Keil and Delitzsch Commentary - Genesis 12:6 - 12:6

Online Resource Library

Commentary Index | Return to PrayerRequest.com

Keil and Delitzsch Commentary - Genesis 12:6 - 12:6


(Show All Books | Show All Chapters)

This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

On his arrival in Canaan, “Abram passed through the land to the place of Sichem:” i.e., the place where Sichem, the present Nablus, afterwards stood, between Ebal and Gerizim, in the heart of the land. “To the terebinth (or, according to Deu 11:30, the terebinths) of Moreh:” אֵלֹון אֵיל (Gen 14:6) and אֵילָה are the terebinth, אַלֹּון and אַלָּה the oak; though in many MSS and editions אַלֹּון and אֵלֹון are interchanged in Jos 19:33 and Jdg 4:11, either because the pointing in one of these passages is inaccurate, or because the word itself was uncertain, as the ever-green oaks and terebinths resemble one another in the colour of their foliage and their fissured bark of sombre grey. - The notice that “the Canaanites were then in the land” does not point to a post-Mosaic date, when the Canaanites were extinct. For it does not mean that the Canaanites were then still in the land, but refers to the promise which follows, that God would give this land to the seed of Abram (Gen 12:7), and merely states that the land into which Abram had come was not uninhabited and without a possessor; so that Abram could not regard it at once as his own and proceed to take possession of it, but could only wander in it in faith as in a foreign land (Heb 11:9).