And there is the grammatical counterpart to mot
tamut, a “duplicate unconditional.”
When you have the aspectless verb followed by the
same verb root and binyan in a perfect aspect, you are not looking at a
conditional situation. You are looking at an absolute situation.
An example would be Genesis 27:30.
וַיְהִי כַּאֲשֶׁר כִּלָּה יִצְחָק לְבָרֵךְ אֶת־יַעֲקֹב
וַיְהִי אַךְ יָצֹא יָצָא יַעֲקֹב מֵאֵת פְּנֵי יִצְחָק אָבִיו וְעֵשָׂו
אָחִיו בָּא מִצֵּידוֹ:
It must have been as soon as Yitschaq finished
blessing Yaaqov, it must have been just as Yaaqov absolutely left the presence
of Yitschaq his father, Esav his brother just coming from his hunting.
I translated ba as progressive, “just then”
instead of perfective, “finished coming”. The whole verse is about two things
happening at the same instant, with some real narrative tension going on.
This is unusual. An evidentiary epistemic like va-y’hi
is normally followed by a narrative past, although sometimes there is intervening material. An
example of a delayed narrative past is Genesis 14:1-10 where there’s a
mini-sidebar from verses 2 to 6 inclusive and verse 7 opens with the narrative
past. The progressive ba may be a substitute, the way eyn substitutes
for imperfect in the verse about Sarai not having children that I already
discussed.
The second evidentiary epistemic is followed by
the duplicate conditional.
My claim is that the duplicate conditional invokes
the law, but duplicate unconditional cuts off legal consequences. How does that
work here?
Notice that they escape the situation where Esav
could have killed Yaaqov right then and there. Since Yitschaq was blind, there
would be no witnesses to this killing, and since there was no enmity between
the brothers before, it would have been only manslaughter. Yaaqov would still
be dead, and Esav would have to flee to a city of refuge – and there were none
at the time, a link between Esav and Qain.
Some relative would have been responsible for
hunting down Esav. Who would do such a thing? What about Yishmael? But the next
thing we learn is that Esav marries a daughter of Yishmael, so the old man is
out of the loop for avenging his half-nephew on his son-in-law. Torah
eliminates all these issues with a two-word phrase pointing out that they never
mattered.
Another good example is from the
Yosef story, Genesis 40:15. When Yosef is talking to the chief butler before
interpreting his dream, Yosef says this:
כִּֽי־גֻנֹּ֣ב גֻּנַּ֔בְתִּי מֵאֶ֖רֶץ הָֽעִבְרִ֑ים
וְגַם־פֹּה֙ לֹֽא־עָשִׂ֣יתִי מְא֔וּמָה כִּֽי־שָׂמ֥וּ אֹתִ֖י בַּבּֽוֹר:
My status is having been stolen from
the land of the Hebrews; also here I didn’t do anything to result in
being put into the pit.
That’s a duplicate unconditional using
the pual. In narratives, pual is one step before the denouement,
as with the finishing of heaven and earth, immediately followed by the real
denouement, creation of Shabbat. In legal situations, pual is one step
before hufal, a legal definition like yumat allowing an execution
if reached by due process. With pual there are still issues to resolve
before legal action can be taken.
In this case, there are multiple
ways that Yosef could have become a slave. One is to commit a theft of property
that he could not pay off. When the court determines that you are a thief, you
have to make restitution in one lump sum. If you can’t, the court can take out
an exclusive services contract on you in the value of the theft, and you have
to work it off unless the other party to the contract forgives your debt to
him.
Another possibility is Yosef taking
out the contract on himself for some reason. As an adult (he was 17 at the
time), he had that right.
Finally, there’s the possibility that
somebody kidnapped Yosef so as to sell him into slavery. This is a capital
crime in Judaism.
At the end of the verse, when Yosef
says “and here too I didn’t do anything wrong,” he’s denying being a thief so
his being in the pit is not the step before selling him to pay restitution.
But before that, he uses a duplicate
unconditional in pual to say “don’t get wrapped around the axles trying
to convict anybody of kidnapping me. I don’t have the witnesses necessary to
try a capital crime. We have bigger fish to fry; let’s be about it.”
While writing Narrating the Torah,
wherever I came across a duplicate unconditional, I stopped to analyze what
laws it would cut off. And it worked every time, although I had to do some
legal research to get there. Its use suggests two things.
One comes directly from Olrik’s
principles: Genesis is a heroic saga about ancestors who provide examples of
cultural behavior. The other is that Genesis is about patriarchal law as
it existed before the Egyptian Oppression, which occurred between 1700 and 1628
BCE.
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