书城公版The City of God
19592600000303

第303章

As I said a little ago, Jacob was also called Israel, the name which was most prevalent among the people descended from him.

Now this name was given him by the angel who wrestled with him on the way back from Mesopotamia, and who was most evidently a type of Christ.For when Jacob overcame him, doubtless with his own consent, that the mystery might be represented, it signified Christ's passion, in which the Jews are seen overcoming Him.And yet he besought a blessing from the very angel he had overcome; and so the imposition of this name was the blessing.For Israel means seeing God, (4) which will at last be the reward of alI the saints.The angel also touched him on the breadth of the thigh when he was overcoming him, and in that way made him lame.So that Jacob was at one and the same time blessed and lame: blessed in those among that people who believed in Christ, and lame in the unbelieving.For the breadth of the thigh is the multitude of the family.For there are many of that race of whom it was prophetically said beforehand, "And they have halted in their paths." (5CHAP.40.--HOW IT IS SAID THAT JACOB WENT INTO EGYPT WITH SEVENTY-FIVESOULS, WHEN

MOST OF THOSE WHO ARE MENTIONED WERE BORN AT A LATER PERIOD.

Seventy-five men are reported to have entered Egypt along with Jacob, counting him with his children.In this number only two women are mentioned, one a daughter, the other a grand-daughter.But when the thing is carefully considered, it does not appear that Jacob's offspring was so numerous on the day or year when he entered Egypt.There are also included among them the great-grandchildren of Joseph, who could not possibly be born already.

For Jacob was then 130 years old, and his son Joseph thirty-nine and as it is plain that he took a wife when he was thirty or more, how could he in nine years have great-grandchildren by the children whom he had by that wife? Now since, Ephraim and Manasseh, the sons of Joseph, could not even have children, for Jacob found them boys under nine years old when he entered Egypt, in what way are not only their sons but their grandsons reckoned among those seventy-five who then entered Egypt with Jacob? For there is reckoned there Machir the son of Manasseh, grandson of Joseph, and Machir's son, that is, Gilead grandson of Manasseh, great-grandson of Joseph; there, too, is he whom Ephraim, Joseph's other son, begot, that is, Shuthelah grandson of Joseph, and Shuthelah's son Ezer, grandson of Ephraim, and great-grand-son of Joseph, who could not possibly be in existence when Jacob came into Egypt, and there found his grandsons, the sons of Joseph, their grandsires, still boys under nine years of age.' But doubtless, when the Scripture mentions Jacob's entrance into Egypt with seventy-five souls, it does not mean one day, or one year, but that whole time as long as Joseph lived, who was the cause of his entrance.

For the same Scripture speaks thus of Joseph:

"And Joseph dwelt in Egypt, he and his brethren, and all his father's house: and Joseph lived 110 years, and saw Ephraim's children of the third generation." (2) That is, his great-grandson, the third from Ephraim; for the third generation means son, grandson, great-grandson.Then it is added," The children also of Machir, the son of Manasseh, were born upon Joseph's knees." (3) And this is that grandson of Manasseh, and great-grandson of Joseph.But the plural number is employed according to scriptural usage; for the one daughter of Jacob is spoken of as daughters, just as in the usage of the Latin tongue liberi is used in the plural for children even when there is only one.Now, when Joseph's own happiness is proclaimed, because he could see his great-grandchildren, it is by no means to be thought they already existed in the thirty-ninth year of their great-grand-sire Joseph, when his father Jacob came to him in Egypt.

But those who diligently look into these things will the less easily be mistaken, because it is written, "These are the names of the sons of Israel who entered into Egypt along with Jacob their father." (4) For this means that the seventy-five are reckoned along with him, not that they were all with him when he entered Egypt; for, as I have said, the whole period during which Joseph, who occasioned his entrance, lived, is held to be the time of that entrance.

CHAP.41.--OF THE BLESSING WHICH JACOB

PROMISED IN JUDAH HIS SON.