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			 FAMILY TRADITIONS 
			1Ch 1:10; 1Ch 1:19-46; 1Ch 2:3; 1Ch 2:7-34; 1Ch 4:9-10; 1Ch 4:18; 
			1Ch 4:22; 1Ch 4:27; 1Ch 4:34-43; 1Ch 5:10; 1Ch 5:18-22; 1Ch 7:21-23; 
			1Ch 8:13 
			CHRONICLES is a miniature Old Testament, and may have been meant 
			as a handbook for ordinary people, who had no access to the whole 
			library of sacred writings. It contains nothing corresponding to the 
			books of Wisdom or the apocalyptic literature; but all the other 
			types of Old Testament literature are represented. There are 
			genealogies, statistics, ritual, history, psalms, and prophecies. 
			The interest shown by Chronicles in family traditions harmonizes 
			with the stress laid by the Hebrew Scriptures upon family life. The 
			other historical books are largely occupied with the family history 
			of the Patriarchs, of Moses, of Jephthah, Gideon, Samson, Saul, and 
			David. The chronicler intersperses his genealogies with short 
			anecdotes about the different families and tribes. Some of these are 
			borrowed from the older books; but others are peculiar to our 
			author, and were doubtless obtained by him from the family records 
			and traditions of his contemporaries. The statements that "Nimrod 
			began to be mighty upon the earth"; {1Ch 1:10} that "the name of 
			one" of Eber’s sons "was Peleg, because in his days the earth was 
			divided"; {1Ch 1:19} and that Hadad "smote Moab in the field of 
			Midian," {1Ch 1:46} are borrowed from Genesis. As he omits events 
			much more important and more closely connected with the history of 
			Israel, and gives no account of Babel, or of Abraham, or of the 
			conquest of Canaan, these little notes are probably retained by 
			accident, because at times the chronicler copied his authorities 
			somewhat mechanically. It was less trouble to take the genealogies 
			as they stood than to exercise great care in weeding out everything 
			but the bare names. 
			 
			In one instance (Cf. Gen 36:24, and 1Ch 1:40), however, the 
			chronicler has erased a curious note to a genealogy in Genesis. A 
			certain Anah is mentioned both in Genesis and Chronicles among the 
			Horites, who inhabited Mount Seir before it was conquered by Edom. 
			Most of us, in reading the Authorized Version, have wondered what 
			historical or religious interest secured a permanent record for the 
			fact that "Anah found the mules in the wilderness, as he fed the 
			asses of Zibeon his father." A possible solution seemed to be that 
			this note was preserved as the earliest reference to the existence 
			of mules, which animals played an important part in the social life 
			of Palestine; but the Revised Version sets aside this explanation by 
			substituting "hot springs" for "mules," and as these hot springs are 
			only mentioned here, the passage becomes a greater puzzle than ever. 
			The chronicler could hardly overlook this curious piece of 
			information, but he naturally felt that this obscure archaeological 
			note about the aboriginal Horites did not fall within the scope of 
			his work. On the other hand, the tragic fates of Er and Achar had a 
			direct genealogical significance. They are referred to in order to 
			explain why the lists contain no descendants of these members of the 
			tribe of Judah. The notes to these names illustrate the more 
			depressing aspects of history. The men who lived happy, honorable 
			lives can be mentioned one after another without any comment; but 
			even the compiler of pedigrees pauses to note the crimes and 
			misfortunes that broke the natural order of life. The annals of old 
			families dwell with melancholy pride on murders, and fatal duels, 
			and suicides. History, like an ancient mansion, is haunted with 
			unhappy ghosts. Yet our interest in tragedy is a testimony to the 
			blessedness of life; comfort and enjoyment are too monotonously 
			common to be worth recording, but we are attracted and excited by 
			exceptional instances of suffering and sin. 
			 
			Let us turn to the episodes of family life only found in Chronicles. 
			They may mostly be arranged in little groups of two or three, and 
			some of the groups present us with an interesting contrast. 
			 
			We learn from 1Ch 2:34-41; 1Ch 4:18 that two Jewish families traced 
			their descent from Egyptian ancestors. Sheshan, according to 
			Chronicles, was eighth in descent from Judah and fifth from 
			Jerahmeel, the brother of Caleb. Having daughters, but no son, he 
			gave one of his daughters in marriage to an Egyptian slave named 
			Jarha. The descendants of this union are traced for thirteen 
			generations. Genealogies, however, are not always complete; and our 
			other data do not suffice to determine even approximately the date 
			of this marriage. But the five generations between Jerahmeel and 
			Sheshan indicate a period long after the Exodus; and as Egypt plays 
			no recorded part in the history of Israel between the Exodus and the 
			reign of Solomon, the marriage may have taken place under the 
			monarchy. The story is a curious parallel to that of Joseph, with 
			the parts of Israelite and Egyptian reversed. God is no respecter of 
			persons; it is not only when the desolate and afflicted in strange 
			lands belong to the chosen people that Jehovah relieves and delivers 
			them. It is true of the Egyptian, as well as of the Israelite, that 
			"the Lord maketh poor and maketh rich." 
			 
			"He bringeth low, He also lifteth up; He raiseth up the poor out of 
			the dust: He lifteth up the needy from the dunghill, To make them 
			sit with princes; And inherit the throne of glory." {1Sa 2:7-8} 
			 
			This song might have been sung at Jarha’s wedding as well as at 
			Joseph’s. 
			 
			Both these marriages throw a sidelight upon the character of Eastern 
			slavery. They show how sharply and deeply it was divided from the 
			hopeless degradation of Negro slavery in America. Israelites did not 
			recognize distinctions of race and color between themselves and 
			their bondsmen so as to treat them as worse than pariahs and regard 
			them with physical loathing. An American considers himself disgraced 
			by a slight taint of Negro blood in his ancestry, but a noble Jewish 
			family was proud to trace its descent from an Egyptian slave. 
			 
			The other story is somewhat different, and rests upon an obscure and 
			corrupt passage in 1Ch 4:18. The confusion makes it impossible to 
			arrive at any date, even by rough approximation. The genealogical 
			relations of the actors are by no means certain, but some 
			interesting points are tolerably clear. Some time after the conquest 
			of Canaan, a descendant of Caleb married two wives, one a Jewess, 
			the other an Egyptian. The Egyptian was Bithiah, a daughter of 
			Pharaoh, i.e., of the contemporary king of Egypt. It appears 
			probable that the inhabitants of Eshtemoa traced their descent to 
			this Egyptian princess, while those of Gedor, Soco, and Zanoah 
			claimed Mered as their ancestor by his Jewish wife. Here again we 
			have the bare outline of a romance, which the imagination is at 
			liberty to fill in. It has been suggested that Bithiah may have been 
			the victim of some Jewish raid into Egypt, but surely a king of 
			Egypt would have either ransomed his daughter or recovered her by 
			force of arms. The story rather suggests that the chiefs of the 
			clans of Judah were semi-independent and possessed of considerable 
			wealth and power, so that the royal family of Egypt could intermarry 
			with them, as with reigning sovereigns. But if so, the pride of 
			Egypt must have been greatly broken since the time when the Pharaohs 
			haughtily refused to give their daughters in marriage to the kings 
			of Babylon. 
			 
			Both Egyptian alliances occur among the Kenizzites, the descendants 
			of the brothers Caleb and Jerahmeel. In one case a Jewess marries an 
			Egyptian slave; in the other a Jew marries an Egyptian princess. 
			Doubtless these marriages did not stand alone, and there were others 
			with foreigners of varying social rank. The stories show that even 
			after the Captivity the tradition survived that the clans in the 
			south of Judah had been closely connected with Egypt, and that 
			Solomon was not the only member of the tribe who had taken an 
			Egyptian wife. Now intermarriage with foreigners is partly forbidden 
			by the Pentateuch; and the prohibition was extended and sternly 
			enforced by Ezra and Nehemiah (Deu 7:3; Joshua; Ezr 9:1; Ezr 9:10 
			Neh 13:23). In the time of the chronicler there was a growing 
			feeling against such marriages. Hence the traditions we are 
			discussing cannot have originated after the Return, but must be at 
			any rate earlier than the publication of Deuteronomy under Josiah. 
			 
			Such marriages with Egyptians must have had some influence on the 
			religion of the south of Judah, but probably the foreigners usually 
			followed the example of Ruth, and adopted the faith of the families 
			into which they came. When they said, "Thy people shall be my 
			people," they did not fail to add, "and thy God shall be my God." 
			When the Egyptian princess married the head of a Jewish clan, she 
			became one of Jehovah’s people; and her adoption into the family of 
			the God of Israel was symbolized by a new name: "Bithiah," "daughter 
			of Jehovah." Whether later Judaism owed anything to Egyptian 
			influences can only be matter of conjecture; at any rate, they did 
			not pervert the southern clans from their old faith. The Calebites 
			and Jerahmeelites were the backbone of Judah both before and after 
			the Captivity. 
			 
			The remaining traditions relate to the warfare of the Israelites 
			with their neighbors. The first is a colorless reminiscence, that 
			might have been recorded of the effectual prayer of any pious 
			Israelite. The genealogies of chapter 4 are interrupted by a 
			paragraph entirely unconnected with the context. The subject of this 
			fragment is a certain Jabez never mentioned elsewhere, and, so far 
			as any record goes, as entirely "without father, without mother, 
			without genealogy," as Melchizedek himself. As chapter 4 deals with 
			the families of Judah, and in 1Ch 2:55 there is a town Jabez also 
			belonging to Judah, we may suppose that the chronicler had reasons 
			for assigning Jabez to that tribe; but he has neither given these 
			reasons, nor indicated how Jabez was connected therewith. The 
			paragraph runs as follows: {1Ch 4:9-10} "And Jabez was honored above 
			his brethren, and his mother called his name Jabez" (Ya’bec), 
			"saying, In pain" (‘oceb) "I bore him. And Jabez called upon the God 
			of Israel, saying, ‘If Thou wilt indeed bless me by enlarging my 
			possessions, And Thy hand be with me to provide pasture, that I be 
			not in distress" (‘oceb). 
			 
			And God brought about what he asked. The chronicler has evidently 
			inserted here a broken and disconnected fragment from one of his 
			sources; and we are puzzled to understand why he gives so much, and 
			no more. Surely not merely to introduce the etymologies of Jabez; 
			for if Jabez were so important that it was worth while to interrupt 
			the genealogies to furnish two derivations of his name, why are we 
			not told more about him? Who was he, when and where did he live, and 
			at whose expense were his possessions enlarged and pasture provided 
			for him? Everything that could give color and interest to the 
			narrative is withheld, and we are merely told that he prayed for 
			earthly blessing and obtained it. The spiritual lesson is obvious, 
			but it is very frequently enforced and illustrated in the Old 
			Testament. Why should this episode about an utterly unknown man be 
			thrust by main force into an unsuitable context, if it is only one 
			example of a most familiar truth? It has been pointed out that Jacob 
			vowed a similar vow and built an altar to El, the God of Israel; 
			{Gen 28:20; Gen 33:20} but this is one of many coincidences. The 
			paragraph certainly tells us something about the chronicler’s views 
			on prayer, but nothing that is not more forcibly stated and 
			exemplified in many other passages; it is mainly interesting to us 
			because of the light it throws on his methods of composition. 
			Elsewhere he embodies portions of well-known works and apparently 
			assumes that his readers are sufficiently versed in them to be able 
			to understand the point of his extracts. Probably Jabez was so 
			familiar to the chronicler’s immediate circle that he can take for 
			granted that a few lines will suffice to recall all the 
			circumstances to a reader. 
			 
			We have next a series of much more definite statements about 
			Israelite prowess and success in wars against Moab and other 
			enemies. 
			 
			1Ch 4:21-22, we read, "The sons of Shelah the son of Judah: Er the 
			father of Lecah, and Laadah the father of Mareshah, and the families 
			of the house of them that wrought fine linen, of the house of Ashbea; 
			and Jokim, and the men of Cozeba, and Joash, and Saraph, who had 
			dominion in Moab and returned to Bethlehem." Here again the 
			information is too vague to enable us to fix any date, nor is it 
			quite certain who had dominion in Moab. The verb "had dominion" is 
			plural in Hebrew, and may refer to all or any of the sons of Shelah. 
			But, in spite of uncertainties, it is interesting to find chiefs or 
			clans of Judah ruling in Moab. Possibly this immigration took place 
			when David conquered and partly depopulated the country. The men of 
			Judah may have returned to Bethlehem when Moab passed to the 
			Northern Kingdom at the disruption, or when Moab regained its 
			independence. 
			 
			The incident in 1Ch 4:34-43 differs from the preceding in having a 
			definite date assigned to it. In the time of Hezekiah some Simeonite 
			clans had largely increased in number and found themselves 
			straitened for room for their flocks. They accordingly went in 
			search of new pasturage. One company went to Gedor, another to Mount 
			Seir. 
			 
			The situation of Gedor is not clearly known. It cannot be the Gedor 
			of Jos 15:58, which lay in the heart of Judah. The LXX has Gerar, a 
			town to the south of Gaza, and this may be the right reading; but 
			whether we read Gedor or Gerar, the scene of the invasion will be in 
			the country south of Judah. Here the children of Simeon found what 
			they wanted, "fat pasture, and good," and abundant, for "the land 
			was wide." There was the additional advantage that the inhabitants 
			were harmless and inoffensive and fell an easy prey to their 
			invaders: "The land was quiet and peaceable, for they that dwelt 
			there aforetime were of Ham." As Ham in the genealogies is the 
			father of Cainan, these peaceable folk would be Cainanites; and 
			among them were a people called Meunim, probably not connected with 
			any of the Maons mentioned in the Old Testament, but with some other 
			town or district of the same name. So "these written by name came in 
			the days of Hezekiah, king of Judah, and smote their tents, and the 
			Meunim that were found there, and devoted them to destruction as 
			accursed, so that none are left unto this day. And the Simeonites 
			dwelt in their stead." 
			 
			Then follows in the simplest and most unconscious way the only 
			justification that is offered for the behavior of the invaders: 
			"because there was pasture there for their flocks." The narrative 
			takes for granted- 
			 
			"The good old rule, the simple plan,  
			That they should take who have the power,  
			And they should keep who can." 
			 
			The expedition to Mount Seir appears to have been a sequel to the 
			attack on Gedor. Five hundred of the victors emigrated into Edom, 
			and smote the remnant of the Amalekites who had survived the 
			massacre under Saul; {1 Samuel 15} "and they also dwelt there unto 
			this day." 
			 
			In substance, style, and ideas this passage closely resembles the 
			books of Joshua and Judges, where the phrase "unto this day" 
			frequently occurs. Here, of course, the "day" in question is the 
			time of the chronicler’s authority. When Chronicles was written the 
			Simeonites in Gedor and Mount Seir had long ago shared the fate of 
			their victims. 
			 
			The conquest of Gedor reminds us how in the early days of the 
			Israelite occupation of Palestine "Judah went with Simeon his 
			brother into the same southern lands," and they smote the Canaanites 
			that inhabited Zephath, and devoted them to destruction as accursed; 
			{Jdg 1:17} and how the house of Joseph took Bethel by treachery. {Jdg 
			1:22-26} But the closest parallel is the Danite conquest of Laish. 
			{Judges 18} The Danite spies said that the people of Laish "dwelt in 
			security, after the manner of the Zidonians, quiet and secure," 
			harmless and inoffensive, like the Gedorites. Nor were they likely 
			to receive succor from the powerful city of Zidon or from other 
			allies, for "they were far from the Zidonians, and had no dealings 
			with any man." Accordingly, having observed the prosperous but 
			defenseless position of this peaceable people, they returned and 
			reported to their brethren, "Arise, and let us go up against them, 
			for we have seen the land, and, behold, it is very good; and are ye 
			still? Be not slothful to go and to enter in to possess the land. 
			When ye go, ye shall come unto a people secure, and the land," like 
			that of Gedor, "is large, for God hath given it into your hand, a 
			place where there is no want of anything that is in the earth." 
			 
			The moral of these incidents is obvious. When a prosperous people is 
			peaceable and defenseless, it is a clear sign that God has delivered 
			them into the hand of any warlike and enterprising nation that knows 
			how to use its opportunities. The chronicler, however, is not 
			responsible for this morality, but he does not feel compelled to 
			make any protest against the ethical views of his source. There is a 
			refreshing frankness about these ancient narratives. The wolf 
			devours the lamb without inventing any flimsy pretext about troubled 
			waters. 
			 
			But in criticizing these Hebrew clans who lived in the dawn of 
			history and religion we condemn ourselves. If we make adequate 
			allowance for the influence of Christ, and the New Testament, and 
			centuries of Christian teaching, Simeon and Dan do not compare 
			unfavorably with modern nations. As we review the wars of 
			Christendom, we shall often be puzzled to find any ground for the 
			outbreak of hostilities other than the defenselessness of the weaker 
			combatant. The Spanish conquest of America and the English conquest 
			of India afford examples of the treatment of weaker races which 
			fairly rank with those of the Old Testament. Even today the 
			independence of the smaller European states is mainly guaranteed by 
			the jealousies of the Great Powers. Still there has been progress in 
			international morality; we have got at last to the stage of Aesop’s 
			fable. Public opinion condemns wanton aggression against a weak 
			state; and the stronger power employs the resources of civilized 
			diplomacy in showing that not only the absent, but also the 
			helpless, are always wrong. There has also been a substantial 
			advance in humanity towards conquered peoples. Christian warfare 
			even since the Middle Ages has been stained with the horrors of the 
			Thirty Years’ War and many other barbarities; the treatment of the 
			American Indians by settlers has often been cruel and unjust; but no 
			civilized nation would now systematically massacre men, women, and 
			children in cold blood. We are thankful for any progress towards 
			better things, but we cannot feel that men have yet realized that 
			Christ has a message for nations as well as for individuals, As His 
			disciples we can only pray more earnestly that the kingdoms of the 
			earth may in deed and truth become the kingdoms of our Lord and of 
			His Christ. 
			 
			The next incident is more honorable to the Israelites. The sons of 
			Reuben, and the Gadites, and the half-tribe of Manasseh did not 
			merely surprise and slaughter quiet and peaceable people: they 
			conquered formidable enemies in fair fight (1Ch 5:7-10, 1Ch 
			5:18-22). There are two separate accounts of a war with the Hagrites, 
			one appended to the genealogy of Reuben and one to that of Gad. The 
			former is very brief and general, comprising nothing but a bare 
			statement that there was a successful war and a consequent 
			appropriation of territory. Probably the two paragraphs are 
			different forms of the same narrative, derived by the chronicler 
			from independent sources. We may therefore confine our attention to 
			the more detailed account. 
			 
			Here, as elsewhere, these Transjordanic tribes are spoken of as 
			"valiant {Deu 33:20 1Ch 12:8-21} men," "men able to bear buckler and 
			sword and to shoot with the bow, and skillful in war." Their numbers 
			were considerable. While five hundred Simeonites were enough to 
			destroy the Amalekites on Mount Seir, these eastern tribes mustered 
			"forty and four thousand seven hundred and threescore that were able 
			to go forth to war." Their enemies were not "quiet and peaceable 
			people," but the wild Bedouin of the desert "the Hagrites, with 
			Jetur and Naphish and Nodab." Nodab is mentioned only here; Jetur 
			and Naphish occur together in the lists of the sons of Ishmael. {Gen 
			25:15} Ituraea probably derived its name from the tribe of Jetur. 
			The Hagrites or Hagarenes were Arabs closely connected with the 
			Ishmaelites, and they seem to have taken their name from Hagar. In 
			Psa 83:6-8 we find a similar confederacy on a larger scale:- 
			 
			"The tents of Edom and the Ishmaelites, Moab and the Hagarenes, 
			Gebal and Ammon and Amalek, Philistia with the inhabitants of Tyre, 
			Assyria also is joined with them; They have helped the children of 
			Lot." 
			 
			There could be no question of unprovoked aggression against these 
			children of Ishmael, that "wild ass of a man, whose hand was against 
			every man, and every man’s hand against him." {Gen 16:12} The 
			narrative implies that the Israelites were the aggressors, but to 
			attack the robber tribes of the desert would be as much an act of 
			self-defense as to destroy a hornet’s nest. We may be quite sure 
			that when Reuben and Gad marched eastward they had heavy losses to 
			retrieve and bitter wrongs to avenge. We might find a parallel in 
			the campaigns by which robber tribes are punished for their raids 
			within our Indian frontier, only we must remember that Reuben and 
			Gad were not very much more law-abiding or unselfish than their Arab 
			neighbors. They were not engaged in maintaining a pax Britannica for 
			the benefit of subject nations; they were carrying on a struggle for 
			existence with persistent and relentless foes. Another partial 
			parallel would be the border feuds on the Northumbrian marches when- 
			 
			"over border, dale, and fell  
			Full wide and far was terror spread;  
			For pathless marsh and mountain cell  
			The peasant left his lowly shed:  
			The frightened flocks and herds were pent  
			Beneath the peel’s rude battlement,  
			And maids and matrons dropped the tear  
			While ready warriors seized the spear  
			The watchman’s eye  
			Dun wreaths of distant smoke can spy." 
			 
			But the Israelite expedition was on a larger scale than any "warden 
			raid," and Eastern passions are fiercer and shriller than those sung 
			by the Last Minstrel: the maids and matrons of the desert would 
			shriek and wail instead of "dropping a tear." 
			 
			In this great raid of ancient times "the war was of God," not, as at 
			Laish, because God found for them helpless and easy victims, but 
			because He helped them in a desperate struggle. When the fierce 
			Israelite and Arab borderers joined battle, the issue was at first 
			doubtful; and then "they cried to God, and He was entreated of them, 
			because they put their trust in Him," "and they were helped against" 
			their enemies; "and the Hagrites were delivered into their hand, and 
			all that were with them, and there fell many slain, because the war 
			was of God"; "and they took away their cattle: of their camels fifty 
			thousand, and of sheep two hundred and fifty thousand, and of asses 
			two thousand, and of slaves a hundred thousand." "And they dwelt in 
			their stead until the captivity." 
			 
			This "captivity" is the subject of another short note. The 
			chronicler apparently was anxious to distribute his historical 
			narratives equally among the tribes. The genealogies of Reuben and 
			Gad each conclude with a notice of a war, and a similar account 
			follows that of Eastern Manasseh:-"And they trespassed against the 
			God of their fathers, and went a-whoring after the gods of the 
			peoples of the land, whom God destroyed before them. And the God of 
			Israel stirred up the spirit of Pul, king of Assyria, and the spirit 
			of Tilgath-pilneser, king of Assyria, and he carried them away, even 
			the Reubenites, and the Gadites, and the half-tribe of Manasseh, and 
			brought them unto Halah, and Habor, and Hara, and to the river of 
			Gozan, unto this day." And this war also was "of God." Doubtless the 
			descendants of the surviving Hagrites and Ishmaelites were among the 
			allies of the Assyrian king, and saw in the ruin of Eastern Israel a 
			retribution for the sufferings of their own people; but the later 
			Jews and probably the exiles in "Halah, Habor, and Hara," and by 
			"the river of Gozan," far away in Northeastern Mesopotamia, found 
			the cause of their sufferings in too great an intimacy with their 
			heathen neighbors: they had gone a-whoring after their gods. 
			 
			The last two incidents which we shall deal with in this chapter 
			serve to illustrate afresh the rough-and-ready methods by which the 
			chronicler has knotted together threads of heterogeneous tradition 
			into one tangled skein. We shall see further how ready ancient 
			writers were to represent a tribe by the ancestor from whom it 
			traced its descent. We read in 1Ch 7:20-21, "The sons of Ephraim: 
			Shuthelah, and Bered his son, and Tahath his son, and Eleadah his 
			son, and Zabad his son, and Shuthelah his son, and Ezer and Elead, 
			whom the men of Gath that were born in the land slew, because they 
			came down to take away their cattle." 
			 
			Ezer and Elead are apparently brothers of the second Shuthelah; at 
			any rate, as six generations are mentioned between them and Ephraim, 
			they would seem to have lived long after the Patriarch. Moreover, 
			they came down to Gath, so that they must have lived in some 
			hill-country not far off, presumably the hill-country of Ephraim. 
			But in the next two verses (1Ch 7:22-23) we read, "And Ephraim their 
			father mourned many days, and his brethren came to comfort him. And 
			he went in to his wife, and she conceived, and bare a son; and he 
			called his name Beriah, because it went evil with his house." 
			 
			Taking these words literally, Ezer and Elead were the actual sons of 
			Ephraim; and as Ephraim and his family were born in Egypt and lived 
			there all their days, these patriarchal cattle-lifters did not come 
			down from any neighboring highlands, but must have come up from 
			Egypt, all the way from the land of Goshen, across the desert and 
			past several Philistine and Canaanite towns. This literal sense is 
			simply impossible. The author from whom the chronicler borrowed this 
			narrative is clearly using a natural and beautiful figure to 
			describe the distress in the tribe of Ephraim when two of its clans 
			were cut off, and the fact that a new clan named Beriah was formed 
			to take their place. Possibly we are not without information as to 
			how this new clan arose. In 1Ch 8:13 we read of two Benjamites, 
			"Beriah and Shema, who were heads of fathers’ houses of the 
			inhabitants of Aijalon, who put to flight the inhabitants of Gath." 
			Beriah and Shema probably, coming to the aid of Ephraim, avenged the 
			defeat of Ezer and Elead; and in return received the possessions of 
			the clans, who been cut off, and Beriah was thus reckoned among the 
			children of Ephraim. 
			 
			The language of 1Ch 7:22 is very similar to that of Gen 37:34-35 : 
			"And Jacob mourned for his son many days. And all his sons and all 
			his daughters rose up to comfort him"; and the personification of 
			the tribe under the name of its ancestor may be paralleled from Jdg 
			21:6 : "And the children of Israel repented them for Benjamin their 
			brother." 
			 
			Let us now reconstruct the story and consider its significance. Two 
			Ephraimite clans, Ezer and Elead, set out to drive the cattle "of 
			the men of Gath, who were born in the land," i.e., of the aboriginal 
			Avvites, who had been dispossessed by the Philistines, but still 
			retained some of the pasture-lands. Falling into an ambush or taken 
			by surprise when encumbered with their plunder, the Ephraimites were 
			cut off, and nearly all the fighting men of the clans perished. The 
			Avvites, reinforced by the Philistines of Gath, pressed their 
			advantage, and invaded the territory of Ephraim, whose border 
			districts, stripped of their defenders, lay at the mercy of the 
			conquerors. From this danger they were rescued by the Benjamite 
			clans Shema and Beriah, then occupying Aijalon; and the men of Gath 
			in their turn were defeated and driven back. The grateful 
			Ephraimites invited their allies to occupy the vacant territory and 
			in all probability to marry the widows and daughters of their 
			slaughtered kinsmen. From that time onwards Beriah was reckoned as 
			one of the clans of Ephraim. 
			 
			The account of this memorable cattle foray is a necessary note to 
			the genealogies to explain the origin of an important clan and its 
			double connection with Ephraim and Benjamin. Both the chronicler and 
			his authority recorded it because of its genealogical significance, 
			not because they were anxious to perpetuate the memory of the 
			unfortunate raid. In the ancient days to which the episode belonged, 
			a frontier cattle foray seemed as natural and meritorious an 
			enterprise as it did to William of Deloraine. The chronicler does 
			not think it necessary to signify any disapproval-it is by no means 
			certain that he did disapprove-of such spoiling of the 
			uncircumcised; but the fact that he gives the record without comment 
			does not show that he condoned cattle-stealing. Men today relate 
			with pride the lawless deeds of noble ancestors, but they would be 
			dismayed if their own sons proposed to adopt the moral code of 
			mediaeval barons or Elizabethan buccaneers. 
			 
			In reviewing the scanty religious ideas involved in this little 
			group of family traditions, we have to remember that they belong to 
			a period of Israelite history much older than that of the 
			chronicler; in estimating their value, we have to make large 
			allowance for the conventional ethics of the times. Religion not 
			only serves to raise the standard of morality, but also to keep the 
			average man up to the conventional standard; it helps and encourages 
			him to do what he believes to be right as well as gives him a better 
			understanding of what right means. Primitive religion is not to be 
			disparaged because it did not at once convert the rough Israelite 
			clansmen into Havelocks and Gordons. In those early days, courage, 
			patriotism, and loyalty to one’s tribesmen were the most necessary 
			and approved virtues. They were fostered and stimulated by the 
			current belief in a God of battles, who gave victory to His faithful 
			people. Moreover, the idea of Deity implied in these traditions, 
			though inadequate, is by no means unworthy. God is benevolent; He 
			enriches and succors His people; He answers prayer, giving to Jabez 
			the land and pasture for which he asked. He is a righteous God; He 
			responds to and justifies His people’s faith: "He was entreated of 
			the Reubenites and Gadites because they put their trust in Him." On 
			the other hand, He is a jealous God; He punishes Israel when "they 
			trespass against the God of their fathers and go a-whoring after the 
			gods of the peoples of the land." But the feeling here attributed to 
			Jehovah is not merely one of personal jealousy. Loyalty to him meant 
			a great deal more than a preference for a god called Jehovah over a 
			god called Chemosh. It involved a special recognition of morality 
			and purity, and gave a religious sanction to patriotism and the 
			sentiment of national unity. Worship of Moabite or Syrian gods 
			weakened a man’s enthusiasm for Israel and his sense of fellowship 
			with his countrymen, just as allegiance to an Italian prince and 
			prelate has seemed to Protestants to deprive the Romanist of his 
			full inheritance in English life and feeling. He who went astray 
			after other gods did not merely indulge his individual taste in 
			doctrine and ritual: he was a traitor to the social order, to the 
			prosperity and national union, of Israel. Such disloyalty broke up 
			the nation, and sent Israel and Judah into captivity piecemeal. 
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