Jubilees

Pseudepigrapha · 150-100 B.C.E.

The Book of Jubilees retells the narrative of the book of Genesis and the early chapters of the book of Exodus. The book may reflect a struggle between two Jewish groups, one who was more accepting of Hellenization, and another, who along with the author of Jubilees, radically opposed it. The author of Jubilees stresses the special covenant relationship between God and Israel and may also be witness to an early form of a split in the Jewish community such as between the Essenes and Pharisees.

1During the first year of the Israelites' exodus from Egypt, in the third month — on the sixteenth of the month — the Lord said to Moses: “Come up to me on the mountain. I will give you the two stone tablets of the law and the commandments which I have written so that you may teach them.”[1] 2 So Moses went up the mountain of the Lord. The glory of the Lord took up residence on Mt. Sinai, and a cloud covered it for six days. 3 When he summoned Moses into the cloud on the seventh day, he saw the glory of the Lord like a fire blazing on the summit of the mountain. 4 Moses remained on the mountain for 40 days and 40 nights while the Lord showed him what had happened beforehand as well as what was to come. He related to him the divisions of all the times — both of the law and of the testimony.[2] 5 He said to him: “Pay attention to all the words which I tell you on this mountain. Write them in a book so that their offspring may see that I have not abandoned them because of all the evil they have done in straying from the covenant between me and you which I am making today on Mt. Sinai for their offspring. 6 So it will be that when all of these things befall them they will recognize that I have been more faithful than they in all their judgments and in all their actions. They will recognize that I have indeed been with them.[3] 7 “Now you write this entire message which I am telling you today, because I know their defiance and their stubbornness even before I bring them into the land which I promised by oath to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob: 'To your posterity I will give the land which flows with milk and honey'. When they eat and are full, 8 they will turn to foreign gods — to ones which will not save them from any of their afflictions. Then this testimony will serve as evidence.[4] 9 For they will forget all my commandments — everything that I command them — and will follow the nations, their impurities, and their shame. They will serve their gods, and this will prove an obstacle for them — an affliction, a pain, and a trap. 10 Many will be destroyed. They will be captured and will fall into the enemy's control because they abandoned my statutes, my commandments, my covenantal festivals, my sabbaths, my holy things which I have hallowed for myself among them, my tabernacle, and my temple which I sanctified for myself in the middle of the land so that I could set my name on it and that it could live there. 11 They made for themselves high places, sacred groves, and carved images; each of them prostrated himself before his own in order to go astray. They will sacrifice their children to demons and to every product conceived by their erring minds.[5] 12 I will send witnesses to them so that I may testify to them, but they will not listen and will kill the witnesses. They will persecute those too who study the law diligently. They will abrogate everything and will begin to do evil in my presence. 13 Then I will hide my face from them. I will deliver them into the control of the nations for captivity, for booty, and for being devoured. I will remove them from the land and disperse them among the nations. 14 They will forget all my law, all my commandments, and all my verdicts. They will err regarding the beginning of the month, the sabbath, the festival, the jubilee, and the decree. 15 “After this they will return to me from among the nations with all their minds, all their souls, and all their strength. Then I will gather them from among all the nations, and they will search for me so that I may be found by them when they have searched for me with all their minds and with all their souls. I will rightly disclose to them abundant peace. 16 I will transform them into a righteous plant with all my mind and with all my soul. They will become a blessing, not a curse; they will become the head, not the tail. 17 I will build my temple among them and will live with them; I will become their God and they will become my true and righteous people. 18 I will neither abandon them nor become alienated from them, for I am the Lord their God.” 19 Then Moses fell prostrate and prayed and said: “Lord my God, do not allow your people and your heritage to go along in the error of their minds, and do not deliver them into the control of the nations with the result that they rule over them lest they make them sin against you. 20 May your mercy, Lord, be lifted over your people. Create for them a just spirit. May the spirit of Belial not rule them so as to bring charges against them before you and to trap them away from every proper path so that they may be destroyed from your presence. 21 They are your people and your heritage whom you have rescued from Egyptian control by your great power. Create for them a pure mind and a holy spirit. May they not be trapped in their sins from now to eternity.” 22 Then the Lord said to Moses: “I know their contrary nature, their way of thinking, and their stubbornness. They will not listen until they acknowledge their sins and the sins of their ancestors. 23 After this they will return to me in a fully upright manner and with all their minds and all their souls. I will cut away the foreskins of their minds and the foreskins of their descendants' minds. I will create a holy spirit for them and will purify them in order that they may not turn away from me from that time forever. 24 Their souls will adhere to me and to all my commandments. They will perform my commandments. I will become their father and they will become my children. 25 All of them will be called children of the living God. Every angel and every spirit will know them. They will know that they are my children and that I am their father in a just and proper way and that I love them. 26 “Now you write all these words which I will tell you on this mountain: what is first and what is last and what is to come during all the divisions of time which are in the law and which are in the testimony and in the weeks of their jubilees until eternity — until the time when I descend and live with them throughout all the ages of eternity.” 27 Then he said to an angel of the presence: “Dictate to Moses starting from the beginning of the creation until the time when my temple is built among them throughout the ages of eternity.[6] 28 The Lord will appear in the sight of all, and all will know that I am the God of Israel, the father of all Jacob's children, and the king on Mt. Zion for the ages of eternity. Then Zion and Jerusalem will become holy.” 29 The angel of the presence, who was going along in front of the Israelite camp, took the tablets which told of the divisions of the years from the time the law and the testimony were created — for the weeks of their jubilees, year by year in their full number, and their jubilees from the time of the creation until the time of the new creation when the heavens, the earth, and all their creatures will be renewed like the powers of the sky and like all the creatures of the earth, until the time when the temple of the Lord will be created in Jerusalem on Mt. Zion. All the luminaries will be renewed for the purposes of healing, health, and blessing for all the elect ones of Israel and so that it may remain this way from that time throughout all the days of the earth.[7]

2On the Lord's orders the angel of the presence said to Moses: “Write all the words about the creation — how in six days the Lord God completed all his works, everything that he had created, and kept sabbath on the seventh day. He sanctified it for all ages and set it as a sign for all his works.[8] 2 For on the first day he created the heavens that are above, the earth, the waters, and all the spirits who serve before him, namely: the angels of the presence; the angels of holiness; the angels of the spirits of fire; the angels of the spirits of the winds; the angels of the spirits of the clouds, of darkness, snow, hail, and frost; the angels of the sounds, the thunders, and the lightnings; and the angels of the spirits of cold and heat, of winter, spring, autumn, and summer, and of all the spirits of his creatures which are in the heavens, on earth, and in every place. There were also the depths, darkness and light, dawn and evening which he prepared through the knowledge of his mind.[9] 3 Then we saw his works and blessed him. We offered praise before him regarding all his works because he had made seven great works on the first day. 4 On the second day he made a firmament between the waters, and the waters were divided on that day. Half of them went up above and half of them went down below the firmament (which was) in the middle above the surface of the whole earth. This was the only work that he made on the second day. 5 On the third day he did as he said to the waters that they should pass from the surface of the whole earth to one place and that the dry land should appear. 6 The waters did so, as he told them. They withdrew from the surface of the earth to one place apart from this firmament, and dry land appeared. 7 On that day he created for them all the seas — each with the places where they collected — all the rivers, and the places where the waters collected in the mountains and on the whole earth; all the reservoirs, all the dew of the earth; the seed that is sown — with each of its kinds — all that sprouts, the fruit trees, the forests, and the garden of Eden (which is) in Eden for enjoyment and for food. These four great types he made on the third day. 8 On the fourth day the Lord made the sun, the moon, and the stars. He placed them in the heavenly firmament to shine on the whole earth, to rule over day and night, and to separate between light and darkness. 9 The Lord appointed the sun as a great sign above the earth for days, sabbaths, months, festivals, years, sabbaths of years, jubilees, and all times of the years.[10] 10 It separates between light and darkness and serves for wellbeing so that everything that sprouts and grows on the earth may prosper. These three types he made on the fourth day. 11 On the fifth day he created the great sea monsters within the watery depths, for these were the first animate beings made by his hands; all the fish that move about in the waters, all flying birds, and all their kinds. 12 The sun shone over them for their wellbeing and over everything that was on the earth — all that sprouts from the ground, all fruit trees, and all animate beings. These three kinds he made on the fifth day. 13 On the sixth day he made all the land animals, all cattle, and everything that moves about on the earth. 14 After all this, he made mankind — as one man and a woman he made them. He made him rule everything on earth and in the seas and over flying creatures, animals, cattle, everything that moves about on the earth, and the entire earth. Over all these he made him rule. These four kinds he made on the sixth day.[11] 15 The total was 22 kinds. 16 He finished all his works on the sixth day: everything in heaven, on the earth, in the seas, in the depths, in the light, in the darkness, and in every place. 17 He gave us the sabbath day as a great sign so that we should perform work for six days and that we should keep sabbath from all work on the seventh day. 18 He told us — all the angels of the presence and all the angels of holiness (these two great kinds) — to keep sabbath with him in heaven and on earth. 19 He said to us: “I will now separate a people for myself from among my nations. They, too, will keep sabbath. I will sanctify the people for myself and will bless them as I sanctified the sabbath day. I will sanctify them for myself; in this way I will bless them. They will become my people and I will become their God. 20 I have chosen the descendants of Jacob among all of those whom I have seen. I have recorded them as my first-born son and have sanctified them for myself throughout the ages of eternity. I will tell them about the sabbath days so that they may keep sabbath from all work on them.”[12] 21 In this way he made a sign on it by which they, too, would keep sabbath with us on the seventh day to eat, drink, and bless the creator of all as he had blessed them and sanctified them for himself as a noteworthy people out of all the nations; and to keep sabbath together with us. 22 He made his commands rise as a fine fragrance which is acceptable in his presence for all times. 23 There were 22 leaders of humanity from Adam until him; and 22 kinds of works were made until the seventh day. The latter is blessed and holy and the former, too, is blessed and holy. The one with the other served the purposes of holiness and blessing. 24 It was granted to these that for all times they should be the blessed and holy ones of the testimony and of the first law, as it was sanctified and blessed on the seventh day. 25 He created the heavens, the earth, and everything that was created in six days. The Lord gave a holy festal day to all his creation. For this reason he gave orders regarding it that anyone who would do any work on it was to die; also, the one who would defile it was to die. 26 Now you command the Israelites to observe this day so that they may sanctify it, not do any work on it, and not defile it for it is holier than all other days. 27 Anyone who profanes it is to die and anyone who does any work on it is to die eternally so that the Israelites may observe this day throughout their history and not be uprooted from the earth. For it is a holy day; it is a blessed day. 28 Everyone who observes it and keeps sabbath on it from all his work will be holy and blessed throughout all times like us. 29 Inform and tell the Israelites the law which relates to this day and that they should keep sabbath on it and not neglect it through the error of their minds lest they do any work on it — the day on which it is not proper to do what they wish, namely: to prepare on it anything that is to be eaten or drunk; to draw water; to bring in or remove on it anything which one carries in their gates — any work that they had not prepared for themselves in their dwellings on the sixth day. 30 They are not to bring anything out or in from house to house on this day because it is more holy and more blessed than any of the jubilee of jubilees. On it we kept sabbath in heaven before it was made known to all humanity that on it they should keep sabbath on earth. 31 The creator of all blessed but did not sanctify any people(s) and nations to keep sabbath on it except Israel alone. To it alone did he give the right to eat, drink, and keep sabbath on it upon the earth. 32 The creator of all who created this day blessed it for the purposes of blessing, holiness, and glory more than all other days. 33 This law and testimony were given to the Israelites as an eternal law throughout their history.

3On the sixth day of the second week we brought to Adam, on the Lord’s orders, all animals, all cattle, all birds, everything that moves about on the earth, and everything that moves about in the water — in their various kinds and various forms: the animals on the first day; the cattle on the second day; the birds on the third day; everything that moves about on the earth on the fourth day; and the ones that move about in the water on the fifth day.[13] 2 Adam named them all, each with its own name. Whatever he called them became their name. 3 During these five days Adam was looking at all of these — male and female among every kind that was on the earth. But he himself was alone; there was no one whom he found for himself who would be for him a helper who was like him. 4 Then the Lord said to us: 'It is not good that the man should be alone. Let us make him a helper who is like him.' 5 The Lord our God imposed a sound slumber on him and he fell asleep. Then he took one of his bones for a woman. That rib was the origin of the woman — from among his bones. He built up the flesh in its place and built the woman. 6 Then he awakened Adam from his sleep. When he awoke, he got up on the sixth day. Then he brought her to him. He knew her and said to her: 'This is now bone from my bone and flesh from my flesh. This one will be called my wife, for she was taken from her husband.' 7 For this reason a man and a woman are to become one, and for this reason he leaves his father and his mother. He associates with his wife, and they become one flesh. 8 In the first week Adam and his wife — the rib — were created, and in the second week he showed her to him. Therefore, a commandment was given to keep women in their defilement seven days for a male child and for a female two units of seven days.[14] 9 After 40 days had come to an end for Adam in the land where he had been created, we brought him into the Garden of Eden to work and keep it. His wife was brought there on the eightieth day. After this she entered the Garden of Eden.[15] 10 For this reason a commandment was written in the heavenly tablets for the one who gives birth to a child: if she gives birth to a male, she is to remain in her impurity for seven days like the first seven days; then for 33 days she is to remain in the blood of purification. She is not to touch any sacred thing nor to enter the sanctuary until she completes these days for a male. 11 As for a female she is to remain in her impurity for two weeks of days like the first two weeks and 66 days in the blood of purification. Their total is 80 days. 12 After she had completed these 80 days, we brought her into the Garden of Eden because it is the holiest in the entire earth, and every tree which is planted in it is holy. 13 For this reason the law of these days has been ordained for the one who gives birth to a male or a female. She is not to touch any sacred thing nor to enter the sanctuary until the time when those days for a male or a female are completed. 14 These are the law and testimony that were written for Israel to keep for all times. 15 During the first week of the first jubilee Adam and his wife spent the seven years in the Garden of Eden working and guarding it. We gave him work and were teaching him how to do everything that was appropriate for working it. 16 While he was working it he was naked but did not realize it nor was he ashamed. He would guard the garden against birds, animals, and cattle. He would gather its fruit and eat it and would store its surplus for himself and his wife. He would store what was being kept. 17 When the conclusion of the seven years which he had completed there arrived — seven years exactly — in the second month, on the seventeenth, the serpent came and approached the woman. The serpent said to the woman: 'Is it from all the fruit of the trees in the garden that the Lord has commanded you: “Do not eat from it?”'[16] 18 She said to him: 'From all the fruit of the trees which are in the garden the Lord told us: “Eat.” But from the fruit of the tree which is in the middle of the garden he told us: “Do not eat from it and do not touch it so that you may not die.”' 19 Then the serpent said to the woman: 'You will not really die because the Lord knows that when you eat from it your eyes will be opened, you will become like gods, and you will know good and evil.' 20 The woman saw that the tree was delightful and pleasing to the eye and that its fruit was good to eat. So she took some of it and ate it.[17] 21 She first covered her shame with fig leaves and then gave it to Adam. He ate it, his eyes were opened, and he saw that he was naked. 22 He took fig leaves and sewed them; thus he made himself an apron and covered his shame. 23 The Lord cursed the serpent and was angry at it forever. At the woman, too, he was angry because she had listened to the serpent and eaten. 24 He said to her: 'I will indeed multiply your sadness and your pain. Bear children in sadness. Your place of refuge will be with your husband; he will rule over you.'[18] 25 Then he said to Adam: 'Because you listened to your wife and ate from the tree from which I commanded you not to eat, may the ground be cursed on account of you. May it grow thorns and thistles for you. Eat your food in the sweat of your face until you return to the earth from which you were taken. For earth you are and to the earth you will return.' 26 He made clothing out of skins for them, clothed them, and dismissed them from the Garden of Eden. 27 On that day, as he was leaving the Garden of Eden, he burned incense as a pleasing fragrance — frankincense, galbanum, stacte, and aromatic spices — in the early morning when the sun rose at the time when he covered his shame. 28 On that day the mouths of all the animals, the cattle, the birds, everything that walks and everything that moves about were made incapable of speaking because all of them used to converse with one another in one language and one tongue.[19] 29 He dismissed from the Garden of Eden all the animate beings that were in the Garden of Eden. All animate beings were dispersed — each by its kind and each by its nature — into the places which had been created for them. 30 But of all the animals and cattle he permitted Adam alone to cover his shame. 31 For this reason it has been commanded in the heavenly tablets regarding all those who know the judgment of the law that they cover their shame and not uncover themselves as the nations uncover themselves.[20] 32 At the beginning of the fourth month Adam and his wife departed from the Garden of Eden. They lived in the land of Elda, in the land where they were created. 33 Adam named his wife Eve. 34 They were childless throughout the first jubilee; afterwards he knew her. 35 He himself was working the land as he had been taught in the Garden of Eden.

4In the third week in the second jubilee [years 64-70], she gave birth to Cain; in the fourth [71-77] she gave birth to Abel; and in the fifth [78-84] she gave birth to his daughter Awan. 2 During the first 5 (week) of the third jubilee [99-105] Cain killed Abel because we had accepted his sacrifice from him but from Cain we had not accepted one. 3 When he killed him in a field, his blood cried out from the ground to heaven — crying because he had been killed. 4 The Lord blamed Cain regarding Abel because he had killed him. While he allowed him a length of time on the earth because of his brother's blood, he cursed him upon the earth. 5 For this reason it has been written on the heavenly tablets: “Cursed is the person who beats his companion maliciously.” All who saw it said: “Let him be cursed. And let the man who has seen but has not told be cursed like him.” 6 For this reason we report, when we come before the Lord our God, all the sins which take place in heaven and on earth — what happens in the light, in the darkness, or in any place. 7 Adam and his wife spent four weeks of years mourning for Abel. Then in the fourth year of the fifth week [130] they became happy. Adam again knew his wife, and she gave birth to a son for him. He named him Seth because he said: “The Lord has raised up for us another offspring on the earth in place of Abel” (for Cain had killed him). 8 In the sixth week [134-40] he became the father of his daughter Azura. 9 Cain married his sister Awan, and at the end of the fourth jubilee [148-96] she gave birth to Enoch for him. In the first year of the first week of the fifth jubilee [197] houses were built on the earth. Then Cain built a city and named it after his son Enoch. 10 Adam knew his wife Eve, and she gave birth to nine more children.[21] 11 In the fifth week of the fifth jubilee [225-31] Seth married his sister Azura, and in its fourth year [228] she gave birth to Enosh for him. 12 He was the first one to call on the Lord's name on the earth. 13 In the seventh jubilee, in the third week [309-15] Enosh married his sister Noam. She gave birth to a son for him in the third year of the fifth week [325], and he named him Kenan. 14 At the end of the eighth jubilee [344-92] Kenan married his sister Mualelit. She gave birth to a son for him in the ninth jubilee, in the first week — in the third year of this week [395] — and he named him Malalael. 15 During the second week of the tenth jubilee [449-55] Malalael married Dinah, the daughter of Barakiel, the daughter of his father's brother. She gave birth to a son for him in the third week, in its sixth year [461]. He named him Jared because during his lifetime the angels of the Lord who were called Watchers descended to earth to teach mankind and to do what is just and upright upon the earth.[22] 16 In the eleventh jubilee [491-539] Jared took a wife for himself, and her name was Barakah, the daughter of Rasu'eyal, the daughter of his father's brother, in the fourth week of this jubilee [512-18]. She gave birth to a son for him during the fifth week, in the fourth year of the jubilee [522], and he named him Enoch. 17 He was the first of mankind who were born on the earth who learned the art of writing, instruction, and wisdom and who wrote down in a book the signs of the sky in accord with the fixed pattern of their months so that mankind would know the seasons of the years according to the fixed patterns of each of their months. 18 He was the first to write a testimony. He testified to mankind in the generations of the earth: The weeks of the jubilees he related, and made known the days of the years; the months he arranged, and related the sabbaths of the years, as we had told him.[23] 19 While he slept he saw in a vision what has happened and what will occur — how things will happen for mankind during their history until the day of judgment. He saw everything and understood. He wrote a testimony for himself and placed it upon the earth against all mankind and for their history.[24] 20 During the twelfth jubilee, in its seventh week [582-88] he took a wife for himself. Her name was Edni, the daughter of Daniel, the daughter of his father's brother. In the sixth year of this week [587] she gave birth to a son for him, and he named him Methuselah.[25] 21 He was, moreover, with God's angels for six jubilees of years. They showed him everything on earth and in the heavens — the dominion of the sun — and he wrote down everything. 22 He testified to the Watchers who had sinned with the daughters of men because these had begun to mix with earthly women so that they became defiled. Enoch testified against all of them.[26] 23 He was taken from human society, and we led him into the Garden of Eden for his greatness and honor. Now he is there writing down the judgment and condemnation of the world and all the wickedness of mankind. 24 Because of him the flood water did not come on any of the land of Eden because he was placed there as a sign and to testify against all people in order to tell all the deeds of history until the day of judgment. 25 He burned the evening incense of the sanctuary which is acceptable before the Lord on the mountain of incense.[27] 26 For there are four places on earth that belong to the Lord: the Garden of Eden, the mountain of the east, this mountain on which you are today — Mt. Sinai — and Mt. Zion which will be sanctified in the new creation for the sanctification of the earth. For this reason the earth will be sanctified from all its sins and from its uncleanness into the history of eternity. 27 During the jubilee — that is, the fourteenth jubilee — Methuselah married Edna, the daughter of Ezrael, the daughter of his father's brother, in the third week in the first year of that week [652]. He became the father of a son whom he named Lamech. 28 In the fifteenth jubilee, in the third week [701-707], Lamech married a woman whose name was Betanosh, the daughter of Barakiel, the daughter of his father's brother. During this week she gave birth to a son for him, and he named him Noah, explaining: “He is one who will give me consolation from my sadness, from all my work, and from the earth which the Lord cursed.” 29 At the end of the nineteenth jubilee, during the seventh week — in its sixth year [930] — Adam died. All his children buried him in the land where he had been created. He was the first to be buried in the ground.[28] 30 He lacked 70 years from 1000 years because 1000 years are one day in the testimony of heaven. For this reason it was written regarding the tree of knowledge: “On the day that you eat from it you will die.” Therefore he did not complete the years of this day because he died during it.[29] 31 At the conclusion of this jubilee Cain was killed one year after him. His house fell on him, and he died inside his house. He was killed by its stones for with a stone he had killed Abel and, by a just punishment, he was killed with a stone.[30] 32 For this reason it has been ordained on the heavenly tablets: “By the instrument with which a man kills his fellow he is to be killed. As he wounded him so are they to do to him.”[31] 33 In the twenty-fifth jubilee Noah married a woman whose name was Emzara, the daughter of Rakiel, the daughter of his father's brother — during the first year in the fifth week [1205]. In its third year [1207] she gave birth to Shem for him; in its fifth year [1209] she gave birth to Ham for him; and in the first year during the sixth week [1212] she gave birth to Japheth for him.

5When mankind began to multiply on the surface of the entire earth and daughters were born to them, the angels of the Lord — in a certain (year) of this jubilee — saw that they were beautiful to look at. So they married of them whomever they chose. They gave birth to children for them and they were giants.[32] 2 Wickedness increased on the earth. All animate beings corrupted their way — (everyone of them) from people to cattle, animals, birds, and everything that moves about on the ground. All of them corrupted their way and their prescribed course. They began to devour one another, and wickedness increased on the earth. Every thought of all mankind's knowledge was evil like this all the time.[33] 3 The Lord saw that the earth was corrupt, (that) all animate beings had corrupted their prescribed course, and (that) all of them — everyone that was on the earth — had acted wickedly before his eyes. 4 He said that he would obliterate people and all animate beings that were on the surface of the earth which he had created. 5 He was pleased with Noah alone. 6 Against his angels whom he had sent to the earth he was angry enough to uproot them from all their (positions of) authority. He told us to tie them up in the depths of the earth; now they are tied within them and are alone.[34] 7 Regarding their children there went out from his presence an order to strike them with the sword and to remove them from beneath the sky. 8 He said: “My spirit will not remain on people forever for they are flesh. Their lifespan is to be 120 years.” 9 He sent his sword among them so that they would kill one another. They began to kill each other until all of them fell by the sword and were obliterated from the earth. 10 Now their fathers were watching, but afterwards they were tied up in the depths of the earth until the great day of judgment when there will be condemnation on all who have corrupted their ways and their actions before the Lord.[35] 11 He obliterated all from their places; there remained no one of them whom he did not judge for all their wickedness. 12 He made a new and righteous nature for all his creatures so that they would not sin with their whole nature until eternity. Everyone will be righteous — each according to his kind — for all time. 13 The judgment of them all has been ordained and written on the heavenly tablets; there is no injustice. (As for) all who transgress from their way in which it was ordained for them to go — if they do not go in it, judgment has been written down for each creature and for each kind. 14 There is nothing which is in heaven or on the earth, in the light, the darkness, Sheol, the deep, or in the dark place — all their judgments have been ordained, written, and inscribed. 15 He will exercise judgment regarding each person — the great one in accord with his greatness and the small one in accord with his smallness — each one in accord with his way. 16 He is not one who shows favoritism nor one who takes a bribe, if he says he will execute judgment against each person. If a person gave everything on earth he would not show favoritism nor would he accept it from him because he is the righteous judge. 17 Regarding the Israelites it has been written and ordained: “If they turn to him in the right way, he will forgive all their wickedness and will pardon all their sins.” 18 It has been written and ordained that he will have mercy on all who turn from all their errors once each year. 19 To all who corrupted their ways and their plans before the flood no favor was shown except to Noah alone because favor was shown to him for the sake of his children whom he saved from the flood waters for his sake because his mind was righteous in all his ways, as it had been commanded concerning him. He did not transgress from anything that had been ordained for him. 20 The Lord said that he would obliterate everything on the land — from people to cattle, animals, birds, and whatever moves about on the ground. 21 He ordered Noah to make himself an ark in order to save himself from the flood waters. 22 Noah made an ark in every respect as he had ordered him during the twenty-seventh jubilee of years, in the fifth week, during its fifth year [1307]. 23 He entered it during its sixth year [1308], in the second month — on the first of the second month until the sixteenth. He and all that we brought to him entered the ark. The Lord closed it from outside on the seventeenth in the evening. 24 The Lord opened the seven floodgates of heaven and the openings of the sources of the great deep — there being seven openings in number. 25 The floodgates began to send water down from the sky for 40 days and 40 nights, while the sources of the deep brought waters up until the whole earth was full of water. 26 The waters increased on the earth; the waters rose 15 cubits above every high mountain. The ark rose above the earth and moved about on the surface of the waters. 27 The waters remained standing on the surface of the earth for five months — 150 days. 28 Then the ark came to rest on the summit of Lubar, one of the mountains of Ararat. 29 During the fourth month the sources of the great deep were closed, and the floodgates of heaven were held back. On the first of the seventh month all the sources of the earth's deep places were opened, and the waters started to go down into the deep below. 30 On the first of the tenth month the summits of the mountains became visible, and on the first of the first month the earth became visible. 31 The waters dried up from above the earth in the fifth week, in its seventh year [1309]. On the seventeenth day of the second month the earth was dry. 32 On its twenty-seventh day he opened the ark and sent from it the animals, birds, and whatever moves about.

6On the first of the third month he left the ark and built an altar on this mountain. 2 He appeared on the earth, took a kid, and atoned with its blood for all the sins of the earth because everything that was on it had been obliterated except those who were in the ark with Noah.[36] 3 He placed the fat on the altar. Then he took a bull, a ram, a sheep, goats, salt, a turtledove, and a dove and offered them as a burnt offering on the altar. He poured on them an offering mixed with oil, sprinkled wine, and put frankincense on everything. He sent up a pleasant fragrance that was pleasing before the Lord. 4 The Lord smelled the pleasant fragrance and made a covenant with him that there would be no flood waters which would destroy the earth; that throughout all the days of the earth seedtime and harvest would not cease; that cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night would not change their prescribed pattern and would never cease. 5 Now you increase and multiply yourselves on the earth and become numerous upon it. Become a blessing within it. I will put fear of you and dread of you on everything that is on the earth and in the sea. 6 I have now given you all the animals, all the cattle, everything that flies, everything that moves about on the earth, the fish in the waters, and everything for food. Like the green herbs I have given you everything to eat. 7 But you are not to eat animate beings with their spirit — with the blood — because the vital force of all animate beings is in the blood so that your blood with your vital forces may not be required from the hand of any man. From the hand of each one I will require the blood of man. 8 The person who sheds the blood of man will have his blood shed by man because he made mankind in the image of the Lord. 9 As for you — increase and become numerous on the earth. 10 Noah and his sons swore an oath not to consume any blood that was in any animate being. During this month he made a covenant before the Lord God forever throughout all the history of the earth. 11 For this reason he told you, too, to make a covenant — accompanied by an oath — with the Israelites during this month on the mountain and to sprinkle blood on them because of all the words of the covenant which the Lord was making with them for all times.[37] 12 This testimony has been written regarding you to keep it for all times so that you may not at any time eat any blood of animals or birds throughout all the days of the earth. As for the person who has eaten the blood of an animal, of cattle, or of birds during all the days of the earth — he and his descendants will be uprooted from the earth. 13 Now you command the Israelites not to eat any blood so that their name and their descendants may continue to exist before the Lord our God for all time. 14 This law has no temporal limits because it is forever. They are to keep it throughout history so that they may continue supplicating for themselves with blood in front of the altar each and every day. In the morning and in the evening they are continually to ask pardon for themselves before the Lord so that they may keep it and not be uprooted. 15 He gave Noah and his sons a sign that there would not again be a flood on the earth. 16 He put his bow in the clouds as a sign of the eternal covenant that there would not henceforth be flood waters on the earth for the purpose of destroying it throughout all the days of the earth. 17 For this reason it has been ordained and written on the heavenly tablets that they should celebrate the festival of weeks during this month — once a year — to renew the covenant each and every year. 18 This entire festival had been celebrated in heaven from the time of creation until the lifetime of Noah — for 26 jubilees and five weeks of years [= 1309 years]. Then Noah and his sons kept it for seven jubilees and one week of years until Noah's death [= 350 years]. From the day of Noah's death his sons corrupted it until Abraham's lifetime and were eating blood. 19 Abraham alone kept it, and his sons Isaac and Jacob kept it until your lifetime. During your lifetime the Israelites had forgotten it until I renewed it for them at this mountain. 20 Now you command the Israelites to keep this festival during all their generations as a commandment for them: one day in the year, during this month, they are to celebrate the festival. 21 Because it is the festival of weeks and it is the festival of firstfruits. This festival is twofold and of two kinds. Celebrate it as it is written and inscribed regarding it. 22 For I have written this in the book of the first law in which I wrote for you that you should celebrate it at each of its times one day in a year. I have told you about its sacrifice so that the Israelites may continue to remember and celebrate it throughout their generations during this month — one day each year. 23 On the first of the first month, the first of the fourth month, the first of the seventh month, and the first of the tenth month are memorial days and days of the seasons. They are written down and ordained at the four divisions of the year as an eternal testimony. 24 Noah ordained them as festivals for himself throughout the history of eternity with the result that through them he had a reminder. 25 On the first of the first month he was told to make the ark, and on it the earth became dry, he opened it, and saw the earth. 26 On the first of the fourth month the openings of the depths of the abyss below were closed. On the first of the seventh month all the openings of the earth's depths were opened, and the water began to go down into them. 27 On the first of the tenth month the summits of the mountains became visible, and Noah was very happy. 28 For this reason he ordained them for himself forever as memorial festivals. So they are ordained. 29 And they enter them on the heavenly tablets. Each one of them consists of 13 weeks; their memorial extends from one to the other: from the first to the second, from the second to third, and from the third to the fourth. 30 All the days of the commandments will be 52 weeks of days; they will make the entire year complete. 31 So it has been engraved and ordained on the heavenly tablets. One is not allowed to transgress a single year, year by year. 32 Now you command the Israelites to keep the years in this number — 364 days. Then the year will be complete and it will not disturb its time from its days or from its festivals because everything will happen in harmony with their testimony. They will neither omit a day nor disturb a festival. 33 If they transgress and do not celebrate them in accord with his command, then all of them will disturb their times. The years will be moved from this; they will disturb the times and the years will be moved. They will transgress their prescribed pattern. 34 All the Israelites will forget and will not find the way of the years. They will forget the first of the month, the season, and the sabbath; they will err with respect to the entire prescribed pattern of the years. 35 For I know and from now on will inform you — not from my own mind because this is the way the book is written in front of me, and the divisions of times are ordained on the heavenly tablets, lest they forget the covenantal festivals and walk in the festivals of the nations, after their error and after their ignorance. 36 There will be people who carefully observe the moon with lunar observations because it is corrupt with respect to the seasons and is early from year to year by ten days.[38] 37 Therefore years will come about for them when they will disturb the year and make a day of testimony something worthless and a profane day a festival. Everyone will join together both holy days with the profane and the profane day with the holy day, for they will err regarding the months, the sabbaths, the festivals, and the jubilee. 38 For this reason I am commanding you and testifying to you so that you may testify to them because after your death your children will disturb it so that they do not make the year consist of 364 days only. Therefore, they will err regarding the first of the month, the season, the sabbath, and the festivals. They will eat all the blood with all kinds of meat.

7During the seventh week, in its first year, in this jubilee [1317] Noah planted a vine at the mountain (whose name was Lubar, one of the mountains of Ararat) on which the ark had come to rest. It produced fruit in the fourth year [1320]. He guarded its fruit and picked it that year during the seventh month.[39] 2 He made wine from it, put it in a container, and kept it until the fifth year [1321] — until the first day at the beginning of the first month. 3 He joyfully celebrated the day of this festival. He made a burnt offering for the Lord — one young bull, one ram, seven sheep each a year old, and one kid — to make atonement through it for himself and for his sons. 4 First he prepared the kid. He put some of its blood on the meat that was on the altar which he had made. He offered all the fat on the altar where he made the burnt offering along with the bull, the ram, and the sheep. He offered all their meat on the altar. 5 On it he placed their entire sacrifice mixed with oil. Afterwards he sprinkled wine in the fire that had been on the altar beforehand. He put frankincense on the altar and offered a pleasant fragrance that was pleasing before the Lord his God. 6 He was very happy, and he and his sons happily drank some of this wine. 7 When evening came, he went into his tent. He lay down drunk and fell asleep. He was uncovered in his tent as he slept. 8 Ham saw his father Noah naked and went out and told his two brothers outside. 9 Then Shem took some clothes, rose — he and Japheth — and they put the clothes on their shoulders as they were facing backwards. They covered their father's shame as they were facing backwards. 10 When Noah awakened from his sleep, he realized everything that his youngest son had done to him. He cursed his son and said: 'Cursed be Canaan. May he become an abject slave to his brothers.' 11 Then he blessed Shem and said: 'May the Lord, the God of Shem, be blessed. May Canaan become his slave.' 12 May the Lord enlarge Japheth, and may the Lord live in the place where Shem resides. May Canaan become their slave. 13 When Ham realized that his father had cursed his youngest son, it was displeasing to him that he had cursed his son. He separated from his father — he and his sons Cush, Mizraim, Put, and Canaan. 14 He built himself a city and named it after his wife Neelatamauk. 15 When Japheth saw this, he was jealous of his brother. He, too, built himself a city and named it after his wife Adataneses. 16 But Shem remained with his father Noah. He built a city next to his father at the mountain. He, too, named it after his wife Sedeqatelebab. 17 Now these three cities were near Mt. Lubar: Sedeqatelebab in front of the mountain on its east side; Naeletamauk toward its south side; and Adataneses toward the west. 18 These were Shem's sons: Elam, Asshur, Arpachshad (he was born two years after the flood), Aram, and Lud. 19 Japheth's sons were: Gomer, Magog, Madai, Javan, Tubal, Meshech, and Tiras. These were Noah's sons. 20 During the twenty-eighth jubilee [1324-72] Noah began to prescribe for his grandsons the ordinances and the commandments — every statute which he knew. He testified to his sons that they should do what is right, cover the shame of their bodies, bless the one who had created them, honor father and mother, love one another, and keep themselves from fornication, uncleanness, and from all injustice.[40] 21 For it was on account of these three things that the flood was on the earth, since it was due to fornication that the Watchers had illicit intercourse — apart from the mandate of their authority — with women. When they married of them whomever they chose, they committed the first acts of uncleanness.[41] 22 They fathered as their sons the Nephilim. They were all dissimilar from one another and would devour one another: the giant killed the Naphil; the Naphil killed the Elyo; the Elyo mankind; and people their fellows.[42] 23 When everyone sold himself to commit injustice and to shed innocent blood, the earth was filled with injustice. 24 After them all the animals, birds, and whatever moves about and whatever walks on the earth. Much blood was shed on the earth. All the thoughts and wishes of mankind were devoted to thinking up what was useless and wicked all the time. 25 Then the Lord obliterated all from the surface of the earth because of their actions and because of the blood which they had shed in the earth. 26 We — I and you, my children, and everything that entered the ark with us — were left. But now I am the first to see your actions — that you have not been conducting yourselves properly because you have begun to conduct yourselves in the way of destruction, to separate from one another, to be jealous of one another, and not to be together with one another, my sons.[43] 27 For I myself see that the demons have begun to lead you and your children astray; and now I fear regarding you that after I have died you will shed human blood on the earth and that you yourselves will be obliterated from the surface of the earth. 28 For everyone who sheds human blood and everyone who consumes the blood of any animate being will all be obliterated from the earth. 29 No one who consumes blood or who sheds blood on the earth will be left. He will be left with neither descendants nor posterity living beneath heaven because they will go into Sheol and will descend into the place of judgment. All of them will depart into deep darkness through a violent death. 30 No blood of all the blood which there may be at any time when you sacrifice any animal, cattle, or creature that flies above the earth is to be seen on you. Do a good deed for yourselves by covering what is poured out on the surface of the earth. 31 Do not be one who eats meat with the blood; exert yourselves so that blood is not consumed in your presence. Cover the blood because so was I ordered to testify to you and your children together with all humanity. 32 Do not eat the life with the meat so that your blood, your life, may not be required from every person who sheds blood on the earth. 33 For the earth will not be purified of the blood which has been shed on it; but by the blood of the one who shed it the earth will be purified in all its generations. 34 Now listen, my children. Do what is just and right so that you may be rightly planted on the surface of the entire earth. Then your honor will be raised before my God who saved me from the flood waters. 35 You will now go and build yourselves cities, and in them you will plant every kind of plant that is on the earth as well as every kind of fruit tree. 36 For three years its fruit will remain unpicked by anyone for the purpose of eating it; but in the fourth year its fruit will be sanctified. It will be offered as firstfruits that are acceptable before the most high Lord, the creator of heaven, the earth, and everything, so that they may offer in abundance the first of the wine and oil as firstfruits on the altar of the Lord who accepts it. What is left over those who serve in the Lord's house are to eat before the altar which receives it. 37 During the fifth year arrange relief for it so that you may leave it in the right and proper way. Then you will be doing the right thing, and all your planting will be successful.[44] 38 For this is how Enoch, your father's father, commanded his son Methuselah; then Methuselah his son Lamech; and Lamech commanded me everything that his fathers had commanded him. 39 Now I am commanding you, my children, as Enoch commanded his son in the first jubilees. While he was living in its seventh generation, he commanded and testified to his children and grandchildren until the day of his death.

8In the twenty-ninth jubilee, in the first week — at its beginning [1373] — Arpachshad married a woman named Rasueya, the daughter of Susan, the daughter of Elam. She gave birth to a son for him in the third year of this week [1375], and he named him Kainan.[45] 2 When the boy grew up, his father taught him the art of writing. He went to look for a place of his own where he could possess his own city. 3 He found an inscription which the ancients had incised in a rock. He read what was in it, copied it, and sinned on the basis of what was in it, since in it was the Watchers' teaching by which they used to observe the omens of the sun, moon, and stars and every heavenly sign.[46] 4 He wrote it down but told no one about it because he was afraid to tell Noah about it lest he become angry at him about it. 5 In the thirtieth jubilee, in the second week — in its first year [1429] — he married a woman whose name was Melka, the daughter of Madai, Japheth's son. In its fourth year [1432] he became the father of a son whom he named Shelah, for he said: 'I have truly been sent'. 6 After he was born in the fourth year, Shelah grew up and married a woman whose name was Muak, the daughter of Kesed, his father's brother, in the thirty-first jubilee, in the fifth week, in its first year [1499]. 7 She gave birth to a son for him in its fifth year [1503], and he named him Eber. He married a woman whose name was Azurad, the daughter of Nebrod, during the thirty-second jubilee, in the seventh week, during its third year [1564]. 8 In the sixth year [1567] she gave birth to a son for him, and he named him Peleg because at the time when he was born Noah's children began to divide the earth for themselves. For this reason he named him Peleg. 9 They divided it in a bad way among themselves and told Noah.[47] 10 At the beginning of the thirty-third jubilee [1569-1617] they divided the earth into three parts — for Shem, Ham, and Japheth — each in his own inheritance. This happened in the first year of the first week [1569] while one of us who were sent was staying with them. 11 When he summoned his children, they came to him — they and their children. He divided the earth into the lots which his three sons would occupy. They reached out their hands and took the book from the bosom of their father Noah. 12 In the book there emerged as Shem's lot the center of the earth which he would occupy as an inheritance for him and for his children throughout the history of eternity: from the middle of the mountain range of Rafa, from the source of the water from the Tina River. His share goes toward the west through the middle of this river. One then goes until one reaches the water of the deeps from which this river emerges. This river emerges and pours its waters into the Me'at Sea. This river goes as far as the Great Sea. Everything to the north belongs to Japheth, while everything to the south belongs to Shem.[48] 13 It goes until it reaches Karas. This is in the bosom of the branch which faces southward. 14 His share goes toward the Great Sea and goes straight until it reaches to the west of the branch that faces southward, for this is the sea whose name is the Branch of the Egyptian Sea. 15 It turns from there southward toward the mouth of the Great Sea on the shore of the waters. It goes toward the west of Afra and goes until it reaches the water of the Gihon River and to the south of the Gihon's waters along the banks of this river. 16 It goes eastward until it reaches the Garden of Eden, toward the south side of it — on the south and from the east of the entire land of Eden and of all the east. It turns to the east and comes until it reaches to the east of the mountain range named Rafa. Then it goes down toward the bank of the Tina River's mouth. 17 This share emerged by lot for Shem and his children to occupy it forever, throughout his generation until eternity. 18 Noah was very happy that this share had emerged for Shem and his children. He recalled everything that he had said in prophecy with his mouth, for he had said: 'May the Lord, the God of Shem, be blessed, and may the Lord live in the places where Shem resides'. 19 He knew that the Garden of Eden is the holy of holies and is the residence of the Lord; that Mt. Sinai is in the middle of the desert; and that Mt. Zion is in the middle of the navel of the earth. The three of them — the one facing the other — were created as holy places.[49] 20 He blessed the God of gods, who had placed the word of the Lord in his mouth, and he blessed the Lord forever. 21 He knew that a blessed and excellent share had come about for Shem and his children throughout the history of eternity: all the land of Eden, all the land of the Erythrean Sea, all the land of the east, India, that which is in Erythrea and its mountains, all the land of Bashan, all the land of Lebanon, the islands of Caphtor, the entire mountain range of Sanir and Amana, the mountain range of Asshur which is in the north, all the land of Elam, Asshur, Babylon, Susan, and Madai; all the mountains of Ararat, all the area on the other side of the sea which is on the other side of the mountain range of Asshur toward the north — a blessed and spacious land. Everything in it is very beautiful. 22 For Ham there emerged a second share toward the other side of the Gihon — toward the south — on the right side of the garden. It goes southward and goes to all the fiery mountains. It goes westward toward the Atel Sea; it goes westward until it reaches the Mauk Sea, everything that descends into which is destroyed. 23 It comes to the north to the boundary of Gadir and comes to the shore of the sea waters, to the waters of the Great Sea, until it reaches the Gihon River. The Gihon River goes until it reaches the right side of the Garden of Eden. 24 This is the land which emerged for Ham as a share which he should occupy for himself and his children forever throughout their generations until eternity. 25 For Japheth there emerged a third share on the other side of the Tina River toward the north of the mouth of its waters. It goes toward the northeast, toward the whole area of Gog and all that is east of them. 26 It goes due north and goes toward the mountains of Qelt, to the north and toward the Mauq Sea. It comes to the east of Gadir as far as the edge of the sea waters. 27 It goes until it reaches the west of Fara. Then it goes back toward Aferag and goes eastward toward the water of the Me'at Sea. 28 It goes to the edge of the Tina River toward the northeast until it reaches the bank of its waters toward the mountain range of Rafa. It goes around the north. 29 This is the land that emerged for Japheth and his children as his hereditary share which he would occupy for himself and his children throughout their generations forever: five large islands and a large land in the north.[50] 30 However, it is cold while the land of Ham is hot. Now Shem's land is neither hot nor cold but it is a mixture of cold and heat.

9Ham divided his share among his sons. There emerged a first share for Cush to the east; to the west of him one for Egypt; to the west of him one for Put; to the west of him one for Canaan; and to the west of him was the sea. 2 Shem, too, divided his share among his sons. There emerged a first share for Elam and his children to the east of the Tigris River until it reaches the east of the entire land of India, in Erythrea on its border, the waters of the Dedan, all the mountains of Mebri and Ela, all the land of Susan, and everything on the border of Farnak as far as the Erythrean Sea and the Tina River. 3 For Asshur there emerged as the second share the whole land of Asshur, Nineveh, Shinar, and Sak as far as the vicinity of India, where the Wadafa River rises. 4 For Arpachshad there emerged as a third share all the land of the Chaldean region to the east of the Euphrates which is close to the Erythrean Sea; all the waters of the desert as far as the vicinity of the branch of the sea which faces Egypt; the entire land of Lebanon, Sanir, and Amana as far as the vicinity of the Euphrates. 5 There emerged for Aram as the fourth share the entire land of Mesopotamia between the Tigris and Euphrates to the north of the Chaldeans as far as the vicinity of the mountain range of Asshur and the land of Arara. 6 For Lud there emerged as the fifth share the mountain range of Asshur and all that belongs to it until it reaches the Great Sea and reaches to the east of his brother Asshur. 7 Japheth, too, divided the land among his sons as an inheritance. 8 There emerged for Gomer a first share eastward from the north side as far as the Tina River. North of him there emerged as a share for Magog all the central parts of the north until it reaches the Me'at Sea. 9 For Madai there emerged a share for him to occupy on the west of his two brothers as far as the islands and the shores of the islands. 10 For Javan there emerged as the fourth share every island and the islands that are in the direction of Lud's border. 11 For Tubal there emerged as the fifth share the middle of the branch which reaches the border of Lud's share as far as the second branch, and the other side of the second branch into the third branch. 12 For Meshech there emerged a sixth share, namely all the region on the other side of the third branch until it reaches to the east of Gadir. 13 For Tiras there emerged as the seventh share the four large islands within the sea which reach Ham's share. The islands of Kamaturi emerged by lot for Arpachshad's children as his inheritance. 14 In this way Noah's sons divided the earth for their sons in front of their father Noah. He made them swear by oath to curse each and every one who wanted to occupy the share which did not emerge by his lot. 15 All of them said: 'So be it'! So be it for them and their children until eternity during their generations until the day of judgment on which the Lord God will punish them with the sword and fire because of all the evil impurity of their errors by which they have filled the earth with wickedness, impurity, fornication, and sin.

10During the third week of this jubilee [1583-89] impure demons began to mislead Noah's grandchildren, to make them act foolishly, and to destroy them. 2 Then Noah's sons came to their father Noah and told him about the demons who were misleading, blinding, and killing his grandchildren. 3 He prayed before the Lord his God and said: 'God of the spirits which are in all animate beings — you who have shown kindness to me, saved me and my sons from the flood waters, and did not make me perish as you did to the people meant for destruction — because your mercy for me has been large and your kindness to me has been great: may your mercy be lifted over the children of your children; and may the wicked spirits not rule them in order to destroy them from the earth.'[51] 4 Now you bless me and my children so that we may increase, become numerous, and fill the earth. 5 You know how your Watchers, the fathers of these spirits, have acted during my lifetime. As for these spirits who have remained alive, imprison them and hold them captive in the place of judgment. May they not cause destruction among your servant's sons, my God, for they are savage and were created for the purpose of destroying. 6 May they not rule the spirits of the living for you alone know their punishment; and may they not have power over the sons of the righteous from now and forevermore. 7 Then our God told us to tie up each one. 8 When Mastema, the leader of the spirits, came, he said: 'Lord creator, leave some of them before me; let them listen to me and do everything that I tell them, because if none of them is left for me I shall not be able to exercise the authority of my will among mankind. For they are meant for the purposes of destroying and misleading before my punishment because the evil of mankind is great.' 9 Then he said that a tenth of them should be left before him, while he would make nine parts descend to the place of judgment.[52] 10 He told one of us that we should teach Noah all their medicines because he knew that they would neither conduct themselves properly nor fight fairly. 11 We acted in accord with his entire command. All of the evil ones who were savage we tied up in the place of judgment, while we left a tenth of them to exercise power on the earth before the satan. 12 We told Noah all the medicines for their diseases with their deceptions so that he could cure them by means of the earth's plants.[53] 13 Noah wrote down in a book everything just as we had taught him regarding all the kinds of medicine, and the evil spirits were precluded from pursuing Noah's children. 14 He gave all the books that he had written to his oldest son Shem because he loved him much more than all his sons. 15 Noah slept with his fathers and was buried on Mt. Lubar in the land of Ararat. 16 He completed 950 years in his lifetime — 19 jubilees, two weeks, and five years — 17 (he) who lived longer on the earth than other people except Enoch because of his righteousness in which he was perfect; because Enoch's work was something created as a testimony for the generations of eternity so that he should report all deeds throughout generation after generation on the day of judgment. 18 During the thirty-third jubilee, in the first year in this second week [1576], Peleg married a woman whose name was Lomna, the daughter of Sinaor. She gave birth to a son for him in the fourth year of this week [1579], and he named him Ragew, for he said: 'Mankind has now become evil through the perverse plan to build themselves a city and tower in the land of Shinar.' 19 For they had emigrated from the land of Ararat toward the east, to Shinar, because in his lifetime they built the city and the tower, saying: 'Let us ascend through it to heaven.' 20 They began to build. In the fourth week [1590-96] they used fire for baking and bricks served them as stones. The mud with which they were plastering was asphalt which comes from the sea and from the water springs in the land of Shinar. 21 They built it; they spent 43 years building it with complete bricks whose width was 13 units and whose height was a third of one unit. Its height rose to 5433 cubits, two spans, and thirteen stades. 22 Then the Lord our God said to us: 'The people here are one, and they have begun to work. Now nothing will elude them. Come, let us go down and confuse their tongues so that they do not understand one another and are dispersed into cities and nations and one plan no longer remains with them until the day of judgment.'[54] 23 So the Lord went down and we went down with him to see the city and the tower which mankind had built. 24 He confused every sound of their tongues; no one any longer understood what the other was saying. Then they stopped building the city and the tower. 25 For this reason the whole land of Shinar was named Babel because there God confused all the tongues of mankind. From there they were dispersed into their cities, each according to their languages and their nations. 26 The Lord sent a wind at the tower and tipped it to the ground. It is now between Asshur and Babylon, in the land of Shinar. He named it the Collapse.[55] 27 In the fourth week, during the first year — at its beginning — of the thirty-fourth jubilee [1639], they were dispersed from the land of Shinar. 28 Ham and his sons went into the land which he was to occupy, which he had acquired as his share, in the southern country. 29 When Canaan saw that the land of Lebanon as far as the stream of Egypt was very beautiful, he did not go to his hereditary land to the west of the sea. He settled in the land of Lebanon, on the east and west, from the border of Lebanon and on the seacoast. 30 His father Ham and his brothers Cush and Mizraim said to him: 'You have settled in a land which was not yours and did not emerge for us by lot. Do not act this way, for if you do act this way both you and your children will fall in the land and be cursed with rebellion, because you have settled in rebellion and in rebellion your children will fall and be uprooted forever.' 31 Do not settle in Shem's residence because it emerged by their lot for Shem and his sons. 32 You are cursed and will be cursed more than all of Noah's children through the curse by which we obligated ourselves with an oath before the holy judge and before our father Noah. 33 But he did not listen to them. He settled in the land of Lebanon — from Hamath to the entrance of Egypt — he and his sons until the present. 34 For this reason that land was named the land of Canaan. 35 Japheth and his sons went toward the sea and settled in the land of their share. Madai saw the land near the sea but it did not please him. So he pleaded for land from Elam, Asshur, and Arpachshad, his wife's brother. He has settled in the land of Medeqin near his wife's brother until the present. 36 He named the place where he lived and the place where his children lived Medeqin after their father Madai.

11In the thirty-fifth jubilee, during the third week — in its first year [1681] — Ragew married a woman whose name was Ara, the daughter of Ur, Kesed's son. She gave birth to a son for him, and he named him Serug in the seventh year of this week [1687]. 2 During this jubilee Noah's children began to fight one another, to take captives, and to kill one another; to shed human blood on the earth, to consume blood; to build fortified cities, walls, and towers; men to elevate themselves over peoples, to set up the first kingdoms; to go to war — people against people, nations against nations, city against city; and everyone to do evil, to acquire weapons, and to teach warfare to their sons. City began to capture city and to sell male and female slaves. 3 Ur, Kesed's son, built the city of Ara of the Chaldeans. He named it after himself and his father. 4 They made molten images for themselves. Each one would worship the idol which he had made as his own molten image. They began to make statues, images, and unclean things; the spirits of the savage ones were helping and misleading them so that they would commit sins, impurities, and transgression. 5 Prince Mastema was exerting his power in effecting all these actions and, by means of the spirits, he was sending to those who were placed under his control the ability to commit every kind of error and sin and every kind of transgression; to corrupt, to destroy, and to shed blood on the earth. 6 For this reason Serug was named Serug: because everyone turned to commit every kind of sin. 7 He grew up and settled in Ur of the Chaldeans near the father of his wife's mother. He was a worshiper of idols. During the thirty-sixth jubilee, in the fifth week, in its first year [1744], he married a woman whose name was Melcha, the daughter of Kaber, the daughter of his father's brother. 8 She gave birth to Nahor for him during the first year of this week [1744]. He grew up and settled in Ur — in the one that is the Ur of the Chaldeans. His father taught him the studies of Chaldeans: to practice divination and to augur by the signs of the sky. 9 During the thirty-seventh jubilee, in the sixth week, in its first year [1800], he married a woman whose name was Iyaseka, the daughter of Nestag of the Chaldeans. 10 She gave birth to Terah for him in the seventh year of this week [1806]. 11 Then Prince Mastema sent ravens and birds to eat the seed which would be planted in the ground and to destroy the land in order to rob mankind of their labors. Before they plowed in the seed, the ravens would pick it from the surface of the ground. 12 For this reason he named him Terah: because the ravens and birds reduced them to poverty and ate their seed. 13 The years began to be unfruitful due to the birds. They would eat all the fruit of the trees from the orchards. During their time, if they were able to save a little of all the fruit of the earth, it was with great effort. 14 During the thirty-ninth jubilee, in the second week, in the first year [1870], Terah married a woman whose name was Edna, the daughter of Abram, the daughter of his father's sister. 15 In the seventh year of this week [1876] she gave birth to a son for him, and he named him Abram after his mother's father because he had died before his daughter's son was conceived. 16 The child began to realize the errors of the earth — that everyone was going astray after the statues and after impurity. His father taught him the art of writing. When he was two weeks of years (14 years), he separated from his father in order not to worship idols with him. 17 He began to pray to the creator of all that he would save him from the errors of mankind and that it might not fall to his share to go astray after impurity and wickedness. 18 When the time for planting seeds in the ground arrived, all of them went out together to guard the seed from the ravens. Abram — a child of 14 years — went out with those who were going out. 19 As a cloud of ravens came to eat the seed, Abram would run at them before they could settle on the ground. He would shout at them before they could settle on the ground to eat the seed and would say: 'Do not come down; return to the place from which you came!' And they returned. 20 That day he did this to the cloud of ravens 70 times. Not a single raven remained in any of the fields where Abram was. 21 All who were with him in any of the fields would see him shouting: then all of the ravens returned to their place. His reputation grew large throughout the entire land of the Chaldeans. 22 All who were planting seed came to him in this year, and he kept going with them until the seedtime came to an end. They planted their land and that year brought in enough food. So they ate and were filled. 23 In the first year of the fifth week [1891] Abram taught the people who made equipment for bulls — the skillful woodworkers — and they made an implement above the ground, opposite the plow beam, so that one could place seed on it. The seed would then drop down from it onto the end of the plow and be hidden in the ground; and they would no longer be afraid of the ravens. 24 They made vessels like this above the ground on every plow beam. They planted seed, and all the land did as Abram told them. So they were no longer afraid of the birds.

12During the sixth week, in its seventh year [1904], Abram said to his father Terah: ‘My father’. He said: ‘Yes, my son’?[56] 2 He said: ‘What help and advantage do we get from these idols before which you worship and prostrate yourself?’[57] 3 ‘For there is no spirit in them because they are dumb. They are an error of the mind. Do not worship them.’ 4 ‘Worship the God of heaven who makes the rain and dew fall on the earth and makes everything on the earth. He created everything by his word; and all life comes from his presence.’ 5 ‘Why do you worship those things which have no spirit in them? For they are made by hands and you carry them on your shoulders. You receive no help from them, but instead they are a great shame for those who make them and an error of the mind for those who worship them. Do not worship them.’ 6 Then he said to him: ‘I, too, know this, my son. What shall I do with the people who have ordered me to serve in their presence?’ 7 ‘If I tell them what is right, they will kill me because they themselves are attached to them so that they worship and praise them. Be quiet, my son, so that they do not kill you.’[58] 8 When he told these things to his two brothers and they became angry at him, he remained silent. 9 During the fortieth jubilee, in the second week, in its seventh year [1925], Abram married a woman whose name was Sarai, the daughter of his father, and she became his wife. 10 His brother Haran married a woman in the third year of the third week [1928], and she gave birth to a son for him in the seventh year of this week [1932]. He named him Lot. 11 His brother Nahor also got married. 12 In the sixtieth year of Abram’s life (which was the fourth week, in its fourth year [1936]), Abram got up at night and burned the temple of the idols. He burned everything in the temple but no one knew about it. 13 They got up at night and wanted to save their gods from the fire. 14 Haran dashed in to save them, but the fire raged over him. He was burned in the fire and died in Ur of the Chaldeans before his father Terah. They buried him in Ur of the Chaldeans. 15 Then Terah left Ur of the Chaldeans — he and his sons — to go to the land of Lebanon and the land of Canaan. He settled in Haran, and Abram lived with his father in Haran for two weeks of years. 16 In the sixth week, during its fifth year [1951], Abram sat at night — at the beginning of the seventh month — to observe the stars from evening to dawn in order to see what would be the character of the year with respect to the rains. He was sitting and observing by himself.[59] 17 A voice came to his mind and he said: ‘All the signs of the stars and signs of the moon and the sun — all are under the Lord’s control. Why should I be investigating them?’[60] 18 ‘If he wishes, he will make it rain in the morning and evening; and if he wishes, he will not make it fall. Everything is under his control.’ 19 That night he prayed and said: ‘My God, my God, God most High, You alone are my God. You have created everything; everything that was and has been is the product of your hands. You and your lordship I have chosen.’ 20 ‘Save me from the power of the evil spirits who rule the thoughts of people’s minds. May they not mislead me from following you, my God. Do establish me and my posterity forever. May we not go astray from now until eternity.’[61] 21 Then he said: ‘Shall I return to Ur of the Chaldeans who are looking for me to return to them? Or am I to remain here in this place? Make the path that is straight before you prosper through your servant so that he may do it. May I not proceed in the error of my mind, my God.’ 22 When he had finished speaking and praying, then the word of the Lord was sent to him through me: ‘Now you, come from your land, your family, and your father’s house to the land which I will show you. I will make you into a large and populous people.’ 23 ‘I will bless you and magnify your reputation. You will become blessed in the earth. All the nations of the earth will be blessed in you. Those who bless you I will bless, while those who curse you I will curse.’ 24 ‘I will become God for you, your son, your grandson, and all your descendants. Do not be afraid. From now until all the generations of the earth I am your God.’ 25 Then the Lord God said to me: ‘Open his mouth and his ears to hear and speak with his tongue in the revealed language.’ For from the day of the collapse it had disappeared from the mouths of all mankind. 26 I opened his mouth, ears, and lips and began to speak Hebrew with him — in the language of the creation.[62] 27 He took his fathers’ books (they were written in Hebrew) and copied them. From that time he began to study them, while I was telling him everything that he was unable to understand. He studied them throughout the six rainy months. 28 In the seventh year of the sixth week [1953], he spoke with his father and told him that he was leaving Haran to go to the land of Canaan to see it and return to him.[63] 29 His father Terah said to him: ‘Go in peace. May the eternal God make your way straight; may the Lord be with you and protect you from every evil; may he grant you kindness, mercy, and grace before those who see you; and may no person have power over you to harm you. Go in peace.’ 30 ‘If you see a land that, in your view, is a pleasant one in which to live, then come and take me to you. Take Lot, the son of your brother Haran, with you as your son. May the Lord be with you.’ 31 ‘Leave your brother Nahor with me until you return in peace. Then all of us together will go with you.’

13Abram went from Haran and took his wife Sarai and Lot, the son of his brother Haran, to the land of Canaan. He came to Asur. He walked as far as Shechem and settled near a tall oak tree. 2 He saw that the land — from the entrance of Hamath to the tall oak — was very pleasant. 3 Then the Lord said to him: ‘To you and your descendants I will give this land.’ 4 He built an altar there and offered on it a sacrifice to the Lord who had appeared to him. 5 He departed from there toward the mountain of Bethel which is toward the sea, with Ai toward the east, and pitched his tent there. 6 He saw that the land was spacious and most excellent and that everything was growing on it: vines, fig trees, pomegranates, oak trees, holm oaks, terebinths, olive trees, cedars, cypresses, incense trees, and all kinds of wild trees; and there was water on the mountains. 7 Then he blessed the Lord who had led him from Ur of the Chaldeans and brought him to this mountain. 8 During the first year in the seventh week [1954] — on the first of the month in which he had initially built the altar on this mountain — he called on the name of the Lord: ‘You, my God, are the eternal God.’ 9 He offered to the Lord a sacrifice on the altar so that he would be with him and not abandon him throughout his entire lifetime. 10 He departed from there and went toward the south. When he reached Hebron (Hebron was built at that time), he stayed there for two years. Then he went to the southern territory as far as Boa Lot. There was a famine in the land. 11 So Abram went to Egypt in the third year of the week [1956]. He lived in Egypt for five years before his wife was taken from him by force.[64] 12 Egyptian Tanais was built at that time — seven years after Hebron. 13 When the pharaoh took Abram’s wife Sarai by force for himself, the Lord punished the pharaoh and his household very severely because of Abram’s wife Sarai. 14 Now Abram had an extremely large amount of property: sheep, cattle, donkeys, horses, camels, male and female servants, silver, and very much gold. Lot — his brother’s son — also had property. 15 The pharaoh returned Abram’s wife Sarai and expelled him from the land of Egypt. He went to the place where he had first pitched his tent — at the location of the altar, with Ai on the east and Bethel on the west. He blessed the Lord his God who had brought him back safely. 16 During this forty-first jubilee, in the third year of the first week [1963], he returned to this place. He offered a sacrifice on it and called on the Lord’s name: ‘You, Lord, most high God, are my God forever and ever.’ 17 In the fourth year of this week [1964] Lot separated from him. Lot settled in Sodom. Now the people of Sodom were very sinful. 18 He was brokenhearted that his brother’s son had separated from him for he had no children. 19 In that year when Lot was taken captive, the Lord spoke to Abram — after Lot had separated from him, in the fourth year of this week — and said to him: ‘Look up from the place where you have been living toward the north, the south, the west, and the east; 20 because all the land which you see I will give to you and your descendants forever. I will make your descendants like the sands of the sea. Even if a man can count the sands of the earth, your descendants will still not be counted. 21 Get up and walk through its length and its width. Look at everything because I will give it to your descendants.’ Then Abram went to Hebron and lived there. 22 In this year Chedorlaomer, the king of Elam, Amraphel, the king of Shinar, Arioch, the king of Selasar, and Tergal, the king of the nations came and killed the king of Gomorrah, while the king of Sodom fled. Many people fell with wounds in the valley of Saddimaw, in the Salt Sea. 23 They took captive Sodom, Adamah, and Zeboim; they also took Lot, the son of Abram’s brother, captive and all his possessions. He went as far as Dan. 24 One who had escaped came and told Abram that the son of his brother had been taken captive. 25 When he had armed his household servants, [Abram went and killed Chedorlaomer. Upon returning, he took a tithe of everything and gave it to Melchizedek. This tithe was] for Abram and his descendants the tithe of the firstfruits for the Lord. The Lord made it an eternal ordinance that they should give it to the priests who serve before him for them to possess it forever. 26 This law has no temporal limit because he has ordained it for the history of eternity to give a tenth of everything to the Lord — of seed, the vine, oil, cattle, and sheep. 27 He has given it to his priests to eat and drink joyfully before him. 28 When the king of Sodom came up to him, he knelt before him and said: ‘Our lord Abram, kindly give us the people whom you rescued, but their booty is to be yours.’ 29 Abram said to him: ‘I lift my hands to the most high God to show that I will not take anything of yours — not a thread or sandal thongs, so that you may not say: “I have made Abram rich” — excepting only what the young men have eaten and the share of the men who went with me: Awnan, Eschol, and Mamre. These will take their share.’

14After these things — in the fourth year of this week [1964], on the first of the third month — the word of the Lord came to Abram in a dream: ‘Do not be afraid, Abram. I am your protector; your reward will be very large.’ 2 He said: ‘Lord, Lord, what are you going to give me when I go on being childless. The son of Maseq — the son of my maid servant — that is Damascene Eliezer — will be my heir. You have given me no descendants. Give me descendants.’ 3 He said to him: ‘This one will not be your heir but rather someone who will come out of your loins will be your heir.’ 4 He brought him outside and said to him: ‘Look at the sky and count the stars, if you can count them.’ 5 When he had looked at the sky and seen the stars, he said to him: ‘Your descendants will be like this.’ 6 He believed the Lord, and it was credited to him as something righteous.[65] 7 He said to him: ‘I am the Lord who brought you from Ur of the Chaldeans to give you the land of the Canaanites to occupy forever and to become God for you and your descendants after you.’ 8 He said: ‘Lord, Lord, how will I know that I will inherit it?’ 9 He said to him: ‘Get for me a three-year-old calf, a three-year-old goat, a three-year-old sheep, a turtledove, and a dove.’ 10 He got all of these in the middle of the month. He was living at the oak of Mamre which is near Hebron. 11 He built an altar there and sacrificed all of these. He poured out their blood on the altar and divided them in the middle. He put them opposite one another, but the birds he did not divide. 12 Birds kept coming down on what was spread out, but Abram kept preventing them and not allowing the birds to touch them. 13 At sunset, a terror fell on Abram; indeed a great, dark fear fell on him. It was said to Abram: ‘Know for a fact that your descendants will be aliens in a foreign land. They will enslave them and oppress them for 400 years. 14 But I will judge the nation whom they serve. Afterwards, they will leave from there with many possessions.’ 15 ‘But you will go peacefully to your fathers and be buried at a ripe old age.’ 16 ‘In the fourth generation they will return to this place because until now the sins of the Amorites have not been completed.’ 17 When he awakened and got up, the sun had set. There was a flame and an oven was smoking. Fiery flames passed between what was spread out. 18 On that day the Lord concluded a covenant with Abram with these words: ‘To your descendants I will give this land from the river of Egypt as far as the great river, the Euphrates River: the Kenites, the Kenizzites, the Kadmonites, the Perizzites, the Rephaim, the Phakorites, the Hivites, the Amorites, the Canaanites, the Girgashites, and the Jebusites.’[66] 19 It passed along, and Abram offered what had been spread out, the birds, their cereal offering, and their libation. The fire devoured them. 20 During this night we concluded a covenant with Abram like the covenant which we concluded during this month with Noah. Abram renewed the festival and the ordinance for himself forever. 21 Abram was very happy and told all these things to his wife Sarai. He believed that he would have descendants, but she continued not to have a child. 22 Sarai advised her husband Abram and said to him: ‘Go in to my Egyptian slave-girl Hagar; perhaps I will build up descendants for you from her.’ 23 Abram listened to his wife Sarai’s suggestion and said to her: ‘Do as you suggest.’ So Sarai took her Egyptian slave-girl Hagar, and gave her to her husband Abram to be his wife. 24 He went in to her, she became pregnant, and gave birth to a son. He named him Ishmael in the fifth year of this week [1965]. That year was the eighty-sixth year in Abram’s life.

15During the fifth year of the fourth week of this jubilee [1986] — in the third month, in the middle of the month — Abram celebrated the festival of the firstfruits of the wheat harvest. 2 He offered as a new sacrifice on the altar the firstfruits of the food for the Lord — a bull, a ram, and a sheep; he offered them on the altar as a sacrifice to the Lord together with their cereal offerings and their libations. He offered everything on the altar with frankincense. 3 The Lord appeared to him, and the Lord said to Abram: ‘I am the God of Shaddai. Please me and be perfect, 4 I will place my covenant between me and you. I will increase you greatly.’ 5 Then Abram fell prostrate. The Lord spoke with him and said: 6 ‘My pact is now with you. I will make you the father of many nations. 7 You will no longer be called Abram; your name from now to eternity is to be Abraham because I have designated you the father of many nations.’ 8 ‘I will make you very great. I will make you into nations, and kings shall emerge from you. 9 I will place my covenant between me and you and your descendants after you throughout their generations and as an eternal pact so that I may be God to you and to your descendants after you. 10 To you and your descendants after you I will give the land where you have resided as an alien — the land of Canaan which you will rule forever. I will be their God.’ 11 Then the Lord said to Abraham: ‘As for you, keep my covenant — you and your descendants after you. Circumcise all your males; circumcise your foreskins. It will be a sign of my eternal pact which is between me and you. 12 You will circumcise a child on the eighth day — every male in your families: the person who has been born in your house, the one whom you purchased with money from any foreigners — whom you have acquired who is not from your descendants. 13 The person who is born in your house must be circumcised; and those whom you purchased with money are to be circumcised. My covenant will be in your flesh as an eternal pact. 14 The male who has not been circumcised — the flesh of whose foreskin has not been circumcised on the eighth day — that person will be uprooted from his people because he has violated my covenant.’ 15 The Lord said to Abraham: ‘Your wife Sarai will no longer be called Sarai for her name will be Sarah. 16 I will bless her. I will give you a son from her and will bless him. He will become a nation, and kings of nations will come from him.’ 17 Abraham fell prostrate and was very happy. He said to himself: ‘Will a son be born to one who is 100 years of age? Will Sarah who is 90 years of age give birth to a child?’ 18 So Abraham said to the Lord: ‘I wish that Ishmael could live in your presence.’ 19 The Lord said: ‘Very well, but Sarah, too, will give birth to a son for you and you will name him Isaac. I will establish my covenant with him as an eternal covenant and for his descendants after him. 20 Regarding Ishmael I have listened to you. I will indeed bless him, increase him, and make him very numerous. He will father 12 princes, and I will make him into a large nation. 21 But my covenant I will establish with Isaac to whom Sarah will give birth for you at this time next year.’ 22 When he had finished speaking with him, the Lord went up from Abraham. 23 Abraham did as the Lord told him. He took his son Ishmael, everyone who was born in his house and who had been purchased with money — every male who was in his house — and circumcised the flesh of their foreskins. 24 On the same day Abraham was circumcised; those who were born in his house, the men of his household, and all those who had been purchased with money (even from foreigners) were circumcised with him. 25 This law is valid for all history forever. There is no circumcising of days, nor omitting any day of the eight days because it is an eternal ordinance ordained and written on the heavenly tablets. 26 Anyone who is born, the flesh of whose private parts has not been circumcised by the eighth day does not belong to the people of the pact which the Lord made with Abraham but to the people meant for destruction. Moreover, there is no sign on him that he belongs to the Lord, but he is meant for destruction, for being destroyed from the earth, and for being uprooted from the earth because he has violated the covenant of the Lord our God. 27 For this is what the nature of all the angels of the presence and all the angels of holiness was like from the day of their creation. In front of the angels of the presence and the angels of holiness he sanctified Israel to be with him and his holy angels. 28 Now you command the Israelites to keep the sign of this covenant throughout their history as an eternal ordinance so that they may not be uprooted from the earth 29 because the command has been ordained as a covenant so that they should keep it forever on all the Israelites. 30 For the Lord did not draw near to himself either Ishmael, his sons, his brothers, or Esau. He did not choose them simply because they were among Abraham’s children, for he knew them. But he chose Israel to be his people. 31 He sanctified them and gathered them from all mankind. For there are many nations and many peoples and all belong to him. He made spirits rule over all in order to lead them astray from following him. 32 But over Israel he made no angel or spirit rule because he alone is their ruler. He will guard them and require them for himself from his angels, his spirits, and everyone, and all his powers so that he may guard them and bless them and so that they may be his and he theirs from now and forever. 33 I am now telling you that the Israelites will prove false to this ordinance. They will not circumcise their sons in accord with this entire law because they will leave some of the flesh of their circumcision when they circumcise their sons. All the people of Belial will leave their sons uncircumcised just as they were born. 34 Then there will be great anger from the Lord against the Israelites because they neglected his covenant, departed from his word, provoked, and blasphemed in that they did not perform the ordinance of this sign. For they have made themselves like the nations so as to be removed and uprooted from the earth. They will no longer have forgiveness or pardon so that they should be pardoned and forgiven for every sin, for their violation of this eternal ordinance.

16On the first of the fourth month we appeared to Abraham at the oak of Mamre. We spoke with him and told him that a child would be given to him from his wife Sarah.[67] 2 Sarah laughed when she heard that we had conveyed this message to Abraham, but when we chided her, she became frightened and denied that she had laughed about the message. 3 We told her the name of her son as it is ordained and written on the heavenly tablets - Isaac - 4 and that when we returned to her at a specific time she would have become pregnant with a son. 5 During this month the Lord executed the judgment of Sodom and Gomorrah, Zeboim and all the environs of the Jordan. He burned them with fire and brimstone and annihilated them until the present in accord with what I have now told you about all their actions — that they were savage and very sinful, that they would defile themselves, commit sexual sins in their flesh, and do what was impure on the earth. 6 The Lord will execute judgment in the same way in the places where people commit the same sort of impure actions as Sodom — just like the judgment on Sodom. 7 But we went about rescuing Lot because the Lord remembered Abraham. So he brought him out from the overthrow of Sodom. 8 He and his daughters committed a sin on the earth which had not occurred on the earth from the time of Adam until his time because the man lay with his daughter. 9 It has now been commanded and engraved on the heavenly tablets regarding all his descendants that he is to remove them, uproot them, execute judgment on them like the judgment of Sodom, and not to leave him any human descendants on the earth on the day of judgment. 10 During this month Abraham migrated from Hebron. He went and settled between Kadesh and Sur in the mountains of Gerar. 11 In the middle of the fifth month he migrated from there and settled at the well of the oath. 12 In the middle of the sixth month the Lord visited Sarah and did for her as he had said. 13 She became pregnant and gave birth to a son in the third month; in the middle of the month, on the day that the Lord had told Abraham — on the festival of the firstfruits of the harvest — Isaac was born. 14 Abraham circumcised him when he was eight days old. He was the first to be circumcised according to the covenant which was ordained forever. 15 In the sixth year of the fourth week [1987] we came to Abraham at the well of the oath. We appeared to him just as we had said to Sarah that we would return to her and she would have become pregnant with a son. 16 We returned during the seventh month, and in front of us we found Sarah pregnant. We blessed him and told him everything that had been commanded for him: that he would not yet die until he became the father of six sons and that he would see them before he died; but that through Isaac he would have a reputation and descendants. 17 All the descendants of his sons would become nations and be numbered with the nations. But one of Isaac's sons would become a holy progeny and would not be numbered among the nations, 18 for he would become the share of the Most High. All his descendants had fallen into that share which God owns so that they would become a people whom the Lord possesses out of all the nations; and that they would become a kingdom, a priesthood, and a holy people.[68] 19 Then we went on our way and told Sarah all that we had reported to him. The two of them were extremely happy. 20 There he built an altar for the Lord who had recued him and who was making him so happy in the country where he resided as an alien. He celebrated a joyful festival in this month — for seven days — near the altar which he had built at the well of the oath. 21 He constructed tents for himself and his servants during this festival. He was the first to celebrate the festival of tabernacles on the earth.[69] 22 During these seven days he was making — throughout all the days, each and every day — an offering to the Lord on the altar: two bulls, two rams, seven sheep, one goat for sins in order to atone through it for himself and his descendants. 23 And as a peace offering: seven rams, seven kids, seven sheep, seven he-goats as well as their cereal-offerings and their libations over all their fat — all of these he would burn on the altar as a choice offering for a pleasing fragrance. 24 In the morning and evening he would burn fragrant substances: frankincense, galbanum, stacte, nard, myrrh, aromatic spices, and costum. All seven of these he would offer beaten, equally mixed, pure. 25 He celebrated this festival for seven days, being happy with his whole heart and all his being — he and all those 5 who belonged to his household. There was no foreigner with him, nor anyone who was uncircumcised. 26 He blessed his creator who had created him in his generation because he had created him for his pleasure, for he knew and ascertained that from him there would come a righteous plant for the history of eternity and that from him there lo would be holy descendants so that they should be like the one who had made everything. 27 He gave a blessing and was very happy. He named this festival the festival of the Lord — a joy acceptable to the most high God. 28 We blessed him eternally and all the descendants who would follow him throughout all the history of the earth because he had celebrated this festival at its time in accord with the testimony of the heavenly tablets. 29 For this reason it has been ordained on the heavenly tablets regarding Israel that they should celebrate the festival of tabernacles joyfully for seven days during the seventh month which is acceptable in the Lord's presence — a law which is eternal throughout their history in each and every year. 30 This has no temporal limit because it is ordained forever regarding Israel that they should celebrate it, live in tents, place wreaths on their heads, and take leafy branches and willow branches from the stream. 31 So Abraham took palm branches and the fruit of good trees, and each and every day he would go around the altar with the branches — seven times per day. In the morning he would give praise and joyfully offer humble thanks to his God for everything.

17In the first year of the fifth week [1989], in this jubilee, Isaac was weaned. Abraham gave a large banquet in the third month, on the day when his son Isaac was weaned. 2 Now Ishmael, the son of Hagar the Egyptian, was in his place in front of his father Abraham. Abraham was very happy and blessed the Lord because he saw his own sons and had not died childless. 3 He remembered the message which he had told him on the day when Lot had separated from him. He was very happy because the Lord had given him descendants on the earth to possess the land. With his full voice he blessed the creator of everything. 4 When Sarah saw Ishmael playing and dancing and Abraham being extremely happy, she became jealous of Ishmael. She said to Abraham: ‘Banish this girl and her son because this girl’s son will not be an heir with my son Isaac.’[70] 5 In Abraham’s opinion the command regarding his servant girl and his son — that he should banish them from himself — was saddening, 6 but the Lord said to Abraham: ‘It ought not to be a sad thing in your opinion regarding the child and the girl. Listen to everything that Sarah says to you and do it because through Isaac you will have a reputation and descendants.’ 7 Now with regard to this girl’s son — I will make him into a large nation because he is one of your descendants.’ 8 So Abraham rose early in the morning, took food and a bottle of water, placed them on the shoulders of Hagar and the child, and sent her away. 9 She went and wandered about in the wilderness of Beersheba. When the water in the bottle was gone, the child grew thirsty. He was unable to go on and fell. 10 His mother took him and, going on, she threw him under an olive tree. Then she went and sat opposite him at a distance of a bowshot, for she said: ‘May I not see the death of my child.’ When she sat down she cried. 11 An angel of God — one of the holy ones — said to her: ‘What are you crying about, Hagar? Get up, take the child, and hold him in your arms, because the Lord has heard you and has seen the child.’ 12 She opened her eyes and saw a well of water. So she went, filled her bottle with water, and gave her child a drink. Then she set out and went toward the wilderness of Paran. 13 When the child grew up, he became an archer and the Lord was with him. His mother took a wife for him from the Egyptian girls. 14 She gave birth to a son for him, and he named him Nebaioth, for she said: ‘The Lord was close to me when I called to him.’ 15 During the seventh week, in the first year during the first month — on the twelfth of this month — in this jubilee [2003], there were voices in heaven regarding Abraham, that he was faithful in everything that he told him, that the Lord loved him, and that in every difficulty he was faithful.[71] 16 Then Prince Mastema came and said before God: ‘Abraham does indeed love his son Isaac and finds him more pleasing than anyone else. Tell him to offer him as a sacrifice on an altar. Then you will see whether he performs this order and will know whether he is faithful in everything through which you test him.’[72] 17 Now the Lord was aware that Abraham was faithful in every difficulty which he had told him. For he had tested him through his land and the famine; he had tested him through the wealth of kings; he had tested him again through his wife when she was taken forcibly, and through circumcision; and he had tested him through Ishmael and his servant girl Hagar when he sent them away.[73] 18 In everything through which he tested him he was found faithful. He himself did not grow impatient, nor was he slow to act; for he was faithful and one who loved the Lord.

18The Lord said to him: ‘Abraham, Abraham!’ He replied: ‘Yes?’ 2 He said to him: ‘Take your son, your dear one whom you love — Isaac — and go to a high land. Offer him on one of the mountains which I will show you.’[74] 3 So he got up early in the morning, loaded his donkey, and took with him two servants as well as his son Isaac. He chopped the wood for the sacrifice and came to the place on the third day. He saw the place from a distance. 4 When he reached a well of water, he ordered his servants: ‘Stay here with the donkey while I and the child go on. After we have worshiped, we will return to you.’ 5 He took the wood for the sacrifice and placed it on his son Isaac’s shoulders. He took fire and a knife in his hands. The two of them went together to that place. 6 Isaac said to his father: ‘Father.’ He replied: ‘Yes, my son?’ He said to him: ‘Here are the fire, the knife, and the wood, but where is the sheep for the sacrifice, father?’ 7 He said: ‘The Lord will provide for himself a sheep for the sacrifice, my son.’ When he neared the place of the mountain of the Lord, 8 he built an altar and placed the wood on the altar. Then he tied up his son Isaac, placed him on the wood which was on the altar, and reached out his hands to take the knife in order to sacrifice his son Isaac. 9 Then I stood in front of him and in front of Prince Mastema. The Lord said: ‘Tell him not to let his hand go down on the child and not to do anything to him because I know that he is one who fears the Lord.’ 10 So I called to him from heaven and said to him: ‘Abraham, Abraham!’ He was startled and said: ‘Yes?’ 11 I said to him: ‘Do not lay your hands on the child and do not do anything to him because now I know that you are one who fears the Lord. You have not refused me your first-born son.’ 12 Price Mastema was put to shame. Then Abraham looked up and saw a ram caught; it was coming with its horns. Abraham went and took the ram. He offered it as a sacrifice instead of his son. 13 Abraham named that place ‘The Lord Saw’ so that it is named ‘The Lord Saw’. It is Mt. Zion. 14 The Lord again called to Abraham by his name from heaven, just as we had appeared in order to speak to him in the Lord’s name. 15 He said: ‘I have sworn by myself, says the Lord: because you have performed this command and have not refused me your first-born son whom you love, I will indeed bless you and will indeed multiply your descendants like the stars in the sky and like the sands on the seashore. Your descendants will possess the cities of their enemies.’ 16 ‘All the nations of the earth will be blessed through your descendants because of the fact that you have obeyed my command. I have made known to everyone that you are faithful to me in everything that I have told you. Go in peace.’[75] 17 Then Abraham went to his servants. They set out and went together to Beersheba. Abraham lived at the well of the oath. 18 He used to celebrate this festival joyfully for seven days during all the years. He named it the festival of the Lord in accord with the seven days during which he went and returned safely. 19 This is the way it is ordained and written on the heavenly tablets regarding Israel and his descendants: they are to celebrate this festival for seven days with festal happiness.

19During the first year of the first week in the forty-second jubilee [2010], Abraham returned and lived opposite Hebron — that is, Kiriath Arba — for two weeks of years. 2 In the first year of the third week of this jubilee [2024] the days of Sarah's life were completed and she died in Hebron. 3 When Abraham went to mourn for her and to bury her, we were testing whether he himself was patient and not annoyed in the words that he spoke. But in this respect, too, he was found to be patient and not disturbed, 4 because he spoke with the Hittites in a patient spirit so that they would give him a place in which to bury his dead. 5 The Lord gave him a favorable reception before all who would see him. He mildly pleaded with the Hittites, and they gave him the land of the double cave which was opposite Mamre — that is, Hebron — for a price of 400 silver pieces. 6 They pleaded with him: ‘Allow us to give it to you for nothing!’ Yet he did not take it from them for nothing but he gave as the price of the place the full amount of money. He bowed twice to them and afterwards buried his dead in the double cave. 7 All the time of Sarah's life was 127 — that is, two jubilees, four weeks, and one year. This was the time in years of Sarah's life. 8 This was the tenth test by which Abraham was tried, and he was found to be faithful and patient in spirit.[76] 9 He said nothing about the promise of the land which said that the Lord would give it to him and his descendants after him. He pleaded for a place there to bury his dead because he was found to be faithful and was recorded on the heavenly tablets as the friend of the Lord. 10 In its fourth year [2027] he took a wife for his son Isaac. Her name was Rebecca, the daughter of Bethuel (the son of Abraham's brother Nahor), the sister of Laban — Bethuel was their father — the daughter of Bethuel, the son of Milcah who was the wife of Abraham's brother Nahor. 11 Abraham married a third wife whose name was Keturah — one of the children of his household servants — when Hagar died prior to Sarah. 12 She gave birth to six sons for him — Zimran, Jokshan, Medai, Midian, Ishbak, and Shuah — during two weeks of years. 13 In the sixth week, during its second year [2046], Rebecca gave birth to two sons for Isaac: Jacob and Esau. Jacob was perfect and upright, while Esau was a harsh, rustic, and hairy man. Jacob used to live in tents. 14 When the boys grew up, Jacob learned the art of writing, but Esau did not learn it because he was a rustic man and a hunter. He learned the art of warfare, and everything that he did was harsh.[77] 15 Abraham loved Jacob but Isaac loved Esau. 16 As Abraham observed Esau's behavior, he realized that through Jacob he would have a reputation and descendants. He summoned Rebecca and gave her orders about Jacob because he saw that she loved Jacob much more than Esau. 17 He said to her: ‘My daughter, take care of my son Jacob because he will occupy my place on the earth and will prove a blessing among mankind and the glory of all the descendants of Shem. 18 For I know that the Lord will choose him as his own people who will be special from all who are on the surface of the earth. 19 My son Isaac now loves Esau more than Jacob, but I see that you rightly love Jacob. 20 Increase your favor to him still more; may your eyes look at him lovingly because he will prove to be a blessing for us on the earth from now and throughout all the history of the earth. 21 May your hands be strong and your mind be happy with your son Jacob because I love him much more than all my sons; for he will be blessed forever and his descendants will fill the entire earth. 22 If a man is able to count the sands on the earth, in the same way his descendants, too, will be counted. 23 May all the blessings with which the Lord blessed me and my descendants belong to Jacob and his descendants for all time. 24 Through his descendants may my name and the name of my ancestors Shem, Noah, Enoch, Malaleel, Enos, Seth, and Adam be blessed. 25 May they serve the purpose of laying heaven's foundations, making the earth firm, and renewing all the luminaries which are above the firmament.’ 26 Then he summoned Jacob into the presence of his mother Rebecca, kissed him, blessed him, and said: 27 ‘My dear son Jacob whom I myself love, may God bless you from above the firmament. May he give you all the blessings with which he blessed Adam, Enoch, Noah, and Shem. Everything that he said to me and everything that he promised to give me may he attach to you and your descendants until eternity — like the days of heaven above the earth. 28 May the spirits of Mastema not rule over you and your descendants to remove you from following the Lord who is your God from now and forever. 29 May the Lord God become your father and you his first-born son and people for all time. Go in peace, my son.’ 30 The two of them departed together from Abraham. 31 Rebecca loved Jacob with her entire heart and her entire being very much more than Esau; but Isaac loved Esau much more than Jacob.

20During the forty-second jubilee, in the first year of the seventh week [2052], Abraham summoned Ishmael and his twelve children, Isaac and his two children, and the six children of Keturah and their sons. 2 He ordered them to keep the way of the Lord so that they would do what is right and that they should love one another; that they should be like this in every war so that they could go against each one who was against them; and do what is just and right on the earth. 3 That they should circumcise their sons in the covenant which he had made with them; that they should not deviate to the right or left from all the ways which the Lord commanded us; that we should keep ourselves from all sexual impurity and uncleanness; and that we should dismiss all uncleanness and sexual impurity from among us. 4 If any woman or girl among you commits a sexual offense, burn her in fire; they are not to commit sexual offenses by following their eyes and their hearts so that they take wives for themselves from the Canaanite women, because the descendants of Canaan will be uprooted from the earth. 5 He told them about the punishment of the giants and the punishment of Sodom — how they were condemned because of their wickedness; because of the sexual impurity, uncleanness, and corruption among themselves they died in their sexual impurity. 6 ‘Now you keep yourselves from all sexual impurity and uncleanness and from all the contamination of sin so that you do not make our name into a curse, your entire lives into a reason for hissing and all your children into something that is destroyed by the sword. Then you will be accursed like Sodom, and all who remain of you like the people of Gomorrah. 7 I testify to you my sons: love the God of heaven and hold fast to all his commandments. Do not follow their idols and their uncleanness. 8 Do not make for yourselves gods that are molten images or statues because they are something empty and have no spirit in them. For they are made by hands, and all who trust in them all trust in nothing at all. Do not worship them or bow to them. 9 Rather, worship the most high God and bow to him continually. Look expectantly for his presence at all times, and do what is right and just before him so that he may be delighted with you, give you his favor, and make the rain to fall for you morning and evening; bless everything that you do — all that you have done on the earth; bless your food and water; and bless the products of your loins, the products of your land, the herds of your cattle, and the flocks of your sheep. 10 You will become a blessing on the earth, and all the nations of the earth will be delighted with you. They will bless your sons in my name so that they may be blessed as I am.’ 11 When he had given gifts to Ishmael, his sons, and Keturah’s sons and sent them away from his son Isaac, he gave everything to his son Isaac. 12 Ishmael, his sons, Keturah’s sons, and their sons went together and settled from Paran as far as the entrance of Babylon — in all the land toward the east opposite the desert. 13 They mixed with one another and were called Arabs and Ishmaelites.

21In the sixth year of the seventh week of this jubilee [2057] Abraham summoned his son Isaac and gave him orders as follows: ‘I have grown old but do not know when I will die because I have reached the full number of my days.’ 2 ‘Now I am 175 years of age. Throughout my entire lifetime I have continually remembered the Lord and tried to do his will wholeheartedly and to walk a straight course in all his ways.’ 3 ‘I have personally hated idols in order to keep myself from doing the will of the one who created me.’ 4 ‘For he is the living God. He is more holy, faithful, and just than anyone. With him there is no favoritism nor does he accept bribes because he is a just God and one who exercises judgment against all who transgress his commands and despise his covenant.’ 5 ‘Now you, my son, keep his commands, ordinances, and verdicts. Do not pursue unclean things, statues, or molten images.’ 6 ‘Do not eat any blood of an animal, cattle, or of any bird that flies in the sky.’ 7 ‘If you slaughter a victim for a peace offering that is acceptable, slaughter it and pour their blood onto the altar. All the fat of the sacrifice you will offer on the altar with the finest flour; and the offering kneaded with oil, with its libation — you will offer it all together on the altar as a sacrifice. It is an aroma that is pleasing before the Lord.’ 8 ‘As you place the fat of the peace offering on the fire which is on the altar, so also remove the fat which is on the stomach and all the fat which is on the internal organs and the two kidneys and all the fat which is on them and which is on the upper thighs and liver with the kidneys.’ 9 ‘All of this you will offer as a pleasant fragrance which is acceptable before the Lord, with its sacrifice and its libation as a pleasant fragrance — the food of the offering to the Lord.’ 10 ‘Eat its meat during that day and on the next day; but the sun is not to set on it on the next day until it is eaten. It is not to be left over for the third day because it is not acceptable to him. For it was not pleasing and is not therefore commanded. All who eat it will bring guilt on themselves because this is the way I found it written in the book of my ancestors, in the words of Enoch and the words of Noah.’ 11 ‘On all your offerings you are to place salt; let the covenant of salt not come to an end on any of your sacrifices before the Lord.’ 12 ‘Be careful about the kinds of woods that are used for sacrifice so that you bring no kinds of woods onto the altar except these only: cypress, silver-fir, almond, fir, pine, cedar, juniper, date, olive wood, myrtle, laurel wood, the cedar whose name is the juniper bush, and balsam.’ 13 ‘Of these kinds of woods place beneath the sacrifice on the altar ones that have been tested for their appearance. Do not place beneath it any split or dark wood; place there strong woods and firm ones without any defect — a perfect and new growth. Do not place there old wood, for its aroma has left — because there is no longer an aroma upon it as at first.’ 14 ‘Apart from these kinds of woods there is no other which you are to place beneath the sacrifice because their aroma is distinctive and the smell of their aroma goes up to heaven.’ 15 ‘Pay attention to this commandment and do it, my son, so that you may behave properly in all your actions.’ 16 ‘At all times be clean with respect to your body. Wash with water before you go to make an offering on the altar. Wash your hands and feet before you approach the altar. When you have finished making an offering, wash your hands and feet again.’ 17 ‘No blood is to be visible on you or on your clothing. My son, be careful with blood; be very careful to cover it with dirt.’ 18 ‘You are not, therefore, to consume any blood because the blood is the vital force. Do not consume any blood.’ 19 ‘Do not take a bribe for any human blood so that it may not be shed casually — without punishment — because it is the blood that is shed which makes the earth sin. The earth will not be able to become pure from human blood except through the blood of the one who shed it.’ 20 ‘Do not take a bribe or gift for human blood; blood for blood — then it will be acceptable before the most high God. He will be the protection of the good; and he will be this so that you may be kept from every evil one and that he may save you from every kind of death.’ 21 ‘I see, my son, that all the actions of mankind consist of sin and wickedness and all their deeds of impurity, worthlessness, and contamination. With them there is nothing that is right.’ 22 ‘Be careful not to walk in their ways or to tread in their paths so that you may not commit a mortal sin before the most high God. Then he will hide his face from you and will hand you over to the power of your offenses. He will uproot you from the earth and your descendants from beneath heaven. Your name and descendants will be destroyed from the entire earth.’ 23 ‘Depart from all their actions and from all their impurity. Keep the obligations of the most high God and do his will. Then you will act properly in every regard.’ 24 ‘He will bless you in all your actions. He will raise from you a righteous plant in all the earth throughout all the history of the earth. Then my name and your name will not be passed over in silence beneath heaven throughout all time.’ 25 ‘Go in peace, my son. May the most high God — my God and your God — strengthen you to do his will. May he bless all your descendants — the remnant of your descendants — throughout the history of eternity with every proper blessing so that you may become a blessing throughout the entire earth.’ 26 Then he left him feeling happy.

22In the first week in the forty-fourth jubilee, during the second year [2109] — it is the year in which Abraham died — Isaac and Ishmael came from the well of the oath to their father Abraham to celebrate the festival of weeks (this is the festival of the firstfruits of the harvest). Abraham was happy that his two sons had come. 2 For Isaac's possessions in Beersheba were numerous. Isaac used to go and inspect his possessions and then return to his father. 3 At that time Ishmael came to see his father, and all of them came together. Isaac slaughtered a sacrifice for the offering; he offered it on his father's altar which he had made in Hebron. 4 He sacrificed a peace offering and prepared a joyful feast in front of his brother Ishmael. Rebecca made fresh bread out of new wheat. She gave it to her son Jacob to bring to his father Abraham some of the firstfruits of the land so that he would eat it and bless the Creator of everything before he died. 5 Isaac, too, sent through Jacob his excellent peace offering and wine to his father Abraham for him to eat and drink. 6 He ate and drank. Then he blessed the most high God who created the heavens and the earth, who made all the fat things of the earth, and gave them to mankind to eat, drink, and bless their Creator. 7 ‘Now I offer humble thanks to you, my God, because you have shown me this day. I am now 175 years of age, old and with my time completed. All of my days have proved to be peace for me.’ 8 ‘The enemy's sword has not subdued me in anything at all which you have given me and my sons during all my lifetime until today.’ 9 ‘May your kindness and peace rest on your servant and on the descendants of his sons so that they, of all the nations of the earth, may become your chosen people and heritage from now until all the time of the earth's history throughout all ages.’[78] 10 He summoned Jacob and said to him: ‘My son Jacob, may the God of all bless and strengthen you to do before him what is right and what he wants. May he choose you and your descendants to be his people for his heritage in accord with his will throughout all time. Now you, my son Jacob, come close and kiss me.’ 11 So he came close and kissed him. Then he said: ‘May my son Jacob and all his sons be blessed to the most high Lord throughout all ages. May the Lord give you righteous descendants, and may he sanctify some of your sons within the entire earth. May the nations serve you, and may all the nations bow before your descendants.’ 12 ‘Be strong before people and continue to exercise power among all of Seth's descendants. Then your ways and the ways of your sons will be proper so that they may be a holy people.’ 13 ‘May the most high God give you all the blessings with which he blessed me and with which he blessed Noah and Adam. May they come to rest on the sacred head of your descendants throughout each and every generation and forever.’ 14 ‘May he purify you from all filthy pollution so that you may be pardoned for all the guilt of your sins of ignorance. May he strengthen and bless you; may you possess the entire earth.’ 15 ‘May he renew his covenant with you so that you may be for him the people of his heritage throughout all ages. May he truly and rightly be God for you and your descendants throughout all the time of the earth.’ 16 ‘Now you, my son Jacob, remember what I say and keep the commandments of your father Abraham. Separate from the nations, and do not eat with them. Do not act as they do, and do not become their companion, for their actions are something that is impure, and all their ways are defiled and something abominable and detestable.’[79] 17 ‘They offer their sacrifices to the dead, and they worship demons. They eat in tombs, and everything they do is empty and worthless.’ 18 ‘They have no mind to think, and their eyes do not see what they do and how they err in saying to a piece of wood: “You are my god”; or to a stone: “You are my Lord; you are my deliverer.” They have no mind.’ 19 ‘As for you, my son Jacob, may the most high God help you and the God of heaven bless you. May he remove you from their impurity and from all their error.’ 20 ‘Be careful, my son Jacob, not to marry a woman from all the descendants of Canaan's daughters, because all of his descendants are meant for being uprooted from the earth.’ 21 ‘For through Ham's sin Canaan erred. All of his descendants and all of his people who remain will be destroyed from the earth; on the day of judgment there will be no one descended from him who will be saved.’ 22 ‘There is no hope in the land of the living for all who worship idols and for those who are odious. For they will descend to sheol and will go to the place of judgment. There will be no memory of them on the earth. As the people of Sodom were taken from the earth, so all who worship idols will be taken.’ 23 ‘Do not be afraid, my son Jacob, and do not be upset, son of Abraham. May the most high God keep you from corruption; and from every erroneous way may he rescue you.’ 24 ‘This house I have built for myself to put my name on it upon the earth. It has been given to you and to your descendants forever. It will be called Abraham's house. It has been given to you and your descendants forever because you will build my house and will establish my name before God until eternity. Your descendants and your name will remain throughout all the history of the earth.’ 25 Then he finished commanding and blessing him. 26 The two of them lay down together on one bed. Jacob slept in the bosom of his grandfather Abraham. He kissed him seven times, and his feelings and mind were happy about him. 27 He blessed him wholeheartedly and said: ‘The most high God is the God of all and Creator of everything who brought me from Ur of the Chaldeans to give me this land in order that I should possess it forever and raise up holy descendants so that they may be blessed forever.’ 28 Then he blessed Jacob: ‘My son, with whom I am exceedingly happy with all my mind and feelings — may your grace and mercy continue on him and his descendants for all time.’ 29 ‘Do not leave or neglect him from now until the time of eternity. May your eyes be open on him and his descendants so that they may watch over them and so that you may bless and sanctify them as the people of your heritage.’ 30 ‘Bless him with all your blessings from now until all the time of eternity. With your entire will renew your covenant and your grace with him and with his descendants throughout all the history of the earth.’

23He put two of Jacob's fingers on his eyes and blessed the God of gods. He covered his face, stretched out his feet, fell asleep forever, and was gathered to his ancestors. 2 During all of this Jacob was lying in his bosom and was unaware that his grandfather Abraham had died. 3 When Jacob awakened from his sleep, there was Abraham cold as ice. He said: ‘Father, father!’ But he said nothing to him. Then he knew that he was dead. 4 He got up from his bosom and ran and told his mother Rebecca. Rebecca went to Isaac at night and told him. They went together — and Jacob with them carrying a lamp in his hands. When they came, they found Abraham's corpse lying there. 5 Isaac fell on his father's face, cried, and kissed him. 6 After the report was heard in the household of Abraham, his son Ishmael set out and came to his father Abraham. He mourned for his father Abraham — he and all Abraham's household. They mourned very much. 7 They — both of his sons Isaac and Ishmael — buried him in the double cave near his wife Sarah. All the people of his household as well as Isaac, Ishmael, and all their sons and Keturah's sons in their places mourned for him for 40 days. Then the tearful mourning for Abraham was completed. 8 He had lived for three jubilees and four weeks of years — 175 years — when he completed his lifetime. He had grown old and his time was completed.[80] 9 For the times of the ancients were 19 jubilees for their lifetimes. After the flood they started to decrease from 19 jubilees, to be fewer with respect to jubilees, to age quickly, and to have their times be completed in view of the numerous difficulties and through the wickedness of their ways — with the exception of Abraham. 10 For Abraham was perfect with the Lord in everything that he did — being properly pleasing throughout all his lifetime. And yet even he had not completed four jubilees during his lifetime when he became old — in view of wickedness — and reached the end of his time. 11 All the generations that will come into being from now until the great day of judgment will grow old quickly — before they complete two jubilees. It will be their knowledge that will leave them because of their old age; all of their knowledge will depart. 12 At that time, if a man lives a jubilee and one-half of years, it will be said about him: ‘He has lived for a long time.’ But the greater part of his time will be characterized by difficulties, toil, and distress without peace, 13 because there will be blow upon blow, wound upon wound, distress upon distress, bad news upon bad news, disease upon disease, and every kind of bad punishment like this, one with the other: disease and stomach pains; snow, hail, and frost; fever, cold, and numbness; famine, death, sword, captivity, and every sort of blow and difficulty. 14 All of this will happen to the evil generation which makes the earth commit sin through sexual impurity, contamination, and their detestable actions.[81] 15 Then it will be said: ‘The days of the ancients were numerous — as many as 1000 years — and good. But now the days of our lives, if a man has lived for a long time, are 70 years, and, if he is strong, 80 years.’ All are evil, and there is no peace during the days of that evil generation.[82] 16 During that generation the children will find fault with their fathers and elders because of sin and injustice, because of what they say and the great evils that they commit, and because of their abandoning the covenant which the Lord had made between them and himself so that they should observe and perform all his commands, ordinances, and all his laws without deviating to the left or right. 17 For all have acted wickedly; every mouth speaks what is sinful. Everything that they do is impure and something detestable; all their ways are characterized by contamination and corruption. 18 The earth will indeed be destroyed because of all that they do. There will be no produce from the vine and no oil because what they do constitutes complete disobedience. All will be destroyed together — animals, cattle, birds, and all fish of the sea — because of mankind. 19 One group will struggle with another — the young with the old, the old with the young; the poor with the rich, the lowly with the great; and the needy with the ruler — regarding the law and the covenant. For they have forgotten commandment, covenant, festival, month, sabbath, jubilee, and every verdict. 20 They will stand up with swords and warfare in order to bring them back to the way; but they will not be brought back until much blood is shed on the earth by each group. 21 Those who escape will not turn from their wickedness to the right way because all of them will elevate themselves for the purpose of cheating and through wealth so that one takes everything that belongs to another. They will mention the great name but neither truly nor rightly. They will defile the holy of holies with the impure corruption of their contamination. 22 There will be a great punishment from the Lord for the actions of that generation. He will deliver themselves to the sword, judgment, captivity, plundering, and devouring. 23 He will arouse against them the sinful Gentiles who will have no mercy or kindness for them and who will show partiality to no one, whether old, young, or anyone at all, because they are evil and strong so that they are more evil than all mankind. They will cause chaos in Israel and sin against Jacob. Much blood will be shed on the earth, and there will be no one who gathers up corpses or who buries them.[83] 24 At that time they will cry out and call and pray to be rescued from the power of the sinful nations, but there will be no one who rescues them. 25 The children's heads will turn white with gray hair. A child who is three weeks of age will look old like one whose years are 100, and their condition will be destroyed through distress and pain. 26 In those days the children will begin to study the laws, to seek out the commands, and to return to the right way. 27 The days will begin to become numerous and increase, and mankind as well — generation by generation and day by day until their lifetimes approach 1000 years and to more years than the number of days had been. 28 There will be no old man, nor anyone who has lived out his lifetime, because all of them will be infants and children.[84] 29 They will complete and live their entire lifetimes peacefully and joyfully. There will be neither a satan nor any evil one who will destroy. For their entire lifetimes will be times of blessing and healing.[85] 30 Then the Lord will heal his servants. They will rise and see great peace. He will expel his enemies. The righteous will see this, offer praise, and be very happy forever and ever. They will see all their punishments and curses on their enemies.[86] 31 Their bones will rest in the earth and their spirits will be very happy. They will know that the Lord is one who executes judgment but shows kindness to hundreds and thousands and to all who love him.[87] 32 Now you, Moses, write down these words because this is how it is written and entered in the testimony of the heavenly tablets for the history of eternity.

24After Abraham's death, the Lord blessed his son Isaac. He set out from Hebron and went during the first year of the third week of this jubilee [2073] and lived at the well of the vision for seven years. 2 During the first year of the fourth week [2080] a famine — different than the first famine which had occurred in Abraham's lifetime — began in the land. 3 When Jacob was cooking lentil porridge, Esau came hungry from the field. He said to his brother Jacob: ‘Give me some of this wheat porridge.’ But Jacob said to him: ‘Hand over to me your birthright which belongs to the first-born, and then I will give you food and some of this porridge as well.’ 4 Esau said to himself: ‘I will die. What good will this right of the first-born do?’ So he said to Jacob: ‘I hereby give it to you.’ 5 Jacob said to him: ‘Swear to me today.’ So he swore to him. 6 Then Jacob gave the food and porridge to his brother Esau, and he ate until he was full. Esau repudiated the right of the first-born. This is why he was named Esau and Edom: because of the wheat porridge which Jacob gave him in exchange for his right of the first-born. 7 So Jacob became the older one, but Esau was lowered from his prominent position. 8 As there was a famine over the land, Isaac set out to go down to Egypt during the second year of this week [2081]. He went to Gerar to the Philistine king Abimelech. 9 The Lord appeared to him and told him: ‘Do not go down to Egypt. Stay in the land that I will tell you. Live as a foreigner in that land. I will be with you and bless you, 10 because I will give this entire land to you and your descendants. I will carry out the terms of my oath which I swore to your father Abraham. I will make your descendants as numerous as the stars of the sky. I will give this entire land to your descendants. 11 All the peoples of the earth will be blessed through your descendants because of the fact that your father obeyed me and kept my obligations, commands, laws, statutes, and covenant. Now obey me and live in this land.’ 12 So he lived in Gerar for three weeks of years. 13 Abimelech gave orders as follows regarding him and everything that belonged to him: ‘Any man who touches him or anything that belongs to him is to die.’ 14 Isaac prospered among the Philistines and possessed much property: cattle, sheep, camels, donkeys, and much property. 15 They planted seeds in the land of the Philistines, and he harvested a hundred ears. When Isaac had become very great, the Philistines grew jealous of him. 16 As for all the wells that Abraham's servants had dug during Abraham's lifetime — the Philistines covered them up after Abraham's death and filled them with dirt. 17 Then Abimelech told Isaac: ‘Leave us because you have become much too great for us.’ So Isaac left that place during the first year of the seventh week [2101]. He lived as a foreigner in the valleys of Gerar. 18 They again dug the water wells which the servants of his father Abraham had dug and the Philistines had covered up after his father Abraham's death. He called them by the names that his father Abraham had given them. 19 Isaac's servants dug wells in the wadi and found flowing water. Then the shepherds of Gerar quarreled with Isaac's shepherds and said: ‘This water is ours.’ So Isaac named that well Difficult because they have been difficult for us. 20 They dug a second well, and they fought about it too. He named it Narrow. When he had set out, they dug another well but did not quarrel about it. He named it Wide. Isaac said: ‘Now the Lord has enlarged a place for us, and we have increased in numbers on the land.’ 21 He went up from there to the well of the oath during the first year of the first week in the forty-fourth jubilee [2108]. 22 The Lord appeared to him that night — on the first of the first month — and said to him: ‘I am the God of your father Abraham. Do not be afraid because I am with you and will bless you. I will certainly make your descendants as numerous as the sand of the earth for the sake of my servant Abraham.’ 23 There he built the altar which his father Abraham had first built. He called on the Lord's name and offered a sacrifice to the God of his father Abraham. 24 They dug a well and found flowing water. 25 But when Isaac's servants dug another well, they did not find water. They went and told Isaac that they had not found water. Isaac said: ‘On this very day I have sworn an oath to the Philistines; now this has happened to us.’ 26 He named that place the well of the oath because there he had sworn an oath to Abimelech, his companion Ahuzzath, and his guard Phicol. 27 On that day Isaac realized that he had sworn an oath to them under pressure to make peace with them. 28 On that day Isaac cursed the Philistines and said: ‘May the Philistines be cursed from among all peoples at the day of anger and wrath. May the Lord make them into an object of derision and a curse, into an object of anger and wrath in the hands of the sinful nations and in the hands of the Kittim. 29 Whoever escapes from the enemy's sword and from the Kittim, may the just nation in judgment eradicate from beneath the sky, for they will become enemies and opponents to my sons during their times on the earth. 30 They will have no one left or anyone who is rescued on the day of judgmental anger, for all the descendants of the Philistines are meant for destruction, eradication, and removal from the earth. All of Caphtor will no longer have either name or descendants left upon the earth. 31 For even if he should go up to the sky, from there he would come down; even if he should become powerful on the earth, from there he will be torn out. Even if he should hide himself among the nations, from there he will be uprooted; even if he should go down to Sheol, there his punishment will increase. There he will have no peace. 32 Even if he should go into captivity through the power of those who seek his life, they will kill him along the way. There will remain for him neither name nor descendants on the entire earth, because he is going to an eternal curse. 33 This is the way it has been written and inscribed regarding him on the heavenly tablets — to do this to him on the day of judgment so that he may be eradicated from the earth.

25In the second year of this week, in this jubilee [2109], Rebecca summoned her son Jacob and spoke to him: ‘My son, do not marry any of the Canaanite women like your brother Esau who has married two wives from the descendants of Canaan. They have embittered my life with all the impure things that they do because everything that they do consists of sexual impurity and lewdness. They have no decency because what they do is evil.’ 2 ‘I, my son, love you very much; my heart and my affection bless you at all times of the day and watches of the nights.’ 3 ‘Now, my son, listen to me. Do as your mother wishes. Do not marry any of the women of this land but someone from my father's house and from my father's clan. Marry someone from my father's house. The most high God will bless you; your family will become a righteous family and your descendants will be holy.’ 4 Then Jacob spoke with his mother Rebecca and said to her: ‘Mother, I am now nine weeks of years [= 63 years] and have known no woman. I have neither touched one nor become engaged to one, nor have I even considered marrying any women of all the descendants of Canaan's daughters.’ 5 ‘For I recall, mother, what our father Abraham ordered me — that I should not marry anyone from all the descendants of Canaan's house. For I will marry someone from the descendants of my father's house and from my family.’ 6 ‘Earlier I heard, mother, that daughters had been born to your brother Laban. I have set my mind on them for the purpose of marrying one of them.’ 7 ‘For this reason I have kept myself from sinning and from becoming corrupted in any ways during my entire lifetime because father Abraham gave me many orders about lewdness and sexual impurity.’ 8 ‘Despite everything he ordered me, my brother has been quarreling with me for the last 22 years and has often said to me: “My brother, marry one of the sisters of my two wives.” But I have not been willing to do as he did.’ 9 ‘I swear in your presence, mother, that during my entire lifetime I will not marry any of the descendants of Canaan's daughters nor will I do what is wrong as my brother has done.’ 10 ‘Do not be afraid, mother. Be assured that I will do as you wish. I will behave rightly and will never conduct myself corruptly.’ 11 Then she lifted her face to heaven, extended her fingers, and opened her mouth. She blessed the most high God who had created the heavens and the earth and gave him thanks and praise. 12 She said: ‘May God be blessed, and may his name be blessed forever and ever — he who gave me Jacob, a pure son and a holy offspring, for he belongs to you. May his descendants be yours throughout all time, throughout the history of eternity.’ 13 ‘Bless him, Lord, and place a righteous blessing in my mouth so that I may bless him.’ 14 At that time the spirit of righteousness descended into her mouth. She put her two hands on Jacob's head and said: 15 ‘Blessed are you, righteous Lord, God of the ages; and may he bless you more than all the human race. My son, may he provide the right path for you and reveal what is right to your descendants.’ 16 ‘May he multiply your sons during your lifetime; may they rise in number to the months of the year. May their children be more numerous and great than the stars of the sky; may their number be larger than the sands of the sea.’ 17 ‘May he give them this pleasant land as he said he would give it for all time to Abraham and his descendants after him; may they own it as an eternal possession.’ 18 ‘Son, may I see your blessed children during my lifetime; may all your descendants become blessed and holy descendants.’ 19 ‘As you have given rest to your mother's spirit during her lifetime, so may the womb of the one who gave birth to you bless you. My affection and my breasts bless you; my mouth and my tongue praise you greatly.’ 20 ‘Increase and spread out in the land; may your descendants be perfect throughout all eternity in the joy of heaven and earth. May your descendants be delighted, and, on the great day of peace, may they have peace.’ 21 ‘May your name and your descendants continue until all ages. May the most high God be their God; may the righteous God live with them; and may his sanctuary be built among them into all ages.’ 22 ‘May the one who blesses you be blessed and anyone who curses you falsely be cursed.’ 23 She then kissed him and said to him: ‘May the eternal Lord love you as your mother's heart and her affection are delighted with you and bless you.’ She then stopped blessing him.

26During the seventh year of this week [2114] Isaac summoned his older son Esau and said to him: 'My son, I have grown old and now have difficulty seeing, but I do not know when I will die.' 2 Now take your hunting gear — your quiver and your bow — and go to the field. Hunt on my behalf and catch something for me, my son. Then prepare some food for me just as I like it and bring it to me so that I may eat it and bless you before I die.' 3 Now Rebecca was listening as Isaac was talking to Esau. 4 When Esau went out early to the open territory to trap something, catch it, and bring it to his father, 5 Rebecca summoned her son Jacob and said to him: 'I have just heard your father Isaac saying to your brother Esau: “Trap something for me, prepare me some food, bring it to me, and let me eat it. Then I will bless you in the Lord's presence before I die.”' 6 Now, therefore, listen, my son, to what I am ordering you. Go to your flock and take for me two excellent kids. Let me prepare them as food for your father just as he likes it. You are to take it to your father, and he is to eat it so that he may bless you in the Lord's presence before he dies and you may be blessed.' 7 But Jacob said to his mother Rebecca: 'Mother, I will not be sparing about anything that my father eats and that pleases him, but I am afraid, mother, that he will recognize my voice and wish to touch me.' 8 You know that I am smooth while my brother Esau is hairy. I will look to him like someone who does what is wrong. I would be doing something that he did not order me to do, and he would get angry at me. Then I would bring a curse on myself, not a blessing.' 9 But his mother Rebecca said to him: 'Let your curse be on me, my son; just obey me.' 10 So Jacob obeyed his mother Rebecca. He went and took two excellent, fat kids and brought them to his mother. His mother prepared them as he liked them. 11 Rebecca then took her older son Esau's favorite clothes that were present with her in the house. She dressed her younger son Jacob in them and placed the goatskins on his forearms and on the exposed parts of his neck. 12 She then put the food and bread which she had prepared in her son Jacob's hand. 13 He went in to his father and said: 'I am your son. I have done as you told me. Get up, have a seat, and eat some of what I have caught, father, so that you may bless me.' 14 Isaac said to his son: 'How have you managed to find it so quickly, my son?' 15 Jacob said: 'It was your God who made me find it in front of me.' 16 Then Isaac said to him: 'Come close and let me touch you, my son, so that I can tell whether you are my son Esau or not.' 17 Jacob came close to his father Isaac. When he touched him he said: 18 'The voice is Jacob's voice, but the forearms are Esau's forearms.' He did not recognize him because there was a turn of affairs from heaven to distract his mind. Isaac did not recognize him because his forearms were hairy like Esau's forearms so that he should bless him. 19 He said: 'Are you my son Esau?' He said: 'I am your son.' Then he said: 'Bring it to me and let me eat some of what you have caught, my son, so that I may bless you.' 20 He then brought him food and he ate; he brought him wine and he drank. 21 His father Isaac said to him: 'Come close and kiss me, my son.' He came close and kissed him. 22 When he smelled the fragrant aroma of his clothes, he blessed him and said: 'Indeed the aroma of my son is like the aroma of a field which the Lord has blessed.' 23 May the Lord grant to you and multiply for you your share of the dew of heaven and the dew of the earth; may he multiply grain and oil for you. May the nations serve you, and the peoples bow to you. 24 Become lord of your brothers; may the sons of your mother bow to you. May all the blessings with which the Lord has blessed me and blessed my father Abraham belong to you and your descendants forever. May the one who curses you be cursed, and the one who blesses you be blessed.' 25 After Isaac had finished blessing his son Jacob and Jacob had left his father Isaac, he hid and his brother Esau arrived from his hunting. 26 He, too, prepared food and brought it to his father. He said to his father: 'Let my father rise and eat some of what I have caught so that you may bless me.' 27 His father Isaac said to him: 'Who are you?' He said to him: 'I am your first-born, your son Esau. I have done as you ordered me.' 28 Then Isaac was absolutely dumbfounded and said: 'Who was the one who hunted, caught something for me, and brought it? I ate some of everything before you came and blessed him. He and all his descendants are to be blessed forever.' 29 When Esau heard what his father Isaac said, he cried out very loudly and bitterly and said to his father: 'Bless me too, father.' 30 He said to him: 'Your brother came deceptively and took your blessings.' He said: 'Now I know the reason why he was named Jacob. This is now the second time that he has cheated me. The first time he took my birthright and now he has taken my blessing.' 31 He said: 'Have you not saved a blessing for me, father?' Isaac said in reply to Esau: 'I have just now designated him as your lord. I have given him all his brothers to be his servants. I have strengthened him with an abundance of grain, wine, and oil. So, what shall I now do for you, my son?' 32 Esau said to his father Isaac: 'Do you have just one blessing, father? Bless me too, father.' Then Esau cried loudly. 33 Isaac said in reply to him: 'The place where you live is indeed to be away from the dew of the earth and from the dew of heaven above.' 34 You will live by your sword and will serve your brother. May it be that, if you become great and remove his yoke from your neck, then you will commit an offense fully worthy of death and your descendants will be eradicated from beneath the sky.' 35 Esau kept threatening Jacob because of the blessing with which his father had blessed him. He said to himself: 'The time of mourning for my father is now approaching. Then I will kill my brother Jacob.'

27Rebecca was told in a dream what her older son Esau had said. So she sent and summoned her younger son Jacob and said to him: 2 ‘Your brother Esau will now try to get revenge against you by killing you.’ 3 ‘Now, my son, listen to me. Set out and run away to my brother Laban — to Haran. Stay with him for a few days until your brother’s anger turns away and he stops being angry at you and forgets everything that you have done to him. Then I will send and take you back from there.’ 4 Jacob said: ‘I am not afraid. If he wishes to kill me, I will kill him.’ 5 She said to him: ‘May I not lose my two sons in one day.’ 6 Jacob said to his mother Rebecca: ‘You are indeed aware that my father has grown old, and I notice that he has difficulty seeing. If I left him, it would be a bad thing in his view because I would be leaving him and going away from you. My father would be angry and curse me. I will not go. If he sends me, only then will I go.’ 7 Rebecca said to Jacob: ‘I will go in and tell him. Then he will send you.’ 8 Rebecca went in and said to Isaac: ‘I despise my life because of the two Hittite women whom Esau has married. If Jacob marries one of the women of the land who are like them, why should I remain alive any longer, because the Canaanite women are evil?’ 9 So Isaac summoned his son Jacob, blessed and instructed him, and said to him: 10 ‘Do not marry any of the Canaanite women. Set out and go to Mesopotamia, to the house of Bethuel, your mother’s father. From there take a wife from the daughters of Laban, your mother’s brother. 11 May the God of Shaddai bless you; may he make you increase, become numerous, and be a throng of nations. May he give the blessings of my father Abraham to you and to your descendants after you so that you may possess the land where you wander as a foreigner — and all the land which the Lord gave to Abraham. Have a safe trip, my son.’ 12 So Isaac sent Jacob away. He went to Mesopotamia, to Laban, the son of Bethuel the Aramean — the brother of Rebecca, Jacob’s mother. 13 After Jacob had set out to go to Mesopotamia, Rebecca grieved for her son and kept crying. 14 Isaac said to Rebecca: ‘My sister, do not cry for my son Jacob because he will go safely and return safely.’ 15 ‘The most high God will guard him from every evil and will be with him because he will not abandon him throughout his entire lifetime.’ 16 ‘For I well know that his ways will be directed favorably wherever he goes until he returns safely to us and we see that he is safe.’ 17 ‘Do not be afraid for him, my sister, because he is just in his way. He is perfect; he is a true man. He will not be abandoned. Do not cry.’ 18 So Isaac was consoling Rebecca regarding her son Jacob, and he blessed him. 19 Jacob left the well of the oath to go to Haran during the first year of the second week of the forty-fourth jubilee [2115]. He arrived at Luz, which is on the mountain — that is, Bethel — on the first of the first month of this week. He arrived at the place in the evening, turned off the road to the west of the highway during this night, and slept there because the sun had set. 20 He took one of the stones of that place and set it at the place where his head would be beneath that tree. He was traveling alone and fell asleep. 21 That night he dreamed that a ladder was set up on the earth and its top was reaching heaven; that angels of the Lord were going up and down on it; and that the Lord was standing on it. 22 He spoke with Jacob and said: ‘I am the God of Abraham your father and the God of Isaac. The land on which you are sleeping I will give to you and your descendants after you.’ 23 ‘Your descendants will be like the sands of the earth. You will become numerous toward the west, the east, the north, and the south. All the families of the nations will be blessed through you and your descendants.’ 24 ‘As for me, I will be with you. I will guard you wherever you go. I will bring you back safely to this land because I will not abandon you until I have done everything that I have said to you.’ 25 Jacob said in his sleep: ‘This place is indeed the house of the Lord, but I did not know it.’ He was afraid and said: ‘This place, which is nothing but the house of the Lord, is awe-inspiring; and this is the gate of heaven.’ 26 Jacob, upon rising early in the morning, took the stone which he had placed at his head and set it up as a pillar for a marker. He poured oil on top of it and named that place Bethel. But at first the name of this area was Luz. 27 Jacob vowed to the Lord: ‘If the Lord is with me and guards me on this road on which I am traveling and gives me food to eat and clothes to wear so that I return safely to my father’s house, then the Lord will be my God. Also, this stone which I have set up as a pillar for a marker in this place is to become the house of the Lord. Everything that you have given me I will indeed tithe to you, my God.’

28He set out on foot and came to the eastern land, to Laban, Rebecca’s brother. He remained with him and served him in exchange for his daughter Rachel for one week. 2 During the first year of the third week [2122] he said to him: ‘Give me my wife for whom I have served you seven years.’ Laban said to Jacob: ‘I will give you your wife.’ 3 Laban prepared a banquet, took his older daughter Leah, and gave her to Jacob as a wife. He gave her Zilpah, his servant girl, as a maid. But Jacob was not aware of this because Jacob thought she was Rachel. 4 He went in to her, and, to his surprise, she was Leah. Jacob was angry at Laban and said to him: ‘Why have you acted this way? Was it not for Rachel that I served you and not for Leah? Why have you wronged me? Take your daughter and I will go because you have done a bad thing to me.’ 5 For Jacob loved Rachel more than Leah because Leah’s eyes were weak, though her figure was very lovely; but Rachel’s eyes were beautiful, her figure was lovely, and she was very pretty.[88] 6 Laban said to Jacob: ‘It is not customary in our country to give the younger daughter before the older one. It is not right to do this because this is the way it is ordained and written on the heavenly tablets: that no one should give his younger daughter before his older one, but he should first give the older and after her the younger. Regarding the man who acts in this way, they will enter a sin in heaven. There is no one who is just and does this because this action is evil in the Lord’s presence. 7 Now you order the Israelites not to do this. They are neither to take nor give the younger before giving precedence to the older because it is very wicked.’ 8 Laban said to Jacob: ‘Let the seven days of the banquet for this one go by; then I will give you Rachel so that you serve me a second term of seven years by tending my flocks as you did during the first week.’ 9 At the time when the seven days of Leah’s banquet had passed by, Laban gave Rachel to Jacob so that he would serve him a second term of seven years. He gave her Bilhah, Zilpah’s sister, as a maid. 10 He served seven years a second time for Rachel because Leah had been given to him for nothing. 11 When the Lord opened Leah’s womb, she became pregnant and gave birth to a son for Jacob. He named him Reuben on the fourteenth day of the ninth month during the first year of the third week [2122]. 12 Now Rachel’s womb was closed because the Lord saw that Leah was hated but Rachel was loved. 13 Jacob again went in to Leah. She became pregnant and gave birth to a second son for Jacob. He named him Simeon on the twenty-first of the tenth month during the third year of this week [2124]. 14 Jacob again went in to Leah. She became pregnant and gave birth to a third son for him. He named him Levi on the first of the first month during the sixth year of this week [2127]. 15 He went in yet another time to her, and she gave birth to a fourth son. He named him Judah on the fifteenth of the third month during the first year of the fourth week [2129]. 16 Through all of this Rachel was jealous of Leah, since she was not bearing children. She said to Jacob: ‘Give me children.’ Jacob said to her: ‘Have I withheld the product of your womb from you? Have I abandoned you?’ 17 When Rachel saw that Leah had given birth to four sons for Jacob — Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah — she said to him: ‘Go in to my servant girl Bilhah. Then she will become pregnant and give birth to a son for me.’ 18 So he went in, she became pregnant, and gave birth to a son for him. He named him Dan on the ninth of the sixth month during the sixth year of the third week [2127]. 19 Jacob once again went in to Bilhah. She became pregnant and gave birth to a second son for Jacob. Rachel named him Naphtali on the fifth of the seventh month during the second year of the fourth week [2130]. 20 When Leah saw that she had become barren and was not bearing children, she grew jealous of Rachel and also gave her maid Zilpah to Jacob as a wife. She became pregnant and gave birth to a son. Leah named him Gad on the twelfth of the eighth month during the third year of the fourth week [2131]. 21 He again went in to her, and she became pregnant and gave birth to a second son for him. Leah named him Asher on the second of the eleventh month during the fifth year of the fourth week [2133]. 22 Then Jacob went in to Leah. She became pregnant and gave birth to a son for Jacob. He named him Issachar on the fourth day of the fifth month during the fourth year of the fourth week [2132]. She gave him to a nurse. 23 Again Jacob went in to her. She became pregnant and gave birth to twins: a son and a daughter. She named the son Zebulun and the daughter Dinah on the seventh of the seventh month, during the sixth year, the fourth week [2134]. 24 Then the Lord was kind to Rachel. He opened her womb, and she became pregnant and gave birth to a son. She named him Joseph on the first of the fourth month, during the sixth year in this fourth week [2134]. 25 At the time when Joseph was born, Jacob said to Laban: ‘Give me my wives and my children so that I may go to my father Isaac and make a house for myself, because I have completed the years during which I served you in exchange for your two daughters. Then I will go to my father’s house.’ 26 Laban said to Jacob: ‘Stay with me in exchange for your wages. Tend my flocks for me again and take your wages.’ 27 They agreed among themselves that he would give him his wages; all the lambs and kids which were born a dark gray color and dark mixed with white were to be his wages. 28 All the dark-colored sheep kept giving birth to all with variously colored spots of every kind and various shades of dark gray. The sheep would again give birth to lambs which looked like them. All with spots belonged to Jacob and those without spots to Laban. 29 Jacob’s possessions grew very large; he acquired cattle, sheep, donkeys, camels, and male and female servants. 30 When Laban and his sons became jealous of Jacob, Laban took back his sheep from him and kept his eye on him for evil purposes.

29After Rachel had given birth to Joseph, Laban went off to shear his sheep because they were a three-day journey removed from him. 2 Jacob saw that Laban was going off to shear his sheep and summoned Leah and Rachel. He spoke tenderly with them so that they would come with him to the land of Canaan. 3 For he told them how he had seen everything in a dream and everything about his statement to him that he would return to his father’s house. They said: ‘We will go with you wherever you go.’ 4 Jacob blessed the God of his father Isaac and the God of his grandfather Abraham. He set about loading up his wives and his children and took all his possessions. After he had crossed the river, he reached the land of Gilead. But Jacob had concealed his plan from Laban and had not told him. 5 During the seventh year of the fourth week [2135] Jacob returned to Gilead on the twenty-first day of the first month. Laban pursued him and found Jacob on the mountain of Gilead on the thirteenth day in the third month. 6 But the Lord did not allow him to harm Jacob because he had appeared to him at night in a dream, and Laban told Jacob. 7 On the fifteenth of those days Jacob prepared a banquet for Laban and all who had come with him. That day Jacob swore to Laban and Laban to Jacob that neither would commit an offense against the other on the mountain of Gilead with bad intentions. 8 There he made a mound as a testimony; for this reason that place is named the mound of testimony after this mound. 9 But at first the land of Gilead was named the land of Rafaem because it was the land of the Rafaim. The Rafaim were born, giants whose heights were ten cubits, nine cubits, eight cubits, and down to seven cubits. 10 The places where they lived extended from the land of the Ammonites as far as Mt. Hermon. Their royal centers were Karnaim, Ashtarot, Edrei, Misur, and Beon. 11 The Lord destroyed them because of the evil things they did, for they were very wicked. The Amorites — evil and sinful — lived in their place. Today there is no nation that has matched all their sins. They no longer have length of life on the earth. 12 Jacob sent Laban away, and he went to Mesopotamia, to the eastern country. But Jacob returned to the land of Gilead. 13 He crossed the Jabbok on the eleventh of the ninth month, and on the same day his brother Esau came to him. They were reconciled with one another. Then he went from him to the land of Seir, while Jacob lived in tents. 14 In the first year of the fifth week during this jubilee [2136] he crossed the Jordan. He settled on the other side of the Jordan and tended his sheep from the sea of Fahahat as far as Bethshan, Dothan, and the forest of Akrabbim. 15 He sent his father Isaac some of all his possessions: clothing, food, meat, things to drink, milk, butter, cheese, and some dates from the valley. 16 To his mother Rebecca, too, he sent goods four times per year — between the seasons of the months, between plowing and harvest, between autumn and the rainy season, and between winter and spring — to Abraham’s tower. 17 For Isaac had returned from the well of the oath, had gone up to the tower of his father Abraham, and had settled there away from his son Esau. 18 Because, at the time when Jacob went to Mesopotamia, Esau had married Mahalath, Ishmael’s daughter. He had gathered all his father’s flocks and his wives and had gone up and lived in Mt. Seir. He had left his father Isaac alone at the well of the oath. 19 So Isaac had gone up from the well of the oath and settled at the tower of his father Abraham in the mountain of Hebron. 20 From there Jacob would send everything that he was sending to his father and mother from time to time — everything they needed. Then they would bless Jacob with all their mind and with all their being.

30During the first year of the sixth week [2143] he went up safely to Salem, which is on the east side of Shechem, in the fourth month.[89] 2 There Jacob’s daughter Dinah was taken by force to the house of Shechem, the son of Hamor the Hivite, the ruler of the land. He lay with her and defiled her. Now she was a small girl, twelve years of age. 3 He begged her father and her brothers that she be given to him as his wife. Jacob and his sons were angry with the Shechemites because they had defiled their sister Dinah. They spoke deceptively with them, acted in a crafty way toward them, and deceived them. 4 Simeon and Levi entered Shechem unexpectedly and effected a punishment on all the Shechemites. They killed every man whom they found in it. They left absolutely no one in it. They killed everyone in a painful way because they had violated their sister Dinah. 5 Nothing like this is to be done anymore from now on — to defile an Israelite woman. For the punishment had been decreed against them in heaven that they were to annihilate all the Shechemites with the sword, since they had done something shameful in Israel. 6 The Lord handed them over to Jacob’s sons for them to uproot them with the sword and to effect punishment against them and so that there should not again be something like this within Israel — defiling an Israelite virgin. 7 If there is a man in Israel who wishes to give his daughter or his sister to any foreigner, he is to die. He is to be stoned because he has done something sinful and shameful within Israel. The woman is to be burned because she has defiled the reputation of her father’s house; she is to be uprooted from Israel. 8 No adulterer or impure person is to be found within Israel throughout all the time of the earth’s history, for Israel is holy to the Lord. Any man who has defiled it is to die; he is to be stoned. 9 For this is the way it has been ordained and written on the heavenly tablets regarding any descendant of Israel who defiles it: ‘He is to die; he is to be stoned’. 10 This law has no temporal limit. There is no remission or any forgiveness; but rather the man who has defiled his daughter within all of Israel is to be eradicated because he has given one of his descendants to Molech and has sinned by defiling them. [90] 11 Now you, Moses, order the Israelites and testify to them that they are not to give any of their daughters to foreigners and that they are not to marry any foreign women because it is despicable before the Lord. 12 For this reason I have written for you in the words of the law everything that the Shechemites did to Dinah and how Jacob’s sons said: ‘We will not give our daughter to a man who has a foreskin because for us that would be a disgraceful thing’. 13 It is a disgraceful thing for the Israelites who give or take in marriage one of the foreign women because it is too impure and despicable for Israel. 14 Israel will not become clean from this impurity while it has one of the foreign women or if anyone has given one of his daughters to any foreign man. 15 For it is blow upon blow and curse upon curse. Every punishment, blow, and curse will come. If one does this or shuts his eyes to those who do impure things and who defile the Lord’s sanctuary and to those who profane his holy name, then the entire nation will be condemned together because of all this impurity and this contamination. 16 There will be no favoritism nor partiality; there will be no receiving from him of fruit, sacrifices, offerings, fat, or the aroma of a pleasing fragrance so that he should accept it. So is any man or woman in Israel to be who defiles his sanctuary. 17 For this reason I have ordered you: ‘Proclaim this testimony to Israel: “See how it turned out for the Shechemites and their children — how they were handed over to Jacob’s two sons. They killed them in a painful way. It was a just act for them and was recorded as a just act for them”’. 18 Levi’s descendants were chosen for the priesthood and as Levites to serve before the Lord as we do for all time. Levi and his sons will be blessed forever because he was eager to carry out justice, punishment, and revenge on all who rise against Israel. 19 So blessing and justice before the God of all are entered for him as a testimony on the heavenly tablets. [91] 20 We ourselves remember the justice which the man performed during his lifetime at all times of the year. As far as a thousand generations will they enter it. It will come to him and his family after him. He has been recorded on the heavenly tablets as a friend and a just man’. 21 I have written this entire message for you and have ordered you to tell the Israelites not to sin or transgress the statutes or violate the covenant which was established for them so that they should perform it and be recorded as friends. 22 But if they transgress and behave in any impure ways, they will be recorded on the heavenly tablets as enemies. They will be erased from the book of the living and will be recorded in the book of those who will be destroyed and with those who will be uprooted from the earth. 23 On the day that Jacob’s sons killed the people of Shechem, a written notice was entered in heaven for them to the effect that they had carried out what was right, justice, and revenge against the sinners. It was recorded as a blessing. 24 They led their sister Dinah from Shechem’s house and captured everything that was in Shechem — their sheep, cattle, and donkeys; all their property and all their flocks — and brought everything to their father Jacob. 25 He spoke with them about the fact that they had killed the people of a city because he was afraid of the people who were living in the land — of the Canaanites and the Perizzites. 26 A fear of the Lord was in all the cities which were around Shechem. They did not set out to pursue Jacob’s sons because terror had fallen on them.

31On the first of the month Jacob told all the people of his household: ‘Purify yourselves and change your clothes; we are to set out and go up to Bethel where I made a vow, on the day that I ran away from my brother Esau, to the one who has been with me and brought me back safely to this land. Remove the foreign gods which are among you.’ 2 They handed over the foreign gods, their earrings and necklaces, and the idols that Rachel had stolen from her father Laban. She gave everything to Jacob, and he burned them, broke them into pieces, ruined them, and hid them beneath the oak which is in the land of Shechem. 3 On the first of the seventh month he went up to Bethel. He built an altar at the place where he had slept and had set up a pillar. He sent word to his father Isaac and to his mother Rebecca as well to come to him to his sacrifice. 4 Isaac said: ‘Let my son Jacob come so that I can see him before I die.’ 5 Jacob went to his father Isaac and his mother Rebecca in the house of his father Abraham. He took two of his sons with him — Levi and Judah. He came to his father Isaac and his mother Rebecca. 6 Rebecca went out of the tower into the tower gates to kiss Jacob and hug him because she had revived at the time she heard the report: ‘Your son Jacob has now arrived.’ She kissed him. 7 When she saw his two sons, she recognized them. She said to him: ‘Are these your sons, my son?’ She hugged them, kissed them, and blessed them as follows: ‘Through you Abraham’s descendants will become famous. You will become a blessing on the earth.’ 8 Jacob went in to his father Isaac, to his bedroom where he was lying down. His two children were with him. He took his father’s hand, bent down, and kissed him. Isaac hung on his son Jacob’s neck and cried on his neck. 9 Then the shadow passed from Isaac’s eyes and he saw Jacob’s two sons — Levi and Judah — and said: ‘Are these your sons, my son, because they look like you?’ 10 He told him that they were indeed his sons: ‘You have noticed correctly that they are indeed my sons.’ 11 When they came up to him, he turned and kissed them and hugged both of them together. 12 A spirit of prophecy descended into his mouth. He took Levi by his right hand and Judah by his left hand. 13 He turned to Levi first and began to bless him first. He said to him: ‘May the Lord of everything — he is the Lord of all ages — bless you and your sons throughout all ages. 14 May the Lord give you and your descendants extremely great honor; may he make you and your descendants alone out of all humanity approach him to serve in his temple like the angels of the presence and like the holy ones. The descendants of your sons will be like them in honor, greatness, and holiness. May he make them great throughout all ages.’ 15 They will be princes, judges, and leaders of all the descendants of Jacob’s sons. They will declare the word of the Lord justly and will justly judge all his verdicts. They will tell my ways to Jacob and my paths to Israel. The blessing of the Lord will be placed in their mouths, so that they may bless all the descendants of the beloved. 16 Your mother named you Levi, and she has given you the right name. You will become one who is joined to the Lord and a companion of all Jacob’s sons. His table is to belong to you; you and your sons are to eat from it. May your table be filled throughout all history; may your food not be lacking throughout all ages. 17 May all who hate you fall before you, and all your enemies be uprooted and perish. May the one who blesses you be blessed, and any nation that curses you be cursed.’ 18 Then he said to Judah: ‘May the Lord give you the power and strength to trample on all who hate you. Be a prince — you and one of your sons — for Jacob’s sons. May your name and the name of your sons be one that goes and travels around in the entire earth and the regions. Then the nations will be frightened before you; all the nations will be disturbed; all peoples will be disturbed.’ 19 May Jacob’s help be in you; may Israel’s safety be found in you. 20 At the time when you sit on the honorable throne that is rightly yours, there will be great peace for all the descendants of the beloved’s sons. The one who blesses you will be blessed, and all who hate and trouble you, and those, too, who curse you will be uprooted and destroyed from the earth and are to be cursed.’ 21 He turned, kissed him again, and hugged him. He was very happy that he had seen the sons of his true son Jacob. 22 He moved out from between his feet, fell down, and bowed to him. He then blessed them. He rested there near his father Isaac that night. They ate and drank happily. 23 He made Jacob’s two sons sleep, one on his right, one on his left; and it was credited to him as something righteous. 24 That night Jacob told his father everything — how the Lord had shown him great kindness, that he had directed all his ways favorably and had protected him from every evil one. 25 Isaac blessed the God of his father Abraham who had not put an end to his mercy and faithfulness for the son of his servant Isaac. 26 In the morning Jacob told his father Isaac the vow that he had made to the Lord, the vision that he had seen, that he had built an altar and everything was ready for offering the sacrifice before the Lord as he had vowed, and that he had come to put him on a donkey. 27 But Isaac said to his son Jacob: ‘I am unable to come with you because I am old and unable to put up with the trip. Go safely, my son, because I am 165 years of age today. I am no longer able to travel. Put your mother on an animal and let her go with you. 28 I know, my son, that it was on my account that you came. Blessed be this day on which you have seen me alive and I, too, have seen you, my son. 29 Be successful and carry out the vow that you made. Do not delay in carrying out your vow because you will be held accountable regarding the vow. Now hurry to perform it. May the one who has made everything, to whom you made the vow, be pleased with it.’ 30 He said to Rebecca: ‘Go with your son Jacob.’ So Rebecca went with her son Jacob and Deborah with her. They arrived at Bethel. 31 When Jacob recalled the prayer with which his father had blessed him and his two sons — Levi and Judah — he was very happy and blessed the God of his fathers Abraham and Isaac. 32 He said: ‘Now I know that I and my sons, too, have an eternal hope before the God of all.’ This is the way it is ordained regarding the two of them, and it is entered for them as an eternal testimony on the heavenly tablets just as Isaac blessed them.

32That night he stayed at Bethel. Levi dreamed that he — he and his sons — had been appointed and made into the priesthood of the Most High God forever. When he awakened, he blessed the Lord. 2 Jacob got up early in the morning on the fourteenth day of this month and gave a tithe of everything which had come with him — from people to animals, from money to all utensils and clothing. He gave a tithe of everything. 3 At that time Rachel became pregnant with her son Benjamin. Jacob counted his sons from him. He went up the list, and it came down on Levi in the Lord’s share. His father put priestly clothes on him and ordained him.[92] 4 On the fifteenth of this month he brought to the altar 14 young bulls from the cattle, 28 rams, 49 sheep, 7 kids, and 21 goats — as a burnt offering on the altar and as a pleasing offering for a pleasant aroma before God. 5 This was his gift because of the vow which he had made that he would give a tithe along with their sacrifices and their libations. 6 When the fire had consumed it, he would burn incense on the fire above it; and as a peace offering two young bulls, four rams, four sheep, four he-goats, two year-old sheep, and two goats. This is what he would do daily for the seven days. 7 He was eating happily there — he, all his sons, and his men — for the seven days. He was blessing and praising the Lord who had freed him from all his difficulties and who had granted him his vow. 8 He tithed all the clean animals and made an offering of them. He gave his son Levi the unclean animals and gave him all the persons of the men. 9 Levi rather than his ten brothers served as priest in Bethel before his father Jacob. There he was a priest, and Jacob gave what he had vowed. In this way he again gave a tithe to the Lord. He sanctified it, and it became holy.[93] 10 For this reason it is ordained as a law on the heavenly tablets to tithe a second time, to eat it before the Lord — year by year — in the place which has been chosen as the site where his name will reside. This law has no temporal limits forever. 11 That statute has been written down so that it should be carried out year by year — to eat the tithe a second time before the Lord in the place that has been chosen. One is not to leave any of it over from this year to the next year. 12 For the seed is to be eaten in its year until the time for harvesting the seed of the year; the wine will be drunk until the time for wine; and the olive will be used until the proper time of its season. 13 Any of it that is left over and grows old is to be considered contaminated; it is to be burned up because it has become impure. 14 In this way they are to eat it at the same time in the sanctuary; they are not to let it grow old. 15 The entire tithe of cattle and sheep is holy to the Lord, and is to belong to his priests who will eat it before him year by year, because this is the way it is ordained and inscribed on the heavenly tablets regarding the tithe. 16 During the next night, on the twenty-second day of this month, Jacob decided to build up that place and to surround the courtyard with a wall, to sanctify it, and make it eternally holy for himself and for his children after him forever. 17 The Lord appeared to him during the night. He blessed him and said to him: ‘You are not to be called Jacob only, but you will also be named Israel.’ 18 He said to him a second time: ‘I am the Lord who created heaven and earth. I will increase your numbers and multiply you very much. Kings will come from you, and they will rule wherever mankind has set foot. 19 I will give your descendants all of the land that is beneath the sky. They will rule over all the nations just as they wish. Afterwards, they will gain the entire earth, and they will possess it forever.’ 20 When he had finished speaking with him, he went up from him, and Jacob kept watching until he had gone up into heaven. 21 In a night vision he saw an angel coming down from heaven with seven tablets in his hands. He gave them to Jacob, and he read them. He read everything that was written in them — what would happen to him and his sons throughout all ages. 22 After he had shown him everything that was written on the tablets, he said to him: ‘Do not build up this place, and do not make it an eternal temple. Do not live here because this is not the place. Go to the house of your father Abraham and live where your father Isaac is until the day of your father’s death. 23 For you will die peacefully in Egypt and be buried honorably in this land in the grave of your fathers — with Abraham and Isaac. 24 Do not be afraid because everything will happen just as you have seen and read. Now you write down everything just as you have seen and read.’ 25 Then Jacob said: ‘Lord, how shall I remember everything just as I have read and seen?’ He said to him: ‘I will remind you of everything.’ 26 When he had gone from him, he awakened and remembered everything that he had read and seen. He wrote down all the things that he had read and seen. 27 He celebrated one more day there. On it he sacrificed exactly as he had been sacrificing on the previous days. He named it Addition because that day was added. He named the previous ones the Festival. 28 This is the way it was revealed that it should be, and it is written on the heavenly tablets. For this reason it was revealed to him that he should celebrate it and add it to the seven days of the festival. 29 It was called Addition because of the fact that it is entered in the testimony of the festal days in accord with the number of days in the year. 30 That night, on the twenty-third of this month, Deborah, Rebecca’s nurse, died. They buried her below the city, beneath the oak near the stream. He named that place the Stream of Deborah and the oak the Oak of Mourning for Deborah. 31 Then Rebecca set out and returned home to her father Isaac. Through her Jacob sent rams, he-goats, and sheep to make his father a meal as he would wish. 32 He followed his mother until he reached the country of Kabratan, and he remained there. 33 During the night Rachel gave birth to a son. She named him Son of my Pain because she had difficulty when she was giving birth to him. But his father named him Benjamin on the eleventh of the eighth month, during the first year of the sixth week of this jubilee [2143]. 34 Rachel died there and was buried in the country of Ephrathah, that is, Bethlehem. Jacob built a pillar at Rachel’s grave — on the road above her grave.

33Jacob went and lived to the south of the Tower of Eder Ephrathah. He went to his father Isaac — he and his wife Leah — on the first of the tenth month. 2 When Reuben saw Bilhah, Rachel's maid — his father's concubine — bathing in water in a private place, he loved her.[94] 3 At night he hid. He entered Bilhah's house at night and found her lying alone in her bed and sleeping in her tent. 4 After he had lain with her, she awakened and saw that Reuben was lying with her in the bed. She uncovered the edge of her clothing, took hold of him, shouted out, and realized that it was Reuben. 5 She was ashamed because of him. Once she had released her grip on him, he ran away. 6 She grieved terribly about this matter and told no one at all. 7 When Jacob came and looked for her, she said to him: ‘I am not pure for you because I am too contaminated for you, since Reuben defiled me and lay with me at night. I was sleeping and did not realize it until he uncovered the edge of my garment and lay with me.’ 8 Jacob was very angry at Reuben because he had lain with Bilhah, since he had uncovered the covering of his father. 9 Jacob did not approach her again because Reuben had defiled her. As for any man who uncovers the covering of his father — his act is indeed very bad and it is indeed despicable before the Lord. 10 For this reason it is written and ordained on the heavenly tablets that a man is not to lie with his father's wife and that he is not to uncover the covering of his father because it is impure. They are certainly to die together — the man who lies with his father's wife and the woman, too — because they have done something impure on the earth. 11 There is to be nothing impure before our God within the nation that he has chosen as his own possession. 12 Again it is written a second time: ‘Let the one who lies with his father's wife be cursed because he has uncovered his father's shame.’ All of the Lord's holy ones said: ‘So be it, so be it.’ 13 Now you, Moses, order the Israelites to observe this command because it is a capital offense and it is an impure thing. To eternity there is no expiation to atone for the man who has done this; but he is to be put to death, to be killed, and to be stoned and uprooted from among the people of our God. 14 For any man who commits it in Israel will not be allowed to live a single day on the earth because he is despicable and impure. 15 They are not to say: ‘Reuben was allowed to live and have forgiveness after he had lain with the concubine-wife of his father while she had a husband and her husband — his father Jacob — was alive.’ 16 For the statute, the punishment, and the law had not been completely revealed to all but only in your time as a law of its particular time and as an eternal law for the history of eternity. 17 There is no time when this law will be at an end, nor is there any forgiveness for it; rather both of them are to be uprooted among the people. On the day on which they have done this they are to kill them. 18 Now you, Moses, write for Israel so that they keep it and do not act like this and do not stray into a capital offense; because the Lord our God, who shows no partiality and accepts no bribes, is the judge. 19 Tell them these words of the testament so that they may listen, guard themselves, be careful about them, and not be destroyed or uprooted from the earth. For all who commit it on the earth before the Lord are impure, something detestable, a blemish, and something contaminated. 20 No sin is greater than the sexual impurity which they commit on the earth because Israel is a holy people for the Lord its God. It is the nation which he possesses; it is a priestly nation; it is a priestly kingdom; it is what he owns. No such impurity will be seen among the holy people. 21 During the third year of the sixth week [2145] Jacob and all his sons went and took up residence at the house of Abraham near his father Isaac and his mother Rebecca. 22 These are the names of Jacob's sons: Reuben, his first-born, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, Zebulun were Leah's sons. Rachel's sons were Joseph and Benjamin. Bilhah's sons were Dan and Naphtali. And Zilpah's sons were Gad and Asher. Leah's daughter Dinah was Jacob's only daughter. 23 After they had come, they bowed to Isaac and Rebecca. When they saw them, they blessed Jacob and all his children. Isaac was extremely happy that he had seen the children of his younger son Jacob, and he blessed them.

34During the sixth year of this week of this forty-fourth jubilee [2148], Jacob sent his sons to tend their sheep — his servants were also with them — to the field of Shechem. 2 Seven Amorite kings assembled against them to kill them from their hiding place beneath the trees and to take their animals as booty. 3 But Jacob, Levi, Judah, and Joseph remained at home with their father Isaac because he was distressed and they were unable to leave him. Benjamin was the youngest, and for this reason he stayed with him. 4 Then came the kings of Tafu, the king of Ares, the king of Seragan, the king of Selo, the king of Gaaz, the king of Betoron, the king of Maanisakir, and all who were living on this mountain, who were living in the forest of the land of Canaan. 5 It was reported to Jacob: ‘The Amorite kings have just surrounded your sons and have carried off their flocks by force.’ 6 He set out from his house — he, his three sons, all his father’s servants, and his servants — and went against them with 6000 men who carried swords. 7 He killed them in the field of Shechem, and they pursued the ones who ran away. He killed them with the blade of the sword. He killed Ares, Tafu, Saregan, Silo, Amanisakir, and Gagaas. 8 He collected his flocks. He got control of them and imposed tribute on them so that they should give him as tribute five of their land’s products. He built Robel and Tamnatares. 9 He returned safely. He made peace with them, and they became his servants until the day that he and his sons went down to Egypt. 10 During the seventh year of this week [2149], he sent Joseph from his house to the land of Shechem to find out about his brothers’ welfare. He found them in the land of Dothan. 11 They acted in a treacherous way and made a plan against him to kill him; but, after changing their minds, they sold him to a traveling band of Ishmaelites. They brought him down to Egypt and sold him to Potiphar, the pharaoh’s eunuch, the chief cook, and the priest of the city of Elew. 12 Jacob’s sons slaughtered a he-goat, stained Joseph’s clothing by dipping it in its blood, and sent it to their father Jacob on the tenth of the seventh month. 13 He mourned all that night because they had brought it to him in the evening. He became feverish through mourning his death and said that a wild animal had eaten Joseph. That day all the people of his household mourned with him. They continued to be distressed and to mourn with him all that day. 14 His sons and daughter set about consoling him, but he was inconsolable for his son. 15 That day Bilhah heard that Joseph had perished. While she was mourning for him, she died. She had been living in Qafratefa. His daughter Dinah, too, died after Joseph had perished. These three reasons for mourning came to Israel in one month. 16 They buried Bilhah opposite Rachel’s grave, and they buried his daughter Dinah there as well. 17 He continued mourning Joseph for one year and was not comforted but said: ‘May I go down to the grave mourning for my son.’ 18 For this reason, it has been ordained regarding the Israelites that they should be distressed on the tenth of the seventh month — on the day when the news which made him lament Joseph reached his father Jacob — in order to make atonement for themselves on it with a kid — on the tenth of the seventh month, once a year — for their sins. For they had saddened their father’s feelings of affection for his son Joseph.[95] 19 This day has been ordained so that they may be saddened on it for their sins, all their transgressions, and all their errors; so that they may purify themselves on this day once a year. 20 After Joseph had perished, Jacob’s sons took wives for themselves. The name of Reuben’s wife was Oda; the name of Simeon’s wife was Adebaa, the Canaanite; the name of Levi’s wife was Melcha, one of the daughters of Aram — one of the descendants of Terah’s sons; the name of Judah’s wife was Betasuel, the Canaanite; the name of Issachar’s wife was Hezaqa; the name of Zebulun’s wife was Neeman; the name of Dan’s wife was Egla; the name of Naphtali’s wife was Rasu’u of Mesopotamia; the name of Gad’s wife was Maka; the name of Asher’s wife was Iyona; the name of Joseph’s wife was Asenath, the Egyptian; and the name of Benjamin’s wife was Iyaska. 21 Simeon, after changing his mind, married another woman from Mesopotamia like his brothers.

35During the first year of the first week in the forty-fifth jubilee [2157], Rebecca summoned her son Jacob and ordered him regarding his father and brother that he was to honor them throughout Jacob’s entire lifetime. 2 Jacob said: ‘I will do everything just as you ordered me because this matter will be something honorable and great for me; it will be a righteous act for me before the Lord that I should honor them.’ 3 ‘You, mother, know everything I have done and all my thoughts from the day I was born until today — that at all times I think of what is good for all.’ 4 ‘How shall I not do what you have ordered me — that I should honor my father and brother?’ 5 ‘Tell me, mother, what impropriety you have noticed in me and I will certainly turn away from it and will experience mercy.’ 6 She said to him: ‘My son, throughout my entire lifetime I have noticed no improper act in you but only proper ones. However, I will tell you the truth, my son: I will die during this year and will not make it alive through this year because I have seen the day of my death in a dream — that I will not live more than 155 years. Now I have completed my entire lifetime that I am to live.’ 7 Jacob laughed at what his mother was saying because his mother said to him that she would die, but she was sitting in front of him in possession of her strength. She had lost none of her strength because she could come and go; she could see and her teeth were strong. No sickness had touched her throughout her entire lifetime. 8 Jacob said to her: ‘Mother, I would be fortunate if my lifetime approached your lifetime and if my strength would remain with me in the way your strength has. You are not going to die but rather have jokingly spoken idle nonsense with me about your death.’ 9 She went in to Isaac and said to him: ‘I am making one request of you: make Esau swear that he will not harm Jacob and not pursue him in hatred. For you know the way Esau thinks — that he has been malicious since his youth and that he is devoid of virtue because he wishes to kill him after your death.’ 10 ‘You know everything that he has done from the day his brother Jacob went to Haran until today — that he has wholeheartedly abandoned us. He has treated us badly; he has gathered your flocks and has taken all your possessions away from you by force.’ 11 ‘When we would ask him in a pleading way for what belonged to us, he would act like someone who was being charitable to us.’ 12 ‘He is behaving bitterly toward you due to the fact that you blessed your perfect and true son Jacob since he has virtue only, no evil. From the time he came from Haran until today he has not deprived us of anything but he always brings us everything in its season. He is wholeheartedly happy when we accept anything from him, and he blesses us. He has not separated from us from the day he came from Haran until today. He has continually been living with us at home all the while honoring us.’ 13 Isaac said to her: ‘I, too, know and see the actions of Jacob who is with us — that he wholeheartedly honors us. At first I did love Esau more than Jacob, after he was born; but now I love Jacob more than Esau because he has done so many bad things and lacks the ability to do what is right. For the entire way he acts is characterized by injustice and violence and there is no justice about him.’ 14 ‘Now my mind is disturbed about his actions. Neither he nor his descendants are to be saved because they will be destroyed from the earth and be uprooted from beneath the sky. For he has abandoned the God of Abraham and has gone after his wives, after impurity, and after their errors — he and his sons.’ 15 ‘You are saying to me that I should make him swear not to kill his brother Jacob. Even if he does swear, it will not happen. He will not do what is virtuous but rather what is evil.’ 16 ‘If he wishes to kill his brother Jacob, he will be handed over to Jacob and will not escape from his control but will fall into his control.’ 17 ‘Now you are not to be afraid for Jacob because Jacob’s guardian is greater and more powerful, glorious, and praiseworthy than Esau’s guardian.’ 18 Then Rebecca sent and summoned Esau. When he had come to her, she said to him: ‘I have a request that I will make of you, my son; say that you will do it, my son.’ 19 He said: ‘I will do anything you tell me; I will not refuse your request.’ 20 She said to him: ‘I ask of you that on the day I die you bring me and bury me near your father’s mother Sarah; and that you and Jacob love one another, and that the one not aim at what is bad for his brother but only at loving one another. Then you will be prosperous, my sons, and be honored on the earth. Your enemy will not be happy over you. You will become a blessing and an object of kindness in the view of all who love you.’ 21 He said: ‘I will do everything that you say to me. I will bury you on the day of your death near my father’s mother Sarah as you have desired that her bones may be near your bones.’ 22 ‘My brother Jacob I will love more than all mankind. I have no brother on the entire earth but him alone. This is no great thing for me if I love him because he is my brother. We were conceived together in your belly and we emerged together from your womb. If I do not love my brother, whom shall I love?’ 23 ‘I myself ask of you that you instruct Jacob about me and my sons because I know that he will indeed rule over me and my sons. For on the day when my father blessed him he made him the superior and me the inferior one.’ 24 ‘I swear to you that I will love him and that throughout my entire lifetime I will not aim at what is bad for him but only at what is good.’ He swore to her about this entire matter. 25 She summoned Jacob in front of Esau and gave him orders in line with what she had discussed with Esau. 26 He said: ‘I will do what pleases you. Trust me that nothing bad against Esau will come from me or my sons. I will not be first except in love only.’ 27 She and her sons ate and drank that night. She died that night at the age of three jubilees, one week, and one year [= 155 years]. Her two sons Esau and Jacob buried her in the twofold cave near their father’s mother Sarah.

36During the sixth year of this week [2162] Isaac summoned his two sons Esau and Jacob. When they had come to him, he said to them: ‘My children, I am going on the way of my fathers, to the eternal home where my fathers are.’ 2 ‘Bury me near my father Abraham in the double cave in the field of Ephron the Hittite which Abraham acquired to have a burial place there. There, in the grave that I dug for myself, bury me.’ 3 ‘This is what I am ordering you, my sons: that you do what is right and just on the earth so that the Lord may bring on you everything which the Lord said that he would do for Abraham and his descendants.’ 4 ‘Practice brotherly love among yourselves, my sons, like a man who loves himself, with each one aiming at doing what is good for his brother and at doing things together on the earth. May they love one another as themselves.’[96] 5 ‘Regarding the matter of idols, I am instructing you to reject them, to be an enemy of them, and not to love them because they are full of errors for those who worship them and who bow to them.’ 6 ‘My sons, remember the Lord, the God of your father Abraham (afterwards I, too, worshiped and served him properly and sincerely) so that he may make you numerous and increase your descendants in number like the stars of the sky and plant you in the earth as a righteous plant which will not be uprooted throughout all the history of eternity.’ 7 ‘Now I will make you swear with the great oath — because there is no oath which is greater than it, by the praiseworthy, illustrious, and great, splendid, marvelous, powerful, and great name which made the heavens and the earth and everything together — that you will continue to fear and worship him,’[97] 8 ‘as each loves his brother kindly and properly. One is not to desire what is bad for his brother now and forever, throughout your entire lifetime, so that you may be prosperous in everything that you do and not be destroyed.’ 9 ‘If one of you aims at what is bad for his brother, be aware that from now on anyone who aims at what is bad for his brother will fall into his control and will be uprooted from the land of the living, while his descendants will be destroyed from beneath the sky.’ 10 ‘On the day of turmoil and curse, of anger and wrath — with a blazing fire that devours — he will burn his land, his city, and everything that belongs to him just as he burned Sodom. He will be erased from the disciplinary book of mankind. He will not be entered in the book of life but in the one that will be destroyed. He will pass over to an eternal curse so that their punishment may always be renewed with denunciation and curse, with anger, pain, and wrath, and with blows and eternal sickness.’ 11 ‘I am reporting and testifying to you, my sons, in accord with the punishment which will come on the man who wishes to do what is harmful to his brother.’ 12 That day he divided all the property that he owned between the two of them. He gave the larger part to the man who was the first to be born along with the tower, everything around it, and everything that Abraham had acquired at the well of the oath. 13 He said: ‘I am making this portion larger for the man who was the first to be born.’ 14 But Esau said: ‘I sold it to Jacob; I gave my birthright to Jacob. It is to be given to him. I will say absolutely nothing about it because it belongs to him.’ 15 Isaac then said: ‘May a blessing rest on you, my sons, and on your descendants today because you have given me rest. My mind is not saddened regarding the birthright — lest you do something perverse about it.’ 16 ‘May the Most High Lord bless the man who does what is right — him and his descendants forever.’ 17 When he had finished giving them orders and blessing them, they ate and drank together in front of him. He was happy because there was agreement between them. They left him, rested that day, and fell asleep. 18 That day Isaac was happy as he fell asleep on his bed. He fell asleep forever and died at the age of 180 years. He had completed 25 weeks and five years. His two sons Esau and Jacob buried him. 19 Esau went to the land of Edom — to Mt. Seir — and lived there, 20 while Jacob lived on the mountain of Hebron, in the tower which was located in the land where his father Abraham had resided as a foreigner. He worshiped the Lord wholeheartedly and in line with the visible commands according to the division of the times of his generation. 21 His wife Leah died during the fourth year of the second week of the forty-fifth jubilee [2167]. He buried her in the twofold cave near his mother Rebecca, on the left of his grandmother Sarah’s grave. 22 All her sons and his sons came to mourn with him for his wife Leah and to comfort him regarding her because he was lamenting her. 23 For he loved her very much from the time when her sister Rachel died because she was perfect and right in all her behavior and honored Jacob. In all the time that she lived with him he did not hear a harsh word from her mouth because she was gentle and possessed the virtues of peace, truthfulness, and honor. 24 As he recalled all the things that she had done in her lifetime, he greatly lamented her because he loved her with all his heart and with all his soul.

37On the day that Isaac, the father of Jacob and Esau, died, Esau’s sons heard that Isaac had given the birthright to his younger son Jacob. They became very angry. 2 They quarreled with their father: ‘Why is it that when you are the older and Jacob the younger, your father gave Jacob the birthright and neglected you?’ 3 He said to them: ‘Because I sold my right of the first-born to Jacob in exchange for a little lentil broth. The day my father sent me to hunt and trap and to bring something to him so that he could eat it and bless me, he came in a crafty way and brought in food and drink to my father. My father blessed him and put me under his control.’ 4 ‘Now our father has made us — me and him — swear that we will not aim at what is bad, the one against his brother, and that we will continue in a state of mutual love and peace, each with his brother, so that we should not corrupt our behavior.’[98] 5 They said to him: ‘We will not listen to you by making peace with him because our strength is greater than his strength, and we are stronger than he is. We will go against him, kill him, and destroy his sons. If you do not go with us, we will harm you, too.’ 6 ‘Now listen to us; let us send to Aram, Philistia, Moab, and Ammon; and let us choose for ourselves select men who are brave in battle. Then let us go against him, fight with him, and uproot him from the earth before he gains strength.’ 7 Their father said to them: ‘Do not go and do not make war with him so that you may not fall before him.’ 8 They said to him: ‘Is this not the very way you have acted from your youth until today? You are putting your neck beneath his yoke. We will not listen to what you are saying.’ 9 So they sent to Aram and to their father’s friend Aduram. Together with them they hired for themselves 1000 fighting men, select warriors. 10 There came to them from Moab and from the Ammonites 1000 select men who were hired; from the Philistines 1000 select warriors; from Edom and the Horites 1000 select fighters, and from the Kittim strong warriors. 11 They said to their father: ‘Go out; lead them. Otherwise, we will kill you.’ 12 He was filled with anger and wrath when he saw that his sons were forcing him to go in front in order to lead them to his brother Jacob. 13 But afterwards he remembered all the bad things that were hidden in his mind against his brother Jacob, and he did not remember the oath that he had sworn to his father and mother not to aim at anything bad against his brother Jacob throughout his entire lifetime. 14 During all of this, Jacob was unaware that they were coming to him for battle. He, for his part, was mourning for his wife Leah until they approached him near the tower with 4000 warriors, select fighting men. 15 The people of Hebron sent word to him: ‘Your brother has just now come against you to fight you with 4000 men who have swords buckled on and are carrying shields and weapons.’ They told him because they loved Jacob more than Esau, since Jacob was a more generous and kind man than Esau. 16 But Jacob did not believe it until they came near the tower. 17 Then he closed the gates of the tower, stood on the top, and spoke with his brother Esau. He said: ‘It is a fine consolation that you have come to give me for my wife who has died. Is this the oath that you swore to your father and your mother two times before he died? You have violated the oath and were condemned in the hour when you swore it to your father.’ 18 Then Esau said in reply to him: ‘Neither mankind nor animals have a true oath which they, once they have sworn, have sworn it as valid forever. Every day they aim at what is bad for one another and at each one killing his enemy and opponent. 19 You will hate me and my sons forever. There is no observing of brotherly ties with you. 20 Listen to what I have to say to you. If a pig changes its hide and makes its bristles as limp as wool; and if horns like deer’s and sheep’s horns emerge from its head, then I will observe brotherly ties with you. The breasts have been separated from their mother, for you have not been a brother to me. 21 If wolves make peace with lambs so that they do not eat them or injure them; and if they have resolved to treat them well, then there will be peace in my mind for you. 22 If the lion becomes the friend of a bull, and if it is harnessed together with it in a yoke and plows with it and makes peace with it, then I will make peace with you. 23 If the raven turns white like the raza-bird, then know that I love you and will make peace with you. As for you — be uprooted and may your children be uprooted. There is to be no peace for you.’ 24 When Jacob saw that he was adversely inclined toward him from his mind and his entire self so that he could kill him and that he had come bounding along like a boar that comes upon the spear which pierces it and kills it but does not pull back from it, 25 then he told his own people and his servants to attack him and all his companions.

38After this Judah spoke to his father Jacob and said to him: ‘Draw your bow, father; shoot your arrow; pierce the enemy; and kill the foe. May you have the strength because we will not kill your brother, since he is near to you and, in our estimation, he is equal to you in honor.’ 2 Jacob then stretched his bow, shot an arrow, pierced his brother Esau on his right breast, and struck him down. 3 He shot another arrow and hit Aduran the Aramean on his left breast; he drove him back and killed him. 4 After this Jacob’s sons — they and their servants — went out, dividing themselves to the four sides of the tower. 5 Judah went out in front. Naphtali and Gad were with him, and 50 servants were with him on the south side of the tower. They killed everyone whom they found in front of them. No one at all escaped from them. 6 Levi, Dan, and Asher went out on the east side of the tower, and 50 were with them. They killed the Moabite and Ammonite warriors. 7 Reuben, Issachar, and Zebulun went out on the north side of the tower, and 50 were with them. They killed the Philistine fighting men. 8 Simeon, Benjamin, and Enoch — Reuben’s son — went out on the west side of the tower, and 50 were with them. Of the people of Edom and the Horites they killed 400 strong warriors, and 600 ran away. Esau’s four sons ran away with them. They left their slain father just as he had fallen on the hill that is in Aduram. 9 Jacob’s sons pursued them as far as Mt. Seir, while Jacob buried his brother on the hill that is in Aduram and then returned to his house. 10 Jacob’s sons pressed hard on Esau’s sons in Mt. Seir. They bowed their necks to become servants for Jacob’s sons. 11 They sent to their father to ask whether they should make peace with them or kill them. 12 Jacob sent word to his sons to make peace. So they made peace with them and placed the yoke of servitude on them so that they should pay tribute to Jacob and his sons for all time. 13 They continued paying tribute to Jacob until the day that Jacob went down to Egypt. 14 The Edomites have not extricated themselves from the yoke of servitude which Jacob’s sons imposed on them until today. 15 These are the kings who ruled in Edom — before a king ruled the Israelites — until today in the land of Edom. 16 Balak, son of Bo’er, became king in Edom. The name of his city was Danaba. 17 After Balak died, Yobab son of Zara who was from Bosir became king in his place. 18 After Yobab died, Asam who was from Mt. Teman became king in his place. 19 After Asam died, Adat son of Bared who slaughtered Midian in the field of Moab became king in his place. The name of his city was Awutu. 20 After Adat died, Saloman who was from Emaseqa became king in his place. 21 After Saloman died, Saul who was from the river Raabot became king in his place. 22 After Saul died, Beelunan son of Akbur became king in his place. 23 After Baelunan son of Akbur died, Adat became king in his place. His wife’s name was Maytabit, daughter of Matrit, daughter of Metabedezaab. 24 These are the kings who ruled in the land of Edom.

39Jacob lived in the land where his father had wandered as a foreigner — the land of Canaan. 2 This is the history of Jacob. When Joseph was 17 years of age, they brought him down to Egypt. The pharaoh’s eunuch Potiphar, the chief cook, bought him. 3 He put Joseph in charge of his entire house. The Lord’s blessing was present in the Egyptian’s house because of Joseph. The Lord made everything that he did succeed for him. 4 The Egyptian left everything to Joseph because he noticed that the Lord was with him and that the Lord made everything that he did succeed for him. 5 Now Joseph was well-formed and very handsome. The wife of his master looked up, saw Joseph, loved him, and pleaded with him to lie with her. 6 But he did not surrender himself. He remembered the Lord and what his father Jacob would read to him from the words of Abraham — that no one is to commit adultery with a woman who has a husband; that there is a death penalty which has been ordained for him in heaven before the Most High Lord. The sin will be entered regarding him in the eternal books forever before the Lord. 7 Joseph remembered what he had said and refused to lie with her. 8 She pleaded with him for one year and a second, but he refused to listen to her. 9 She drew him close and held on to him in the house in order to compel him to lie with her. She closed the door of the house and held on to him. He left his clothes in her hands, broke the door, and ran away from her to the outside. 10 When that woman saw that he would not lie with her, she accused him falsely to his master: ‘Your Hebrew slave whom you love wanted to force me so that he could lie with me. When I shouted, he ran away, left his clothes in my hands when I grabbed him, and broke the door.’ 11 When the Egyptian saw Joseph’s clothes and the broken door, he believed what his wife said. He put Joseph in prison in the place where the prisoners whom the king imprisoned would stay. 12 While he was there in the prison, the Lord gave Joseph a favorable reception before the chief of the prison guards and a kind reception before him because he saw that the Lord was with him and that the Lord was making everything that he did succeed for him. 13 He left everything to him. The chief of the prison guards knew nothing at all about his affairs because Joseph would do everything and the Lord would bring it to completion. He remained there for two years. 14 At that time the pharaoh, the king of Egypt, became angry at two of his eunuchs — the chief butler and the chief baker. He put them in prison, in the house of the chief cook, in the prison where Joseph was held. 15 The chief of the prison guards appointed Joseph to serve them. So he would serve in his presence. 16 Both of them — the chief butler and the chief baker — had a dream and told it to Joseph. 17 Things turned out for them just as he interpreted for them. The pharaoh restored the chief butler to his job, but he hanged the baker as Joseph had interpreted for him. 18 The chief butler forgot Joseph in prison although he had informed him about what would happen to him. He did not remember to tell the pharaoh how Joseph had told him because he forgot.

40At that time the pharaoh had two dreams in one night about the subject of the famine which would come on the whole land. When he awakened, he summoned all the dream interpreters who were in Egypt and the enchanters. He told them his two dreams, but they were unable to understand them. 2 Then the chief butler remembered Joseph. After he had told the king about him, he was brought from prison and he related his two dreams in his presence. 3 He said in the pharaoh’s presence that his two dreams were one. He said to him: ‘Seven years are coming in which there will be abundance in the entire land of Egypt, but afterwards there will be a seven-year famine, the like of which famine has never been in the entire land.’ 4 ‘Now let the pharaoh appoint overseers throughout the entire land of Egypt and let them store each city’s food in the city during the period of the years of abundance. Then there will be food for the seven years of famine, and the land will not be destroyed because of the famine, since it will be very severe.’ 5 The Lord gave Joseph a favorable and kind reception in the view of the pharaoh. The pharaoh said to his servants: ‘We will not find a man as wise and knowledgeable as this man, for the spirit of the Lord is with him.’ 6 He appointed him as the second in command in his entire kingdom, gave him authority over all Egypt, and allowed him to ride on his second chariot which was the pharaoh’s. 7 He dressed him with clothing made of linen and hung a gold chain on his neck. He made a proclamation before him and said: ‘Il il and abirer.’ He put a signet ring on his hand and made him ruler over his entire household. He made him great and said to him: ‘I will not be greater than you except with regard to the throne only.’ 8 So Joseph became ruler over the entire land of Egypt. All of the pharaoh’s princes, all of his servants, and all who were doing the king’s work loved him because he conducted himself in a just way. He was not arrogant, proud, or partial, nor did he accept bribes because he was ruling all the people of the land in a just way. 9 The land of Egypt lived in harmony before the pharaoh because of Joseph for the Lord was with him. He gave him a favorable and kind reception for all his family before all who knew him and who heard reports about him. The pharaoh’s rule was just, and there was no satan or any evil one. 10 The king named Joseph Sefantifanes and gave Joseph as a wife the daughter of Potiphar, the daughter of the priest of Heliopolis — the chief cook. 11 On the day when Joseph took up his position with the pharaoh he was 30 years of age when he took up his position with the pharaoh. 12 (Isaac died that year). Things turned out just as Joseph had reported about the interpretation of his two dreams, just as he had reported to him. There were seven years of abundance in the whole land of Egypt. The land of Egypt was most productive: one measure would produce 1800 measures. 13 Joseph collected each city’s food in the city until it was so full of wheat that it was impossible to count or measure it because of its quantity.

41In the forty-fifth jubilee, the second week during the second year [2165], Judah took as a wife for his first-born Er one of the Aramean women whose name was Tamar. 2 He hated her and did not lie with her because his mother was a Canaanite woman and he wanted to marry someone from his mother’s tribe. But his father Judah did not allow him.[99] 3 That Er, Judah’s first-born, was evil, and the Lord killed him. 4 Then Judah said to his brother Onan: ‘Go in to your brother’s wife, perform the levirate duty for her, and produce descendants for your brother.’ 5 Onan knew that the descendants would not be his but his brother’s, so he entered the house of his brother’s wife and poured out the semen on the ground. In the Lord’s estimation, it was an evil act, and he killed him. 6 So Judah said to his daughter-in-law Tamar: ‘Remain in your father’s house as a widow until my son Selom grows up. Then I will give you to him as a wife.’ 7 He grew up, but Judah’s wife Bedsuel did not allow her son Selom to marry her. Judah’s wife Bedsuel died during the fifth year of this week [2168]. 8 In its sixth year [2169] Judah went up to shear his sheep in Timnah. Tamar was told: ‘Your father-in-law is now going up to shear his sheep in Timnah.’ 9 Then she put aside her widow’s clothing, put on a veil, made herself up, and sat down at the gate near the road to Timnah. 10 As Judah was going along, he found her and supposed that she was a prostitute. He said to her: ‘Let me come in to you.’ She said to him: ‘Come in.’ So he came in. 11 She said to him: ‘Give me my fee.’ He said to her: ‘I have nothing with me except the ring on my finger, my neck chain, and my staff which is in my hand.’ 12 She said to him: ‘Give them to me until you send me my fee.’ He said to her: ‘I will send you a kid.’ He gave them to her. After he was with her, she became pregnant by him. 13 Then Judah went to his sheep, but she went to her father’s house. 14 Judah sent the kid through his Adullamite shepherd, but he failed to find her. He asked the men of the area: ‘Where is the prostitute who was here?’ They said to him: ‘There is no prostitute here, nor do we have any prostitute with us.’ 15 When he returned and told him that he had failed to find her, he said to him: ‘I asked the men of the area and they said to me: “There is no prostitute here.”’ He said: ‘Let her keep them so that we may not become the object of mockery.’ 16 When she reached three months, she was visibly pregnant. Judah was told: ‘Your daughter-in-law Tamar has now become pregnant through prostitution.’ 17 Judah went to her father’s house and said to her father and brothers: ‘Bring her out and let her be burned because she has done something impure in Israel.’ 18 When she was brought out to be burned, she sent the ring, the neck chain, and the staff to her father-in-law and said: ‘Recognize whose these are because I am pregnant by him.’ 19 Judah recognized them and said: ‘Tamar has been more just than I; therefore, do not burn her.’ 20 For this reason she was not given to Selom, and he did not approach her again. 21 Afterwards she was pregnant and gave birth to two boys — Perez and Zerah — during the seventh year of this second week [2170]. 22 Following this, the seven years of copious harvest which Joseph had told the pharaoh were completed. 23 Judah knew that what he had done was evil because he had lain with his daughter-in-law. In his own view, he considered it evil, and he knew that he had done wrong and erred, for he had uncovered his son’s covering. He began to lament and plead before the Lord because of his sin. 24 We told him in a dream that it would be forgiven for him because he had pleaded very much and because he had lamented and did not do it again. 25 He had forgiveness because he turned from his sin and from his ignorance, for the sin was a great one before our God. Anyone who acts in this way — anyone who lies with his mother-in-law — is to be burned in fire so that he burns in it because impurity and contamination have come on them. They are to be burned. 26 Now you order the Israelites that there is to be no impurity among them, for anyone who lies with his daughter-in-law or his mother-in-law has done something that is impure. They are to burn the man who lay with her and the woman. Then he will make anger and punishment desist from Israel. 27 We told Judah that his two sons had not lain with her. For this reason his descendants were established for another generation and would not be uprooted. 28 For in his integrity he had gone and demanded punishment because Judah had wanted to burn her on the basis of the law which Abraham had commanded his children.

42During the first year of the third week of the forty-fifth jubilee [2171], the famine began to come to the land. The rain refused to fall because there was nothing coming down. 2 The earth became unproductive, but in the land of Egypt, there was food because Joseph had gathered the seed in the land during the seven years of copious harvest and kept it. 3 When the Egyptians came to Joseph so that he would give them food, he opened the storehouses where the grain of the first year was and sold it to the people of the land in exchange for money. 4 Jacob heard that there was food in Egypt, so he sent his ten sons to get food for him in Egypt. But he did not send Benjamin. They arrived with those who were going there. 5 Joseph recognized them, but they did not recognize him. He spoke with them, asked them questions, and said to them: ‘Are you not spies? You have come to investigate the paths of the land.’ He then imprisoned them. 6 Afterwards he released them, detaining only Simeon, and sent his nine brothers away. 7 He filled their sacks with grain and put their money in their sacks. But they did not know this. 8 He ordered them to bring their youngest brother because they had told him that their father was alive and their youngest brother also. 9 They went up from the land of Egypt and came to the land of Canaan. They told their father everything that had happened to them and how the ruler of the area had spoken harshly with them and was holding Simeon until they brought Benjamin. 10 Jacob said: ‘You have deprived me of children. Joseph is no more, nor is Simeon, and now you are going to take Benjamin. Your wickedness has come upon me.’ 11 He said: ‘My son will not go with you. Perhaps he would become ill. For their mother gave birth to two; one has died and now you would take this one from me. Perhaps he would catch a fever on the way, and you would bring down my old age in sorrow to death.’ 12 For he saw that their money was returned — each one in his purse, and he was afraid to send him for this reason. 13 Now the famine grew increasingly severe in the land of Canaan and in every land except the land of Egypt, because many Egyptians had stored their seed for food after they saw Joseph collecting seed, placing it in storehouses, and keeping it for the years of famine. 14 The Egyptians fed themselves with it during the first year of the famine. 15 When Israel saw that the famine was very severe in the land and that there was no relief, he said to his sons: ‘Go, return, and get us some food so that we may not die.’ 16 But they said: ‘We will not go. If our youngest brother does not come with us, we will not go.’ 17 Israel saw that if he did not send him with them, they would all die because of the famine. 18 Then Reuben said: ‘Put him under my control. If I do not bring him back to you, kill my two sons for his life.’ But he said to him: ‘He will not go with you.’ 19 Then Judah approached and said: ‘Send him with us. If I do not bring him back to you, then let me be guilty before you throughout my entire lifetime.’ 20 So he sent him with them during the second year of this week [2172], on the first of the month. They arrived in the territory of Egypt with all who were going there and had their gifts in their hands: stacte, almonds, terebinth nuts, and pure honey. 21 They arrived and stood in front of Joseph. When he saw his brother Benjamin, he recognized him and said to them: ‘Is this your youngest brother?’ They said to him: ‘He is.’ He said: ‘May the Lord be gracious to you, my son.’ 22 He sent him into his house and brought Simeon out to them. He prepared a dinner for them. They presented him with the gifts which they had brought in their hands. 23 They ate in front of him. He gave portions to all of them, but Benjamin's share was seven times larger than the share of any of them. 24 They ate and drank. Then they got up and stayed with their donkeys. 25 Joseph conceived of a plan by which he would know their thoughts — whether there were peaceful thoughts between them. He said to the man who was in charge of his house: ‘Fill all their sacks with food for them and return their money to them in their containers; put the cup with which I drink in the sack of the youngest — the silver cup — and send them away.’

43He did as Joseph told him. He filled all their sacks with food for them and placed their money in their sacks. He put the cup in Benjamin's sack. 2 Early in the morning they went off. But when they had left that place, Joseph said to the man of his house: ‘Pursue them. Run and reprimand them as follows: “You have repaid me with evil instead of good. You have stolen from me the silver cup with which my master drinks.” Bring their youngest brother back to me and bring him quickly, before I go out to the place where I rule.’ 3 He ran after them and spoke to them in line with this message. 4 They said to him: ‘Heaven forbid that your servants should do such a thing and should steal any container from the house of your master. Your servants have brought back from the land of Canaan the money that we found in our sacks the first time. 5 How, then, should we steal any container? Here we and our sacks are. Make a search, and anyone of us in whose sack you find the cup is to be killed, while we and our donkeys are to serve your master.’ 6 He said to them: ‘That is not the way it will be. I will take only the man with whom I find it as a servant, and you may go safely to your home.’ 7 As he was searching among their containers, he began with the oldest and ended with the youngest. It was found in Benjamin's sack. 8 They tore their clothing, loaded their donkeys, and returned to the city. When they arrived at Joseph's house, all of them bowed to him with their faces to the ground. 9 Joseph said to them: ‘You have done an evil thing.’ They said: ‘What are we to say and what shall we say in our defense? Our master has discovered the crime of his servants. We ourselves and our donkeys, too, are our master's servants.’ 10 Joseph said to them: ‘As for me, I fear the Lord. As for you, go to your houses, but your brother is to be enslaved because you have done something evil. Do you not know that a man takes pleasure in his cup as I do in this cup? And you stole it from me.’[100] 11 Then Judah said: ‘Please, master, allow me, your servant, to say something in my master's hearing. His mother gave birth to two brothers for your servant our father. One has gone away and been lost; no one has found him. He alone is left of his mother's children, and your servant our father loves him, and his life is tied together with the life of this one. 12 If we go to your servant our father and if the young man is not with us, then he would die, and we would bring our father down in sorrow to death. 13 Rather, I, your servant, will remain in place of the child as a servant of my master. Let the young man go with his brothers because I took responsibility for him from your servant our father. If I do not bring him back, your servant will be guilty to our father forever.’ 14 When Joseph saw that the minds of all of them were in harmony with one another for good ends, he was unable to control himself, and he told them that he was Joseph. 15 He spoke with them in the Hebrew language. He wrapped his arms around their necks and cried. But they did not recognize him and began to cry. 16 Then he said to them: ‘Do not cry about me. Quickly bring my father to me and let me see him before I die, while my brother Benjamin also looks on. 17 For this is now the second year of the famine, and there are still five more years without harvest, without fruit growing on trees, and without plowing. 18 You and your households come down quickly so that you may not die in the famine. Do not worry about your property because the Lord sent me first before you to arrange matters so that many people may remain alive. 19 Tell my father that I am still alive. You now see that the Lord has made me like a father to Pharaoh and to rule in his household and over the entire land of Egypt. 20 Tell my father about all my splendor and all the wealth and splendor which the Lord has given me.’ 21 By personal command of Pharaoh, he gave them wagons and provisions for the trip, and he gave all of them colored clothing and silver. 22 To their father, he sent clothing, silver, and ten donkeys which were carrying grain. Then he sent them away. 23 They went up and told their father that Joseph was alive and that he was distributing grain to all the peoples of the earth and ruling over the entire land of Egypt. 24 Their father did not believe it because he was disturbed in his thoughts. But after he saw the wagons which Joseph had sent, his spirit revived, and he said: ‘It is enough for me that Joseph is alive. Let me go down and see him before I die.’

44Israel set out from Hebron, from his house, on the first of the third month. He went by way of the well of the oath and offered a sacrifice to the God of his father Isaac on the seventh of this month. 2 When Jacob remembered the dream that he had seen in Bethel, he was afraid to go down to Egypt. 3 But as he was thinking about sending word to Joseph that he should come to him and that he would not go down, he remained there for seven days on the chance that he would see a vision about whether he should remain or go down. 4 He celebrated the harvest festival — the firstfruits of grain — with old grain because in all the land of Canaan there was not even a handful of seed in the land since the famine affected all the animals, the cattle, the birds, and mankind as well. 5 On the sixteenth, the Lord appeared to him and said to him: ‘Jacob, Jacob.’ He said: ‘Yes?’ He said to him: ‘I am the God of your fathers — the God of Abraham and Isaac. Do not be afraid to go down to Egypt because I will make you into a great nation there.’ 6 ‘I will go down with you, and I will lead you back. You will be buried in this land, and Joseph will place his hands on your eyes. Do not be afraid; go down to Egypt.’ 7 His sons and grandsons set about loading their father and their property on the wagons. 8 Israel set out from the well of the oath on the sixteenth day of this third month and went to the territory of Egypt. 9 Israel sent his son Judah in front of him to Joseph to check the land of Goshen because Joseph had told his brothers to come there in order to live there so that they would be his neighbors. 10 It was the best place in the land of Egypt and it was near him for each one and also all the cattle. 11 These are the names of Jacob’s children who went to Egypt with their father Jacob. 12 Reuben, Israel’s firstborn, and these are the names of his sons: Enoch, Pallu, Hezron, and Carmi — five; 13 Simeon and his sons, and these are the names of his sons: Jemuel, Jamin, Ohad, Jachin, Zohar, and Shaul, the son of the Phoenician woman — seven; 14 Levi and his sons, and these are the names of his sons: Gershon, Kohath, and Merari — four; 15 Judah and his sons, and these are the names of his sons: Shelah, Perez, and Zerah — four; 16 Issachar and his sons, and these are the names of his sons: Tola, Puvah, Iob, and Shimron — five; 17 Zebulun and his sons, and these are the names of his sons: Sered, Elon, and Jahleel — four; 18 These are Jacob’s sons and their sons to whom Leah gave birth for Jacob in Mesopotamia — six and their one sister Dinah. All of the persons of Leah’s sons and their sons who went with their father Jacob to Egypt were 29. And, as their father Jacob was with them, they were 30. 19 The sons of Zilpah, the maid of Jacob’s wife Leah, to whom she gave birth for Jacob were Gad and Asher. 20 These are the names of their sons who went with him into Egypt. Gad’s sons: Ziphion, Haggi, Shuni, Ezbon, [Eri], Areli, and Arodi — eight. 21 The children of Asher: Imnah, Ishvah, [Ishvi], Beriah, and their one sister Serah — six. 22 All the persons were 14, and all those of Leah were 44. 23 The sons of Rachel, who was Jacob’s wife, were Joseph and Benjamin. 24 Before his father came to Egypt, children, to whom Asenath — the daughter of Potiphar, the priest of Heliopolis — gave birth for him, were born to Joseph in Egypt: Manasseh and Ephraim — three. 25 The sons of Benjamin were: Bela, Becher, Ashbel, Gera, Naaman, Ehi, Rosh, Muppim, Huppim, and Ard — eleven. 26 All the persons of Rachel were 14. 27 The sons of Bilhah, the maid of Jacob’s wife Rachel, to whom she gave birth for Jacob, were Dan and Naphtali. 28 These are the names of their sons who went with them to Egypt. The sons of Dan were: Hushim, Samon, Asudi, Iyaka, and Salomon — six. 29 They died in Egypt during the year in which they came there. Only Hushim was left to Dan. 30 These are the names of Naphtali’s sons: Jahzeel, Guni, Jezer, Shillem, and Ev. 31 Ev, who was born after the years of the famine, died in Egypt. 32 All those of Rachel were 26. 33 All the persons of Jacob who entered Egypt were 70 persons. So all of these sons and grandsons of his were 70, and five who died in Egypt before they married. They had no children. 34 Judah’s two sons, Er and Onan, had died in the land of Canaan. They had no children. The sons of Israel buried those who died, and they were placed among the 70 nations.

45Israel went into the territory of Egypt, into the land of Goshen, on the first of the fourth month during the second year of the third week of the forty-fifth jubilee [2172]. 2 When Joseph came to meet his father Jacob in the land of Goshen, he wrapped his arms around his father’s neck and cried. 3 Israel said to Joseph: ‘Now let me die after I have seen you. Now may the Lord, the God of Israel, the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac — who has not withheld his kindness and his mercy from his servant Jacob — be blessed.’ 4 ‘It is enough for me that I have seen your face while I am alive, because the vision that I saw in Bethel was certainly true. May the Lord my God be blessed forever and ever, and may his name be blessed.’ 5 Joseph and his brothers ate food and drank wine in front of their father. Jacob was extremely happy because in front of him he saw Joseph eating and drinking with his brothers. He blessed the creator of all who had preserved him and preserved his twelve sons for him. 6 As a gift, Joseph gave his father and his brothers the right to live in the land of Goshen and in Ramses; and he gave them all its districts which they would rule in the pharaoh’s presence. Israel and his sons lived in the land of Goshen, the best part of the land of Egypt. Israel was 130 years of age when he came into Egypt. 7 Joseph provided as much food for his father, his brothers, and also for their livestock as would be sufficient for them for the seven years of famine. 8 As the land of Egypt suffered from the famine, Joseph gained the whole land of Egypt for the pharaoh in exchange for food. He acquired the people, their cattle, and everything for the pharaoh. 9 When the years of the famine were completed, Joseph gave seed and food to the people who were in the land so that they could sow seed in the eighth year because the river had overflowed the entire land of Egypt. 10 For during the seven years of the famine, it had irrigated only a few places at the river bank, but now it overflowed. The Egyptians seeded the land, and it yielded good produce that year. 11 That was the first year of the fourth week of the forty-fifth jubilee [2178]. 12 Joseph took the king’s fifth of the food which had been sown, and he left four parts for them for food and seed. Joseph made it a law for the land of Egypt until today. 13 Israel lived for 17 years in the land of Egypt. All of the time that he lived was three jubilees — 147 years. He died during the fourth year of the fifth week of the forty-fifth jubilee [2188]. 14 Israel blessed his sons before he died. He told them everything that would happen to them in the land of Egypt; and he informed them about what would happen to them at the end of time. He blessed them and gave Joseph two shares in the land. 15 He slept with his fathers and was buried near his father Abraham in the double cave in the land of Canaan — in the grave which he had dug for himself in the double cave in the land of Hebron. 16 He gave all his books and the books of his fathers to his son Levi so that he could preserve them and renew them for his sons until today.

46After the death of Jacob, the children of Israel became numerous in the land of Egypt. They became a populous nation, and all of them were of the same mind so that each one loved the other and each one helped the other. They became numerous and increased very much — even for ten weeks of years [= 70 years] — for all of Joseph’s lifetime. 2 There was no satan or any evil one throughout all of Joseph’s lifetime that he lived after his father Jacob because all the Egyptians were honoring the children of Israel for all of Joseph’s lifetime. 3 Joseph died when he was 110 years of age. He had lived for 17 years in the land of Canaan; for ten years he remained enslaved; he was in prison for three years; and for 80 years he was ruling the entire land of Egypt under the pharaoh. 4 He died, and all his brothers and all of that generation. 5 Before he died, he ordered the Israelites to take his bones along at the time when they would leave the land of Egypt. 6 He made them swear about his bones because he knew that the Egyptians would not again bring him out and bury him on the day in the land of Canaan, since Makamaron, the king of Canaan — while he was living in the land of Asur — fought in the valley with the king of Egypt and killed him there. He pursued the Egyptians as far as the gates of Ermon. 7 He was unable to enter because another new king ruled Egypt. He was stronger than he, so he returned to the land of Canaan, and the gates of Egypt were closed with no one leaving or entering Egypt. 8 Joseph died in the forty-sixth jubilee, in the sixth week, during its second year [2242]. He was buried in the land of Egypt, and all his brothers died after him. 9 Then the king of Egypt went out to fight with the king of Canaan in the forty-seventh jubilee, in the second week, during its second year [2263]. The Israelites brought out all the bones of Jacob’s sons except Joseph’s bones. They buried them in the field, in the double cave in the mountain. 10 Many returned to Egypt but a few of them remained on the mountain of Hebron. Your father Amram remained with them. 11 The king of Canaan conquered the king of Egypt and closed the gates of Egypt. 12 He conceived an evil plan against the Israelites in order to make them suffer. He said to the Egyptians: 13 ‘The nation of the Israelites has now increased and become more numerous than we are. Come on, let us outwit them before they multiply. Let us make them suffer in slavery before war comes our way and they, too, fight against us. Otherwise they will unite with the enemy and leave our land because their minds and faces look toward the land of Canaan.’ 14 He appointed taskmasters over them to make them suffer in slavery. They built fortified cities for the pharaoh — Pithom and Ramses. They built every wall and all the fortifications which had fallen down in the cities of Egypt. 15 They were enslaving them by force, but however much they would make them suffer, the more they would multiply and the more they would increase. 16 The Egyptians considered the Israelites detestable.

47During the seventh week, in the seventh year, in the forty-seventh jubilee [2303], your father came from the land of Canaan. You were born during the fourth week, in its sixth year, in the forty-eighth jubilee [2330], which was the time of distress for the Israelites. 2 The pharaoh, the king of Egypt, had given orders regarding them that they were to throw their sons — every male who was born — into the river.[101] 3 They continued throwing them in for seven months until the time when you were born. Your mother hid you for three months. Then they told about her. 4 She made a box for you, covered it with pitch and asphalt, and put it in the grass at the riverbank. She put you in it for seven days. Your mother would come at night and nurse you, and during the day your sister Miriam would protect you from the birds. 5 At that time Tarmuth, the pharaoh’s daughter, went out to bathe in the river and heard you crying. She told her slaves to bring you, so they brought you to her. 6 She took you out of the box and pitied you. 7 Then your sister said to her: ‘Should I go and summon for you one of the Hebrew women who will care for and nurse this infant for you?’ [She said to her: ‘Go.’] 8 She went and summoned your mother Jochebed. She gave her wages, and she took care of you. 9 Afterwards, when you had grown up, you were brought to the pharaoh’s daughter and became her child. Your father Amram taught you the art of writing. After you had completed three weeks [= 21 years], he brought you into the royal court. 10 You remained in the court for three weeks of years [= 21 years] until the time when you went from the royal court and saw the Egyptian beating your companion, who was one of the Israelites. You killed him and hid him in the sand. 11 On the next day, you found two of the Israelites fighting. You said to the one who was acting unjustly: ‘Why are you beating your brother?’ 12 He became angry and indignant and said: ‘Who appointed you as ruler and judge over us? Do you want to kill me as you killed the Egyptian?’ Then you were afraid and ran away because of this matter.

48During the sixth year of the third week of the forty-ninth jubilee [2372], you went and lived there for five weeks and one year [= 36 years]. Then you returned to Egypt in the second week, during the second year in the fiftieth jubilee [2410]. 2 You know who spoke to you at Mt. Sinai and what Prince Mastema wanted to do to you while you were returning to Egypt — on the way at the lodge.[102] 3 Did he not wish with all his strength to kill you and to save the Egyptians from your power because he saw that you were sent to carry out punishment and revenge on the Egyptians? 4 I rescued you from his power. You performed the signs and miracles which you were sent to perform in Egypt against the pharaoh, all his house, his servants, and his nation. 5 The Lord effected a great revenge against them on account of Israel. He struck them and killed them with blood, frogs, gnats, dog flies, bad sores which break out in blisters; and he struck their cattle with death; and with hailstones — with these he annihilated everything that was growing for them; with locusts which ate whatever was left for them from the hail; with darkness; and with the death of their first-born of men and cattle. The Lord took revenge on all their gods and burned them up. 6 Everything was sent through you, before it was done, so that you should do it. You were speaking with the king of Egypt and in front of all his servants and his people. 7 Everything happened by your word. Ten great and severe punishments came to the land of Egypt so that you could take revenge on it for Israel. 8 The Lord did everything for the sake of Israel and in accord with his covenant which he made with Abraham to take revenge on them just as they were enslaving them with force. 9 The prince of Mastema would stand up against you and wish to make you fall into the pharaoh’s power. He would help the Egyptian magicians, and they would oppose you and perform in front of you.[103] 10 We permitted them to do evil things, but we would not allow healings to be performed by them. 11 When the Lord struck them with bad sores, they were unable to oppose you because we deprived them of their ability to perform a single sign. 12 Despite all the signs and miracles, the prince of Mastema was not put to shame until he gained strength and cried out to the Egyptians to pursue you with all the Egyptian army — with their chariots, their horses — and with all the throng of the Egyptian people. 13 I stood between you, the Egyptians, and the Israelites. We rescued the Israelites from his power and from the power of the people. The Lord brought them out through the middle of the sea as if on dry ground. 14 All of the people whom he brought out to pursue the Israelites, the Lord our God threw into the sea — to the depths of the abyss — in place of the Israelites, just as the Egyptians had thrown their sons into the river. He took revenge on 1,000,000 of them. One thousand men who were strong and also very brave perished for one infant of your people whom they had thrown into the river.[104] 15 On the fourteenth day, the fifteenth, the sixteenth, the seventeenth, and the eighteenth the prince of Mastema was bound and locked up behind the Israelites so that he could not accuse them.[105] 16 On the nineteenth day we released them so that they could help the Egyptians and pursue the Israelites. 17 He stiffened their resolve and made them stubborn. They were made stubborn by the Lord our God so that he could strike the Egyptians and throw them into the sea. 18 On the fourteenth day we bound him so that he could not accuse the Israelites on the day when they were requesting utensils and clothing from the Egyptians — utensils of silver, utensils of gold, and utensils of bronze; and so that they could plunder the Egyptians in return for the fact that they were made to work when they enslaved them by force. 19 We did not bring the Israelites out of Egypt empty-handed.

49Remember the commandments which the Lord gave you regarding the Passover so that you may celebrate it at its time on the fourteenth of the first month, that you may sacrifice it before evening, and so that they may eat it at night on the evening of the fifteenth from the time of sunset. 2 For on this night — it was the beginning of the festival and the beginning of joy — you were eating the Passover in Egypt when all the forces of Mastema were sent to kill every firstborn in the land of Egypt — from the pharaoh’s firstborn to the firstborn of the captive slave-girl at the millstone and to the cattle as well.[106] 3 This is that which the Lord gave them: into each house on whose door they saw the blood of a year-old lamb, they were not to enter that house to kill but were to pass over it in order to save all who were in the house because the sign of the blood was on its door. 4 The Lord’s forces did everything that the Lord ordered them. They passed over all the Israelites. The plague did not come on them to destroy any of them — from cattle to mankind to dogs.[107] 5 The plague on Egypt was very great. There was no house in Egypt in which there was no corpse, crying, and mourning. 6 All Israel was eating the paschal meat, drinking the wine, and glorifying, blessing, and praising the Lord God of their fathers. They were ready to leave the Egyptian yoke and evil slavery. 7 Now you remember this day throughout all your lifetime. Celebrate it from year to year throughout all your lifetime, once a year on its day in accord with all of its law. Then you will not change a day from the day or from month to month. 8 For it is an eternal statute and it is engraved on the heavenly tablets regarding the Israelites that they are to celebrate it each and every year on its day, once a year, throughout their entire history. There is no temporal limit because it is ordained forever. 9 The man who is pure but does not come to celebrate it on its prescribed day — to bring a sacrifice that is pleasing before the Lord and to eat and drink before the Lord on the day of his festival — that man who is pure and nearby is to be uprooted because he did not bring the Lord’s sacrifice at its time. That man will bear responsibility for his own sin. 10 The Israelites are to come and celebrate the Passover on its specific day — on the fourteenth of the first month — between the evenings, from the third part of the day until the third part of the night. For two parts of the day have been given for light and its third part for the evening. 11 This is what the Lord commanded you — to celebrate it between the evenings. 12 It is not to be sacrificed at any hour of the daylight but in the hour of the boundary of the evening. They will eat it during the evening hours until the third part of the night. Any of its meat that is left over from the third part of the night and beyond is to be burned. 13 They are not to boil it in water nor eat it raw but roasted on a fire, cooked with care on a fire — the head with its internal parts and its feet. They are to roast it on a fire. There will be no breaking of any bone in it because no bone of the Israelites will be broken. 14 Therefore the Lord ordered the Israelites to celebrate the Passover on its specific day. No bone of it is to be broken because it is a festal day and a day which has been commanded. From it there is to be no passing over a day from the day or a month from the month because it is to be celebrated on its festal day. 15 Now you order the Israelites to celebrate the Passover each year during their times, once a year on its specific day. Then a pleasing memorial will come before the Lord and no plague will come upon them to kill and to strike them during that year when they have celebrated the Passover at its time in every respect as it was commanded.[108] 16 It is no longer to be eaten outside of the Lord’s sanctuary but before the Lord’s sanctuary. All the people of the Israelite congregation are to celebrate it at its time. 17 Every man who has come on its day, who is 20 years of age and above, is to eat it in the sanctuary of your God before the Lord, because this is the way it has been written and ordained — that they are to eat it in the Lord’s sanctuary. 18 When the Israelites enter the land which they will possess — the land of Canaan — and set up the Lord’s tabernacle in the middle of the land in one of their tribal groups (until the time when the Lord’s temple will be built in the land), they are to come and celebrate the Passover in the Lord’s tabernacle and sacrifice it before the Lord from year to year. 19 At the time when the house is built in the Lord’s name in the land which they will possess, they are to go there and sacrifice the Passover in the evening when the sun sets, in the third part of the day. 20 They will offer its blood on the base of the altar. They are to place the fat on the fire which is above the altar and are to eat its meat roasted on a fire in the courtyard of the sanctuary in the name of the Lord. 21 They will not be able to celebrate the Passover in their cities or in any places except before the Lord’s tabernacle or otherwise before the house in which his name has resided. Then they will not go astray from the Lord. 22 Now you, Moses, order the Israelites to keep the statute of the Passover as it was commanded to you so that you may tell them its year each year, the time of the days, and the festival of unleavened bread so that they may eat unleavened bread for seven days to celebrate its festival, to bring its sacrifice before the Lord on the altar of your God each day during those seven joyful days. 23 For you celebrated this festival hastily when you were leaving Egypt until the time you crossed the sea into the wilderness of Sur, because you completed it on the seashore.

50After this law I informed you about the sabbath days in the wilderness of Sin which is between Elim and Sinai. 2 On Mt. Sinai I told you about the sabbaths of the land and the years of jubilees in the sabbaths of the years, but its year we have not told you until the time when you enter the land which you will possess. 3 The land will observe its sabbaths when they live on it, and they are to know the year of the jubilee. 4 For this reason I have arranged for you the weeks of years and the jubilees — 49 jubilees from the time of Adam until today, and one week and two years. It is still 40 years off (for learning the Lord’s commandments) until the time when he leads them across to the land of Canaan, after they have crossed the Jordan to the west of it.[109] 5 The jubilees will pass by until Israel is pure of every sexual evil, impurity, contamination, sin, and error. Then they will live confidently in the entire land. They will no longer have any satan or any evil person. The land will be pure from that time until eternity. 6 I have now written for you the sabbath commandments and all the statutes of its laws. 7 You will work for six days, but on the seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord your God. Do not do any work on it — you, your children, your male and female servants, all your cattle, or the foreigner who is with you. 8 The man who does any work on it is to die. Any man who desecrates this day; who lies with a woman; who says anything about work on it — that he is to set out on a trip on it, or about any selling or buying; who on it draws water which he had not prepared for himself on the sixth day; or who lifts any load to bring it outside his tent or his house is to die. 9 On the sabbath day do not do any work which you have not prepared for yourself on the sixth day so that you may eat, drink, rest, keep sabbath on this day from all work, and bless the Lord your God who has given you a festal day and a holy day. This day among their days is to be the day of the holy kingdom for all Israel throughout all time. 10 For great is the honor which the Lord has given Israel to eat, drink, and be filled on this festal day; and to rest on it from any work that belongs to the work of mankind except to burn incense and to bring before the Lord offerings and sacrifices for the days and the sabbaths. 11 Only this kind of work is to be done on the sabbath days in the sanctuary of the Lord your God in order that they may atone continuously for Israel with offerings from day to day as a memorial that is acceptable before the Lord; and in order that he may receive them forever, day by day, as you were ordered. 12 Any man who does work; who goes on a trip; who works farmland whether at his home or in any other place; who lights a fire; who rides any animal; who travels the sea by ship; any man who beats or kills anything; who slits the throat of an animal or bird; who catches either a wild animal, a bird, or a fish; who fasts and makes war on the sabbath day —[110] 13 A man who does any of these things on the sabbath day is to die, so that the Israelites may continue observing the sabbath in accord with the commandments for the sabbaths of the land as it was written in the tablets which he placed in my hands so that I could write for you the laws of each specific time in every division of its times. Here the words regarding the divisions of the times are completed.