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The Holy Bible, Berean Study Bible

Genesis 37:24

and they took him and threw him into the pit. Now the pit was empty, with no water in it.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Jealousy;   Joseph;   Reuben;   Thompson Chain Reference - Bible Stories for Children;   Children;   Cruelty;   Home;   Kindness-Cruelty;   Pleasant Sunday Afternoons;   Religion;   Stories for Children;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Joseph;   Reuben;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Envy;   Family Life and Relations;   Pit;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Cistern;   Pit;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Cistern;   Genesis;   Pit;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Dothan;   Prison;   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Garments;   Pit;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Dothan;   Smith Bible Dictionary - Reu'ben;  

Encyclopedias:

- Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia - Joseph;   International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Cistern;   Joseph (2);   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Joseph;   Sidra;  

Parallel Translations

Hebrew Names Version
and they took him, and threw him into the pit. The pit was empty. There was no water in it.
King James Version
And they took him, and cast him into a pit: and the pit was empty, there was no water in it.
Lexham English Bible
And they took him and threw him into the pit (the pit was empty; there was no water in it).
New Century Version
and threw him into the well. It was empty, and there was no water in it.
New English Translation
Then they took him and threw him into the cistern. (Now the cistern was empty; there was no water in it.)
Amplified Bible
then they took him and threw him into the pit. Now the pit was empty; there was no water in it.
New American Standard Bible
and they took him and threw him into the pit. Now the pit was empty, without any water in it.
Geneva Bible (1587)
And they tooke him, and cast him into a pit, and the pit was emptie, without water in it.
Legacy Standard Bible
and they took him and cast him into the pit. Now the pit was empty, without any water in it.
Contemporary English Version
and threw him into a dry well.
Complete Jewish Bible
and took him and threw him into the cistern (the cistern was empty; without any water in it).
Darby Translation
and they took him and cast him into the pit; now the pit was empty—there was no water in it.
Easy-to-Read Version
Then they threw him into an empty well that was dry.
English Standard Version
And they took him and threw him into a pit. The pit was empty; there was no water in it.
George Lamsa Translation
And they took him, and threw him into a pit; and the pit was empty, there was no water in it.
Good News Translation
Then they took him and threw him into the well, which was dry.
Christian Standard Bible®
Then they took him and threw him into the pit. The pit was empty, without water.
Literal Translation
And they took him and threw him into the pit, the pit being empty, no water in it.
Miles Coverdale Bible (1535)
& toke him and cast him in to a pytt. But the same pytt was emptye, and no water in it,
American Standard Version
and they took him, and cast him into the pit: and the pit was empty, there was no water in it.
Bible in Basic English
And they took him and put him in the hole: now the hole had no water in it.
Bishop's Bible (1568)
And they toke hym, and cast hym into an emptie pit, wherein was no water.
JPS Old Testament (1917)
and they took him, and cast him into the pit--and the pit was empty, there was no water in it.
King James Version (1611)
And they tooke him and cast him into a pit: and the pit was emptie, there was no water in it.
Brenton's Septuagint (LXX)
And they took him and cast him into the pit; and the pit was empty, it had not water.
English Revised Version
and they took him, and cast him into the pit: and the pit was empty, there was no water in it.
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
that hadde no water.
Young's Literal Translation
and take him and cast him into the pit, and the pit [is] empty, there is no water in it.
Update Bible Version
and they took him, and cast him into the pit: and the pit was empty, there was no water in it.
Webster's Bible Translation
And they took him, and cast him into a pit: and the pit [was] empty; [there was] no water in it.
World English Bible
and they took him, and threw him into the pit. The pit was empty. There was no water in it.
New King James Version
Then they took him and cast him into a pit. And the pit was empty; there was no water in it.
New Living Translation
Then they grabbed him and threw him into the cistern. Now the cistern was empty; there was no water in it.
New Life Bible
And they took him and threw him into the hole. The hole was empty and had no water in it.
New Revised Standard
and they took him and threw him into a pit. The pit was empty; there was no water in it.
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
and took him, and cast him into the pit, but the pit, was empty, there was in it no water.
Douay-Rheims Bible
And cast him into an old pit where there was not water.
Revised Standard Version
and they took him and cast him into a pit. The pit was empty, there was no water in it.
New American Standard Bible (1995)
and they took him and threw him into the pit. Now the pit was empty, without any water in it.

Contextual Overview

23So when Joseph came to his brothers, they stripped him of his robe-the robe of many colors he was wearing- 24and they took him and threw him into the pit. Now the pit was empty, with no water in it.25And as they sat down to eat a meal, they looked up and saw a caravan of Ishmaelites coming from Gilead. Their camels were carrying spices, balm, and myrrh on their way down to Egypt. 26Then Judah said to his brothers, "What profit will we gain if we kill our brother and cover up his blood? 27Come, let us sell him to the Ishmaelites and not lay a hand on him; for he is our brother, our own flesh." And they agreed. 28So when the Midianite traders passed by, his brothers pulled Joseph out of the pit and sold him for twenty shekels of silver to the Ishmaelites, who took him to Egypt. 29When Reuben returned to the pit and saw that Joseph was not there, he tore his clothes, 30returned to his brothers, and said, "The boy is gone! What am I going to do?"

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

and cast: Psalms 35:7, Lamentations 4:20

the pit: Psalms 40:2, Psalms 88:6, Psalms 88:8, Psalms 130:1, Psalms 130:2, Jeremiah 38:6, Lamentations 3:52-55, Zechariah 9:11

Reciprocal: Genesis 49:23 - General

Cross-References

Genesis 37:1
Now Jacob lived in the land where his father had resided, the land of Canaan.
Genesis 37:2
This is the account of Jacob. When Joseph was seventeen years old, he was tending the flock with his brothers, the sons of Bilhah and Zilpah, his father's wives, and he brought their father a bad report about them.
Psalms 35:7
For without cause they laid their net for me; without reason they dug a pit for my soul.
Psalms 40:2
He lifted me up from the pit of despair, out of the miry clay; He set my feet upon a rock, and made my footsteps firm.
Psalms 88:6
You have laid me in the lowest pit, in the darkest of the depths.
Psalms 88:8
You have removed my friends from me; You have made me repulsive to them; I am confined and cannot escape.
Jeremiah 38:6
So they took Jeremiah and dropped him into the cistern of Malchiah, the king's son, which was in the courtyard of the guard. They lowered Jeremiah with ropes into the cistern, which had no water but only mud, and Jeremiah sank down into the mud.
Lamentations 4:20
The LORD's anointed, the breath of our life, was captured in their pits. We had said of him, "Under his shadow we will live among the nations."
Zechariah 9:11
As for you, because of the blood of My covenant, I will release your prisoners from the waterless pit.

Gill's Notes on the Bible

And they took him, and cast him into a pit,.... Into the same that Reuben pointed to them, whose counsel they gladly took and readily executed, supposing he meant the same thing they did, starving him to death:

and the pit [was] empty, [there was] no water in it; only serpents and scorpions, as the Targum of Jonathan; and Jarchi adds, this remark, that there was no water in it, seems to be made either to furnish out a reason why Reuben directed to it, that he might be the more easily got out of it, and not be in danger of losing his life at once, or of being drowned in it; or else to show the uncomfortable situation he was in, having not so much as a drop of water to refresh him; see Zechariah 9:11. Dothan is said to remain to this day, and the inhabitants of it show the ancient ditch into which Joseph was cast u.

u Bunting's Travels, p. 80.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

- Joseph Was Sold into Egypt

17. דתין dotayı̂n Dothain, “two wells?” (Gesenius)

25. נכאת neko't “tragacanth” or goat’s-thorn gum, yielded by the “astragalus gummifer”, a native of Mount Lebanon. צרי tsērı̂y “opobalsamum,” the resin of the balsam tree, growing in Gilead, and having healing qualities. לט loṭ, λῆδον lēdon, “ledum, ladanum,” in the Septuagint στακτή staktē. The former is a gum produced from the cistus rose. The latter is a gum resembling liquid myrrh.

36. פוטיפר pôṭı̂yphar Potiphar, “belonging to the sun.”

The sketch of the race of Edom, given in the preceding piece, we have seen, reaches down to the time of Moses. Accordingly, the history of Jacob’s seed, which is brought before us in the present document, reverts to a point of time not only before the close of that piece, but before the final record of what precedes it. The thread of the narrative is here taken up from the return of Jacob to Hebron, which was seventeen years before the death of Isaac.

Genesis 37:1-5

Joseph is the favorite of his father, but not of his brethren. “In the land of his father’s sojournings.” This contrasts Jacob with Esau, who removed to Mount Seir. This notice precedes the phrase, “These are the generations.” The corresponding sentence in the case of Isaac is placed at the end of the preceding section of the narrative Genesis 25:11. “The son of seventeen years;” in his seventeenth year Genesis 37:32. “The sons of Bilhah.” The sons of the handmaids were nearer his own age, and perhaps more tolerant of the favorite than the sons of Leah the free wife. Benjamin at this time was about four years of age. “An evil report of them.” The unsophisticated child of home is prompt in the disapproval of evil, and frank in the avowal of his feelings. What the evil was we are not informed; but Jacob’s full-grown sons were now far from the paternal eye, and prone, as it seems, to give way to temptation. Many scandals come out to view in the chosen family. “Loved Joseph.” He was the son of his best-loved wife, and of his old age; as Benjamin had not yet come into much notice. “A Coat of many colors.” This was a coat reaching to the hands and feet, worn by persons not much occupied with manual labor, according to the general opinion. It was, we conceive, variegated either by the loom or the needle, and is therefore, well rendered χιτὼν ποικίλος chitōn poikilos, a motley coat. “Could not bid peace to him.” The partiality of his father, exhibited in so weak a manner, provokes the anger of his brothers, who cannot bid him good-day, or greet him in the ordinary terms of good-will.

Genesis 37:5-11

Joseph’s dreams excite the jealousy of his brothers. His frankness in reciting his dream to his brothers marks a spirit devoid of guile, and only dimly conscious of the import of his nightly visions. The first dream represents by a figure the humble submission of all his brothers to him, as they rightly interpret it. “For his dreams and for his words.” The meaning of this dream was offensive enough, and his telling of it rendered it even more disagreeable. A second dream is given to express the certainty of the event Genesis 41:32. The former serves to interpret the latter. There the sheaves are connected with the brothers who bound them, and thereby indicate the parties. The eleven stars are not so connected with them. But here Joseph is introduced directly without a figure, and the number eleven, taken along with the eleven sheaves of the former dream, makes the application to the brothers plain. The sun and moon clearly point out the father and mother. The mother is to be taken, we conceive, in the abstract, without nicely inquiring whether it means the departed Rachel, or the probably still living Leah. Not even the latter seems to have lived to see the fulfillment of this prophetic dream Genesis 49:31. The second dream only aggravated the hatred of his brothers; but his father, while rebuking him for his speeches, yet marked the saying. The rebuke seems to imply that the dream, or the telling of it, appears to his father to indicate the lurking of a self-sufficient or ambitious spirit within the breast of the youthful Joseph. The twofold intimation, however, came from a higher source.

Genesis 37:12-17

Joseph is sent to Dothan. Shekem belonged to Jacob; part of it by purchase, and the rest by conquest. Joseph is sent to inquire of their welfare (שׁלום shālom “peace,” Genesis 37:4). With obedient promptness the youth goes to Shekem, where he learns that they had removed to Dothan, a town about twelve miles due north of Shekem.

Genesis 37:18-24

His brothers cast him into a pit. “This master of dreams;” an eastern phrase for a dreamer. “Let us slay him.” They had a foreboding that his dreams might prove true, and that he would become their arbitrary master. This thought at all events would abate somewhat of the barbarity of their designs. It is implied in the closing sentence of their proposal. Reuben dissuades them from the act of murder, and advises merely to cast him into the pit, to which they consent. He had a more tender heart, and perhaps a more tender conscience than the rest, and intended to send Joseph back safe to his father. He doubtless took care to choose a pit that was without water.

Genesis 37:25-30

Reuben rips his clothes when he finds Joseph gone. “To eat bread.” This shows the cold and heartless cruelty of their deed. “A caravan” - a company of travelling merchants. “Ishmaelites.” Ishmael left his father’s house when about fourteen or fifteen years of age. His mother took him a wife probably when he was eighteen, or twenty at the furthest. He had arrived at the latter age about one hundred and sixty-two years before the date of the present occurrence. He had twelve sons Genesis 25:13-15, and if we allow only four other generations and a fivefold increase, there will be about fifteen thousand in the fifth generation. “Came from Gilead;” celebrated for its balm Jeremiah 8:22; Jeremiah 46:11. The caravan road from Damascus to Egypt touches upon the land of Gilead, goes through Beth-shean, and passes by Dothan. “Spicery.” This gum is called tragacanth, or goats-thorn gum, because it was supposed to be obtained from this plant. “Balm,” or balsam; an aromatic substance obtained from a plant of the genus Amyris, a native of Gilead. “Myrrh” is the name of a gum exuding from the balsamodendron myrrha, growing in Arabia Felix. “Lot,” however, is supposed to be the resinous juice of the cistus or rock rose, a plant growing in Crete and Syria. Judah, relenting, and revolting perhaps from the crime of fratricide, proposes to sell Joseph to the merchants.

Midianites and Medanites Genesis 37:36 are mere variations apparently of the same name. They seem to have been the actual purchasers, though the caravan takes its name from the Ishmaelites, who formed by far the larger portion of it. Midian and Medan were both sons of Abraham, and during one hundred and twenty-five years must have increased to a small clan. Thus, Joseph is sold to the descendants of Abraham. “Twenty silver pieces;” probably shekels. This is the rate at which Moses estimates a male from five to twenty years old Leviticus 27:5. A man-servant was valued by him at thirty shekels Exodus 21:32. Reuben finding Joseph gone, rends his clothes, in token of anguish of mind for the loss of his brother and the grief of his father.

Genesis 37:31-36

The brothers contrive to conceal their crime; and Joseph is sold into Egypt. “Torn, torn in pieces is Joseph.” The sight of the bloody coat convinces Jacob at once that Joseph has been devoured by a wild beast. “All his daughters.” Only one daughter of Jacob is mentioned by name. These are probably his daughters-in-law. “To the grave.” Sheol is the place to which the soul departs at death. It is so called from its ever craving, or being empty. “Minister.” This word originally means eunuch, and then, generally, any officer about the court or person of the sovereign. “Captain of the guards.” The guards are the executioners of the sentences passed by the sovereign on culprits, which were often arbitrary, summary, and extremely severe. It is manifest, from this dark chapter, that the power of sin has not been extinguished in the family of Jacob. The name of God does not appear, and his hand is at present only dimly seen among the wicked designs, deeds, and devices of these unnatural brothers. Nevertheless, his counsel of mercy standeth sure, and fixed is his purpose to bring salvation to the whole race of man, by means of his special covenant with Abraham.


 
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