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Bethuel
Bethuel
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Bethuel (Hebrew: בְּתוּאֵלBəṯūʾēl), in the Hebrew Bible, was an Aramean man,[1] the youngest son of Nahor and Milcah,[2] the nephew of Abraham, and the father of Laban and Rebecca.[3]

Key Information

Bethuel was also a town in the territory of the tribe of Simeon, west of the Dead Sea.[4] Some scholars[5] identify it with Bethul[6] and Bethel in southern Judah,[7] to which David gives part of the spoils of his combat with the Amalekites.[8]

Hebrew Bible

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Bethuel appears nine times in nine verses in the Hebrew Bible, all in the Book of Genesis. Adherents of the documentary hypothesis often attribute most of these verses to the Jahwist source,[9] and the remainder to the priestly source.[10]

Bethuel lived in Paddan Aram, identified as the area of Harran in Upper Mesopotamia.[11] He was a descendant of Terah. Bethuel's uncle Abraham sent his senior servant to Paddan Aram to find a wife for his son Isaac. By the well outside of Nahor in Aram-Naharaim, the servant met Bethuel's daughter Rebecca. The servant told Rebecca's household his good fortune in meeting Bethuel's daughter, Abraham's relative. Laban and Bethuel answer, "'The matter was decreed by יהוה; we cannot speak to you bad or good. Here is Rebekah before you; take her and go, and let her be a wife to your master’s son, as יהוה has spoken.'"[12]

After meeting Abraham's servant, Rebecca “ran and told all this to her mother’s household”, that Rebecca's “brother and her mother said, "'Let the maiden remain with us some ten days; then you may go'. ... So they sent off their sister Rebekah and her nurse along with Abraham’s servant and his entourage." Some scholars[who?] thus hypothesize that mention of Bethuel in Gen. 24:50 was a late addition to the preexisting story. Other scholars[who?] argue that these texts indicate that Bethuel was somehow incapacitated. Other scholars attribute the emphasis on the mother's role to a matrilineal family structure. Despite the importance of Rebekah's mother in the narrative of this bible passage, her name is not mentioned.

A generation later, Isaac and Rebecca sent their son Jacob back to Paddan Aram to take a wife from among Laban's daughters, Bethuel's granddaughters, rather than from among the Canaanites.

Rabbinic interpretation

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In the Talmud, Rabbi Isaac called Bethuel a wicked man.[13] The midrash identified Bethuel as a king.[14]

The Book of Jasher, a collection of sayings of the sages from the Amoraim period, lists the children of Bethuel as Sahar, Laban, and their sister Rebecca.[citation needed]

In the Talmud, Abba Arikha in the name of Reuben ben Strobilus cited Laban's and Bethuel's response to Abraham's servant as a proof text for the proposition that God destines a woman and a man for each other in marriage in Moed.[15]

Joshua ben Nehemiah, in the name of Hanina bar Isaac, said that the decree regarding Rebecca that Laban and Bethuel acknowledged came from Mount Moriah in Genesis Rabbah 60:10.

Noting that Genesis 24:55 reports that the next day, Rebekah's “brother and her mother said, ‘Let the maiden remain with us some ten days’” (Gen. 24:55), the Rabbis asked: “Where was Bethuel?” The midrash concluded that Bethuel wished to hinder Rebekah's marriage, and so he was smitten during the night. (Genesis Rabbah 60:12.) The Rabbis said that Abraham's servant did not disclose Bethuel's fate to Isaac.[16]

In his retelling of the story, Josephus reported that Rebekah told Abraham's servant, “my father was Bethuel, but he is dead; and Laban is my brother; and, together with my mother, takes care of all our family affairs, and is the guardian of my virginity.”[17]

See also

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Notes

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Bethuel (Hebrew: בְּתוּאֵל, Bəṯūʾēl, meaning "house of " or "dweller in ") was an Aramean patriarch in the , appearing in the as the son of Nahor and , thereby serving as the nephew of Abraham. He fathered two children: Laban, who later became the father of and , and Rebekah, who married , Abraham's son, thus linking Bethuel to the foundational lineage of the Israelite patriarchs. Residing in (also known as or ), Bethuel's household in became central to the narrative of Abraham's servant 's mission to find a for . In Genesis 24, after Rebekah demonstrated hospitality by providing water for Eliezer and his camels, she identified herself as the daughter of Bethuel, the son of Nahor. Bethuel, alongside his son Laban, received Eliezer and, upon hearing the servant's account of divine guidance in the journey, consented to Rebekah's betrothal, acknowledging it as God's will: "This is from the ; we can say nothing to you one way or the other." Bethuel is subsequently referenced in genealogical contexts, including Isaac's marriage to Rebekah and journey to take a from Bethuel's family. His narrative role underscores themes of familial alliances and divine providence in the Abrahamic covenant, though he fades from the biblical account after the betrothal negotiations.

Biblical Account

Genealogy and Family

Bethuel is identified in the Hebrew Bible as the youngest son of Nahor, the brother of Abraham, and , who was Nahor's niece and the daughter of , Abraham's other brother. This positions Bethuel as Abraham's nephew within the extended patriarchal lineage descending from . Nahor and had eight sons together, listed in birth order as Uz (the firstborn), Buz, Kemuel (the father of Aram), Kesed, Hazo, Pildash, Jidlaph, and Bethuel. These siblings represent the core male descendants from this union, with Kemuel noted specifically as an ancestor of the . Bethuel's family line thus branches from Nahor's household in the Mesopotamian region, distinct from Abraham's direct descendants but interconnected through ties. Bethuel married an unnamed wife, with whom he fathered at least two children: a son named Laban and a named Rebekah. Rebekah later became the wife of , Abraham's son, making Bethuel the father-in-law of and linking the families across generations. This marriage underscores Bethuel's role in preserving endogamous ties within the Terahite clan. The family resided in , a region in associated with the city of , where Nahor had settled after Terah's migration. Biblical texts explicitly designate Bethuel as "the Aramean" from , reflecting his ethnic and geographic identity amid Aramean populations in northern and . In summary, Bethuel's genealogy can be outlined as follows:
  • Grandfather:
  • Father: Nahor (Abraham's brother)
  • Mother: (daughter of )
  • Siblings: Uz, Buz, Kemuel, Kesed, Hazo, Pildash, Jidlaph (seven brothers)
  • Children: Laban (son), Rebekah (daughter)
  • Key Relations: Nephew of Abraham; first cousin of
This structure highlights Bethuel's pivotal position as a connector in the ancestral narratives, facilitating alliances through his daughter Rebekah's betrothal to .

Role in Rebekah's Betrothal

In the narrative of Genesis 24, Bethuel is first introduced as the father of Rebekah when she encounters Abraham's servant at the well outside the city of Nahor in Aram. Rebekah identifies herself to the servant as "the daughter of Bethuel son of , whom she bore to Nahor," establishing her lineage and Bethuel's position as head of the household. Later, the servant recounts this identification to Laban, Rebekah's brother, upon arriving at the family home, reinforcing Bethuel's paternal role in the betrothal proceedings. Bethuel's most direct involvement occurs in Genesis 24:50-51, where he joins Laban in responding to the servant's proposal for Rebekah's marriage to . Together, they affirm the arrangement as divinely ordained, stating, “This is from the ; we can say nothing to oppose it. Here is Rebekah; take her and go, and let her become the wife of your master’s son, as the has directed.” This brief dialogue marks Bethuel's only spoken contribution in the chapter, after which the narrative shifts focus to Laban and Rebekah's family preparing her departure, with no further actions attributed to him. The text presents ambiguity regarding Bethuel's status during the betrothal negotiations, as Laban assumes a dominant role from the outset—greeting the servant, providing , and leading discussions—while Bethuel speaks only once alongside him in verse 50. Bethuel is referenced twice more in connection to Rebekah's during later journey to find wives among his kin. In Genesis 28:2, instructs , "Go at once to Paddan-aram to the house of Bethuel, your mother's father," and in verse 5, the text notes that "went to Paddan-aram, to Laban son of Bethuel the Aramean, the brother of Rebekah, and Esau's mother." These mentions underscore Bethuel's enduring significance as the patriarchal link in the Aramean lineage, though without detailing his personal agency. Bethuel appears nine times across Genesis, consistently highlighting his role in kinship networks rather than active decision-making. The events unfold in Bethuel's household at in Paddan-aram, an Aramean region tied to Abraham's ancestral origins, reflecting cultural norms of arranged marriages within extended kin groups to preserve lineage and alliances.

Name and Etymology

Linguistic Origins

The name Bethuel appears in the with the spelling בְּתוּאֵל, featuring vocalization from the that yields the pronunciation Bəṯūʾēl (alternatively rendered as Betuel in anglicized forms). This form reflects standard , where the initial bet receives a dagesh forte, the taw is spirantized, and the final lamed concludes the theophoric element. Philologically, the name's root components suggest possible derivations within Hebrew morphology. One interpretation links it to בֵּית (bêt, "house") combined with אֵל (ʾēl, "God"), forming a compound akin to other theophoric names denoting divine association with a domicile. An alternative traces it to a stem related to בָּתַל (bātal, "to destroy" or "division") prefixed or compounded with אֵל, implying a sense of divine separation or ruin, though the exact segmentation remains debated among lexicographers. These elements align with common Semitic naming patterns, where אֵל frequently serves as a divine suffix. In comparative Semitic linguistics, Bethuel's structure shows affinities with and Akkadian cognates, underscoring its Aramean cultural context in the biblical narrative. The "house" component parallels baytā ("house") and Akkadian bītu, while אֵל corresponds to widespread Northwest Semitic terms for , such as ʾlh or Akkadian ilu, highlighting the name's embedding in broader Aramean onomastic traditions. The personal name occurs solely in Genesis—specifically in 22:22–23, 24:15, 24:24, 24:47, 24:50, 25:20, 28:2, and 28:5—with variants like Bethul appearing as a place name in 19:4 and 1 Chronicles 4:30. Textual transmission preserves the name with notable consistency across ancient versions. The renders it as Βαθουήλ (Bathouēl), adapting the Hebrew taw to and incorporating for phonetic approximation in . Similarly, the employs Bethuel or the variant Bathuel, maintaining the core structure while aligning with Latin conventions.

Interpretations of Meaning

The name Bethuel, derived from Hebrew elements, has been primarily interpreted in biblical scholarship as "House of God," combining bayit (בית), meaning "house," with 'el (אל), denoting "God." This theophoric construction suggests a domestic or authoritative realm under divine presence, aligning with patriarchal themes of familial covenant. Alternative primary renderings include "Man of God," proposed through a possible link to met (מת), "man," though this faces phonetic challenges as the name begins with bet rather than met. Another interpretation, "Virgin of God," draws from betulah (בתולה), "virgin," emphasizing purity within the lineage leading to Israel's matriarchs. An alternative view posits "God Destroys," from batel (בטל), meaning "to annul" or "destroy," paired with 'el, potentially alluding to themes of or transience in ancestral narratives. This reading appears in standard lexical references but lacks broad consensus due to contextual in the figure's portrayal. Scholarly debates highlight etymological uncertainties, with Abarim Publications tying the root to batal (בטל), suggesting connotations of "separation" or "daughtering" (via the virgin motif), reflecting processes of distinction in family lines. Older dictionaries, such as those informing , occasionally propose "Dweller in God," implying intimate divine habitation, though this is critiqued for overgeneralizing bayit beyond literal housing. In cultural context, Bethuel's name reflects monotheistic influences among Aramean kin, where 'el-based formations signify Yahweh's sovereignty, paralleling names like Bethel ("House of ") and ("Strives with "). Such theophoric elements underscore shared Semitic traditions of divine naming in Abrahamic lineages. Modern analyses reveal no definitive consensus, with interpretations often linking the name to themes of divine , portraying Bethuel's household as a vessel for providential continuity in the patriarchal family.

Traditional Interpretations

Rabbinic and Midrashic Views

In , Bethuel is depicted as a morally flawed figure whose actions reflect poorly on his character and family dynamics. The portrays him as wicked, with Rabbi Isaac explicitly labeling him as such, suggesting that his involvement in the betrothal of Rebekah was tainted by unethical intentions toward Abraham's servant and the proposed . This characterization implies broader failings in his dealings with family and outsiders, contrasting with the biblical narrative's relative neutrality. Midrashic traditions expand on Bethuel's role in Rebekah's betrothal, emphasizing divine intervention to overcome his opposition. According to Genesis Rabbah 60:12, Bethuel was absent from the decision-making because he had died suddenly that night after attempting to hinder the marriage; one interpretation states that an angel struck him down, while another describes him as a fool pushed by the angel Gabriel, causing him to fall. These accounts highlight Eliezer's presence during the events, underscoring how God ensured the union proceeded despite human resistance, with Bethuel incapacitated before he could interfere further. Some midrashim elevate Bethuel's social standing beyond the biblical text by identifying him as a king of , who exercised oppressive practices such as the jus primae noctis over brides in his domain. This royal portrayal serves to amplify the narrative tension, portraying his household as one of power and corruption that ultimately overrides in facilitating the patriarchal lineage. Pseudepigraphal works like the Book of Jasher provide additional details on Bethuel's family, listing Sechar as a son alongside Laban and Rebekah, thus depicting a larger household than implied in Genesis. These expansions reinforce the thematic emphasis in rabbinic interpretations on God's over flawed human wills, ensuring the continuity of the covenant through and Rebekah's marriage despite Bethuel's shortcomings.

Later Jewish and Christian Traditions

In medieval Jewish , commentators like addressed ambiguities in the biblical account of Bethuel's involvement in Rebekah's betrothal. On Genesis 24:50, Rashi interprets Laban's response as the act of a wicked son who interrupted and spoke before his father, implying Bethuel's presence but silence during the proceedings. Midrashic traditions, reflected in Rashi's commentary and later elaborations, resolve Bethuel's subsequent absence from the narrative by stating that he died the night before the agreement, struck down for opposing the match, thus explaining his non-participation in later decisions. These interpretations underscore themes of divine intervention overriding human obstruction in the patriarchal lineage. In Christian traditions, particularly within , Bethuel is portrayed as an Aramean native of the ancient town of Arach (possibly Erech), serving as the father of Rebecca in narratives that align with the biblical . This depiction appears in texts like , a work associated with the , which emphasizes his familial role without moral judgment. Patristic more broadly highlights Bethuel's consent in Genesis 24:50 as affirming God's providential guidance in the Abrahamic covenant, facilitating the union that ensures the promised seed through . Modern biblical scholarship examines Bethuel's marginal and abrupt portrayal in the Genesis narrative—appearing only briefly before vanishing—as symbolic of generational transitions within the patriarchal stories, marking the pivot from Nahor's Aramean line to Isaac's Israelite descent. While no direct archaeological evidence links to Bethuel as an individual, excavations at in southeastern , identified with the Paddan-Aram region of his residence, uncover a settlement with cultural artifacts supporting the broader historical milieu of the ancestral narratives. Comparatively, Islamic traditions mention Bethuel (often as Batuel) sparingly as the father of Rebekah, integrating him solely into the Abrahamic without narrative expansion or thematic development beyond the prophetic lineage. This contrasts with the more elaborated Jewish and Christian portrayals, where his role invites interpretive scrutiny.

References

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