Genesis 4:20

20 And Adah begat Jabal, that was the father of (the) dwellers in tents, and of shepherds;

Genesis 4:20 Meaning and Commentary

Genesis 4:20

And Adah bare Jabal
According to Hillerus F13, this name, and Jubal and Tubal, after mentioned, all signify a river; why Lamech should call all his sons by names signifying the same thing, is not easy to say.

He was the father of such as dwelt in tents, and [of such as have]
cattle:
not in a proper sense the father of them, though his posterity might succeed him in the same business; but he was the first author and inventor of tents or movable habitations, which could be carried from place to place, for the convenience of pasturage for cattle: he was not the first that had cattle in his possession, or that first fed and kept them, for Abel, the son of Adam, was a keeper of sheep; but he was the first that found out the use of tents, and the pitching of them to abide in at proper places, so long as the pasturage lasted, and then to remove elsewhere; as we find in later times the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob did, and as the Scenitae and Nomades among the Arabs, and who retain the same method of keeping cattle to this day; and so the words may be rendered according to Bochart F14 and Noldius F15,

``he was the father of such that dwell in tents "with" cattle.''

Heidegger F16 thinks this Jabal to be the same with Pales, the god of shepherds F17, to whom the Palilia were sacred with the Heathens; and that from Jabal may be formed "Bal", leaving out the "jod", as is sometimes done, and by adding the termination, it will be "Bales", and by changing the letters of the same organ, "Pales".


FOOTNOTES:

F13 Onomastic. Sacr. p. 35, 45, 349.
F14 Hierozoic. par. 1. l. 2. c. 44. col. 466.
F15 Ebr. Part. Concord. p. 273. No. 1196.
F16 Hist. Patriarch. Exercit. 6. sect. 11.
F17 Vid. Servium & Probum in Virgil. Georgic. l. 3. ver. 1.

Genesis 4:20 In-Context

18 Forsooth Enoch begat Irad; and Irad begat Mehujael; and Mehujael begat Methusael; and Methusael begat Lamech;
19 that took two wives, the name to the one wife was Adah, and the name to the other was Zillah. (and Lamech took two wives, and his first wife was named Adah, and the other was named Zillah.)
20 And Adah begat Jabal, that was the father of (the) dwellers in tents, and of shepherds;
21 and the name of his brother was Jubal; he was the father of the singers in harp and organ. (and his brother's name was Jubal; and he was the father of the players of harps and of organs.)
22 And Zillah begat Tubalcain, that was an hammer-beater, and [a] smith on all works of brass and of iron (who used a hammer, and was a smith of all things made out of bronze and of iron); forsooth the sister of Tubalcain was Naamah.
Copyright © 2001 by Terence P. Noble. For personal use only.