Book of Jasher 25 Abe takes Keturah as Wife,has 6 Sons-Generations of Keturah's Sons & of Ishmael
CHAPTER 25--Abraham takes
Keturah for a
Wife, by whom he has Six
Sons. The
Generations of the Sons of Keturah, and of
Ishmael.
BOOK OF JASHER (BIBLICAL REFERENCES)
From
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Book of Jasher (also,
Jashar) or
Book of the Just Man (
Hebrew sēfer ha yāšār ספר הישר) is an unknown book mentioned in the
Hebrew Bible. The translation "Book of the Just Man" is the traditional
Greek and
Latin translation, while the rendering a personal name "
Jasher" is found in the
King James Bible, 1611.
Biblical references
The book appears to date from after the reign of
David. 2
Samuel 1:18 states:
To teach the Sons of Judah the use of the bow; behold it is written in the Book of the
Upright (Sēper haiYāšār).
David's lament for
Jonathan immediately follows.
The Book of Joshua 10:13 states: And the Sun stood still, and the
Moon stayed, until the people had avenged themselves on their enemies. Is this not written in the Book of the Upright (Sēper haiYāšār)?
The presence of this event in a book of poetry has been interpreted as a poetic description of the prolonged battle.
The Septuagint translation renders sefer hayashar in both cases as 'Book of the Just'. The reference to the bow is here missing so that the text reads: And he gave orders to teach it the sons of Iouda: behold it is written in the Book of the Just.
According to the
Medieval Jewish scholar,
Rashi,
Sefer HaYashar refers to the Pentateuch, as a fulfillment of
Jacob's prophecy regarding Ephraim "His seed [of Ephraim] will fill the nations." (
Gen. 48:19) that this refer's to
Joshua's renown after the miracle of the standing of the sun
SEFER HAYASHAR (MIDRASH)
The
Sefer haYashar (first edition 1552) is a Hebrew midrash also known as the Toledot
Adam and Dibre ha-Yamim be-'
Aruk. The Hebrew title may be translated Sefer haYashar "Book of the
Upright Man," but it is known in
English translation mostly as The Book of Jasher following English tradition. The book is named after the
Book of Jasher mentioned in Joshua and 2 Samuel.
This is among several texts purporting to be the original "Book of Jasher." The text is not accepted as such in rabbinical Judaism.
HISTORY
The earliest authenticated verified version of this Hebrew midrash was printed in
Venice in 1625 and the introduction refers to an earlier 1552 "edition" in
Naples of which neither trace or other mention has been found. The printer
Joseph ben Samuel claimed the work was copied by a scribe named Jacob the son of Atyah from an ancient manuscript whose letters could hardly be made out.
This work is not to be confused with an ethical text by the same name, which, according to the
Encyclopaedia Judaica,
Volume 14, p. 1099, was "probably written in the
13th century."
Scholars have proposed various dates between the
9th century and
16th century.
The Venice 1625 text was heavily criticised as a forgery by
Leon Modena as part of his criticisms of the
Zohar as a forgery and Kabbalah in general.
Modena was a member of the
Venetian rabbinate which supervised the Hebrew press in Venice, and Modena prevented the printers from identifying
Sefer ha-Yashar with the Biblical lost book.
Despite Modena's intervention the preface to the 1625 version nevertheless still claims that its original source book came from the ruins of
Jerusalem in
AD 70, where a
Roman officer named Sidrus discovered a Hebrew scholar hiding in a hidden library. The officer Sidrus reportedly took the scholar and all the books safely back to his estates in
Seville, Spain (which in
Roman times was known as
Hispalis, the provincial capital of
Hispania Baetica). The 1625 edition then claims that at some uncertain
point in history of
Islamic Spain) the manuscript was transferred or sold to the Jewish college in
Cordova, Spain. The 1625 edition claims that scholars preserved the book until its printings in Naples in 1552 and in Venice in 1625. Although outside of the preface to the 1625 work, there is no evidence to support any of this story. The work was used extensively but not especially more than many other sources in
Louis Ginzberg's
Legends of the
Jews.