Marah (Bible)

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Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Gérard Jollain
, 1670.
Bonaparte visiting the "Water of Marah" in December 1798 during the Egyptian expedition.

Marah (Hebrew: מָרָה meaning 'bitter') is one of the locations which the Exodus identifies as having been travelled through by the Israelites, during the Exodus.[1][2]

The liberated Israelites set out on their journey in the desert, somewhere in the Sinai Peninsula. It becomes clear that they are not spiritually free. Reaching Marah, the place of a well of bitter water, bitterness and murmuring,

Israel receives a first set of divine ordinances and the foundation of the Shabbat
. The shortage of water there is followed by a shortness of food. Moses throws a log into the bitter water, making it sweet. Later God sends manna and quail. The desert is the ground where God acquires his people. The 'murmuring motifi' is a recurring perspective of Hebrew people.

Marah - bitterness - a fountain at the sixth station of the Israelites (Ex. 15:23, 24; Num. 33:8) whose waters were so bitter that they could not drink them. On this account they murmured against Moses, who, under divine direction, cast into the fountain "a certain tree" which took away its bitterness, so that the people drank of it. This was probably the 'Ain Hawarah, where there are still several springs of water that are very "bitter," distant some 47 miles from 'Ayun Mousa.

— Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary

Events

The narrative concerning Marah in the

bitter, hence the name, which means bitterness.[1] In the text, when the Israelites reach Marah they complain about the undrinkability,[4] so Moses complains to Yahweh, and Yahweh responds by showing Moses a certain piece of wood, which Moses then throws into the water, making it sweet and fit to drink.[5]

The text goes on to state that in this location, a decree and a law were made by Yahweh for the Israelites, and that Yahweh tested them.

Sinai was reached.[7]

Speculations about the location

Well in the desert

According to the Book of Exodus, the Israelites reached Marah after travelling in the Wilderness of

Elim.[10][11] Textual scholars regard the geographic information as deriving from two different versions of the same independent list of stations, one version being the list which takes up a chapter of the Book of Numbers, and the other version being slotted around the Marah narrative and around other narratives in the Book of Exodus and Book of Numbers, as appropriate;[12] according to this view, the latter version of this list would originally have read ...and they went out into the wilderness of Shur; and they went three days in the wilderness, and found no water, then they came to Elim, where were twelve wells of water, ..., without mentioning Marah.[12]

The exact location of Marah is uncertain, as are the positions of Etham, Shur, and Elim; the identification of these locations is heavily dependent on the identification of the

Biblical Mount Sinai. Traditionally, Sinai was equated with one of the mountains at the south of the Sinai Peninsula leading to the identification of Marah as Ain Hawarah, a salty spring roughly 47 miles southeast from Suez.[7] Some scholars have proposed to identify Marah as Bir el-Mura, based on the fact that the Arabic name is a cognate of Hebrew one.[13]

In popular culture

In the classic 1970

, the protagonist and his female companion approach a river and the woman attempts to drink from it, only to find out that it is bitter in taste. The protagonist tells her that Moses found water in the desert but that the people were unable to drink it because it was bitter and so they called the water Marah. The protagonist then stirs the water with a tree branch, the woman drinks again and this time it is sweet. He then tells her, "I shall call you Marah, because you are bitter like water".

See also

References

Sources

  • The Torah - A Modern Commentary by Gunther W. Plaut, pp. 495; Union of American Hebrew Congregations, 1981, New York.

29°20′N 32°55′E / 29.333°N 32.917°E / 29.333; 32.917