Difference between revisions of "Lot"

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== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_42021" /> ==
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_36366" /> ==
&nbsp;Genesis 11:27&nbsp;Genesis 11:28&nbsp;Genesis 11:31&nbsp;Genesis 11:31&nbsp;Genesis 12:5 <p> After traveling throughout [[Canaan]] and into Egypt, [[Abraham]] and [[Lot]] finally settled between [[Bethel]] and Ai, about ten miles north of [[Jerusalem]] (&nbsp;Genesis 13:3 ). Abraham and Lot acquired herds and flocks so large that the land was unable to support both (&nbsp;Genesis 13:2 ,Genesis 13:2,&nbsp;13:5 ). In addition, the herdsmen of Abraham and Lot did not get along (&nbsp;Genesis 13:7 ). Thus, to secure ample pasturelands for their flocks and to avoid any further trouble, Abraham suggested they separate. Abraham allowed Lot to take his choice of the land. Lot took advantage of Abraham's generosity and chose the well-watered [[Jordan]] Valley where the city of [[Sodom]] was located (&nbsp;Genesis 13:8-12 ). </p> <p> Some interesting details of the split between Abraham and Lot remind the reader of earlier events in Genesis. For example, the Jordan Valley is described as being well watered “like the garden of the Lord” (&nbsp;Genesis 13:10 ) reminding one of the story of [[Adam]] and [[Eve]] in the [[Garden]] of Eden. One wonders if Lot would be more successful in this garden spot than Adam and Eve had been. The prospect of success was thrown in doubt by the way Lot's journey is described—he journeyed east, a description that recalls Adam's and Eve's journey after their expulsion from the garden (&nbsp;Genesis 3:24 ). </p> <p> The Jordan Valley is also described as being fertile like [[Egypt]] (&nbsp;Genesis 13:10 ). This detail not only recalls Abraham's nearly disastrous journey to Egypt to avoid the famine in Canaan (&nbsp;Genesis 12:10-20 ) but also foreshadows the journey that [[Jacob]] and his family would later make (&nbsp;Genesis 42-50 )—a journey that did have disastrous consequences (&nbsp;Exodus 1:8-14 ). </p> <p> The mention of the cities of the Jordan Valley also carries negative connotations. One is reminded of the story of the tower of [[Babel]] where the people had gathered in one place (they had migrated from the east) to build themselves a city and make a name for themselves, so that they would not be scattered over the face of the earth and live like sojourners (&nbsp;Genesis 11:1-4 ). One is also reminded that [[Terah]] gave up his pilgrimage to Canaan to settle in the city of [[Haran]] (&nbsp;Genesis 11:31 ). To add to the negative connotations that cities have in the stories of Genesis, we are told that the people of Sodom were great sinners against the Lord (&nbsp;Genesis 13:13 ). </p> <p> All in all, things did not look as good for Lot as they might at first glance appear when he chose to live in the well-watered Jordan Valley. We begin to see this unfold in &nbsp;Genesis 14:1 . Not only was the Jordan Valley attractive to herdsmen like Lot, but the riches of this valley were also attractive to foreign kings. Prominent among them was [[Chedorlaomer]] who, along with three other kings, captured and sacked Sodom, taking Lot as prisoner (&nbsp;Genesis 14:1-12 ). Abraham, upon hearing of Lot's fate, gathered an army and rescued his nephew (&nbsp;Genesis 14:13-16 ). </p> <p> Lot is not mentioned again until &nbsp;Genesis 19:1 when two angels visited him. God had already told Abraham that He intended to destroy Sodom and [[Gomorrah]] (&nbsp; [[Genesis]] 18:20 ). Abraham interceded on behalf of Sodom, that if ten righteous men were found in Sodom that God would not destroy the city (&nbsp;Genesis 18:32 ). The two angels were apparently going to Sodom to inspect it. When the angels arrived, Lot received them with hospitality. When the townsmen heard that two strangers were staying with Lot, they wanted to have sexual relations with them. Lot protected his guests and offered them his daughters instead. The townsmen refused this offer and tried unsuccessfully to get the two strangers. For Lot's help, the angels revealed God's desire to destroy Sodom and urged Lot to take his family to the hills to safety. They warned Lot and his family not to look on Sodom. Lot, instead of going to the hills for safety, decided to live in another city (Zohar). In their flight from Sodom, Lot's nameless wife looked at the destruction and turned to a pillar of salt (&nbsp;Genesis 19:1-29 ). Abraham <i> had rescued </i> Lot, again, (&nbsp; Genesis 19:29; compare &nbsp;Genesis 12:4 ). </p> <p> As it turned out, Lot feared to live in the city of [[Zohar]] and decided to live in the surrounding caves instead. His daughters, fearing that they would never have offspring, decided to deceive their father into having intercourse with them. They got their father drunk; both conceived a son by him. The son of the eldest daughter was called [[Moab]] and became the father of the Moabites. The son of the youngest daughter was named Ben-ammi and became the father of the [[Ammonites]] (&nbsp;Genesis 19:30-38 ). Later in Israel's history, God desired to ensure the place of the [[Moabites]] and Ammonites in [[Palestine]] (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 2:9 ). The Moabites and Ammonites betrayed their relationship, however, by joining with [[Assyria]] at a later period (&nbsp;Psalm 83:5-8 ). </p> <p> In the New Testament, the day of the Son of man is compared to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah (&nbsp;Luke 17:28-29 ). The followers of Jesus are warned not to desire their former lives, like Lot's wife, but to be willing instead to lose their lives. Losing one's life is the only way to gain life (&nbsp;Luke 17:32 ). The story of Lot is also used to show the faithfulness of God to rescue his people (&nbsp;2 Peter 2:7 ). </p> <p> Phil Logan </p>
<p> Haran's son, Abraham's nephew (&nbsp;Genesis 11:27-31). Born in [[Ur]] of the Chaldees, before Terah's emigration. [[Accompanied]] [[Abram]] to Charan, then to [[Canaan]] (&nbsp;Genesis 12:4-5), then, in the famine, to Egypt. On their return a quarrel arose between Abram's and Lot's herdsmen. In the spirit of a child of God Abram goes to [[Lot]] himself, instead of listening to subordinates' reports, and begs as they are brethren there should be no strife between them (contrast &nbsp;Acts 15:39), and offers Lot precedency, though as his senior Abram might have claimed it; "if thou wilt take the left hand, then I will go to the right," etc. Lot chose by sight, not faith, the richly watered circle of the Jordan, fertile, but the region of wicked [[Sodom]] (&nbsp;Joshua 7:24; &nbsp;Joshua 8:15). At first Lot only "pitched his tent toward Sodom," but he was venturing too near temptation not to be caught (&nbsp;Psalms 1:1; &nbsp;1 Corinthians 15:33). </p> <p> He soon was dwelling in a "house" in Sodom, and paid the penalty in being carried off with his much-loved "goods" by Chedorlaomer; he was rescued only by the disinterested bravery and magnanimity of Abram, who, forgetting Lot's unamiable conduct, thought only of how to rescue him at all hazards in his distress. This warning ought to have been enough to drive Lot from Sodom, but no, he still lives there. Next, Lot appears exercising that goodly hospitality by which he" entertained angels unawares," and for which the [[Epistle]] to [[Hebrew]] (&nbsp;Hebrews 13:2) commends him. Evidently, the luxury of worldly Sodom had not wholly corrupted the simplicity of his character. The Spirit of God, who knows hearts, designates him (&nbsp;2 Peter 2:7-9) "just Lot, vexed with the filthy conversation (the licentious behaviour) of the wicked" (the lawless, who set at defiance the laws of nature and God). </p> <p> The Sodomites' words, "this one fellow came in to sojourn, and he will needs be a judge" refer evidently to Lot's remonstrances with them which Peter presupposes. The gracious Lord reminds us of his faithfulness, not of his subsequent incest. If there had been "ten" such "fellows" in Sodom [[Jehovah]] would have spared it (&nbsp;Genesis 18:32). Again God records, "that righteous man dwelling among them, in seeing and hearing, vexed (tormented) his righteous soul from day to day with their unlawful deeds." Lot had gone into temptation, and must have perished but, for God's grace; to all appearances his position was hopeless, but "the Lord knoweth how to deliver the godly out of temptations," He is at no loss for means. The angels' visit was meant to test Lot as well as the Sodomites. The angels' declining his invitation at first, "we will abide in the street (the broad open space) all night," answers to Jesus' mode of eliciting the faith of the two [[Emmaus]] disciples (&nbsp;Luke 24:28). </p> <p> His sin is faithfully recorded, his offering to sacrifice his daughters' honour to save his guests. He was retributively punished by those daughters sacrificing their father's honour and their own. They seem to have been only betrothed, not yet married, to Lot's so-called "sons in law." When he warned them to flee from the coming destruction "he seemed as one that mocked unto his sons in law" (compare &nbsp;Luke 24:11). His imperfection of faith appears in that "he lingered" even on the morning of Sodom's doom. But the angels "laid hold upon his hand ... the Lord being merciful to him (&nbsp;Romans 9:15-16) ... and set him without the city." They further warned him, "escape for thy life, look not behind thee (compare the Christian's motto, &nbsp;Philippians 3:13; &nbsp;Luke 9:62), neither stay thou in all the plain," the ( '''''Ciccar''''' ) circuit of [[Jordan]] which he had so coveted. Defective faith made him plead for leave to stay at Zoar, which, as "a little one," he urges could have but few sinning in it so as to incur a share in Sodom's doom. </p> <p> God grants even this, and adds "I cannot do anything until thou be come there"; God's love controls His omnipotence (&nbsp;Matthew 27:42). Lot's wife "looked back" with regrets on Sodom's sinful pleasures, then stayed behind, and "became a pillar of salt"; possibly overtaken by the fire and brimstone and incrusted with salt. The Americans found E. of Usdum a pillar of salt 40 ft. high, which may be the traditional one identified with Sodom's wife (Josephus, Ant. 1:11). Vacillation in faith led him to doubt even Zoar's safety, notwithstanding God's promise. From "lingering" about Sodom, Lot passes to the opposite extreme, desponding of safety even in its extreme skirt. His unbelief issued in the sin in the cave, and the offspring were "the children of Lot," [[Moab]] and [[Ammon]] (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 2:9; &nbsp;Deuteronomy 2:19; &nbsp;Psalms 73:8). See our Lord's spiritual lesson from Sodom and Lot's wife (&nbsp;Luke 17:28-32). </p>
          
          
== Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_81041" /> ==
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_5869" /> ==
<p> the son of Haran, and nephew to Abraham. He accompanied his uncle from [[Ur]] to Haran, and from thence to Canaan; a proof of their mutual attachment, and similarity of principles respecting the true religion. With Abraham he descended into Egypt, and afterward returned with him into Canaan: but the multiplicity of their flocks, and still more the quarrels of their servants, rendered a friendly separation necessary. When God destroyed the cities of the plain with fire and brimstone, he delivered "just Lot" from the conflagration, according to the account of the divine historian. The whole time that Lot resided there was twenty-three years. During all this period he had been a preacher of righteousness among this degenerate people. In him they had before their eyes an illustrious example of the exercise of genuine piety, supported by unsullied justice and benevolent actions. And doubtless it was for these purposes that [[Divine]] [[Providence]] placed him for a time in that city. The losses which Lot sustained on this melancholy occasion were very great; his wife, property, and all the prospects of the future settlement of his family blasted. [[Pity]] must therefore draw a friendly veil over the closing scene of this man of affliction; and let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall into deeds more reprehensible than those of Lot, without having equal trials and sufferings to plead in his favour. Respecting his wife, whether grieving for the loss of her property, or inwardly censuring the severity of the divine dispensation, or whether moved by unbelief or curiosity, cannot now be known; but, looking back, she became a pillar of salt, &nbsp;Genesis 19:26 . It would be endless to present the reader with all the opinions on this subject. Some contend that nothing more is meant than that she was suffocated: others, that a column or monument of metallic salt was erected upon her grave: others affirm that she became encrusted with the sulphur, insomuch that she appeared like an [[Egyptian]] mummy, which is embalmed with salt. Our Lord warns his disciples to remember Lot's wife in their flight from Jerusalem, and not to imitate her tardiness, &nbsp;Luke 17:32 . </p> <p> <strong> 2. </strong> LOT, any thing cast or drawn in order to determine any matter in question, &nbsp; Proverbs 18:18 . We see the use of lots among the Hebrews in many places of Scripture: God commands, for example, that lots should be cast upon the two goats which were offered for the sins of the people, upon the solemn day of expiation, to know which of the two should be sacrificed, and which liberated, &nbsp;Leviticus 16:8-10 . He required also that the land of promise should be divided by lot as soon as it was conquered; which command Joshua accordingly executed, &nbsp;Numbers 26:55-56; &nbsp;Numbers 33:54; &nbsp;Numbers 34:13 , &c; Joshua xiv-xvi; hence the term "lot" is used for an inheritance, "Thou maintainest my lot;" and figuratively for a happy state or condition. The priests and [[Levites]] had their cities appointed by lot. Lastly, in the time of David, the four and twenty classes of the priests and Levites were distributed by lot, to determine in what order they should wait in the temple, &nbsp;1 Chronicles 6:54; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 6:61; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 24:5; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 25:8 . In the division of the spoil, after victory, lots were likewise cast, to give every man his portion, &nbsp;Obadiah 1:11; &nbsp;Nahum 3:10 , &c. In the New Testament, after the death of Judas, lots were cast to decide who should occupy the place of the traitor, &nbsp;Acts 1:26 . From the above instances, it is clear that when men have recourse to this method, the matter ought to be of the greatest importance, and no other apparent way left to determine it; and the manner of making the appeal should be solemn and grave, if we would escape the guilt of taking the name of God in vain. It unquestionably implies a solemn appeal to the Most High to interpose by his decision; and so every thinking man will be very careful that he has a true and religious ground for so serious a proceeding; and few if any cases can now occur in which it can have any justification. The ancient manner of casting lots, was either in some person's "lap," or fold of the robe; into a helmet, or urn, or other vessel, in which they might be shaken before they were drawn or cast. </p>
<p> ''''' lot ''''' : </p> I. Personality. <p> The man who bore the name Lot ( לוט , <i> ''''' lōṭ ''''' </i> ; Λώτ , <i> ''''' Lṓt ''''' </i> ) is mentioned for the first time in &nbsp; [[Genesis]] 11:27 , at the beginning of that section of Genesis which is entitled "the generations of Terah." After Terah's 3 sons are named, it is added that the third of these, Haran, begat Lot. </p> <p> The reason for thus singling out but one of the grandsons of [[Terah]] appears in the next verse, where we are told that "Haran died before his father Terah in the land of his nativity, in Ur of the Chaldees." For that period in the life of this family, therefore, which begins with the migration from Ur, Lot represents his father's branch of the family (&nbsp;Genesis 11:31 ). It is hardly probable that the relation between [[Abraham]] and Lot would have been what it was, had not [[Haran]] died; but be this as it may, we read this introduction of Lot into the genealogy of Terah as an anticipation of the story to which it furnishes an introduction, and in which Lot is destined to play an important part. </p> <p> The sections of that story in which Lot appears are: in &nbsp;Genesis 11 , the migration from Ur to Haran; in &nbsp;Genesis 12 , Abraham's wanderings; in &nbsp;Genesis 13 , the separation of Abraham and Lot; in &nbsp;Genesis 14 , the campaign of the eastern kings against Sodom and Abraham's recovery of the captives; and in &nbsp;Genesis 19 , the destruction of Sodom. </p> <p> In &nbsp;Genesis 14:14 , &nbsp;Genesis 14:16 Lot is termed the "brother" of Abraham; but that this does not represent a variant tradition is proved by reference to &nbsp; Genesis 14:12 of the same chapter (ascribed to "an independent source") and to &nbsp; Genesis 13:8 (ascribed to J; compare &nbsp; Genesis 11:28 J). </p> II. Career. <p> <b> 1. First Period: </b> </p> <p> Lot's life, as the scanty references to him permit us to reconstruct it, falls into four periods. Of the first period - that previous to the migration from Haran - we know nothing save Lot's birth in Ur, the death of his father there, the marriage of his sister [[Milcah]] to his uncle [[Nahor]] (of another sister, Iscah, we learn only the name), and the journey to Haran in company with Terah, Abraham and Sarah. The fact that Sarah's childlessness and Haran's death are the only two circumstances related of the family history, may serve to explain why Lot went with Abraham instead of staying with Nahor. A childless uncle and a fatherless nephew may well have remained together with the idea that, even if there was no formal adoption, the nephew might become his uncle's heir. Certainly, the promise of a numberless seed, so often repeated to the patriarchs, comes first to Abraham immediately after Lot has separated from him (see &nbsp;Genesis 13:6-18 ). </p> <p> <b> 2. Second Period: </b> </p> <p> In the second period of Lot's life, we find him the companion of Abraham on his journeys from [[Mesopotamia]] to Canaan, through Canaan to Egypt, and back again to the neighborhood of Beth-el. His position is subordinate, for his uncle is head of the family, and oriental custom is uniform and rigorous in the matter of family rule. Hence, the use of the singular number throughout the narrative. What Abraham did, his whole "clan" did. Yet Lot's position was as nearly independent as these patriarchal conditions admit. When the story reaches the point where it is necessary to mention this fact, the narrator explains, first, the generosity with which Abraham treated his nephew, in permitting him to have "flocks, and herds, and tents" of his own, a quasi-independent economy, and second, that disproportion between their collective possessions and the land's resources which made separation inevitable. Up to this point the only mention of Lot during this period of wandering is contained in &nbsp;Genesis 13:1 , in the words "and Lot with him." And even here the words are useless (because stating a fact perfectly presumable here as elsewhere), except as they prepare the reader for the story of the separation that is immediately to follow. </p> <p> <b> 3. Third Period: </b> </p> <p> That story introduces the third period of Lot's career, that of his residence in the <i> ''''' Kikkār ''''' </i> (the Revised Version (British and American) "Plain," the Revised Version margin "Circle") and in Sodom. To the fundamental cause of separation, as above stated, the author adds the two circumstances which contributed to produce the result, namely, first, the strife that arose between Abraham's herdsmen and Lot's herdsmen, and, second, the presence in the same country of others - the [[Canaanites]] and [[Perizzites]] - thus reminding his readers that it was no vacant land, through which they might spread themselves absolutely at will and so counteract the operation of the principal cause and the contributory cause already set forth. </p> <p> With a magnanimity that must have seemed even greater to minds accustomed to patriarchal authority than it seems to us, and that was in fact much more remarkable than it would be here and now, Abraham offers to his nephew the choice of the land - from the nomad's point of view. In the "we are brethren" (&nbsp;Genesis 13:8 ), the whole force of the scene is crystallized. Lot, who believes himself to have chosen the better part, is thereupon traced in his nomadic progress as far as Sodom, and the reader leaves him for a time face to face with a city whose men "were wicked and sinners against [[Yahweh]] exceedingly," while the narrative moves on with Abraham through that fresh scene of revelation which presented to this man of magnanimity a [[Divine]] deed to all the land, and to this man, now left without an heir from among his own kindred (compare &nbsp;Genesis 15:2 , &nbsp;Genesis 15:3 ), a Divine pledge of innumerable offspring. </p> <p> Lot returns for a moment to our view as the mainspring of Abraham's motions in the campaign of &nbsp;Genesis 14 . We are expressly told that it was "when Abram heard that his brother was taken captive," that he "led forth his trained men ... and pursued." On the one hand we hear that Lot now "dwelt in Sodom," having abandoned the life in tents that he had led since Mesopotamian days, and on the other hand we find in him a foil to the energetic, decisive and successful figure of his uncle - for Lot plays a sorry role, bracketed always with "the women and the goods." </p> <p> This period of his life ends with the annihilation of his chosen home, his wealth, his companions, and all that was his save two daughters, who, it would seem, might better have perished with the rest. &nbsp;Genesis 19 , coming immediately after the intercession of Abraham for Sodom that poignantly impresses on the reader's mind the wickedness of Lot's environment, exhibits to us the man himself in his surroundings, as they have affected him through well-nigh a score of years (compare &nbsp;Genesis 12:4; &nbsp;Genesis 17:1 ). What we see is a man who means well (courtesy, &nbsp;Genesis 19:1; hospitality, &nbsp;Genesis 19:2 , &nbsp;Genesis 19:3 , &nbsp;Genesis 19:6-8; natural shame, &nbsp;Genesis 19:7; loyalty, &nbsp;Genesis 19:14; and gratitude, &nbsp;Genesis 19:19 ), but who is hopelessly bound up with the moral life of the city through his family connections - alliances that have pulled him down rather than elevated others (&nbsp;Genesis 19:9 , &nbsp;Genesis 19:14 , &nbsp;Genesis 19:26 , &nbsp;Genesis 19:31-35 ). The language of &nbsp;2 Peter 2:7 , &nbsp;2 Peter 2:8 reminds us that Lot was, even at this time of his life, a "righteous" man. [[Viewed]] as a part of his environment (the writer has been speaking of Sodom, &nbsp; Genesis 19:6 ), Lot was certainly entitled to be called a "righteous" man, and the term fits the implications of &nbsp;Genesis 18:23-32 . Moreover, Gen 19 itself shows Lot "vexed ... with their lawless deeds" and "sore distressed by the lascivious life of the wicked" (compare &nbsp;Genesis 19:3 , &nbsp;Genesis 19:7 , &nbsp;Genesis 19:8 , &nbsp;Genesis 19:14 ). Yet the contrast with Abraham is always present in the reader's mind, so that the most lasting impressions are made by Lot's selfishness worldliness vacillation and cowardice, not to mention the moral effect made by the closing scene of his life (&nbsp;Genesis 19:30-38 ). </p> <p> <b> 4. Fourth Period: </b> </p> <p> The fourth period of Lot's career is of uncertain duration. Upon the destruction of Sodom he dwelt at first in Zoar, the "little" city, spared as a convenient refuge for him and his; but at some time unspecified, he "went up out of Zoar," for "he feared to dwell in Zoar" - why, we cannot say. This fear was greater than even the evidently great fear he entertained of dwelling in "the mountain" (&nbsp;Genesis 19:19 ). In this mountain-country of rocks and caves (Driver in <i> HDB </i> , article "Lot," cites Buckingham, <i> Travels in Syria </i> , 61-63, 87, as authority for the statement that people still live in caves in this region), Lot and his two remaining daughters dwell; and the biography of this companion of "the friend of God" ends in a scene of incest, which supplies the logical epilogue to a drama of progressive moral deterioration. This bestial cave-man of Gen 19 is the "brother" of Abraham, but he has reached this goal because his path had led down from Beth-el to Sodom. The origin of the two neighboring and kindred nations, Moab and Ammon, is by the Hebrew tradition traced thus to Lot and his daughters. </p> III. Place in Later Literature. <p> In the Bible, Lot finds mention only as the father of Moab and Ammon (&nbsp;Deuteronomy 2:9 , &nbsp;Deuteronomy 2:19; &nbsp;Psalm 83:8 ), and in the passage in 2 Pet already noticed; and, besides these places, in &nbsp;Luke 17:28-32 . Here Lot represents the central figure in the destruction of Sodom, as Noah in the flood in the preceding context (compare the association of these two characters in 2 Pet and the Koran). His deliverance is mentioned, the haste and narrowness of that escape is implied, and his wife's fate is recalled. In [[Jewish]] and Mohammedan lore (including many passages in the [[Koran]] itself), Lot is a personage of importance, about whom details are told which fancy has added to the sober traditions of old Israel. But particularly for [[Mohammed]] there was point of attachment in Lot's career, offered in &nbsp;Genesis 19:7 , &nbsp;Genesis 19:14 . Like Mohammed to the men of wicked Mecca, Lot becomes a preacher of righteousness and a messenger of judgment to the men of wicked Sodom. He is one of the line of apostles, sent to reveal God's will and purpose to his contemporaries. </p> IV. Critical Theories About the [[Figure]] of Lot. <p> The common view of those who deny the historical reality of Lot is that this name simply stands for the ethnic group, Moab and Ammon. Wellhausen, e.g., expressly calls "Lot" a national name ( <i> Volksname </i> ). As to what is told of him in Gen he remarks: "Were it not for the remarkable depression in which the [[Dead]] Sea lies, Sodom and [[Gomorrah]] would not have perished; were it not for the little flat tongue of land that reaches out into the swamp from the Southeast, Lot would have fled at once to the mountains of his sons, Moab and Ammon, and not have made the detour by Zoar, which merely serves the purpose of explaining why this corner is excepted from 'the overthrow,' to the territory of which it really belongs" ( <i> Prolegomena6 </i> , 323). Meyer confesses that nothing can be made of Lot, because "any characteristic feature that might furnish a point of attachment is entirely lacking." The first of the families of the [[Horites]] of [[Seir]] was named [[Lotan]] (&nbsp; Genesis 36:20 , &nbsp;Genesis 36:22 ), and this writer believes it "probable that this name is derived from Lot; but that Lot was ever a tribal name ( <i> Stammname </i> ) follows neither from this fact (rather the contrary) nor from the designation of Moab and the <i> ''''' benē ''''' </i> <i> ''''' ‛Ammōn ''''' </i> as 'Sons of Lot' " ( <i> Die Israeliten und ihre Nachbarstamme </i> , 311; Compare 261, 339). If "Horite" was understood as "cave-dweller," the story in &nbsp;Genesis 19:30 might be adduced in support of this combination. But the most recent line of reasoning concerning these patriarchal figures makes their names "neither Divine names nor tribal names, whether in actual use or regarded as such, but rather simple personal names like Tom, Dick and Harry.... Typical names they became ... so that ... Israel's story-tellers would connect the name of Lot with the overthrow of the cities" (Gressmann, article in <i> ZATW </i> , 1910). These names were chosen just because "they were very common at the time when the narratives were stamped into types"; later they became unfashionable, but the story-tellers held fast to the old names. "One sees from this at once into how ancient a time the proper names Abraham and Lot must reach, and understands therefore the more easily how they could be changed into tribal ancestors." It does not require the cautions, uttered by writers of this way of thinking, against regarding their views as a return to the old historical view of the patriarchs, to remind us that, in spite of all that may be said to the contrary, the present trend of thought among the most radical critics of the Genesis-traditions is much mote favorable to that conservative historical view than were the opinions which they have overthrown. So that it may justly be asserted, as Gressmann writes: "Confidence in tradition is in any case on the rise." </p> <p> Lot's Wife: This woman, unknown by name, figures in the narrative of Lot that relates his escape from Sodom. She is mentioned in &nbsp;Genesis 19 only in &nbsp; Genesis 19:15-17 , where she is commanded to flee from the doomed city with her husband and daughters, and is laid hold upon by the angelic visitors in their effort to hasten the slow departure; and in &nbsp;Genesis 19:26 , where she alone of the four fugitives disobeys the warning, looks back, and becomes a "pillar of salt" This disobedience, with the moral state it implied and the judgment it entailed, is held up as an example by Christ in &nbsp;Luke 17:32 . In the [[Scriptures]] this is all that is said of a person and event that furnished the basis for a great deal of speculation. [[Josephus]] ( <i> Ant. </i> , I, xi, 4) adds to the statement derived from Gen, "She was changed into a pillar of salt," the words, "for I visited it, and it still remains even now" (see also The Wisdom of [[Solomon]] 10:7). </p> <p> Among [[Christian]] writers contemporary with and subsequent to Josephus, as well as among the [[Jews]] themselves and other Orientals, the same assertion is found, and down to recent times travelers have reported the persistence of such a "pillar of salt," either on the testimony of natives or as eyewitnesses. The question of the origin and nature of these "pillars" is a part of the larger question of Sodom and its neighborhood (see [[Salt]]; [[Siddim]]; [[Slime]] ); for that no one particular "pillar" has persisted through the centuries may be regarded as certain; nor if it had, would the identification of Lot's wife with it and with it alone be ascertainable. This is just an early, persistent and notable case of that "identification" of Biblical sites which prevails all over the [[Holy]] Land. It is to be classed with the myth-and legend-building turn of mind in simple peoples, which has e.g. embroidered upon this Old [[Testament]] account of the destruction of Sodom such marvelous details and embellishments. </p> <p> The principal thing to observe is the vagueness and the simplicity of the story in Gen. For it does not necessarily imply the "metamorphosis" popularly attributed to it, in the strict sense of that word. And it lacks, even in a narrative like this, where the temptation would be greatest, all indications of that "popular archaeology" or curiosity, which according to some critics, is alleged to have furnished the original motive for the invention of the patriarchal narratives. "She became a pillar of salt," and "Remember Lot's wife": this is the extent of the Biblical allusions. All the rest is comment, or legend, or guess, or "science." </p>
       
== Smith's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_73644" /> ==
<p> '''Lot.''' (veil or covering). </p> <p> 1. The son of Haran, and therefore the nephew of Abraham. &nbsp;Genesis 11:27; &nbsp;Genesis 11:31. (B.C. before 1926-1898). His sisters were Milcah, the wife of Nahor, and Iscah, by some identified with Sarah. Haran died before the emigration of Terah and his family from Ur of the Chaldees, &nbsp;Genesis 11:28, and Lot was, therefore, born there. </p> <p> He removed with the rest of his kindred to Charran, and again subsequently with Abraham and [[Sarai]] to Canaan. &nbsp;Genesis 12:4-5. With them, he took refuge in Egypt from a famine, and with them, returned, first to the "south," &nbsp;Genesis 13:1, and then to their original settlement between Bethel and Ai. &nbsp;Genesis 13:3-4. </p> <p> But the pastures of the hills of Bethel, which had, with ease, contained the two strangers on their first arrival, were not able any longer to bear them, so much had their possessions of sheep, goats and cattle increased. Accordingly, they separated, Lot choosing the fertile plain of the Jordan, and advancing as far as Sodom. &nbsp;Genesis 13:10-14. </p> <p> The next occurrence in the life of Lot is his capture by the four kings of the east and his rescue by Abram. &nbsp;Genesis 13:14. The last scene preserved to us in the history of Lot is too well known to need repetition. </p> <p> He was still living in Sodom, &nbsp;Genesis 19:1, from which he was rescued by some angels on the day of its final overthrow. He fled first to Zoar, in which he found a temporary refuge during the destruction of the other cities of the plain. Where this place was situated is not known with certainty. See '''Zoar''' . </p> <p> The end of Lot's wife is commonly treated as one of the difficulties of the Bible; but it surely need not be so. It cannot be necessary to create the details of the story where none are given. On these points, the record is silent. The value and the significance of the story to us are contained in the allusion of '''Christ''' . &nbsp;Luke 17:32. </p> <p> Later ages have not been satisfied so to leave the matter, but have insisted on identifying the "pillar" with some one of the fleeting forms which the perishable rock of the south end of the [[Dead]] Sea is constantly assuming in its process of decomposition and liquefaction. From the incestuous intercourse between Lot and his two daughters, sprang the nations of Moab and Ammon. </p> <p> (literally, a pebble). </p> <p> 2. The custom of deciding doubtful questions by lot is one of great extent and high antiquity. Among the Jews, lots were used with the expectation that God would so control them as to give a right direction to them. They were very often used by God's appointment. "As to the mode of casting lots, we have no certain information. Probably several modes were practiced." </p> <p> "Very commonly among the Latins, little counters of wood were put into a jar with so narrow a neck, that only one could come out at a time. After the jar had been filled with water and the contents shaken, the lots were determined by the order in which the bits of wood, representing the several parties, came out with the water. In other cases, they were put into a wide open jar, and the counters were drawn out by the hand. Sometimes again, they were cast in the manner of dice. The soldiers who cast lots for '''Christ's''' garments undoubtedly used these dice." - Lyman Abbott. </p>
       
== People's Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_70424" /> ==
<p> '''Lot''' (lŏt), veil or covering. The son of Haran and nephew of Abraham. &nbsp;Genesis 11:27; &nbsp;Genesis 11:31. His sisters were [[Milcah]] the wife of Nahor, and Iscah, by some identified with Sarah. Haran died before the emigration of Terah and his family from Ur of the Chaldees, ver. 28, and Lot was therefore born there. He removed with the rest of his kindred to Haran, and again subsequently with Abraham and Sarai to Canaan. &nbsp;Genesis 12:4-5. With them he took refuge in Egypt from a famine, and with them returned first to the "South," &nbsp;Genesis 13:1, and then to their original settlement between Bethel and Ai. vs. 3, 4. Later, they separated, Lot choosing the fertile plain of the Jordan, near Sodom. &nbsp;Genesis 13:10-14. Lot was captured by the four kings of the East, and rescued by Abram. &nbsp;Genesis 14:1-24. He was still living in Sodom, &nbsp;Genesis 19:1-38, from which he was rescued by angels on the day of its final overthrow. He fled first to Zoar, in which he found a temporary refuge during the destruction of the other cities of the plain. The end of Lot's wife is commonly treated as one of the difficulties of the Bible; but it surely need not be so. The value and the significance of the story to us are contained in the allusion of Christ. &nbsp;Luke 17:32. It is folly to think of identifying the "pillar" with some one of the fleeting forms which the perishable rock of the south end of the Dead Sea is constantly assuming. From the incestuous intercourse between Lot and his two daughters sprang the nations of Moab and Ammon. </p> <p> '''Lot.''' [[Casting]] lots or a pebble is an ancient custom of deciding doubtful questions. &nbsp;Proverbs 16:33. Among the Jews lots were used with the expectation that God would so control them as to give a right direction to them, as in the choice of the apostle Matthias, &nbsp;Acts 1:26, and in the cases of [[Saul]] and Jonathan, and Jonah and his companions to determine who had offended God. &nbsp;1 Samuel 14:41-42; &nbsp;Jonah 1:7. In the division of the [[Promised]] Land among the tribes of [[Israel]] the use of the lot was expressly commanded by God himself, it being understood that the extent of territory should be proportioned to the population of each tribe. &nbsp;Numbers 26:55. So the selection of the scapegoat on the day of atonement was to be determined by lot. &nbsp;Leviticus 16:8. [[Property]] was divided in a similar way. &nbsp;Psalms 22:18; &nbsp;Matthew 27:35. The orders of the priests and their daily services were also assigned by lot. 1 Chron. chaps. 24, 25. The manner of casting lots is supposed to have been by stones or marks which were thrown together into the lap or fold of a garment, or into an urn or vase, and the person holding them shook them violently, and they were then drawn. The passage, &nbsp;Proverbs 16:33, is paraphrased thus: "In a lot-vase the lots are shaken in all directions; nevertheless, from the Lord is the whole decision or judgment." </p>
       
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_32417" /> ==
&nbsp;Numbers 33:54&nbsp;Jonah 1:7&nbsp;Proverbs 16:33&nbsp;Esther 3:7&nbsp;Numbers 26:55&nbsp;34:13&nbsp;Joshua 7:14,18&nbsp;1 Samuel 10:20,21&nbsp;1 Chronicles 24:3,5,19&nbsp;Luke 1:9&nbsp;Leviticus 16:8&nbsp;Acts 1:24-26 <p> This word also denotes a portion or an inheritance (&nbsp;Joshua 15:1; &nbsp;Psalm 125:3; &nbsp;Isaiah 17:4 ), and a destiny, as assigned by God (&nbsp;Psalm 16:5; &nbsp;Daniel 12:13 ). </p> <p> Lot, (Heb. lot), a covering; veil, the son of Haran, and nephew of Abraham (&nbsp;Genesis 11:27 ). On the death of his father, he was left in charge of his grandfather Terah (31), after whose death he accompanied his uncle Abraham into Canaan (12:5), thence into Egypt (10), and back again to Canaan (13:1). After this he separated from him and settled in Sodom (13:5-13). There his righteous soul was "vexed" from day to day (&nbsp;2 Peter 2:7 ), and he had great cause to regret this act. Not many years after the separation he was taken captive by Chedorlaomer, and was rescued by Abraham (&nbsp;Genesis 14 ). At length, when the judgment of God descended on the guilty cities of the plain (&nbsp;Genesis 19:1-20 ), Lot was miraculously delivered. When fleeing from the doomed city his wife "looked back from behind him, and became a pillar of salt." There is to this day a peculiar crag at the south end of the Dead Sea, near Kumran, which the Arabs call Bint [[Sheik]] Lot, i.e., Lot's wife. It is "a tall, isolated needle of rock, which really does bear a curious resemblance to an [[Arab]] woman with a child upon her shoulder." From the words of warning in &nbsp;Luke 17:32 , "Remember Lot's wife," it would seem as if she had gone back, or tarried so long behind in the desire to save some of her goods, that she became involved in the destruction which fell on the city, and became a stiffened corpse, fixed for a time in the saline incrustations. She became "a pillar of salt", i.e., as some think, of asphalt. (See [[Salt]] .) </p> <p> Lot and his daughters sought refuge first in Zoar, and then, fearing to remain there longer, retired to a cave in the neighbouring mountains (&nbsp; Genesis 19:30 ). Lot has recently been connected with the people called on the Egyptian monuments Rotanu or Lotanu, who is supposed to have been the hero of the [[Edomite]] tribe Lotan. </p>
       
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_67353" /> ==
<p> Son of Haran the brother of Abraham. He seems to have accompanied Abraham. without having a like faith in Abraham's God. When their flocks and herds had so increased that they could no longer dwell together, Abraham bade his nephew choose whither he would turn. Lot looked on the well-watered plain of the Jordan, and went <i> toward </i> Sodom, notwithstanding that the men of that city were exceedingly wicked. The next record of Lot is that he dwelt <i> in </i> Sodom, and from thence was carried away by the four kings who made war against that city. </p> <p> Though rescued by Abraham he did not profitby the discipline, but returned to dwell in the guilty city; whereas Abraham would not accept so much as a shoe latchet from its king. Lot is next seen <i> sitting in the gate </i> of Sodom, the place of power and judgement, when the two angels arrived to destroy the city. He acted hospitably towards them, but had to be rescued by them from the enmity of the inhabitants. </p> <p> Lot and his family were loathe to leave the city, but the angels hastened them out, and bade them flee to the mountains. Lot begged to be allowed to go to Zoar, and was permitted; but, fearing to stay there, he left with his two daughters and abode in a cave, where, alas, he became the father of Moab and Ben-ammi, the ancestors of the Moabites and the Ammonites, who are afterwards alluded to as the children of Lot. </p> <p> From his history in the O.T. it could not have been discovered that he was a righteous man; but this testimony is given of him in &nbsp;2 Peter 2:7,8 , where he is called 'just Lot,' who, as a righteous man, was daily vexed in his soul by the unlawful deeds of those among whom he dwelt. Though God delivered him, he is a solemn instance of a righteous man dwelling needlessly amid gross wickedness; his course being the strongest contrast to that of Abraham. &nbsp;Genesis 11 — &nbsp; Genesis 14 , &nbsp;Genesis 19; &nbsp;Psalm 83:8; &nbsp;Luke 17:28,29 . </p> <p> LOT'S WIFE, on leaving Sodom, looked back and became a pillar of salt! and is held up as a warning not to linger but to flee from coming judgements. &nbsp;Luke 17:32 . </p>
       
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_52483" /> ==
<p> <strong> LOT </strong> . The son of Haran, brother of Abraham. His name seems clearly derived from a root meaning <em> to wrap closely </em> . The account of his life is contained in &nbsp; Genesis 11:27 to &nbsp; Genesis 14:16; &nbsp; Genesis 14:19 . He was born in Ur, and went with Abraham to Haran, and thence to Canaan. He accompanied Abraham in much of his wandering. The separation between them (ch. 13) was due to a quarrel between their herdsmen, each having great possessions of cattle. As a result, Lot dwelt in the cities of the plain, making his home in Sodom. During the expedition of Chedorlaomer (ch. 14) he was carried away captive, and rescued by Abraham. In ch. 19 is narrated the escape of Lot and his daughters from Sodom, with the subsequent incidents. The city of <strong> [[Zoar]] </strong> , where they dwelt for a time, is possibly the <em> Zoara </em> or <em> Zoôr </em> of Josephus, at the S.E. extremity of the Dead Sea, in the modern <em> Ghôr es-Sâfieh </em> , a well-watered region. The mountain to which he finally went is doubtless the mountainous region later known as Moab. The story of the daughters of Lot (&nbsp; Genesis 19:30-38 ) is now usually considered to be not history, but a traditional account of the origin of the two nations, Moab and Ammon. The basis of the story is partly popular etymology of the two names; while it is prompted chiefly by national rivalry and hostility. That Lot was a righteous man (&nbsp; 2 Peter 2:7-8 ) may be granted in a relative sense, in comparison with the Sodomites; but he shows no great strength of character. </p> <p> <strong> Lot’s wife. </strong> The historical character of the story of Lot’s wife and her transformation into a <strong> pillar of salt </strong> is doubtful: it may have arisen from the peculiarities of the cliffs in the vicinity of the Dead Sea. At its S.W. extremity is a range of cliffs 6 miles long and 600 feet high, called <em> Jebel Usdum </em> , ‘the mountain of Sodom.’ These consist of crystallized rock salt, covered with chalky limestone and gypsum, and curiously furrowed and worn, so as sometimes to resemble a human figure. </p> <p> [[George]] R. Berry. </p>
       
== Bridgeway Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_18816" /> ==
<p> When Abraham and his household moved from [[Mesopotamia]] into Canaan, his nephew Lot went with him. He also went with Abraham into Egypt, and then back into Canaan (&nbsp;Genesis 11:26-31; &nbsp;Genesis 12:1-5; &nbsp;Genesis 12:10; &nbsp;Genesis 13:1). </p> <p> Like Abraham, Lot was a wealthy owner of sheep and cattle. When trouble arose between Abraham’s and Lot’s workers, the two households separated. Lot chose for himself the fertile pasture lands around Sodom and Gomorrah, east of the Dead Sea (&nbsp;Genesis 13:5-11). Lot’s choice was selfish and it soon brought him trouble. Mesopotamian invaders raided his territory, plundered his goods and took Lot himself captive. Only swift action by Abraham rescued him (&nbsp;Genesis 14:1-3; &nbsp;Genesis 14:12-16). </p> <p> Lot established himself in the city of Sodom and continued to increase in prosperity. But Sodom and the neighbouring city of Gomorrah were so morally corrupt that God decided to destroy them (&nbsp;Genesis 13:12-13; &nbsp;Genesis 18:20-21). Lot did not agree with the immoral practices of Sodom (&nbsp;2 Peter 2:7-8), though he apparently did nothing to oppose them. He was even prepared to allow the sexual perverts of the city to rape his daughters, in order to save two guests from homosexual assault (&nbsp;Genesis 19:1-11). Lot was so much at home in Sodom that even when God’s judgment was about to fall on the city, he did not want to leave (&nbsp;Genesis 19:15-20). </p> <p> The two daughters of Lot, still affected by the evil influences of Sodom, forced their father into immoral sexual relations with them. The two children born as a result marked the beginnings of two nations, [[Ammon]] and Moab (&nbsp;Genesis 19:30-38). </p>
       
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_61276" /> ==
<p> LOT, n. </p> 1. That which, in human speech, is called chance, hazard, fortune but in strictness of language, is the determination of Providence as, the land shall be divided by lot. &nbsp;Numbers 26 . 2. That by which the fate or portion of one is determined that by which an event is committed to chance, that is, to the determination of Providence as, to cast lots to draw lots. <p> The lot is cast into the lap, but the whole disposing thereof is of the Lord. &nbsp;Proverbs 16 . </p> 3. The part, division or fate which falls to one by chance, that is, by divine determination. <p> The second lot came forth to [[Simeon.]] &nbsp;Joshua 19 . </p> <p> He was but born to try the lot of man, to suffer and to die. </p> 4. A distinct portion or parcel as a lot of goods a lot of boards. 5. [[Proportion]] or share of taxes as, to pay scot and lot. 6. In the United States, a piece or division of land perhaps originally assigned by drawing lots, but now any portion, piece or division. So we say, a man has a lot of land in Broadway, or in the meadow he has a lot in the plain, or on the mountain he has a home-lot, a house-lot, a wood-lot. <p> The defendants leased a house and lot in the city of New York. </p> <p> To cast lots, is to use or throw a die, or some other instrument, by the unforseen turn or position of which, an event is by previous agreement determined. </p> <p> To draw lots, to determine an event by drawing one thing from a number whose marks are concealed from the drawer, and thus determining an event. </p> <p> LOT, To allot to assign to distribute to sort to catalogue to portion. </p>
       
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_16582" /> ==
<p> The son of Haran, and nephew of Abraham, followed his uncle from Ur, and afterwards from Haran, to settle in Canaan, &nbsp;Genesis 11:31 &nbsp; 12:4-6 &nbsp; 13:1 . Abraham always had a great affection for him, and when they could not continue longer together in Canaan, because they both had large flocks and their shepherds sometimes quarreled, &nbsp;Genesis 13:5-7 , he gave Lot the choice of his abode. Lot chose the plain of Sodom, which appears then to have been the most fertile parts of the land. Here he continued to dwell till the destruction of Sodom and the adjacent cities. He was a righteous man even in Sodom, &nbsp;2 Peter 2:7; but the calamities consequent upon his choice of this residence-his capture by eastern marauders, the molestation caused by his ungodly and vicious neighbors, the loss of his property in the burning city, the destruction of his sons-in-law and of his wife-if they do not prove that he regarded ease and profit more than duty, show that the most beautiful and fruitful land is not always the best; the profligacy of its citizens may sink it into the abyss of perdition, and endanger all who have any concern with it. Lot's wife, looking back with disobedient regrets, and arrested by the threatened judgment midway in her flight to the mountain, is an awful warning to all who turn their faces Zionward, but are unwilling to leave all for Christ, &nbsp;Genesis 19:1-38 &nbsp; Luke 17:32 . </p>
       
== Vine's Expository Dictionary of OT Words <ref name="term_76408" /> ==
<p> <em> Gôrâl </em> (גֹּרָל, Strong'S #1486), “lot.” This word is attested 77 times and in all periods of the language (if a traditional view of the formation of the canon is accepted). </p> <p> <em> Gôrâl </em> represents the “lot” which was cast to discover the will of God in a given situation: “And [[Aaron]] shall cast lots upon the two goats; one lot for the Lord, and the other lot for the scapegoat” (Lev. 16:8—the first occurrence). Exactly what casting the “lot” involved is not known. </p> <p> Since the land of Palestine was allocated among the tribes by the casting of the “lot,” these allotments came to be known as their lots: “This then was the lot of the tribe of the children of [[Judah]] by their families; even to the border of [[Edom]] …” (Josh. 15:1). </p> <p> In an extended use the word <em> gôrâl </em> represents the idea “fate” or “destiny”: “And behold at eveningtide trouble; and before the morning he is not. This is the portion of them that spoil us, and the lot of them that rob us” (Isa. 17:14). Since God is viewed as controlling all things absolutely, the result of the casting of the “lot” is divinely controlled: “The lot is cast into the lap; but the whole disposing thereof is of the Lord” (Prov. 16:33). Thus, providence (divine control of history) is frequently figured as one’s “lot.” </p>
       
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_140084" /> ==
<p> '''(1):''' ''' (''' n.) The part, or fate, which falls to one, as it were, by chance, or without his planning. </p> <p> '''(2):''' ''' (''' v. t.) To allot; to sort; to portion. </p> <p> '''(3):''' ''' (''' n.) That which happens without human design or forethought; chance; accident; hazard; fortune; fate. </p> <p> '''(4):''' ''' (''' n.) [[Anything]] (as a die, pebble, ball, or slip of paper) used in determining a question by chance, or without man's choice or will; as, to cast or draw lots. </p> <p> '''(5):''' ''' (''' n.) A prize in a lottery. </p> <p> '''(6):''' ''' (''' n.) A separate portion; a number of things taken collectively; as, a lot of stationery; - colloquially, sometimes of people; as, a sorry lot; a bad lot. </p> <p> '''(7):''' ''' (''' n.) A large quantity or number; a great deal; as, to spend a lot of money; lots of people think so. </p> <p> '''(8):''' ''' (''' n.) A distinct portion or plot of land, usually smaller than a field; as, a building lot in a city. </p>
       
== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_56429" /> ==
<p> (Λώτ) </p> <p> Lot, the nephew, and for a time the companion, of Abraham, is thrice over called ‘righteous’ in &nbsp;2 Peter 2:7-8. With all his faults, of which the spirit of compromise was the most conspicuous, he was relatively δίκαιος, <i> i.e. </i> in comparison with the citizens of Sodom among whom he made his abode. The Vulgateand Erasmus assume that in v. 8 he is designated ‘just in seeing and hearing’-‘aspectu et auditu justus’-but it is better to read, ‘in seeing and hearing he vexed his righteous soul.’ The active voice (ἐβασάνιζεν) implies that while he was no doubt continually vexed beyond measure by the conduct of the people around him, his troubles were ultimately of his own making, ‘It was precisely his dwelling there, which was his own deliberate choice, that became an active torment to his soul’ (H. von Soden in <i> Handkom. zum NT </i> , iii., [[Freiburg]] i. B., 1899, p. 203). </p> <p> James Strahan. </p>
       
== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_48109" /> ==
<p> Son of Haran, and nephew to Abraham. His name signifies wrapped up, or hidden. His history we have interspersed with that of Abraham, from &nbsp;Genesis 11:27-32; &nbsp;Genesis 12:1-20; &nbsp;Genesis 13:1-18; &nbsp;Genesis 14:1-24; &nbsp;Genesis 15:1-21; &nbsp;Genesis 16:1-16; &nbsp;Genesis 17:1-27; &nbsp;Genesis 18:1-33; &nbsp;Genesis 19:1-36. </p>
       
== Charles Buck Theological Dictionary <ref name="term_20078" /> ==
<p> Is a mutual agreement to determine an uncertain event, no other ways determinable, by an appeal to the providence of God, on casting or throwing something. This is a decisory lot, &nbsp;Proverbs 16:33; &nbsp;Proverbs 18:18 . The matter, therefore, to be determined, in order to avoid guilt, should be important, and no other possible way left to determine it; and the manner of making the appeal solemn and grave, if we would escape the guilt of taking the name of God in vain. Wantonly, without necessity, and in a ludicrous manner, to make this appeal, must be therefore highly blameable. And if thus the decisory lot, when wantonly and unneccessarity employed, be criminal, equally, if not more so, must the divinatory lot be, which is employed for discovering the will of God: this being no mean of God's appointment, must be superstitious, and the height of presumption. </p>
       
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_49036" /> ==
<p> (properly גּוֹרָל or גֹּרָל, goral', κλῆρος, literally a pebble, used anciently for balloting; other terms occasionally thus rendered are חֵבֶל or חֶבֶל, che'bel, a portion, &nbsp;Deuteronomy 32:9; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 16:18; &nbsp;Psalms 105:11, referring to an inheritance; and λαγχάνω, to obtain by lot, &nbsp;Luke 1:9; &nbsp;John 19:24), strictly a small stone, as used in casting lots (&nbsp;Leviticus 16:8; &nbsp;Numbers 33:54; &nbsp;Joshua 19:1. &nbsp;Ezekiel 24:6; &nbsp;Jonah 1:7), hence also a method used to determine chances or preferences, or to decide a debate. The decision by lot was often resorted to among the Hebrews, but always with the strictest reference to the interposition of God. As to the precise manner of casting lots, we have no certain information; probably several modes were practiced. In &nbsp;Proverbs 16:33 we read that "the lot," i.e., pebble, "is cast into the lap," properly into the bosom of an urn or vase. It does not appear that the lap or bosom of a garment worn by a person was ever used to receive lots. </p> <p> The use of lots among the ancients was very general (see Dale, Orac. ethn. c. 14; Potter, Greek Antiq. 1:730; Adams, [[Roman]] Ant. 1:540 sq.; Smith, Dict. of Class. Ant. s.v. Sors) and highly esteemed (Xenoph. Cyrop; 1:6, 46), as is natural in simple stages of society (Tacit. Germ. 10), " recommending itself as a sort of appeal to the [[Almighty]] secure from all influence of passion or bias, and a sort of divination employed even by the gods themselves (Homer, Iliad, 22:209; Cicero, De Div. 1:34; 2:41). The word sors is thus used for an oracular response (Cicero, De Div., 2:56). So there was a mode of divination among heathens by means of arrows, two inscribed and one without mark, βελομαντεία (&nbsp;Hosea 4:12; &nbsp;Ezekiel 21:21; Mauritius, De Sortitione, c. 14, § 4; see also &nbsp;Esther 3:7; &nbsp;Esther 9:24-32; Mishna, Taanith, 2:10). (See Divinatlon). Among heathen instances the following additional may be cited: </p> <p> '''1.''' Choice of a champion, or of priority in combat (Il. 3:316; 7:171; Herod. 3:108); </p> <p> '''2.''' [[Decision]] of fate in battle (Il. 20:209); </p> <p> '''3.''' [[Appointment]] of magistrates, jurymen, or other functionaries (Aristot. Pol. 4:16; Schol. On Aristoph. Plut. 277; Herod. 6:109; Xenoph. Cyrol). 4:5, 55: Demosth. c. Aristog. 1:778, 1; comp. Smith, Dict. of Class. Antiq. s.v. Dicastes); </p> <p> '''4.''' [[Priests]] (AEsch. in Tim. page 188, Bekk.); </p> <p> '''5.''' A German practice of deciding by marks on twigs, mentioned by Tacitus (Germ. 10); </p> <p> '''6.''' [[Division]] of conquered or colonized land (Thucydides, 3:50; Plutarch, Pericles, 84; Bockh, Public Econ. of Ath. 2:170)." </p> <p> The [[Israelites]] sometimes had recourse to lots as a method of ascertaining the divine will (&nbsp;Proverbs 16:33), and generally in cases of doubt regarding serious enterprises (&nbsp;Esther 3:7; compare Rosenmü ller, Morgenl. 3:301), especially the following: (a.) In matters of partition or distribution. e.g. the location of the several tribes in Palestine (&nbsp;Numbers 26:55 sq.; &nbsp;Numbers 33:34; &nbsp;Numbers 34:13; &nbsp;Numbers 36:2; &nbsp;Joshua 14:2; &nbsp;Joshua 18:6 sq.; &nbsp;Joshua 19:5), the assignment of the [[Levitical]] cities (&nbsp;Joshua 21:4 sq.), and, after the return from the exile, the settlement in the homesteads at the capital (&nbsp;Nehemiah 11:1; compare &nbsp;1 [[Maccabees]] 3:36). [[Prisoners]] of war were also disposed of by lot (&nbsp;Joel 3:3; &nbsp;Nahum 3:10; &nbsp;Obadiah 1:11; compare &nbsp;Matthew 27:35; &nbsp;John 19:24; compare Xenoph. Cyrop. 4:5, 55). (b.) In criminal investigations where doubt existed as to the real culprit (&nbsp;Joshua 7:14; &nbsp;1 Samuel 14:42). A notion prevailed among the Jewls that this detection was performed by observing the shining of the stones in the high-priest's breastplate (Mauritius, c. 21, § 4). The instance of the mariners casting lots to ascertain by the surrendering of what offender the sea could be appeased (&nbsp;Jonah 1:7), is analogous; but it is not clear, from &nbsp;Proverbs 18:18, that lots were resorted to for the determination of civil disputes. (c.) In the election to an important office or undertaking foir which several persons appeared to have claims (&nbsp;1 Samuel 10:19; &nbsp;Acts 1:26; comp. Herod. 3:128; Justin. 13:4; Cicero, Verr. 2:2, 51; Aristot. Polit. 4:16), as well as in the assignment of official duties among associates having a common right (&nbsp;Nehemiah 10:34), as of the priestly offices in the [[Temple]] service among the sixteen of the family of [[Eleazar]] and the eight of that of [[Ithamar]] (&nbsp;1 Chronicles 24:3; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 24:5; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 24:19; &nbsp;Luke 1:9), also of the Levites for similar purposes (&nbsp;1 Chronicles 23:28; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 24:20-31; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 25:8; &nbsp;1 Chronicles 26:13; Mishna, Tamid, 1:2; 3:1.; 5:2; Jonut, 2:2. 3, 4; Shabb. 23:2; Lightfoot, Hor. Hebr. in &nbsp;Luke 1:8-9, volume 2, page 489). (d.) In military enterprises (&nbsp;Judges 20:10; compare Val. Max. 1:5, 3). </p> <p> In the sacred ritual of the Hebrews we find the use of lots but once prescribed, namely, in the selection of the scape-goat (&nbsp;Leviticus 16:8 sq.). The two inscribed tablets of boxwood, afterwards of gold, were put into an urns which was shaken, and the lots drawn out (Joma, 3:9; 4:1). (See [[Day Of Atonement]]). Eventually lots came into frequent usage (comp. the Mishna, Shabb. 23:2). In later times they even degenerated into a game of hazard, of which human life was the stakes (Josephus, War, 3:8, 7). [[Dice]] appear to have been usually employed for the lot (הַשְׁלַיךְ גּוֹרָל, to "throw the die," &nbsp;Joshua 18:8; so הוֹרָה, to cast, &nbsp;Joshua 18:6; δίδωμι, to give, &nbsp;Acts 1:26; נָפָל, πίπτω, to fall, &nbsp;Jonah 1:7; &nbsp;Ezekiel 24:7; &nbsp;Acts 1:26), and were sometimes drawn from a vessel (יָצָא הִגּוֹרָל," the lot came forth," Numbers 32:54, so עָלָה, to "come up," &nbsp;Leviticus 6:9; comp. the Mishna, Joma, 4:1). A different kind of lot is elsewhere indicated in the [[Mishna]] (Josna, 2:1; comp. Lightfoot, Hor. Hebr. page 714). A sacred species of lot was by means of the (See [[Urim And Thummim]]) (q.v.) of the high-priest (&nbsp;Numbers 27:21; &nbsp;1 Samuel 28:6), which appears to have had some connection with the divination by means of the sacerdotal EPHOD (&nbsp;1 Samuel 23:6; &nbsp;1 Samuel 23:9). Stones were occasionally employed in prophetical or emblematical lots (&nbsp;Numbers 17:6 sq.; &nbsp;Zechariah 11:10; &nbsp;Zechariah 11:14). (See [[Purim]]). [[Election]] by lot appears to have prevailed in the [[Christian]] Church as late as the 7th century (Bingham, Eccles. Antiq. 4:1, 1, volume 1, page 426; Bruns, Conc. 2:66). Here also we may notice the use of words heard, or passages chosen at random from Scripture. Sortes Biblicae, like the Sortes Vigilance, prevailed among Jews, as they have also among Christians, though denounced by several councils (Johnson, "Life of Cowley," Works, 9:8; Bingham, Eccl. Antiq. 16:5, 3; id., 6:53 sq.; Bruns, Conc. 2:145-154, 166; Mauritius, c. 15; Hofmann, Lex. s.v. Sortes). </p> <p> On the subject generally, see Mauritius, De Sortitione ap. vet. Hebraeos (Basil, 1692); Chrysander, De Sortibus (Halle, 1740); Benzel, De Sortibus vet. in his Syntagma dissertat. 1:297-318; Winckler, Gedanken ü ber dl. Spuren gottl. Providenz in Loose (Hildesheim, 1750); Palaophili, Abhandl. v. Gebrauchs d. Looses in d. heil. Schr. in Semler's Hall. Samml. 1:2, 79 sq.; Junius, De Sorte, remedio dubias caussas dirimendi (Lips. 1746); Eenberg, De Sortilegiis (Upsal. 1705); Hanovius, De electione per sortem (Gedan. 1743; in German by Tramhold, Hamb. 1751); Bauer, Vormitze Kunst, etc. (Hildesh. 1750). </p> <p> The term "lot" is also used for that which falls to one by lot, especially a portion or inheritance (&nbsp;Joshua 15:1; &nbsp;Judges 1:3; &nbsp;Psalms 125:3; &nbsp;Isaiah 17:14; &nbsp;Isaiah 47:6; &nbsp;Acts 8:21). Lot is also used metaphorically for portion, or destiny, as assigned to men from God (&nbsp;Psalms 16:5): "And arise to thy lot in the end of days" in the Messiah's kingdom (&nbsp;Daniel 12:13; comp. &nbsp;Revelation 20:6). (See [[Heritage]]). </p>
       
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_16103" /> ==
<p> Lot (A covering); son of Haran and nephew of Abraham, who by the early death of his father had already come into possession of his property when Abraham went into the land of Canaan . Their united substance, consisting chiefly in cattle, was not then too large to prevent them from living together in one encampment. Eventually, however, their possessions were so greatly increased, that they were obliged to separate; and Abraham with rare generosity conceded the choice of pasture-grounds to his nephew. Lot availed himself of this liberality of his uncle, as he deemed most for his own advantage, by fixing his abode at Sodom, that his flocks might pasture in and around that fertile and well-watered neighborhood . He had soon very great reason to regret this choice; for although his flocks fed well, his soul was starved in that vile place, the inhabitants of which were sinners before the Lord exceedingly. There 'he vexed his righteous soul from day to day with the filthy conversation of the wicked' . </p> <p> About eight years after his separation from Abraham (B.C. 1913), Lot was carried away prisoner by Chedorlaomer, along with the other inhabitants of Sodom, and was rescued and brought back by Abraham (Genesis 14), as related under other heads [ABRAHAM; CHEDORLAOMER]. This exploit procured for Abraham much celebrity in Canaan; and it ought to have procured for Lot respect and gratitude from the people of Sodom, who had been delivered from hard slavery and restored to their homes on his account. But this does not appear to have been the result. </p> <p> At length the guilt of 'the cities of the plain' brought down the signal judgments of Heaven. The avenging angels, after having been entertained by Abraham, repaired to Sodom, where they were received and entertained by Lot, who was sitting in the gate of the town when they arrived. While they were at supper the house was beset by a number of men, who demanded that the strangers should be given up to them, for the unnatural purposes which have given a name of infamy to Sodom in all generations. Lot resisted this demand, and was loaded with abuse by the vile fellows outside on that account. They had nearly forced the door, when the angels smote them with instant blindness, by which their attempts were rendered abortive, and they were constrained to disperse. Towards morning the angels apprised Lot of the doom which hung over the place, and urged him to hasten thence with his family. He was allowed to extend the benefit of this deliverance to the families of his daughters who had married in Sodom; but the warning was received by those families with incredulity and insult, and he therefore left Sodom accompanied only by his wife and two daughters. As they went, being hastened by the angels, the wife, anxious for those who had been left behind, or reluctant to remove from the place which had long been her home, and where much valuable property was necessarily left behind, lingered behind the rest, and was suddenly involved in the destruction, by which—smothered and stiffened as she stood by saline incrustations—she became 'a pillar of salt.' </p> <p> Lot and his daughters then hastened on to Zoar, the smallest of the five cities of the plain, which had been spared on purpose to afford him a refuge: but, being fearful, after what had passed, to remain among a people so corrupted, he soon retired to a cavern in the neighboring mountains, and there abode. After some stay in this place, the daughters of Lot became apprehensive lest the family of their father should be lost for want of descendants, than which no greater calamity was known or apprehended in those times; and in the belief that, after what had passed in Sodom, there was no hope of their obtaining suitable husbands, they, by a contrivance which has in it the taint of Sodom, where they had been brought up, made their father drunk with wine, and in that state seduced him into an act which, as they well knew, would in soberness have been most abhorrent to him. They thus became the mothers, and he the father, of two sons, named Moab and Ammon, from whom sprung the Moabites and Ammonites, so often mentioned in the [[Hebrew]] history (Genesis 19). This circumstance is the last which the [[Scripture]] records of the history of Lot; and the time and place of his death are unknown. </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==
<references>
<references>


<ref name="term_42021"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/holman-bible-dictionary/lot Lot from Holman Bible Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_36366"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/fausset-s-bible-dictionary/lot+(1) Lot from Fausset's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_81041"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/watson-s-biblical-theological-dictionary/lot Lot from Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_73644"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/smith-s-bible-dictionary/lot Lot from Smith's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_70424"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/people-s-dictionary-of-the-bible/lot Lot from People's Dictionary of the Bible]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_32417"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/easton-s-bible-dictionary/lot Lot from Easton's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_67353"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/morrish-bible-dictionary/lot Lot from Morrish Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_52483"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-bible/lot Lot from Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_18816"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/bridgeway-bible-dictionary/lot Lot from Bridgeway Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_61276"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/king-james-dictionary/lot Lot from King James Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_16582"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/american-tract-society-bible-dictionary/lot Lot from American Tract Society Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_76408"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/vine-s-expository-dictionary-of-ot-words/lot Lot from Vine's Expository Dictionary of OT Words]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_140084"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/webster-s-dictionary/lot Lot from Webster's Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_56429"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-new-testament/lot Lot from Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_48109"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hawker-s-poor-man-s-concordance-and-dictionary/lot Lot from Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_20078"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/charles-buck-theological-dictionary/lot Lot from Charles Buck Theological Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_49036"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/lot Lot from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_16103"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/kitto-s-popular-cyclopedia-of-biblial-literature/lot Lot from Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature]</ref>
<ref name="term_5869"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/international-standard-bible-encyclopedia/lot+(1) Lot from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia]</ref>
          
          
</references>
</references>

Latest revision as of 15:30, 16 October 2021

Fausset's Bible Dictionary [1]

Haran's son, Abraham's nephew ( Genesis 11:27-31). Born in Ur of the Chaldees, before Terah's emigration. Accompanied Abram to Charan, then to Canaan ( Genesis 12:4-5), then, in the famine, to Egypt. On their return a quarrel arose between Abram's and Lot's herdsmen. In the spirit of a child of God Abram goes to Lot himself, instead of listening to subordinates' reports, and begs as they are brethren there should be no strife between them (contrast  Acts 15:39), and offers Lot precedency, though as his senior Abram might have claimed it; "if thou wilt take the left hand, then I will go to the right," etc. Lot chose by sight, not faith, the richly watered circle of the Jordan, fertile, but the region of wicked Sodom ( Joshua 7:24;  Joshua 8:15). At first Lot only "pitched his tent toward Sodom," but he was venturing too near temptation not to be caught ( Psalms 1:1;  1 Corinthians 15:33).

He soon was dwelling in a "house" in Sodom, and paid the penalty in being carried off with his much-loved "goods" by Chedorlaomer; he was rescued only by the disinterested bravery and magnanimity of Abram, who, forgetting Lot's unamiable conduct, thought only of how to rescue him at all hazards in his distress. This warning ought to have been enough to drive Lot from Sodom, but no, he still lives there. Next, Lot appears exercising that goodly hospitality by which he" entertained angels unawares," and for which the Epistle to Hebrew ( Hebrews 13:2) commends him. Evidently, the luxury of worldly Sodom had not wholly corrupted the simplicity of his character. The Spirit of God, who knows hearts, designates him ( 2 Peter 2:7-9) "just Lot, vexed with the filthy conversation (the licentious behaviour) of the wicked" (the lawless, who set at defiance the laws of nature and God).

The Sodomites' words, "this one fellow came in to sojourn, and he will needs be a judge" refer evidently to Lot's remonstrances with them which Peter presupposes. The gracious Lord reminds us of his faithfulness, not of his subsequent incest. If there had been "ten" such "fellows" in Sodom Jehovah would have spared it ( Genesis 18:32). Again God records, "that righteous man dwelling among them, in seeing and hearing, vexed (tormented) his righteous soul from day to day with their unlawful deeds." Lot had gone into temptation, and must have perished but, for God's grace; to all appearances his position was hopeless, but "the Lord knoweth how to deliver the godly out of temptations," He is at no loss for means. The angels' visit was meant to test Lot as well as the Sodomites. The angels' declining his invitation at first, "we will abide in the street (the broad open space) all night," answers to Jesus' mode of eliciting the faith of the two Emmaus disciples ( Luke 24:28).

His sin is faithfully recorded, his offering to sacrifice his daughters' honour to save his guests. He was retributively punished by those daughters sacrificing their father's honour and their own. They seem to have been only betrothed, not yet married, to Lot's so-called "sons in law." When he warned them to flee from the coming destruction "he seemed as one that mocked unto his sons in law" (compare  Luke 24:11). His imperfection of faith appears in that "he lingered" even on the morning of Sodom's doom. But the angels "laid hold upon his hand ... the Lord being merciful to him ( Romans 9:15-16) ... and set him without the city." They further warned him, "escape for thy life, look not behind thee (compare the Christian's motto,  Philippians 3:13;  Luke 9:62), neither stay thou in all the plain," the ( Ciccar ) circuit of Jordan which he had so coveted. Defective faith made him plead for leave to stay at Zoar, which, as "a little one," he urges could have but few sinning in it so as to incur a share in Sodom's doom.

God grants even this, and adds "I cannot do anything until thou be come there"; God's love controls His omnipotence ( Matthew 27:42). Lot's wife "looked back" with regrets on Sodom's sinful pleasures, then stayed behind, and "became a pillar of salt"; possibly overtaken by the fire and brimstone and incrusted with salt. The Americans found E. of Usdum a pillar of salt 40 ft. high, which may be the traditional one identified with Sodom's wife (Josephus, Ant. 1:11). Vacillation in faith led him to doubt even Zoar's safety, notwithstanding God's promise. From "lingering" about Sodom, Lot passes to the opposite extreme, desponding of safety even in its extreme skirt. His unbelief issued in the sin in the cave, and the offspring were "the children of Lot," Moab and Ammon ( Deuteronomy 2:9;  Deuteronomy 2:19;  Psalms 73:8). See our Lord's spiritual lesson from Sodom and Lot's wife ( Luke 17:28-32).

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia [2]

lot  :

I. Personality.

The man who bore the name Lot ( לוט , lōṭ  ; Λώτ , Lṓt ) is mentioned for the first time in   Genesis 11:27 , at the beginning of that section of Genesis which is entitled "the generations of Terah." After Terah's 3 sons are named, it is added that the third of these, Haran, begat Lot.

The reason for thus singling out but one of the grandsons of Terah appears in the next verse, where we are told that "Haran died before his father Terah in the land of his nativity, in Ur of the Chaldees." For that period in the life of this family, therefore, which begins with the migration from Ur, Lot represents his father's branch of the family ( Genesis 11:31 ). It is hardly probable that the relation between Abraham and Lot would have been what it was, had not Haran died; but be this as it may, we read this introduction of Lot into the genealogy of Terah as an anticipation of the story to which it furnishes an introduction, and in which Lot is destined to play an important part.

The sections of that story in which Lot appears are: in  Genesis 11 , the migration from Ur to Haran; in  Genesis 12 , Abraham's wanderings; in  Genesis 13 , the separation of Abraham and Lot; in  Genesis 14 , the campaign of the eastern kings against Sodom and Abraham's recovery of the captives; and in  Genesis 19 , the destruction of Sodom.

In  Genesis 14:14 ,  Genesis 14:16 Lot is termed the "brother" of Abraham; but that this does not represent a variant tradition is proved by reference to   Genesis 14:12 of the same chapter (ascribed to "an independent source") and to   Genesis 13:8 (ascribed to J; compare   Genesis 11:28 J).

II. Career.

1. First Period:

Lot's life, as the scanty references to him permit us to reconstruct it, falls into four periods. Of the first period - that previous to the migration from Haran - we know nothing save Lot's birth in Ur, the death of his father there, the marriage of his sister Milcah to his uncle Nahor (of another sister, Iscah, we learn only the name), and the journey to Haran in company with Terah, Abraham and Sarah. The fact that Sarah's childlessness and Haran's death are the only two circumstances related of the family history, may serve to explain why Lot went with Abraham instead of staying with Nahor. A childless uncle and a fatherless nephew may well have remained together with the idea that, even if there was no formal adoption, the nephew might become his uncle's heir. Certainly, the promise of a numberless seed, so often repeated to the patriarchs, comes first to Abraham immediately after Lot has separated from him (see  Genesis 13:6-18 ).

2. Second Period:

In the second period of Lot's life, we find him the companion of Abraham on his journeys from Mesopotamia to Canaan, through Canaan to Egypt, and back again to the neighborhood of Beth-el. His position is subordinate, for his uncle is head of the family, and oriental custom is uniform and rigorous in the matter of family rule. Hence, the use of the singular number throughout the narrative. What Abraham did, his whole "clan" did. Yet Lot's position was as nearly independent as these patriarchal conditions admit. When the story reaches the point where it is necessary to mention this fact, the narrator explains, first, the generosity with which Abraham treated his nephew, in permitting him to have "flocks, and herds, and tents" of his own, a quasi-independent economy, and second, that disproportion between their collective possessions and the land's resources which made separation inevitable. Up to this point the only mention of Lot during this period of wandering is contained in  Genesis 13:1 , in the words "and Lot with him." And even here the words are useless (because stating a fact perfectly presumable here as elsewhere), except as they prepare the reader for the story of the separation that is immediately to follow.

3. Third Period:

That story introduces the third period of Lot's career, that of his residence in the Kikkār (the Revised Version (British and American) "Plain," the Revised Version margin "Circle") and in Sodom. To the fundamental cause of separation, as above stated, the author adds the two circumstances which contributed to produce the result, namely, first, the strife that arose between Abraham's herdsmen and Lot's herdsmen, and, second, the presence in the same country of others - the Canaanites and Perizzites - thus reminding his readers that it was no vacant land, through which they might spread themselves absolutely at will and so counteract the operation of the principal cause and the contributory cause already set forth.

With a magnanimity that must have seemed even greater to minds accustomed to patriarchal authority than it seems to us, and that was in fact much more remarkable than it would be here and now, Abraham offers to his nephew the choice of the land - from the nomad's point of view. In the "we are brethren" ( Genesis 13:8 ), the whole force of the scene is crystallized. Lot, who believes himself to have chosen the better part, is thereupon traced in his nomadic progress as far as Sodom, and the reader leaves him for a time face to face with a city whose men "were wicked and sinners against Yahweh exceedingly," while the narrative moves on with Abraham through that fresh scene of revelation which presented to this man of magnanimity a Divine deed to all the land, and to this man, now left without an heir from among his own kindred (compare  Genesis 15:2 ,  Genesis 15:3 ), a Divine pledge of innumerable offspring.

Lot returns for a moment to our view as the mainspring of Abraham's motions in the campaign of  Genesis 14 . We are expressly told that it was "when Abram heard that his brother was taken captive," that he "led forth his trained men ... and pursued." On the one hand we hear that Lot now "dwelt in Sodom," having abandoned the life in tents that he had led since Mesopotamian days, and on the other hand we find in him a foil to the energetic, decisive and successful figure of his uncle - for Lot plays a sorry role, bracketed always with "the women and the goods."

This period of his life ends with the annihilation of his chosen home, his wealth, his companions, and all that was his save two daughters, who, it would seem, might better have perished with the rest.  Genesis 19 , coming immediately after the intercession of Abraham for Sodom that poignantly impresses on the reader's mind the wickedness of Lot's environment, exhibits to us the man himself in his surroundings, as they have affected him through well-nigh a score of years (compare  Genesis 12:4;  Genesis 17:1 ). What we see is a man who means well (courtesy,  Genesis 19:1; hospitality,  Genesis 19:2 ,  Genesis 19:3 ,  Genesis 19:6-8; natural shame,  Genesis 19:7; loyalty,  Genesis 19:14; and gratitude,  Genesis 19:19 ), but who is hopelessly bound up with the moral life of the city through his family connections - alliances that have pulled him down rather than elevated others ( Genesis 19:9 ,  Genesis 19:14 ,  Genesis 19:26 ,  Genesis 19:31-35 ). The language of  2 Peter 2:7 ,  2 Peter 2:8 reminds us that Lot was, even at this time of his life, a "righteous" man. Viewed as a part of his environment (the writer has been speaking of Sodom,   Genesis 19:6 ), Lot was certainly entitled to be called a "righteous" man, and the term fits the implications of  Genesis 18:23-32 . Moreover, Gen 19 itself shows Lot "vexed ... with their lawless deeds" and "sore distressed by the lascivious life of the wicked" (compare  Genesis 19:3 ,  Genesis 19:7 ,  Genesis 19:8 ,  Genesis 19:14 ). Yet the contrast with Abraham is always present in the reader's mind, so that the most lasting impressions are made by Lot's selfishness worldliness vacillation and cowardice, not to mention the moral effect made by the closing scene of his life ( Genesis 19:30-38 ).

4. Fourth Period:

The fourth period of Lot's career is of uncertain duration. Upon the destruction of Sodom he dwelt at first in Zoar, the "little" city, spared as a convenient refuge for him and his; but at some time unspecified, he "went up out of Zoar," for "he feared to dwell in Zoar" - why, we cannot say. This fear was greater than even the evidently great fear he entertained of dwelling in "the mountain" ( Genesis 19:19 ). In this mountain-country of rocks and caves (Driver in HDB , article "Lot," cites Buckingham, Travels in Syria , 61-63, 87, as authority for the statement that people still live in caves in this region), Lot and his two remaining daughters dwell; and the biography of this companion of "the friend of God" ends in a scene of incest, which supplies the logical epilogue to a drama of progressive moral deterioration. This bestial cave-man of Gen 19 is the "brother" of Abraham, but he has reached this goal because his path had led down from Beth-el to Sodom. The origin of the two neighboring and kindred nations, Moab and Ammon, is by the Hebrew tradition traced thus to Lot and his daughters.

III. Place in Later Literature.

In the Bible, Lot finds mention only as the father of Moab and Ammon ( Deuteronomy 2:9 ,  Deuteronomy 2:19;  Psalm 83:8 ), and in the passage in 2 Pet already noticed; and, besides these places, in  Luke 17:28-32 . Here Lot represents the central figure in the destruction of Sodom, as Noah in the flood in the preceding context (compare the association of these two characters in 2 Pet and the Koran). His deliverance is mentioned, the haste and narrowness of that escape is implied, and his wife's fate is recalled. In Jewish and Mohammedan lore (including many passages in the Koran itself), Lot is a personage of importance, about whom details are told which fancy has added to the sober traditions of old Israel. But particularly for Mohammed there was point of attachment in Lot's career, offered in  Genesis 19:7 ,  Genesis 19:14 . Like Mohammed to the men of wicked Mecca, Lot becomes a preacher of righteousness and a messenger of judgment to the men of wicked Sodom. He is one of the line of apostles, sent to reveal God's will and purpose to his contemporaries.

IV. Critical Theories About the Figure of Lot.

The common view of those who deny the historical reality of Lot is that this name simply stands for the ethnic group, Moab and Ammon. Wellhausen, e.g., expressly calls "Lot" a national name ( Volksname ). As to what is told of him in Gen he remarks: "Were it not for the remarkable depression in which the Dead Sea lies, Sodom and Gomorrah would not have perished; were it not for the little flat tongue of land that reaches out into the swamp from the Southeast, Lot would have fled at once to the mountains of his sons, Moab and Ammon, and not have made the detour by Zoar, which merely serves the purpose of explaining why this corner is excepted from 'the overthrow,' to the territory of which it really belongs" ( Prolegomena6 , 323). Meyer confesses that nothing can be made of Lot, because "any characteristic feature that might furnish a point of attachment is entirely lacking." The first of the families of the Horites of Seir was named Lotan (  Genesis 36:20 ,  Genesis 36:22 ), and this writer believes it "probable that this name is derived from Lot; but that Lot was ever a tribal name ( Stammname ) follows neither from this fact (rather the contrary) nor from the designation of Moab and the benē ‛Ammōn as 'Sons of Lot' " ( Die Israeliten und ihre Nachbarstamme , 311; Compare 261, 339). If "Horite" was understood as "cave-dweller," the story in  Genesis 19:30 might be adduced in support of this combination. But the most recent line of reasoning concerning these patriarchal figures makes their names "neither Divine names nor tribal names, whether in actual use or regarded as such, but rather simple personal names like Tom, Dick and Harry.... Typical names they became ... so that ... Israel's story-tellers would connect the name of Lot with the overthrow of the cities" (Gressmann, article in ZATW , 1910). These names were chosen just because "they were very common at the time when the narratives were stamped into types"; later they became unfashionable, but the story-tellers held fast to the old names. "One sees from this at once into how ancient a time the proper names Abraham and Lot must reach, and understands therefore the more easily how they could be changed into tribal ancestors." It does not require the cautions, uttered by writers of this way of thinking, against regarding their views as a return to the old historical view of the patriarchs, to remind us that, in spite of all that may be said to the contrary, the present trend of thought among the most radical critics of the Genesis-traditions is much mote favorable to that conservative historical view than were the opinions which they have overthrown. So that it may justly be asserted, as Gressmann writes: "Confidence in tradition is in any case on the rise."

Lot's Wife: This woman, unknown by name, figures in the narrative of Lot that relates his escape from Sodom. She is mentioned in  Genesis 19 only in   Genesis 19:15-17 , where she is commanded to flee from the doomed city with her husband and daughters, and is laid hold upon by the angelic visitors in their effort to hasten the slow departure; and in  Genesis 19:26 , where she alone of the four fugitives disobeys the warning, looks back, and becomes a "pillar of salt" This disobedience, with the moral state it implied and the judgment it entailed, is held up as an example by Christ in  Luke 17:32 . In the Scriptures this is all that is said of a person and event that furnished the basis for a great deal of speculation. Josephus ( Ant. , I, xi, 4) adds to the statement derived from Gen, "She was changed into a pillar of salt," the words, "for I visited it, and it still remains even now" (see also The Wisdom of Solomon 10:7).

Among Christian writers contemporary with and subsequent to Josephus, as well as among the Jews themselves and other Orientals, the same assertion is found, and down to recent times travelers have reported the persistence of such a "pillar of salt," either on the testimony of natives or as eyewitnesses. The question of the origin and nature of these "pillars" is a part of the larger question of Sodom and its neighborhood (see Salt; Siddim; Slime ); for that no one particular "pillar" has persisted through the centuries may be regarded as certain; nor if it had, would the identification of Lot's wife with it and with it alone be ascertainable. This is just an early, persistent and notable case of that "identification" of Biblical sites which prevails all over the Holy Land. It is to be classed with the myth-and legend-building turn of mind in simple peoples, which has e.g. embroidered upon this Old Testament account of the destruction of Sodom such marvelous details and embellishments.

The principal thing to observe is the vagueness and the simplicity of the story in Gen. For it does not necessarily imply the "metamorphosis" popularly attributed to it, in the strict sense of that word. And it lacks, even in a narrative like this, where the temptation would be greatest, all indications of that "popular archaeology" or curiosity, which according to some critics, is alleged to have furnished the original motive for the invention of the patriarchal narratives. "She became a pillar of salt," and "Remember Lot's wife": this is the extent of the Biblical allusions. All the rest is comment, or legend, or guess, or "science."

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