According to the
Hebrew Bible, Lot was born to
Haran, who died in
Ur of the Chaldees.
Terah, Lot's grandfather, took Abram (later called
Abraham), Lot, and Sarai (later called
Sarah) to go into
Canaan. They settled at the site called
Haran, where Terah died. As a part of the
covenant of the pieces, God told Abram to leave his country and his kindred. Abram's nephew Lot joined him on his journey and they went into the land of Canaan, settling in the hills of Bethel. Due to famine, Abram and Lot journeyed into
Egypt, but Abram pretended that his wife Sarai was his sister. Hearing of her beauty, the Pharaoh took Sarai for his own, for which God afflicted him with great plagues. When the Pharaoh confronted Abram, the patriarch admitted that Sarai had been his wife all along, and so the Pharaoh sent them out of Egypt, also gifted him many precious presents, slavemen and slavewomen.
The plain of Jordan When Abram and Lot returned to the hills of Bethel with their many livestock, their respective herdsmen began to bicker. Abram suggested they part ways and let Lot decide where he would like to settle. Lot saw that the plains of the Jordan were well watered "like the gardens of the Lord, like the land of Egypt", and so settled among the cities of the plain, going as far as Sodom. Likewise, Abram went to dwell in
Hebron, staying in the land of Canaan. The five kingdoms of the plain had become
vassal states of an alliance of four eastern kingdoms under the leadership of
Chedorlaomer, king of
Elam. They served this king for twelve years, but "in the thirteenth year they rebelled." The following year Chedorlaomer's four armies returned and at the
Battle of Siddim the kings of
Sodom and
Gomorrah fell in defeat. Chedorlaomer despoiled the cities and took captives as he departed, including Lot, who dwelt in Sodom. When Abram heard what had happened to Lot, he led a force of three hundred and eighteen of his trained men and caught up to the armies of the four kings in
Dan. Abram divided his forces and pursued them to
Hobah. Abram brought back Lot and all of his people and their belongings.
Sodom ,
Lot and His Daughters, (
National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.).
His wife is left as a pillar of salt on the road behind. , (
National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo) Later, after God had changed Abram's name to Abraham and Sarai's name to
Sarah as part of the
covenant of the pieces, God appeared to Abraham in the form of three angels. God promised Abraham that Sarah would bear a son, and he would become a great and mighty nation. God then tells Abraham his plan, As the angels continued to walk toward Sodom, Abraham pled to God on behalf of the people of Sodom, where Lot dwelt. God assured him that the city would not be destroyed if fifty righteous people were found there. He continued inquiring, reducing the minimum number for sparing the town to forty-five, forty, thirty, twenty, and finally, ten.
Lot's visitors After supper, that night before bedtime, the men of the city, young and old, gathered around Lot's house demanding that he bring out his two guests that they may rape them. Lot went out, closing the door behind him, and begged them to refrain from so wicked a deed, offering them instead his virgin daughters to do with as they pleased. The men of Sodom accused Lot of acting as a judge and threatened to do worse to him than they would have done to the ‘men’. The angels drew Lot back in to his house and struck the mob with blindness. The angels then said that God had sent them to destroy the place, telling Lot, "whomsoever thou hast in the city; bring them out of the place". Lot went to the houses of his sons-in-law and warned them to leave the city, but they would not come, imagining that he spoke only in jest. , (
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna) Lot lingered in the morning so the angels forced him and his family out of the city, telling them to flee for the hills and
not look back. Fearful that the hills would not afford them sufficient protection from the impending destruction, Lot instead asked the angels if he and his might hide in the safety of a neighboring village. An angel agreed and the village was thenceforth known as Zoar. When God rained fire and brimstone upon Sodom and Gomorrah, Lot's wife looked back at the burning cities of the plain and was turned into a pillar of salt in recompense for her folly. Instead of
fire and brimstone,
Josephus has only lightning as the cause of the fire that destroyed Sodom: "God then cast a thunderbolt upon the city, and set it on fire, with its inhabitants; and laid waste the country with the like burning." In
The Jewish War, he likewise says that the city was "burnt by lightning".
Daughters ,
Israel, showing the so-called "
Lot's Wife" pillar composed, like the rest of the mountain, of
halite. After the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, Lot was afraid to stay in Zoar and so he and his two daughters resettled into the hills, living in a cave. Concerned for their father having descendants, one evening, Lot's eldest daughter gets Lot drunk and has sex with him without his knowledge. The elder daughter then insisted that her younger sister also get him drunk and have sex with him, which the younger sister duly did on the following night. From these incestuous unions, the older daughter conceived
Moab (Hebrew מוֹאָב, lit., "from the father" [meh-Av]), father of the Moabites; while the younger conceived
Ben-Ammi (Hebrew בֶּן-עַמִּי, lit., "Son of my people"), father of the Ammonites. The story, usually called
Lot and his daughters, has been the subject of
many paintings over the centuries, and became one of the subjects in the
Power of Women group of subjects, warning men against the dangers of succumbing to the temptations of women, while also providing an opportunity for an erotic depiction. The scene generally shows Lot and his daughters eating and drinking in their mountain refuge. Often the background contains a small figure of Lot's wife, and in the distance, a burning city. Along with the account of
Tamar and
Judah (Genesis 38:11–26), this is one instance of "
sperm stealing" in the Bible, in which a woman seduces and has sex with her male relative under false pretenses in order to become pregnant. Each case involves a direct ancestor of
King David. ==Religious views==