The Fallible · Synthetic · Study Bible

Genesis29:31–35

Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah

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Genesis 29:31–35 — Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah. Each verse below carries the full apparatus: the Berean Standard Bible, the vocalized original (tap any word), and a parsed breakdown of every term transcribed from the interlinear. Synthesized commentary, canonical threads, and the reading of Christ gather at the end, over the whole unit.

31“When the LORD saw that Leah was unloved, He opened her womb; but…”+

31When the LORD saw that Leah was unloved, He opened her womb; but Rachel was barren.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

Yah·weh way·yar kî- lê·’āh śə·nū·’āh way·yip̄·taḥ ’eṯ- raḥ·māh wə·rā·ḥêl ‘ă·qā·rāh

Literal — word-for-word from the original

“And-saw YHWH that Leah (was) hated, and-he-opened her-womb; but-Rachel (was) barren.”

Where the English smooths the original

  • וַיַּ֤רְא The unit opens verb-first: וַיַּרְא (way·yar, root rāʼāh, H7200), “and he saw.” The BSB’s subordinating “When the LORD saw” turns a main clause into a temporal one; in Hebrew the seeing of YHWH is itself the foreground event. Barnes: “The eye of the Lord is upon the sufferer.” The same verb-root will sound again in Leah’s naming of Reuben (v. 32) — “the LORD has seen my affliction.”
  • שְׂנוּאָ֣ה שְׂנוּאָה (śə·nū·’āh, Qal passive participle of śānêʼ, H8130) is the blunt word “hated,” not the BSB’s softened “unloved.” The commentators uniformly read it comparatively — “less loved than Rachel” (JFB, Poole, Gill) — yet the Hebrew refuses to be tamed: Ellicott warns, “We must not soften this down too much.” It is the same loaded term the Torah uses of the “hated” (i.e. less-loved) wife whose firstborn’s right must still be honored (Deuteronomy 21:15).
  • וַיִּפְתַּ֖ח וַיִּפְתַּח (way·yip̄·taḥ, root pāthach, H6605) is “he opened” — God opens the womb as one opens a door. Onkelos paraphrases it “gave her conception” (so Gill). The womb is not said to open of itself; the same idiom of YHWH opening a closed womb governs Hannah’s story (1 Samuel 1:5–6).
  • עֲקָרָֽה עֲקָרָה (‘ă·qā·rāh, H6135) is the rare, weighty word “barren” — used in only eleven verses of the Hebrew Bible. It is the matriarchs’ word: Sarai (Gen 11:30), Rebekah (Gen 25:21), and now Rachel. The Pulpit Commentary draws the line out: Rachel’s sterility, like theirs, was “designed… to prove that ‘the origin of Israel was to be a work not of nature, but of grace’” (citing Keil).
Word by word10 · parsed+
יְהוָה֙Yah·wehWhen the LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodNounpropermasculine singular
YHWH (H3068) — the covenant name stands first. Barnes notes it is “remarkable that both the narrator and Leah employ the proper name of God,” the name that makes covenant-keeping a feature of His character — fitting, since Leah is “the mother of the promised seed.”
וַיַּ֤רְאway·yarsawH7200
√ râʼâh — to see, literally or figuratively (in numerous applications, direct and implied, transitive, intransitive and causative)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine singular
וַיַּרְא, “and he saw” — the divine gaze is the engine of the whole passage. What man overlooks (Leah), God regards.
כִּֽי־kî-thatH3588
√ kîy — (by implication) very widely used as a relative conjunction or adverb (as below)Conjunction
לֵאָ֔הlê·’āhLeahH3812
√ Lêʼâh — Leah, a wife of JacobNounproperfeminine singular
Leah (Lêʼâh, H3812) — the wife of priority but not of preference (Barnes). She was given by Laban’s deceit (Gen 29:23–25); the chapter now begins to vindicate the unwanted one.
שְׂנוּאָ֣הśə·nū·’āhwas unlovedH8130
√ sânêʼ — to hate (personally)VerbQalQalPassParticiplefeminine singular
שְׂנוּאָה, “hated” — the narrator’s stark verdict on Jacob’s heart. Keil names it “Jacob’s sinful weakness,” and God’s response “the chastisement of God,” blessing the hated wife with children.
וַיִּפְתַּ֖חway·yip̄·taḥHe openedH6605
√ pâthach — to open wide (literally or figuratively)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine singular
וַיִּפְתַּח, “he opened” — the sovereign act. Conception is gift, not achievement; the verb has God as its subject.
אֶת־’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
רַחְמָ֑הּraḥ·māhher wombH7358
√ rechem — the wombNounmasculine singular constructthird person feminine singular
raḥmāh, “her womb” (root rechem, H7358) — the organ of mercy and the organ of barrenness; the same root underlies raḥămîm, compassion. God opens what He alone can open.
וְרָחֵ֖לwə·rā·ḥêlbut RachelH7354
√ Râchêl — Rachel, a wife of JacobConjunctive wawNounproperfeminine singular
עֲקָרָֽה׃‘ă·qā·rāh[was] barrenH6135
√ ʻâqâr — sterile (as if extirpated in the generative organs)Adjectivefeminine singular
עֲקָרָה, “barren,” closes the verse on Rachel — the loved wife left empty while the hated wife is filled. The reversal is deliberate and theological: grace, not nature, builds Israel.
The Voices✦ public domain+
We must not soften this down too much; for plainly Leah was not the object of love at all. It was her fruitfulness which gave her value in her husband’s eyes
This declares that often they who are despised by men are favoured by God.
Marginal note (k) on “he opened her womb.”
The eye of the Lord is upon the sufferer.
On YHWH “seeing” Leah’s state.
the origin of Israel was to be a work not of nature, but of grace
loved less than Rachel, in which sense it is required that we hate father and mother, in comparison with Christ, Luke 14:26
Benson reads the verb comparatively, citing Christ’s own usage of “hate” in Luke 14:26.
32“And Leah conceived and gave birth to a son, and she named him Re…”+

32And Leah conceived and gave birth to a son, and she named him Reuben, for she said, “The LORD has seen my affliction. Surely my husband will love me now.”

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

lê·’āh wat·ta·har wat·tê·leḏ bên wat·tiq·rā šə·mōw rə·’ū·ḇên kî ’ā·mə·rāh Yah·weh rā·’āh bə·‘ān·yî kî kî- ’î·šî ye·’ĕ·hā·ḇa·nî ‘at·tāh

Literal — word-for-word from the original

“And-Leah conceived and-bore a-son, and-she-called his-name Reuben; for she-said, Surely YHWH has-seen my-affliction — for now my-husband will-love-me.”

Where the English smooths the original

  • רְאוּבֵ֑ן רְאוּבֵן (Reuben, H7205) is heard by the text as two words — rᵉ’û (“see ye!”) + bēn (“a son”): “Behold, a son!” The Pulpit Commentary renders the cry literally as “an expression of joyful surprise at the Divine compassion,” and Ellicott catches the maternal tone — “See, a son!” The name is a shout before it is a label.
  • רָאָ֤ה רָאָה (rā·’āh, root rāʼâh, H7200) — “has seen.” Leah’s naming-speech puns on her son’s name: Reubenrā’āh bᵉ‘onyî, “he saw my affliction.” Cambridge marks this as “a popular and unscientific etymology,” a play on sound rather than strict derivation — but it is the play the inspired narrator records. The verb deliberately echoes v. 31’s opening “and YHWH saw.”
  • בְּעָנְיִ֔י בְּעָנְיִי (bə·‘ān·yî, root ʻŏnî, H6040) is “in/upon my affliction” — a strong word for misery and oppression, the very term used of Israel’s bondage that God “saw” in Egypt (Exodus 3:7) and of Hannah’s grief (1 Samuel 1:11). The LXX renders it tapeinōsis, “low estate” (Cambridge) — the same word Mary will take up in the Magnificat (Luke 1:48).
  • יֶאֱהָבַ֥נִי יֶאֱהָבַנִי (ye·’ĕ·hā·ḇa·nî, root ʼāhab, H157) — “he will love me,” the very thing she lacks. The BSB’s “Surely my husband will love me now” captures the hope; the Hebrew word-order ends the verse on the longed-for verb. Her ache, Ellicott observes, shows “that, while she loved Jacob tenderly, he was to her more than unloving.”
Word by word17 · parsed+
לֵאָה֙lê·’āhAnd LeahH3812
√ Lêʼâh — Leah, a wife of JacobNounproperfeminine singular
וַתַּ֤הַרwat·ta·harconceivedH2029
√ hârâh — to be (or become) pregnant, conceive (literally or figuratively)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
וַתַּהַר, “and she conceived” (root hārāh, H2029) — the first of four rapid conceptions (Keil: “four sons in rapid succession”). The verb recurs at the head of each birth, a drumbeat of grace.
וַתֵּ֣לֶדwat·tê·leḏand gave birth toH3205
√ yâlad — to bear youngConjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
בֵּ֔ןbêna sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular
וַתִּקְרָ֥אwat·tiq·rāand she named himH7121
√ qârâʼ — to call out to (iConjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
שְׁמ֖וֹšə·mōw. . .H8034
√ shêm — an appellation, as amark or memorial of individualityNounmasculine singular constructthird person masculine singular
רְאוּבֵ֑ןrə·’ū·ḇênReubenH7205
√ Rᵉʼûwbên — Reuben, a son of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
Reuben — first of the twelve, first sign that God regards the unregarded. Yet Gill notes the irony: she perhaps hoped for “the promised seed,” but “this son of hers proved unstable, and did not excel” (cf. Gen 49:4).
כִּ֣יforH3588
√ kîy — (by implication) very widely used as a relative conjunction or adverb (as below)Conjunction
אָֽמְרָ֗ה’ā·mə·rāhshe saidH559
√ ʼâmar — to say (used with great latitude)VerbQalPerfectthird person feminine singular
’āmᵉrāh, “she said” — the naming is a confession. JFB: “There was piety and wisdom in attaching a signification to names.”
יְהוָה֙Yah·wehThe LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodNounpropermasculine singular
רָאָ֤הrā·’āhhas seenH7200
√ râʼâh — to see, literally or figuratively (in numerous applications, direct and implied, transitive, intransitive and causative)VerbQalPerfectthird person masculine singular
רָאָה, “has seen” — Leah answers the narrator’s v. 31 “YHWH saw” with her own “YHWH has seen.” Geneva: “By this it appears that she had sought help from God in her affliction.”
בְּעָנְיִ֔יbə·‘ān·yîmy afflictionH6040
√ ʻŏnîy — depression, iPreposition-bNounmasculine singular constructfirst person common singular
bᵉ‘onyî, “my affliction” — Leah names her pain to God before she names her son. The same root threads through Hagar, the Egypt-bondage, and Hannah.
כִּ֥י. . .H3588
√ kîy — (by implication) very widely used as a relative conjunction or adverb (as below)Conjunction
כִּֽי־kî-SurelyH3588
√ kîy — (by implication) very widely used as a relative conjunction or adverb (as below)Conjunction
אִישִֽׁי׃’î·šîmy husbandH376
√ ʼîysh — a man as an individual or a male personNounmasculine singular constructfirst person common singular
יֶאֱהָבַ֥נִיye·’ĕ·hā·ḇa·nîwill love meH157
√ ʼâhab — to have affection for (sexually or otherwise)VerbQalImperfectthird person masculine singularfirst person common singular
יֶאֱהָבַנִי, “will love me” — the verse closes on Leah’s deepest want. The hope, as the next verses show, was not yet answered; the cure for the unloved heart is found elsewhere.
עַתָּ֖ה‘at·tāhnowH6258
√ ʻattâh — at this time, whether adverb, conjunction or expletiveAdverb
The Voices✦ public domain+
When the first child is born, Leah joyfully calls him “Reuben,” that is, See, a son! and fondly hopes that now she is a mother her husband will love her.
Behold a Son! an expression of joyful surprise at the Divine compassion
On the name Reuben.
By this it appears that she had sought help from God in her affliction.
Marginal note (l) on “the LORD hath looked upon my affliction.”
The sound of these two words forms some kind of a play on the name Reuben, and represents a popular and unscientific etymology.
On the etymology of Reuben (râ’ah be‘onyi).
There was piety and wisdom in attaching a signification to names, as it tended to keep the bearer in remembrance of his duty and the claims of God.
On why the naming-speeches carry weight.
33“Again she conceived and gave birth to a son, and she said, “Beca…”+

33Again she conceived and gave birth to a son, and she said, “Because the LORD has heard that I am unloved, He has given me this son as well.” So she named him Simeon.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

‘ō·wḏ wat·ta·har wat·tê·leḏ bên wat·tō·mer Yah·weh kî- šā·ma‘ kî- ’ā·nō·ḵî śə·nū·’āh way·yit·ten- lî zeh gam- ’eṯ- wat·tiq·rā šə·mōw šim·‘ō·wn

Literal — word-for-word from the original

“And-she-conceived again and-bore a-son, and-she-said, Because YHWH has-heard that I (am) hated, he-has-given to-me this also; and-she-called his-name Simeon.”

Where the English smooths the original

  • שָׁמַ֤ע שָׁמַע (šā·ma‘, root shāmaʻ, H8085) — “has heard.” This is the verb that names the child: Shim‘ôn (Simeon) ↔ šāma‘, “hearing.” Poole presses the sense: “hearing being oft put for understanding” — God not merely registered her words but regarded them. Where Reuben answered her affliction seen, Simeon answers her affliction heard.
  • שְׂנוּאָ֣ה שְׂנוּאָה (śə·nū·’āh, H8130) — the same blunt “hated” as v. 31, now in Leah’s own mouth (“that I am hated”). She does not soften it to “less loved” as the kindly commentators do; she owns the hard word. The naming of Simeon is wrung from continued rejection, not from fulfilled hope.
  • וַיִּתֶּן־ וַיִּתֶּן (way·yit·ten, root nāthan, H5414) — “and he gave.” The son is framed as a divine gift in compensation: “he hath therefore given me this son also” (Gill). The verb of giving, not of bearing, carries the theology — the child is YHWH’s grant to the unloved.
  • שִׁמְעֽוֹן שִׁמְעוֹן (Shim‘ôn, H8095). The text’s own etymology binds the name to “hearing” (so Cambridge: shama; cf. Gen 16:11, where Ishmael — “God hears” — is likewise named from šāmaʻ). Leah’s second naming moves from sight (Reuben) to hearing (Simeon): God both sees and hears the afflicted.
Word by word19 · parsed+
עוֹד֮‘ō·wḏAgainH5750
√ ʻôwd — properly, iteration or continuanceAdverb
‘ôḏ, “again” (H5750) — the iteration-word opens vv. 33, 34, 35, marking the relentless cadence of grace to the hated wife.
וַתַּ֣הַרwat·ta·harshe conceivedH2029
√ hârâh — to be (or become) pregnant, conceive (literally or figuratively)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
וַתֵּ֣לֶדwat·tê·leḏand gave birth toH3205
√ yâlad — to bear youngConjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
בֵּן֒bêna sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular
וַתֹּ֗אמֶרwat·tō·merand she saidH559
√ ʼâmar — to say (used with great latitude)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
יְהוָה֙Yah·wehBecause the LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodNounpropermasculine singular
YHWH again on Leah’s lips — Barnes: she “had learned to acknowledge the Lord in all her ways.”
כִּֽי־kî-. . .H3588
√ kîy — (by implication) very widely used as a relative conjunction or adverb (as below)Conjunction
שָׁמַ֤עšā·ma‘has heardH8085
√ shâmaʻ — to hear intelligently (often with implication of attention, obedience, etcVerbQalPerfectthird person masculine singular
שָׁמַע, “has heard” — the hinge-word. Barnes glosses Simeon as “answer”: “She had prayed to the Lord, and this was her answer.”
כִּֽי־kî-thatH3588
√ kîy — (by implication) very widely used as a relative conjunction or adverb (as below)Conjunction
אָנֹ֔כִי’ā·nō·ḵîIH595
√ ʼânôkîy — IPronounfirst person common singular
שְׂנוּאָ֣הśə·nū·’āham unlovedH8130
√ sânêʼ — to hate (personally)VerbQalQalPassParticiplefeminine singular
שְׂנוּאָה, “hated” — Leah’s candor. The birth of Reuben “had obviously not answered Leah’s expectations in increasing Jacob’s love” (Pulpit); she is still the hated one.
וַיִּתֶּן־way·yit·ten-He has givenH5414
√ nâthan — to give, used with greatest latitude of application (put, make, etcConjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person masculine singular
וַיִּתֶּן, “he has given” — the child received as gift; the verb keeps God the giver.
לִ֖יme
Prepositionfirst person common singular
זֶ֑הzehthis [son]H2088
√ zeh — the masculine demonstrative pronoun, this or thatPronounmasculine singular
גַּם־gam-as wellH1571
√ gam — properly, assemblageConjunction
אֶת־’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
וַתִּקְרָ֥אwat·tiq·rāSo she named himH7121
√ qârâʼ — to call out to (iConjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
שְׁמ֖וֹšə·mōw. . .H8034
√ shêm — an appellation, as amark or memorial of individualityNounmasculine singular constructthird person masculine singular
שִׁמְעֽוֹן׃šim·‘ō·wnSimeonH8095
√ Shimʻôwn — Shimon, one of Jacob's sons, also the tribe descended from himNounpropermasculine singular
Shim‘ôn closes the verse — “Hearing” (Pulpit). Cambridge notes an alternative animal-etymology, but the text’s own pun is on šāma‘.
The Voices✦ public domain+
The Lord hath heard, i.e. perceived or understood; hearing being oft put for understanding.
because the Lord hath heard that I was hated; or less loved than her sister: he hath therefore given me this son also
the birth of Reuben had obviously not answered Leah's expectations in increasing Jacob's love
On why a second son was needed.
Simeon ] Heb. Shimeon . The meaning of this name is very likely that of an animal, “the hyaena”
Cambridge’s alternative philology, beside the text’s own pun on šāma‘ (“hearing”).
34“Once again Leah conceived and gave birth to a son, and she said,…”+

34Once again Leah conceived and gave birth to a son, and she said, “Now at last my husband will become attached to me, because I have borne him three sons.” So he was named Levi.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

‘ō·wḏ wat·ta·har wat·tê·leḏ bên wat·tō·mer ‘at·tāh hap·pa·‘am ’î·šî yil·lā·weh ’ê·lay kî- yā·laḏ·tî lōw šə·lō·šāh ḇā·nîm ‘al- kên qā·rā- šə·mōw lê·wî

Literal — word-for-word from the original

“And-she-conceived again and-bore a-son, and-she-said, Now this-time will-be-joined my-husband to-me, because I-have-borne to-him three sons; therefore one-called his-name Levi.”

Where the English smooths the original

  • יִלָּוֶ֤ה יִלָּוֶה (yil·lā·weh, Niphal of lāvâh, H3867) — “will be joined / attached / will twine himself.” The root means literally “to twine, entwine” (Strong’s); the BSB’s “become attached” is right but pale. This is the verb that names Lēwî (Levi) ↔ lāvâh, “joined.” The same rare verb (only 22 verses) will be turned, in Numbers 18:2,4, on the tribe of Levi’s being “joined” to Aaron for priestly service — Leah’s longing for marital union becomes, in her son’s tribe, the word for cleaving to the LORD’s service.
  • אִישִׁי֙ אִישִׁי (’î·šî, root ’îsh, H376) — “my husband / my man.” For the third time Leah’s naming-speech bends toward Jacob, not God: Reuben that he might love her, Simeon as gift while she is hated, Levi that he might be joined to her. The progression is poignant — each son a fresh bid for the husband’s heart.
  • קָרָֽא־ קָרָא (qā·rā, H7121) here is third-person masculine singular — literally “he called his name” (or impersonal “one called”), whereas Reuben and Simeon were named with the feminine “she called” (wat·tiqrā). The shift may quietly mark the father’s naming of Levi, or an impersonal “he was named” (as the BSB takes it) — a subtle grammatical seam the smooth English erases.
Word by word20 · parsed+
עוֹד֮‘ō·wḏOnce againH5750
√ ʻôwd — properly, iteration or continuanceAdverb
וַתַּ֣הַרwat·ta·har[Leah] conceivedH2029
√ hârâh — to be (or become) pregnant, conceive (literally or figuratively)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
וַתֵּ֣לֶדwat·tê·leḏand gave birth toH3205
√ yâlad — to bear youngConjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
בֵּן֒bêna sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular
וַתֹּ֗אמֶרwat·tō·merand she saidH559
√ ʼâmar — to say (used with great latitude)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
עַתָּ֤ה‘at·tāhNowH6258
√ ʻattâh — at this time, whether adverb, conjunction or expletiveAdverb
‘at·tāh hap·pa‘am, “now this time” — the same emphatic phrase Adam used over Eve, “this is now (this time) bone of my bones” (Gen 2:23); Leah hopes this birth will finally bind her husband to her.
הַפַּ֙עַם֙hap·pa·‘amat lastH6471
√ paʻam — a stroke, literally or figuratively (in various applications, as follow)ArticleNounfeminine singular
אִישִׁי֙’î·šîmy husbandH376
√ ʼîysh — a man as an individual or a male personNounmasculine singular constructfirst person common singular
אִישִׁי, “my husband” — Leah’s eye is still on Jacob. Henry frames the longing as proper: “Mutual affection is both the duty and comfort of the married relation.”
יִלָּוֶ֤הyil·lā·wehwill become attachedH3867
√ lâvâh — properly, to twine, iVerbNifalImperfectthird person masculine singular
יִלָּוֶה, “will be joined” — the heart of the verse. Poole: “This time will my husband be joined unto me in more sincere and fervent affection.” The verb that here means marital cleaving becomes the tribal name of those who cleave to God’s altar.
אֵלַ֔י’ê·layto meH413
√ ʼêl — near, with or amongPrepositionfirst person common singular
כִּֽי־kî-becauseH3588
√ kîy — (by implication) very widely used as a relative conjunction or adverb (as below)Conjunction
יָלַ֥דְתִּיyā·laḏ·tîI have borneH3205
√ yâlad — to bear youngVerbQalPerfectfirst person common singular
ל֖וֹlōwhim
Prepositionthird person masculine singular
שְׁלֹשָׁ֣הšə·lō·šāhthreeH7969
√ shâlôwsh — threeNumbermasculine singular
šᵉlōšāh ḇānîm, “three sons” — Gill: she considered them “a threefold cord, binding his affections to her, which could not be easily broke” (cf. Eccl 4:12).
בָנִ֑יםḇā·nîmsonsH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine plural
עַל־‘al-SoH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsPreposition
כֵּ֥ןkên. . .H3651
√ kên — properly, set uprightAdverb
קָרָֽא־qā·rā-he was namedH7121
√ qârâʼ — to call out to (iVerbQalPerfectthird person masculine singular
קָרָא, “he/one called” — the grammatical shift from the feminine namings of vv. 32–33.
שְׁמ֖וֹšə·mōw. . .H8034
√ shêm — an appellation, as amark or memorial of individualityNounmasculine singular constructthird person masculine singular
לֵוִֽי׃lê·wîLeviH3878
√ Lêvîy — Levi, a son of JacobNounpropermasculine singular
Lēwî (H3878), “Joined” — the priestly tribe’s ancestor (so Cambridge, Numbers 18). The word born of Leah’s craving for union becomes Israel’s word for nearness to God.
The Voices✦ public domain+
This time will my husband be joined unto me in more sincere and fervent affection.
because I have born him three sons; which she considered as a threefold cord, binding his affections to her, which could not be easily broke
In Numbers 18:2 ; Numbers 18:4 , this word lavah is especially used of the attachment of the sons of Levi to the service of Jehovah, as the priestly tribe.
On the root lavah and the tribe of Levi.
Mutual affection is both the duty and comfort of the married relation
35“And once more she conceived and gave birth to a son and said, “T…”+

35And once more she conceived and gave birth to a son and said, “This time I will praise the LORD.” So she named him Judah. Then Leah stopped having children.

Berean Standard Bible · CC0

Hebrew — tap a word ↓

‘ō·wḏ wat·ta·har wat·tê·leḏ bên wat·tō·mer hap·pa·‘am ’ō·w·ḏeh ’eṯ- Yah·weh ‘al- kên qā·rə·’āh šə·mōw yə·hū·ḏāh wat·ta·‘ă·mōḏ mil·le·ḏeṯ

Literal — word-for-word from the original

“And-she-conceived again and-bore a-son, and-she-said, This-time I-will-praise YHWH; therefore she-called his-name Judah; and-she-stood-still from-bearing.”

Where the English smooths the original

  • אוֹדֶ֣ה אוֹדֶה (’ō·w·ḏeh, Hifil of yādâh, H3034) — “I will praise / give thanks / acknowledge.” The root’s base sense is physical — “to throw” (a hand, a stone) — so to praise is to cast forth open hands toward God. This is the verb that names Yᵉhûdâh (Judah) ↔ ’ôḏeh, “praise.” Keil notes the form precisely: Judah means “not merely the praised one, but the one for whom Jehovah is praised.” The same root crowns the whole Psalter’s vocabulary of thanksgiving (Ps 100:4).
  • יְהוּדָ֑ה יְהוּדָה (Judah, H3063) — the turning-point name. With the first three sons Leah looked to her husband; with the fourth she looks only to YHWH: “This time I will praise the LORD.” Ellicott traces the arc: “slowly she parts with her hope of human affection, and finds comfort in Jehovah alone.” This is the son “fore-ordained to be the ancestor of the promised seed.”
  • וַֽתַּעֲמֹ֖ד וַתַּעֲמֹד (wat·ta·‘ă·mōḏ, root ʻāmaḏ, H5975) means literally “and she stood still / stood,” not simply “stopped.” The BSB’s “Leah stopped having children” is interpretive; the Hebrew pictures a pause, a standing-still. The Pulpit Commentary insists: “Literally, stood still, i.e. ceased… Not altogether… only for a time” (cf. Gen 30:17), lest she “be unduly lifted up by her good fortune” (Keil).
Word by word16 · parsed+
ע֜וֹד‘ō·wḏAnd once moreH5750
√ ʻôwd — properly, iteration or continuanceAdverb
וַתַּ֨הַרwat·ta·harshe conceivedH2029
√ hârâh — to be (or become) pregnant, conceive (literally or figuratively)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
וַתֵּ֣לֶדwat·tê·leḏand gave birth toH3205
√ yâlad — to bear youngConjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
בֵּ֗ןbêna sonH1121
√ bên — a son (as a builder of the family name), in the widest sense (of literal and figurative relationship, including grandson, subject, nation, quality or condition, etcNounmasculine singular
וַתֹּ֙אמֶר֙wat·tō·merand saidH559
√ ʼâmar — to say (used with great latitude)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
הַפַּ֙עַם֙hap·pa·‘amThis timeH6471
√ paʻam — a stroke, literally or figuratively (in various applications, as follow)ArticleNounfeminine singular
hap·pa‘am, “this time” — the same word that opened the Levi-speech (v. 34), but the object has changed: no longer “my husband” but “the LORD.” The shift is the spiritual climax of the passage.
אוֹדֶ֣ה’ō·w·ḏehI will praiseH3034
√ yâdâh — physically, to throw (a stone, an arrow) at or awayVerbHifilImperfectfirst person common singular
אוֹדֶה, “I will praise” — Henry: “All our praises must centre in Christ, both as the matter of them, and as the Mediator of them.” Poole hears intensification: “Now will I praise the Lord more solemnly and continually.”
אֶת־’eṯ-H853
√ ʼêth — properly, self (but generally used to point out more definitely the object of a verb or preposition, even or namely)Direct object marker
יְהוָ֔הYah·wehthe LORDH3068
√ Yᵉhôvâh — Jehovah, Jewish national name of GodNounpropermasculine singular
YHWH — the object of praise, named for the fourth time on Leah’s lips. The hated wife becomes the first worshipper of the four mothers.
עַל־‘al-SoH5921
√ ʻal — above, over, upon, or against (yet always in this last relation with a downward aspect) in a great variety of applicationsPreposition
כֵּ֛ןkên. . .H3651
√ kên — properly, set uprightAdverb
קָרְאָ֥הqā·rə·’āhshe named himH7121
√ qârâʼ — to call out to (iVerbQalPerfectthird person feminine singular
שְׁמ֖וֹšə·mōw. . .H8034
√ shêm — an appellation, as amark or memorial of individualityNounmasculine singular constructthird person masculine singular
יְהוּדָ֑הyə·hū·ḏāhJudahH3063
√ Yᵉhûwdâh — Jehudah (or Judah), the name of five IsraelitesNounpropermasculine singular
Yᵉhûdâh (Judah), “Praise” — Henry: “This was he, of whom, as concerning the flesh, Christ came… He descended after the flesh from him whose name was Praise, and He is our praise.” Gill cites the Targum: from Judah “shall come forth David the king.”
וַֽתַּעֲמֹ֖דwat·ta·‘ă·mōḏThen Leah stoppedH5975
√ ʻâmad — to stand, in various relations (literal and figurative, intransitive and transitive)Conjunctive wawVerbQalConsecutive imperfectthird person feminine singular
וַתַּעֲמֹד, “and she stood still” — the pause, not a permanent end (she bears again in 30:17–21). The standing-still guards her from pride (Keil).
מִלֶּֽדֶת׃mil·le·ḏeṯhaving childrenH3205
√ yâlad — to bear youngPreposition-mVerbQalInfinitive construct
mil·le·ḏeṯ, “from bearing” (root yālaḏ) — the same root that has driven the whole passage now halts; the drumbeat of births rests on the note of praise.
The Voices✦ public domain+
Her fourth son she called Judah, or praise, saying, Now will I praise the Lord. This was he, of whom, as concerning the flesh, Christ came.
And why may it not be as well supposed that she had knowledge of the Messiah springing from him, which would greatly heighten and increase her joy and praise?
Now will I praise the Lord more solemnly and continually; for otherwise she did praise and acknowledge God for the former mercies.
Literally, stood still, i.e. ceased, from bearing . Not altogether ( Genesis 30:16 ); only for a time
On the closing verb wat·ta·‘ă·mōḏ.

The verse-by-verse work is done. What follows gathers the whole unit. All three layers below are machine-generated (⚙). Weigh them; they have no authority.

Grand Commentary — the unit, read wholesynthesis · verify+

AI synthesis — woven from the public-domain voices above and the original text; generated and fallible.

i. The God who saw the unwanted — 31

The unit turns on a single Hebrew verb set first in its clause: way·yar, “and YHWH saw.” What Jacob overlooked, God regarded. Barnes states the theme bare: “The eye of the Lord is upon the sufferer,” and notes the “remarkable” fact that “both the narrator and Leah employ the proper name of God,” the covenant name fitting in the mouth of one who is “the mother of the promised seed.” The narrator’s word for Leah is not the BSB’s gentle “unloved” but the blunt participle שְׂנוּאָה, “hated” — and Ellicott refuses to dilute it: “We must not soften this down too much; for plainly Leah was not the object of love at all. It was her fruitfulness which gave her value in her husband’s eyes.” Against that human contempt God acts: “he opened her womb,” while Rachel — named with the rare matriarchal word עֲקָרָה, “barren” (only eleven verses in all the Hebrew Bible) — was left empty. The Geneva Bible draws the doctrine from the margin: “This declares that often they who are despised by men are favoured by God.” Keil names the design: “the origin of Israel was to be a work not of nature, but of grace.”

ii. Four names, a soul laid bare — 32–34

Leah preaches her whole inner life in three names. Reuben — heard as rᵉ’û bēn, “see, a son!” — is, in the Pulpit Commentary’s phrase, “an expression of joyful surprise at the Divine compassion,” and Geneva reads in it a prayer answered: “By this it appears that she had sought help from God in her affliction.” Cambridge cautions that the wordplay (Reubenrā’āh bᵉ‘onyî, “he saw my affliction”) is “a popular and unscientific etymology” — sound, not strict derivation — yet it is the play the inspired text records. Simeon turns from sight to hearing: Poole insists “The Lord hath heard, i.e. perceived or understood; hearing being oft put for understanding,” and Gill gives Leah’s logic — “the Lord hath heard that I was hated… he hath therefore given me this son also.” The Pulpit Commentary marks the pathos: “the birth of Reuben had obviously not answered Leah’s expectations in increasing Jacob’s love.” Levi reaches for the husband once more — the root lāvâh, “to twine, be joined” — and Poole renders her hope: “This time will my husband be joined unto me in more sincere and fervent affection,” for, as Gill puts it, three sons were “a threefold cord, binding his affections to her, which could not be easily broke.” Cambridge notes the great future of that verb: “this word lavah is especially used of the attachment of the sons of Levi to the service of Jehovah, as the priestly tribe.” The craving for marital union becomes the name of the tribe that cleaves to God.

iii. From husband to LORD — the birth of praise — 35

The fourth name breaks the pattern. With Reuben, Simeon, and Levi, Leah’s eye was on Jacob — that he might love her, that she was hated, that he might be joined to her. With Judah she looks past her husband entirely: “This time I will praise the LORD.” Ellicott traces the arc of the whole section to this point: “slowly she parts with her hope of human affection, and finds comfort in Jehovah alone… And it was this son of the despised one, whose birth called forth from her this hymn of simple thanksgiving, who was fore-ordained to be the ancestor of the promised seed.” The verb is ’ôḏeh (root yādâh), and Keil reads the name with care: Judah means “not merely the praised one, but the one for whom Jehovah is praised.” Henry draws the line to its end: “This was he, of whom, as concerning the flesh, Christ came… He descended after the flesh from him whose name was Praise, and He is our praise.” Gill dares the question outright — “why may it not be as well supposed that she had knowledge of the Messiah springing from him?” Then the womb rests: וַתַּעֲמֹד, “she stood still from bearing” — “only for a time,” says the Pulpit Commentary, lest she be “unduly lifted up by her good fortune” (Keil). The drumbeat of births halts on the note of praise.

Read under Sola Scriptura — this tool’s own fallible reading (⚙)

Held against the rule that Scripture interprets Scripture, this quiet birth-narrative is doing something far larger than family chronicle. First, it is a doctrine of the God who sees and hears. The passage is framed by divine perception — YHWH saw that Leah was hated (v. 31), Leah confesses YHWH has seen my affliction (v. 32) and YHWH has heard that I am hated (v. 33). The same two verbs, with the same word for “affliction” (‘ŏnî), reappear when God “sees” Israel’s misery in Egypt (Exodus 3:7) and when Hannah pleads her “affliction” (1 Samuel 1:11). The God of the unwanted wife is the God of the enslaved nation and the barren suppliant: He regards what man despises. Second, it is grace overturning nature. The loved wife is barren; the hated wife is fruitful — and the commentators are united that this is design, not accident: “the origin of Israel was to be a work not of nature, but of grace” (Keil; so the Pulpit Commentary). The line of promise does not run through preference but through providence. Third, and most pointedly, it is the secret election of Judah. Leah is the wife “of priority, but not of preference” (Barnes) — given by fraud, less loved, openly hated — and from her, not from beloved Rachel, comes the royal and messianic tribe. The fourth son, born when she had stopped looking to her husband and started praising her God, is the ancestor of David and of Christ. The whole movement of Leah’s heart — from “now my husband will love me” to “now I will praise the LORD” — is the movement Scripture commends: the cure for the unloved soul is not the husband’s affection but the LORD’s praise. (This reading is offered as fallible synthesis, to be weighed against the Word, not above it.)

The hated wife, not the beloved, becomes the mother of the praised tribe — God builds His promise out of the one nobody wanted.

Canonical Threads — out to the whole of Scripturecross-refs · verify+

AI-generated connections. Each carries a verification badge with a recorded basis; contested links are flagged.

The barren matriarchs — Rachel in the line of Sarah and Rebekah verbal / quotation — confirmed

Rachel’s sterility is told with the rare word ‘ăqārâ (H6135), “barren,” which appears in only eleven verses of the Hebrew Bible. The Verifier ties Genesis 29:31 to Genesis 25:21 — Rebekah’s barrenness, healed when “Isaac prayed to the LORD” — on that rare lexeme together with hārâh, “conceive.” The Pulpit Commentary already reads the chain (“as Sarai and Rebekah had been”), and the theology is uniform: the mothers of the covenant are barren until God opens the womb, so that Israel is plainly “a work not of nature, but of grace” (Keil). Genesis 25 and Genesis 29 are two panels of one picture — the promise carried by wombs only God can open.

Genesis 29:31 · Genesis 25:21

basis: Verifier pair-output shares H6135 ʻâqâr (only 11 verses in the whole Hebrew Bible) plus H3588 kî; the verbal weight rests entirely on the rare ʻâqâr, and both verses also share H2029 hârâh (conceive) in the candidate screen. Recurring within the patriarchal birth-narratives with the matriarchal motif explicit, it is a true verbal echo rather than a generic theme

The barren one who bears a deliverer — Samson’s mother verbal / quotation — confirmed

The same rare word ‘ăqārâ reappears at Judges 13:3, where the angel of the LORD tells Manoah’s wife, “you are barren and have not borne, but you shall conceive and bear a son” — Samson, a judge raised to begin Israel’s deliverance. The Verifier records the link on the rare ‘ăqārâ (H6135, 11 vv) together with rāʼâh, “see” (H7200). The barren womb is, repeatedly, the cradle God chooses for a saviour-figure: the motif runs from Rachel (mother of Joseph the preserver) through Manoah’s wife (mother of Samson) to Hannah (mother of Samuel), and the New Testament will sound it once more at Elizabeth (Luke 1:7). What is closed by nature God opens for salvation.

Genesis 29:31 · Judges 13:3

basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes H6135 ʻâqâr (11 vv) and H7200 râʼâh. The rare ʻâqâr carries the verbal tie; the deliverer-from-barrenness motif is shared, but the link is anchored on the rare lexeme, so tiered verbal rather than merely thematic

“Hated” — the less-loved wife, the law, and Christ’s hard word structural / thematic — confirmed

The narrator’s word for Leah is the blunt participle śᵉnū’âh (root śānêʼ, H8130), “hated.” The commentators read it comparatively — “less loved” (JFB, Poole, Gill) — and they anchor the reading in two places where the same root carries exactly that force. The Verifier ties Genesis 29:31 to Deuteronomy 21:15, the law of the man with “two wives, the one beloved and the other hated,” whose hated wife’s firstborn must still receive the double portion — the very statute Leah’s hated firstborn Reuben stands under (cf. Gen 49:3). It ties further to Malachi 1:2–3, “I loved Jacob, but Esau I hated,” where “hate” again means elective preference, not malice. Cambridge cites both, and Poole runs the chain to the New Testament: the same idiom underlies Christ’s “if anyone… does not hate… his own father and mother” (Luke 14:26). The hard Hebrew word is not malice but the language of comparative love — yet it is hard enough that God Himself moves to vindicate the unloved one.

Genesis 29:31 · Deuteronomy 21:15 · Malachi 1:3

basis: Verifier-computed shared lexeme H8130 śānêʼ (139 vv, common — so tiered thematic, not verbal). The link is the shared legal/idiomatic sense of “hate” = love less, attested by the commentators (Cambridge, Poole) across Deuteronomy 21:15 and Malachi 1:2–3; the further reach to Luke 14:26 is cross-Testament (Greek miseō ↔ Hebrew śānêʼ), a shared semantic range, never a verbal quotation

“The LORD has seen my affliction” — Leah, Israel in Egypt, and Hannah structural / thematic — confirmed

Leah’s naming-cry, rā’āh bᵉ‘onyî — “the LORD has seen my affliction” (v. 32) — uses the same pairing of verb and noun the Verifier links to Exodus 3:7, where God says, “I have surely seen the affliction of my people in Egypt,” and to 1 Samuel 1:11, Hannah’s vow that God “look on the affliction of your servant.” The shared lexemes are ‘ŏnî (H6040, only 36 verses) and rāʼâh (H7200). No quotation is claimed; this is a shared scriptural idiom for the God who regards the lowly. The LXX renders ‘ŏnî here as tapeinōsis, “low estate” (Cambridge) — the very word Mary takes up in Luke 1:48. Leah’s private grief speaks the same language as the nation’s bondage and the barren woman’s prayer.

Genesis 29:32 · Exodus 3:7 · 1 Samuel 1:11

basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes H6040 ʻŏnîy (36 vv) and H7200 râʼâh. A shared idiom (“seeing affliction”), not a quotation — tiered thematic; ʻŏnî is moderately rare but the phrase is a recurring formula rather than a citation

“Joined” — Leah’s longing becomes Levi’s priesthood verbal / quotation — confirmed

Leah names Levi from the rare verb lāvâh (H3867), “to twine, be joined,” hoping “this time my husband will be joined to me” (v. 34). That same verb — in only 22 verses of the Hebrew Bible — is turned in Numbers 18:2,4 on the tribe of Levi itself: the sons of Levi are “joined” to Aaron to minister at the tabernacle. Cambridge marks the connection: the word “is especially used of the attachment of the sons of Levi to the service of Jehovah, as the priestly tribe.” The Verifier confirms the shared lexeme. A wife’s ache for marital union becomes, in her son’s descendants, the technical word for cleaving to God’s altar — the human longing redeemed into priestly nearness.

Genesis 29:34 · Numbers 18:2 · Numbers 18:4

basis: Verifier-computed shared rare lexeme H3867 lâvâh (only 22 verses). The deliberate priestly wordplay in Numbers on the same root that names Levi makes this a genuine verbal echo, not a mere motif

“I will praise” — Judah and the vocabulary of thanksgiving structural / thematic — confirmed

Judah is named from the verb yādâh (H3034), “to praise, give thanks”: “This time I will praise the LORD” (v. 35). The Verifier ties this to Jacob’s blessing in Genesis 49:8 — “Judah, your brothers shall praise you” — on the shared lexemes yādâh (111 vv) and the name Yᵉhûdâh (H3063). The same root saturates the Psalter’s thanksgiving (e.g. Ps 100:4, “enter his gates with thanksgiving… give thanks to him”). Keil reads the name exactly: Judah is “the one for whom Jehovah is praised.” The tribe whose very name means praise becomes the royal line, and Jacob’s deathbed blessing puns the name back to its birth: the praised son will be praised by his brothers, and from him comes the King who is Israel’s praise.

Genesis 29:35 · Genesis 49:8 · Psalm 100:4

basis: Verifier-computed shared lexemes H3034 yâdâh (111 vv) and H3063 Yᵉhûwdâh. The shared root names Judah and recurs in his blessing and in the Psalter’s praise-vocabulary, but no quotation is claimed — tiered thematic, since yâdâh is common

The hated wife’s son and the line of Messiah — a cross-Testament reach flagged — verify source

The fourth son of the hated wife, born when Leah turned from her husband to praise her God, is Judah — and the New Testament traces the Christ precisely to him: Jesus is “descended from Judah” (Hebrews 7:14), “the Lion of the tribe of Judah” (Revelation 5:5), set at the head of Matthew’s genealogy (Matthew 1:2). Henry already hears it in Genesis: “This was he, of whom, as concerning the flesh, Christ came.” Held honestly: this is a cross-Testament link — the Genesis text is Hebrew (Yᵉhûdâh, yādâh), the New Testament Greek (Ioudas) — so the Verifier finds “no shared original-language lexeme,” and the connection cannot be tiered “verbal.” It is theologically certain on the New Testament’s own terms but rests on the apostolic genealogies and interpretation rather than a verbal quotation of the Hebrew, so it is left flagged in the open.

Genesis 29:35 · Hebrews 7:14 · Revelation 5:5

basis: cross-Testament (Greek↔Hebrew): no shared Strong’s lexeme possible; Verifier returns none. The descent of Christ from Judah is explicit in the NT but rests on genealogy/interpretation, not a Hebrew quotation, so flagged rather than asserted as verbal

Christ in the Unittypology · verify+

AI-generated reading; weigh it against the text.

Judah, the praised son of the unloved — the tribe of the Messiah widely-held

The royal and messianic line is, by Scripture’s own arrangement, the gift of grace to the unwanted. From Leah the hated, not Rachel the beloved, comes Judah; and from Judah, by the New Testament’s explicit witness, comes the Christ: Jesus “sprang out of Judah” (Hebrews 7:14), the “Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David” who alone is worthy to open the scroll (Revelation 5:5). Henry saw it in the name itself — Judah means Praise, and “He descended after the flesh from him whose name was Praise, and He is our praise.” The God who “saw that Leah was hated” was, in that very mercy, laying the first stone of the house of David and the manger of Bethlehem. The unloved wife is the great-grandmother of kings and the foremother of the King.

Genesis 29:35 · Hebrews 7:14 · Revelation 5:5

“This time I will praise the LORD” — the song of the lowly fulfilled in Christ novel

Leah’s confession over Judah — “the LORD has seen my affliction” (v. 32), and at last, “this time I will praise the LORD” (v. 35) — is the seed of a song Scripture keeps singing. Her word ‘ŏnî, “affliction,” is rendered by the LXX as tapeinōsis, the very word Mary uses: “He has looked on the humble estate of his servant” (Luke 1:48). The unloved Leah and the lowly virgin praise the same God for the same mercy — He regards the despised and through them brings forth the promised Seed. The pattern climaxes in Christ, who “made himself of no reputation” (Philippians 2:7) and is exalted; the God who lifts the hated wife to be mother of the praised tribe is the God who exalts the humble and brings the Saviour through the lowly.

Genesis 29:32 · Luke 1:48 · Genesis 29:35

Levi joined to God — the priesthood that points to the better Priest novel

Leah named Levi from lāvâh, “to be joined,” longing for union with her husband; the word became the name of the priestly tribe “joined” to the service of God (Numbers 18:2,4; so Cambridge). But the Levitical priesthood was never the end. Hebrews argues that “our Lord sprang out of Judah,” not Levi (Hebrews 7:14), and that a priest “after the order of Melchizedek” supersedes the sons of Levi. So the two sons of the hated wife together prophesy: Levi the longing-for-union that the law’s priesthood could only gesture toward, Judah the King-Priest in whom God and man are truly joined. The marital “joining” Leah craved is answered, beyond Levi, in the One who joins His people to God forever.

Genesis 29:34 · Numbers 18:2 · Hebrews 7:14

Apparatus & Provenance

The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). Hebrew/Greek text, transliteration, morphology and Strong’s are transcribed from the Berean interlinear (CC0) + Strong’s lexicons (PD); the literal renderings, divergence notes, word notes and all synthesis are this tool’s own work (⚙) — fallible; verify them.

Named voices, quoted verbatim from public-domain works:

The biblical text is the Berean Standard Bible (BSB), public domain (CC0). The named voices are quoted verbatim from public-domain commentaries on Genesis 29:31–35, attributed in place: Charles Ellicott, Joseph Benson, Matthew Henry, Albert Barnes, Jamieson-Fausset-Brown, Matthew Poole, John Gill, the Geneva Study Bible, the Cambridge Bible, the Pulpit Commentary, and Keil & Delitzsch. Several entries in the source set (notably Henry’s, Barnes’, JFB’s, and Keil & Delitzsch’s notes) are repeated across all five verses because they comment on the block 29:31–35 as a whole; each excerpt here is drawn from the source attached to its own verse. The Geneva Study Bible lines ending “EXEGETICAL (ORIGINAL LANGUAGES)” are header artifacts from the source page; only Geneva’s actual marginal glosses (notes k, l, m) are quoted.

The Hebrew is the Masoretic tradition; transliterations, parsings, and per-word glosses are from the Berean/Strong’s apparatus supplied in the source data. The literal renderings, the “where the English smooths the Hebrew” notes, the word-weighted notes, the grand commentary, the threads, and the reading of Christ are this tool’s own machine synthesis (⚙) — careful but fallible; verify against a lexicon (BDB, HALOT) and a standard grammar. In particular, the name-etymologies (Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah) are, as Cambridge candidly notes, “popular” puns on sound rather than strict philological derivations — they are the wordplay the inspired narrator records, not modern etymology.

Cross-reference tiers follow the Verifier’s computed bases. The Hebrew↔Hebrew links to Genesis 25:21 and Judges 13:3 (the rare ‘ăqārâ, “barren,” 11 verses) and to Numbers 18:2,4 (the rare lāvâh, “joined,” 22 verses) rest on genuinely rare shared lexemes and are tiered verbal. The links to Exodus 3:7 / 1 Samuel 1:11 (“seeing affliction,” ‘ŏnî + rāʼâh), to Deuteronomy 21:15 / Malachi 1:2–3 (the common śānêʼ, “hate” = love less), and to Genesis 49:8 / Psalm 100:4 (the common yādâh, “praise”) are honestly tiered thematic, since no quotation is claimed; the further reach from “hated” to Luke 14:26 is cross-Testament semantic range, not a verbal tie. The link from Judah to the Messiah (Hebrews 7:14, Revelation 5:5, Matthew 1:2) is left flagged on purpose: it is a cross-Testament connection (Greek to Hebrew), so no shared Strong’s number can exist and the Verifier returns none. The descent of Christ from Judah is certain on the New Testament’s own terms, but rests on the apostolic genealogies and interpretation rather than a verbal quotation of the Hebrew — so it is shown flagged rather than asserted as “verbal,” keeping the three authorities (Word, ✦ human voice, ⚙ machine) unblurred. “Test all things; hold fast what is good.” (1 Thessalonians 5:21)

= human, public-domain source, quoted and named. = machine synthesis, to be verified. Flagged cross-references are left visible on purpose — the verifier working in the open. “Search the Scriptures daily, whether those things were so.” (Acts 17:11)