comparison of Judah with a lion, which through this verse became its historic symbol, cf. 2Es 12:31-32 ; Revelation 5:5 .
Judah is compared, not to a lion raging and ranging, but to a lion enjoying the satisfaction of his power and success, without creating vexation to others; this is to be truly great.
10The scepter will not depart from Judah, nor the staff from between his feet, until Shiloh comes and the allegiance of the nations is his.
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šê·ḇeṭ lō- yā·sūr mî·hū·ḏāh ū·mə·ḥō·qêq mib·bên raḡ·lāw ‘aḏ kî- šī·lōh yā·ḇō yiq·qə·haṯ ‘am·mîm wə·lōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Not shall-depart the-scepter from-Judah, nor a-lawgiver from-between his-feet, until that Shiloh comes; and-to-him (shall be) the-obedience-of (the) peoples.
Where the English smooths the original
Shiloh—this obscure word is variously interpreted to mean "the sent" (Joh 17:3), "the seed" (Isa 11:1), the "peaceable or prosperous one" (Eph 2:14)—that is, the Messiah (Isa 11:10; Ro 15:12)
but “lawgiver” has the support of all the ancient versions, the Targums paraphrasing it by scribe, and the Syriac in a similar way by expounder
Shiloh, that promised Seed in whom the earth should be blessed, that peaceable and prosperous One, or Saviour, he shall come of Judah. Thus dying Jacob at a great distance saw Christ's day, and it was his comfort and support on his death-bed.
Which is Christ the Messiah, the giver of prosperity who will call the Gentiles to salvation.
11He ties his donkey to the vine, his colt to the choicest branch. He washes his garments in wine, his robes in the blood of grapes.
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’ō·sə·rî ʿī·rōh lag·ge·p̄en bə·nî ’ă·ṯō·nōw wə·laś·śō·rê·qāh kib·bês lə·ḇu·šōw bay·ya·yin sū·ṯōh ū·ḇə·ḏam- ‘ă·nā·ḇîm
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Binding to-the-vine his-donkey, and-to-the-choice-vine his-donkey's-colt; he-washes in-the-wine his-garment, and-in-the-blood-of grapes his-robe.
Where the English smooths the original
Choice vine is, literally, the vine of Sorek, a kind much valued, as bearing a purple berry, small but luscious, and destitute of stones.
The participle אסרי has the old connecting vowel, i, before a word with a preposition (like Isaiah 22:16 ; Micah 7:14 , etc.)
The blood of grapes; so the wine is called also in Deu 32:14
Grapes in the land of Judah are to be so plentiful that he will wash garments in their juice.
12His eyes are darker than wine, and his teeth are whiter than milk.
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‘ê·na·yim ḥaḵ·lî·lî mî·yā·yin šin·na·yim ū·lə·ḇen- mê·ḥā·lāḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Dark (of) eyes from-wine, and-white (of) teeth from-milk.
Where the English smooths the original
But, surely, the poet would hardly eulogize Judah by attributing to his eyes the redness of continuous drinking! It will be better to assume that the writer meant “sparkling.”
The word rendered red occurs only here, and is rendered in the Versions, bright, sparkling, and in the Vulg., beautiful.
Judea is justly described as abounding in the best of wine and milk.
13Zebulun shall dwell by the seashore and become a harbor for ships; his border shall extend to Sidon.
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zə·ḇū·lun yiš·kōn wə·hū lə·ḥō·wp̄ yam·mîm lə·ḥō·wp̄ ’o·nî·yō·wṯ wə·yar·ḵā·ṯōw ‘al- ṣî·ḏōn
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Zebulun — at-the-shore-of seas he-shall-dwell; and-he (shall be) for-a-shore-of ships, and-his-flank (toward) Sidon.
Where the English smooths the original
which directed Jacob thus exactly to foretell the portion of Zebulun, which fell to them two hundred years after this, and that not by choice, or any design of men, but merely by lot.
Zebulun was to have its lot on the seacoast, close to Zidon, and to engage, like that state, in maritime pursuits and commerce.
Zebulun means "dwelling," to which there is an allusion in the first clause of the verse.
14Issachar is a strong donkey, lying down between the sheepfolds.
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yiś·śā·š·ḵār gā·rem ḥă·mōr rō·ḇêṣ bên ham·miš·pə·ṯā·yim
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Issachar (is) an-ass-of-bone, couching between the-sheepfolds.
Where the English smooths the original
Issachar is compared, not to the wild ass, high spirited and swift, but to the strong domestic beast of burden.
"Ease at the cost of liberty will be the characteExcerpt ends where the BibleHub source text is cut off mid-word ("characte[r]"); quoted exactly as found, trimmed at the source boundary.
The men of that tribe shall be strong and industrious, fit for and inclined to labour, particularly the toil of husbandry; like the ass that patiently carries his burden. Issachar submitted to two burdens, tillage and tribute.
15He saw that his resting place was good and that his land was pleasant, so he bent his shoulder to the burden and submitted to labor as a servant.
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way·yar kî mə·nu·ḥāh ṭō·wḇ wə·’eṯ- kî hā·’ā·reṣ nā·‘ê·māh way·yêṭ šiḵ·mōw lis·bōl way·hî lə·mas- ‘ō·ḇêḏ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-he-saw rest that (it was) good, and the-land that (it was) pleasant; and-he-bowed his-shoulder to-bear, and-he-became for-forced-labor a-servant.
Where the English smooths the original
It means service paid in actual labour, such as was exacted by Solomon of the descendants of the Canaanites
Let us, with an eye of faith, see the heavenly rest to be goHenry's clause as preserved at the source; the word "good" is cut to "go" at the BibleHub excerpt boundary and quoted exactly as found.
Issachar was ready to kneel, and bear any heavy burden, for the sake of a quiet life in a fertile land.
16Dan shall provide justice for his people as one of the tribes of Israel.
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dān yā·ḏîn ‘am·mōw kə·’a·ḥaḏ šiḇ·ṭê yiś·rā·’êl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Dan shall-judge his-people, as-one-of the-tribes-of Israel.
Where the English smooths the original
There is an elegant paronomasia, or an allusion to the name of Dan in those words, which signifies to judge
Though he be the son of my concubine, yet he shall not be subject to any other tribe, but shall have an absolute power within himself.
The word “judge” carries with it the sense of “pleading the cause of” and “helping.”
17He will be a snake by the road, a viper in the path that bites the horse’s heels so that its rider tumbles backward.
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ḏān yə·hî- nā·ḥāš ‘ă·lê- ḏe·reḵ šə·p̄î·p̄ōn ‘ă·lê- ’ō·raḥ han·nō·šêḵ sūs ‘iq·qə·ḇê- rō·ḵə·ḇōw way·yip·pōl ’ā·ḥō·wr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Let-be Dan a-serpent by-the-way, a-horned-adder on-the-path, that-bites the-horse's heels, so-that-falls its-rider backward.
Where the English smooths the original
A cerastes, probably, or kind of horned serpent, of a subtle nature, which, according to Pliny, hides its whole body in the sand, showing only its horns to catch birds.
A serpent, an adder, implies subtlety and stratagem; such was pre-eminently the character of Samson, the most illustrious of its judges.
Dan is dangerous to his foes by ambuscades, secret raids, and guerilla warfare
18I await Your salvation, O LORD.
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qiw·wî·ṯî lî·šū·‘ā·ṯə·ḵā Yah·weh
Literal — word-for-word from the original
For-thy-salvation I-wait, O-LORD.
Where the English smooths the original
the thought of the serpent wounding his prey in the heel carried the mind of the patriarch back to the fall of man, and the promise made to Eve
Seeing the miseries that his posterity would fall into, he bursts out in prayer to God to remedy it.
Jacob in the midst of his great work doth take a little breathing, and finding himself weakened by his speech to his children, and drawing nearer death, he opens his arms to receive it
19Gad will be attacked by raiders, but he will attack their heels.
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gāḏ yə·ḡū·ḏen·nū gə·ḏūḏ wə·hū yā·ḡuḏ ‘ā·qêḇ
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Gad — a-raiding-band shall-raid-him; but-he shall-raid (their) heel.
Where the English smooths the original
These words furnish a double play upon the name of the tribe Gad. Gad … gedud yegudennu … yagud ‘ekêbâm = “Gad, raiders shall raid him, but he shall raid their rear (lit. heel).”
The cause of God and his people, though for a time it may seem to be baffled and run down, will be victorious at last.
The name Gad reminds the patriarch of גּוּד to press, and גּדוּד the pressing host, warlike host, which invades the land.
20Asher’s food will be rich; he shall provide royal delicacies.
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mê·’ā·šêr laḥ·mōw šə·mê·nāh wə·hū yit·tên me·leḵ ma·‘ă·ḏan·nê-
Literal — word-for-word from the original
From-Asher — rich (is) his-bread; and-he shall-yield delicacies-of a-king.
Where the English smooths the original
Its allotment was the seacoast between Tyre and Carmel, a district fertile in the production of the finest corn and oil in all Palestine.
The name of the tribe will then open the verse as a kind of nominativus pendens , i.e. “As for Asher, his bread, &c.”
The God of nature has provided for us not only necessaries but dainties, that we might call him a bountiful benefactor
21Naphtali is a doe set free that bears beautiful fawns.
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nap̄·tā·lî ’ay·yā·lāh šə·lu·ḥāh han·nō·ṯên šā·p̄er ’im·rê-
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Naphtali (is) a-doe let-loose, that-gives words-of beauty.
Where the English smooths the original
שׁלהה here is neither hunted, nor stretched out or grown slim; but let loose, running freely about
"He giveth goodly words." Here we pass from the figure to the reality. Eloquence in prose and verse was characteristic of this particular tribe.
Overcoming more by fair words than by force.
It is doubtful whether the simile applied to this tribe is that of “a hind” or “a terebinth tree.”
22Joseph is a fruitful vine—a fruitful vine by a spring, whose branches scale the wall.
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yō·w·sêp̄ pō·rāṯ bên pō·rāṯ bên ‘ă·lê- ‘ā·yin bā·nō·wṯ ṣā·‘ă·ḏāh ‘ă·lê- šūr
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Son-of-a-fruit-tree (is) Joseph, son-of-a-fruit-tree by-a-spring; daughters march over (the) wall.
Where the English smooths the original
Joseph is compared to the branch of a fruit-tree planted by a well ( Psalm 1:3 ), which sends it shoots over the wall, and by which, according to Psalm 80 , we are probably to understand a vine.
The first thing connected with Joseph in the patriarch's mind is fruitfulness. The image is vivid and striking. "Son of a fruitful tree." A branch or rather a shoot transplanted from the parent stem.
The structure of the clauses, the order of the words, the repetition of the thoughts, supply a glimpse into the fond emotion with which the aged prophet approached the blessing of his beloved son Joseph.
23The archers attacked him with bitterness; they aimed at him in hostility.
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ba·‘ă·lê ḥiṣ·ṣîm way·mā·ră·ru·hū wā·rōb·bū way·yiś·ṭə·mu·hū
Literal — word-for-word from the original
And-they-embittered-him and-shot; and-they-hated-him, the-archers.
Where the English smooths the original
The words of our text are probably to be taken as prophecy, not as history-as referring to the future conflicts and victories of the tribe, not to the past trials and triumphs of its father.From Maclaren's sermon "The Hands of the Mighty God of Jacob" on Genesis 49:23-24.
He had had many enemies, here called archers, being skilful to do mischief; they hated him, they shot their poisonous darts at him.
the allusions throughout the song are tribal, and not personal
24Yet he steadied his bow, and his strong arms were tempered by the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob, in the name of the Shepherd, the Rock of Israel,
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wat·tê·šeḇ bə·’ê·ṯān qaš·tōw zə·rō·‘ê yā·ḏāw way·yā·p̄ōz·zū mî·ḏê ’ă·ḇîr ya·‘ă·qōḇ miš·šām rō·‘eh ’e·ḇen yiś·rā·’êl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
But-abode in-permanence his-bow, and-were-supple the-arms-of his-hands, from-the-hands-of the-Mighty-One-of Jacob — from-there, from the-Shepherd, the-Stone-of Israel.
Where the English smooths the original
we get a series of names of God, in apposition with each other, as the sources of the strength promised to the arms of the hands of the warlike sons of Joseph.From Maclaren's sermon "The Shepherd, the Stone of Israel" on Genesis 49:24.
"The Might," the exalted upholder; "the Shepherd, the Stone," the fostering guardian as well as the solid foundation of his being.
The word for strength is highly poetical. It means that which goes on for ever, like the flowing streams or the eternal hills.
Herein Joseph was a type of Christ; who was shot at and hated, but borne up undBenson's clause as preserved at the source; the closing word is truncated ("und[er]") at the BibleHub excerpt boundary and quoted exactly as found.
25by the God of your father who helps you, and by the Almighty who blesses you, with blessings of the heavens above, with blessings of the depths below, with blessings of the breasts and womb.
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mê·’êl ’ā·ḇî·ḵā wə·ya‘·zə·re·kā wə·’êṯ šad·day wî·ḇā·rə·ḵe·kā bir·ḵōṯ šā·ma·yim mê·‘āl bir·ḵōṯ tə·hō·wm rō·ḇe·ṣeṯ tā·ḥaṯ bir·ḵōṯ šā·ḏa·yim wā·rā·ḥam
Literal — word-for-word from the original
From-the-God-of thy-father — may-he-help-thee; and-with the-Almighty — may-he-bless-thee: blessings-of heaven from-above, blessings-of the-deep crouching beneath, blessings-of breasts and-womb.
Where the English smooths the original
The Hebrew, however, for “by” is most probably due to an error in the transcription of one letter ( êth for êl ). Read “and God Almighty.” “ Êl ” was read by LXX, Sam., and Syr. Pesh.
"Blessings of heaven above" - the air, the rain, and the sun. "Blessings of the deep" - the springs and streams, as well as the fertile soil.
Our experiences of God’s power and goodness, in strengthening us hitherto, are encouragements still to hope for help from him. He that has helped us, will.
26The blessings of your father have surpassed the blessings of the ancient mountains and the bounty of the everlasting hills. May they rest on the head of Joseph, on the brow of the prince of his brothers.
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Hebrew — tap a word ↓
bir·ḵōṯ ’ā·ḇî·ḵā gā·ḇə·rū ‘al- bir·ḵōṯ hō·w·ray ‘aḏ- ta·’ă·waṯ ‘ō·w·lām giḇ·‘ōṯ tih·yɛn lə·rōš yō·w·sêp̄ ū·lə·qā·ḏə·qōḏ nə·zîr ’e·ḥāw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
The-blessings-of thy-father have-prevailed above the-blessings-of my-progenitors, unto the-bound-of the-everlasting hills; may-they-be on-the-head-of Joseph, and-on-the-crown-of the-prince-of his-brothers.
Where the English smooths the original
most modern commentators adopt the reading of the Samaritan Pentateuch, supported by the Samaritan Targum and the LXX., “The blessings of thy father are mightier than the blessings of the ancient mo
Ishmael was excluded from Abraham’s blessing, and my brother excluded from Isaac’s blessing, but both Joseph’s children are comprehended in Jacob’s blessing.
Either in dignity, or when he was sold from his brethren.
27Benjamin is a ravenous wolf; in the morning he devours the prey, in the evening he divides the plunder.”
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
bin·yā·mîn zə·’êḇ yiṭ·rāp̄ bab·bō·qer yō·ḵal ‘aḏ wə·lā·‘e·reḇ yə·ḥal·lêq šā·lāl
Literal — word-for-word from the original
Benjamin (is) a-wolf (that) tears-in-pieces; in-the-morning he-devours prey, and-at-evening he-divides spoil.
Where the English smooths the original
It is plain Jacob was guided in what he said by a spirit of prophecy, and not by natural affection, else he would have spoken with more tenderness of his beloved son Benjamin
Elsewhere in the O.T. the simile of a wolf is used only in a bad sense.
Morning and evening together suggest the idea of incessant and victorious capture of booty
28These are the tribes of Israel, twelve in all, and this was what their father said to them. He blessed them, and he blessed each one with a suitable blessing.
Berean Standard Bible · CC0
Hebrew — tap a word ↓
’êl·leh šiḇ·ṭê yiś·rā·’êl šə·nêm ‘ā·śār kāl- wə·zōṯ ’ă·šer- ’ă·ḇî·hem dib·ber lā·hem way·ḇā·reḵ ’ō·w·ṯām ’îš bê·raḵ ’ă·šer ’ō·ṯām kə·ḇir·ḵā·ṯōw
Literal — word-for-word from the original
All these (are) the-tribes-of Israel, twelve; and-this (is) what spoke to-them their-father, and-he-blessed-them: each-one according-to-his-blessing he-blessed them.
Where the English smooths the original
even Reuben, Simeon, and Levi, though put down through their own fault, received a share in the promised blessing.
Jacob's prophetic words obviously refer not so much to the sons as to the tribes of Israel.
The tribes are generally accounted twelve, though they were thirteen, because the land was divided only into twelve parts, Levi having no distinct part of his own.
every one received his own appropriate benediction
The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.
AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.
The chapter opens by changing keys. Jacob does not bless as a sentimental old man but, in Jamieson, Fausset & Brown's words, as one over whose words "attention is called" not "to the sayings of the dying saint, so much as of the inspired prophet... Under the immediate influence of the Holy Spirit he pronounced his prophetic benediction." The Hebrew underwrites this: he summons his sons not for a private farewell but with the Niphal imperative hê·’ā·sə·p̄ū, "be assembled" (v.1), doubled in v.2 by hiq·qā·ḇə·ṣū — a public convening. Keil hears "an elevated and solemn tone" in the repetition. And the horizon is set by one phrase: bə·’a·ḥă·rîṯ hayyāmîm, "in the latter part of the days" (v.1), which the Cambridge Bible links to the prophetic formula of Numbers 24:14 and Isaiah 2:2. Whatever else this is, it is prophecy reaching, as Barnes says, toward "the end of the human race."
The first three sons are addressed by the gifts they wasted. Reuben is named "my firstborn... my might, and the firstfruit of my strength" (v.3) — and then, in one word, undone: pa·ḥaz, "boiling over like water" (v.4). The Cambridge Bible: "The metaphor from water, bubbling over, is intended to express wanton or reckless vehemence." The grammar even recoils — "Notice the change from the second to the third person, as if the speaker had turned away in loathing." Simeon and Levi are bound together not by birth but by character: Keil insists they are "brethren in the full sense of the word... in their modes of thought and action." Their oracle hangs on a word no one fully understands — mə·ḵê·rō·ṯê·hem, which the Cambridge Bible notes "occurs only here," guessed as "swords" from its chime with Greek machaira. Over them falls the one curse in a chapter of blessings: ’ā·rūr (v.7). Yet Matthew Henry draws the line carefully: "Jacob does not curse their persons, but their lusts." The same adjective ‘āz that praised Reuben's "power" (v.3) now condemns their "fierce" anger (v.7) — the song's quiet thesis that strength blesses or damns by its use.
With Judah the tone breaks into eulogy. The Cambridge Bible marks "the outburst of the eulogy upon Judah" after "the sombre oracles." His name is praise, and the blessing is the name unfolding: Keil notes yōḏûḵā, "thy brethren shall praise thee," is "a play upon yəhûḏâ" (v.8). He is the lion — whelp, lion, lioness in three breaths (v.9) — and, the Cambridge Bible observes, this verse is what made the lion "through this verse... its historic symbol, cf. Revelation 5:5." Then the pivot of the whole chapter: "The scepter will not depart from Judah... until Shiloh comes" (v.10). On šī·lōh the voices are openly divided — Jamieson, Fausset & Brown catalogue the readings, "'the sent'... 'the seed'... the 'peaceable or prosperous one' — that is, the Messiah," while the Geneva note is flat: "Which is Christ the Messiah... who will call the Gentiles to salvation." Matthew Henry: "dying Jacob at a great distance saw Christ's day, and it was his comfort and support on his death-bed." The vine-and-blood imagery that follows (vv.11-12) pours out a land so rich one washes robes in wine — and Henry hears the sacrament: "He is the true Vine; wine is the appointed symbol of his blood... shed for sinners."
The middle tribes are sketched by name-puns and animal emblems. Zebulun "dwells" by the sea his name half-predicts (v.13) — Poole stands amazed that Jacob foretold "the portion of Zebulun, which fell to them two hundred years after this... merely by lot." Issachar is "an ass of bone" (v.14), couching between the sheepfolds — a phrase whose rare dual word ham·miš·pə·ṯā·yim recurs only in Deborah's reproach of Reuben (Judges 5:16); Keil reads his fate: "Ease at the cost of liberty." Dan, a concubine's son, is leveled to full standing — Gill notes "an elegant paronomasia... Dan, which signifies to judge" (v.16) — and then made a serpent striking at the heel (v.17), the word ‘āqêḇ reaching back to Genesis 3:15. It is precisely there, mid-catalogue, that the old man breaks off: "I await Your salvation, O LORD" (v.18). Ellicott (with the Speaker's Commentary) traces the cry to the serpent-and-heel just spoken, which "carried the mind of the patriarch back to the fall of man, and the promise made to Eve." Keil, citing Calvin, reads it not as a prayer for himself but as confidence "that his descendants would receive the help of his God." Gad's verse alliterates fourfold on his name (v.19); Asher yields "royal dainties" (v.20); Naphtali is "a hind let loose" who "giveth goodly words" (v.21, Geneva: "Overcoming more by fair words than by force").
For his beloved son the patriarch's words swell. Joseph is "son of a fruit-tree... by a well, whose daughters march over the wall" (v.22) — Barnes: "A branch or rather a shoot transplanted from the parent stem," Keil reading the tree, with Psalm 80, as a vine. Then the archers (v.23): the verbs way·mā·ră·ru·hū ("they embittered him") and way·yiś·ṭə·mu·hū ("they hated him") echo the brothers' hatred, though the Cambridge Bible warns "the allusions throughout the song are tribal, and not personal." Above the conflict rises the source of strength: "the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob... the Shepherd, the Stone of Israel" (v.24). Maclaren marvels at the pile-up of divine titles — "the mark of the flash of rapturous confidence which lit up the dying man's thoughts when they turned to God." The blessing then turns to entreaty (vv.25-26), heaping heaven, deep, breast and womb, and reaching "to the bound of the everlasting hills" — a text whose every other clause (Cambridge, Ellicott) carries a known variant between the Masoretic "my progenitors" and the Samaritan/LXX "ancient mountains."
Benjamin, the gentlest-named and best-loved, is given a predator's oracle: "a ravenous wolf" who "in the morning devours the prey, in the evening divides the plunder" (v.27). Benson notes Jacob spoke "by a spirit of prophecy, and not by natural affection, else he would have spoken with more tenderness." The closing verse (v.28) then frames the whole as the blessing of tribes, not merely men — JFB: "Jacob's prophetic words obviously refer not so much to the sons as to the tribes." And it makes a startling claim about the curses: "He blessed them, every one according to his blessing." Poole asks the obvious question — "There is no blessing here given to Reuben, Simeon, and Levi, but rather a curse; how then is he said to bless every one?" — and Keil answers: "even Reuben, Simeon, and Levi, though put down through their own fault, received a share in the promised blessing." The book of beginnings ends its great deathbed prophecy by insisting that a true word, even a hard one, fitted to the man, is a blessing.
Held to the rule that Scripture interprets Scripture, three things in this chapter stand out — offered as a reading to be tested, not a verdict to be trusted. First, the whole song is governed by one phrase that lifts it off the deathbed. Jacob says he will tell what befalls his sons bə·’a·ḥă·rîṯ hayyāmîm, "in the latter part of the days" (v.1) — the prophetic formula that elsewhere reaches to Messiah's age (Numbers 24:14; Isaiah 2:2). What follows is therefore not a father reading his children's temperaments but a prophet seeing tribes, and beyond the tribes, an end. Second, the chapter is built on the conviction that character is destiny and that the same gift blesses or curses by its use. The adjective ‘āz, "strong," praises Reuben's "power" in v.3 and damns Simeon and Levi's "anger" in v.7. The verb ḥālaq, "divide," is a sentence of dispersion on the violent (v.7) and a victor's parceling of spoil on Benjamin (v.27). The verb ‘ālāh, "go up," is Reuben's shame climbing to the bed (v.4) and Judah's lion ascending in triumph (v.9). The text rhymes crime with punishment and gift with glory on purpose. Third, the center of gravity is Judah, and the center of Judah is a coming One. The scepter holds "until Shiloh comes" (v.10) — a word so contested that honesty forbids leaning the whole weight of doctrine on its etymology. Yet the chapter does not depend on that one word alone: it gives Judah the homage of the nations, the lion that Revelation will name, the wine that is the blood of grapes, and at its heart the old man's own cry, "I await Your salvation, O LORD" (v.18). A dying man, cataloguing the futures of twelve flawed sons, stops to say he is waiting for a salvation that has a name. That cry, more than any single disputed noun, is where this chapter looks forward.
Twelve flawed sons, named for what they were and what they would become — and at the dead center of the list, a dying man stops to say he is waiting for a salvation that has a name.
AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.
The promise that "the scepter will not depart from Judah... until Shiloh comes, and the obedience of the peoples is his" (v.10) hangs on a word found almost nowhere else. Yiqqâhâh ("obedience / allegiance," H3349) occurs in only two verses of the entire Hebrew Bible — here and Proverbs 30:17. The Verifier confirms this rarity (freq 2). Because the word is so nearly unique, the verbal contact between Genesis 49:10 and Proverbs 30:17 is real, though the sense differs (filial obedience to a mother in Proverbs; the peoples' obedience to Shiloh here). The thread is recorded as a verbal link on the strength of the rare shared lexeme, not as a thematic equivalence.
Genesis 49:10 · Proverbs 30:17
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexeme H3349 yiqqâhâh, which occurs in only 2 verses of the Hebrew Bible (Genesis 49:10; Proverbs 30:17). The near-unique frequency makes this a confirmed verbal link; the contexts differ, so it is a lexical, not a thematic, equivalence.
Jacob's lion-portrait of Judah (v.9) — "a lion's whelp (gûr)... he crouches and lies down (rābats) like a lion; like a lioness (lābîʼ), who dares to rouse him?" — reappears, image for image, in Ezekiel's lament over the princes of Israel: "What was your mother? A lioness (lābîʼ); she crouched among lions, among young lions (gûr) she reared her cubs" (Ezekiel 19:2). The Verifier finds four shared lexemes, but none of them is rare: gûr (whelp, 7 vv), lābîʼ (lioness, 14 vv), rābats (crouch, 30 vv), and ʼărî (lion, 72 vv). With no near-unique word and no quotation formula, the honest tier is structural, not verbal — a shared lion-image pattern, not a recorded citation. Yet the convergence of four lion-terms in one tableau is no accident: Ezekiel takes the Genesis song of Judah's couched strength and inverts it into a dirge over a mother-lioness whose cubs are caged. The motif of the kingly lion of Judah travels from blessing (Genesis) to lament (Ezekiel) and on to triumph (Revelation 5:5).
Genesis 49:9 · Ezekiel 19:2
basis: Verifier: shared lexemes H1482 gûwr (7 vv), H3833 lâbîyʼ (14 vv), H7257 râbats (30 vv), H738 ʼărîy (72 vv) — none rare. Downgraded from verbal to structural: the link is a shared lion-image pattern (whelp + crouch + lioness), not a quotation or a near-unique lexeme. The motif is real and confirmed, the tier honest.
Judah's land is so rich he ties his colt to "the choicest branch," literally the śōrēq vine (v.11) — a prized purple-grape stock named by Ellicott. The word śōrēq (H8321) is rare, appearing in only three verses. The Verifier links Genesis 49:11 to both Isaiah 5:2 (God plants His vineyard "with the choicest vine," śōrēq, also sharing ʻênāb, "grape") and Jeremiah 2:21 ("I planted you a choice vine," śōrēq, sharing gephen, "vine"). The rare shared botanical term makes both confirmed verbal links: the lavish vine promised to Judah becomes, in the prophets, the figure of Israel as the LORD's own vineyard — planted choice, then judged for yielding wild grapes.
Genesis 49:11 · Isaiah 5:2 · Jeremiah 2:21
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexeme H8321 sôrêq (in only 3 vv) links all three; plus H6025 ʻênâb (Isaiah 5:2) and H1612 gephen (Jeremiah 2:21). The near-unique vine-term confirms verbal contact.
Issachar "lying down between the sheepfolds" (v.14) shares a genuinely rare word with the Song of Deborah. The dual noun mishpᵉthayim ("sheepfolds / hurdles," H4942) occurs in only two verses of the Hebrew Bible: here and Judges 5:16, where Reuben is reproached — "Why did you sit among the sheepfolds, to hear the whistlings for the flocks?" The Verifier confirms the frequency (2 vv). The same picture — a tribe settled comfortably among the folds instead of rising to act — is used of Issachar's chosen servitude here and of Reuben's failure to fight there. A confirmed verbal link by the rare shared lexeme, carrying a shared motif of ease that forfeits honor.
Genesis 49:14 · Judges 5:16
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexeme H4942 mishpâth, which occurs in only 2 verses (Genesis 49:14; Judges 5:16); also the common H996 bêyn ("between"). The rarity of mishpâth confirms the verbal link.
The fourfold pun on Gad's name (v.19) turns on the verb gûd ("to raid, press upon," H1464): "Gad — a raiding band shall raid him; but he shall raid their heel." This verb is rare, found in only two verses. The Verifier links it to Habakkuk 3:16, where the prophet, trembling, awaits "the day of trouble to come upon the people that shall invade us (yᵉgûdennû)" — the same form used of Gad's raiders here. A confirmed verbal link by the rare shared lexeme; both texts use the word of an invading band, Gad to promise eventual victory, Habakkuk to brace for the day of distress.
Genesis 49:19 · Habakkuk 3:16
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexeme H1464 gûwd, which occurs in only 2 verses (Genesis 49:19; Habakkuk 3:16). The near-unique frequency confirms the verbal link.
Of Joseph it is said his "strong arms were made supple" (v.24): the verb pāzaz (H6339), "to be agile / refined-pliant," occurs in only two verses of the Hebrew Bible. The Verifier links Genesis 49:24 to 2 Samuel 6:16, where David, bringing up the ark, was "leaping (mᵉp̄azzêz) and dancing before the LORD" — the same rare verb of nimble, joyful motion. The link is verbal by the unique shared lexeme. The connection is lexical rather than thematic (an archer's supple arms vs. a king's dance), and is recorded as such; but it is a true and rare verbal contact, and both occurrences locate the agility's source in the LORD.
Genesis 49:24 · 2 Samuel 6:16
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexeme H6339 pâzaz, which occurs in only 2 verses (Genesis 49:24; 2 Samuel 6:16). Near-unique frequency confirms the verbal link; the contexts differ (supple arms vs. leaping dance), so it is lexical, not thematic.
Joseph's enemies "shot at him" (v.23): the verb rābab ("to shoot an arrow," H7232) is one of the rarest in the Hebrew Bible, occurring in only two verses. The Verifier links Genesis 49:23 to Psalm 18:14, where the LORD, descending in storm, "sent out His arrows (ḥêts) and scattered them; He shot out (rābab) lightnings and routed them." The near-unique shared verb makes this a confirmed verbal contact, and the two uses face opposite ways: in Genesis the arrow-verb is aimed at the persecuted Beloved by his foes, while in the psalm the same verb is God's own bolt loosed against the wicked. The archer-verb that wounds Joseph in v.23 is, in v.24, answered by "the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob" — the very Champion whose lightnings Psalm 18 says He shoots.
Genesis 49:23 · Psalm 18:14
basis: Verifier: shared rare lexeme H7232 râbab, which occurs in only 2 verses (Genesis 49:23; Psalm 18:14); also the common H2671 chêts ("arrow"). The near-unique frequency of râbab confirms the verbal link; the directions differ (arrows shot at Joseph vs. God's bolts at the wicked), so it is lexical, not a claim of equivalence.
The sudden ejaculation of v.18 — "I await Your salvation, O LORD" — interrupts the oracle on Dan, who is a serpent biting "the horse's heels" (‘iqqᵉḇê, v.17). Ellicott, following the Speaker's Commentary, reads the cry as triggered by that very image, which "carried the mind of the patriarch back to the fall of man, and the promise made to Eve" — the protevangelium of Genesis 3:15, where the seed of the woman bruises the serpent's head and the serpent bruises His heel. This is a thematic/structural link within Genesis, carried by the shared serpent-and-heel motif rather than by a single rare lexeme; it is recorded as the long-held reading of these expositors, not as a quotation.
Genesis 49:17 · Genesis 49:18 · Genesis 3:15
basis: Shared serpent-and-heel motif (the wounded heel, Genesis 3:15 and 49:17) prompting the cry for salvation in 49:18; recorded as the reading of Ellicott / the Speaker's Commentary. No claim of a single rare shared lexeme, hence thematic rather than verbal.
AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.
When the elder comforts the weeping John in Revelation 5:5 — "Weep not: behold, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, has prevailed" — he is reading Genesis 49 aloud. The lion that crouches "like a lioness, who dares to rouse him?" (v.9) becomes Judah's permanent emblem; the Cambridge Bible notes flatly that "through this verse" the lion became Judah's "historic symbol, cf. Revelation 5:5." The scepter that "will not depart from Judah until Shiloh comes" (v.10) is read, from the Geneva note ("Which is Christ the Messiah") through Jamieson, Fausset & Brown's catalogue of messianic readings, as fulfilled in the One born of Judah's line. The connection from the Greek of Revelation to the Hebrew of Genesis is thematic and typological — there is no shared original-language word, since the Testaments differ in language — but the reading is ancient, apostolic, and all but universal: the Lion who lay down in Judah rises in the Lamb who was slain.
Genesis 49:9 · Genesis 49:10 · Revelation 5:5 · Hebrews 7:14
"The scepter will not depart from Judah... until Shiloh comes, and the obedience of the peoples is his" (v.10). The church has heard in Shiloh a name of Christ since antiquity. Jamieson, Fausset & Brown survey the readings — "'the sent' (John 17:3), 'the seed' (Isaiah 11:1), the 'peaceable or prosperous one'... that is, the Messiah" — and the Geneva Bible is unhesitating: "Which is Christ the Messiah, the giver of prosperity who will call the Gentiles to salvation." Matthew Henry: "dying Jacob at a great distance saw Christ's day, and it was his comfort and support on his death-bed." Honesty requires the flag that the vocalization and etymology of šî·lōh are genuinely disputed (modern critics repoint it "until he comes to Shiloh"), so no doctrine should rest on the one word alone. But the surrounding promise — homage of the nations to a coming ruler of Judah's line — is the soil from which the New Testament's "to him shall the obedience of the peoples be" grows toward Christ. The link is thematic/typological across the Testaments, ancient and widely held, but appropriately tempered by the textual uncertainty of the name itself.
Genesis 49:10 · Genesis 49:18 · John 17:3
In Joseph's blessing the source of all strength is named in a rush of divine titles: "the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob... the Shepherd, the Stone of Israel" (v.24). The fathers and the apostles heard both titles converge on Christ. He is "the good Shepherd" who "lays down his life for the sheep" (John 10:11); He is the "living Stone, rejected by men but chosen and precious in God's sight," the cornerstone of 1 Peter 2:4-8 and Psalm 118:22. Maclaren, preaching on this verse, lingered over the heaped names as "the manifold preciousness of Him whom no name, nor crowd of names, can rightly praise." The link is typological — Hebrew titles of God read forward to the incarnate Son — and is recorded as the historic Christian reading rather than as a quotation; there is no shared original-language word between this Hebrew and the Greek of John or Peter. Ancient and widely held: the Shepherd-Stone of the patriarch's last breath is, the church confesses, the Shepherd and Stone of the gospel.
Genesis 49:24 · John 10:11 · 1 Peter 2:6-8
The oracle on Joseph traces a shape the older expositors heard echoed in Christ: the beloved son set apart from his brethren (v.26, nāzîr, "separated"), "sorely grieved" and "shot at" and "hated" by archers (v.23), yet whose "bow abode in strength" by "the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob" (v.24). John Gill reads v.23 of Joseph's brethren who "shot out bitter words against him, and hated him for his dreams... they mocked at him, conspired to kill him... and then sold him; in all which he was a type of Christ, as used by the Jews." Joseph Benson on v.24 says the same in a clause cut off at the source: "Herein Joseph was a type of Christ; who was shot at and hated, but borne up und[er it]." This is a typological reading, not a quotation: there is no shared original-language word, since the link runs from a Hebrew oracle to the Greek gospel. But the figure is among the oldest in Christian and even pre-Christian reading — the rejected and sold brother who is exalted to save the very brothers who wronged him (Genesis 45:5-7; cf. Acts 7:9-13) — and it is offered as the historic type, to be tested, not as a proof from the text's vocabulary.
Genesis 49:22 · Genesis 49:23 · Genesis 49:24 · Genesis 49:26 · Acts 7:9
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.
Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:
The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0); the Hebrew parsing, transliteration, and Strong's numbers are from the Berean/Strong's data supplied in the unit input and are not contradicted here. The named voices are quoted verbatim from public-domain commentaries on these verses at BibleHub: Charles Ellicott, Joseph Benson, Matthew Henry, Albert Barnes, Jamieson-Fausset-Brown, Matthew Poole, John Gill, the Geneva Study Bible, the Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges, the Pulpit Commentary, Keil & Delitzsch, and Alexander Maclaren's sermon "The Hands of the Mighty God of Jacob" (on vv. 23-24). Each excerpt is a contiguous substring of its source; where a BibleHub source text was itself cut off mid-word (Keil on v.14, Henry on v.15, Benson on v.24, Ellicott on v.26), the excerpt is quoted exactly as found and trimmed at that boundary, with an editorial note — never silently completed or altered.
Honesty notes specific to this unit: (1) Genesis 49:10 ("Shiloh") is one of the most text-critically and lexically disputed verses in the Pentateuch; the messianic reading is ancient and dominant but the vocalization of šî·lōh is not certain, and this is flagged in the Christ section rather than asserted as settled. (2) Several oracles turn on genuine textual variants — v.25 (’êṯ "with" vs. ’êl "God," per Cambridge/LXX/Samaritan) and v.26 (hôray "my progenitors" vs. "the ancient mountains," per Samaritan/LXX); both are reported, not resolved. (3) v.5 (mᵉkêrāh) and several others rest on hapax legomena whose meaning the commentators themselves do not claim to know with certainty; the divergence notes say so. (4) The cross-Testament Christ threads (Lion of Judah → Revelation 5:5; Shepherd/Stone → John 10 / 1 Peter 2; Joseph as type of Christ → Acts 7) cannot use shared Strong's numbers, since the Testaments differ in language; they are tiered as typological/thematic and marked ancient/widely-held, never "verbal." The Hebrew↔Hebrew threads do cite the Verifier's computed shared lexemes, with frequencies, as their recorded basis. (5) One Hebrew↔Hebrew thread has been downgraded in this editorial pass: the Judah-lion link to Ezekiel 19:2 shares four lion-words but none rare (lowest frequency 7), so it is tiered structural / thematic, not "verbal," since there is no near-unique lexeme or quotation formula — only a shared image. The threads tiered "verbal" all rest on a genuinely rare shared lexeme (frequency 2–3): H3349 (Proverbs 30:17), H4942 (Judges 5:16), H1464 (Habakkuk 3:16), H6339 (2 Samuel 6:16), H7232 (Psalm 18:14), and H8321 (Isaiah 5:2; Jeremiah 2:21). The ⚙ machine layer (literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes, the grand commentary's synthesis, the sola reading, and all thread/Christ framing) is fallible and offered to be tested against the Word.
✦ = human, public-domain source, quoted and named. ⚙ = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)