Keil and Delitzsch Commentary - Genesis 39:19 - 39:19

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Keil and Delitzsch Commentary - Genesis 39:19 - 39:19


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Joseph in Prison. - Potiphar was enraged at what he heard, and put Joseph into the prison where (אֲשֶׁר for שָׁם אֲשֶׁר, Gen 40:3 like Gen 35:13) the king's prisoners (state-prisoners) were confined. הַסֹּהַר בֵּית: lit., the house of enclosure, from סהר, to surround or enclose (ὀχύρωμα, lxx); the state-prison surrounded by a wall. This was a very moderate punishment. For according to Diod. Sic. (i. 78) the laws of the Egyptians were πικροὶ περὶ τῶν γυναιῶν νόμοι. An attempt at adultery was to be punished with 1000 blows, and rape upon a free woman still more severely. It is possible that Potiphar was not fully convinced of his wife's chastity, and therefore did not place unlimited credence in what she said.

(Note: Credibile est aliquod fuisse indicium, quo Josephum innocentem esse Potiphari constiteret; neque enim servi vita tanti erat ut ei parceretur in tam gravi delicto. Sed licet innocuum, in carcere tamen detinebat, ut uxoris honori et suo consuleret (Clericus). The chastity of Egyptian women has been in bad repute from time immemorial (Diod. Sic. i. 59; Herod. ii. 111). Even in the middle ages the Fatimite Hakim thought it necessary to adopt severe measures against their immorality (Bar-Hebraei, chron. p. 217), and at the present day, according to Burckhardt (arab. Sprichwφrter, pp. 222, 227), chastity is “a great rarity” among women of every rank in Cairo.)

But even in that case it was the mercy of the faithful covenant God, which now as before (Gen 37:20.) rescued Joseph's life.