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Midianite Merchants
Genesis 37 uses 'Ishmaelites' and 'Midianites' interchangeably or describes a multi-ethnic merchant band. Descendants of Midian (son of Abraham and Keturah), these people played a diverse role in Israel's history—at times enemies (Judges), and at times family by marriage (Moses). Here, they are the functional middlemen who complete the sale of Joseph, bridging the gap between the nomadic life of the patriarchs and the imperial system of Egypt.
Midian
Located east of the Gulf of Aqaba, Midian served as the territory of refuge for Moses after he fled Egyptian justice. This semi-arid region was populated by descendants of Midian, the son of Abraham, and served as the geographical setting for Moses’ first encounter with the burning bush and the calling of God.
Land of Midian
Midian was a desert region in the northwestern Arabian Peninsula, settled by the descendants of Abraham through Keturah. It served as Moses' place of refuge and spiritual maturation for forty years, housing the 'Mountain of God' where the divine encounter at the burning bush would eventually occur.
Midian
Midian refers to the territory in northwest Arabia inhabited by descendants of Midian, son of Abraham. It served as Moses’ training ground in the desert for forty years before the Burning Bush encounter.
Moses' Flight to Midian
Triggered by the revelation of his murder of an Egyptian taskmaster, Moses' flight to Midian represents a forty-year transition from prince to shepherd. This event serves as the great stripping away of human reliance, positioning him in the isolation of the desert to receive his true identity and mission from God.
Midian
Midian, the fourth son of Abraham and Keturah, is the most influential descendant from this line, founding a powerful nomadic nation that would intersect significantly with the life of Moses and the history of early Israel.
The Well of Midian
As in the stories of Isaac and Jacob, the well serves as a literary and spiritual 'meeting place' in Exodus 2. It was at this well that Moses displayed his characteristic protective nature, defending the daughters of Reuel and initiating his connection to the Midianite priesthood.
The Well in the Wilderness
Like Isaac and Jacob before him, Moses meets his future wife at a well. In biblical typology, the well represents a place of provision, divine meeting, and social justice where the 'stranger' proves his character by serving others, eventually pointing toward Jesus at the woman at the well in Samaria.
The Well of Meeting
The 'Well of Meeting' is a recurring biblical motif where significant covenants, marriages (Isaac, Jacob, Moses), and messianic revelations (Samaritan woman) take place near vital water sources.
Ark of Bulrushes (Papyrus Basket)
Crafted from papyrus (bulrushes) and sealed with bitumen and pitch, this small 'ark' (Hebrew: 'tebah', the same word used for Noah’s ark) functioned as a physical instrument of divine salvation. It carried the future of the nation upon the waters that were intended for its destruction.