Book contents
Introduction
The Twelve Tribes Tradition and the Hidden History of “Becoming Israel”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 March 2022
Summary
His father’s stolen blessing in hand, the young Jacob, not yet a patriarch, lights out for the territories. His flight rewinds history, retracing the thread of family destiny back to Harran, where once his grandfather Abraham heard the voice of a new god speaking: lech lecha, take yourself and go. This time, it is the voice of his mother Rebekah that Jacob heard, telling him “look, Esau your brother is consoling himself by plotting to kill you” (Gen. 27:42). He chooses the better part of valor and his life not only begins, but, happily for him, continues. In Harran, in the home of his uncle Laban, Jacob will marry, not once but twice, and become the father of thirteen children – one daughter, and twelve sons (Gen. 29–30). After fourteen years, Jacob and his family return to Canaan, and near the end of his life, travel from Canaan to Egypt (Gen. 46). In Egypt, in the fullness of time, the descendants of Jacob’s twelve sons become the twelve tribes of Israel, a populous and powerful nation.
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- The Myth of the Twelve Tribes of IsraelNew Identities Across Time and Space, pp. 1 - 21Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022