Verse 1
Genesis 38:1. At that time —
That is, about that time; this
expression, as also the words
then, in those days, often
referring in Scripture to a
considerable space of time. For
though these words, as Le Clerc
well observes, seem to connect
the following events with those
spoken of in the former chapter,
yet some of them, particularly
Judah’s marriage, which leads to
the rest, must have happened
long before Joseph was sold into
Egypt. This chapter must
therefore be here placed out of
the order of time, and the
events here recorded must have
happened soon after Jacob came
from Mesopotamia into Canaan,
though Moses, for some special
reasons, relates them in this
place. Judah went down from his
brethren — Withdrew for a time
from his father’s family, and
got intimately acquainted with
one Hirah an Adullamite. When
young people that have been well
educated, begin to change their
company, they will soon change
their manners, and lose their
good education. They that go
down from their brethren, that
forsake the society of the seed
of Israel, and pick up
Canaanites for their companions,
are going down the hill apace.
Verse 2
Genesis 38:2. He took her — To
wife. His father, it should
seem, was not consulted, but he
acted by the advice of his new
friend Hirah.
Verse 7-8
Genesis 38:7-8. Er was wicked in
the sight of the Lord — That is,
in defiance of God, and his law.
And the Lord slew him — Cut him
off by an untimely death, before
he had any children by Tamar. As
long life among the Jews was
generally reckoned a blessing
from God; so an untimely death
was accounted a punishment. The
next brother, Onan, was,
according to the ancient usage,
married to the widow, to
preserve the name of his
deceased brother that died
childless. This custom of
marrying the brother’s widow was
afterward made one of the laws
of Moses, Deuteronomy 25:5. Onan,
though he consented to marry the
widow, yet, to the great abuse
of his own body, and of the wife
he had married, and to the
dishonour of the memory of his
brother that was gone, refused
to raise up seed unto his
brother. And this story seems to
be recorded by the Holy Ghost
purposely to condemn, not only
his malignant and envious
disposition with respect to his
deceased brother, but also and
especially that vile pollution
of his body of which he was
guilty. For, observe, The thing
which he did displeased the
Lord, and brought upon him the
Lord’s vengeance. And it is to
be feared that thousands,
especially of single persons,
still displease the Lord in a
similar way, and destroy their
own bodies and souls. All such
sins, at the same time that they
dishonour the body, evidence the
power of vile affections, and
are not only condemned in the
Scriptures, but by the light of
nature, and were held even by
the heathen moralists to be
peculiarly criminal, and by the
Jewish doctors to be a degree of
murder. See Universal History.
Verse 11
Genesis 38:11. Remain a widow
till Shelah my son be grown —
The contract of marriage, it
seems, was so understood, even
before any positive law was made
on the subject, that, if the
husband died without any issue,
his next brother was to marry
his wife, and as long as any of
his brethren remained they were
bound to marry her, if left a
widow. Accordingly Shelah, the
third son, was reserved for
Tamar, yet with design that he
should not marry so young as his
brothers had done. For it would
seem from Judah’s expression,
Lest peradventure he die also,
that he thought marrying too
young was the cause of their
death; though some consider his
conduct as an evidence that he
never intended to give his son
to her.
Verse 14
Genesis 38:14. She put her
widow’s garments off, &c. — Some
excuse her conduct in this by
suggesting that she believed the
promise made to Abraham and his
seed, particularly that of the
Messiah, and that she was
therefore desirous to have a
child by one of that family,
that she might have the honour,
or at least stand fair for being
the mother of the Messiah. She
covered her with a veil — It was
the custom of harlots in those
times to cover their faces, that
though they were not ashamed,
yet they might seem to be so:
the sin of uncleanness did not
go so bare-faced as it now doth.
Verses 17-21
Genesis 38:17-21. A kid from the
flock — A goodly price at which
her chastity and honour were
valued! Had the consideration
been a thousand rams, and ten
thousands of rivers of oil, it
had not been a valuable
consideration. The favour of
God, the purity of the soul, the
peace of the conscience, and the
hope of heaven, are too precious
to be exposed to sale at any
such rates. It is a good
account, if it be but true, of
any place, that which they here
gave, that there is no harlot in
this place, for such sinners are
the scandals and plagues of any
place. Judah sits down content
to lose his signet and his
bracelets, and forbids his
friend to make any further
inquiry.
Verse 23
Genesis 38:23. Lest we be
ashamed — Either, 1st, Lest his
sin should come to be known
publicly; or, 2d, Lest he should
be laughed at as a fool for
trusting a whore with his signet
and his bracelets. He expresses
no concern about the sin, only
about the shame. There are many
who are more solicitous to
preserve their reputation with
men, than to secure the favour
of God; lest we be ashamed, goes
further with them than lest we
be damned.
Verse 24
Genesis 38:24. Judah said, Bring
her forth, and let her be burnt
— Some have inferred from this
that fathers then had the power
of life and death over their
children. But if so, it is
probable that some instance
would have occurred and have
appeared on record in which such
a power was actually exercised.
It seems very unlikely that
Judah should have such a power,
at least over her, who was a
Canaanite, and who was not in
his, but in her own father’s
house. He probably only meant,
Bring her forth to the
magistrate, from whom she may
receive her sentence and
deserved punishment, as a person
guilty of adultery, (having been
betrothed to Shelah,) a crime
formerly punished with death by
the laws of God, and of divers
nations. See Deuteronomy
22:23-24; Jeremiah 29:22-23.
This eagerness of Judah,
however, proceeded not from zeal
for justice, for then he would
not have endeavoured to destroy
the innocent child with the
guilty mother, but from worldly
policy, that he might take her
out of the way whom he viewed as
a disgrace and burden to his
family. But perhaps, though he
uttered this severe sentence in
the heat of his passion, he
would not have urged the putting
of it in execution; or, as some
think, by burning her he might
mean no more than branding her
in the forehead to denote her
being a harlot.
Verse 26
Genesis 38:26. And Judah
acknowledged them — His guilty
conscience and the horror of so
foul a fact, together with the
sudden surprise, forced him to
make an immediate and ingenuous
confession. She hath been more
righteous than I — This he says
because he had broken his word
with her in withholding Shelah
from her, whom he had promised;
whereas she had kept her faith
with him, and had lived as a
widow honestly; besides, she had
committed the fact out of desire
to have a child, he to satisfy
his lust. She was, however, more
guilty than he in another
respect, as having knowingly
committed both adultery and
incest, when he designed
neither. And he knew her again
no more — Thus showing the
sincerity of his confession, by
forsaking the sin confessed, the
only sure way of showing it.
Verse 28-29
Genesis 38:28-29. When she
travailed — It should seem the
birth was hard to the mother, by
which she was corrected for her
sin: the children also, like
Jacob and Esau, struggled for
the birthright, and Pharez, who
got it, is ever named first, and
from him Christ descended. He
had his name from his breaking
forth before his brother: this
breach be upon thee — The Jews,
as Zarah, bid fair for the
birthright, and were marked, as
it were, with a scarlet thread,
as those that came first; but
the Gentiles, like Pharez, or a
son of violence, got the start
of them, by that violence which
the kingdom of heaven suffers,
and attained to the
righteousness which the Jews
came short of: yet when the
fulness of time is come, all
Israel shall be saved. Both
these sons are named in the
genealogy of our Saviour,
Matthew 1:3, to perpetuate the
story, as an instance of the
humiliation of our Lord Jesus. |