Genesis 4:7
Footnote:
169 | Hebrew Ambiguities toward you is his longing, and yourself/herself is reigning in-himself. The ambiguity of the verse is such that it is quite enigmatic. This apparently led to a lot of violation of basic Hebrew grammar, with the intent to force certain meanings upon it. Strong's H4910 - ืืฉื (mashal): The Hebrew ืืชื otah can be either yourself or herself, see Genesis 6:14, 16:3, etc. The Hebrew verb ืชืืฉื (timšol), from the root ืืฉื (mฤšal, Strong’s #4911 or #4910), is morphologically ambiguous in the Qal imperfect, potentially conveying either “you (masculine singular) will reign” (2ms) or “she will reign” (3fs). This form arises from the common prefix ืชึพ used in both grammatical persons and is disambiguated only by context. In Genesis 4:7, the accompanying pronoun ืืชื (“you [masc. sg.]/ her [fem. sing]”) is also ambiguous as the subject. The King of (within) KingsTake note of 2 Chronicles 9:26 using this verb, speaking of Solomon: ืืืื ืืืฉื ืืื ืืืืืื "And he is him who reigns as king within all the Kings" Because the noun ืืืืช (“sin/missing of the mark”) is feminine, and ืชืฉืืงืชื cannot refer to the sin because the possessive is masculine, "his desire," a different reading proposes that the sin/miss is the subject: “she [i.e., sin] will reign in you,” inverting the received sense of the passage which has traditionally mangled or ignored the grammatical rules. |