The destruction of Sodom
1 ① When the two angels reached Sodom in the evening, Lot was sitting at the gate of the town. As soon as he saw them, he rose to meet them, bowed with his face to the ground, 2and said, “My lords, I pray you come to your servant’s house to stay the night. Wash your feet, and then in the morning you may rise early and go on your way.” They said, “No, we will spend the night in the square.” 3But so strongly did he insist that they went with him to his house; there he prepared a meal for them, baking bread without yeast. This they ate.
4They had not yet gone to bed when men from the town surrounded the house; they were the men of Sodom, young and old, the entire population. 5They called Lot and said to him, “Where are the men who arrived here tonight? Send them out so that we may have sex with them.”
6Lot went out to meet them, shut the door behind him and said, 7“I beg you, my brothers, don’t do such a wicked thing. 8I have two daughters who are still virgins; let me bring them out to you; you may do with them as you please, but don’t do anything to these men, for they have come to shelter under my roof.” 9But they replied, “Get out of the way! This fellow is a foreigner and he wants to play the judge! Now we will do worse with you than with them.” They pressed hard against Lot and drew near in order to break the door. 10But the men inside the house stretched out their hands to bring Lot inside and then shut the door. 11As for those at the entrance to the house, they were struck with blindness, from the smallest to the largest, so that they were unable to find the door.
12The two men said to Lot, “Who is still here with you? Your sons-in-law? Get them out of the place: your sons, your daughters and all your people in the town. We are about to destroy this place. 13The cry for retribution against it is great before Yahweh who has sent us to destroy it.” 14Lot went out and spoke to his sons-in-law, those who were to marry his daughters, saying, “Hurry, leave, for Yahweh is about to destroy the town.” But they took what he said as a joke.
15At daybreak the Angels urged Lot, saying, “Hurry! Take your wife and two daughters who are here, lest they perish because of the sin of the town.” 16As he hesitated, the men took him by the hand and his wife and two daughters with him, because Yahweh had mercy on him. And they led him outside the town.
17When they were outside, the men said to him, “Flee for your life and don’t look back and don’t stop anywhere in the plain. Flee to the mountain lest you perish.”
18But Lot replied, “My lords, your servant has found favor with you, 19and you have shown me great kindness in saving my life. But I cannot flee to the mountains for fear the disaster will overtake me and I die. See, there is a town near enough for me to flee to and it’s a small one. 20Let me flee there: it is very small (that is why the town is called Zoar). So I will be safe.” 21And the angel answered, “I grant you this favor as well by not destroying the town you speak of. 22But flee fast for I can do nothing until you arrive there.”
23The sun had risen on the earth when Lot reached Zoar. 24Then Yahweh rained on Sodom and Gomorrah burning sulphur out of the heavens from Yahweh, 25and he completely destroyed those towns and all the valley and all the inhabitants of the towns and everything that grew there.
Other legends
26 ② Lot’s wife looked back and she became a pillar of salt.
27Early next morning Abraham returned to the place where he had stood before Yahweh. 28He looked towards Sodom and Gomorrah and towards all the land of the valley and he saw smoke rising from the earth like the smoke from a furnace.
29So when God destroyed the towns of the plain he remembered Abraham and made Lot escape from the catastrophe while he destroyed the cities where Lot had lived.
30Lot went up from Zoar and lived in the hills with his two daughters, because he was afraid to live in Zoar. He lived in a cave, he and his two daughters. 31The elder said to the younger, “Our father is old and there is not a man in the country to lie with us as is the custom all over the world. 32Come, let us make our father drunk with wine; we shall lie with him and have the race survive through our father.” 33So they made their father drink wine that night and the elder went to lie with her father. He knew nothing of it, neither when she lay down nor when she left.
34The next day the elder daughter said to the younger, “Last night I lay with my father. Let us give him wine again tonight and you go and lie with him. In this way we shall continue the race through our father.” 35Again that night they got their father to drink wine. The younger went and lay with him. He was aware of nothing, neither when she lay with him nor when she left. 36And the two daughters of Lot became pregnant by their father. 37The elder gave birth to a son and named him Moab. He was the ancestor of the Moabites who live today. 38The younger, also gave birth to a son and named him Ben-ammi. He is the ancestor of the Ammonites who exist to this day.
- Gen 19,1 The salt of the Red Sea and the ruins of two cities destroyed by earthquakes: Sodom and Gomorrah - perhaps gave food for thought. We must remember that in those days people looked upon catastrophes as punishments from God and upon prosperity as a blessing from God. Such was the origin of this story which teaches us some truths: - respect for guests who must be welcomed as angels of the Lord; - the horror of homosexuality. Sodom and Gomorrah will remain tragic names in sacred history, and serve as proof that we must not make fun of God's judgments nor take them lightly. The prophets will recall this catastrophe when they threaten those who refuse to be converted (see Is 1:9; Ezk 16:49) and so will Jesus (Mt 10:15; Lk 17:29). The present story does not fail to emphasize - in Lot's case - that God never forgets a single one of his children, even when they are isolated in the midst of wickedness. Lot's answer (v. 8) seems incredible to us, but it coincides with the ideas of those distant days when women were not considered as human persons. It seemed normal to sacrifice a daughter in order to save a friend. See something similar in Judges 19. Gen 19,26 We should remember that these are legendary traditions of the Israelites through which they attempted to explain the origins of different peoples and their connection with them. Since an age-old hatred separated the Israelites from the Ammonites and the Moabites, the present explanation was not meant to praise them.
- Gen 19,1 The salt of the Red Sea and the ruins of two cities destroyed by earthquakes: Sodom and Gomorrah - perhaps gave food for thought. We must remember that in those days people looked upon catastrophes as punishments from God and upon prosperity as a blessing from God. Such was the origin of this story which teaches us some truths: - respect for guests who must be welcomed as angels of the Lord; - the horror of homosexuality. Sodom and Gomorrah will remain tragic names in sacred history, and serve as proof that we must not make fun of God's judgments nor take them lightly. The prophets will recall this catastrophe when they threaten those who refuse to be converted (see Is 1:9; Ezk 16:49) and so will Jesus (Mt 10:15; Lk 17:29). The present story does not fail to emphasize - in Lot's case - that God never forgets a single one of his children, even when they are isolated in the midst of wickedness. Lot's answer (v. 8) seems incredible to us, but it coincides with the ideas of those distant days when women were not considered as human persons. It seemed normal to sacrifice a daughter in order to save a friend. See something similar in Judges 19. Gen 19,26 We should remember that these are legendary traditions of the Israelites through which they attempted to explain the origins of different peoples and their connection with them. Since an age-old hatred separated the Israelites from the Ammonites and the Moabites, the present explanation was not meant to praise them.