Reading the Women of the Bible: A New Interpretation of Their Stories - SILO.PUB (2024)

READING THE WOMEN OF THE BIBLE

A L S O B Y Τ Ι Κ VA

FRYMER-KENSKY

Motherprayer In the Wake of the Goddesses

READING THE W O M E N OF THE B I B L E

Copyright © 2002 by Tikva Frymer-Kensky All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Schocken Books, a division of Random 1 louse. Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Distributed by Pantheon Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York. Originally published in. hardcover by Schocken Books, a division of Random House. Inc., New York, in 2002. Schocken and colophon are registered trademarks of Random 1louse. Inc. A cataloging-in-publication record has been prepared for Reading the Women of the Bible by the Library of Congress.

ISBN 0-8052-J i 82-9 www. schocken. com Book design by An the a Lingeman Printed in the United S:ates of America First Paperback Edition 2

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Dedicated to Professor Yohanan Muffs, beloved teacher of my youth, who gave me the gift of Torah, sharing with me his love of this fascinating book and the joys of its study.

CONTENTS

Acknowledgments

ix

Introduction

xiii

Parti.

Victors

The Hand That Rocks the Cradle: The Rivka Stories

5

Saviors of the Exodus

24

The Guardian at the Door: Rahab

34

Warriors by Weapon and Word: Deborah and Yael

45

A Wise Woman of Power

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The Shunammite

64

Villains: Potiphar's Wile, Delilah, and Athaliah

74

Part II. Victims The Disposable Wife

93

Daddy's Daughters

99

Father-right Awry: Jephthah and His Daughter

102

The Bad Old Days: Concubine and Chaos

118

Kings to the Rescue?

139

O f f with His Head": David, Uriah, and Bathsheba

143

Trauma and Tragedy: The Betrayals of Tamar

157

Power and Person: A Problem of Political Life

170

Part III. Virgins The Dinah Affair

179

To the Barricades: Views Against the Other

199

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Contents

Queen Jezebel, or Deuteronomy's Worst Nightmare

209

Cozbi

215

Hagar, My Other, My Self

225

Royal Origins: Ruth on the Royal Way

238

Royal Origins: The Moabite

257

Royal Origins: Tamar

264

The Royal Way

278

Outsider Women: Exile and Ezra

283

Part IV. Voice Oracles of the Conquest of Canaan: Rahab and Deborah

297

Oracles of Saul: Hannah and the Witch of Encior

301

The Nccromanccr at Endor

310

Abigail

315

Huldah

324

Woman as Voice

327

Part V Reading the Women of the Bible Women of Metaphor, Metaphors of Women

333

The Later Adventures of Biblical Women

339

Mirrors and Voices: Reading These Stories Today

350

Notes

355

Index

437

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I have spent many years working on this project. Like many women my age, I grew up translating myself into the men of the Bible. In my imagination I was Abraham, not Sarah; David, not one of his Avives. My feminist sensibilities were directed at gaining access to the world of study, not in transforming the curriculum. But in the 1970s, inspired by the women's movement, 1 realized what 1—what all of us—had been missing. 1 began to study and teach Women in Religion, and 1 was immediately struck by the complexity and sheer abundance of the stories about women in the Hebrew Bible. My first project, In the Wake of the Goddesses, was not about the women in the Bible. Trained as an assyriologist, I decided to begin at the beginning, with the females in Mesopotamian literature, the goddesses, and the book that resulted is a study of the role these goddesses played in the ancient religious imagination, and an exploration of the impact on Biblical thought of the elimination of goddesses from Israel's religious life and imagination. Clearly at least one of the functions of goddesses—thinking about gender—was carried on in the Bible through the stories about human women, and so I began my intense study of the stories about women in the Bible. I included my study of the gender attitudes of these stories, or rather, of the surprisinglack of specific gender differentiation in Biblical thought in In the Wake of the Goddesses, but 1 realized that the stories were not primarily about gender. Ever since, I have been studying these stories. During this time, I moved from Ann Arbor to Philadelphia to teach at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, spent a wonderful year in residence at the Center for Jewish Studies in Philadelphia, came to Chicago to teach at the Divinity School of the University of Chicago, and spent another wonderful year at the Center. These were superb places to work, with supportive colleagues eager to encourage each other to keep learning. The Center for Jewish Studies

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Acknowledgments

is a scholar's paradise, a garden of knowledge in which no labor is required other than tending the books of the garden and eating their fruit. I am deeply grateful for my time there. But my two teaching institutions, the RRC and the Divinity School, have also been excellent places to work, with an interested administration, collégial faculty, and—above all phenomenal students. Many of the analyses in this book were done in coordination with the courses on Women in the Bible that I taught several times at each place, and once at an adult women's education program in Philadelphia. Much of the careful word analysis was done in anticipation of and in answer to the demands of my students that 1 prove my points; many of the discoveries came as part of the searching interactions and wonderful conversations that took place in these classes. The Rabbinical students' search for relevance kept me from ascending ivory towers, the life experience of the adult women kept me aware that these stories have always resonated with the personal experiences of women's lives, and my graduate students gave me the gift of demanding that I show the same scholarly meticulousness and intellectual rigor that I demand from them. Much as 1 sometimes long to spend more time in the uninterrupted contemplative atmosphere of a research institute, I know that my work would not be the same without the stimulation of my students, and 1 am grateful to them. No matter how many years one spends working on a book, the last year is always a mad rush to fill in blanks and complete postponed tasks. I have benefited during these years from the able assistance of my secretary, Nathelda McGee, who made sure that things got sent to their appropriate places, and my student assistants Sharon Mattila, who tracked down publication dates and other bibliographic details, Holly Bland, who keeps me in a steady supply of Xeroxed articles to mark and devour, and Sally Stamper, who made sure that other things didn't get abandoned while 1 concentrated on this manuscript. 1 would also like to thank two students, Sharon Albert and Laura Lieber, who were kind enough to step in and give me a crash course in contemporary ways to transliterate Hebrew so that this book would not have to use Hebrew symbols. Above all, I would like to acknowledge my husband's support. I typed my own manuscript, but he provided needed encouragement to keep working on this book whenever the administrative and pastoral details of an academic position threatened to derail me or my periodic illnesses exhausted me. Often, in recent years, this encouragement had to come

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by telephone, and I am thankful for the patience and support that he has g wen so freely 1 give thanks to all of these, God's agents, by which God sustained me and brought me to this moment. Btrûkîm tiheyû, Blessed be! Tikva Fry me r - Ke η sky Chicago, April 2002

INTRODUCTION: READING THE

W O M E N OF T H E BIBLE

The women of ancient Israel have carved a place for themselves in our consciousness. Sarah, Rebekkah, Rachel, and Leah are the mothers of Israel; the biblical Eve is our mother in myth, now joined by "mitochondrial Eve" as our mother in genes. Bathsheba and Delilah: their very names conjure up scenes in our imagination, nights of ancient sex and betrayal. Children walk around today bearing the names of Miriam and Deborah, ancient leaders, poets, and prophets, and the names of Abigail, Yael, Ruth, Naomi, and Esther, heroines and queens of the Hebrew Bible. Faced with the memory of so many prominent women, a visitor from a distant planet might justifiably conclude that ancient Israel was a feminist paradise. But the visitor would be wrong. Ancient Israel, like all other great historical civilizations, was a patriarchy. Men owned almost all the land, which was passed on from father to son. The legal tribunals consisted of men: the judges at the central courts and the elders in their local councils. The army was composed of men, as was the administrative bureaucracy. Men also dominated public religious life, serving as officiants in local and national rituals and holding all the positions in the temple hierarchy Women, while not physically confined to the home, expended most of their energies there. Economically dependent on the head of their households, they had a limited ability to determine events beyond their own families, and even within the family they ultimately had to conform to the wishes of the father or husband. Our visitor from a distant planet might not be troubled by this discovery, but readers from the late twentieth century are often startled. The Bible, after all, has informed and continues to inform much of our own moral thinking. How can a book that teaches the common divine origin of all humanity and the sacred nature of each human being reflect a social order in which women are systematically disadvantaged and subordinated? This question creates a whole range of answers among

Introduction xvi

contemporary readers. At one end of the spectrum is the leadership of the Southern Baptists, who embrace the biblical system and mandate that today's women suppress their demand for equality and be subordinate to their husbands. Other readers, at the opposite pole of the spectrum, find the patriarchy of the Bible a reason to abandon the monotheist religions based on it. They suspect that the Bible itself led to patriarchy. These readers argue that since Israel had only one god, and this god is referred to as "He," this male "Lord" provides a divine model for males as master. After all, as Mary Daley said concerning contemporary religion, "If God is a man, than a man is god." Monotheism, then (according to this argument), created patriarchy. Like the visitor from a distant planet, these twentieth-century theorists are drawing logical conclusions, but they are simply wrong. History shows that patriarchy was well entrenched fifteen hundred years before Israel first came into being. As we trace our written records from the beginning of writing in ancient Sumer through the ensuing centuries and millennia in the ancient world, we can trace the intensification of patriarchy as time goes on. But even the first written records reflect a social system in which males were predominant. Male-dominated social systems were (and are) very widespread, encompassing geographically distant societies with very different religious and sociopolitical systems. Biblical Israel did not invent patriarchy It was not even the most intense or thorough patriarchy in the ancient world. Other classical societies, like Assyria and Athens, show a much greater degree of domination of women. The worship of lshtar in Assyria and Athena in Athens did not lessen male control over real women. The male Lord did not create patriarchy The truth is just the opposite: patriarchal thought required that the one Lord of all be conceived as a male and portrayed in a masculine grammar. It is important to get the facts straight; though patriarchy preexisted the Bible, the Bible was not written to construct it. Readers can accept the Bible's moral stature without conforming to the patriarchal social structure within it. At the same time, there is no ignoring the fact that even though the Bible did not create patriarchy, it also did not eliminate it. The Bible did not question the patriarchy in the social structure it shared with the rest of the ancient world, just as it did not question another glaring social inequity slavery Biblical thinkers, so radical in their transformation of ideas about God and about the relationship of humanity to the cosmos, never conceived of a radical transformation of society. They were very aware of social problems, trying to ameliorate the

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suffering of the downtrodden, curtailing abuses, helping runaway slaves stay free, redeeming those sold into slavery and calling for a limit to capitalist aggrandizement. Despite such concerns, the Bible did not eradicate slavery, it did not eliminate patriarchy, it did not eradicate economic oppression. However, the Bible also does not defend the status quo, for the idea of social revolution is integral to biblical thought. God is a god of change, for God elevates the lowly brings the marginalized to the center, and raises high the socially inferior. In this way, power and privilege are necessarily impermanent. But reversing position does not create a more egalitarian world any more than ameliorating suffering does: it only changes the fortunes of individual people. Biblical thinkers never conceived of a social order without hierarchy. The Bible, a product of this patriarchal society, is shaped by the concerns of the men of Israel who were involved in public life. As such, it is a public book, concerned with matters of government, law, ritual, and social behavior. But why then, does this clearly androcentric text from a patriarchal society have so many stories that revolve around women? And why are there so many memorable women in the Bible? The sheer number of their stories demands an explanation: What are they doing here? Why were they written? Why were they included in this compact text? One possible answer soon occurred to me: could the biblical stories about women have been written because of the desire of Israelite men to explore the nature of women and their role and to understand the question of gender? To explore this possibility, I analyzed the biblical stories from the perspective of gender questions: What, according to these stories, do women want? What are they like? How do they achieve their goals? The results, documented in In the Wake of the Goddesses, were unexpected. Contrary to all assumptions my own included the Hebrew Bible, unlike other ancient literature, does not present any ideas about women as the "Other." The role of woman is clearly subordinate, but the Hebrew Bible does not "explain" or justify this subordination by portraying women as different or inferior. The stories do not reflect any differences in goals and desires between men and women. Nor do they point out any strategies or methods used by women that are different from those used by men who are not in positions of authority. There are no personality traits or psychological characteristics that are unique to women, and the familiar Western notions of "feminine wiles," "the battle betwecm the sexes," "sisterly solidarity," and "sex as weapon" are all

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absent, as are any discussions of the nature of women. There are also no negative statements and stereotypes about women, no gynophobic ("woman-fearing") discourse. The only misogynist statement in the Bible comes very late in biblical development, in the book of Ecclesiastes, and shows the introduction of the classical Greek denigration of women into Israel. The Bible's lack of ideas about female otherness does not make it a feminist paradise any more than the presence of memorable women does. Women were still socially disadvantaged and excluded from public power. But the Bible does not add insult to this disadvantage, does not claim that women need to be controlled because they are wild, or need to be led because they are foolish, or need to be directed because they are passive, or any of the other justifications for male domination that have been prevalent in Western culture. The Bible's lack of justification for social inequity can be interpreted in two radically different ways. Reading with a hermeneutic of suspicion, wTe might speculate that the Bible did not need to justify patriarchy, because patriarchy was so firmly entrenched, and that the Bible's lack of stereotypes about women is simply a gender blindness that totally ignores everyone but economically advantaged males. If, however, we follow the hermeneutic of suspicion w7ith a hermeneutic of grace, wre might conclude that even though the Bible failed to eradicate or even notice patriarchy, it created a vision of humanity that is gender neutral. Biblical thinkers treated social structure as a historical given: they sought to reguläre social behavior, but not to explain or justify the social structure itself. The Bible's view of gender sets up a dramatic clash between theory and reality. On the one hand, women occupied a socially subordinate position. On the other hand, the Bible did not label them as inferior. This gap between ideology and social structure has a major disadvantage: it did not explain people's lives, did not give people a way to understand why women had no access to public decision making. Such dissonance could not last forever: one of the two had to give, and the Bible's vision of a gender-neutral humanity ultimately gave way in the face of ongoing patriarchy. At the same time, the biblical vision had the enormous advantage of not adding prejudice to powerlessness. The biblical view understood that women were powerless and subordinate without being inferior. This insight had enormous implications for the way Israel viewed itself. Israel was always small and vulnerable in comparison to

Introduction

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the empires surrounding it. As time went on, this vulnerability gave way to defeat, and Israel was conquered by more powerful nations. The Bible's view of women became central to Israel's thinking, for it provided a paradigm for understanding powerlessness and subordination without recourse to prejudicial ideas. Israel was subject to the power and authority of others on an international level just as women were subordinate within Israelite society, and the Bible's own image of women enabled its thinkers to accept this powerlessness without translating it into a sense of inferiority or worthlessness. In this way the Bible 's image of women was an essential element in its self-image and its understanding of Israel's destiny.

The Women-stories The stories, then, were not written in order to make statements about women. To understand why they were written, we have to look at each story intently, with all the techniques described below7, and also consider them collectively, as a group, reading them in relation to one another instead of confining them to the context in which they occur individually When wre do this, patterns begin to emerge, not only type-scenes and parallel plotlines, but also recognizable themes with which these stories are concerned. I have identified four categories of stories, four "discourses" to which these stories address themselves. With my fondness for alliteration, I label these "woman as victor," "woman as victim," "woman as virgin (bride-to-be)," and "woman as voice (of God)." The "woman as victor" stories are tales about heroic women wiio become saviors. These women, both Israelites and foreigners, help Israel survive and defeat its enemies. The stories about these women appear in the book of Exodus, during the time of the redemption from Egypt, in the books of Joshua and Judges from the days of the settlement, in the books of Samuel from the early days of the monarchy And then they disappear, to appear again in the days after the death of the kingdom, during the Persian exile. The absence of victor stories from the four hundred years of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah is no accident. When there is no centralized power, when political action takes place in the household or village, then women can rise to public prominence. When times are peaceful, they may be leaders and counselors; in times of danger, they can become heroic figures of resistance. When war brings action into the homes of women, they may act with w7hat until recently

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would have been considered "manlv" courage and aggression. They can also be masters of indirection, knowing the techniques and skills upon which people not in positions of power have to rely. When a strong central government is established, a pyramid of power extends from the top down through the various hierarchies and bureaucracies. At such a time, women in Israel were frozen out of the positions of powder, and relegated to the private domain. They may have been heroines in their own families, but they left no trace in the public record. Not all women fared well, as the second category of stories— "women as victims" illustrates. These are the "texts of terror," tales of women who suffer at the hands of the men in power. At first glance, one might assume that these stories are a form of gender propaganda, demonstrating to women the dire events that could befall them. If this were indeed their purpose, the Bible authors would be expressing a concealed but malignant misogyny But the placement of these stories is a clue to revealing their purpose. They all appear in two of the historical books of the Bible, Judges and Second Samuel, which relate the initial settlement of Israel and the consolidation of the Davidic monarchy The "historian," the composer of the great sequence of historical books from Joshua through Kings, tells these "texts of terror" in a symmetrical way that indicts and condemns the political systems under which these abuses occurred. The tragedies of the daughter of Jephthah and the concubine in Gibeah mark the progressive deterioration of society in the time of the judges. In so doing, they dramatize the flaws in the sociopolitical structure that allows the victimization of vulnerable women. In the absence of a centralized power structure, women are under the unsupervised control of the men of their families. Sometimes, when the men act well toward their women, individual women can rise to prominence. But when the men act violently there is no one to restrain them. By the end of the book of Judges, the reader, stunned by the story of the destructive spiral of violence that first killed a concubine in Gibeah and then almost consumed Israel, is ready to accept monarchy. But once David has consolidated the monarchy, the historian presents two more stories, of Bathsheba and of Tamar. Together they show that the Davidic monarchy contains the same basic flaw as the premonarchic system. Because of this flaw (which we now understand is patriarchy itself), the monarchy could not succeed. These stories about victims, far from supporting oppressive social systems, indict them. The third group of stories, which we can call "voices," is also placed artfully within the historical books. The placement of these stories con-

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veyed an important message. The first "voice" story appears at the very beginning of the book of Joshua, as Rahab announces that God has given Israel the land. The last "voice" story is at the end of Kings, when the prophet Huldah announces that Israel will be sent into exile. These two female oracles form a literary bracket that encloses Israel in Canaan. Throughout these books, women appear as oracles to announce each stage in the history of Israel. Rahab and Deborah bracket the conquest of Canaan; Hannah and the witch of Endor surround the kingship of Saul; Abigail and Huldah support the Davidic monarchy These women are very different from one another, coming from a wide range of social locations to appear as oracles of Israel's destiny at significant junctions of its history. The choice of women as the voice of God's decisions makes a powerful statement about how the marginalized can be chosen to convey the word. These three categories of stories about women—as victors, victims, and voices—are quite distinct from one another. The stories of victims and victors are about issues of polity and control, while the stories of the oracles involve prophecy and destiny. But whether they deal with power or Providence, all these stories have something in common: the women are all viewed positively. The victims are an index of Israel's social justice, the victors are agents of Israel's destiny, and the oracles are the medium of God's word. There is nothing dark or threatening about any of them. Even the few female villains of the Bible are uncomplicated: they are simply on the wrong side, enemies of the state, agents of foreign kings or foreign gods. But the fourth category of stories, the tales of "virgins," presents a more varied picture. These stories concern questions of marriage, intermarriage, ethnicity, and boundaries with non-Israelites. These boundary issues play a significant role in the development of a national identity; the permeability of boundaries to marital partners determines the ethnic character of the group. The dilemmas of this issue are highlighted by the story of Dinah, but most of these stories concern women brought into Israel as brides. The Bible does not speak with one voice on this issue, does not have one single attitude toward such marital alliances. The stories range from the extreme negative pole of Cozbi and Jezebel to the heroic positive figures of Rahab and Ruth. They offer a whole spectrum of opinions about the complex issues of identity and survival. These stories, and the attitudes they express, are an important window into the soul of Israel.

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Women in the Mind of Israel The identification of these four discourses helps refine the question of ''why'1 with which we began, enabling us to look closely at these four types of women, the victors and victims, the virgins and voices, in order to see what it is about these images that so resonated with the thinkers of ancient Israel. It is easiest to see why Israel preserves stories about virgins, about women being "taken" in marriage (to use the biblical idiom). The contracting of marriages is a vital occasion in a group's history At this moment, there can be no doubt that the personal is political. The marital alliances formed by individuals determine the makeup of the community's future. Any group concerned about its future has to give serious thought to whom its members will marry Since the general pattern of marriage in biblical Israel had the man "taking" a woman in marriage and bringing her into his household, the issue of "whom do we marry?" was usually formulated in terms of "which women could the men of Israel marry?" Telling stories about foreign women was the Bible's way of conducting a public discussion of this issue so vital to national survival. National survival is also the concern of the stories about victors. The tales of marginalized women who acted without governmental authority military training, or superhuman physical strength to become figures of salvation are not only memories of heroines of the past. They also convey a powerful message to people who are feeling (and probably are) weak, small, and vulnerable. These women are paradigms for individuals, groups, and nations who find themselves in such disadvantaged situations, a dramatic representation of how they can nevertheless rise to redeem themselves and others. Like these women, the people of Israel can persevere to preserve their destiny The gifts of faith, persuasion, persistence, and cunning can allow the nation of Israel to be victorious when surrounded by, besieged by, and even conquered by more powerful nations. The identification of Israel with vulnerable and marginal women is also at the heart of the stories about women as victims. At one level, the tragedies of these victims indict their societies and show the inability of Israel's successive forms of government to ensure the well-being of the vulnerable, and the demonstration of this failure helps explain the disap-

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pearance of these governments. But on a more profound level, there was a reason that the biblical writers chose the tragedies of women as their social barometer, the same reason they told stories about heroines victorious against all odds: Israel identified with marginalized vulnerable. women in their tragedies and in their triumphs. Israel's sense of self as a woman is explicit in the poetic metaphor of "maiden Israel," "maiden Zion," and "maiden-folk" that Israel's classical prophets Amos, Hosea, and Jeremiah use to express their sorrow over the suffering of Israel and Jerusalem. The pathos of the tragic victim encapsulates the people of Israel battered by her enemies. This underlying metaphorical understanding of Israel as a woman also explains why the historians bracketed Israel's history with the appearance of female oracles who carried the voice of God. After all, Israel was vitally concerned with the voice of God. The Pentateuch revolves around the central revelation at Sinai; the classical prophets derive the force and authority of their critique of Israel from their position as voice of God; and the historical books present a scenario in which prophets come to advise or indict kings throughout Israel's history. But despite all these prophets running around, the historians tell tales in which God chooses female prostitutes, mediums, housewives, and "professional" prophets in order to announce the turning points in Israel's history. Just as these women, not politically powerful themselves, are privileged to know the will of God, so too Israel, small and marginal between the great empires of the world, is nevertheless the bearer of God's word. Virgins "taken" in marriage define the borders of Israel. Women as victors and victims parallel Israel's role in the world through her vulnerability and oppression and in her victory over oppression, and the women as the voice of God demonstrate Israel's ultimate significance despite her size. All these tales are important, for the individual stories they tell, the issues that they discuss, and their underlying metaphorical significance for Israel's self-understanding. This biblical metaphor of Israel as a woman is made possible by its unique gender ideology, and by the dissonance between this genderneutral ideology and the Bible's patriarchal social structure. The Bible's view that women were socially disadvantaged without being essentially inferior provided a paradigm through which biblical Israel did not have to equate its own powerlessness with inferiority. The subordination of women in Israelite society provided a way to understand national subordination and ultimate captivity without prejudice, so that the telling and

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preservation of these stories illuminated the role of Israel in the world. The role of these stories in Israel's understanding of its own history, its "metanarrative," accounts for their abundance in the Bible.

How to Read Biblical Stories Understanding these issues can come only from in-depth study of the biblical stories themselves, each one studied by itself, and then groups of them examined collectively and "intertextually" with reference to one another. The minute analyses of these stories form the heart of this book. At first sight, reading laws and stories seems much easier than reading the poetry of biblical prophecy or wisdom. The language is relatively simple, and students can begin to read narrative selections fairly early in their studies of biblical Hebrew But biblical stories are artfully crafted documents that open up deep levels of meaning in response to careful study. Underneath the simple Sunday school tales taught by faith traditions lie complex, deeply ambiguous narratives that require the reader to take an active part in their exposition. Serious study begins with the effort to remove the traditional interpretations and read the stories in their richly enigmatic artistry. To do this, the contemporary reader can make use of a whole range of modern techniques that serve as optical lenses. Zoom camera lenses and microscopes let us focus e\^er more deeply on the minutiae of grammar and rhetoric; wide-angle lenses let us see the story in its structural integrity and, beyond that, in its relation to biblical literature, biblical law7, and biblical social context; telescopes let us see an even larger canvas of the ancient world and global culture. The multiple process of reading starts with subtraction: taking away the veils of tradition and stripping the story of the layers of interpretive midrash that have been incorporated in it. This is not as easy as it might seem. In fact, it is a task worthy of Hercules, a kind of cultural cleaning of the Augean stables. Some interpretations have become so intertwined with the text that they are very difficult to see. The only way to make them visible is through a slow, close reading, informed by all the classic techniques of philological analysis. In this close reading, the reader carefully checks both traditional interpretations and her own personal presuppositions with the written text. It is almost axiomatic that there is no "pure text" untainted by assumptions, and the reader always has some degree of participation in the creation of a meaningful story. Careful disciplined reading highlights those passages where earlier read-

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ers made choices and allows us to go beyond our received traditions. This fundamental close reading is not only the first stage: it is an ongoing process that has to be repeated many times after each method of interpretation is applied. The biblical text itself always has to control the reading process. Close reading is not esoteric. There is a certain level that every reader can reach, learning to read slowly word by word, to check translations against each other, to see if conclusions are based on the words or on the white space around the words where interpretations have found their home. Professional biblicists have the advantage of being able to penetrate below the level of translation. Every translation, after all, is an interpretation. Every translator must make choices, and the more gapped or ambiguous the text, the more choices the translator has to make. For this reason, all the translations of the stories in this book are my own. When I diverge from the more common English translations, 1 indicate the reason in my notes. The next stage in reading biblical stories is to "go small," to look beyond the actual words to understand the literary nature and structure of the text. Recently developed techniques of rhetorical criticism, literary analysis, and narratology help us to understand the art of the storyteller. They also pinpoint the narrative techniques of ambiguity by which the narrator provides the moments in which readers determine the meaning. Going small can also involve going back into the prehistory of the text. Most stories were part of Israels cultural life for hundreds of years before they were written in their present form. Through dramatic storytelling and earlier written versions, many voices transmitted the story through generations, and sometimes left their traces. "Higher literary criticism" seeks to unravel the layers of tradition in a text; "tradition criticism" or "redaction criticism" tries to trace the development of the text. A "holistic" or "final form" study of the story focuses on the creative decisions and crafting of the redactor, the last hand to treat the story before its form was frozen in the canon. The studies in this book are all final form studies, but they try to be conscious of historical development. Another perspective uses wide-angle lenses: Stories have a literary context. They are embedded in a larger narrative, which influences the impression that the story creates in its readers. Biblical authors also connect stories to others that appear in different biblical books by using techniques of allusions, key words and phrases, or parallel structure.

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These intertextual techniques add a deeper dimension to the story that may be vital to the storytellers' ideological agenda. They create clusters of stories about women that comprise the discourses I present in this book. Even wider lenses encompass the cultural context of the stories. Biblical stories take form against a background of customs and behavior. Often, the study of biblical law helps illuminate points of the story that literary reading might not reveal. Biblical laws consider problematic situations and present a way of dealing with them. Reading the stories intertextually with laws can often illuminate some of the deep social concerns that motivate both. Wider and wider lenses, from farther and farther away, take in the cultures surrounding Israel. We need to back away and look at larger sections of the map, seeing Israel as part of the "fertile crescent" with ancient Mesopotamia, Canaan, and, at certain periods, Egypt. Stories and laws assume the type of informal cultural knowledge that people who live together often share, but modern readers, not having this background, may miss many of the nuances of an ancient text. The study of ancient Near Eastern literature and law is often a very important tool to fill in some of the gaps in our knowledge. The many texts from Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Ugarit prove invaluable as we reconstruct the cultural heritage of ancient Israel and the traditions that biblical Israel inherited, adopted, and transformed. Knowing the heritage that Israel received from the ancient world and the cultures with which it was in contact enables us to "read with ancient eyes," often helping us fill in the unexpressed background of the readers of ancient Israel. We then also need to adjust our telescope to the eastern Mediterranean world to see the Bible together with Hittite and ancient Greek ideas. The stories in the book of Judges, including the ones presented in this book, are often illuminated by classical studies. And sometimes nothing less than the long-distance view of a spy satellite or the Hubble telescope will do, and we turn to anthropological, sociological, and ethnographic studies to provide information that clarifies further nuances in the biblical story The many techniques and disciplines that biblical scholars use provide new perspectives and reveal many facets of the stories. Putting them together builds a composite picture that can shed new light on these deceptively simple-looking narratives that have long been oversimplified into morality tales and children's stories.

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The Active Reader The photographer looking at a scene through the various prisms on the camera is also looking through the lens of her own eye. Our own values and ideologies create a philosophical filter through which we read biblical stories. This filter is always there, and even when we are striving to be totally objective, our values inform the questions that we bring to the Bible. For a long time, readers believed that they could read the story objectively, determining with ever greater precision what the original author said. But everyone reads with presuppositions. The misogvnistic and gynophobic assumptions of traditional readers transformed the biblical stories in ways that then reinforced the a priori beliefs of these readers. This process of deformation was invisible because the readers who shaped the tradition all shared the same patriarchal beliefs. Modern readers, confronted with these traditional stories, had to make a choice. They could "accept" the Bible as a faith document despite the patriarchal slant of these stories, or they could "reject" the Bible as not appropriate lor people who believe in the full humanity of women. It was only when people, notably women, who did not share patriarchal assumptions began to read and analyze the Bible that they saw how patriarchal readers had transformed biblical texts into patriarchal stories. They then began the work of "depatriarchalizing" the biblical material. Removing the traditional patriarchal lenses does not create a "valuefree" reading. There is no such thing as a value-free reading. It is easy to see how other people's assumptions influence their reading, much harder to see how the same process operates in our own reading. All readers have both assumptions and goals in pursuit of which they devote the time and the effort to understanding this ancient and sometimes difficult book. These combine with our particular combination of skills and methods to create a personal hermeneutic. This has always been the case; the difference in contemporary reading is that w7e have become more aware of this philosophical filter, more self-conscious as we make interpretive choices, more willing to expose the filter, make it visible, and reveal the principles on which we operate. My own readings, like everyone else's, are informed by who I am. I have the advantage of being a biblical scholar. I bring to my readings knowledge of biblical Hebrew7, of grammar, and of history. As a scholar, 1 pay close attention to the text and attempt meticulousness and discipline in my analysis. I also look at how these stories relate to biblical

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ideas about society, and try to make my interpretations consonant with the totality of what I know about biblical culture. I am particularly interested in intellectual and cultural history the development of ideas and institutions in religion and law. To understand how biblical ideas developed, 1 became an Assyriologist, studying Akkadian and Sumerian precisely for the purpose of understanding the development of ideas from the Babylonian world into the Bible. Conscious of the processes of interpretation and development, I attempt to trace the life of ideas and institutions within the Bible itself and then on into the post-biblical world of Midrash and exegesis. I am also a feminist. My first principle, which may be called my feminist philosophy, is that men and women are created equal, and it is hard for me to imagine how and why "feminist" is such a provocative term. It seems to me self-evident that women are full characters in the world. I was not always cognizant of feminism. Gradually, like other people, I became aware of androcentricity and patriarchy and how they affect all elements of life. I began to see how patriarchy has distorted monotheism itself how it has impoverished our religious traditions and perverted biblical ideas. My feminism combined with my love of the Bible determine my interpretative choices. They cause me to combine a hermeneutic of suspicion with a hermeneutic of grace, not assuming evil intent on the part of the biblical authors, but not ignoring the patriarchal difficulties. The combination creates an actively liberationist stance. When my scholarship presents alternative readings, I choose those readings that I believe will prove most beneficial to people.

The Path Not Taken This book is not a comprehensive encyclopedia of all the women in the Bible or even a tour of its greatest women. In fact, this may be the only book ever written about women in the Bible that does not include Eve and Miriam. This is not because they are not important. Miriam was one of the great triumvirate who led Israel out of Egypt, and the traces of her story in the Pentateuch barely hint at her original prominence. Eve is the much misunderstood and much maligned mother of all who began the transformation of humanity from natural creatures to people of culture and knowledge. Her story is the key to the biblical conceptions of humanity, and I presented my reading of the so-called fall in In the Wake of the Goddesses. But the lives of great women do not always illuminate the lives of others, and the enormous shadow of individual great

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women can block other women from the limelight. These special women may grow so great that other women suffer in comparison, until one can say (as was said of the Virgin Mary) "alone of all her sex she found favor." In the same way the stories about Eve, the matriarchs, and Miriam often obscure the stories of other women and may block the impact of the total picture. Instead of focusing on individual woman-figures, this book looks to the meaning of the women-stories as a group and to the concept of "woman" in the Bible. It does so by examining these stories in reference to one another, by analyzing their composition and their purpose. The groundwork for such an analysis has been laid during the thirty years since contemporary feminist study of women in the Bible began. There is now a large body of scholarly literature that informs and enriches my own scholarship. In acknowledgment of my debt to this scholarship, and to help guide other readers through this ever growing scholarly literature, 1 include a discussion of this literature in the notes to each chapter. But this book goes beyond these individual studies to create a picture of the composition of the women-stories and of the way these function in the Bible as a whole. This synthesis of the whole fabric of these tales then enables us to go beyond scholarship to consider what they might mean to us in our own culture today, when the lives of most women are dramatically different from the lives of the biblical figures who have so fascinated us throughout the millennia.

Part One

VICTORS

h e v i c t o r s are the great women of the Bible. Some are women who have been remembered through the centuries as figures of power and influence. Their names and their stories have influenced countless generations. And some of the great women have been ignored and are only now7 gradually being rediscovered. Most of the great women were heroines; a few have been remembered as villains. Most of them were Israelites, but some of Israel's heroines were originally foreigners. The women came from different niches in society. Some of them occupied the stereotypical roles of mother, wife, midwife, and prostitute; others were extraordinary in stepping forward as fighters or possessing political power as judge, wise woman, and queen. They are united by the fact that they appear on the scene to act powerfully to affect Israel's destiny.

T

The Hand That Rocks the Cradle T h e Rivka Stories of the Bible is a book of beginnings, the beginning of the world and the beginning of Israel. Ancestor stories trace Israel's development from one couple, Abraham and Sarah. The stories are preoccupied with family, with generation and transmission. They reveal the structure of Israel's ancestral family: a patriarchy, like other ancient families, in which decision-making authority rested in the hands of the father. They also reveal the important role that women could play even in patriarchal families. The matriarchs worked to direct, shape, and secure the destiny of the family First Sarah and then Rivka (who was married to Sarah's son Isaac) show how7 significant the character and actions of a woman could be to the future of the family

A T THE BEGINNING

Both of the two original mothers, Sarah and Rivka, set the pattern of female involvement. Like Abraham, they each undertook the decisive journey from Mesopotamia to Canaan that marked Israel's destiny. It is easy to overlook Sarah, who was already married to Abraham when she made the journey. Abraham himself did not realize her importance. God had to inform him that God's promise to Abraham had also been given to Sarah (Gen. 17:21) and that Abraham should pay attention to Sarah's desires (Gen. 21:12). Rivka (Rebecca) is not so easily overlooked, for she receives the fullest treatment of any matriarch. Rivka is the only woman of the Bible whose birth is recorded. Her birth notice interrupts the action, coming right after the binding of Isaac. After saving Isaac, God reiterated God's promise to Abraham of multitudinous progeny (Gen. 22:15 19)· The narrator then changes focus. Prologue. Birth: In timation of Destiny (Gen.

22:20-24)*

It happened after these matters. Thus was told to Abraham: "Look! Milkah has also borne sons, to Nahor your brother: 'All chapter and verse citations follow the Hebrew Bible.

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Utz his firstborn and Buz his brother and Kemuel the father of Aram. And Keshed and Hazo and Pildash and Yidlaph and Bethuel. Bethuel gave birth to Rivka. These are the eight whom Milkah bore for Nahor the brother of Abraham. His concubine her name was Reuma also gave birth, to Tebah, Goham, Tehash, and Ma'akah. A new7 matter is beginning: It happened after these matters. The narrator lists Nahor's descendants, presenting first the sons of Nahor's wife Milkah and then the sons of his concubine. The form is typical for genealogies, except that after listing Milkah s sons, before stating there were eight sons, the narrator jumps to the next generation to include the son's daughter: Bethuel gave birth to Rivka. The placement of this birth notice is important. Isaac has been saved, the promise has been repeated. The genealogy informs Abraham that his own birth family, the lineage of Terah, has not really been left behind. Through Isaac and this birth it will again be connected to God's promise to Abraham. Isaac will carry on the promise, and the baby Rivka will be the child of destiny, the agent of this promise. Another aspect of the placement of her birth notice illuminates her destiny. Her birth is mentioned just before Sarah's death: Rivka will carry on Sarah's role. Moreover, the birth announcement appears just after Abraham has been promised that his descendants will inherit their enemies' gates (Gen. 22:17). Re-readers of the story may catch the intertextual allusion, for this is the very blessing that Rivka's family bestows upon her as she leaves to marry Isaac (24:60). The one who will succeed Abraham in this role has just been born. Act I. The Marriage of Rivka Rivka's destiny comes into closer view when Abraham is ready to find a wife for his son. Scene 1. The charge of destiny (Gen. 24:1 9) Abraham was old, advanced in years, and Y H W H blessed Abraham with everything. Abraham said to his servant, the elder of his house who ruled over all he had: "Put your hand under my thigh, and I will adjure you by YHWH the God of heaven and the God of

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earth that you should not take any wife for my son from the daughters of the Canaanite in whose midst I am living. Rather, you shall go to my land, my homeland, and take a wife for my son Isaac." The servant said to him, "Perhaps the woman will not be willing to come after me to this land

should 1 bring your son

back to the land from which you came?" Abraham said to him, "Be careful not to return my son to there. Y H W H the God of heaven, who took me from my father's house and my homeland and who spoke to me and who swore to me thus, T o your seed 1 give this land'—he will send his angel before you and you shall take a wife for my son from there. And if the woman is not willing to come after you, you are free of your oath. Just do not bring my son there. " The servant placed his hand under Abraham's thigh and swore to him about this matter. Abraham, too old to go himself, sends his chief steward. The charge is clear: bring back a girl from the homeland. The alternative is also clear: Isaac is not to go there. If the girl will not come, the steward is discharged from his oath. God's promise connected Abraham and Sarah's progeny with the land. And so everything hinges on whether the woman that the servant finds is willing to come to Canaan. Scene 2. Seeking serendipity (Gen. 24:10 14) The servant took ten of his master's camels and went with all the bounty of his master in his hand. He arose and went to Aram-Naharaim to the city of Nahor. He parked his camels outside the town at a well toward evening, at the time that the girls who draw water come out. He said, "YHWH, God of my master Abraham, make it happen for me today and act benevolently with my master Abraham. Look! I am standing by the water spring and the daughters of the men of the city are coming out to draw water. Let it be that the girl to whom I say 'Incline your jug to me that I may drink' and she says 'Drink, and 1 will also water your camels '

her you will have brought for your ser-

vant Isaac and through her I will know that you have acted benevolently with my master."

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The servant asks for a serendipitous "happenstance," that the right girl would chance to come his way that very evening. He wants the hand of Providence to be clear, and asks for a sign. The sign is not random: it will also show that the girl has a willing heart. Abraham has described the characteristics of an ideal woman for his son: she must be from the homeland and be willing to come. The servant wants more: she must be hospitable and strong. The sign that she is truly the destined one is that she not only agrees to give him drink but volunteers to water his camels too. Like the mighty wife of Proverbs 31, she must be both caring and industrious. Moreover, as everyone knows, Ά good wife comes from God" (Prov. 19:14). Scene ], Providence (Gen. 24:15 27J It happened that before he finished speaking, look! Rivka is coming out, she who was born to Bethuel son of Milkah the wife of Nahor the brother of Abraham, and her jug was on her shoulder. The girl was very beautiful, a young maiden whom no man had known. She came down to the spring and filled her jug and came up. The servant ran toward her and said, "Draw for me please a little water from your jug." She said, "Drink, my lord!" and hurried to lower her jug to her hand and give him drink. She finished giving him drink and said, "For your camels also I will draw water until they have finished drinking." The girl hurried and emptied her jug into the trough and ran again to the well to draw and drew for his camels. The man, astonished at her, was keeping quiet to know if YHWH had made him succeed or not. And it happened when the camels finished drinking, the man took a gold nose ring whose weight was a half-shekel and two bracelets on her arms, ten shekels their weight. He said, "Whose daughter are you? Tell me please, does your father's house have room for us to spend the night?" She said to him, "1 am the daughter of Bethuel the son of Milkah whom she bore to Nahor." And she said to him, " We have both straw and plentiful food and also a place to spend the night." The man bowed down and prostrated himself to YHWH.

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He said, "Blessed is Y H W H the God of my master Abraham who has not abandoned his deeds of benevolence and his fidelity from my lord. As for me, Y H W H led me on the way to the house of my lord's brothers." The emissary's prayer is answered immediately and in a way far more providential than he ever imagined. First, the girl was very beautiful, always a desirable trait in a wife and, in the Bible, a mark of divine favor. Second, she is a betûlah, a girl of marriageable age. Third, she is a virgin. Unless virgins wore identifying clothing, how would the servant know? And even if virgins wore identifying clothing, one would assume that all unmarried girls would wear that clothing, so again, how would the servant know? But the narrator knows everything, and clearly the narrator cares that she is a virgin. Chastity is an important value in the Bible; the chastity of young girls not only makes them "pure," it also shows that they are well disciplined and faithful to their family 's control. A girl who stays chaste while unmarried is most likely to stay faithful as a wife. Finally, the girl goes even further than the servant imagined. She not only offers to draw water for his camels, she offers to water them until they have finished drinking. Camels can hold a lot of water, and after they have traveled such a long distance, they will be ready to drink a great amount. Rivka is very generous. She is also very strong. Ancient Near Eastern wells were not vertical shafts through which buckets are lowered by rope. They were inclined slopes that the girl went down and came up. To water ten camels after a long journey, Rivka had to go down and come up many times. It is no wonder that the servant watching her was astonished! The servant has asked for two logical signs, one more meaningful than the other, that would indicate the girl's suitability: she must give him something to drink and offer to water the camels. Not all women would be thoughtful enough to consider the camels. If girls had come and failed one of these tests before Rivka arrived, there would be no reason to conclude that the choice of Rivka indicated anything more than a clever envoy It is the fact that she arrived immediately, before the servant even finished his prayer, that shows the hand of Providence at work. So the servant is ready to take the next step. He offers her gold, possibly to assure her of his generosity as a guest. He has brought ten camels of goods for wedding gifts and bride-price, but it is premature to offer them yet. She has met his criteria for a good wife, but not yet Abraham's. For that he asks two questions: Who is she? And will her family

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offer him hospitality? When he hears that Providence has brought him to Abraham's close kin, he immediately offers blessing and thanks to God. God has truly led him on the path of success to find this exemplary young woman from Abraham's own lineage. But there are still two hurdles before he can be successful: Will her family agree to the marriage? And will she come? The envoy must meet the family Rivka runs home to her mother's house, a sign perhaps that she realizes marriage may be discussed. Scene 4. The family of destiny (Gen. 28 52j The girl ran home and told her mother's house about these matters. Rivka had a brother named Laban. Lab an ran outside to the spring. It happened that when he saw the nose ring and the bracelets on his sister's arm and when he heard the words of his sister Rivka, "thus the man said," he came to the man and look! He was standing with his camels at the spring. He said to him, "Blessed be YHWH—why do you stand outside and I have cleared the house and a place for the camels?" The man came to the house and settled the camels and gave straw and feed to the camels and water to wash his feet and the feet of the men who wTere with him. Food was placed before him, but he said, "I will not eat until I have spoken my matter," and he said, "Speak!" He said, "I am the servant of Abraham. YHWH blessed my lord greatly and he grew great, and he gave him sheep and cattle and silver and gold and man- and maid-servants and camels and asses. Sarah, my lord's wife, bore a son for my lord after she had grown old and he gave him everything he had. "My lord adjured me thus, 'You shall not take a wife for my son from the daughters of the Canaanite in whose land I dwell. You must go to my father's house and take a wife for my son.' "1 said to my master, 'Perhaps the woman will not come after me.' He said to me, 'YHWH before whom I have walked will send his angel with you and make your way successful and you will take a wife for my son from my family, from my father's house. Then you will be clear from my oath. If

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you come to my family and they do not give her to you, you will be clear from my oath.' ' i came to the spring today and said, Ό Y H W H , God of my lord Abraham, if you will please make successful the way upon which I am going—Look, 1 am standing by the water spring, and the maiden who comes out to draw and 1 say to her, "Give me a little water to drink from your jug" and she will say to me, "You drink, and I will draw also for your camels"—let her be the woman whom Y H W H has decreed for my lord's son.' " "And before 1 finished thinking this, look! Rivka was coming out with her jug on her shoulder. She went down to the spring and drew, and 1 said to her, 'Give me a little to drink.' She quickly took her jug down and said, ' Drink and 1 will water your camels,' and I drank and she watered the camels too. 1 asked her thus, 'Whose daughter are you?' and she said, 'The daughter of Bethuel son of Nahor whom Milkah bore for him,' and 1 placed the nose ring on her nose and the bracelets on her arms. And 1 bowed and prostrated myself to Y H W H . And I blessed Y H W H , the God of my lord Abraham, who directed me on the true way to take my lord's brother's daughter to his son. "And now, if you will act benevolently and faithfully to my lord, tell me, and if not

tell me and 1 will go left or right."

Lab an and Bethuel spoke up and said, "The matter is from Y H W H . We cannot say to you bad or good. Look, Rivka is before you. Take, her and go and let her be a wife to your lord's son, as Y H W H has spoken." When Abraham's servant heard their words, he prostrated himself before Y H W H . Abraham's emissary is very smart in the way he retells his story He places a. slight "spin" on the matter that emphasizes the family association and highlights Bethuel and Laban's household. Abraham, who is not a great family man, said nothing about his father's house. The envoy himself had not prayed that God bring him a Terahite, only a willing, hospitable wife. But now he "relates" Abraham's desire for his father's family and his concern that the family will agree to the marriage. He also emphasizes how important this particular family is by reporting

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that he first found out who Rivka was and only thereafter placed the gifts on her nose and arms. The steward would not give gifts to any girl, no matter how virtuous. Only a girl from this family will do! In this way the steward also intensifies the providential nature of the meeting: God not only found the right woman for Isaac; he has guided the servant to the family of destiny Faced with this recounting of the story, the family has only one possible response: since God has singled them out, they must agree. Despite the fact that this focus on the family is the servant's spin, the narrator makes it clear that God did arrange this providential meeting with Rivka, and that it is indeed very important that she be Bethuel and Milkah's daughter rather than someone else. There are three reasons for this: the facts that the family worships Yahweh, that Rivka's father is descended from Ter ah, and that Rivka's mother is also descended from Terah. The family's devotion to YHWH is immediately apparent. Laban's first wrords to the emissary are "Blessed be Y H W H , " and Bethuel and Laban's response to the servant's story is "The matter is from Y H W H " and that they will do "as Y H W H has spoken." This God language is not simply verbiage to suit the servant. YHWH is also Laban's God, and much later, when Laban makes a treaty with Jacob, he takes an oath by "The God of Nahor and the God of Abraham, their father's God" (Gen. 31:53). The worship of YHWH may be the reason that Terah first left Mesopotamia to head for Canaan. Terah s lineage is very important. In Genesis 20, Abraham says of Sarah, "She is really my sister, the daughter of my father but not the daughter of my mother. " If so, Isaac would be doubly descended from Terah, through his father Abraham and through his mother's father. Bethuel's lineage is also doubly Terahite, through his father Nahor, son of Terah, and through his mother, Milkah, who was the daughter of Nahor's brother Haran. Rivka, like Isaac, is doubly Terahite. A marriage between them will keep the lineage as pure as possible. The genealogy of the mothers is important to preserve the intensity of this same lineage. The genealogies repeatedly mention Milkah's name, and God reminds Abraham that Abraham's covenant must come through a child of Sarah (Gen. 17:15-19). In the same way, Rivka is destined to be the one to bear a child to Isaac, who will inherit YHWH's covenanted promise. But the marriage is not a fait accompli. Rivka must agree. Abraham had mentioned the possibility that the girl might not agree to go. We do not often hear of the consent of children in an arranged marriage. Abra-

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ham and his servant do not consult Isaac before the servant tenders his offer. But Rivka has to move far away, cut her ties to her birth family and go out to what is essentially a pioneer country. Scene j. Embracing destiny (Gen. jj-62) The servant brought out silver vessels and gold vessels and garments and gave them to Rivka. He gave gifts to her brother and her mother. They ate and drank, he and the men who were with him, and they stayed the night. He said, "Send me off to my master!" Her brother and mother said, "Let the girl stay with us a few days or ten; after, she may go." He said to them, "Do not make me stay later when YHWH has made my way successful. Send me off and I will go to my master." They said, "We will call the girl and ask her." They called Rivka and said to her, "Will you go with this man?" She said, "1 will go." They sent off Rivka their sister with her nursemaid and Abraham's servant and his men. They blessed Rivka and said to her, "Our sister, may you become a thousand myriads, and may your seed inherit its enemies' gates!" Rivka arose, and her handmaidens, and they got up on the camels and they followed after the man. The servant took Rivka and went. The family may be reluctant, and may wish to delay matters. But the girl shows no such hesitation, and answers simply, "I will go." Not knowing either Abraham or Isaac, whose name is not even mentioned, she declares her willingness to go. At that moment, it becomes clear that Rivka is the counterpart to both Abraham and Sarah. Like Sarah, she is the instrument of the promise, the agent through whom Isaac will become the father of a nation. She is also a second Abraham, who, like him, voluntarily chooses to leave Mesopotamia for Canaan. Her "I will go" answers the four times the issue of going has been raised in the story (in vv. 4, 7, 38, and 40) and echoes God's command to Abraham to "Go!" in Gen. 12:1. The voyage from Mesopotamia to Israel was the one

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qualification that Abraham sought in a daughter-in-law, and her willingness to do so establishes her credentials. Rivka is very much like Abraham. They are both models of hospitality, and the narrator of her story highlights her similarity to him by describing her actions toward the emissary in the same language that describes Abraham's actions toward his angel visitors (Gen. 18:1 8). Both of them are eager to perform their hospitable acts. Abraham "ran" to meet the three stranger-angels and "ran" to the flock; Rivka "ran" to the well. Abraham "hurried" to cook for them, Rivka "hurried" to lower her jug and "hurried" to empty her jug. They also both show a greater generosity than hospitality codes require, Abraham giving the strangers meat and Rivka watering ten camels to their fill. Like Abraham, Rivka is the bearer of a promise. The promise is bestowed in her family's blessing: many children, a progeny that "inherits its enemies' gates." "Inheritance" {yarns) is an essential theme of Genesis, and indeed of every family history When Abraham had no children, he complained that someone from his household would "inherit" him (Gen. 15:3). After the binding of Isaac, God promised Abraham, "Your seed will inherit its enemies' gate" (Gen. 22:17). Rivka's family offers her the same blessing; later, Jacob is told that he will inherit the land in which he lives (Gen. 28:4). Isaac is promised the land and progeny (Gen. 26:3-4), but "inheriting" is too active a word for him. "Inheriting" goes from Abraham to Rivka to Jacob and to the people of Israel. Her decisiveness, her strong will, and her embrace of her destiny make her a strong active link between Abraham and Jacob. First, Rivka must become a wife. Scene 6. Rivka, the wife of Isaac (Gen. 24:62-67) Isaac was coming from the way to Beer Lahai-Roi, He was living in the Negeb. Isaac went out to converse in the field before evening. He raised his eyes and look! Camels are coming. Rivka lifted her eyes and saw Isaac. She slipped off the camel. She said to the servant, "Who is that man, the one who is walking toward us in the field?" The servant said, "He is my master." She took a scarf and veiled herself. The servant related to Isaac all the things that he had done. Isaac brought her into the tent of Sarah his mother.

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He rook Rivka and she became a wife to him and he loved her, Isaac was consoled over his mother. Abraham's servant, who represented him in the negotiations, now continues to play that role in the presentation. Abraham is not involved. The servant does not change his role: he acts in the Negeb as he acted in Mesopotamia. But Rivka changes. She who was so assertive and decisive in her meeting with the servant and in her discussions at home now turns into a wife. She who left Mesopotamia as an autonomous person turned into a betrothed woman "taken" by the servant and is now "taken" into her husband's domain. As soon as Isaac enters the scene, she veils herself. Veiling may have been required. The Assyrian laws require married women to be veiled. The fact that Jacob marries Leah thinking she is Rachel seems to indicate that such a custom also applied to betrothed women. But the veiling is also symbolic: all of Rivka's attributes, not only her beauty will be less visible as a wife. In marriage, women, even the active Rivka, become the object of action: Isaac takes her. But her qualities do not remain hidden to him, for he loves her. She not only takes Sarah's place in the tent, she takes her place in his heart. The biblical ideal of marriage may consider the husband the dominant partner, but it nevertheless envisions a love relationship. Modern commentators assume a mismatch between a strong Rivka and a ρ ass we Isaac, but the story tells us that he loved her. Isaac's love for Rivka did not prevent him from imitating his father and pretending that Rivka was his sister when they went to Gerar (Gen. 26:6-11). Marriage was patriarchal, and even a beloved wife could be disposable when the man's life was at stake. But his love for her may have prevented his ruse from succeeding, for Abimelech king of Gerar saw Isaac "playing," mesahheq, with Rivka and realized that they were married (v. 8). The marriage of Isaac and Rivka, even though arranged, was a love relationship. The reader has been given two clues that God has a special interest in Rivka. Both the announcement of her birth and the providential nature of her marriage indicate that she is a woman of destiny with a divinely ordained role to play. But first, she must become a mother. And this is neither easy nor ordinary. Like Sarah before her, and Rachel after her, Rivka has to undergo a period of infertility

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«ς> Act II. Motherhood: Giving Birth (Gen. 25:20-26) Isaac was forty years old when he took Rivka daughter of Bethuel the Aramean from Padan-Aram, the sister of Laban the Aramean, as his wife. Isaac entreated YHWH in the presence of his wife, for she was infertile. YHWH was successfully entreated by him and Rivka his wife became pregnant. Inside her, the children moved around tumultuously. Rivka said, "If this is the way it is, what do 1 need this for?" She went to inquire of YHWH. YHWH said to her: "Two peoples are in your belly TWO nations from your loins will divide. Nation over nation will be strong, And the older the younger will work." Her days till birth were complete, and look! There were twins in her belly. The first one came out, red, and all of him like a mantle of hair, and they called his name Esau. Afterward, his brother came out, his hand holding Esau's heel. They called his name Jacob. Isaac was sixty years old when she gave birth to them. Since God has promised Isaac numerous progeny, Isaac entreats. But Rivka does not always turn to Isaac to mediate between her and God. When her pregnancy distresses her, she does not involve Isaac; she goes directly to inquire of YHWH. There is no need for intercession. And Rivka gets her answer; the struggles in her womb are just the beginning. In oracular poetry, she is told that she has twins in her womb who are destined to become two separate nations. Twins, of course, heighten the problem of sibling rivalry, which is such a prominent issue in the ancestral stories. Rivka is given a clue as to how the struggles are destined to be resolved. "The elder will work (for) the younger," says the oracle. Or does it say "the elder, the younger will work (for)?" Oracles may be informative, but they are never clear. The events that happen later enable the petitioner to interpret the oracle. The birth of the twins seems to provide such a clue. Jacob coming close on Esau's heel seems to bear

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out the idea that the younger son will not be content to be the lesser and that the elder will someday work for the younger. Oracles are expected to lead to action. If the oracle predicts evil to come, the petitioner is expected to try to avert it. Some Mesopotamia!! collections of oracles even contain the "solution," the ritual to perform to avert the doom. In Assyria, an evil astral omen might even cause the king to descend temporarily from his throne and appoint a substitute king. In the same way a petitioner will try to ensure that nothing will prevent the predicted good fortune. Rivka takes a prominent role in fulfilling her birth oracle, acting to guarantee that her younger son will achieve his destiny as the preeminent heir. That moment comes as it is time to transfer the family heritage from Isaac to the next generation. Act III. Motherhood: Fulfilling the Destiny (Gen. 27) Rivka7s Plan (2jn-13) It happened that Isaac was old, and his eyes were too dim to see. He called Esau his elder son and said to him, "My son!" and he said, "Here!" He said to him, "Look! 1 have gotten old. 1 do not know the day of my death. And now, please take your tools, your bow and arrow and go out to the field. Catch game and make me a delicacy such as 1 love and bring it to me, and I will eat so that my soul can bless you before I die." Rivka was listening while Isaac was speaking to Esau. Esau went to the field to hunt game to bring back. Rivka said to Jacob her son thus, "Look, 1 have heard your father speaking to your brother Esau thus, 'Bring me game and make me a delicacy and I will bless you before Y H W H before 1 die/ And now, my son, listen to me, to what I am commanding you! Go, please, to the flock and take two fine goats and 1 will make them into delicacies for your father such as he loves. And you will bring it to your father and he will ear so that he will bless you before he dies." Jacob said to Rivka his mother, "But Esau my brother is a hairy man and 1 am a smooth man. Perhaps my father will feel me, and I will be a liar in his eyes and bring a curse upon myself and not a blessing/" His mother said to him, "May your curse be upon me, my son. Just listen to me and go get it for me."

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Rivka is faced with a problem, in the world of the ancestors, a father could determine who wTas going to be his "firstborn," his chief heir, and could change his mind even on his deathbed. Family documents from the Syrian city of Nuzi, from around 1600 b . c . e . , include several documents in which a man promises another that he will be the firstborn. Nevertheless, one of the documents shows that the man's family came to him on his deathbed to tell him to designate his firstborn. Esau had sold the prerogatives of firstborn to Jacob, but despite the arrangement that they once had made, Isaac's blessing in anticipation of death can determine their future relationship. Rivka knows that Isaac has always favored Esau the hunter and wants to give him the blessing. If she is going to ensure that the omen of Jacob's destiny will be fulfilled, she must act. Her motives may be pure, to carry out God's will. She may also be influenced by the fact that she favors the more domestic Jacob. She may believe that he is more likely to care for her in her old age. Motives are rarely unmixed. Moreover, even people who operate purely from selfish reasons may unwittingly be carrying out God's plan, like the brothers who sell Joseph into Egypt or Potiphar's wife, who gets him into the dungeon where he can come to the attention of Pharaoh. Actions have consequences whatever their motives. And whether or not Rivka is thinking of the oracle at this particular moment, the oracle has shown her and the reader wThat God's plan is. Isaac must bless Jacob. Only he has the right to bestow the blessing. Rivka knows that he has made his decision and she will not be able to persuade Isaac to change his mind. And so she decides to trick him, and turns to persuade Jacob of her plan. Rivka's plan is straightforward, based on an intimate knowledge of sheep breeding. Shepherds try to match up orphaned lambs with ewes who have lost their lambs. But ewes nurse only their own lambs. In order to convince a ewe to suckle an orphaned lamb, shepherds will flay the dead lamb and wrap the orphan in its skin. In the same way Rivka will wrap a goat around the smooth-skinned Jacob. But Jacob is not enthusiastic about Rivka's plan to disguise him as Esau. He is worried that his father will brand him as a "trickster" (which he certainly is) and will utter a curse instead of a blessing. Rivka knows that once uttered, a curse cannot be easily removed, but it can be deflected, and Rivka offers to take the consequences of the curse upon herself. She is the first woman to do so, but not the last. Women who ask men to do something need to allay the fears of those men; both Abigail and the Wise Woman of Tekoa will offer to take upon themselves the consequences of the acts that they ask David to do. This is a very persuasive technique, and it

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works. Jacob purs on the goat skins and goes to trick his father into giving him the blessing he plans for Esau. The deception of the blind elderly Isaac is a bizarre episode, verging on both the tragic and the burlesque. It rests on a premise alien to contemporary thinking, that a blessing unwittingly bestowed is still a blessing. And it assumes that trickery is not automatically immoral. Many heroes of the Bible, including Moses and David, use trickery when frontal assaults will not work, and the Jacob cycle has quite a few trickster stories. Isaac himself is a trickster, having tried the wife-sister trick on Abimelech. Jacob takes Isaac's place in the next generation, as well as Rivka's, being both a trickster and bearer of the promise. Rivka will use whatever means are in the tool kit of those without authority to make decisions. The story never tells us that Rivka must use deception because she is powerless, and later readers have often accused her of improper and immoral behavior. But the biblical world valued cunning in the underdog. Only the powerful value honesty at all costs. The powerless know that trickery may save their lives. Early interpreters, both Jewish and Christian, praised Rivka, as did medieval and reformation writers. The censure did not begin until the end of the nineteenth century when male biblical scholars began to condemn her as a Lady Macbeth. The pendulum is beginning to swing again as we learn more about how the disadvantaged make their way in the world and how women negotiate through patriarchy. To some contemporary eyes, the ingenuity and cunning of Rivka's plan is itself a mark of divine guidance and her role as divine helper. The story also does not tell us that the purpose of her action was to fulfill the oracle. But the oracle provides an interpretive prologue to these events, and a divine authority for action that supersedes Isaac's male authority. Moreover, Isaac's blessing refers back to the language of the oracle. First, Isaac blesses Jacob with prosperity (a blessing he was able to repeat with Esau). Then comes the crucial sentence (v 29): Many peoples will serve you, many nations will submit to you. Be a magnate to your brothers, The sons of your mother will submit to you. Cursed are those who curse you and blessed are those who bless you. Like the words of the oracle, the blessing is in poetry. Moreover, it uses the same key terms. The oracle had spoken of two nations,

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leummim, separating from Rivka's womb: Isaac refers to the nation, leummim, who will submit to Jacob. The oracle spoke of the older serving, ya a bod, the younger; Isaac says that "peoples will serve you," ya abduka, and tells Jacob to "be a magnate over your brother." This is the dramatic moment. The oracle was enigmatic, with language that allowed either one to serve the other. The birth story lent credence to the idea that Jacob would be prominent, as did the sale of the birthright. But not until the blessing of Isaac does it become clear and unambiguous: the one Isaac speaks to will "be magnate over your brother." And Rivka has guaranteed that Jacob will be the son standing there at that moment. Did Isaac know? Some commentators believe that he realized what was happening but went along with it. He is certainly suspicious, asking, "Who are you, my son?" (Gen. 27:18); asking to feel Jacob so that he could see 'Are you my son Esau or not?" (v. 21). He expresses doubt, for "The voice is the voice of Jacob and the hands are the hands of Esau" (v. 22), and he asks yet a third time, 'Are you my son Esau?" (v. 24). He asks Jacob to come close and kiss him, and finally identifies him as Esau because his smell is "as the smell of the field" (v. 27). Does a goat smell like the field? And would an old man trust his sense of smell over his hearing? Or is the storyteller hinting that Isaac realized what was happening, while at the same time casting aspersion on Esau and the Edomites that they smell like goats? Rivka's plan and Jacob's execution of it may have brought Isaac to realize that, come what may, Jacob would be superior over Esau. Or not, and Isaac was simply tricked. Rivka has one more role to play in Jacob's life. Having heard that Esau wants someday to take his revenge, Rivka wishes to spirit Jacob out of town. At the same time, like Abraham before her, she desires her designated heir to find a wife from Mesopotamia. Esau's anger is her opportunity to send Jacob to Mesopotamia. But she cannot send him, or arrange a marriage for him. Jacob must want to go, and his father must send him. So Rivka sets out to persuade the two men to follow her plan. Epilogue. Assuring the Future (Gen. 27:42-28:5) Rivka was told the words of Esau her son. She called Jacob her younger son and she said to him, "Look! Esau your brother is consoling himself to kill you. And now, my son, listen to my voice. Get up and run away to my brother Lab an, to Haran. Live with him awhile until your brother's anger subsides. Until your brother's anger turns away from you and he forgets what you have done to him,

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and 1 send and rake you from there. Why should 1 be bereft of both of you on one day?" Rivka said to Isaac, "I am almost dying because of the daughters of Het. If Jacob took one of these daughters of Het, one of the girls of the land for a wife—why should I live?" Isaac called Jacob and blessed him. He commanded him and said to him, "Do not take a wife from the daughters of Canaan. Arise and go to Padan-Aram to the house of Bethuel, your mother's father, and take a wife from there, from the daughters of Laban, your mother's brother. And El Shaddai will bless you and make you fertile and numerous and you will become a national community He will give you the blessing of Abraham, and to your seed with you, to inherit the land in which you live, which God gave to Abraham." Isaac sent Jacob off and he went to Padan-Aram to Laban, son of Bethuel the Aramean, the brother of Rivka, the mother of Jacob and Esau. Rivka says nothing to Jacob about marrying a woman in Haran. Marriage is not on Jacob's mind, and he would not be convinced that this was the appropriate thing to do right at the moment that he has alienated his brother. Rivka uses the one argument that would work with him, sending him temporarily for refuge. She reminds him that his brother's rage is murderous, if temporary, and subtly convinces him that he should be careful of his life for her sake if not for his: Why should I be bereft of both of you? If Esau killed Jacob, he himself would have to be executed, and Rivka would lose both her children. To prevent this, Jacob must flee, and her brother's house, she intimates, would be sanctuary. Isaac, however, is another story Talking to him about the danger to Jacob would bring up the topic of the trickery. It might anger Isaac. Even if it did not, Isaac might not wish to send Jacob away. He might wish to resolve the issue between his sons by discussing matters with them, or even by sending Esau to one of his in-laws. Or else he might send Jacob to Abimelech king of Gerar, with whom he had treaty relations, or to his uncle Ishmael. Both would keep him safe, and both are much closer than Haran. Isaac, the only patriarch never to leave the land of Canaan, might not think to send his son back to Mesopotamia . But Rivka wants to get Jacob to Haran. She therefore brings up the subject of Esau's wives,

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who, the narrator told us just before Isaac announced his desire to bestow the blessing, were "bitterness" for Isaac and Rivka (Gen. 26:35). Like other petitioners in the Bible, she speaks forcefully, using a guiltproducing rhetoric. But in this death-invoking hyperbole is a truth: the life of a mother involves assuring the life of her children. Rivka, moreover, has devoted her life to the promise. To her, the future of her son is bound up with the promise. The promise brought Abraham from Mesopotamia, and her after him. Rivka wants her own successor to make the same journey Through her initiative, Isaac duplicates Abraham's charge that his son should not marry a local woman, and repeats the promise that God gave him. In this way Rivka assures that Jacob's future will imitate Isaac's and that the girl he marries will be like her. Then, having secured for Jacob both the blessing and the charge to marry within the line of Terah, Rivka disappears from the Bible's view The portrait of Rivka is more extensive than that of Sarah, but they are not different in any fundamental way Both play a determinative role in deciding the future of their children. The narratives make sure that we know7 that both mothers are acting only to ensure the future that ought to happen. They are acting as God's partner and agent, working to bring about God's will. God explicitly tells Abraham to do as Sarah wishes (Gen. 21:12). In the case of Rivka, the storyteller relates the oracle to legitimate Rivka's actions, to make sure that readers understand that tricky as they might be, they are in accord with the word of God. The two first matriarchs are notable for determining the success of their sons, often against their husbands' inclinations. The assertiveness of these Genesis mothers should not surprise us. Recent anthropological fieldwork in contemporary rural Greece and Turkey, both unabashed self-proclaimed patriarchies, shows that wives and mothers can be to all appearances subordinate women, and nevertheless exercise enormous real power within their households and villages. In the case of Sarah and Rivka, their own preferences are made more powerful with divine charge and divine knowledge. These women temper paternal authority to bring about God's will. The third generation does not pass as smoothly into the fourth. It begins much the same, as Jacob finds Rachel as a young woman at a well, beautiful as Rivka was beautiful. And he loves her, as Isaac loved Rivka. A younger child favored over the older, Rachel is a kind of echo of Jacob himself. She is ambitious and attached to the teraphim of her father's household, symbols of both authority and family. Taking this symbol (much as Jacob took Isaac's blessing), she then (again like Jacob) tricks

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her father so that he cannot find the teraphim. But, unlike Jacob, she cannot separate from her sister. She does not have the autonomy or the means to decide that she would not like to spend her life trying to best her sister. When her father, Laban, decides that Jacob must marry both Rachel and Leah, the two sisters become co-wives, rivals for the same husband. And then, like so many women, Rachel dies in childbirth. Rachel's premature death has great consequences for Jacob's family. She is not there to guide her young son Joseph as the children grow7 up, or to mediate between him and his brothers. Leah does not fill Sarah's or Rivka's position in the family. Either she is too busy managing a household with thirteen children, or she also dies at some point. Without Rachel's presence, Jacob cannot ensure their transition to the next generation. As the stories of Genesis show7, nobody orchestrates their marital contracts, and the stresses between Jacob and his grown sons and among the brothers threaten to destroy the family. When nobody rocks the cradle, nobody rules the world.

Saviors of the Exodus

Ou R Fo c u s now shifts to the period after the end of the book of Genesis. The question is no longer "Who will inherit the mantle of this ancestry?" It is "What will become of the descendants of these ancestors?" Some things have not changed since the days of Genesis. The descendants live in families and center their political organization and power in the family. As a result, women continue to demonstrate considerable ability to influence events. But with the national emphasis of the book of Exodus, it becomes clear that choices made by women in the course of their domestic lives determine the destiny of the entire people. Acting in their routine roles as midwives, mothers, daughters, and wives, women become the saviors of early Israel and bring on the redemption from Egypt. The book of Exodus opens as the new king expresses fear at the ever multiplying alien group in his land. Having enslaved them, he then commands the midwives to kill the boy children they help deliver. Act I. The Midwives (Exod.

1:15-22)

The Pharaoh said to the Hebrew midwives, one of whose name was Shifrah and the other's name was Pu'ah; He said, "When you birth the Hebrew women, you will look on the birthstones. if it is a boy, you shall kill it; if a girl, she shall live." The midwives feared God and did not do as the king of Egypt had instructed them. They let the boy children live. The king of Egypt called for the midwives. He said to them, "Why have you done this thing, that you let the boy children live?" The midwives said to Pharaoh, "Because the Hebrew women are not like Egyptian women. They are animals. Before the midwife can get to them, they have given birth."

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God was good to the midwives, and the people grew greatly numerous. And it happened that because the midwives feared God, God made them houses. Pharaoh commanded all his people thus: "Every son that is born cast him into the Nile. Every girl you can let live." Pharaoh's injunction seems strange. To kill a population, one surely should kill the future birth-givers. But Pharaoh is worried only about the boys. From his perspective, the girls are insignificant. Without men, they are not even Israel. Their wombs have not yet been claimed and branded. If married by Egyptians, they will produce Egyptian children. The boys, however, may grow to be men who will fight against Egypt. Within his limited perspective, Pharaoh is no fool. The narrator relates Pharaoh's intensely male-oriented perspective and then shows how the women begin to act. The midwives are not so easily persuaded to murder Hebrew boy babies. They themselves might be Israelite women. The Hebrew7 Imyldt h 'bryt is ambiguous: it could mean "to the Hebrew midwives" or "to the midwives who serve the Hebrew women." The Masoretic vowels lammeyalledât hdibriyyôt opt for the former, the Septuagint leaves the question open, and Josephus relates that they were Egyptian (Antiquities II, 206-7). The women w7ere most probably Hebrews, for midwives usually come from the community they serve. Their names can have meaning in Hebrew, Shifrah from "beautiful" and Pu'ah from "pant," or Pu ah can be related to Ugaritic pgt, "young woman." These would be meanings appropriate to midwives. On the other hand, the names are not the usual form of Hebrew names. They may have come from another subject people. Now, however, they cast their lot with Israel and defy Pharaoh's orders to kill.

The midwives make an independent moral decision. Fearing God, they refuse to obey immoral orders and do not murder the boy children. Called on the carpet, they do not declare their defiance in what would have been both a futile and fatal act of frontal resistance. Instead, they trick Pharaoh, belittling the Israelite women as "animals" who give birth so quickly that they need no midwives. The word hayyôt, "animals," is too often softened in translation to "lively." But the midwives would certainly not compliment the Hebrews over the Egyptian women! Instead, building on the fact that Pharaoh sees Israel as "other," they make an

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ethnic slur belittling these "others." In this way, they demonstrate to Pharaoh that they are not in favor of Hebrews. Not seeing the power of these women to defy him, Pharaoh is all too willing to hear something negative about Hebrews and falls for their trick. The midwives have failed to kill the male children and have pulled the wool over Pharaoh's eyes in a way that shows his own denigration of Israel is ludicrous. The humor in their answer to Pharaoh is compounded by God's response. God rewards them for their uprightness by making them very successful. More successful midwives means that fewer children die at birth, and as a result, Israel grows even more numerous. But Pharaoh is not yet done trying to destroy Israel. He corrects one mistake he made, no longer appointing individuals to be the killers, but commanding the whole people to take part in this murder. But he repeats his more fundamental mistake. He commands everyone to throw the boy children into the Nile. But he tells them to let the daughters live. The next to defy Pharaoh w7ill be the daughters. Act II. The Daughters (Exod.

2:1-10)

Parti. Three daughters (Exod. 2:1-6) A man from the house of Levi went and took a daughter of Levi, The woman became pregnant and gave birth to a son. She saw that he was good and she hid him three months. She couldn't hide him anymore and took an ark of reeds and tarred it with pitch and tar. She put the boy in it and placed it in the reeds at the banks of the Nile. His sister stood by at a distance to see what would happen to him. The daughter of Pharaoh came down to bathe in the Nile. Her maids were walking by the side of the Nile, She saw the ark among the reeds and sent forth her arm and took it. She opened it and saw him, the boy child. Look! The lad was crying and she had pity on it. She said, "This is one of the boys of the Hebrews." Pharaoh has a problem. Just as he took no heed of daughters, daughters take no heed of him. Immediately, two daughters defy Pharaoh's command and act to preserve the life of a boy child. A daughter of Levi gives

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birth to a son. As long as Israelite women are still alive, they will continue to give birth to children, and sons will continue to be born. And, like the midwives before her, the daughter of Levi will not kill at Pharaoh's command. Instead of throwing her son in the river, she hides her son for three months. Then, unable to hide him anymore, she sets the baby adrift in an ark on the river where he will at least have a chance for survival. The word "ark" (teibah) appears only twice in the Bible: here and Gen. chapters 6 9. Noah didn't drown because God placed him in an ark; Moses didn't drown because his mother did the same. There is another allusion here: she seals the baby in the ark as God closed the ark for Noah. Moses' mother subverts Pharaoh's order. She does indeed place the boy child in the Nile, but in a way that will give him a chance. In this, she does not act alone, for her own daughter, the child's sister, goes to keep watch. Yet another daughter—Pharaoh's daughter—finds the baby. She has compassion for the crying infant, but she knowrs right aw a ν that this is a Hebrew child. She has a decision to make. On the one hand, as Pharaoh's daughter, she should obey the royal decree and throw the boy into the Nile. On the other side—she has pity. Her motivation is not quite the same as that of the midwives: they acted on moral grounds, she acted on compassionate grounds. They decided in the abstract: the midwives feared God and concluded it was wrong to kill babies. Pharaoh's daughter made no such previous judgment; she may have considered the whole affair her father's business. But: the lad was crying and she had pity on it. At this moment, the baby 's sister crystallizes the issue and precipitates the moment of decision. Part 2. Λ conspiracy of women (Exod. 2:7-10) His sister said to the daughter of Pharaoh, "Should 1 go and call a nursemaid woman from the Hebrews for you, and she will nurse the child?" The daughter of Pharaoh said to her, "Go!" The young girl went and called the boy's mother. The daughter of Pharaoh said to her, "Take this boy and nurse him for me and I will pay you your wages." The woman took the boy and nursed him. The boy grew and she brought him to the daughter of Pharaoh and he became her son. She called his name Moshe as she said, "For from the water 1 drew him out,"

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The three women now enter a conspiracy to save the child. The daughter of Pharaoh restores him to his own mother to nurse—but with a difference: nurse him for me. To all appearances, Moses' mother will simply be a wage-earning nurse, and the boy will be safe in his mother's arms. The fate of the child is coming full circle, as the story emphasizes by repeating "(she) took." The mother of Moses took an ark for him, the daughter of Pharaoh took him, and the mother of Moses took him back and nursed him. Then, after he was weaned, she brought him to the daughter of Pharaoh and he became her son. And since he was now hers, Pharaoh's daughter named him. Like so many names in the Bible, "Moses" is a play on words. Moshe /Moses comes from a standard Egyptian word mes for "son," as in Tutmoses (son of Tut). At the same time, his name, like the names of Jacob's children, is ostensibly related to his birth circumstances, for from the water I drew him out. But the form mos eh is an active participle of the verb "the one who draws out," and the one who "draws out" from the waters is Pharaoh's daughter, not Moses, who is only the one drawn out (masiiy). The narrator and the listeners know that the real meaning of the name refers to Moses' life, not his birth. For Moshe will be the one who "draws out" (mdseh) the people of Israel from Egypt as their savior (?nâšTa). The "drawing out" of Moses from the waters saves the one who will "draw out" Israel from Egypt. And so Moses is born, and saved to be reborn, by the collaboration of this triad of daughters, who begin the redemption of Israel. The Bible records the name of Moses' mother, Yochebed, and his sister Miriam, and midrash adds the name "Bithya" for the daughter of Pharaoh. But none of them is named in this story for like the anonymous daughters of the book of Judges, they are archetypal. They are daughters, women, the very ones overlooked by both Pharaoh and the tradition that remembered the names of only the men who came to Egypt. Three subversive daughters have foiled the plans of men and shaped the destiny of the world. But Moses must first grow7 up, and then he must become a savior. Nursed by his birth mother and tended by his finder-mother, he experiences transformation in two traumatic crises. First he kills an oppressive slave master, flees Egypt, and meets his future wife, Zipporah, marries her and has two sons. Then one day Moses is confronted by God in the burning bush, who sends him back to Egypt to lead the redemption of the Israelites. And then comes the second crisis, for on his way back to Egypt, God, the One mightier than Pharaoh, attacks him. Once again, Moses is saved by a woman.

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Act III. The Wife (Exod.

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4:24-26)

On the way to the night lodging, God confronted Moshe and sought to kill him. Zipporah took a flint and cut off her son's foreskin. She touched it to his feet. She said, "For you are a bridegroom in blood to me." He let him be. Then she said, Ά bridegroom in blood" about the circumcision. In this bizarre and incomprehensible episode, this much is certain: God attacks in a. lethal way, and the child had not yet been circumcised. The story does not tell us w7hich son. It does not even tell us whom God attacked: we assume it was Moses. The object of the attack could have been the son, for the story says just "him." It was probably Moses, for "seeking to kill" has been a leitmotiv in his life. He fled to Midian because Pharoah sought to kill him (Exod. 2:15), and God assured him that it was safe to go back because those who w7ere seeking his life were dead (Exod. 4:19). Now suddenly God apparently attacks and seeks to kill him; the narrator leaves this ambiguous to further heighten the enigmatic nature of this episode. The narrator also does not give any indication why God attacked. Was the noncircumcision of his son the reason that Moses (or the son) got into danger? This is the suggestion of the Targumim and midrashim, but God knew that the son was not circumcised when God commissioned Moses. God may have attacked Moses or the uncircumciseci son so that Zipporah would save with blood, thus foreshadowing the way Israel would save their firstborn children in Egypt with the blood of the lamb. Certainly in both stories the Israelites are saved because blood is "touched" to its object, and both stories use the verb ng to describe the "touching" (Exod. 12:22). The narrator alerts the reader to the parallel to the Exodus by mentioning the death of the firstborn in Egypt just before the story begins (Exod. 4:23). Early readers noted the parallels between the two blood stories, and the Septuagint and the Targums heighten the parallels by having the attacker be not God but an angel, which it calls "the destroyer," the same name Exodus 12 calls the killer of the firstborn. There are other possible explanations for God's attack. Some scholars have suggested that God is angry at Moses for first refusing to go to Egypt. This does not seem likely, for prophets are expected to refuse

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their call initially, and it would make no sense for God to attack someone who had "repented" and was now7 doing God's bidding. But Moses carries a different kind of guilt, the bloociguilt (dāmÎm), on his head for having killed the Egyptian. Perhaps this bloociguilt might imperil him as he leaves on his mission, and the blood serves as atonement. Or perhaps Moses has done nothing wrong, and God attacks for the same reason that the angel attacked Jacob at the Jabbok River in Genesis 32 (and perhaps Balaam in Num. 22:22-35) hi some kind of dangerous ordeal from which he will emerge transformed before he goes to complete his destiny. The text leaves the cause mysterious. Zipporah doesn't hesitate or ask why. She quickly takes a flint and circumcises their son, and by circumcising him, she averts doom. Nothing else is clear. Did circumcision rescue Moses or his son by sanctifying them? Or was it the blood that averted the doom? Does blood always have mystical protective properties, or is it only the blood of the firstborn or a foreshadowing of the blood of the Paschal Lamb? There is something almost homeopathic about the saving use of blood: a few drops of bloodshed avert the spilling of a person's blood, which is the life. Perhaps circumcision contains this "hair of the dog" aspect: a small act of ritual violence to keep away other, more dangerous acts of violence. The narrator does not tell us, and perhaps does not know Zipporah knows. She takes a flint and circumcises her son. The story is set long after the Stone Age, long after people got into the habit of using metal implements. Zipporah may have used flint because it was readily available on the ground. Flint may also have been the appropriate material for circumcision, as Joshua circumcised Israel with flint knives when they entered Canaan (Josh. 5:2 3). Traditional rituals are often highly conservative, and circumcisers may have used flint long after sharp metal knives were available. The Bible associates metal implements with warfare. No metal was to be used to build an altar (Deut. 27:5) or the temple (1 Kings 6:7), and it would make sense to avoid metal for circumcision. Zipporah then touches the bloody foreskin at his feet. Whose feet? Her son's? Moses'? God's? And is it really "feet" that she touched, or is it genitalia? And then Zipporah cries, "You are a bridegroom in blood for me." To whom is Zipporah talking, who is the "bridegroom," and is she referring to a "bridegroom"? Hat an often means "father-in-law" rather than "groom," so the "you" may be God, and Zipporah may indicate that she has entered into a special relationship with God through this ceremony. The "you" may also be Moses, but even then there are ques-

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tions about the meaning of her statement. By calling Moses her bridegroom, Zipporah may mean that this ritual has now united them in a blood-sealed covenant stronger than normal marriage. But hatan can also be "son-in-law." Zipporah may be suggesting that she herself has become the virtual father-in-law of Moses by becoming the circumciser of the family She has assumed her own father's role in the family becoming a surrogate for Jethro even as she leaves his household. Circumcision often has to be performed before marriage, and Israel may have known customs in which the prospective father of the bride circumcised his son-in-law-to-be, symbolically exposing and preparing the boy's genitalia. The little story abounds in wordplays, some with words that do not even appear in the text. The "trouble," sar, (which does not appear), is averted by Zipporah, sprh, with her flint, sût; The hatan is saved by circumcising, which in Arabic is khatana (as khatari, it means "son-in-law"), either because circumcision was performed by the bride's family or by coincidence of sound. There are other wordplays involved in this very short story. God confronted Moses (pgs) and tried (hqs) to kill him, and the story starts and ends with two words that sound alike, mālon, "the lodging," and mulot, a word that is otherwise unknown but is translated "circumcision" because it sounds like milah. In the face of so many wordplays, even the word the narrator uses for "bloody" dāmîm, may not mean just "bloody" (which could be simply dam) but may be an allusion either to the bloodguilt Moses may carry (dāmîm) or to the multiple deaths in the tenth plague. Moses cannot act. He is either under attack, deathly ill, or paralyzed by a "dark night" of the soul. He needs another savior, and another woman steps up. Zipporah may know about the protective value of circumcision or of blood from Moses or her own traditions. Circumcision was wisely practiced in the ancient world, and may have had an apotropaic aspect in her tradition. She draws on ritual for dispelling the overwhelming power of deity and on almost incantatory words to accompany her act. Above all, she acts with whatever methods she knows to protect her young. It is not hard to see why the Bible associates such protection with women. There are ferocious females in the divine world: Ishtar acts as "mother" particularly when she protects in war; Anat protects her brother by defeating his enemy Mot; Isis protected her brother Osiris, guarded his dead body, and milked it to bring him back to life through his child Horus. These goddesses are related to the animal kingdom. Ishtar is mistress of lions and protects as a lioness protects her

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cubs. Anat is a winged deity, and Isis is often represented as a hawk hovering over Osiris. No creatures are more protective of their own than the great eagles and hawks. It is no accident that Zipporah means "bird." The story, the language used to relate it, and its themes are highly cryptic, and even in biblical times this story was not understood, for the narrator of the last line is trying to puzzle it out, identifying Zipporah's statement with mulot, most probably circumcision. But within the enigma, the figure of Zipporah is decisive and clear. She understands what is happening, knows what to do, averts the doom, and rescues Moses. Zipporah acts to prevent a killing. In this experience of the frightening aspect of divine power, Moses' wife grows into a savior. She becomes a surrogate parent, protecting Moses as well as her children. Moses' Israelite "biological" mother and his Egyptian "foster" mother are. now7 joined in a triad of saviors by this Miciianite "ritual" mother. Now7 Moses will turn from being the rescued to the rescuer, from the saved to the savior.

The stories of the great women of the Exodus show the true meaning of the Midrashic proverb "Because of the righteous women of that generation, Israel w7as redeemed from Egypt." These women were proactive and assertive even while the men were passive, reactive, or absent. They continued to function strongly and decisively even in conditions of dire oppression. And they stood up to overwhelming power. Political power, paternal power, even divine power all failed to deter these women. What enabled them to act in the face of overwhelming odds? Ironically, the empowering element may be their habitual disempowerment. Women have usually (if not always) been in subordinate positions, subservient to and sometimes even subjugated by the men in their lives. As a result, external oppression did not change their lives in fundamental ways. Certainly oppression intensified their suffering, but it did not turn their experience of reality upside down. Because women have rarely had autonomy, negotiating with authority has been their normal mode of existence. Women are used to ignoring outside events and regulations, used to maneuvering through the system to follow personal imperatives: helping their husbands, protecting their children, and being loyal to their God. When people who are used to authority are denied it, they may collapse, but those who have never had it know how7 to react. Women have learned how to acquire some power and autonomy in households

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where legal authority belongs to men. They have learned skills of indirection, writs, and deception—skills well adapted to conditions of subjugation. Such experience can be very useful when the household itself comes under outside rule in conditions of capture or slavery There is another way in winch the experience of oppression may not have been as debilitating to women as to men. Men have defined themselves by their ability to run their households. Proper control over members of their families has been an important ingredient in their self-esteem, in the "honor" of the household that they see themselves as protecting. Under conditions of capture and oppression, men may be debilitated by the loss of their "natural" role. But the culturally defined personal imperatives of women to help their husbands and protect their children do not disappear. In fact, they may become even more important when external oppression magnifies the dangers facing their families. Women in such dire circumstances feel the importance of using the skills of the powerless to succeed as protectors of life.

The Guardian at the Door Rahab

I S R A E L E N T E R S Canaan in families organized around their men. But the pattern set in the days of Egypt reasserts itself: the men who act for Israel are saved by women. Male generals, first Joshua and then Barak, lead the troops. Nevertheless, female saviors mark both the beginning and the end of the war with the Canaanites. The women are not all members of Israel: Rahab is a Canaanite and Yael a Kenite. But from their marginal position, they move center stage to initiate and terminate the conquest of Canaan. The story begins as the people of Israel, having wandered forty years in the desert, are poised on the edge of the land. Years earlier they were not ready to conquer it. Are they now strong and determined enough to do so? In the first story of the historical books, Joshua, chapter 2, a Canaanite prostitute provides the answer to this question.

The Heroine Harlot (Josh. 2\ι-η) Joshua ben Nun sent out from Shittim two men, spies. He said, "Go! See the land and Jericho." They went and came to the house of a prostitute whose name was Rahab. They slept there. Thus was said to the king of Jericho, "Look! Men have come this night from the Israelites to scout out the land." The king of Jericho sent to Rahab, saying thus: "Bring out the men who come to you, who have come to your house, for they have come to scout out the land." The woman took the two men and hid him. She said, "Yes, the men came to me but I did not know where they were from. The. gate was about to close at dark and the men went out. I do not know where the men went. Chase after them quickly, for you may overtake them!"

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She had taken them up on her roof and hidden them in the flax that was spread out for her on the roof. The men chased after them by way of the crossing of the Jordan. The gate was closed after the pursuers went out. Rahab is a familiar anti-type in folklore, the prostitute with the heart of gold. She has faith in God's might, adopts the Israelites as her own, and rescues them. But at the beginning, Rahab is a triply marginalized woman. From Israel's point of view; she is an outsider; from Canaan's point of view, she is a woman; and even from the Canaanite woman's point of view7, she is a prostitute, outside normal family life. Rahab is smart, proactive, tricky, and unafraid to disobey and deceive her king. Her allegiance to God and Israel make her one of Israel's early saviors. The reconnaissance mission recalls the time forty years earlier when Moses sent twelve choice men, great men of Israel whose names are recorded. He gave them a specific charge: "See whether the people living there are weak or strong, few or numerous; whether this land is good or not good and whether the cities are open or fortified; whether the land is fat or thin, has wood or not, and you shall be strong and bring back fruit" (Num. 13:18 20). But their mission was a terrible failure. Only two of the twelve J o s h u a and Caleb, trusted that Israel could conquer the land. The others, men of noble office and pedigree, did not feel powerful enough to conquer. They reported that the nations were strong, that the land could be lethal, and that there were giants in the land, compared to whom the Israelites looked and felt like grasshoppers (Num. 13:27-33). Seeing the anxiety of the people, God decided that the entire generation had to stay in the wilderness until death overtook them. Now it is time to try again. But this time, Joshua sends two ordinary men to Jericho and does not tell them what they should report. The men go directly to the house of Rahab. The narrator doesn't tell us why. Perhaps they went there because a prostitute's establishment is a good place to blend in unobserved and listen to people. Or, perhaps, men who had been out in the wilderness all their lives headed for a bordello with soft beds and soft women. Whatever their reason, the kingfinds out and sends envoys to demand that Rahab hand over the two men. This message is a direct, explicit order. It covers all circumstances and leaves no room for ambiguity: whether the men have come "to you" (which could mean sexually ) or have only "come to your house," the king wants them. There is no room for Rahab to fudge or misunder-

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stand. This is her moment of truth: she must choose whether to be loyal to her king or to protect the men. And, like the midwives in Egypt, she chooses Israel. Like them, she tries to avoid a frontal attack. Like them, she can deceive the king. Rather than say "No, 1 won't," she declares her total ignorance: "the men came to me, but I did not know from where . . . The gate was about to close at dark and the men went out. I do not know where . . . " It is not surprising to find Rahab acting as the "midwife" of the embryonic Israel. The book of Joshua tells the tale of the entry into Canaan as a mirror image of the Exodus from Egypt, filling the account of the events of the entry with allusions to the Exodus. God promises to be with Joshua as with Moses (Josh. 1:5); flint knives are used in circumcisions (Josh. 5:2 3); Joshua and Moses and only they are told to remove their shoes because they stand on holy ground (Josh. 5:15); and the people cross the Jordan on dry land as they had crossed the Red Sea. The narrator heightens the parallel between Rahab and the Exodus story by using a relatively rare word for "hide," spn, when she conceals the two Israelites under the flax. The form of the verb, the third-person imperfect feminine, wattispenô, "she hid him," is even rarer. Moreover, it has a strange suffix: hiinÌ There are two men under the flax. The incongruous use of the singular suffix draws attention to the only other time the verb occurs in the third-person feminine imperfect. When Moses' mother saves Moses "she hid him," wattispenekû. Rahab hides the Israelites spies just as Moses' mother hid her baby. The women of the Exodus have met their successor. The heart of Rahab s story is the dialogue between her and the spies after the soldiers leave. Faith and Hesed (Jos h. 2:8-14) They had barely lain down when she came up to them on the roof She said to the men, "I know that YHWH has given you this land and that dread has fallen upon us, and that all the inhabitants of the land have melted before you. For we have heard that YHWH dried up the waters of the Reed Sea before you when you left Egypt, and what you did to the two Amorite kings across the Jordan, to Sihon and to Og, that you utterly destroyed them. We heard and our hearts melted, and there is no spirit left in anyone because of you,

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for Y H W H your god is God in heaven above and on the earth below. 'And now, swear to me by YHWH: Inasmuch as I have acted benevolently toward you, you will in turn act benevolently toward my father's household, and you will give me a truthful sign. May you grant life to my father and my mother and my brothers and my sisters and everyone that is theirs! May you rescue our lives from death!" The men said to her, "May our lives die instead of yours, provided you do not tell about this matter of ours. And it will be when Y H W H g we s us this land, we will act benevolently and faithfully toward you." Rahab begins by declaring her faith in God's intentions and might, I know that Y H W H has given you this land. With this statement, the would-be savior acknowledges God and becomes the oracle of Israel's occupation of Canaan, the first of the female oracles who appear throughout the historical books (and are discussed in "Voice," pp. 297-330). Rahab is also the first of the inhabitants of the land to declare her allegiance to God, and she is the first to join Israel. Rahab's speech has a considerable amount of hyperbole: if no one has the spirit to stand against Israel, what are the king of Jericho and his soldiers doing chasing these envoys? But it is an important message, and it is the sum content of the favorable report that the men brought back to Joshua. Rahab s speech is couched in language familiar to readers in ancient Israel. She uses special terms, einiah, "dread," and namag, "melt away," from the vocabulary of Israel's holy war to conquer Canaan. These phrases allude to the great song of Israel's sacred history, the Song of the Sea: "All the dwellers of Canaan are aghast, terror and dread descend upon them" (Exod. 15:15 16). The prediction made by the Song is indeed coming true, the process of conquest has truly started. Her speech also contains all the essential elements of the classic Deuteronomic form of covenants. Her acknowledgment of God's greatness forms the preamble and the prologue; her request for her family's salvation and for a sign of assurance are her stipulations; the Israelites' demand for silence and staying within the house are their stipulations; their promise of salvation or death are their sanctions. She requests the oath that they give, and in the next section they offer the scarlet cord as the physical sign of the treaty

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By all these official treaty elements, the narrator conveys the standard nature of the arrangement by which Rahab allies herself with Israel. Rahab ends with a request. In return for her demonstration of loyalty in saving the spies, Rahab asks for benevolent action, hesed, from Israel. She wants a particular beneficence, that she and her family be spared in the destruction. Israel offers this same hesed in the very short story of the Israelite conquest of Bethel (Judg. 1:22 26), a story that is in many ways a "narrative analogy" to the story of Rahab. The Josephite scouts see a man coming out from Bethel and offer him hesed if he reveals the entrance to his city; when they defeat the city, they spare him. Rahab s benevolence w7ill enable Israel to spare her life. Abimelech king of Gerar requested reciprocal hesed from Abraham: "Do with me according to the hesed that I did to you" (Gen. 21:23). Abimelech proposes a treaty with Abraham, Rahab seeks a similar arrangement with Israel, and both Rahab and Abimelech use legal language to reflect the juridical importance of this treaty transaction. Even though hesed means action beyond any legal requirements, it can form the basis for a new formal arrangement. «ς> Th e Scarlet Cord (Jos h. 2 : 1j-24) She let them down through the window by a rope, for her house was in the fortification wall and she lived in the fortification. She said to them, "Go to the hills, lest the pursuers encounter you. Hide there three days until the pursuers return and then go on your way." The men say to her, "We are quit of this oath that you made us swear. Look! We are coming to the land. Tie this scarlet cord in the window through which you have let us down, and gather into your house your father and your mother and your brothers and all your father's house. And it will be that whoever goes out of your doors to the outside his blood is on his head and we are clear. And all who will be with you in the house—his blood is on our heads if anyone touches him. And if you tell about this matter—we are clear from the oath that you have had us swear." She said, "It is according to your words." She sent them off, and they went. She tied the scarlet cord in the window. They went and came to the hills and stayed there three days, until the pursuers w7ent back.

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The pursuers searched the whole path and didn't find (the men). The two men turned back and came down from the hills and crossed over. They came to Joshua ben Nun and related to him all the things that confronted them. They said to Joshua, "Indeed Y H W H has given the whole land into our hands and the inhabitants of the land are melting away before us." When Rahab 1 owners the men outside her window, she makes a seemingly extraneous remark, " G o to the hills." This is good advice, but why include it in the story? Like so much in this story, the purpose is allusive. A similar phrase appears in the story of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, where the angels tell Lot to "escape to the hills" (Gen. 19:18). By including this phrase, the narrator draws attention to the many similarities between these apparently different stories. They have a similar plot sequence: two strangers lodge in a city, their host defies a demand to "bring out the men," the city is destroyed, the inhabitant who lodged them is saved, and his descendants are identified. There are further parallels. In both stories, the host is marginal to the city's social structure, Lot as an outsider from elsewhere, Rahab as a prostitute. And both stories take place in the Jordanian plain, and may have originated as local legends. The narrator emphasizes the intertextual similarities by using a similar vocabulary, by including the escape to the hills, and by a giveaway lexical allusion in which the narrator reports that Rahab hid the "envoys," hammarakhn (Josh. 6:25), the word for the angels in Sodom. The narrator accomplishes two important goals by writing the story in this fashion: he /she can highlight the assertiveness and proactivity of Rahab in comparison to the hesitant and tentative Lot. And he/she can underscore the evilness of the Canaanite city of Jericho and the fact that it, like Sodom, deserved to be destroyed. The response of the men is equally allusive. Absolving themselves of their original oath, they add an additional stipulation before recommitting themselves. They give her a tiqwat hut haŠsām, a scarlet thread, and tell her to place it on her house. A scarlet cord is known from the legend of Peretz, David's ancestor. When Peretz was born, the midwife wrapped the scarlet cord around Zerah's wrist to show7 that he was the first twin to emerge, but his brother Peretz (the barrier-break) actually came through first. The scarlet cord brings Rahab into the august company of the barrier-breakers of David's ancestry. Moreover, the Israelite

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men explain, the scarlet cord is to be used in a special way. Rahab is to gather her family into her house. During the fighting, only those who stay inside the house marked with the scarlet cord will be safe from the devastation. Once again, the alert reader, ancient or modern, may catch the reference. On the night of the slaying of the firstborn of Egypt, the Israelites marked their doors with lamb's blood and stayed inside. Rahab s family, inside the house marked in red, is to be rescued from Jericho as the Israelites were from Egypt. When the Israelites conquered Jericho, Joshua remembered the promise the spies had made. In the Midst of Israel (Josh. 6:21-25) They utterly destroyed everything in the city male and female, young and old, ox and lamb, and ass, (all) by the sword. To the two men who spied out the land, Joshua said, "Come to the house of the prostitute and take out from there the woman and all that is hers, as you swore to her." The spy-lads went and took out Rahab and her father and her mother and her brothers and everything she had. They took her whole family and placed them outside Israel's camp. They burnt by fire the city and all in it. One exception: they took the silver and the gold and the bronze and copper implements into the treasury of YHWH's house. Joshua granted life to Rahab the prostitute and all her father's house and everything she had. She dwells in the midst of Israel until this very day, for she hid the envoys whom Joshua sent to spy out Jericho. Joshua sent the two men to Rahab s house, they brought her and her family out, and she lives in the midst of Israel, beqereb yisrael, until this very day. The family of Rahab reenacts the drama of Israel, and this resourceful outsider, Rahab the trickster, is a new Israel. All has ended happily: Israel has been enriched by the family of a heroine, and the conquest has begun. But is this the way the conquest is supposed to proceed? According to Deuteronomy, the inhabitants of the land ought to be destroyed: "You must doom them to destruction, make no pacts with them, grant them no quarter" (Deut. 7:2). Heran, total war, is an important motif in the

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story of the conquest of Jericho. Chapter 6 uses eleven variations of the verb hrm, summarizing the conquest with the statement "They utterly destroyed everything in the city." Right after this record of total destruction, Joshua sends the spies in to get Rahab, and "The spy-lads went and took out Rahab and her father and her mother and her brothers and everything she had." In the light of herem, it seems strange to see Rahab and her whole family joining Israel, and one might conclude that the first thing the Israelites did on entering Canaan was break the rule of the herem. The saving of Rahab seems even more problematic when it is seen in juxtaposition to the next chapter in Joshua, which tells how the Israelites were defeated at Ai because of a violation of the herem at Jericho. God instructs Joshua to call the people to an oracular procedure to determine who took the herem. Herem in your midst (Josh. 7:13) Arise, sanctify the people and say, "Sanctify yourselves for tomorrow for thus says Y H W H , 'There is herem in your midst, Israel! You will not be able to stand before your enemies until you take away the herem. from your midst.' " The oracular process narrows down to Achan, who confesses that he took a beautiful Sumerian cloak, two hundred silver shekels, and a gold tongue, all of which are found buried in his tent and brought out. As a result, Achan, the loot, his children, his animals, and his goods are taken to the valley burned with fire, and stoned. At that place, they set up a large heap of stones as a marker, which is there "until this day" Parallel phrases point out the contrasts between Rahab s story and Achan s. Israel must take away the "herem in your midst," but Rahab is in the midst of Israel; Achan s whole household is stoned and Rahab s whole household is saved. The mound of stones that marks the violation stands until this day and Rahab lives in Israel until this day. Rahab is saved despite the herem. If the purpose of the herem is to prevent contamination by foreign ideas, it would seem that saving people from the herem is a more serious violation than saving a cloak, and the reader might begin to suspect that there is a dark side to the Rahab story. And yet the book of Joshua does not present it that way. The two stories contain a discourse on the nature of obedience to the herein. God punishes Achan s "liberation" of the cloak by a defeat at Ai, but follows the men's promise to Rahab by a glorious conquest of Jericho, a victory achieved

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by God's miraculous intervention in felling the walls. Israel has clearly not angered God by agreeing to save Rahab. When Achan ignored the heran for selfish reasons, all of Israel was punished and could not conquer Ai until he was found and executed; when the men of Israel ignored the Ii erem as an act of hesed to repay hesed, then God reacted by miraculously conquering Jericho. The juxtaposition of the stories implies that the herem is not an absolute , and is superseded by issues of justice and mercy. The application of the herem is also at issue in the next group of stories in the book of Joshua. Chapter 9 presents the Gibeonites, w7ho pretend to be a faraway nation. Gibeon's Approach (Josh.

9:6-11)

They went to Joshua, to the camp at Gilgal. They said to him, "To the man of Israel, we have come from a far land. And now; cut a treaty with us." The man of Israel said to the Hivite, "Perhaps you live in my midst how could I cut a treaty with you?" They said to Joshua, "We are your servants." Joshua said, "Who are you and where have you come from?" They said to him, "From a very far-off land, your servants come for the sake of YHWH your God. For we have heard his reputation, everything he did in Egypt, and everything he did to the two Amorite kings who are over the Jordan, to Sihon king of Heshbon and to Og king of Bashan in Ashtaroth. Our elders and all the inhabitants of the land said, 'Take provisions and go meet them and tell them, "We are your servants." ' Now cut a treaty with us." Like Rahab, they seek alliance, "For we have heard." And as with Rahab, what they have heard is the story of Egypt and the destruction of Sihon and Og. The name of YHWH has grown great, the report has gone out. The kings of the Amorites gather to fight, but the Gibeonites are moved by this report to try to ally themselves with Israel. The Israelites know that they should not make an alliance if "you live in my midst." Since the Gibeonites know7 this in advance (for they7, like Rahab, seem to have studied Deuteronomy), they trick Israel into believing that they come from far away, and Joshua grants them their treaty. Once again, a smart outsider has escaped the herem and joined Israel. And once again, God shows approval by coming to the aid of Israel with a miracle.

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When Israel comes to rescue the Gibeonites from the Amorites, God makes the sun stand still. Rahab and the Gibeonites refer to Egypt and to Sihon and Og. In each case, God "hardened the heart" of the kings. Exodus tells us that Pharoah first hardened his own heart; then God hardened it. Possibly this was true also of Sihon and Og: since Sihon and Og wanted to fight Israel, God made their resolve even firmer. The Rahab and Gibeon stories may represent an old tradition that remembered the conquest as a process during which many inhabitants of the land survived, became aligned with Israel, and ultimately joined it. According to this tradition, heran applied only to those nations or kings who actively opposed Israel. The battles of conquest were "defensive." These stories show that there was an alternative to resisting the Israelites; those who were convinced by the reports of God's might were assimilated rather than destroyed. Such a view of the amalgamation and incorporation of local inhabitants is strikingly like the account of the settlement of Israel that is currently accepted by archaeologists and historians. The book of Joshua is part of the Deuteronomistic history, and Deuteronomy does not trust foreign alliances and foreign women. To Deuteronomy, the very purpose of the herem. is to prevent the introduction of "foreign" ideas into Israel, and the nations that remain are sources of danger. From this point of view, the rescue of Rahab would look like Israel's first act of apostasy, committed immediately upon Israel's entry into the land. The Deuteronomist does not make any direct negative statements, but the repeated use of the verb herem in Joshua insinuates the suspicion that saving Rahab contains the first seeds of the nation's destruction. The very first words of the Rahab story may hint at Deuteronomic disapproval. The narrator informs us that when Joshua sent out the spies, he was at Shittim, the place where Israel angered God in the incident of Ba'al-Pe'or. When Zimri brought the Midianite princess Cozbi into the Israelite camp, Phineas the priest stabbed them both. As we juxtapose these two Shittim stories, Rahab's position, profession, and name take on new significance. Rahab is a prostitute, zônah, and the word for Israel's faithlessness at Shittim is zanah. The names of the two women show7 the different attitudes of the two stories. Cozbi's name means "deception," and she was killed immediately. Phineas gave her no chance to profess her loyalty to God or to Israel. To Phineas, the sight of a foreign woman was such a danger that she must be eradicated immediately, she and the man who brought her. Had this same Phineas been in charge at

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Jericho, Rahab too might have been killed. By contrast, Rahab's name means "wide, broad." She is the "broad of Jericho." Her name is emblematic of the permeable boundaries of Israel. She is the wide-open woman who is the wide-open door to Canaan, or maybe (in the negative view) the wide-open door to apostasy. To Phineas and Deuteronomy, open boundaries are dangerous; others can see them as presenting an opportunity. In the Rahab story, the negativity implied sotto voce by the mention of Shittim and the reminders of the herem is more than counterbalanced by the positive images that the story projects. Rahab's persona has many of Israel's classic hero themes. She is a female savior, like the mothers of the Exodus. She is a trickster outsider, like Jacob in Laban's house, one who survives by her wits and comes to God by her faith. Rahab the whore is also the outsider's outsider, the most marginal of the marginal. She is the quintessential downtrodden with whom Israel identifies. Just as her pious behavior reverses expectations of how prostitutes act, so her elevation is a reversal of the normal expectations for a prostitute's future. YHWH interrupts normative societal expectations by exalting the prostitute just as YHWH interrupted expectations by choosing the younger sons and freeing the slaves. The saving of Rahab is part of and an example of God's nature and Israel's mission.

Warriors by Weapon and Word Deborah and Yael

into Canaan, changes its role. It is a time of conquest, a time of war. The Israelites have become fighters, and the saviors of Israel—women as well as men—have to be aggressors. The times call for warriors, and two warrior women appear in the decisive defeat of the Canaanites. One, Deborah, initiates the battle, calling the troops to action and declaring the start of hostilities. The other, Yael, delivers the coup de grâce that completes the defeat of Canaan. These women are remembered in both story and song. The story is in Judges 4, and the song is in Judges 5. The Song of Deborah is a very ancient poem, one of the earliest writings that the Bible preserves: it was most probably written in the eleventh century, soon after the events it records. The story reached its present shape much later in Israel's history The two literary creations have subtly different attitudes, and in placing them side by side, the historian of the book of Judges encourages the reader to read them together as well as separately. ISRAEL, CROSSING

Deborah (Judg. 4:4-16; Judg. 5:1-31) Deborah was very different from the savior women we have already encountered. They were private women; she was a recognized public figure. They lived ordinary lives until the politico-military world intruded into their realm; Deborah was active in the public arena as part of her normal everyday life. Her role as leader began sometime before the events related in the narratives by which she is remembered, but how she became a leader is one of the many facets of her life that went unrecorded, Deborah, Prophet and Judge (Judg. 4:4-5) Deborah the prophetess-woman, Lapidot-woman—she judged Israel at that time.

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She would sir under "Deborah's Palm Tree" between Ramah and Beth-El on Mount Ephraim, and the Israelites went up to her for judgment. The record begins as Israel is oppressed by Yabin king of Hazor. Deborah is a prophet-woman, someone who speaks with divine authority, and she is Lapidot-woman. Éšet lapidot could be translated "wife of Lapidot," but it also means "woman of torches." Lappîdôt, "torches," comes where we would ordinarily expect a husband's name, but it is a strange-sounding name for a man and, moreover, does not have the standard patronymic "son of." The reader must decide whether to translate lapidot as a. name or a noun. Translating it "wife of Lapidot" has the advantage of emphasizing that a prophet could be married and that a married woman could have another role. On the other hand, "woman of torches" or "fiery woman" fits the image of Deborah and would fit the story in the manner of biblical names. "Torch-Lady" provides a significant wordplay, for it is Deborah, not her husband, who is the torch that sets the general Barak (whose name means "lightning") on fire. Moreover, in Mesopotamian mythology, the torch and the lightning (snllat and hanis) are the heralds of the storm god. In the same way "TorchLady" and "Lightning" are fit agents for the God of Israel who defeats Sisera by creating a river of mud to incapacitate his chariots. The story also tells us that Deborah judged Israel. The "judges" were Israel's charismatic leaders in the days before the monarchy. These leaders usually acquired their political authority after they saved Israel through battle. The first such judge, Othniel ben Kenaz, set the pattern: the oppressed people cried out to God, "the spirit of YHWH came upon him (Othniel), he judged Israel and went out to battle, and YHWH gave Cushan Rishatayim king of Aram into his hand" (Judg. 3:10). Did Deborah become a judge in the same way, by leading a group in battle? Or perhaps she acquired her authority by offering sage advice that led to a victory or by predicting an important matter that came true. The story never tells us. The Song of Deborah is no more interested in Deborah's biography than the story is, but it may give a hint of how Deborah rose to importance. In the Song, Deborah describes a total breakdown of order in Israel. Wayfarers had to go by roundabout ways to avoid danger; in those days there was no rescue "Until I arose, Deborah, until 1 arose, a mother in Israel" (Judg. 5:7). Somehow Deborah imposed order on Israel. How this happened, neither the poem nor the story records. Their silence on

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such important matters is a reminder that neither the story nor the Song was framed as a record of Deborah's life. The biblical story is not a biography: it is a memory of Israel's defeat of Canaan, a defeat in which Deborah played an important role. Only this role is remembered, and when the action begins, Deborah is already in mid-career. The rest of her legend is unrecorded and unpreserved. One day, Deborah called Barak.

Summons to Battle (Judg.

4:6-10)

She sent and called for Barak ben Abinoam from QecieshNaftali. She said to him, "Did not Y H W H God of Israel command: 'Go and pull toward Mount Tabor and take with you ten thousand men from the men of Naphtali and Zebulun. I will draw Sisera the head of Yabin's army and his chariotry and masses to Wacii Kishon and I will give him into your hand.' " Barak said to her, "if you go with me, I will go. If you will not go with me, I will not go." She said, "I will indeed go with you, especially since you will get no glory on the way you are going, for into the hand of a woman Y H W H will deliver Sisera." Deborah rose and went with Barak to Qedesh. Barak mustered Zebulun and Naphtali to Qedesh. Ten thousand men went up at his feet, and Deborah w7ent up with him. What prompted Deborah to call Barak? Perhaps the people initiated the call. The story tells us that the Israelites went up to her for judgment. This verse describes the way she used to judge Israel, arbitrating disputes between Israelites as once Moses had done, and as a prophet, possibly also being asked for oracular decisions about political and administrative matters. But the narrator introduces a new tense, the imperfect, with the verb went up to her, wayya diu (v. 5), so that the phrase may also serve as a bridge between the background information and the initiation of the action. The people not only regularly went to her for decisions, they came to her one day for a particular kind of "judgment." The poem provides a hint as to what they wanted: "Then the people of Y H W H went down to the gates: Awake, awake, Deborah. Awake, awake, speak a song. Arise, Barak, take your captives, son of Abinoam' "

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(Judg. 5:12). This anguished outcry may have impelled Deborah to begin the redemption. Deborah calls Barak in her role as a prophet, an envoy of God. Such prophetic initiation of battle was known in the ancient Near East; in Assyria it was called a sir takilti, a "song of support." The Assyrian records preserve the report of a liver omen that Esarhaddon received before his fight for power in which the divination experts tell him "Go without delay!" Deborah's call to " G o " is in this tradition. Moreover, Deborah hints that she is following up on a previous call to Barak: Did not YHWIi God of Israel command? God has spoken to Barak, and Deborah's call is a second summons. Barak is reluctant to go, like Moses before him, like Gideon and Samuel later in Israel's history, others called by God to be envoys. He seeks assurance that God is really with him and insists that Deborah go with him to the battle staging area where the warriors assemble. Readers have often been bothered by Barak's reluctance to go without Deborah, declaring that his hesitation makes him "less manly" or tarnishes his glory. But Barak has good reason to be insecure: Yabin, after all, has nine hundred chariots! Moreover, prophets have an important role to play in battle. Letters from the ancient city of Mari show7 that prophets sent word to King Zimri-Lim to give assurance and advice in battle, and Assyrian inscriptions record omens in which prophets urged the king to take action and promise the presence and protection of the gods. The Esarhaddon oracle cited above continues, "We will go by your side and slay your enemies." Prophets play several roles in battle: they muster and inspire the troops, and also declare the correct, auspicious time to begin. The Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Bible, understands this second role of battle oracles, for it adds to Barak's request the phrase "because I do not know on what day the Lord will send his angel to my side." Prophets are such an important presence in battle that Elijah and Elisha are called "Israel's chariot and cavalry." Many readers of this story have been particularly troubled by the presence of women in war, believing that they are somehow out of place there and assuming that ancient Israelites would have felt the same way. But one of our earliest literary creations, the Sumerian epic "Enmerkar and the Lords of Aratta," shows the king consulting with a female sage. Most of the Assyrian prophets were women, and reports from both the ancient and more recent Near East show a consistent pattern of the presence of women to inspire the troops and taunt the enemy. There is no reason to think that biblical readers found anything

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strange about Barak's request to Deborah, in her capacity as either prophet or woman. Ο

The Battle (Judg.

4:13-16)

Sisera mustered all his chariotry nine hundred iron chariots, and all his people from Haroshe th-Hagoyim to Wadi Kishon. Deborah said to Barak, 'Arise, for this is the day that Y H W H gives Sisera into your hand. Does not Y H W H go out before you?" Barak quickly descended from Mount Tabor and ten thousand men after him. Y H W H distressed Sisera and all the chariotry and all the camp by the sword before Barak and Sisera descended from his chariot and fled on foot. Barak chased the chariots and the camp to Harosheth-Hagoyim and fell 011 Sisera's camp with the sword. Not even one remained. Sisera fled 011 foot to the tent of Yael the wife of Heber the Kenite . . . On Mount Tabor, Deborah the prophet announces the victory, "God will deliver Sisera." She announces God's presence, "Does not God go out before you/' and sets the battle, "Arise, for this is the day." She herself does not go down to the battle. Like Moses, Deborah is not a battle commander. Her role is to inspire, predict, and celebrate in song. Her weapon is the word, and her very name is an anagram of "she spoke" (dibberah). The battle itself is not essential. It is important only to remember that God fought: God distressed Sisera. Deborah has announced God's victory, Barak has facilitated it, and God has saved Israel. The Song of Deborah provides a glimpse of how God defeated Canaan: God brought a flash flood that made a bog of sliding mud in which chariots were useless. Barak destroys the Canaanites, but Sisera escapes to meet his destiny. Both the story and the song emphasize the fact that Deborah is a woman. The story tells us that she was a prophetess-woman, adding the word "woman," 'išŠah, when the female noun "prophetess," nelnah, already conveys that information. She is called "Lapidot"-woman or Lapidot s woman, again repeating the word "woman," 'ēšet. And the song stresses that Deborah was a "mother in Israel." The femaleness is nei-

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ther hidden nor incidental: it is an integral part of the story. Deborah is not the typical "mother ": she does not stay at home protecting the children and awaiting the return of her husband. If she had children, they played no part in the story. The motherhood of this "mother in Israel" goes beyond biology. It describes her role as counselor during the days before the war, and it indicates her role in preserving the heritage of Israel, in her case by advising in battle. There is another sense of "mother" in this poem, one very foreign to most modern readers, but well illustrated in an ancient oracle to Ashurbanipal. The oracle took the form of a nocturnal vision in which the goddess Ishtar of Arbela appeared in full battle array. The priest who had the vision reports: "You (Ashurbanipal) were standing in front of her and she spoke to you like a real mother . . . giving the following instructions: 'Wait with the attack, for wherever you intend to go I also am ready to go.' " After Ashurbanipal says he will go with her, the priest continues, "She wrapped you in her lovely baby sling, protecting your entire body. Her face shone like fire. Then [she went out in a frightening way] to defeat your enemies, against Teumman, king of 1:1am, with whom she was angry." In this vision, Ishtar acts like a mother precisely when she protects the king while defeating his enemies. The Assyrians, like us, rarely thought of women as warriors. Ishtar, whom they called "the one who smites the heads of the enemy," was the great exception. But the observation that mothers protect their young against enemies is a universal one. Deborah, the "mother in Israel," protected the people in time of danger. Deborah sees herself in juxtaposition with the mother of Sisera. The Canaanite general's mother plays a role more typically assigned to women in times of war. Like Atossa, the mother of Xerxes in Aeschylus' play Perseus, Sisera's mother stays at home, imagining the battle and awaiting the return of her son. Deborah's and Sisera's mothers stand in the poem as opposite poles between which the Israelites and Canaanites contest. At first it seems that Deborah is going to sympathize with her, mother to mother. But the first glimpse turns malevolent, for Deborah portrays Sisera's mother eagerly awaiting the defeat of Israel. Nor does Sisera's mother (in Deborah's vision) show any sympathy for Israelite women, for she sits gloating over the many girls her son will bring back as spoils. These mothers do not arc in solidarity ewer the tragedy of war; on the contrary, each has sympathy only for her own people. As "mother in Israel," Deborah is fiercely protective of her own—she is not a member of some international club of mothers.

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The fullest sense of Deborah as mother is revealed in her name, which is not only an anagram of "she spoke"; it is also a noun meaning "bee," This name may hint at the fullest sense of her as "mother in Israel/' Like the queen bee, she raises up the swarm for battle, sending out the drones to protect the hive and conquer new territory.

The Coup de Grâce: Yael (Judg. 4:17-21; 5:24-27) Judges 5 is the victory song that Deborah sang after the defeat of the Canaanites. The language is archaic, and scholars agree that this is a very ancient poem, written soon after the events, and perhaps by Deborah herself. In the Song, Deborah dates the happenings "in the days of Shamgar ben Anat, in the days of Yael" (Judg. 5:6), associating Yael with the victorious Shamgar who smote six hundred Philistines (Judg. 3:31). She depicts the battle and the parts she and Barak played, and pronounces praise for the tribes who participated and curses for those who didn't. Then, abruptly, she changes both tone and topic.

Yael, the Song (Judg. 5:24-2 j) Blessed be Yael by women, Blessed be the wife of Heber the Kenite by women in the tent. He asked for water, she gave him milk; In a beautiful beaker she brought the keffir. She sent forth her hand to the tent peg, her right hand to a workman's striking tool. She struck Sisera, she pierced his head, she crushed it and pierced the hollow of his head. Between her legs he sank to his knees, he fell, he lay Between her legs he sank to his knees and lay. Where he sank to his knees, there he lay, destroyed.

Here is the warrior Yael whom Deborah mentioned at the beginning of her song. A woman warrior, perhaps married, the wife of Heber the Kenite. And perhaps not, for heber means "a group." Instead of Yael the wife of Heber the Kenite, the Song may refer to Yael the woman of a band of Kenites. Whether mentioned or not, the husbands of Yael and Deborah play no role in the action. But Yael's womanness is important: she is ušah, "woman'' (or wife). Deborah calls on women to praise her; translators who are perhaps influenced by the way they read Elizabeth's blessing of Mary ("blessed among women," Luke 1:42) often put it that

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Yael is most blessed of women. There is a subtle difference: to translate "most blessed of women" is to imply that Yael is alone among women to be such a heroine; Blessed be Yael by women calls for women to claim Yael as their own heroine and even role model. The Hebrew tebörak minnāšim yael can be understood both ways. The reader must decide: Do all women have this capacity for ferocity and courage? But the translator decides for the reader, who never sees the Hebrew. Beyond the ambiguity there is clarity: Deborah finds Yael praiseworthy. When the warrior comes to her tent, Yael treats him with dignity. Then, as he stands there, Yael grabs the tools she has on hand and fells him, smashing his skull and piercing it. The more familiar story portrays a sleeping Sisera, but in the Song, he is erect, and sinks to his knees and falls prone as she stands over him. The Song emphasizes that he lay between her legs. Midrash and some modern scholars see sexual allusion here, envisioning a scene in which Yael disarms Sisera through sexual enticement, or even, says a midrash, through exhausting him sexually, once for each "between her legs." But the image of Sisera falling between Yael's legs is not a sexual allusion. It is rather a savage grotesquery of childbirth. Sisera doesn't find sexual release and the petit mort ("little death") of orgasm; he finds total death. Rather than being delivered to life, he is delivered to death. The Song delights in this and repeats the phrase "between her legs" twice, for in delivering Sisera to death, Yael helped deliver Israel to life. Just as the "motherhood" of Deborah involved directing battle, this savage "motherhood" of Yael "rebirths" Sisera to his death. Yael is Sisera's last "mother," and as he lies there, defeated, the scene shifts to Sisera's birth mother. Like Yael, she is at home. But instead of going home to his birth mother, Sisera has come to the home of his death mother. His birth mother imagines that he is late because he is taking women as booty: "a girl, two girls for each man" (Judg. 5:30). Instead, two "girls" have finished him off. One, Deborah, encouraged Barak; the other, Yael, made him a battle casualty For this act, Yael is a heroine and a role model: Blessed be Yael by women, blessed be the wife of Heber the Kenite by women in the tents! Women in their tents may not go out to the battlefield, but they can still be the saviors of Israel. Yael kills her enemy, an unusual act for a woman. Even the savior women generally save by prolonging the life of their own people, rather than ending the life of the enemy. The saviors of Exodus and Conquest saved Israelites by doing in terrible circumstances exactly what women

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do in normal rimes: nurturing and preserving lives. Yael kills. The stories of the women warriors sometimes show unease with their actions, but in this ancient song there is no such ambivalence: Blessed be Yael. How did Yael come to be near the battlefield? Why did she act on behalf of Israel? The Song tells us nothing, but the story answers the first question. As Deborah and Barak go to Kadesh, the story interrupts the preparations for battle to note a new7 character, Heber the Kenite, "separated from the Kenites, from the children of Hobab, Moses' father-inlaw, and pitched his tent at the terebinth tree in Soanim which was by Kadesh" (Judg. 4:11). The narrator then turns to Sisera's preparations. The tent, and Hebers wife, become significant only after the battle.

Yael, the Story (Judg. 4:17-23) Scene 1. Invitation (Judg. 4:17-18) Sisera fled on foot to the tent of Yael the wife of Heber the Kenite, for there was peace between Yabin king of Hazor and the house of Heber the Kenite. Yael came out to meet Sisera. She said to him, "Turn aside, my lord, turn aside to me. Don t be afraid!" He turned in to her, to the tent. She covered him with a blanket. The story tells us that Heber had a treaty with the Canaanites. This makes sense: Kenites were often smiths, and Heber may have pitched his tent not too far from the battle in order to service the weaponry. Knowing that Heber worked for Yabin, Sisera may have assumed that Heber s wife would be loyal to her husband's ally. Sisera may have been simply looking for shelter, for Heber is part of the family of Moses' father-inlaw, a priest, and a Kenite s tent would represent sanctuary. There are also indications that Kenite women, like Midianite women, had a cultic role, and Sisera could have seen Yael as a priestly functionary. Yael's invitation to Sisera seems odd. Women do not usually encourage men to enter their tents, and her invitation may be a hint to the reader that all expectations of hospitality are about to be turned upside down. Yael's words may hint that she knows who he is, for her invitation "turn aside," sûrah, which she repeats twice, is reminiscent of the name Sisera. At the end, when she sees Barak, she offers to show7 him "the man whom you seek" (Judg. 4:22). Her invitation to this man whom she rec-

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ognizes may indicate that she already has a plan to dispatch him. Sisera, however, is not suspicious, for he has no reason to expect that Yael has ulterior motives for inviting him in, and her actions once he is inside do nothing to arouse his suspicions. Scene 2. Mothering him to death (Judg. 19 23) She covered him with a blanket. He said to her, "Give me a little water to drink, for I am thirst)7." She opened the skein of milk, gave him drink, and covered him. He said to her, "Stand at the gate of the tent so that if a man comes and questions you and asks, 'Is there a man here?,' then you will say, 'No!' " Yael the wife of Heber took the tent peg and placed the mallet in her hand. She came to him quietly and stuck the peg through the hollow7 of his head and through into the ground. He was alseep. He was tired and he died. Look! Barak is chasing after Sisera. Yael went out to meet him. She said to him, "Come and I will show you the man that you are seeking." He came with her and look! Sisera is lying dead and the tent peg is in his head. At first, Yael seems exactly like all other women. She is at home, not on the battlefield. She welcomes Sisera into her home and begins to nurture him, covering him with a blanket. When he politely asks for water, she gives him fresh milk and covers him again. More than just a hostess, she acts as a mother, and as her mothering enables him to feel secure, he asks her to hide him and lie about his whereabouts. The request seems reasonable, but the tone is not. He had asked politely, even superpolitely, for a little bit of water. Now revived and confident, he starts to issue orders. His demand that Yael stand at the door is not polite: not only does he not say "please," he curtly uses the masculine command form rather than the proper address for a woman. Yael's nurture is beginning to bring out his habit of command. Her mothering also makes him feel secure enough to fall asleep. Yael kills him as he lies asleep, and the narrator adds that he had been very tired. The. picture of Yael sneaking up on an exhausted Sisera is very ciif-

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ferent from the Song's portrait of the fierce woman who attacks him. Sisera's death seems ignoble, a death that would humiliate him in the eyes of warriors. In the story (not the Song), Yael's act shames him; Sisera is unmanned as well as killed. It also may shame Barak, who pursues Sisera only to find him already dead. Deborah had foretold that Barak's battle with Canaan would not bring him personal glory "for into the hand of a woman YHWH will deliver Sisera." And indeed Barak never became a political leader in Israel. And as for the image of women: Yael in the story stands for stealth rather than ferocity. The Song remembers Yael of Strength; the story Yael of Stealth. Neither presents a Yael of Seduction. That is left to later readers, beginning with the Graeco-Roman period, when many of the biblical stories about women were eroticized. The figure of Yael is often merged with a much later heroine whose story is presented in the Apocryphal book of Judith. Judith's story, written in the Graeco-Roman period, is set at the time of the Assyrian invasion of Israel. The Assyrian general Holofernes besieged Bethulia (Bethel), called for surrender, and announced his intention to mutilate the men of the city. Long before, Nahash the Ammonite besieged Jabesh-Gilead with a similar demand, but Saul had mustered Israel in his first act of kingship and rescued the city (Judg. 11). But the Assyrians put an end to the kingship of the North; no help can be expected from a king, and the elders of the city are ready to surrender. Once again, it is time for an old-fashioned savior, and the spirit of YHWH rests on Judith, a pious widow in order to save Israel, she removes her widow's garb, clothes herself sumptuously and has her hair dressed in splendid Hellenistic fashion. The result is that she is so stunningly beautiful that she is able to walk past the guards of a city under siege, past the guards of the Assyrian camp, and reach Holofernes, who invites her to dine. Judith comes to dinner bearing a bag of parched corn (her Kosher food), and sits and eats it while Holofernes drinks more than he ever has before and falls drunk at her feet. She takes his sword, cuts off his head, puts his head in the bag she brought with her, and goes back to her city The rest of the book is a paean of praise that makes allusion to all the old heroes of Israel, including Yael. The similarities between Yael and Judith are obvious: both are domestic women who kill the enemy general. But the differences are equally striking. The story portrays Judith in erotic terms and describes both her beauty and the male reaction to it. There is no doubt that her beauty is the weapon by which Judith saves Israel. Yael's appearance, by contrast, is never described, nor does Sisera react to her as anything but a source

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of help. The difference between Yael and Judith is precisely the difference between biblical ideas and the ideas that came into Israel from the Greek world. In classical biblical works, the beauty of women is never their weapon. It can make them vulnerable to male desires, as with Sarah and Bathsheba, but it does not help them manipulate such desires. It is not until Esther, one of the latest of the biblical books, that the beauty of women is any use to them, and even Esther cannot rely on her beauty to influence Ahasuerus. Many modern readers feel great discomfort about Yael's actions, accusing her of failing to observe her husband's treaty, violating hospitality, and deceiving her guest. Elizabeth Cady Stanton is perhaps the most extreme (but not by much) when she writes, "the deception and cruelty practiced on Sisra by Jael under the guise of hospitality is Revolting . . . it is more like the work of a fiend than of a woman." But the Bible contains no such condemnation of Yael's actions. The Song has no such qualms and praises Yael. The story may reflect some sense that men should have been able to do the job, but it clearly portrays Yael as acting in accordance with the divine will, and in fulfillment of a divine oracle. The story presents no real shame for Barak, for no one man could have delivered Israel. God has an interest in both saving Israel and having Israel realize that God is the savior. In the Gideon story God insists that Gideon take only three hundred men to battle so that it will be obvious that God rather than Gideon is the ultimate, savior (Judg. 8). In the defeat of Canaan, God carries out the salvation of Israel both directly, through the storm, and by the combination of men and women, each doing part of the deliverance. Yael confounds all expectations. The tent does not always make the warrior secure. An old Canaanite tale, the Aqhat epic, conveys a similar message. Aqhat angers the fierce goddess Anat. Later he sits alone in a tent, eating, when Anat s servant Yotpan swoops down in the form of a vulture and strikes him in the head so that he dies. A ferocious woman will find you in the tent. Yael reverses Sisera's expectation that she will protect him, an expectation that many readers share in their assumption of what a "hostess" will do. And she completely inverts the common experience of women in war. When a warrior approaches a tent in wartime, we normally fear, not for the warrior but for the woman inside. We brace ourselves for a violent rape in which the warrior brutally penetrates the woman. Instead, it is Yael who penetrates with her weapon. Women in their tents are not always victims. Yael, the woman of action, never explains her actions. Did she feel the

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divine call, directly from God or through God's prophet Deborah? Did she fear what might happen when this newly imperious Sisera would awake? Was she loyal to Israel despite her husband's employment by the Canaanites? The Kenites, after all, were normally closely allied with Israel. Or did she reason that those chasing the general might find her hiding him and punish her as his ally? Neither the story nor the Song tell us anything about her: she is the heroine of the moment. Her own motives do not count. She fulfills God's oracle, and whatever she might have been thinking, God delivered Sisera into her hands. Rahab and Yael have a lot in common. This is not readily apparent, for they seem very different. Rahab is a prostitute and Yael a married woman (at least in the story); Rahab has her own establishment and Yael lives in her husband's tent. But these distinctions are superficial and arbitrary, pernicious oppositions that have nothing to do with the lives of these women but are imposed by our own categorizations of women as "good" (married, in her husband's home) and "bad" (prostitute at large). In truth, they have significant similarities. Both are women marginalized within their own society, Rahab as a prostitute and Yael as a Kenite in Canaan. As a result, neither has a stake in the power structure of Canaan. They are living their normal lives, each in her own house, when political events encroach upon them as the Israelite men come to Rahab's house and Sisera to Yael's tent. Each has a "moment of truth" when her destiny is thrust upon her and she has to demonstrate her loyalties: Rahab to the spies or the king of Jericho, Yael to Sisera or Israel. At that moment, confronted by history and destiny, each woman abandons whatever claims the Canaanites might have to her loyalties, deceives the Canaanite men, and acts for God and Israel.

A Wise Woman of Power

the only woman with political authority in the early days of Israel's history. During the account of a revolt against King David, the story of Sheba ben Bichri, a figure of the revolt, leads us to the town of Abel-bet-Ma acah, where we find a "wise woman" in charge. Sheba flees to the town with David's general Joab in pursuit. D E B O R A H WAS N O T

The Wise Woman of Abel (2 Sam. 20:13-20) The siege (2 Sam. 20:15 11) They gathered and came after him. They came and laid siege against him in Abel-bet-Ma'acah. They cast a ramp against the city and it stood at the rampart. All the people with Joab were engaging in destruction in order to topple the wall. A wise woman called from the city, "Hear me, hear me! Say to Joab, 'Come close up to here and 1 will speak to him.' " He approached her. The pursuit turns into a siege. Joab throws a ramp against the town wall and is about to destroy the wall when a woman calls. Hers is the voice of the besieged, who are fellow Israelites. The battle stops; the wise woman asks Joab to approach. Despite her prominence, she is not named; she is called a "wise woman." Women who have names are each totally unique. Rivka is the mother of Israel, Rahab the only Canaanite prostitute to join Israel, Deborah the only woman prophet-judge in Israel's memory. But the namelessness of this woman is an indication that she was not the only "wise woman" in Israel. The Bible remembers another, the Wise Woman of Tekoa, probably because she too played a role in David's story (2 Sam. 14). Their namelessness indicates that there were still others, that "wise woman" indicates a particular role. The

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Bible never spells out their role, but as the story continues, it demonstrates that they occupied a position of leadership. The woman calls to Joab to approach. Coming close to a wall during a siege can be very dangerous. Abimelech the son of Gideon died an ignoble death when he. came, too near the wall of a besieged city. He was on the verge of winning as he approached the wall, but an unknown woman dropped a millstone on him and cracked his skull (Judg. 9:53). Joab knows this story. He himself mentioned the death of Abimelech when he sent a messenger to inform King David of the battle in which Bathsheba's husband died. Nevertheless, when the woman tells him to approach, he does so. His willingness to risk it is an indication that the "wise woman" who calls him is not simply a woman who happens to be smart. She is an official. As such, she is calling him in her official capacity to a formal parley. Parleys always involve a temporary cease-fire. No one will rain things on Joab s head during a parley, and he can safely draw near to negotiate with her. The peacemaker (2 Sam. 20:1η zz) She said, 'Are you Joab?" and he said, "1 am." She said, "Listen to the words of your servant." He said, "I am listening." She said thus: "They have always spoken thus since early times: 'Let them inquire at Abel and then they will conclude.' I am of the peacemakers of the faithful of Israel. You are seeking to kill a mother city in Israel. Why would you swallow up YHWH's patrimony?" Joab spoke up and said, "God forbid! God forbid that I should swallow up or destroy. That is not the issue. Rather, a man from Mount Ephraim by the name of Sheba ben Bichri raised his hand against King David. Give him alone and I will go away from the city" The woman said to Joab, "Look! His head is thrown to you over the wall." The woman came to all the people in her Wise-Womanhood. They cut off the head of Sheba ben Bichri and threw it to Joab. He blew the shofar and they dispersed from the city each to his tent. Joab went back to Jerusalem to the king.

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The Wise Woman knows it is up to her to avert the attack. She must choose her words carefully. Like Abigail in a similar situation not long before, and like the Shunammite as she desperately speaks to convince Elisha to heal her son, the Wise Woman begins with the humility of a supplicant petitioner, calling herself "your servant." At the same time, her "listen to the words" highlights the importance of what she is about to say And her next words draw upon Israelite custom and knowledge. Abel, she declares, is known in Israel as a place to go to render decisions and settle disputes. "They have always spoken thus since early times: 'Let them inquire at Abel and then they will conclude. ' " Just as the people came to Deborah's palm tree to be judged, so they have also come to Abel when cases are too complex or politically dangerous for the local legal authorities to decide. In Exodus 18, when Moses first appointed judges, he provided that people would come to him for difficult decisions, and he would take them to God. The laws of Deuteronomy prescribe that "if any legal matter is too difficult for you . . . among the cases disputed in your gates, you should go up to the place that God will choose and come to the Levites and the judge who will be at that time and make inquiry; they will tell you the decision" (Deut. 17:8-9). The elders gave judgments in the local towns, but disputes that were too hard to resolve, or disputes between towns, needed a central arbitration center. In Deuteronomy, the place of the sanctuary is also the place of such judicial appeal, and the Le\dtes serve a judicial function as well as their ritual ones. In addition, someone has been appointed the "judge" in this social location, though Deuteronomy does not indicate who it might be. Near Eastern documents show that the king could render judgment, and both David and Absalom were known to perform this function, as was Solomon. There has to be a place for such decisions and a person responsible. Once the monarchy was fully established, the place was Jerusalem and the highest judge was the king; but our story takes place at the very beginning of monarch}7, long before the supreme judicial and religious authority was centralized. Everyone knows, says the Wise Woman, that Abel-bet-Ma'cacah is a center for judgment. " 'Let them inquire' " is proverbial: let them send inquiries to Abel for resolution. Abel resolves disputes in Israel as a mother resolves disputes among children, and thus Abel is 'ir va em, a "mother-city" in Israel. The city of judgment has to have a judge. Moses in the desert was followed by Deborah under the palm tree. Samuel was a "circuit judge," settling disputes and resolving cases as he traveled between his home at Ramah and the major cities of Beth-El, Gilgal, and Mispah. People lined

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up to have their cases heard by David, and Absalom set himself up in that role. And Solomon's fame for wisdom grew from his ability to solve an "intractable case," to be "like an angel" in his ability to distinguish right from wrong (i Kings 3:16-28). The Wise Woman of Abel describes herself as of the peacemakers of the faithful of Israel (šelûmê hnûnê yisrael). The "peacemaker" resolves disputes, making decisions that answer the inquiries presented at Abel-bet-Macacah. The "faithful" or "trustworthy" abide by the peacemaker's decisions rather than settle disputes by force. The Wise Woman's next words show that her role in Abel also includes a considerable amount of political power. When Joab explains that he is only after Sheba ben Bichri, who has committed treason, she confidently promises, "Look! His head is thrown to you over the wall." The passive muslak "is thrown over," and the deictic "Look!" show that her word has authority. Rather than say, "I will see what 1 can do and report back tomorrow," she announces that the deed is as good as done. Then

she comes

to report 111 her

Wise-Womanhood

behokmātāh. The implication of this term is not simply that she comes to advise wisely; that would be behokmah, "with wisdom, wisely." "In her behohnātāh " means "in her Wise-Womanhood," in her official capacity as Wise Woman. She has made the decision. The people did as she said, they cut off Sheba s head and threw it to Joab. And so, the siege is lifted, war is averted, and the city is saved. How does a woman acquire such authority? Unlike Moses, Samuel, and Deborah, the Wise Woman is not called a prophet, and her decisions must rely on her judicial and political authority rather than on divine revelation. The. story of the Wise Woman of Tekoa (2 Sam. 14) provides some clues as to how a woman might attain such power. That story also takes place during the reign of King David, some years after Absalom killed Amnon. Absalom is an exile in Geshur, and Joab knows that the king misses him. Joab devises a plan that needs a Wise Woman, and he sends to Tekoa for her. The story does not show her acting in her normal capacity, but perhaps Tekoa, like Abel, was the seat of a Wise Woman. In this story she acts as an agent of Joab, following his general plan, but at the same time reveals characteristics that may be a component of WiseWomanhood. The contours of Joab's plan are similar to Nathan's approach to David after David's affair with Bathsheba. Nathan, who was known to the king, had to present his case as a parable told in the third person. The Tekoite Wise. Woman can seem to be talking about herself. She is to come dis-

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guiseci as a petitioner and present a legal case for the king's judgment; afterward she is to reveal that the story she presented is really a parable about the king. Disguised as a woman in mourning, she tells a sad tale: she is a widow whose two sons had a fight in the fields during which one killed the other. Now her family is demanding that she deliver the surviving son to their blood vengeance. If that happens, she explains, her patrimony will be gone and her husband will have no surviving name in Israel. The woman presents David with a dilemma between two very important Israelite principles: the need to avenge the blood of a murdered person and the supreme importance of preserving a man's lineage. The king must decide. To this point, the plan has been Joab s. Now, when the king reserves judgment, the woman begins to use her own wisdom. She knows that pardoning a murderer can bring bloodguilt upon the one who spares him, and she realizes that the king will be reluctant to take the bloodguilt of the murdered man upon himself. She therefore assures him that she will take any bloodguilt upon her own father's household so that David's throne and David himself will be free. The Tekoite's words are an echo of Rivka's on the two occasions when she persuaded Jacob to do her bidding. When he worried that his father might curse him instead of blessing him, Rivka offered to take the curse upon herself. And when she wanted to convince him to leave for Haran, she asked him to prevent her from being bereft of both her sons in one day. Rivka and the Tekoite are masters of the biblical rhetoric of persuasion. The king responds to her dilemma, suggesting that she bring to him anyone who bothers her. This is not enough for her ultimate purpose, so she points out that by the time she could bring anyone before the king, the blood avenger already would have killed her son. That prompts the king to take an oath that no one will harm her son. This is what she has been trying to get him to say Just as Nathan explained his parable as soon as David passed judgment against the rich man (2 Sam 12:5 7), the Wise Woman now reveals the analogy between her fictive son and Absalom: "Why have you done this to the people of God—the king speaks thus while he himself is guilty of not bringing back his abandoned one" (2 Sam. 14:13). Like the prophet Nathan, the Wise Woman has led the king to an understanding that he is in the wrong. The Tekoite's next statement reveals the basis of her authority as a Wise Woman. Her exceedingly cryptic words mean something like "for we must all die like waters split upon the ground that cannot be gathered, and God will not forgive the one who makes plans without aban-

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doning the abandoned from him" (2 Sam. 14:14). Her words sound as cryptic as an oracle's, but she is not an oracle and claims no divine revelation. Instead, the first part of her statement sounds like a proverb, and the woman sounds like a sage immersed in Israel's wisdom/proverb tradition. Women could be considered "wise" for several reasons. Motherraised children remember the mother of early childhood as wise and powerful. Moreover, human communities often rely on women to perform tasks that depend on their accumulated knowledge of plant foods and herbs. The many goddesses of wisdom reflect these individual and communal memories, but the Wise Woman represents yet another stream of women's wisdom: the memory of "grandmother's tales" and proverbial sayings. In this respect, the Wise Woman of Tekoa is the personification of "Lady Wisdom." The parable-telling Wise Woman of Tekoa demonstrates mastery of Israel's common lore. The Wise Woman of Abel's authority to settle disputes and make decisions may also rest on such knowledge, and this authority gives her political power. These two Wise Women figure in stories about the reign of David, but not in later history. In many respects, the reign of David is still "pre-monarchic." The reign of Solomon marks a turning point in Israel's history and completes the change possibly begun when David took a census of Israel. Under Solomon, Israel became a centralized state, with a regular system of bureaucracy that was ultimately responsible to the king. Even the wisdom tradition was co-opted by the monarchy, as "Solomon the Wise" became the patron of wisdom and learning. None of Israel's bureaucracies the palace, the army the law courts, even the "Sages"—had any room for women. Once the state was consolidated, women had no role in the pyramid of power; they were not leaders outside the domestic sphere. They could still be wise, but they were no longer Wise Women. From the standpoint of political power, the days before the state were the good old days to women. Once the state was established, they could exercise considerable family power as wives and mothers—but only queens had an impact on the destiny of the nation.

The Shunammite

of women from the public realm (or at least from the public record) does not mean that they all became meek or mild, helpless or victimized. Within their families, women continued to exhibit the same sort of power that the matriarchs demonstrated. Several less than flattering proverbs attest in a negative way to the considerable power of women's speech, particularly the repetitive request: "The nagging of a wife is like the endless dripping of water," says one proverb (Prov. 19:13). Through persuasion, women continued to influence the destiny of their families. A different portrait of a woman emerges in the tale of the Shunammite, a wealthy woman who appears in the Elisha cycle of stories, which take place against a backdrop of harsh rural poverty In contrast to the near-starving peasantry to which Elisha miraculously supplies food, the "great woman" of Shunem has the means to offer him hospitality. THE DISAPPEARANCE

Act I. The Prophet and the Woman Scene 1. A patron in Shunem. (2 Kings 4:810) It happened one day that Elisha passed through Shunem. There was a great woman there and she grabbed him to (make him) eat food. And it happened that whenever he passed by he would turn in there to eat food. She said to her husband, "Look! 1 know that he is a holy man of God. He always comes to us. Let us make him a little chamber on the roof, let us place for him there a bed, a table, a chair, and a lamp, and it will be that when he comes to us he will turn in there." Like so many women in the Bible, the Shunammite is not remembered by name. In biblical stories, both names and their absence are significant. The Shunammite is a "great woman," and as such she is

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representative of all "great" or wealthy women. She is not identified as her father's daughter or her husband's wife, for these relationships do not define her destiny or her role in the story. She is identified by the name of her village because her attachment to a particular location will turn out to be important in her life and in her story. The Shunammite is strikingly free in her dealings with the prophet. She recognizes and acknowledges the fact that he is a prophet and holy man, and becomes his patron and benefactor. She acts on her own, without asking her husband's permission, as she provides food and hospitality to him on his journeys. Her wealth may contribute to her boldness, for wealthy women have greater freedom of action than poor women, and sometimes even more than poor men. But poor women could also be close to the prophets. The prophet Elijah lodged with a poor widow without worrying about gossip, and no one would react badly to the Shunammite s entertaining Elisha. A wife can dispense food without her husband's supervision: another woman of means, Abigail, brought great amounts of food to David without her husband's knowledge. The Shunammite brings her husband into the picture only when she wishes to add an addition to her house. Prophets are known to repay kindness. Hospitality does not call for reciprocity, offers of which may impugn the honor of the host, but prophets transcend such consideration. Elijah rewarded the poor widow of Zarephat with never-ending food, and Elisha looks for some way to repay his hostess. Scene 2. The patron's reward (2 Kings 4:11-17) It happened one day that he came there and turned in to the upper chamber and slept there. He said to his servant Gehazi, "Call this Shunammite." He called her and she stood before him. He said to him, "Say to her, 'Look! You have exerted yourself for us with all this great effort. What is there to do for you? Is there some matter of which we can speak to the king or general?' " She said, "1 live among my own people." He said, "What is there to do for her?" Gehazi said, "Ah, she doesn't have a child and her husband is old." He said, "Call her!" He called her and she stood in the doorway.

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He said, 'At this time, at the life season, you will be holding a son." She said, "No, my lord, man of God, do not lie to your handmaiden," The woman conceived and gave birth to a son at that same time, in the life season, just as Elisha spoke to her. The protocol between Elisha and the Shunammite seems strange: if she is standing before him, why does he speak to Gehazi as an interlocutor? Elisha is not reticent about speaking to women: in the previous story, he spoke directly to the widow7 he was helping. And he is, after all, no stranger to the Shunammite, with whom he has often dined. But perhaps in this instance he is creating the formal circumstances of a magnate offering largesse. He underscores his ability to grant her request by increasing the distance between them and using Gehazi as the interlocutor. The Shunammite will have none of such pretense. She ignores Gehazi and speaks directly to Elisha, both when he asks Gehazi what they can give her, and when he finally addresses her directly As Elisha foretells the birth of her child, the narrator adds what looks like an extraneous detail: the Shunammite woman is standing in the doorway. Like so many details in biblical stories, the doorway is an allusion to another story: the Shunammite stands in the doorway much as Sarah stood in the doorway of her tent when the divine guests foretold the birth of Isaac (Gen. 18:10). The allusion is strengthened as both Elisha and Abraham's guest use the term "life season," et hayyah, for the time of birth. The Shunammite woman has not asked for a child. Alone among the childless women in the Bible, she is not actively seeking a child. She is married to an old man, and may or may not be elderly herself. Even faced with a miracle worker and given the opportunity to make a wish, she never mentions her childlessness and answers only, "I live among my own people." Her answer seems cryptic. It doesn't seem to address the question, and it contradicts what we know about ancient marriage. We would expect her to be living among her husband's kinfolk, not her own. But she stays living in Shunem among her own folk. These two "abnormalities" are clues, pieces of a puzzle, and are joined by a third clue, the Shunammite's lack of anxiety about her childlessness. More pieces emerge later in her story. But at this point, when Elisha is looking for a way to reward her, Gehazi points out that she is childless, and she is given a child. The next vignette is several years later, as the child has a crisis.

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Act II. The Prophet, the Mother; and the Child (2 Kings 4:18-41 ) Scene 1. Mother to the rescue (2 Kings 4:18-23) The boy grew. It happened one day that he went out to his father to the harvesters. He said to his father, "My head, my head!" He said to the manservant, "Carry him to his mother." He lifted him and brought him to his mother. He sat on her knees till noon and died. She arose and laid him down on the man of God's bed, closed the door, and went out. She called to her husband and said, "Send me one of the manservants and one of the asses and 1 will run to the man of God and return," He said, "Why are you going to him today; it is neither new moon nor Sabbath?" She said, "Be well!" The woman may not have been actively seeking a child, but when faced with his death, she acts, and goes to the prophet to intercede. Her husband's question reflects the close connection between prophets and women. On Sabbath and festivals, women would go regularly on pilgrimages. They could also go for help in a crisis, as the wife of Jeroboam went to Ahijah the prophet when her son fell sick (1 Kings 14:1 17). But Jeroboam sent his wife off; the Shunammite does not even inform her husband of the reason she is leaving. When he asks why, she brushes him off with a simple "be well" or "all is well." His lack of understanding as to why she is going is puzzling, but she can't wait to explain it to him. She has a child to save. Still, her independence is equally puzzling, for normally even a wealthy woman depended on her husband's goodwill for her own economic well-being. Women have power in their own households, but the Shunammite does not show any concern that her husband might get angry or even divorce her. This lack of concern, her lack of desperation for a child, and her living among her own kin are all unusual behaviors that make the Shunammite stand out among women. She continues her decisive ways as she comes to Elisha.

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Scene 2. Confronting the prophet (2 Kings 4:24-30) She cinched the ass and said to her manservant, "Guide it and walk, and don't stop me from riding unless I tell you." She went and came to the man of God at Mount Carmel. It happened that when the man of God saw her opposite him, he said to his manservant Gehazi, "Here is that Shunammite. Now please run to meet her and say to her, 'Is all well with you? Is all well with your husband? Is all well with your son?' " She said, "Be well!" She came to the man of God on the mountain and grabbed his legs. Gehazi approached to shoo her away The man of God said, "Leave her alone, for her soul is bitter and YHWH has hidden the matter from me and has not told me." She said, "Did I ask for a son from my lord? Did 1 not say 'You should not fool me'?" He said to Gehazi, "Gird your loins and take my staff in your hands and go. If you meet a man on the way do not bless him, and should someone bless you, do not answrer him. Place my staff upon the boy's face." The boy's mother said, "By the life of YHWH and by your life, I will not leave you!" He arose and went after her. The Shunammite is a woman with a mission. She is in a hurry. She has no time to tell her husband where she is going, she has no time to rest on the way, and she has no time to waste telling Gehazi about the matter, no time for pleasantries once she gets to the prophet. When Elisha sends Gehazi to ask why she has come, she brushes him aside just as she brushed off her husband. She goes straight to the prophet himself and grasps him so that he must listen. Elisha is ready to listen, for unlike Ahijah, who knew why Mrs. Jeroboam had come to him, he does not know what has brought the Shunammite. The Shunammite chooses her words carefully She has rushed to see him, but she does not rush to tell him what is wrong. She takes a posture of subservience, but there is no supplication in her tone. She begins her petition in classic biblical guiltproducing mode: she has not demanded a son, she even demurred when

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offered one. Instead, she challenges him to live up to his responsibility. Her implication is clear: now that the child is in danger, Elisha owes it to her to act. Elisha asks no questions. As soon as she mentions her son, he realizes that the boy is ill or dead and commands Gehazi to go quickly Considering all that the Shunammite has done for him, it is strange that the prophet would send his servant. And the Shunammite will have nothing of miracle-by-proxy: she wants Elisha, not his surrogate, and she will not be satisfied until he comes himself. Elisha understands such determination. In the same way, and using the same phrase, he refused to stay behind when Elijah went up to heaven, three times answering Elijah, "By the life of YHWH and by your life, I will not leave you!" (2 Kings 2:2, 4, 6). And so they go off together. Scene j. A miracle for mother (2 Kings 4:31-37) Gehazi went before him and placed the staff on the boy's face. There was no sound and no response. He returned toward him and told him thus, "The boy didn't awaken." Elisha came to the house and look! The boy was dead, laid out on his bed. He came and closed the door on the two of them and he prayed to YHWH. He got up and lay down upon the child and placed his mouth on his mouth, his eyes on his eyes, and his palms on his palms, and crouched over him, and the child's flesh warmed. He sat up and walked in the house once this way and once that way, He got up and crouched over him. The child sneezed seven times. The child opened his eyes. He called Gehazi and said, "Call that Shunammite!" He called her, and she came to him, and he said, "Pick up your son!" She came and fell upon his feet and prostrated herself to the ground. She picked up her son and went out. The Shunammite was right to demand that Elisha come himself: Gehazi could not revive the child. The power is not in the staff, it is in

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Elisha, who uses intercessory prayer and what seems like a combination of artificial respiration and anti-shock treatment. Elisha returns him to his mother. Her imperious manner has worked: nothing has blocked her way as she mobilized the prophet to rescue her son. And as he once told her that she would embrace a son, he now7 gives her the son again. The Shunammite has convinced Elisha to use his healing powers, and Elisha has proved himself the holy man and miracle worker she always knew him to be. Now that the emergency is over, she can take the time for protocols of respect, and she acknowledges his greatness by prostrating to the ground. Elisha and the Shunammite continue in relationship. Sometime later, Elisha comes to do her another prophetic favor. He warns her of the coming famine and advises her to leave the land. Act III. The Woman, Her Household, and the Land (2 Kings 8:1-6) Scene 1. Exodus and famine (2 Kings 8:1-3) Elisha spoke to the woman whose child he had revived thus: 'Arise and go, you and your household, and live awhile wherever you will live, for YHWH has called a famine and it will come to the land for seven years." The woman arose and acted according to the word of the man of God. She went, she and her household, and she lived in Philistine land for seven years. Like Abraham before her, like the family of Jacob at the end of the ancestral period, and like the family of Elimelekh in the time of judges, the Shunammite and her household leave for a place that has food. There is no mention of her husband, and he may not even be alive. The Shunammite is the major figure. She, not he, has been Elisha s patron and his demanding client. She is the one he warns, and she is the one who believes his message, uproots the household, and leaves Israel for seven years. Scene 2. Mistress of her house (2 Kings 8:3 6) It happened at the end of seven years. The woman returned from the Philistine land and came out to issue a cry to the king for her house and her field. The king was speaking to Gehazi, the man of God's manservant, thus, "Tell me please all the great things that Elisha has done."

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And it happened that he was telling the king that he revived the dead, and look! The woman whose son he revived wTas crying to the king about her house and her field. Gehazi said to the king, "This is the woman and this is her son whom Elisha revived." The king questioned the woman and she related it to him. The king gave her a eunuch, saying thus: 'Return to her all that is hers and all the produce of the field from the day she left the land until now!" Seven years later, the Shunammite comes back. Somebody else has been farming her land in her absence, but she "cries" to the king for help in retrieving her property Crying to the monarch is a fairly standard legal procedure, and she can expect him to restore the land. But he not only restores the field to her, he gives her the produce for the period that she was gone. Near Eastern law indicates that owners can reclaim a field, but the "usufruct," the produce, should belong to the people who worked the land. People who plant can expect to reap: not being able to do so is one of God's dire punishments (Deut. 28:33), and eating the food someone else has planted is a special mark of divine benevolence (Deut. 6:12). God gave Israel the produce of the land when Israel came into the land of Canaan. The king presents the Shunammite with the same favor when she comes back to the land. Perhaps he did so because Gehazi was (providentially?) in court that day, telling him of Elisha's resurrection of the Shunammite's son just when she came to claim her land, and he pointed her out as the person for whom Elisha had worked this miracle. Her special relationship with Elisha motivates the kings generosity. Many years earlier Elisha had asked if there was a matter about which she would wish him to speak to the king. Then there was not, but now the very fact of their proven close relationship is enough of an "intercession" to allow her to reap the king's largesse. The Shunammite herself comes to petition. Her husband is not there, and may be dead. She comes to cry for her house and her field, and the king instructs, "Return to her all that is hers." But is the land hers? By Israelite law, as far as we know a woman does not inherit the property: it becomes her son's, and her son has the obligation to let her stay on it. So why does the story say "her land"? "Her field"? "All that is hers"? In a comparable situation, when Naomi wants to regain possession of and sell the field that she and Elimelekh left when they too departed Israel to escape from famine, the field is carefully specified as "the portion of field

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that belonged to our brother Elimelekh" (Ruth 4:3), and the property is called "all that was Elimelekh's" (Ruth 4:9). Surely the Shunammite's land is her husband's, if he is still alive, or her son's, if he is not! The Shunammite s story has four unusual elements that may all be interrelated. The land is hers. She expressed no need for a child and is markedly independent of her husband. These three abnormalities may all relate to the answer that the Shunammite gave when Elisha first asked if he could do something for her: I live among my own people. Most women marry outside their kin and go to live with their husband's family The only women required to marry within their own tribe are the "daughters of Zelophehad." As the book of Numbers relates, the five daughters of Zelophehad approached Moses toward the end of the period in the desert and asked for a change in Israelite inheritance law. Only sons could inherit land, but there were five daughters and there was no son. They petitioned that since their father did not deserve to have his lineage and his name completely die, they should be allowed to inherit his property and perpetuate his name. Upon consultation with God, Moses issued the provision that whenever a man died without sons, his daughters could inherit (Num. 27:1-11). Later, upon petition by the tribal elders not to allow7 tribal lands to be lost, Moses issued a further decree that the daughters of Zelophehad must marry only within their father's tribe (Num. 36:1-12). From then on, a woman who had no brothers owned her land for her lifetime and married within her father's extended family Like a latter-day "daughter of Zelophehad," the Shunammite lives among her own kin, and her land belongs to her. She might very well be an example of a daughter of Zelophehad. Owning her own land, she is not as dependent on men for her livelihood. She can brush off her husband when she has no time for him, knowing that she would still have her property if he divorced her; and she will not have to rely on a son to allow her to live on her husband's land when she is widowed, and support her from her husband's patrimony. This may explain why the woman of Shunem, alone among barren women in the Bible, did not actively seek a child. Her ownership of land gives her independence from her husband, whose permission she need not ask, either to be Elisha s patron or to seek his aid. The Shunammite may be an example of how7 women act when the economic constraints of patriarchy are removed. This is why she is identified by locale rather than by name or as "Mrs. Somebody." Her location remains her identity in a way that most women's do not. It

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is her village, the village of her lather's household and the one where she lives as an adult woman, the site of the land she owns. She is a woman of place and, by contrast, shows how7 significant the lack of such place is to most women's history. The limitation of women's property rights is the economic linchpin of patriarchal structure; it made women dependent first on their fathers, then on their husbands, and, ultimately, on their sons. Even the humanitarian injunctions of the ancient world to care for widows and the fatherless were an outgrowth of this male monopoly: if widows could inherit land, there would be no need for humanitarian injunctions to care for them. The characteristic determination and boldness of the Shunammite may be a lesson on the freedom that property bestows. It is also a window onto the way at least some women successfully negotiated with prophet and king (the male power structure) despite their lack of official autonomy or authority.

Villains Potiphar's Wife, Delilah, and Athaliah

NOT ALL the strong women in the Bible are good. A quartet of historical villainesses make their mark: Potiphar's wife, Delilah, Athaliah, and Queen Jezebel, the archvillainess discussed later (pp. 209-14). Potiphar's wife and Queen Jezebel are foreigners. Athaliah is an Israelite princess and Delilah's ethnicity is unknown. But one factor unites them: they are allied with the other side in Israel's national and cosmic battles. For this reason, all of them represent the "Other," the alternative to Israel's destiny and way.

Potiphar's Wife Not much is told about Potiphar, the man who bought Joseph as a slave, or about his wife. Potiphar is a laissez-faire owner, entrusting the affairs of his house to Joseph. More Tests and Wars (Judg. 3:1-4) These are the nations that YHWH left in order to test through them Israel, all who didn't experience any of the Canaanite wars. Only so that the generations of Israelites would know to have them experience war, only those who hadn't known it before: the five Philistine kings and all the Canaanites and Sidonians and Hivites who live in the Lebanon from Mount Ba'al-Hermon till the approach to Hamath. And they would remain to test Israel through them, to know whether they would observe the commandments of YHWH which he commanded their fathers through Moses. "Test" and "failure" are important concerns of the historical books of the Bible. These books were composed at a time when the Bible's world was falling apart. The eighth century witnessed an earthquake so massive and devastation so widespread that the prophets Amos, Micah, and Isaiah draw7 comparisons to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah and consider the surviving community "a remnant." Ecological disasters followed drought and hail and insects and these were followed by

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military horror, when the Assyrians destroyed the Northern Kingdom in 722 B.c.E. and reduced Judah to Jerusalem and the surrounding towns. From that time until the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem until 589 B.c.E. and beyond into the exile, Israel's historians wrote in the shadow of destruction. Their choices were stark. They could have concluded that Israel's God was weak, and those who did had no reason to continue to worship YHWH. They could have concluded that Israel's God was malevolent and hated Israel, and those thinkers also had no reason to continue to worship YHWH. The biblical authors needed to make sense of Israel's history and doom in a way that would enable them to maintain faith in the power and goodness of God and in God's love for Israel. Their solution was to "blame the victim"; to understand all the catastrophes as chastisement, punishment, and retribution. This would allow them to keep faith in God and to hope for the possibility of better days ahead. With this politico-theological agenda, they looked at Israel's history to determine what went wrong. To this way of thinking, Israel's immediate failure to eradicate the nations was only the beginning of the long cycle of sin and retribution and repentance that the historians understood to be Israel's history And primary in this failure was apostasy (worshiping other gods) and marriage to the local women.

First Misstep (Judg. 3:5-6) The Israelites lived in the midst of the Canaanite, the Hittite, the Amorite, the Perizzite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite and they took their daughters as wives and gave their own daughters to their sons and worshiped their gods.

Israel's belief that God promised the land to her ancestors is intertwined with her conviction that the original inhabitants of Canaan were wrongdoers. When God took a solemn oath to give Abraham's descendants the land (Gen. 15), God also explained that fulfillment would be postponed for several hundred years because "the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet complete" (Gen. 15:16). Leviticus clarifies what this sin is and how it made the Amorites lose the land. It concludes its list of tabooed acts of incest, idolatry, and sexual perversity with a metaphysical and historical explanation:

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Law and Hesed (Ruth 4:1-8) Boaz went up to the gate and sat there, and look! The redeemer about whom Boaz spoke passed by He said, "Turn aside and sit here, Mr. Whoever-you-are," and he turned and sat. He took ten men from the town elders and said, "Sit here," and they sat. He said to the redeemer, "The portion of field that belongs to our brother Elimelekh, Naomi is selling, who returned from the fields of Moab. I said, Ī will tell you thus, "Buy it in front of those sitting here and in front of the elders of my people." ' If you will redeem it, redeem it, and if you will not redeem it, tell me and I will know; for there is no one but you to redeem and I after you." He said, "I will redeem;" Boaz said, "On the day that you acquire the field from Naomi and from Ruth the Moabite, you have acquired the dead man's widow to erect the name of the dead on his inherited portion." The redeemer said, "1 cannot redeem for me lest I destroy my own inheritance. You redeem my redemption for me, for I cannot redeem." (Once, in Israel, they did thus for redemption or sale, to execute the matter: a man took off his shoe and gave it to the other and that was the testimony ) The redeemer said to Boaz, 'Acquire it for yourself," and took off his shoe. Boaz's statement is very intricate, and the legal situation regarding this land is complex. There are several possibilities. Elimelekh might have sold his land to buy food before the famine caused him to leave for the fields of Moab. A redeemer might be expected to buy back the land, but the right to do so is usually activated when the original purchaser tries to resell. In this case, Naomi would be selling not land but "land futures," the right to redeem the land at some future time. Elimelekh might simply have left the land behind and someone else worked it in his absence. Now, after the harvest, Naomi might be in a position to reclaim that land. According to our understanding of biblical law, a widow would have the right to live on the land, not to sell it. However, we have

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only glimpses of biblical law, and it might be that a widow could sell. A redeemer would have the right and obligation of first purchase. As Jeremiah's cousin told him, "Yours is the rule of redemption to buy" (Jer. 32:7) when he asked Jeremiah to buy his fields. The relative buys land (or buys it back from another purchaser) in order to keep land in the family The land would be his, and he would add it to his own patrimony, but he may have been expected to use the usufruct to support the widow. Perhaps the elders understood the situation better than we do, but since this is a stratagem by Boaz to outmaneuver his kinsman, they may also have been confused. The confusion does not lessen when the relative declares his willingness to redeem. Boaz then informs him that when he acquires the land, someone will also acquire the widow Ruth for the purpose of perpetuating the lineage on its land. The written text (the Ketiv) says, "1 have acquired": Boaz, who has already betrothed Ruth, will engender a child who will lay claim to this land. This would mean that the kinsman would buy land of which the usufruct would support Naomi, and then the land itself would go to Boaz's child rather than to the kinsman. The Masoretic reading (the Qere) reads, "You have acquired." On the day the redeemer buys the land, he obligates himself to beget a child. Either way, the result is the same: the redeemer who acquires the land or land future will have it only in trust for a child who will inherit it, and he will not be able to add the land to his own patrimony. He will use his own money to redeem the land, he will use the produce to support two women, and eventually the land will pass to someone who is not his legal heir. This he cannot afford to do, and he formally relinquishes his right to Boaz, who publicly announces his betrothal and intentions. Boaz's statement does not sound quite right. Why should a kinsman have to marry Ruth in order to buy the land for the family? A redeemer is not a levir. A levir marries his brother's childless widow7 only to beget a son for his dead brother who will inherit the land. When there is no levir, a redeemer who keeps the land in the family is not required to acquire the widow with the land, nor is the redeemer required to create an heir for that land. Boaz is not presenting an accurate legal scenario, but his speech is not mere flimflam. Ruth, although a daughter-in-law rather than a daughter, with 110 blood ties to Elimelekh, nevertheless bears within her the potential to provide an heir for the line of Elimelekh because she is serving as a daughter to Naomi. The oath that she took to Naomi created a permanent daughtership between them, and as the

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daughter, she will carry on the name by remaining with the land and marrying her relative. Ruth has already indicated her willingness to raise a child for the dead man's line. From a moral standpoint, to take the land and ignore the woman who stands ready to bear an heir is to kill Elimelekh and his son: Mahlon's last hope for the perpetuation of their name. According to the code of hesed by which Ruth and Boaz are operating, everyone is to go beyond the requirements of the law As we read the Ketiv, Boaz is fathering the eventual heir, and the redeemer will take the financial loss. As we read the Qere, the kinsman should go beyond his legal obligation redeem the land and, by taking Ruth, create an heir who will then take Elimelekh's field away from him. The kinsman does not argue with Boaz. He does not dispute the moral obligation to support Naomi or beget an heir. But he cannot afford it, and he bows out. Ruth and Boaz marry Happy Endings, Happy Beginnings (Ruth 4:9-17) Boaz said to the elders and all the people, "You are witnesses today that 1 have acquired everything that belonged to Elimelekh and to Kilyon and Mahlon from Naomi. And also Ruth the Moabite, Mahlon's wife, I have acquired as a wife to erect the name of the dead on his inherited portion. May the name of the dead not be cut off from his brothers and from the gate of his place. You are witnesses today" All the people in the gate and the elders said, " We are witnesses. May YHWH make the woman coming into your home like Rachel and like Leah, the two of whom built the house of Israel. Do valiantly in Ephrat and call the name in Bethlehem. May your house be like the house of Peretz whom Tamar bore to Judah, from the seed that YHWH will give you from this young woman." Boaz took Ruth and she became his wife. He came into her and YHWH granted her pregnancy and she gave birth to a son. The women said to Naomi, "Blessed be YHWH who didn't leave you without a redeemer today. May his name be called in Israel. May he be a life renewer for you and support you in your old age. For your daughter-in-law who loves you is better for you than seven sons." Naomi took the baby and laid him to her lap and she became his nursemaid.

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The neighbor women called his name thus, 'Ά child is bom to Naomi. " They called his name Obeci. He was the father of Jesse the father of David. The statement of Boaz and the townspeople's blessings show the two different aspects of the birth of the child. Boaz calls everyone to witness that "Ruth the Moabite, Mahlon3s wife, I have acquired as a wife to erect the name of the dead on his inherited portion" and ends with a rousing "May the name of the dead not be cut o f f . . . " But the townspeople witnessing the event bless him: "May your house be like the house of Peretz whom Tamar bore to Judah, from the seed that YHWH will give you from this young woman." The child should be not only Elimelekh and Mahl oil's descendant; he is also Boaz's son, and the line begins w7ith him. In the same way, Tamar s child was considered to be not Er s but Judah's, and the reckoning of the line of Boaz begins writh Peretz himself. The genealogy at the end of the book of Ruth bears this out, tracing the men from Peretz through Boaz to King David. The women add yet another blessing, one that stresses the importance of the child to Naomi's future. She now is assured of a secure place in a family structure. In one birth, Ruth has provided Boaz with a descendant, Elimelekh with a memory, Naomi with renewal, and Israel with the grandfather of kings. But then, like Tamar, the mother of Peretz, Ruth disappears: all the women name the child, and Ruth ascends into the pantheon of throne mother. This charming narrative of gracious family behavior discusses important issues about Israel's destiny. In many ways, it reverses the Dinah story, another "family" narrative about Israel, its land and its neighbors. Dinah went out to see the "daughters of the land." Her attempt ended in a disaster, but her dream of a relationship with other women conies true with the friendship of Naomi and Ruth. The closeness between them, the hesed and the trust they show each other, the initiative and boldness that each brings out in the other, pave, the way for their own happiness, the perpetuation of Elimelekh's lineage on its land, and the birth of King David. The story ostensibly concerns the tale of one particular family, a very important family, the royal family of Judah. But the names of the characters indicate that its theme goes far beyond their fate. Naomi herself draws attention to the significance of these names by declaring as she returns to Bethlehem that she should no longer be called Naomi, but

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Marah ("Bitter-Woman One"), for God has embittered her life by killing her men. The father forced to leave the land is named Elimelekh, "My God-is-King"; the sons who die are Mahlon, "Disease," and Kilion, "Destruction"; the daughter-in-law who turns away is Orpah. "Back-ofneck": Ruth, who stays with Naomi, is "Sprinkle" or "Dewy," the fertility-giving moisture; and the kinsman whom Ruth marries is Boaz, "He-who-has-Might." When we retell the story using names translated into English, we get a vivid picture of its significance for Israel: Once, many years ago, famine drove My-God-is-King and Pleasant-One from Bethlehem in the land ofJudah to the land of Moab. There My-Godis-King died. His two sons Disease and Destruction married local women, but after a while, they too died, leaving only Pleasant-One and her two daughters-in-law. When they heard that there was food in Bethlehem, they set out to return. On the way, Pleasant-One released her two daughters-in-law and sent them back to begin new lives. Back-of-neck tearfidly turned and left, but Dewy stayed with her mother-in-law; now no longer Pleasant-One but Bitter-Woman, for God had killed her men. In Bethlehem., they turned to their kinsman He-who-has-Might. First God, then Pleasant-Woman, then Dewy, and then He-who-has-Might planned to bring them together; and finally He-who-has-Might married Dewy and from this union came He-who-Serves, the grandfather of Beloved. Read this way, the story is an allegory for Israel's destiny, beginning with her bereavement and ending with her joy Pleasant-Woman is Jerusalem/Judah, so often personified as a woman, the most lovely of women. Elimelekh is the king of Israel or the institution of kingship; the dead sons are the many dead children of Israel. When Pleasant-Woman comes back to the land, "Dewy" the Moabite comes with her, and by mating with the remaining strength in the land (He-who-has-Might), she revitalizes Israel. The combined efforts of these gracious three, all of whom act with hesed toward one another, make possible the rebirth of the lineage. And so "A child is born to Pleasant-Woman," from whom came. Beloved ["and a redeemer comes to Zion "]. Beloved is David, the founder of the dynasty that ruled Judah until its destruction. David himself may have told this story of his ancestry in order to show7 his "legitimate" claim to Moab. But the book of Ruth is not the story as David told it. The language in which Naomi describes her bitter state, her affliction by God, and also God's continuing loving-

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kindness toward her, reflects the lament and prophecy language of a later period. The book of Ruth deals with leaving and then returning to the land of Israel, which could refer to the descent to Egypt and the Exodus from there. But the book also revolves around leaving family property and then reacquiring it. This is a concern of a much later period, the return to Zion after the Babylonian exile. The people who remained in the land occupied the fields of those who were banished, and when the exiles returned, conflicts must inevitably have arisen. The book of Ruth assumes that property should rightly belong to the original owners. The book of Ruth addresses two other major questions that the return from Babylon presented: What should be the relationship between those who returned and those who came with them, wives for instance, who had joined them in Babylon and had not originally come from Judah? And what should be the relationship of the Israelites who were in exile with those who remained in Judah during those two generations? These questions came to a head when Ezra, backed by the power of the Persian throne, declared that only those who had returned from Babylon, the golah, were to be considered the true Israel, the true Jews. He convinced the men of the community to separate themselves from their foreign wives and from the "peoples of the land," which included the Judeans who had not experienced the Babylonian exile. According to the covenant the men made with Ezra, those who did not renounce their wives would no longer be considered members of the community. The decision to divorce their wives and to separate from the "peoples of the land" came amid serious dispute in Israel, and important prophetic voices express differing views. Isaiah emphasizes that the foreigners who have attached themselves to God and Israel will not be separated out, but will be most welcome at the temple (Isa. 55:6-7). And even Malachi, who indicts Israelites for marrying the "daughter of a foreign god," is against the idea of divorcing the foreign wives, upset at people ignoring the marriage covenant and abandoning the "wife of their youth" (Mai. 2:14-16). To these voices, the women who come back to Israel with those returning from exile are to be considered part of the community The telling of the Ruth and Naomi story in the paradigmatic, even allegorical fashion of the book of Ruth should best be seen in the context of these issues. On all of them, the book's views could not be more radically different from those of Ezra and Nehemiah. In the book of Ruth, after all, all three communities—the kinsman in the land (Boaz), the re-

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turning Israelite (Naomi), and the returning Moabite wife of an Israelite (Ruth)—are all faithful to the name and memory of the old king, and it is the cooperation among all three that leads to the continuation of the line of those who stayed in the land and those who had gone into exile. In this way the ancestry story and the genealogy of the great king of Israel's past point the way toward the nation's glorious future.

Royal Origins The Moabite

repeatedly identifies Ruth as a Moabite. This is no innocent detail. It was Moabite women who invited Israel to attend the feast that resulted in Israel's calamitous attachment to Baal-Peor (Num. 25). Those women and Ruth are polar opposites. The friendship of the Moabite women at Shittim brought death; the friendship of Ruth the Moabite leads to newT life. The women at Shittim incited Israel to faithlessness; Ruth the Moabite is the very model of fidelity. This parallelism is not coincidental. The story about Baal-Pe or may originally have been a story about Midianite women, whom Moses held responsible (Num. 31:15-16). Even the story in Numbers 25 shifts abruptly from the Moabite women to the assassination of the Midianite princess Cozbi. Perhaps "Moabite women" appear in Numbers 25 as an artistic device that accomplishes what Midianite women could not: a symmetrical antithesis to the positive image of Ruth. Moab and Amnion occupy a special position in Israel's worldview The two nations bordered on Israel, and the Moabite language was very close to Hebrew7. Their history was one of conflict. Moabites conquered Israel toward the beginning of the period of the book of Judges and ruled until Ehud led an insurrection. David conquered Moab and amalgamated Moab into Israel, where it stayed until King Mesha of Moab achieved independence. In the mind of Israel, Moab is the best and the worst of the foreign nations. The book of Numbers relates how Balak, king of Moab, wanting to destroy Israel, sent the prophet Balaam to curse it; and how the power of God changed Balaam's curses into blessings. Similarly, as we have seen, Numbers 25 indicts Moab for the sin of Baal-Peor. Numbers 31 connects the two stories as Moses indicts the Midianite women and Balaam for inciting them: "Have you let the women live? They were the ones who acted at the word of Balaam to bring trespass to Israel about the matter of Peor and there was a plague in the congregation of Israel" (Num. 31:15-16). Post-biblical traditions exT H E B O O K OF R U T H

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plain that when Balaam could nor curse Israel, he tried to destroy it by suggesting the dinner invitation that resulted in Israel's sin. Deuteronomy also expresses profound ambivalence toward Moab, declaring that God gave the children of Lot their own lands, never calling for their extermination (Deut. 2 : 9 - I I , 18-23). Nevertheless, says Deuteronomy, Moab and Israel must be separate: "The Moabite and Ammonite shall not come into the congregation of YHWH. Even in the tenth generation he shall not come into the congregation of YHWH forever" (Deut. 23:4). Grandchildren of Edomites and Egyptians can enter the congregation; but Moabites and Ammonites never can, for Moab and Amnion did not offer Israel water and drink during their desert wanderings, and hired Balaam to curse them (Deut. 23:7). But this separation proved difficult to maintain. The "Moabite women" 111 Numbers and "Ruth the Moabite" may be polar opposites on the disapproval-approval, disaster-delight, demonic-angelic scale, but they have more in common than might seem apparent. In both stories, the women want to be connected to Israel. The women invite Israel to dinner; Ruth accompanies Naomi to Bethlehem and later goes to Boaz during the night. They take the initiative, and the Israelites respond. Numbers is the worst-case scenario: Israel responds by embracing their God. Ruth is the best-case scenario: Naomi brings Ruth "under the wings of God" (Ruth 2:12), and Boaz brings her into Israel's family structure. The Moabite women in the Bible are assertive and friendly, characteristics that can be seen in the mothers of the Moabite and Ammonite peoples, the daughters of Lot. As the tale is told in Genesis, Lot and his daughters went to stay in a cave in the hills after the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. The Daughters of Lot (Gen. 19:30-38) Lot came up from Zoar and settled on the mountain, his two daughters with him, for he was afraid to stay in Zoar. He lived in a cave, he and his two daughters. The elder daughter said to the younger, "Our father is old, and there is no man in the land to come into us in the way of the wiiole world. Come, let us give him wine to drink and we will lie with him, and we will cause seed to live from our father." They gave their father wine that night, and the elder came and lay with her father. He was not aware when she lay down or when she got up.

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On the next day, the elder said to the younger, "Now I have lain with my father last night. Let us give him wine to drink tonight too and you come and lie with him and we will cause seed to live from our father." They gave their father wine to drink that night too. The younger got up and lay with him. And he was not aware when she lay down or when she rose up. The two daughters of Lot became pregnant from their father. The elder gave birth to a son and she called his name Moab. He was the father of Moab till this day The younger also gave birth to a son and she called his name Ben-Ammi. He is the father of the Ammonites till this day Early modern biblical scholars often considered this story an ethnic slur on Moabites and Ammonites. According to their reading, the sons' very names, Moab (from me-ab, "from the father") and Amnion (from ben-ammi, "the son of my kin"), identify them as children of incest, mamzenm. Since biblical law prohibits marriage between Israelites and mamzerim, some scholars have maintained that the birth story of Moab and Amnion can explain the prohibition against their entry into the congregation. But such a negative interpretation of the story piles assumption upon assumption. Even though we are horrified by incest, as was biblical Israel, the story does not impute any bad motive to the daughters of Lot. Contemporary readers may be angry at Lot for having been so willing to throw his daughters out to the mercy of the aggressive, voracious people of Sodom, but the story does not suggest that the daughters themselves were either angry at him or seeking revenge. On the contrary, the story explicitly declares their motive, an interior view not common in biblical literature. It does so to provide them with the noblest of motives: believing that there are no men left in the world, "we will cause seed to live from our father." The daughters of Lot did not save humanity by acquiring their father's seed, but they did preserve the line of Lot. Without their act, Lot would have had no posterity Lot's daughters presented their father with sons after all his older sons had been killed. They gave him his lineage, who are the Moabites and Ammonites. In ancient Israel, the preservation of a man's lineage was always important; the preservation of a noble lineage was even more so. Lot,

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Abraham's nephew7, was the grandson of Ter ah, the father of Abraham, the one who first set out from Mesopotamia. By descending from Lot and his daughters, the Moabites and Ammonites descend from a. double issue of a noble trunk. In the ancestry of Moab and Amnion, the fourth generation from Terah (Lot's daughters) mated with the third generation (Lot), just as in the ancestry of Israel, the fourth generation from Terah (Rivka) mated with the third (Isaac). The fact that the Terahite descent of Moab and Amnion results from incest does not make it shameful. The Pharaohs of Egypt came from brother sister incest in each generation. This did not make the person of Pharaoh less exalted in the eyes of the Egyptians, but rather more holy, for the sacred, even divine, seed of Pharaoh was not diluted by any mere human lineage. In the same way, incest among the progenitors of a people indicates the purest of lineage. The sons whom Lot's daughters provide for him are doubly his seed and thereby a double continuation of the line of Terah. Ancestors, gods, and gods-on-earth are special beings, marked in their specialness by their breaking of the taboos, including the one against incest, that restrain ordinary people. Breaking the taboos doesn't shame them; it heightens their sacredness. It also emphasizes their otherness, for ordinary people are expected to refrain scrupulously from incest. The prohibition of sex between parent and child may be the closest thing we have to a universal social law. Most scholarly attention has focused on the prohibition of mother son incest, which has been called the primal taboo. To Freud, this was a significant part of personality formation. It is the "Law of the Father" that prohibits the child from completing his Oeciipal fantasies on pain of castration. Foucault made this "prime law" the basis for culture's construction of both sex and gender. There continues to be serious discussion of how7 culture arrives at this rule, and the impact of culture on this rule itself. Far less attention has been given to father daughter incest, even though it is more prevalent. In regard to mother-son incest, society's desire to keep the lines of family discrete and unconfused unites with male concerns about a man's exclusive rights ewer his woman's sexuality and his anxiety about being superseded by younger men. The. desire for discrete family lines also drives the prohibition of father-daughter incest, though here the social interest is not reinforced by male anxieties over being superseded. On the contrary, this prohibition is at odds with the concept of the rights of the paterfamilias to autonomy and authority in his own household, and to control the lives and bodies of his children.

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The father daughter incest taboo involves a vital paradox: the father has complete rights over his daughter's sexuality but he is not allowed to use it; he has only the right to forbid its use by anyone other than the man he chooses. A father is not supposed to have sexual relations with his daughter even in a social structure in which he has the power and authority to sell her into slavery or kill her as a sacrifice. If the contention of sociobiology is correct, that genes have a strong drive to reproduce, then the father-daughter incest taboo contains another major selfcontradiction, for even though a man desires to reproduce, he must deny himself the use of the sexually nubile girl in his household; even if he has no sons, he himself cannot produce a son in his daughter's body. The literary result of all these contradictions is that legal corpora are squeamish about reinforcing this taboo, though they never eradicate it. The biblical laws prohibit father daughter incest in the general prohibition against a man sleeping with his own flesh (Lev. 18:6), but they do not reinforce it by detailing it explicitly, a notable omission in a whole list of specific incest taboos enumerated in this section of Leviticus. In the laws of Hammurabi, a mother and son convicted of incest are to be burned to death; but a father and daughter so convicted are banished. The laws do not want to undermine the freedom of a father's action by punishing him for his actions within his family. At the same time, they cannot condone or permit the incest. As a result, they do not allow father and daughter to live in society. The squeamishness of ancient laws to reinforce the taboo has been matched by the political reluctance of societies to intervene in family affairs and to punish sexually abusive fathers. Father-daughter incest is infinitely more common than the mother-son incest that receives most theoretical attention. But the act of the daughters of Lot was a very special type of incest. In almost all other cases of father-daughter incest, the father initiates the sexual encounter, abusing his position of power. But Lot did not do this. Not only did they initiate the act by getting him drunk; he did not pursue them when he was inebriated, nor even participate in the action. The story makes it clear that they got him so drunk that He was not aware when she lay down or when she got up. He was completely unconscious, siring sons through his daughters while remaining completely guilt-free. Such a begetting through one's daughter without actively committing incest could be almost the fulfillment of a male wish-fantasy. Modern readers suspect that Lot may not have been totally unconscious, a possibility suggested by another ancient tale of father-daughter

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incest, Ovid's story of Mvrrha and her father, Cinyras. Myrrha was obsessed with her father and, knowing that incest with him was forbidden in her country became suicidal in her lovesickness till her old nurse devised a plan. At the festival of Ceres, when married women left the marital bed, Cinyras became drunk. The nurse told him about a girl who loved him, and brought Myrrha in the darkness. Cinyras slept with her, and Ovid comments, "He might have called her daughter, knowing how young she was; she might have answered, dear father, so the names were right and proper to suit the guilty deed." She then returned to him again and again until he called for lights. Seeing his daughter, Cinyras drew7 his sword, and Myrrha fled, wandering in the Sabaean land till she turned into a myrrh tree and the tree gave birth to Adonis. Lot was no Cinyras; he had no idea he wTas having sexual relations. His daughters' goal was children rather than sexual intimacy and Lot intended nothing. But could conception have been possible if he was unconscious? It is almost axiomatic in our culture that "men can't be raped," that if they don't take action at some point, sexual congress is impossible. But Genesis is interested in seed, not in sex. And the ancients believed that a woman could obtain seed from an unconscious, even dead, male. In the ancient Egyptian myth of Isis and Osiris, Osiris's jealous brother Seth killed him, sealed him in a coffin, and threw it into the Nile. Isis, Osiris's sister and wife, found him and "raised the weary one's inertness [his phallus], received the seed, bore the heir," who was Horus, Osiris reincarnate. This conquest of death was one of the great acts of Isis, and Egyptian art often depicts her in the form of a winged woman or a hawk, hovering over Osiris's penis or his inert body. The story of Isis and Osiris contributes to the glory of them, and served as the founding myth of the important cult of Osiris/Horus as the mediator between life and death. Yet another ancient story tells of conception from a father and his daughter without "normal" incestuous relations between them. A medieval rabbinic fantasy the Aleph-Bet of Ben Sira, relates the conception of the great sage Ben Sira, whose parents were the prophet Jeremiah and his own daughter. Jeremiah came upon a group of evil Ephraimites masturbating into the public pool. Fearing that he would inform on them, they would not let go of him until he too masturbated into the pool. When Jeremiah's daughter came to bathe sometime later, she encountered the sperm of Jeremiah in the pool and became pregnant. Every single point in this totally and patently nonhistorical story is contradicted by Scripture, for Jeremiah lived over a hundred years after the Ephraimites were exiled to Assyria, and he

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complains that he had to sir alone and unmarried. This fantastic, mythic story draws on two ancient ideas: that sperm might survive in bathwater and impregnate a woman without sex, and that extraordinary conception is a sign of greatness. In a similar mythical scenario, the Persian Zoroaster was conceived from sperm that had long lain dormant in a river. Stories of extraordinary conceptions bring honor to the father, the son, and the mother. Zoroaster and Ben Sira and even Adonis are marked as special at the very moment of conception. In the same way the Moabites are marked for a special destiny The action of the daughters of Lot was an act of love and faithfulness to their father and to the need to give life an honorable, even heroic act. In the ancestor stories of Genesis, in w7hich God explicitly controls the opening and closing of wombs, the pregnancy of the daughters of Lot and the birth of Amnion and Moab are a reward for their extraordinary actions. This story is not intended to be a discussion of father-daughter incest. It is at once the memory of the highly unusual actions of the daughters of Lot, and a sign of the behavior of their descendants. For the unnamed mother of Moab and her much later descendant Ruth have much in common. Ruth, of course, does not commit incest: the incestuous relationship between the progenitors of a people is not a paradigm to be repeated in the real world of actual families. But she does aggressively pursue Boaz, and conies to his bed in the middle of the night. Like her foremother, Ruth does not consider herself bound by conventional mores when an important issue is at stake. Both women are faced with the problem of begetting children when they have no husbands, and both opt to search for a solution within the family so that the house to which they are attached would survive. Ruth's story is like a less intense echo of the Moab story Her situation is not as dire, and her act is not as drastic, but she and the daughters of Lot share a common thrust. When the posterity of their house is in peril, these women act unconventionally even contra-conventionally to preserve it. Subverting one cultural norm, conventional sexual mores, they reinforce and support an even more primal principle, paternal lineage.

Royal Origins Tamar

T H E W E D D I N G of Ruth and Boaz, the townspeople bless him with the wish that "the woman who is coming into your house" should "be like Rachel and Leah, the two who built the House of Israel" and that "your house be like the house of Peretz whom Tamar bore to Judah, from the seed that God gives you from this girl." Ruth will be the agent of the continuation of this lineage, a line drawn, in the last sentences of the book, from Peretz to Boaz and on to King David. A woman also began this line: Tamar, the mother of Peretz. Without Tamar, there would have been no Peretz and no Boaz; without Ruth, no Obed and thus no King David. Their stories have many similarities, most of which are shared by the story of Lot's daughters: the continuation of a lineage, a departure from home, widowed women, and the birth of a child. And they relate how7 the determined and apparently questionable actions of a widow7 made this crucial continuity possible. Tamar and Ruth share their loyalty their assertiveness, and their ingenuity qualities shared by Ruth's own distant ancestress, the mother of Moab, and perhaps also by Judah s mother, Leah, who traded with Rachel for a night with their mutual husband, Jacob. AT

The story of the house of Judah begins abruptly just after Joseph has been sold into slavery partially at Judah's instigation. Act I. The Beginning of the House of judah ( Gen. 38:1-7) It happened at that time. Judah went away from his brothers. He headed for an Adullamite man named Hirah. There Judah saw the daughter of a Canaanite man named Shua. He took her and came into her. She conceived and gave birth to a boy and he called his name Er. She conceived again and gave birth to a boy and she called his name Onan.

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She did it again and gave birth to a son and she called his name Shelah. It was in Kezib that she bore him. Judah took a wife for his eldest, Er, and her name was Tamar. The story tells us when Judah departed: It happened at that time. In the structure of Genesis, this means right after the sale of Joseph. But the story never reveals the reason he left. His reason lor leaving home is not important to the story, but his destination is: He headed for an Adullamite man named Hirah, who will appear later on as Judah's friend. Judah, like Dinah, seeks contact with the local inhabitants; unlike her, he successfully forges a lasting relationship: Judah saw the daughter of a Canaanite man named Shua. He took her and came into her. Having left his paternal home J u d a h is out of his father's care and supervision. Like his father before him, he can choose his woman and negotiate his own marriage. And like Jacob, he will be the father of the most significant part of his father's lineage, at least in the eyes of the Judeans who transmitted the story. Judah's wife is identified as the daughter of a Canaanite, and commentators both ancient and modern have assumed that his troubles stemmed from his marriage to a Canaanite. But the story itself contradicts such an assumption: it does not comment negatively about the marriage, nor tell us that it displeased God. On the contrary, the union was blessed with three sons. In the ancestor stories of Genesis, in which God actively opens and closes the wombs of women, three sons can hardly be a mark of divine disapproval. In this story, moreover, when God is displeased with a character's actions, God intervenes to kill the perpetrator. But Judah has no problems until after his sons marry. Furthermore, perhaps to forestall the assumptions that readers nevertheless continue to make, the narrator explicitly states that Judah's sons died because of their own actions. Shua is a Canaanite and Hirah is an Adullamite. Judah is indeed connecting with the other inhabitants of the land. And like all Jacob's sons, he must marry an outsider. Who else can they marry? Isaac and Jacob were " e n d o g a m o u s " t h e y married women from their own family But the family of Jacob and that of Laban have separated, and the two men have sworn a nonaggression pact (Gen. 31). So any woman whom Judah weds will be an outsider until after they are married. Quickly we learn about the development of Judah's family. Er is born and then Onan and Shelah. Judah takes Tamar to be the wife of Er. The story pointedly tells us nothing about where Tamar came from or who

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her father was. She could have been a Canaanite or an Aramean; she could have come from Mesopotamia (as the later Testament of Judah relates); she could even have been the daughter of one of Judah's brothers, though it is hard to believe that the narrator would not relate that. Her origin doesn't matter, for she now acquires a new identity: she is Judah's daughter-in-law. Her name matters, for like names in so many biblical stories, it reveals the issue of the story Tamar is the date palm tree, a tree that can bear copious and precious fruit. But the fertility of the date palm is not assured; it must be pollinated by direct human action. The name Tamar hints that this new daughter-in-law has the potential to bear, but her fertility will be endangered. The plot will determine whether she disappears (as did Tamar, the daughter of David) or becomes the ancestress of a precious hero. The equally expressive names of the sons present the triple crisis of the story. Tamar, the potential fruit-bearer, is mated first to Er and then to Onan. Their names also indicate the directions in which they could have gone. Er, whose name could have meant "the energetic one" (from ui; "arise, be awake"), instead does evil (ra) and becomes "the one who has no issue" (from 'rr, "be barren"). Onan, whose name could have meant "vigor" (from wn, "manliness, vigor"), becomes instead "nothingness" (from awen, "nothing"). The name of the third son, Shelah, could indicate that he should be her next mate, from selah, "hers," but the story tells us that he was born in Kezib, from kzb, "false." Things have gone quickly and smoothly for Judah's family until this point, but matters suddenly take a dramatic turn with the death of Er. Act II. Disaster to the House of judah ( Gen. j8:y-n ) Er, Judah's eldest, was evil in YHWH's eyes and YHWH killed him. Judah said to Onan: "Come into your brother's wife, perform the levir ate act, and raise up seed for your brother." Onan knew that the seed would not be for him and it happened that as he came to his brother's wife, he ejaculated on the earth without giving seed for his brother. What he did was evil in YHWH's eyes, and He killed him too. Judah said to Tamar his daughter-in-law, "Sit as a widow in your lather's house until Shelah my son grows up," for he thought, "Lest he too die. like his brothers." Tamar went and sat in her father's house.

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The death of Er presents the first critical juncture of the story. How will Tamar s fertility be actualized and Judah's line continue when she, like Ruth and Naomi, is a widow? As w7e have seen, ancient Near Eastern and biblical laws provide a solution in the institution of the levirate. A levir provides an heir for his childless dead brother by inseminating his brother's widow. He acts as his brother's surrogate and incest taboos are suspended. Judah's firstborn son has died childless, so he gives Tamar to Onan, the next son. But Onan is not willing to act to his own economic detriment. As the elder surviving son, he stands to inherit two-thirds of Judah's estate, if he provides an heir for his brother, that child will inherit his dead "father's" portion. Since Er was the eldest, his son would inherit half of the estate, and Onan would be left with only a quarter. Onan is not willing to lose five-twelfths of the estate, and ejaculated on the earth in coitus interruptus. For this offense, he too is killed by God. His "levirate" action, his calculations, and his life have all come to nothing. With the death of Onan, Judah's crisis deepens, as does Tamar s. There is just one son left, and Judah fears that this one will also die if he gives Tamar to him. Not only have w7e seen that Onan didn't perform the levirate; in an act unusual for biblical storytelling, the narrator lets us know why he did not and why God killed him and Er. The uncommon presentation of the characters' motives puts us, the readers, in the know7, setting up a dramatic irony, for Judah does not know7 any of this. Judah, in his ignorance, has come up with his own theory: Tamar is responsible. In the book of Ruth, the narrator tells us nothing, but Naomi reasons that God has killed her family Here, the narrative tells us, but Judah does not suspect God's role. Instead, he thinks Tamar may be a lethal woman. This belief in the "killer wife" also shows up in the apocryphal book of Tobit, where Sarah's bridegrooms die, killed by a jealous demon (Tob. 3:7 9 and 8:9 11). Judah's belief that his remaining son will die if he mates with Tamar prevents him from treating Tamar as she deserves. The readers, who know what happened, also know7 that Judah is mistaken, and thus Judah seems more foolish than evil in his mistreatment of Tamar. At the same time, it shows that a man with both power and lack of understanding becomes an oppressor. Levirate rules presented Judah with several options, to some extent determined by Shelah's age. According to the Middle Assyrian law, any surviving brother over ten years old should perform the levirate (MAL •j33). If Shelah is over ten, Judah should give Tamar to him; though she may have to wait for the consummation until Shelah is older. Judah pro-

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poses to do precisely this, but deceitfully, since he does not intend to risk his son's life and his own posterity by mating him with Tamar. If Shelah is under ten years old, Judah can ask her to wait for Shelah, or he can perform the levir ate himself. At the very least, since he does not want to perform the levirate or have Shelah do so, he should release her from his family just as Naomi, who had no surviving sons, released Ruth. As a true widow she would still have a chance to make a new life (the date palm could still become fertile), and Judah could marry Shelah to someone else who would give him grandchildren. But Judah is not honest about his intentions, and so he wrongs Tamar. His command that she "live as a widow in your father's house" is a contradiction in terms, for the very definition of "widow" is that she has no man controlling her and is, for better or worse, "free." But "widow" Tamar is not free; she is back under her lather's supervision and in her father-in-law's jurisdiction. She cannot create her own destiny, but must stay bound to Judah or be subject to severe punishment, even death. Later, when Judah believes that she has been faithless, he will be ready to burn her. By leaving her to be a "widow in her father's house," Judah binds her perpetually to his family without intending to provide her a secure future. This could be the end of Tamar's potential, for it would seem that she can do nothing. If the story ended with her hidden away in her father's house, she would be just another victim in one more story that shows a man treating his woman as expendable to save his own life. Tamar would have joined Jephthah's daughter and the concubine as another woman victimized by the mistaken power of their heads of household in the Bible's vision of the "bad old days" before the state, when each man had absolute control over his household. But Tamar's story is not yet over. Act III. Tamar's Trick (Gen. 38:12-19) The days grew7 many. Bat-Shua, Judah's wife, died. Judah was consoled and he went to his sheep-shearers, he and his friend Hirah the Adulamite, to Timnah. Thus was told to Tamar: "Look! Your father-in-law7 is going up to Timnah to shear his sheep." She took off her widow's garments, she covered herself with a scarf and was concealed.

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She sat at "The Eye-Opener" [Petah Eynayim | on the Timnah road, for she saw that Shelah had grown and she hadn't been given to him as a wife. Judah saw her and thought her a prostitute, for she had covered her face. He headed toward her on the road and said, "Let's do this: I will come into you," for he did not know that she was his daughter-in-law. She said, "What will you give me if you come into me?" He said, "1 will send a goat from the flock." She said, "If you give me a pledge until you send it." He said, "What pledge should 1 give you?" She said, "Your seal, your cord, and your staff that is in your hand." He gave it to her, he came into her, and she conceived by him. She arose, she went away She took her scarf off and wore her widow's clothes. Once Tamar realizes that Judah will not give her to Shelah, she knows that she herself must act to protect her future. She must trick Judah into performing the levirate himself: Tamar ceases to be a victim and takes her destiny into her own hands. When she hears that Judah is celebrating the sheep-shearing in Timnah, she sees her opportunity to act. The celebrating should put Judah in a party mood and awaken his libido. Since his wife is dead, he will not be hurrying home. He might be ready for some sexual action, and if Tamar plays out the scenario properly she may satisfy both their desires. She places herself w7here Judah cannot fail to come, on the road from Timnah at a place called, with considerable irony petah eynayim, "the opening of the eyes." Once again, the narrator shows us a character's motives. We should not be scandalized by Tamar's actions, because we know her reasons. Biblical authors rarely do this, but the stories about Lot's daughters, Ruth, and Tamar all tell us why these women act unconventionally Now Tamar saw that Shelah had grown and she hadn't been given to him as a wife. She will be trapped for life if she doesn't do something. But Judah did not sleep with her when Onan died, and she has no reason to suppose that she can either convince or entice him to do so now. His fear of her has already prevented him from approaching her, so she must hide her identity Tamar takes dramatic action, removing her widow's

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garments and wrapping herself in a veil. When Judah sees her sitting by the road, he assumes she is a prostitute. The veil does not signal this, for ancient texts indicate that prostitutes were not usually veiled. Proverbs 7 refers to the bold appearance of the prostitute, and the veil is married woman's garb in the book of Judith (Jdt. 10:2,16:9). The Middle Assyrian laws allow only married women to veil themselves, specifically prohibiting prostitutes from doing so (MAL ^40). This makes sense, for if prostitutes could wear veils, any woman could be one without fear of being recognized. This is what Tamar does. Using her veil as an antirecognition strategy, sitting at the "opening of the eyes," she draws a veil across Judah's eyes and prevents him from seeing her identity. He assumes that she is a prostitute because only a "street-walker" would be hanging around in the open roadway! The narrator once again stresses Judah's lack of knowledge: he did not recognize his daughter-in-law. By this device, the narrator shows us Judah sleeping with Tamar while telling us that he is certainly not guilty of desiring his own daughter-inlaw He sees a woman sitting in the street. Such a woman would be considered approachable, and Judah approaches. There is irony in Tamar's pretending to be a prostitute. She becomes anonymous in the same way that prostitutes are anonymous. And she masquerades as precisely the kind of woman whose behavior male control prevents wives and daughters from emulating. The essence of the prostitute is that she is outside the constraints of family life. No one restricts access to her, or protects it by the threat of retribution. Men can sleep with her without weakening the social system that forbids married women to say yes to anyone but their husbands. Women who are attached to family structures and nevertheless act as if they were without constraints will be punished for breaking their bonds. They are liable to be called "whores," in a pejorative rather than a technical sense, and their action called "harlotry" even when it is not sex for hire. This dual valuation of free, unconstrained female sexual activity is reflected in biblical Hebrew as well as in English. The Hebrew term zônah, "prostitute," is a participle of the very word znh that is often (mistranslated as "to go whoring." A wife or daughter who misbehaves sexually (or any other way) is said to be znh (faithless); but a prostitute, zônah, is one who always acts without constraint. Designated whores, outside the family structure, are not punished, and men are not condemned for sleeping with them. After all, that is the purpose of the institution. A man can therefore freely proposition a woman whom he takes to be a

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whore. Bur if she is nor a whore, he affronts those who protect and control her. Even if she is willing, the men of her family may be outraged, and they, like Dinah's brothers, may not let him get away with treating their woman kezonah, "like a prostitute." There are other women who were outside the ancient family structure and, we believe, had control over their own sexuality The qedēŠāh, normally translated "hierodule," was a woman attached to the temple rather than to a family These women have long been assumed to be "sacred prostitutes," but considerable contemporary scholarship demonstrates that there is no reason for this belief. There were other chores that they could do: in the only biblical passage that offers a glimpse of their activity, they weave garments for the asherah. The gdiititu-priestess in Mesopotamia was involved in childbirth and probably other matters relating to female biology The great similarity between the qedēsāh and the zônah (at least in male eyes) is that the qedēšāh is outside the family system and thereby approachable for sexual encounter or arrangement. The great difference is that, while both have the right to say yes, only the qedēšāh, who has other functions, may have the economic freedom to say no. Divorcing a wife sets her free. Given the economic constraints on most women, the assumption is that she will remarry as soon as possible; until then (as far as we know;) she is a "free agent," able to negotiate her own way. Widowhood, on the other hand, does not always confer this freedom. A widow with children is still part of her deceased husband's family and lives in that household. A new marriage would be arranged by her late husband's family, possibly by her own sons. A childless widow is reattached by means of the levirate, and Near Eastern law makes it clear that if no one performs the act, the woman is (truly) "a widow7" and should be released. Later biblical state law provides a formal public ritual by which a widow can initiate this release (Deut. 25:2 10). But in the ancestor stories of Genesis, long before the biblical state, the authority is Judah's, and he has not released Tamar. Denied a role in Judah's family, she is nevertheless bound by its constraints. Should she act otherwise, she will be punished as an unauthorized "whore." So, sitting at "the eye-opening," Tamar is playing a dangerous game. She must close Judah's eyes in the present, or else he won't sleep with her, but she must provide a way to open them in the future, or she will be in serious trouble. So when he propositions her, she acts like a prostitute. In three "he said, she said" exchanges, she negotiates the payment

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of a kid and asks for his staffs his cord, and his seal the equivalent of his credit card—as a token or pledge of the payment that he will send her. Judah leaves them willingly, for he has no need to hide his actions. Act IV. A Debt of Honor (Gen. 38:20-23) Judah sent a goat by means of his friend Hirah the Adullamite to retrieve his pledge from the woman. He didn't find her. He asked the people of her place thus, "Where is the qedeshah? The one of Eynavim on the road?" They said, "There was no qedeshah there." He returned to Judah and said, "I didn't find her, and the local people said, 'There was no qedeshah there. ' " Judah said, "Take it from her lest w7e become a mockery. Look, I sent this goat and I didn't find her." Judah, being an honorable man, sends his friend Hirah to pay the woman. But Tamar has disappeared back into her widowhood, and Hirah looks in vain for a "qedēšāh" (whom Judah could be paying for any number of services) rather than for a "prostitute," who was clearly hired for sexual favors. Even though it was not illegal to sleep with a prostitute, it appears that Judah nevertheless preferred to keep it quiet. Men may authorize prostitutes to serve their needs, but individually they prefer not to seem too needy Judah would like better that people not know exactly what he was trying to pay the woman for. His care for his reputation also makes him stop Hirah from continuing his inquiries. Judah's concern not to seem needy or foolish shows that he cares deeply about the way he is perceived by others. Act V^ Disgrace and Denouement (Gen. 38:24-26) It happened alter three months had passed. Thus was told to Judah, "Tamar your daughter-in-law has been faithless and what's more, look! She is pregnant from faithless acts." Judah said, "Take her out and let her be burned!" She was being brought out, and she sent to her father-in-law7 thus: "By the man to whom these belong I am pregnant." She said, "Recognize, please, to whom this seal and cord and staff belong."

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Judah recognized and said, "She has been more righteous than I, that for this 1 did not give her to Shelah my son." He did not continue to know her carnally. Tamar has read Judah (and her whole society) correctly. When her pregnancy begins to show7, Judah is told, "Tamar your daughter-in-law has been faithless and what's more, look! She is pregnant from faithless acts." To the people carrying the tale, her pregnancy is both proof and reminder that Tamar has acted in defiance of her obligation to Judah. Judah's status, his very honor, is endangered. Her faithlessness brings no less shame to him than adultery brings to a husband and a nonvirgin daughter brings to her father. Pregnancy takes the shame even further, giving it an undeniable reality and the prospect of a perpetual reminder. The man who worried that people would mock him for trying to pay someone who disappeared is now faced with the ridicule he would endure if a daughter-in-law could get away with thinking so little of his authority that she conceived a child with a man of another household! And so, Judah acts to restore his honor and status: "Take her out and let her be burned!" Her execution will be a public confirmation of the forbidden and treasonable nature of her offense, and of his own "honorable" action in enforcing her obedience. And it will clearly show who is in charge. Tamar now7 seems totally unable to do anything to save herself. The grammar of the sentences underscores the power dynamics. Judah speaks in imperatives, while Tamar 's action is described with a rare form in Hebrew grammar, the passive participle, She was being brought out. But Tamar is not as powerless as it seems, for she has anticipated the entire scenario. She sends Judah's staff and seal to him with word that she is pregnant by their owner. This time she uses an imperative, though softened with a plea, "Recognize, please!" Judah does recognize the objects, and this transforms everything. He had seen his sons die, and had not recognized God's justice: he had seen Tamar and had not perceived her right to have a life; he had seen the veiled Tamar and had not known her. But now he recognizes the staff and seal, and understands all that he had failed to see before. He stops the proceedings, declaring, "She has been more righteous than I, that for this I did give her to Shelah my son." The "for this" is the pregnancy Judah's recognition that he is the father exonerates Tamar, for the man she has slept with is an appropriate levir, her own father-in-law. She has operated unconventionally, but

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within the constraints of her role as a childless widow Judah failed to have Shelah impregnate her, but now she has caused him to impregnate her himself. She is therefore more righteous, in her commitment to continuing the line through the levir ate, than Judah has been. "She is more righteous than 1" is the most probable translation of sadeqah mimmenm. There is another possibility: "She is righteous. It is from me." The "it" implied would be the baby. According to this translation, Judah "acquits" her in his role, as the family's judge, and then gives the reason: the child is his. There would be no stigma in this. Even though, normally, a father-in-law/daughter-in-law union is an incestuous act, the incest provision is suspended for the levir ate. The father is the son's surrogate just as a brother-levir can be his brother's surrogate and sleep with his sister-in-law also an incestuous act under normal circumstances. The gossiping public would realize that a pregnancy by Judah validated Tamars innocence. Once the widow is pregnant, the levir ate is over. The laws do not specify that the woman should continue to be the wife of the levir. Sleeping with a daughter-in-law becomes an incestuous act, and the story hastens to assure us that Judah never slept with Tamar again. Ο

The Birth of the Bold (Gen. 38:27-30) It happened at the time that she gave birth. Look! Twins in her womb! And as she was birthing, one gave a hand. The midwife took it and tied a scarlet thread onto his hand, to say "This one came out first." And as he turned his hand back, look! His brother came out. She said, "How have you broken through your breach?" And he called his name Peretz. And afterward his brother came out who had the scarlet on his hand. And he called his name Zerah.

Judah applauds Tamar's action and God rewards it. Her boldness, initiative, and willingness to defy society's expectations have enabled God to provide Judah with two new sons after the death of his first two sons. By continuing to consider herself a member of Judah 's family and insisting on securing her own future within its parameters, she has made it possible for that family to thrive and develop into a major tribe and eventually the Judean state.. The story marks the significance of this birth of

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twins with the language that heralded the birth of Jacob and Esau, Look! Twins in her womb! But as she is birthing, Tamar s role in Israel's history ends. She will act no more. Midwives mark and witness the children's arrival, and "he," almost certainly Judah, names them. The attention of the story and its readers passes from Tamar to her sons and to the father who names them, claiming his role in their lives. Tamar passes from the scene, but her impact continues. One of the twins is even bolder than Jacob. Jacob, the second born, came out holding on to his brother's heels, and spent the first part of his life trying to supplant him. Peretz supplants his brother even before he leaves the womb. He shows the key characteristic of his mother, breaking through constraints and creating the breach (pars) through which he is born. But the birth of Peretz is not Tamar's only effect and achievement. Despite the story's keen interest in the lineage of Judah, it does not relate the life of Peretz or follow his descendants, and we realize his unique significance only when another bold, unconventional, and loyal woman, Ruth, intervenes to make his lineage lead eventually to the Davidic dynasty In the more immediate context, Genesis continues with the story of Joseph and Judah. And in this story we realize that the woman who transformed the history of the kingdom of Judah also transformed Judah himself Judah, whom his mother named in thanksgiving (from wdh, "give thanks"), becomes the one who has acknowledged (from wdh, "confess, acknowledge") that Tamar was the righteous one. This acknowledgment changes him, and he begins to act more like Tamar. He had left his brothers before he married Batshua, but the rest of Genesis shows him back in Jacob's family. He had betrayed Joseph out of jealousy but he henceforth acts out of loyalty to his brother Benjamin and his father, and is willing to stand up to the Egyptians in order to ensure their safety The very words echo the story of Tamar, for he who had given his staff as pledge to Tamar turns himself into a pledge for the safety of Benjamin (Gen. 43:9; 44:32 34). Ruth and Tamar have much in common with Dinah. Like the former, she looks for friendship with women beyond ethnic boundaries. Like the latter, she engages in sexual activity not arranged by the paterfamilias. Like Tamar, her sexual action endangers her father's honor, but his honor is restored. But there are several crucial differences that make Dinah almost their polar opposite. On the simplest level, Dinah goes out of the Israelite family Tamar and Ruth come in. The five mothers of what becomes the most prominent family in Judah have different points of origin. The daughters of Lot come from inside the nuclear family; Leah

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comes from the next level of extended family; Tamar is from somewhere outside, and Ruth begins outside Israel and then is a widow in Israel. With the exception of the daughters of Lot, whose actions are forbidden in normal circumstances, all women come into a family from outside it. Whoever their progenitors are, they leave their birth family and enter the family of their father-in-law. They lose their earlier identity as young girls and adopt a new one. Dinah attempts to do this before an official marriage has been arranged for her. The marriages of Leah, Tamar, and Ruth give them their adult identities as members of their husbands' households. They wholeheartedly embrace their new7 identity, and when they are widowed, Tamar and Ruth act to maintain it. It is this commitment that transforms their apparently subversive actions into underpinnings of their family. Dinah's out-of-control move has the potential to destroy the patrilineal structure; Tamar and Ruth reinforce it. These differences produce distinctly different results. Dinah has no future; Tamar and Ruth occupy prominent positions in the royal lineage of Israel. Tamar has much in common with Judah's foremothers: Sarah, Rivka, and Leah. Sarah, like Tamar, was given away (to Pharaoh and Abimelech) when Abraham wrongly perceived a threat to his own life; like Tamar, she took action to bear a child by arranging the surrogacy of Hagar. Tamar turned herself into a second Rivka when she veiled herself as Rivka once veiled herself at the sight of Sarah's son, Isaac (Gen. 24:66); she disguised herself as Rivka disguised her son Jacob (Gen. 27:14 16); and she became the mother of twins. Leah disguised herself, pretending to be Rachel in order to marry Jacob. Later, after Jacob rejected her, she actively managed to sleep with him through "hiring" his sexual services by using mandrakes; the result was the birth of Issachar, and later Zebulun (Gen. 30:16-20). Thus, the great-grandmother, the grandmother, and the mother of Judah overcame vulnerability and powerlessness to give birth to and determine the success of the grandfather and father of Judah and of Judah himself. Tamar continues this pattern to the next generation. They all were prepared to risk scandal, humiliation, ostracism, or death to have children with their families. They all were assertive and proactive, and each of them engaged in unconventional sexual activity to accomplish their purpose. And the same is certainly true of the other mothers of David's line, the daughters of Lot and Ruth. Taken by themselves, incest, adultery, and licentious behavior are subversive acts that could destroy the social order. In most contexts, such behavior is an indication of the loss of male control over female

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sexuality, and it can destroy the patriarchal system. However, in the context of the faithfulness of these women to their family and to its men, the loss of male control was actually a good thing; it enabled women to act in ways that served the family structure and enabled it to survive. The characteristics of family loyalty wits, determination, unconventionality, and agressiveness that Tamar and Ruth brought into their family will characterize the Judean monarchy to which these women gave birth.

The Royal Way

D A U G H T E R S of Lot, Leah, Tamar, and Ruth produce the lines of the kings of Judah, which stretch from Terah to Lot to his elder daughter, and from her son Moab to Ruth; and on the other side from Terah to Abraham to Judah and Tamar; from Tamar's son Peretz to Boaz; and from Boaz and Ruth to David. Lot had a second daughter, and her line extends from her son Ben-Ammi to the Ammonites, and from the Ammonites to Na'amah, the Ammonite wife of King Solomon and the mother of Rehoboam (i Kings 14:21). All the friture kings of Judah came from Rehoboam and Na'amah. THE

David's connection to Moab is not limited to his great-grandmother Ruth. He had sent his parents there for protection during his outlaw years, and then conquered Moab near the beginning of his reign. Solomon's story resonates with the story of Tamar and Judah. Judah was Jacob's fourth son, Peretz was Judah's fourth son, and after Absalom and Amnon were killed, Solomon was the fourth living son whose name the Bible remembers. Peretz pushed his way past Zerah to become the firstborn and heir to the line, just as Solomon pushed past Adonijah to become his father's royal successor. In addition, the names of the characters in the two stories bear a strange resemblance to the stories of David and Solomon. Peretz, "breakthrough," is a word frequently associated with the story of David, who named Ba al Peratzim saying, "The Lord broke through (paras) my enemies as water breaks through a dam" (2 Sam. 5:20-22) and named Peretz Uzzah, where the Lord "broke through against Uzzah" (2 Sam. 6:8). Obeci, Ruth's son, is also the name of one of David's inner guard (Chron. 11:47); Tamar is the name of David's daughter. Bathshua, named Judah's wife in Gen. 38:12 and in Chronicles, is also the name by which Chronicles knows David's wife Bathsheba, Solomon's mother. More remotely, Naomi sounds like Ν a amah, mother of Rehoboam, and comes from the same verbal root,

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and the name Hirah, Judah's friend, sounds somewhat like the name of King Hiram of Tyre, who befriended David and Solomon. Are these all coincidences? Or are they sly hidden allusions by the storytellers? David has much in common with Ruth and Tamar. As a young boy, he left his parental home to become a member of Saul's household. Like Ruth, he married into his new family and formed a close relationship with a family member of the same gender, for David and Jonathan and Ruth and Naomi are the Bible's closest same-sex friendships. Then David, like Tamar, had to leave his household when the paterfamilias became frightened of him. David, like Tamar, disguised himself as needed. And both David and Tamar proved their righteousness by showing their paterfamilias something that belonged to them. Tamar sent Judah his staff and seal, saying "recognize," and when Judah recognized them, he said, "She is more righteous than 1" (Gen. 38:25 26). David showed Saul a piece of the robe that David had cut while Saul was sleeping, saying, "See . . . and know that I didn't kill you" (1 Sam. 24:11), to which Saul responded, "You are more righteous than Γ' (i Sam. 24:17). And David and Tamar came back in triumph, Tamar to the house of Judah, and David to the kingship. David as ruler subverted some of the major traditions of Israel. He danced and sacrificed before the ark, merging the roles of priest and king. He began an aggressive campaign of expansion, enlarging the territory of Israel beyond its traditional boundaries. He manipulated the death of one of his trusted inner guards. But in all of his excesses, he remained faithful to his belief that God made promises to him and to his lineage. David's belief in the importance of the lineage principle colored the decisions that he made as judge and leader. When the Wise Woman of Tekoa told him the parable of her son who murdered his only brother, David was prepared to override the demand of her family that he execute the killer, in order to keep their father's line going. His love of his own lineage led him to lay aside his responsibilities as political and judicial authority ignoring his son Amnon's rape of David's own daughter, refusing to acknowledge the threat Absalom presented, and continuing to mourn him even after he was killed in his war of rebellion. Royal concern for the birth and safety of an heir echoes the concern of Ruth and Tamar to have sons for their dead husband's family There is another woman crucial to the development of Judean kingship: Bathsheba. The pivotal story of David and Bathsheba is both the height of David's assertion of power and the means by which he learned

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that there are limits to that power. It shows a David willing to break Israel's most sacred laws—those against adultery and murder—and a David willing to acknowiedge his mistake, repent, and learn from it. David also has much m common with Judah, for his behavior vis-à-vis Bathsheba echoes Judah's treatment of Tamar in Genesis 38. Both men used their power to manipulate those under their control. Both violated family norms David by mating with Bathsheba, Judah by not mating with Tamar. Both exercised their powder over life and death, Judah first condemning Tamar to a living death and later ordering her execution, and David sending Uriah to the most dangerous spot in the battle. And both acknowledged that they did wrong. David is like a larger-than-life version of Judah, whose wrongs go one step further than Judah's. His violation of the norm against adultery is more serious than Judah's violation of levirate rules. He actually commits administrative assassination by arranging Uriah's death; Judah only commands an execution that does not take place. At first glance, Bathsheba does not seem to have much in common with the other mothers of this dynasty She seems to be entirely passive. David sees her and takes her, and the only W O r d s she speaks are her announcement of her pregnancy. It is hard to imagine her in the company of the determined and proactive Tamar, or serving as a model for aggressive and subversive behavior on behalf of principle. But Bathsheba very much belongs in this company The pregnancy of both women precipitates male action: they each use the emphatic '!," dnoki, to emphasize their situation: harah dnoki says Bathsheba, announcing her pregnancy. By the man to whom these things belong harah 'anôkî, says Tamar as she sends Judah his pledge. At the beginning of her story, Tamar too was the silent object of male action. Judah took her for his son, gave her to another son, and sent her away to her father's house. It is only later that she begins to act for her own benefit and the benefit of Judah's house. So too over a longer span of time, Bathsheba develops into a player, acting to become the queen mother and have her son enthroned as the heir. Bathsheba determines the destiny of Solomon in the grand manner of Sarah and Rivka. And, like them, she has the divine word 011 her side, for Bathsheba worked with the prophet Nathan, who bore God's word to David. By the end of her story, Bathsheba, like Tamar, has seen her child, like Peretz, become the breakthrough son and heir. Bathsheba shares another trait with Tamar: we are not sure where

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she came from. Her father's names, Ammiel or Hliam. could be good Hebrew names, but they could also be slight Hebrew7 modifications of Aramean, Canaanite, or Moabite names. By the time we meet her, she is the wife of Uriah the Hittite, but nevertheless she lives near the palace. And she is married, so when she comes into the family and bears David a son, she follows the same trajectory as Tamar and Ruth, from 'beyond the pale" into its center. We can easily understand why the ancestry of kings should be full of unconventional people and subversive actions. Kings, after all, are not noted for their eagerness to conform to social mores. We can also see why the subversive actions that they admire are dedicated to preserving the lineage of the royal family the dynastic succession. In the worldview of kings, support of the royal line is essential. It is somewhat harder to understand w7hy the Israelite kings were so welcoming of foreign wives, even in Israel, where the rights and obligations of kings were not as different from those of commoners as they w7ere elsewThere in the ancient world. Even in Israel, the kings were different from the rest of the populace, marked off by God's special covenant with David. By logical extension, w7e could expect a rigorous three-part division: the king, "us," and "them." But this does not happen. On the contrary, the kings of Israel welcomed foreigners at court and in the harem. The Deuteronomist historian, eager to find reasons for the downfall of the state, faults them for this; the book of Chronicles, on the other hand, does not. There are several reasons for the kings' attitude. First, they themselves are outside the normative group, either above it in the pyramid of power, or at its economic or judicial center. They are thus less committed to the historical sociological factors that bind the society together. Indeed, they may view some of these factors, such as local or tribal allegiances, as rivals to their own pow7er. Second, kings also tend to see the state in territorial terms: whatever territory the central government controls directly is part of the state by definition. From the view of the throne, annexing additional territory does not weaken the boundaries of the state; it simply expands them. The royal concept of national identity is similarly political: whomever the king rules are his people. Adding more people enlarges the circle at the center of which the king sits. Of course, conquered peoples do not always see it this way They may retain their independent sense of identity until such time as they revolt. But until that happens, the king will view all the people in his territory as

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his subjects. And third, kings seek to maximize their alliances with the major powers of their day and with their neighbors, and marriage is a powerful alliance-builder. Kings are notoriously willing to ignore or subvert traditional social institutions, but there is one that they uphold vigorously: the inherited privilege of their own family is the source of their power, and so the key loyalty that they demand of their wives, whether foreign-born or nativeborn, is a commitment to continue the royal line. The stories told of the "mothers" of the dynasty—the daughters of Lot, Tamar, Ruth, and Bathsheba portray them all as actively accepting this commitment. These stories are an effective counterpoint to the more negative opinion of foreign wives. Outsiders can indeed have a positive role in Israel's destiny The dynastic mothers demonstrate steadfast allegiance to their adopted identities. Once married, they are not foreign Avives, nāšīm nokriyyot; whatever their origin, they are mothers of Israel.

Outsider Women Exile and Ezra

was destroyed, the kings were dethroned, the leadership was sent into exile, the people were scattered, and new people arrived in the land of Israel. At this time, at least some of Israels thinkers began to view foreign women as the very symbol of apostasy and faithlessness. Before the exile, the horror stories of Baal-Pe or, Jezebel, and Solomon's wives showed a concern that these foreign women would lead the people to idolatry. During the exile, the prophet Ezekiel sounded a new note. In his version of the "marital metaphor" for the relationship of God and Israel, he attributed the wantonness of Jerusalem to her particular ancestry In a vituperative and graphic diatribe (Ezekiel 16), he declared that Jerusalem began life as the outcast, exposed child of a Canaanite lather and a Hittite mother, that God adopted her as his ward and betrothed her at puberty. But her origin was the cause of Jerusalem's later wantonness (and God's retaliatory devastation). It was a family trait. W H E N JERUSALEM

Like Mother; Like Daughter (Ezek.

16:44-48)

"Look! Everyone who pronounces upon you will say this proverb, 'Like mother, like daughter.' "You are the daughter of your mother, who spurned her husband and sons. 'And you are the sister of your sisters, who spurned their husbands and children. "Your mother was Hittite and your father Amorite. "Your big sister is Samaria and her daughters, she who sits on your left, and your sister who is smaller than you is Sodom, and her daughters. "Did you not walk in their ways and do their abominations? "In just a little while you were becoming more corrupt than they in all your ways.

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"Äs I live!" says Lord YHWH, "your sister Sodom did not do, nor her daughters, as you and your daughters have done." Jerusalem has done abominations, and Ezekiel links them to the proverbial evil of Sodom and to the evil of Samaria, which had been proved by her destruction. These "sisters" are a standard of evil, which, Ezekiel proclaims, Jerusalem has overtaken. The link carries the message, spelled out in the proverb, that a city's evil is "inherited" from its parentage and most especially from the Hittite mother. Even though Jerusalem had been outside the Canaanite milieu since infancy had even been nurtured by God, her "genetic" nature remained, so that her behavior was "Like mother, like daughter." Ezekiel's portrayal of Jerusalem's misbehavior carried a clear message to human society: even though a girl may leave her birth family her birth family never leaves her. To take a foreign wife—even one raised in Israel—is to bring the outsider into your home. Matters came to a head in the Persian period. There was no king to represent the unity of the people, and opinion was divided as to whether monarchy had been a good thing for Israel. The book of Kings catalogues the many times that the kings sinned and led Israel astray, and blames them for the de struction of Jerusalem. The book of Chronicles is in favor of kingship, portraying David and Solomon as great leaders, omitting the stories (Bathsheba-Uriah and Tamar and Amnon) with which the book of Samuel undermines the reader's faith in the monarchy and the story (Solomon's wives) in which the book of Kings indicts him for his foreign marriages. It is probably no coincidence that the book of Chronicles was not worried about intermarriage, carries no cautionary comments or tales about foreign wives, and records mixed marriages matter-of-factly without any particular notice. This difference of opinion erupted into conflict at the time of Ezra. Leaders of the community come before Ezra to complain of foreign marriages in all strata of the community. The Holy Seed (Ezra 9:1-3) When these matters were concluded, the leaders approached me thus, "The people Israel, the priests and the Levites, have not separated themselves from the peoples of the lands according to the abominations of the Canaanite, the Hittite, the Perizzite, the Jebusite, the Ammonite, Moabite, Egyptian, and Edomite ('dmy!). For they have married their

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daughters for wives for themselves and their sons and they have mixed the holy seed with the peoples of the lands. And their leaders and magistrates were first in this transgression." When 1 heard this matter, I tore my garment and my robe. 1 tore out bunches of my hair and beard and 1 sat appalled. The complaining "leaders" are clearly not the total leadership of the people, since they claim that leaders led the offense. The substance of their complaint is not apostasy They object to these marriages not because they might lead to apostasy but simply because they are marriages to other peoples. Their objection is not strictly legal. Only the first four peoples, the Canaanites, Hittites, Perizzites, and Jebusites were forbidden by Deuteronomy and they disappeared long before the period of Deuteronomy, and certainly by the Persian period. The complainants begin with them to give an aura of legitimacy to their objections to the others, Israel's neighbors, who were not forbidden by pre-exilic texts. These marriages are characterized as a particular kind of offense, a ma ni, a trespass against boundaries, particularly of the holy. Those who have joined with the peoples of the lands have not only trespassed national boundaries, they have transgressed the key boundary between holy and profane because, to these leaders, Israel is a "holy seed." The term "seed" is not extraordinary: it is one of the many ways in which Israel is depicted as a plant or a vine. The idea of Israel as a seed became more prominent as land and king became less secure markers of the nation's identities. The Bible's later writers speak of God choosing the seed of Abraham (Isa. 41:8); and of the house of Jacob (Ezek. 20:5). They declare that the seed had gone bad (Jer. 2:21); Isa. 57:4; first in Isa. 1:4), that God will reject the seed (2 Kings 17:20), and that God will return the seed of the house of Israel (Jer. 23:8), of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob (Jer. 33:26), of Israel (Isa. 45:25), and that God will maintain covenant with it (Isa. 59:21; 61:8-9; cf. Jer. 31:36). Those complaining to Ezra speak not just of "seed," but "holy seed." Such language begins to appear in connection with restoration and for an eschatological future. The seed has ceased to be the purely descriptive seed of Abraham, of Jacob, of Israel, and Israel has become very special seed: "seed that the Lord has blessed" (Isa. 61:8 9), "seed blessed by God" (Isa. 65:23), "seed of peace (Zech. 8:12), "seed of God" (Mai. 2:15), and the "holy seed" in Ezra. The holy seed first appears in Isaiah, in connection w7ith his hope for a

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new beginning after the destruction he was convinced would come. He likened the destruction to the felling of an oak and a terebinth, which leaves stumps behind from which the trees can regrow. In just this way, says Isaiah, a holy seed will grow from the stump of Israel (Isa. 6:13). He envisions an open Israel in which strangers join with the house of Jacob (Isa. 14:3). But Ezra's complainers have a more priestly view of seed and holiness: a genetic lineage, and state, whose borders are tightly controlled. For them, the problem posed by intermarriage is neither apostasy nor abomination; it is adulteration. Ezra responds with a public demonstration of grief that attracts others who are worried about this grand transgression. He proclaims a "prayer" that is actually a diatribe. Ezra's Prayer (Ezra 9:3-9) When I heard this matter, I tore my clothes and my cloak and plucked the hair of my head and my beard and sat desolate. To me gathered all those who trembled at the word of the God of Israel about the great transgression and 1 sat desolate until the evening sacrifice. "My God, I am shamed and humiliated to lift, my God, my face to you. "For our sins are great, higher than our head, our guilt great up to the sky. "Since the days of our fathers we have been in great guilt to this very day. "And because of our sins, we have been given, we and our kings and our priests, into the hand of the kings of the nations, into sword and exile, and are in ridicule and shame to this day. "Now for a moment, YHWH our God has extended grace to leave us a remnant and give us a stake in his holy place, to enlighten our eyes has our God (done this) and to give us a little renewal from our servitude . "For we are slaves and God has not abandoned us in our servitude, and he. has given us benevolence, before the kings of Persia to give us renewal to erect our temple, to rebuild our ruins, and to give us a fence around Judah and Jerusalem. "And now, what can we say, our God, after all this, for we have abandoned your commands, which you commanded by the

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hand of your servants the prophets, thus, 'The land which you are coming to inherit is outcast in the quarantine of the peoples of the lands for the abominations with which they filled her from edge to edge in their pollution. And now, do not give your daughters to their sons and do not take their daughters for your sons. Do not seek their welfare or good forever, so that you may be strong and eat of the good of the land and give it as inheritance to your sons forever.' "After all that had come upon us because of our evil deeds and our great guilt

indeed, you, our God, kept back some of

our punishment and left us this remnant—shall we go back to violating your commandments and marrying these nations of abominations? Would you not get angry until destruction so that there would be no remnant, no survival?" Ezra's prayer is penitential in tone and Deuteronomic in its theology Like Moses, Joshua, and Samuel, he reminds the people of their many transgressions, and accuses them of continuing the old pattern of violation even in the moment of new beginning. The prayer is ostensibly addressed to God, but it doesn't ask for God's mercy. Its purpose is to move the people to change their ways by reminding them what trouble comes from sin and then naming Israel's new sin: disobeying God's command to keep away "from the peoples in the land to which you are coming to inherit it." All the recent troubles of Israel are the result of its transgressions, and the first order of these is intermarriage with the local inhabitants. Like Israel's classic Deuteronomic covenant-renewal oration, Ezra's "prayer" moves the people to tears and leads them to promise to mend their ways:

nasîm nokriyyôt (Ezra

10:2-5).

Secaniah son of Yehiel of the family of El am spoke to Ezra: "We have trespassed against our God. "We have brought into our homes foreign wives from the peoples of the land. "But there is hope for Israel about this. "Now7 let us make a covenant to our God to expel all the wives and their offspring at the advice of my lord and those who quake at the command of God. Let it be done as the Tor ah. Arise, for this matter is yours to do.

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"We are with you, be strong and do it." Then Ezra arose and adjured the leaders of the priests, Levites, and all Israel to do this and they took an oath. The momentum of this response leads Ezra to action. First he fasted "because of the transgression of the golah (formerly exiled) community." And then he called for an assembly: The Assembly (Ezra 10:7-14) They sent a proclamation through Judah and Jerusalem to all the members of the golah to gather at Jerusalem: "Everyone who will not come for three days at the advice of the leaders and officers will be excommunicated, with all his possessions, and he will be separated from the assembly of the golah." All the men of Judah, Benjamin, and Jerusalem assembled at the third day, which was the ninth month, the twenty-fifth day of the month, onto the street of the temple, shivering at this matter and the rains. Ezra the priest arose and said to them: "You have transgressed: you have settled foreign wives, adding to Israel's guilt. Now give thanks to YHWH the God of your fathers and do his will. Separate from the peoples of the land and the foreign wives." The whole assembly spoke in a loud voice, "It is true, we must do as you have said. But the people are many, and it is the rainy season, and we have no strength to stand outside, and the work will take more than one or two days because many of us have sinned in this matter. Let the leaders of the congregation and all of those in our cities who have foreign wives come at appointed times with the elders of each city and its judges to turn away God's anger from us about this matter." The people then make arrangements to appear, and from the first day of the tenth month until the first day of the first month, they assemble and repudiate their wives. The combination of peroration and penitence gives the whole passage a heavily Deuteronomic tone. Both leaders and people have learned well the lessons of the Deuteronomistic historical books. The term "for-

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eign wives," našîm nokriyyôt, reinforces the lesson, for it appears only in Ezra, where it emerges seven times, in Nehemiah, and in the historian's verdict on Solomon in 1 Kings 11:1. The pious tone induces the reader to see the whole event as an occasion of sin and repentance and to miss the radical nature of the affair. The "peoples of the land" that Deuteronomy forbids are the long-gone Canaanites. It never forbade Israel to make treaties or marry the Moabites, Ammonites, Egyptianites, and Edomites; they were simply to be kept separate, not allowed to "enter the congregation of YHWH" (Deut. 23:4). The prophets heralded the return from Babylon as a "new Exodus," a. parallel to the departure from Egypt that would rival that exodus. But the peoples of the land to which they came back were not the original inhabitants. Most of them were the descendants of those Judeans who were not exiled to Babylon, who stayed on, as peasants usually do, or ran away to Egypt and then drifted back. Ezra's list of nations combined the abominated nations from Deuteronomy with those that Deuteronomy says "may not enter the congregation of Israel." He then invoked the authority of God's original commandment to prohibit marriage to the entire list. In this way he created a new7 reality: he read out of the community everyone who did not go through the Babylonian exile. Theological language leads to new sociological fact. Encouraged by his initial group of "tremblers," Ezra puts his new definition of Israel into effect by inviting to his assembly all the male, members of the gôlah. The very term indicates that they were the ones who had returned from the exile, galût. The other Jude an and Israelite men were not invited: they are just part of the "peoples of the land." At the assembly he convinces the returnees that their new wives are latter-day Canaanites, and breaks up their marriages. Ezra is concerned with foreign wives in particular. Female returnees who married the "peoples of the land" have already joined those people, and to Ezra they are not part of Israel. But the women that the male returnees have married are adulterating the gôlah, which Ezra considers a "holy seed." They have to be expelled together with their children, a deviation from the normal divorce pattern of the ancient world in which the woman left and the children, who were their father's lineage and posterity stayed with him. Ezra does not want these children, even though their fathers were of the "pure seed." The reason may very well be economic; indeed the division of the community into the gôlah and the "peoples of the land" may very well reflect struggles over who owned the land that the people abandoned when they went into exile,

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land that had been worked in the interim by those who remained. But he never mentions such causes, speaking only the theological language of Deuteronomic law, the pollution language of Leviticus, and the ontological polarity of "holy seed" and "foreign women." As with any politician, we are tempted to ask whether Ezra was using theological language to justify economically motivated actions or whether he truly believed he was defending the "holy seed" from adulteration. But whatever his motives, his argument was successful, and the community of former exiles expelled its wives. Ezra's actions were not universally applauded. The prophet Malachi objected to this mass divorce. His language is obscure, but he clearly objects to rejecting the wife of one's youth in order to seek "the seed of God" (Mai. 2:15). The book of Ruth is not at all ambiguous about this issue. Reciting it in the days of Ezra was a direct rebuttal of Ezra's idea that foreign wives dilute the holy seed. But the real refutation of Ezra came from the people, who continued to marry foreign women. Nehemiah also complains about this practice, for other reasons: «ς> Nehemiah 's Turn (Neh. 13:23-28) In those days too 1 saw Jews who had settled Ashdodite, Ammonite, and Moabite women. Their children spoke half Ashdodite and did not know how to speak Jude an as the language of each people. I contended with them and cursed them and hit people from among them and plucked their hair and adjured them by God "not to give your daughters to their sons and not to take from their daughters to your sons and to you. For because of these, Solomon the king of Israel sinned. In all the nations there never was a king like him, and beloved of his God. God made him king over all Israel. Even him the foreign wives caused to sin. Shall we listen to you to do this great evil to transgress against our God to settle foreign wives?" I chased out from among them one of the sons of the high priest Yehoiyada ben Elyashuv who was the son-in-law of Sanballat the Haronite. Nehemiah mentions the corruption of language and reminds the people that foreign wives enticed even the great Solomon to sin. But he too uses the new pollution language as he states that he "purified" the priests and

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Levites from the foreign element (Neh. 13:30). The marriage problem never went away and Jewish men kept marrying local women. The Maccabeans passed laws, but they too could not prevent the behavior, and the rabbis provided conversion procedures so that foreign women cease to be foreign before Jews marry them. Individual foreign women continue to enter Israel, but the idea of the foreign woman as a source of danger to the community did not disappear. It reached almost mythological status in the figure of the "foreign" or "strange" woman fiššah zarah,1isša nokriyah) in the book of Proverbs, chapters 1 9. This woman is outside the pale, by origin or by behavior. Sometimes she is clearly an adulteress, strange to the man's family; sometimes she breaks cultic rules; and sometimes she is a foreigner. All these are ways in which a woman can be strange, or "go strange." As in the English word "outlandish," the one from out-the-land is also outthe-customs of the land. And the one who disregards the mores of the land, like the adulteress, is deemed an outsider woman. This association of the foreign woman with all kinds of otherness makes her the very symbol of the "Other." The next step will be to see all women, even Israelite women who behave themselves, as somehow "other," and Hellenism will bring that step to Israel.

Part Four

VOICE

B O O K S convey their messages both by their contents and by the arrangement of those contents. The editors, or "redactors," of Genesis arrange the Abraham story into a tight cycle that goes from "Go!" in chapter 12 to "Go!" in chapter 22 (see the discussion above, pp. 225). The editors of the Pentateuch set the stories of Israel as two parallel groups, one in Exodus and one in Numbers, and the juxtaposition of these stories illuminates Israel's ideas about faith, loyalty, and leadership. The editors of the historical books arrange two parallel groups of victim stories, in Judges and Second Samuel, to offer both a justification for and a critique of monarchy. They also create another group of stories, in which the voice of God operates through female oracles. From Judges to Kings, a woman arises at each critical juncture of Israel's history to proclaim the future. These are the stories about "voice."

B

IBLICAL

Oracles of the Conquest of Canaan Rahab and Deborah

F I R S T S A V I O R - W O M A N in Israel's new land is also its first oracle. The Canaanite prostitute Rahab, under orders from the king of Jericho to hand over the Israelites in her house, hides them on her roof and sends the king's men looking for them in the wrong direction. Then she goes up to the roof and says to the Israelites: THE

A Declaration of Faith (josh. 2:9-11 ) "I know that YHWH has given you this land And that dread of you has fallen upon us, And that all the inhabitants of the land have melted before you. For we have heard howr YHWH dried up the waters of the Red Sea before you when you went out of Egypt, And what you did to the kings of the Amorites on the other side of the Jordan to Sihon and to Og, that you utterly destroyed them. We heard and our hearts melted: No man has spirit before you, For YHWH your God is God in heaven above and on the earth below"

This is a formal declaration, beginning with "I know," and ending with her affirmation, " Y H W H your God is God in heaven above and on the earth below." She speaks in the pattern of other statements of faith, using the "I know" with which Moses' father-in-law Je thro declared after the Exodus, "Now 1 know that the Lord is greater than all gods" (Exod. 18:11). After Elisha cured the Syrian captain Naaman from leprosy Naaman affirmed, "For I know that there is no such God in all the land" (2 Kings 5:15). Asjethro was convinced by the Exodus, and Naaman by being cured of leprosy Rahab has been brought to her affirmation by the knowledge of God's miracles. Like the Gibeonites who come

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after her, she has heard about God's great deeds (Josh. 9:9 10), and she even quotes the very verses of the Song of the Sea that predicts how hearing the word of God's actions will cause dread to fall upon the inhabitants and make their hearts melt (Exod. 15:14-16). Rahab is the first of the nations to be convinced that God is indeed God in heaven above and on the earth below. Rahab goes beyond a faith declaration as she reveals that she knows what God is about to do: "I know that Y H W H has given you this land." Israel has not yet crossed the Jordan, but Rahab knows it will take over Canaan. These words of prediction spoken by a Canaanite prostitute convince the spies. They recognize the truth and do not suffer the fear that plagued the emissaries whom Moses had sent out a generation before. And they bring her message back to Joshua. The first prophet after Moses to announce to Israel the paths of her history, Rahab becomes the first oracle of Israel's destiny. There is a connection here between women and prediction, a connection that converges once more when the conquest of Canaan is completed. The action begins suddenly with an introduction of Deborah. Deborah, Prophet and Judge (Judg. 4:4-5) Deborah the prophet-woman, Lapidot-woman

she judged Is-

rael at that time. She would sit under "Deborah's Palm Tree" between Ramah and Beth-El on Mount Ephraim, and the Israelites went up to her for judgment. Unlike Rahab, the outsider's outsider, Deborah was an insider's insider, a public leader, active in the public arena as part of her normal life. o

The Call (Judg. 4:6-10) She sent and called for Barak ben Abinoam from QedeshN a ft ali. She said to him, "Did not YHWH God of Israel command: "Go and pull toward " 'Mount Tabor and take with you ten thousand men from the men of Naphtali and Zebulun. I will draw Sisera the head of Yabin s army and his chariotrv and masses to Wadi Kishon and I will give him into your hand.' " Barak said to her, "If you go with me, I will go. If you will not go with me, I will not go."

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She said, "I will indeed go with you, especially since you will get no glory on the way you are going, for into the hand of a woman YHWH will deliver Sisera." Deborah rose and went with Barak to Qedesh. Barak mustered Zebulun and Naphtali to Qedesh. Ten thousand men went up at his feet, and Deborah went up with him. Deborah's summons to Barak in our story hints at a previous call to him: "Did not Y H W H God of Israel command?" Now Deborah calls him as a prophet, an envoy of God, as part of the important role prophets in the ancient Near East played in battle. As discussed above (page 48), prophets mustered and inspired the troops, and also declared the correct, auspicious time to begin the battle. Deborah delivers an oracle before they even leave for the battle, telling Barak that he will not achieve glory for God will deliver Sisera into the hand of a woman. Like the reader, Barak surely interprets this to mean that Deborah will bring the victory but her speech, like all oracles', is cryptic, and it is only later that we learn yet another woman will enter the fray. The Battle (Judg.

4:12-16)

Sisera mustered all his chariotry nine hundred iron chariots, and all his people from Harosheth-Hagoyim to Wadi Kishon. Deborah said to Barak, 'Arise, for this is the day that YHWH gives Sisera into your hand. Indeed YHWH goes out before you?" Barak quickly descended from Mount Tabor and ten thousand men after him. YHWH distressed Sisera and all the chariotry and all the camp by the sword before Barak, and Sisera descended from his chariot and fled on foot. Barak chased the chariots and the camp to Harosheth-Hagoyim and fell on Sisera's camp with the sword. None remained. Deborah the prophet announces the victory, God will deliver Sisera, and reassures God's presence in that place, "Indeed Y H W H goes out before you," and in that time, "Arise, for this is the day." She herself does not go down to the battlefield. Like Moses, she is not a military

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commander. She stays on Mount Tabor; she inspires and predicts and celebrates in song. Her weapon is the word, and her very name is an anagram of "she spoke" (dibberah). Deborah and Rahab are the literary bookends that surround the conquest of Canaan, which is nestled inside the greater section, about "Israel in the land of Israel" that occupies Joshua-Judges-i and 2 Samuel ι and 2 Kings); and that history is itself bracketed by Rahab and the prophet Huldah.

Oracles of Saul Hannah and the Witch of Endor

was achieved, but the social order established by Israel deteriorated until it imploded in the catastrophes at the end of the book of Judges. It was time for dramatic change, the inauguration of kingship, which culminated in the reign of King David. The advent of the monarchy was the next great turning point in Israel s history and this too was announced by a woman, Hannah. Unlike Deborah and Huldah, she was not a prophet. On the contrary, she was a 'normal" woman, whose peaceful story comes after the end of the book of Judges. The Hebrew Bible places the book of Samuel, the next historical book, right after the book of Judges. The Greek Bible (the Septuagint) places the book of Ruth (which takes place "when the judges judged") after Judges and before Samuel. The first few chapters of Samuel and the book of Ruth have a lot in common. Each story culminates in a birth that will lead to the kingship, and each is a peaceful idyll in which good people live their lives in a world very different from the violence portrayed at the end of Judges. The domestic settings suggest that the monarchy will be good for ordinary people; the fact that the stories invoke Ephratites hints from where the monarchy will come; and the very tranquillity of the stories suggests the internal peace that Israel hoped the monarchy would bring. T H E CONQUEST

Ο

The House of Elkanah (ι Sam. 1:1-8) There was a man from Ramatayim-tsofim from Mount Ephraim whose name was Elkanah son of Yeroham b. Elihu b. Tohu b. Tsuf the Ephratite. He had two wives. The name of one was Hannah and the name of the second Peninah. Peninah had children, but Hannah did not have children.

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The man came up from his town every year to worship and sacrifice to Y H W H of hosts at Shiloh. There the two WOrthless men Hophni and Pinhas were priests for YHWH. On the day, Elkanah sacrificed and gave Peninah his wife and all her sons and daughters portions. To Hannah he gave a parallel portion, for Hannah he loved, and God had closed her womb. Her co-wife would anger her so that she

WOuld

cry aloud, for

God had closed her womb. And so it would happen every year when she went up to the house of Y H W H : thus she would get angry and thus she would not eat. Elkanah her husband said to her, "Hannah, why are you crying and why are you not eating? Why are you sad? Am 1 not better to you than ten sons?" The story begins with a classic biblical dysfunction. The woman who will give birth is childless—like Sarai, Rivka, and Rachel, hints the story, this barren woman will give birth to a great hero chosen by God. Her childlessness causes friction in the family, as there was between Rachel and Leah, and Sarai and Hagar, co-wives set up by society and language to be rivals for the husband's favor. But there is no real contest: even though Peninah has many children, Hannah he loved. Elkanah show's his love for Hannah by giving her a disproportionate share of the sacrificial animal, perhaps even a share equal to all of Peninah's family combined. Peninah's reaction is interesting. It seems that she never gets used to the obvious favoritism, for every year, when they come up on their pilgrimage, Peninah provokes Hannah to anger so that she would cry aloud about the fact that God had closed her womb. What she said we do not know7, as we do not know how7 Hagar "disrespected" Sarai. But it must have been a severe provocation to make Hannah cry loudly. Moreover, did Peninah behave this way all the time, or only every year when she went up to the house of Y H W H ? Such behavior could not endear Peninah to Elkanah or change his behavior, and we must wonder why she would do this. Perhaps she was angry that her children were slighted in order to give Hannah such a large portion. Or perhaps she had another reason, intimated by the phrase so that she would cry aloud.

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Should we simply translate "so that she cried aloud"? The word harimah, "she made her cry aloud," could support either translation, but the words "so that," ba abûr usually imply purpose. Is the word implying that Peninah was purposely trying to get Hannah to express her frustration aloud? Perhaps picking up this clue, a rabbinic midrash explains that Peninah wanted to help Hannah; she made her angry so she would not accept childlessness as her fate and would cry aloud so that God would hear her affliction. If this was truly Peninah's purpose, millennia of tradition owe her an apology, and the story has two more parallels to the story of Ruth. It too would have no villains, only people trying to be kind to one another. And the two births, of Samuel and of Obeci, the son of Ruth, would be the result of women showing solidarity with one another in ways that the society does not anticipate. If this was truly Peninah's purpose, it worked. Hannah refused to eat (from depression or fasting) and prayed for a child. Elkanah doesn't understand. Knowing that co-wives are rivals, he reassures Hannah. Moreover, knowing that childless women are in a terrible predicament, he declares, Am I not better to you than ten sons? He seems blind to his own wife's emotions. But he is not totally obtuse. There is really nothing he can do. He cannot give Hannah a child. He cannot give Hannah control over Peninah as Abram gave Sarai control ewer Hagar, because Peninah is not a slave wife. He reassures her of his love. Furthermore, since a childless woman could be in a precarious position if he died, he intimates that he is taking care of her, providing for her as Ruth provided for Naomi, which the neighbors acclaimed, "for she is better for you than seven sons" (Ruth 4:15). But Hannah's desire for a child goes beyond a wish for status or security Elkanah s lack of understanding only highlights her true wishes. What did she answer him? The narrator doesn't tell, for Elkanah's understanding is not the issue. Hannah's true answer is in her actions. Hannah at the Sanctuary (1 Sam. 1:10-18) Hannah arose after she had eaten in Shiloh and after drinking. Eli the priest was sitting on a chair next to the doorposts of the sanctuary of YHWH. She was bitter and she prayed to God and she wept. She vowed a vow and said, "YHWH of hosts, if you see the affliction of your servant and remember me and do not forget your servant, and give your servant a human seed, I will

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give him to YHWH all the days of his life. A razor will not come on his head." As she was praying much before YHWH, Eli was watching her mouth. Hannah was speaking to her heart, only her lips were moving, and her voice was not heard, and Eli thought her drunk. Eli said to her, "How7 long will you be drunk? Take away your wine." Hannah spoke up and said, "No, my lord, I am a woman in difficult spirit and have not drunk wine or strong drink. I am spilling out my soul before YHWH. Do not consider your servant as a worthless one, for it is because of the greatness of my complaint and my anger that 1 have spoken till now" Eli spoke and said, "Go in peace and the God of Israel will give the request that you requested from him." She said, "May your servant find favor in your eyes." The woman went on her way and ate and her face was no longer (sad). The family has come for a zebah, a sacrifice that the worshipers eat in communion with God. Eating in this context is a religious obligation, and so we are told that Hannah ate and drank. She then goes to the sanctuary to offer prayers. Did she believe that God would hear her prayers better from there? Pilgrims may believe that God hears prayers everywhere. Nevertheless, they go to sites that they consider sacred in order to intensify their prayers, using the sanctity of the place to boost the powers of their own prayers. And so Hannah stays a long time at the sanctuary in her personal prayer. Was it unusual for women to come to offer their own prayers? The story doesn't hint that there was any irregularity invoked. Eli doesn't try to chase her away or tell her that women belong in the home. It is the intensity of her prayers and their long duration that attract his attention, and the fact that he cannot make out what she is saying. Eli may have become accustomed to the sight of drunkenness associated with these pilgrimage feasts. Moreover, he may have expected women in distress to make a loud noise, to cry out or to ululate like mourners. Instead, she is praying silently The story does not tell us why, nor does it tell us what she said. Her prayer was private, and the text leaves it that way. Only one part of the prayer has public importance: the promise of the child to

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God. And this vow is spelled our: the child would be given right back to God in service, and marked for that service by the long hair that distinguished a Nazirite. Later readers were keenly interested in Hannah's prayer: what could she have said to make God give her a child? Rabbinic authors suggest what her arguments might have been. She argued that her womb should not be created for nothing; she argued that God commanded procreation; she argued that Israel was supposed to teach its children the Torah, so there had to be children. Hannah to them is a master petitioner, a model of persuasive argumentation. They also considered her the very model of the importance of the silent prayers they introduced at the center of the worship service. When Hannah explains her plight, Eli promises that she will have a child. How he knew7 this, the story does not say But so it happened. The Birth of Samuel (1 Sam.

1:19-23)

They arose early in the morning and bowed down before Y H W H and turned and came to their house in Ramah. Elkanah knew his wife Hannah and Y H W H remembered her. It happened with the turn of the year that Hannah conceived and bore a son and called his name Samuel, "For 1 requested him from Y H W H . " The man Elkanah went up with his whole household to offer the annual sacrifice to Y H W H and his v o w Hannah did not go up, for she said to her husband, "Until I wean the child and I bring him and he will be seen before the face of Y H W H and will live there forever." Elkanah her man said to her, "Do what is good in your eyes. Sit until you wean him, for God fulfilled his word." The woman sat and nursed her son until she weaned him. This child is Hannah's. She has prayed for it, she has been promised it, and when the boy is born, she takes control. There is no question here of the father asserting dominance over the child: she herself names the child. The man who is better to her than ten sons shows it by giving her control over him: " D o w7hat is good in your eyes." Elkanah may not have quite understood his wife's utter determination to have a son, but he does understand that God promised the son and kept the promise, and he does understand the obligation of vows. The man who goes with

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his household to fulfill his own vow will honor his wife's vow Hannah has dedicated the child to God, and he will not make any claims on the boy to prevent her from carrying out her vow And so she does. After the weaning, Hannah brings Samuel to the sanctuary: The Dedication of Samuel (ι Sam. 1:24-28) She brought him up with her when she weaned him with a three-year-old steer* and an ephah of flour and a skein of wine, and brought him to the sanctuary of YHWH in Shiloh. And the boy was a boy. They slaughtered the steer and brought the boy to Eli. She said, "By me, my lord, by your life, my lord, I am the woman who stood here with you to pray to YHWH. For this boy I prayed and YHWH gave me my request, which I requested from him. And 1 for my part am devoting him to YHWH. All the days he will be he is devoted to YHWH." And they bowed down there to God. Hannah stays central to the story as she is the one to bring him up and she brings the offerings. It doesn't matter whether Elkanah came with her, or Elkanah and Peninah and all their children. The story never says that they don't come, and the plural verb "they slaughtered" sounds as though others were there. It would have been appropriate for the whole family to come. But the initiative and the control were Hannah's, and she is the one who gives the dedication speech. Her speech emphasizes the requested nature of this child. When she named him, she called him Samuel, and she declared, "for I requested him from Y H W H . " This is not an explanation of the name Samuel, which means "name of God," but an exposition of the major theme of his birth, that God answered her request. This is the language that Eli had used when he announced the birth "will give the request that you requested from him," and she returns to this theme at his dedication, "YHWH gave me my request, which I requested from him." She then plays on the verb for "request," si, stating, "I . . . am devoting him to Y H W H , " his'iltihu, and dramatically declaring, "he is devoted to Y H W H , " husaul. But husa'ùl can also mean "he is Saul," and the naming sounds suspiciously like an explanation of the name of Saul. * Emendation: see notes.

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Why would the storyteller go to such elaborate lengths to explain the name Saul? It is tempting to conclude that the story was originally told as a birth narrative about Saul, but was later displaced to Samuel, perhaps when Saul's kingship went into disfavor. Many readers have proposed this idea, but it seems bizarre that editors would simply displace a birth narrative. More likely, all this play on Saul's name is a deliberate narrative technique, for the notion of "request" and the answering of request, the central theme of the birth of Samuel, is also the climax of Samuel's life, his crowning achievement, and the concern of the book of Samuel. As Samuel grew old, the people made a major request of him, and he answered "the requesting people," hā(ām hassoalîm. (ι Sam. 8:10). The people asked for a king, and when Samuel crowned a king, he declared, "Now; here is the king you have chosen, the king you requested (seiltem), and look! God is giving a king over you" (1 Sam. 12:13). That king was Saul, and he was crowned by the boy who was requested from and then devoted to God. Hannah's request for a son and God's granting of it foreshadow the way the people request a king and God grants their request; the plays on Saul's name intimate the one who will be given in request. Hannah foreshadows the kingship. She also proclaims its advent, for after devoting the boy, she recites a psalm:

The Exalted Horn (1 Sam. 2:1-10) My heart rejoices in YHWH, my horn is exalted in YHWH. My mouth is wide open toward my enemies, for 1 rejoice in your salvation. There is no holy one like YHWH. Indeed, there is no one except you, and no rock like our God. Do not speak so much (from) on high, on high; let not arrogance come from your lips. For YHWH is a god of knowledge, and by him schemes are weighed. The bow of the heroes is unbroken; and those who have failed take strength. Those who have been satisfied hire themselves out for food, but the ones who hunger can stop (hiring themselves?) forever. The barren woman gives birth to seven, but she of many sons is bereft. YHWH kills and brings life, brings (people) down to She ol and raises them up.

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YHWH dispossesses and enriches, brings low and exalts. He raises the poor man from the dust, brings up the destitute from the ashes. To seat him with the nobles, lead them to a seat of honor. For the foundations of the earth are YHWH's, and he placed the inhabited world upon them. He guards the feet of his devotees, but the wicked fall silent in the dark. Not by strength does a man become mighty YHWH his rivals are terrified, he thunders over them from the heavens. YHWH judges the ends of the earth, He gives strength to his king, exalts the horn of his anointed one. This psalm does not seem like a poem that Hannah would have composed for the occasion of her weaning of Samuel and presentation to the temple. Much in this psalm seems alien to her situation. Enemies, arrogant speeches, heroes, and bowmen evoke a realm far from the domestic life of Hannah, her co-wife, and Elkanah. If Hannah could read, she might have chosen one from a repertory of psalms at the sanctuary But not this one, which talks about the king, God's anointed. Most probably, the storyteller chose an appropriate psalm to place in Hannah's mouth. And it is appropriate, for it talks about the joy and exaltation of the speaker, the barren woman becoming the mother of many and the lowly being exalted. The psalm's significance goes beyond Hannah's personal situation, for it has a particular significance at the opening of the book of Samuel. It relates the key themes of the whole book. God reverses fortunes, Y H W H dispossesses and enriches, brings low and exalts. God will exalt someone from the poor (first Samuel, then Saul and then David), and he will bring the exalted down (also Saul). And the poem concludes with the essential message of the books of Samuel: He gives strength to his king, exalts the horn of his anointed one. As Hannah recites this psalm, she identifies her exaltation with the king's, and she also announces the coming of kingship to Israel. The coming of the monarchy is the subject of the books of Samuel. It was a long and involved process that began with Samuel and did not reach completion until the appointment of Solomon, the first king to inherit his throne. Poems frame the story as the song of Hannah resonates in the longer Thanksgiving song of David in 2 Samuel 22 (= Psalm 18).

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The two songs are not identical, for only Hannah's song talks about giving birth, and only David's song presents an elaborate metaphorical depiction of distress as drowning. But the other themes of Hannah's song echo in David's. Both are about the "horn," the might of the king (1 Sam. 2:1 and 10; 2 Sam. 22:3) and salvation from enemies (1 Sam. 2:1 and 2 Sam. 22:4). Both songs call God a rock (1 Sam. 2:2 and 2 Sam. 22:32) and celebrate God's giving strength (1 Sam. 2:4 and 2 Sam. 22:40). Both refer to She'ol (1 Sam. 2:6 and 2 Sam. 22:6) and to God thundering from heaven (1 Sam. 2:10 and 2 Sam. 22:14). And both songs end with the close relationship between God and his anointed, the king (1 Sam. 2:10 and 2 Sam. 22:51). Together these two songs underscore the themes of the books of Samuel, the glory of David's kingship. With hindsight, one can also see a pointed allusion to David in Hannah's song, for her warning to the enemies, not to speak so much so haughtily (lit "multiply speaking 'high, high' ") corresponds to the height of the two main enemies of the young David: Goliath and Saul. The song of Hannah is a poetic overture and the song of David an intermezzo, a celebration before the story of the rest of Israel's history But before there was David, there was Samuel the anointer, and there was Saul, who turned out to be only an interim king who died without being able to found a dynasty Other literary frames ("inclusios") highlight the self-contained nature of Saul's rule. The first frame is war. As the story opens, the Philistines mass at Aphek and inflict a terrible defeat on Israel at Eben Ezer which kills Eli's two sons and Eli himself and puts an end both to the old priesthood and to Israel's system of government by "judges" (1 Sam. 4). At the end of the book of Samuel, the Philistines again mass at Aphek (1 Sam. 28) and again defeat Israel, at Mount Gilboa, killing Saul and his sons and ending this first abortive Israelite kingship (1 Sam. 30). And the other frame is the oracle. Both the coming of Saul and his demise were major turning points in Israel's history and like the story of other periods of Israel's history, his reign is bracketed by women oracles. Hannah has another counterpart, the necromancer of Endor.

The Necromancer at Endor

this woman appears to be unlike any other in the historical books. The master of an outlawed craft, she seems so far beyond Israel's horizons as to be unable to play any part in its history. But the necromancer is a true counterpart to Hannah; their different natures themselves symbolize the life and reign of Saul. Like the simple woman who "announced" his kingship, Saul was the smallest of the smallest of the rural population, and his reign remained simple and non-"majestic." But like the necromancer who declared his end, Saul's reign ended illicit and rejected. Moreover, it was Saul himself who made her craft illegal, and (the book of Samuel emphasizes) it was he who caused his kingship to be rejected by God. Though different in nature, Hannah and the necromancer have much in common. They act in ways that would not be predicted by cultural stereotypes: Hannah takes the initiative in prayer and proves wiser than Eli, and the necromancer conjures for Saul and then consoles him. Even more significantly they both fill their oracular function through WO reis that are not their own, one with a psalm and the other by channeling the dead Samuel. A T FIRST SIGHT,

The Necromancer (1 Sam. z8:j-8) Saul saw the Philistines' encampment. He was afraid and his heart trembled greatly Saul inquired of YHWH and YHWH didn't answer him, not by dreams, not by Urim and not by prophets. Saul said to his servants, "Seek for me a necromancer woman, and 1 will go to her and ask through her." His servants said, "Look! There is a necromancer woman in Endor." It was not unusual for leaders to consult an oracle before battle. Moses instructed Joshua to do so (Num. 27:21), and King Ahab consulted

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four hundred prophets (i Kings 22). Saul has an extra incentive: he is afraid. And his fear is intensified when he can get no word through the official divinatory channels. So he goes outside the legitimate system to inquire by a form of oracle that he himself had outlawed, necromancy by use of an ob, a technology for communication with the dead. Ο

The Necromancy (1 Sam.

28:8-19)

Saul disguised himself, wearing other clothes. He went, and two of his men with him and they came to the woman at night. He said to her, "Divine for me, please, with the ob and bring up for me the one 1 will tell you." The woman said to him, "Look! You know what Saul did, that he cut off the ob and the familiars from the land. Why are you ensnaring my life to cause my death?" Saul adjured her by YHWH, saying, "By the life of Y H W H , no punishment will fall upon you about this matter." The woman said, "Who should I bring up for you?" He said, "Bring up Samuel for me." The woman saw7 Samuel and she cried out very loudly. The woman said to Saul, "Why did you lie to me, for you are Saul?" The king said to her, "Do not fear, what did you see?" The woman said to Saul, "I saw7 the divine coming up from the earth." He said to her, "What did he look like?" She said, 'An old man is coming up and he is wrapped in a cloak." And Saul knew that it was Samuel, and he bowed low7 on the ground and lay prostrate. Samuel said to Saul, "Why have you disturbed me, bringing me up?" Saul said, "I am very distressed, and the Philistines are fighting me, and God has left me and doesn't answer me anymore even by prophets or by dreams, and I have called you to tell me what to do." Samuel said, "Why did you make inquiry of me when Y H W H has left you and is with your adversary? And Y H W H will do for him as he said through me, and Y H W H has torn the kingdom from your hand and will give it to your neighbor,

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to David. As you did not listen to the voice of YHWH and didn't perform his wrath against Amalek, therefore this matter YHWH has done to you this day And YHWH will also give Israel with you into the hand of the Philistines. And tomorrow you and your sons are with me. The camp of Israel also YHWH will give into the hand of the Philistines." The story doesn't tell us how the necromancer conjured Samuel. That is left as the secrets of the trade, and it is only through comparative studies that we conclude that the ob might be a pit or trench that the necromancer filled with blood or animal parts or possibly a skull filled with the same. In The Odyssey Circe sends Odysseus to the very gate of Hades to consult the great sage Tiresias. She gives him explicit directions to dig a pit, to pour libations, and to let the blood of animals stream into the pit so that the shades will swarm up (Odyssey 10:504-40). The very word for the necromancer's trench, kosmos (in Greek), may be a loan from the Semitic word qsm, "conjure," the verb with which Saul initiates the necromancy. Mesopotamia!! parallels suggest that the ob may have been a skull, perhaps a plastered skull with which the woman poured libations. Whatever the necromancer does, it works. Even though she is reluctant to risk her life by breaking the law she succeeds in raising a "divine being," elolurn, a spirit. At this point, she does not know what otherworldly being is approaching her: it could be a demon, an angel, or a ghost. But somehow, seeing this spirit, she knows who Saul is: perhaps the spirit immediately told her. She describes him to Saul, who cannot see him, but when she describes him, "An old man is coming up and he is wrapped in a cloak," Saul knows that it is Samuel and she sees immediately that her client is Saul. The necromancer now channels the words of Samuel's ghost, a speech that predicts Saul's death. Samuel is not happy at being brought up: the dead do not like to be disturbed. Saul has once again angered him. If ever there was a slight chance of a good outcome for Saul, it is gone, and the book of Chronicles declares this necromancy the final straw. Samuel repeats his old denunciations and pronounces Saul's doom with the authority of YHWH, whose name he invokes seven times. He refers to Saul's failure to destroy Amalek, and recalls the message he gave Saul at that time: God has torn the kingdom from Saul and given it to his neighbor (1 Sam. 15:28). and Samuel now identifies that

The

Necromancer at

Endor

313

neighbor as David. Samuel does nor repeat the lesson to kings in his earlier speech: Then, when he told Saul that he had not listened to God's word, he added, "Rebellion is as the sin of magic" (1 Sam. 15:23). Now he declares that Saul did not listen to God's word as he stands conjured by an act of real rather than metaphorical magic. The. very act of necromancy is mute testimony that Samuel's earlier words have come to pass. Samuel does not do the one thing that Saul asks of him: he does not tell Saul what to do. This omission echoes in the words he does say: Saul's fate is sealed and there is nothing he can do. Saul is devastated. He lies there defeated as the necromancer approaches him.

The Necromancer's

Hospitality

(1 Sam.

28:20-23)

Saul hurriedly fell to his full length on the ground and w7as very frightened by the. words of Samuel. He had no strength, for he hadn't eaten food all that day and all that night. The woman came to Saul and saw that he wras shocked. She said, "Look, your servant listened to you, I placed my life in my hand and listened to the words you spoke to me. And now7, please, listen to your servant. 1 will place before you a round of bread and eat! You will have strength wiien you go on your way. " He refused and said, "I will not eat." His servants and the woman importuned him and he listened to them. He got up from the ground and he sat on the bed. The woman had a fatted calf in the house. She hurried and slaughtered it. She took flour and kneaded it and baked unleavened bread. She served Saul and his servants. They ate, they arose, and they went on that night. Saul has reached the end of his strength. He has been fasting, either because of depression or to petition God. And now an amazingly flattering portrait emerges of a woman who was, after all, involved in an outlawed activity. She, unlike Samuel, will give him something concrete to do: he can at least eat. Twice she calls herself "your servant," a term often used by women in petition, as she reminds him that "I placed my life in my hand." But her petition is not for herself. She wants only to convince him to eat: "I will place before you a piece of bread." She re-

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minds him that his job is nor finished, that he needs his strength "when you go on your way," perhaps an allusion to his final acts as he goes to his fate. And she won't take no for an answer. She and Saul's servants keep urging him until he agrees to eat. The necromancer becomes the very model of Israelite hospitality Like Abraham, she offers a pat lehem, a 'round" of bread (Gen. 18:5), but then provides meat, giving her guest what might be her only fatted calf. Like Abraham, she hurries (Gen. 18:6) to prepare the meal, and as with Abraham, the details of bread baking are recorded to show that the bread is prepared absolutely fresh and new7 for the visitors (though in Genesis, Abraham can tell Sarah to prepare the bread, Gen. 18:6). Her meal marks a fitting end to Saul's kingship. At the beginning of Samuel's career, Hannah and Elkanah slaughtered an ox when they brought their son to Eli, and Hannah offered thanksgiving that included the prediction of monarchy (r Sam. 1:25). At the beginning of Saul's career, Samuel entertained him at a festive meal and announced that he would be king (1 Sam. 9:19 24). Now at the end of Saul's reign, the necromancer is the counterpart to both Hannah and Samuel, and her meal resonates with theirs. This is not an evil woman. Quite the contrary, the necromancer is presented as good and generous. Her ability to communicate with spirits does not make her evil. Her craft is outlawed because it is an uncontrollable and ungovernable access to divine knowledge. But it is effective, and it can be benevolent. Like the more legitimate prophets, the necromancer is a channel for contact with divine power, and she shares her benevolence with other oracle women such as Rahab, Abigail, and even Huldah, who desire the good of the men to whom they speak. The necromancer has the terrible task of channeling an announcement of doom, but she can at least give Saul the courage and strength to face it.

Abigail

was still king, David formed a private army with which he protected the southern flank of Israel (and of Philistia) from the enemies approaching out of the south. Right after Samuel dies, the story introduces one of the men whose flocks David protected: W H I L E SAIJL

Nabal and Abigail (ι Sam. 2y.2-4) There was a man at Maon whose affairs were in Carmel. The man was very wealthy and had three thousand sheep and one thousand goats. It happened while he w7a.s shearing his sheep in the Carmel. The name of the man was Nabal. The name of his wife was Abigail. The woman was of goodly intelligence and beautiful in looks. The man was hard and evil were his deeds. He was a Calebite. This simple narration introduces the two characters David will meet. One is known only as "the boor," Nabal. His very name tips off the way he will act; as Isaiah declares, "for a boor will speak boorishly and his heart will do iniquity" (Isa. 32:6). His wife, by contrast, is described as both smart and beautiful. She is not called "wise," hakamah, because the two "wise women" who appear in David's story the wise women of Abel and of Tekoa, seem to have had professional positions. Abigail is simply a landowner's wife, without any particular authority. Her significance will come from her own characteristics. The narrator is not neutral: the reader has no doubt as to who is the villain in this story: the fool will be further named a "worthless one" by both his servants and his wife. The narrator adds one more detail: Nabal is a Calebite, a man (perhaps the leader) of the clan that was so prominent in the time of the

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conquest. The written text (Ketib) puns: kelibbo, "as his heart," a declaration of Nabal's essential lawlessness: he does whatever he pleases. 'As his heart" has immediate relevance to Nabal's conduct in the story; "the Calebite" has more significance toward David's ultimate destiny, to which the end of the story returns. Request, Refusal, and Reaction (ι Sam. 25:4-13) David in the wilderness heard that Nabal was shearing his sheep. David sent ten lads. David said to his lads, "Go up to the Carmel. Come to Nabal and greet him for me. Say, 'Thus for life and to you, peace and to your house, peace and to all that is yours, peace. Now, I have heard that they are shearing for you. Now your shepherds were with us and nobody caused them abuse and nothing went missing all the days that they were in the Carmel. Ask your lads and they will tell you. Let my lads find favor in your eyes, for we have come on a holiday Give, please, whatever you please to our servants and your son David.' " Davids lads came and spoke to Nabal in just this way in the name of David and they rested. Nabal spoke to David's servants, saying, "Who is David? Who is the son of Jesse? Today many are the servants who are breaking out each from before his master. Should 1 take my bread and my water and my meat that I slaughtered for my shearers and give it to men from 1 know7 not where?" David's men turned on their way and returned. They came and told him all of these matters. David said to his men, "Gird on your sword." Each man girded on his sword, and David also girded on his sword. There went after him about four hundred men and two hundred remained with the gear. David approaches in the most gentle and proper manner possible. He has instructed his men to be subservient, addressing Nabal as one would a superior and stressing the good that David wishes him and which he has in fact brought to him through his protection. Nabal, on the other

Abigail

317

hand, speaks coarsely "Fine talk does not become a boor," says the proverb (Prov 17:7). Nabal insults David, comparing him to an old servant who has rebelled against his master. His speech is not stupid. It is even clever, playing on the name of David's ancestor Peretz (the "breaker-out") and his grandfather's name, Obed (the "servant"). But his actions are profoundly boorish. As Isaiah tells us, a boor will not give food to the hungry and drink to the thirsty (Isa. 32:6), and Nabal refuses to share the shearing-feast with David's men. David may have been diplomatic and self-abasing in his message. But he reacts to Nabal's response the way someone running a protection racket during Prohibition would have reacted: he is ready to punish Nabal for his refusal. The stage is set for disaster. Ο

Abigail to the Rescue ( 1 Sam.

25:14-23)

To Abigail the wife of Nabal one of the lads spoke, saying, "Look, David sent messengers from the wilderness to greet our master and he swooped down at them. The men were very good to us. We didn't fail and we didn't lose anything all the days we went around with them when we were in the field. They were a wall for us both night and day all the days we were with them herding the sheep. 'And now, know and see what you will do, for evil has been decided against our master and all his house and he is a worthless man as he spoke to him." Abigail hurried and took two hundred (units) of bread and two wineskeins and five dressed sheep and five seah of parched grain and one omer of raisins and two hundred fig cakes and placed them on donkeys. She said to her servants, "Pass before me; I am coming behind you." To her husband she said nothing. It happened that she was riding on the ass and going down the hidden side of the mountain. Look! David and his men are going down toward her and she meets them. David said, "For a lie, I guarded all that that one has in the wilderness and nothing was lost from anything he has, and he has returned me evil for good. Thus shall God do to the enemies of David and thus shall he continue, if 1 should

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leave from all of his any who piss against the wall till morning light." Abigail saw David. She hurried and descended from the ass, she fell on her face toward David and bowed down to the ground. Nabal's words were more prescient than he anticipated, for his own servants now join the "many servants who break out against their master." They turn to Abigail with their problem, and she immediately knows what to do: she too will go against her husband's express wishes and bring an offering to David. Abigail knows her situation. She alone must turn away the anger of someone who marches toward her with four hundred armed men. She faces in reality the situation that Jacob imagined he faced when he came back from Mesopotamia and knew that he had to confront Esau. Like David, Esau came to meet Jacob with four hundred men (Gen. 33:1); Esau too had been wronged, his blessing stolen from him as David feels his payment was stolen from him. Unlike David, Esau was not angry and intended Jacob no harm, but Jacob didn't know that. Jacob prepared an enormous offering for his brother, much larger than Abigail's, sending the gifts before him explicitly to appease and atone for the wrong he had done him (Gen. 32:13-22). Abigail's offering suits her own situation: she will feed David's men in place of her boorish husband. Meeting David, Abigail begins to speak. o; by John Scullion (Minneapolis: Augsburg. 1986); and Victor Hamilton, Genesis iS-jo, New International Commentary on the Old Testament . Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1995). 264 just after Joseph has been sold The relationship between the two stories has occupied commentators since al least the Íìfth century Midrash Β re shit Rabbah (85:2). For recent writings on this topic, see Judah Goldin, "Youngest Son, or Where Does Genesis 38 Belong?", Journal of Biblical Literature 96 (1977): 27-44; Mieke Bal, "One Woman, Many Men and the Dialectic of Chronology," in Lethal Love: Feminist Literary Readings of Biblical Love Stories (Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana

Notes to pages 2 9 8 - 3 0 4

420

University Press, 1987), 89-103; Aaron Wildavsky, "Survival Must Not Be Gained Through Sin: The Moral of the Joseph Stories Prefigured Through Judah and Tamar," Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 62 ( 1994): 37-48; and Peter Lockwood, "Tamar's Place in the Joseph Cycle," Lut heran Theologicaljournal

26 (1992):

35-43. G old 111 emphasizes the line of narration that iirst shows why Reuben, the firstborn, cannot be the chief heir, then Simeon and Levi (Gen. 34) and thus the reader want to see if it will be Judah or Joseph. Mieke Bal suggests the parallel is to the Potiphar's wife episode, and is placed to warn the reader not to conclude too easily that w o m e n are lethal. Wildavsky believes that the story of Judah and Tamar teaches leaders they cannot save their people by violating the moral law; Tamar, by making Judah fulfill his duties as levir, fulfills her obligation under the law and teaches Judah that his fears should not have made him violat e the commandment (of levirate). Lockwood considers Genesis 39 a miniature version of the Joseph cycle, exposing the faults of the ancestors and urging them to make peace with their foes. As Lockwood notes, the true parallel to Joseph is not Judah but Tamar: both are threatened, driven from their home, and force their victimizers to acknowledge wrongdoing and to mend their ways. 264 he called his name Er J. Alberto Soggin suggests that the "he named" of v. 3 (Er) and v. 29 and 30 (Peretz and Uzzah) is a grammatical error ("judah and Tamar • Genesis 38)," in Of Prophets' Visions and the Wisdom of Sages: Essays in Honour of K. Norman Whybray on his Seventieth Birthday, ed. Heather McKay and David Clines, J S O T supp. 162 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1993), 281-87. But this story is very careful about male/female forms, which alternate a lot: in this text. We as readers should take the "he names" seriously: Judah directs the naming of his firstborn son and later the naming of Tamar's children. 265 commentators both ancient and modern The Testamen: of Judah (10-13) and the book of Jubilees (chapter 41 ) blame the death of Er and Onan 011 Judah's marriage to a Canaanite. A m o n g modern commentators, Calum Carmichael blames Judah's role in selling Joseph into slavery and more in having his "half Israelite half Canaanite sons" mate with Tamar: to him the law of kilayim (plowing with two seeds, Deut. 22:9-11; is a commentary on this story ("Forbidden Mixtures," Vftws Testamentum 32 [1982]: 395-415). Along similar lines see Edmund Leach, "The Legitimacy of Solomon: Some Structural Aspects of Old Testament History," reprinted in Genesis as Myth and Other Essays (London: Jonathan Cape, 1969), 25-83; 113-17. 265 where Tamar came from By contrast: to the Canaanite hypothesis for Tamar's origin, Edmund Leach builds his analysis on the assumption that Tamar was a pure Israelite ("The Legitimacy of Solomon"), thus giving Judah "pure-blooded descendants." while his original sons were all tainted. Leach's argument is also based on his assumption that: pure-bloodedness had any relevance for the Juctean monarchy. See the excellent refutation by J. A. Emerton, Ά 1 1 Examination of a Recent Structuralist Interpretation of Genesis XXXYIII," Vetus Testamentum 26 (1986): 79-98. 267 dramatic irony, for Judah docs not know See Jean Louis Ska, "L'ironie de Tamar," Zeitschrift für die allleslamentliche Wissenschaft 100 (1988): 261-63, who discusses the way the motivation clauses (introduced by ki) establish a complicity between author and reader.

Notes to pages 196-203

421

267 Naomi reasons that God has killed her family Ellen van Wolde points out that in Genesis 38 the narrative refers to YH W i f s killing; in the book of Ruth, Naomi does so (/'Texts in Dialogue'";. The intertextual contrast itself sets up an irony: even though Naomi did not know, she understood, and Judah did not. 267 "killer wife" For a discussion of this theory, see Mordechai Friedman, "Tamar, A Symbol of Life: The 'Killer Wife' Superstition in the Bible and Jewish Tradition," Association of Jewish Studies Review 15 (1990): 23-61. Friedman remarks that the attribution of demonic forces to women is absent in the Bible except in this story. He posits a stage in the development of the sources in which the sons died for this reason, and suggests that the story we have is purposely debunking the idea. If so, it failed, for the idea comes back with full force in rabbinic literature. 267 more foolish To Johanna Bos. the men are " wrongheaded irresponsible bunglers who don't see straight." She attributes this to a gynocentric bias in the story ("Out of the Shadows"). At the same time, the aims of the story are clearly patriarchal and androcentric: continuing the line. This gynocentric-within-androcentric combination makes sense in the Bible's gender system, which sees no difference in the nature or goals of men and women. On this, see Frymer-Kensky In the Wake of the Goddesses: Women, Culture, and the Biblical Transformation of Pagan Myth (New York: Maxwell Macmillan International, 1992); and this book, pp. 337-38. 268 he can perform the levirate himself See Hittite Laws 193 and MAL 33. On the levirate, see Eryl W. Davie s, "Inheritance Rights and the Hebrew Levirate Marriage," Vt'IILS' Testamentum 31 (1981): 138-44 and 257-68; and Raymond Westbrook, 111 Property and Family in Biblical Law (Sheffield: JSOT, 1991). 268 so he wrongs Tamar Wildavsky considers the major point of the story to be that Judah should not let his fear prevent him from observing the law ("Survival Must Not be Gained Through Sin"). But the issue is not only "law": Tamar is put in an untenable position. In her intertextual study, van Wolde does not see that there is more difference between Naomi's sending Ruth and Orpah back to their mother's house and Judah's sending Tamar back to her father's ("Texts in Dialogue"). The difference is not simply male female speech but the freedom of the women. For more on how Tamar was wronged, see Nidilch, "The Wronged Woman Righted." 268 she can do nothing Bos points out that Tamar has been a passive figure and is now a passive bystander, and it: seems that: Judah will remain the center of the story ("Out of the Shadows"). 268 by the mistaken power Of course, the story still shows this, a fact picked up by Carol Smith, who suggests that Genesis 38 raises the question of whether the "patently unsuitable" Judah should have that kind of power over another person ("The Story of Tamar: A Power-filled Challenge to the Structures of Power," in Womai in the Biblical Tradition, ed. George Brooke, Studies in Women and Religion 31 [Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen, 1992J, 16-28). Given the fact that these stories are transmitted after the monarchy took away such power from heads-of-household, I do not think it raises the question; rather il answers it with yet another no. Smith does note that Genesis 39 suggests that maybe the old ways were not: so desirable ii" you were not male and powerful. 269 "the opening of the eyes" The Revised Version reads "The Gate of Ena im," a reading adopted also by van Wolde (ibid.). For petah as the city gate, see 1 Kings

422

Notes to pages 298-304 17:10. where petah hatr refers to the entrance to the small town of Zarephat where a widow was gathering wood; and 1 Chron. 21:9, in which the Ammonites came out and fought petah haïr,; Both these passages must refer to outside a gate or other entrance. For a discussion of the ancient reading, "crossroads," see J. A. Emerton, "Some Problems." This reading is adopted by Soggin ("judah and Tamar"). It doesn't matter if it was a gate, a crossroads, or a regular road. Women who would be silting there would be assumed to be "public women."

269 shows us a character's motives Van Wolde points to the double hi: "for she says that" as a sign that the narrator is involved in her awareness, guiding the reader to agree with Tamar ("Texts in Dialogue"). 269 Tamar takes dramatic action Bos notes that the piling up of the verbs in verse 24 "highlights the contrast" with her former passive state ("Out of the Shadows"). Smith suggests that Tamar had other options, such as entering her fatherin-law's bed, in the manner of Ruth, or perhaps legal action ("The Story of Tamar"). But Judah had already rejected her because of his fear and would be unlikely to take her in, and as for legal action, the victim stories show that in the "bad old days," parties unlawfully exiled from their home (like Jephthah) really had no legal recourse against the men in power in their households. 270 wrapping herself in a veil Reading wattekus in the Pu'al or wattitekas in the hilpa el, as in the veiling of Rivka (Gen. 24:66), rather than the Masoretic qai This lapse is best explained as either a Masoretic change of vowels or a scribal loss of one lav rather than a sign that Hebrew was not current at the origin of the text (so Soggin, "judah and Tamar," who also sees a Graecism in "pledge"; see the note to "token . . . of the payment," p. 423). 270 once again stresses Judah's lack of knowledge Morimura Nobuko stresses the importance to the text of exonerating Judah but feels thai "there is an air of blaming Tamar for deceiving Judah." She further believes that when Judah admits that Tamar was right, "the one who has the last word is the winner" ("The Story of Tamar: A Feminist Interpretation of Genesis 38," japan Christian Review 59 ι ο 03 : 55-67). I do not believe thai the story operates on a zero-sum mentality: on the contrary, once Tamar has righted the wrong done her, everyone gains: Tamar, an assured place in life and posterity, and Judah, two new sons. 270 prostitutes See Phyllis Bird, "The Harlot as Heroine: Narrative Art and Social Presupposition in Three Old Testament Texts," in ΛI win« Persons and Mistaken Identities (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1997), 197-218. 271 qedešāh See Mayer Gruber, "Hebrew Qedesah and her Canaanite and Akkadian Cognates." Ugarit-Forschungen 18 (1986): 133-48; and Joan Goodnick Westenholz, "Tamar, Qedesa, Qadistu and Sacred Prostitution in Mesopotamia," Harvard Theological Review 82 (1989): 245-65. Bird is certainly right in her contention that a qedesah is not a whore ("Harlot as Heroine"). 271 "sacred prostitutes" See the discussion in Tikva Frymer-Kensky, In the Wake of the Goddesses, and literature cited there. Bernhard Luther, who admits that "it seems oui of the question" that there were professional sacred prostitutes, nevertheless perpetuates the old idea (based solely on Herodotus 1:1.99 on Babylonia) that each girl was prostituted once to be consecrated to the divinity, and suggests that Judah did not: understand cult: prostitution and therefore confused a whore with a qedesah ("The Novella of Judah and Tamar and Other Israelite Novellas,"

Notes to pages

196-203

423

in Narrative and Novella in Samuel: Studies by Hugo Grossman and Other Scholars 1906-3923, trans. David Orten, ed. David Gunn [Sheffield: Almond, 1991J, 89-118). But the Canaanite literature discovered since Luther wrote does not show any evidence of sexual initiation of girls by prostitution. 271 public ritual See Calum Carmichael, Ά Ceremonial Crux: Removing a Man's Sandal as a Female Gesture of Contempt;" Journal of Biblical Literature 96 (1977): 321-36. 272 token . . . of the payment Speiser (Genesis) derived the Hebrew word 'erabôn from the Old Assyrian erubatu, with the same meaning. Soggin considers this a rare word and therefore improbable and suggests that it: is a "Graecism" from ά ρ ρ α β ο υ ν , "pledge", well known from the Pauline Epistles (J. Alberto Soggin, "Judah and Tamar"). This would have great significance for the dating of the text. However, erubatu comes from the common root erebu, "enter" (Hebrew rb), and it: is likely that this verb is the origin of erubatu, erabôn and ά ρ ο α β ώ ν . The Hebrew verb rb occurs in the sense of "give as pledge, stand security" in Gen. 43:9; 44:32, in both cases of which Judah gives himself as pledge for Benjamin, and in Prov. 6:1. 11:15; 14:10, 20:16, 19; 27:13. 272 "let her be burned" Many commentators have noted that burning is not the prescribed punishment for adultery in the Bible. Since a priest's daughter is to be burned, and qedešah appears in this story, Michael Astour suggests that there was an earlier stage of this story in which Tamar was a hierodule who got pregnant (which, he argues, they were not supposed to do) and was going to be burned, when she turned into a palm tree from which Peretz burst: forth, much as Ovid's Myrrha turned into a myrrh tree and Adonis burst, forth from her (Michael Astour, "Tamar the Hierodule: An Essay in the Method of Vestigial Motifs,'" Journal of Biblical Literature 85 [1966]: 185-96 ). Such a speculative story is so remote irom the present plot that: nothing would connect it: but the names of Tamar and Peretz. Burning is not. confined to a priest's iamily: Lev. 20:14 prescribes it lor a man who sleeps with a woman and her mother. But that is not really the point: this story is set. 111 a time before the giving oi the Sinaitic laws that spell out Israel's punishments; it is also set in a time before the consolidation of the state that would have had its fixed procedures. In the ancestral period, Judah the paterfamilias-judge could pronounce both verdict and sentence in a legal case, and in our story there are not even any judicial proceedings: Judah the paterfamilias-ruler determines what will happen to the members of his family. 273 "righteous" An interesting disparity exists between those who argue that: the righteousness of Tamar consisted in observing the law, like David Banon ("Exegese biblique et philosophie/' Études Théologiques et Religieuses

66 i1991j:

489-504), and those who maintain the story demonstrates that righteousness and justice are more important than literal law (Carol Smith and Thomas Krüger, "Genesis 38—Ein 'Lehrstück' altlestamenllicher Ethik," in Konsequente Traditionsgeschichte: Festschrift fur Klaus Baltzer zum 6>. Geburtstag, ed. Rüdiger Bartiemus, Thomas Krüger, and Helmut Ulzscneider [L'niversitärsverlag Freiburg Schwiez and Göttingen: Vanderhoeck & Ruprect, 1993J, 205-26). The laws that they suggest are being (a) upheld or (b) undermined are the levirate law, the incest taboo, and cultic prostitution. Krüger and Smith also realize that: intermarriage is under consideration, and the negative stance challenged.

Notes to pages 298-304

424

274 never slept with Tamar again Van Wolde poin:s to the Hebrew "he did not know her": once his eves have been opened, 110 other knowledge is needed. Tamar, who sat at the gate of the eyes, is :he eye-opener ( "Texts in Dialogue"). 274 Judah applauds Tamar's action and God rewards it Bos and Fuchs have remarked on the awarding of a "throne of motherhood" that safeguards patriarchal institutions (see Esther Fuchs, "The Literary Characterization of Mothers and Sexual Politics in the Hebrew Bible," in Feminist. Perspectives on Biblical Scholarship, ed. Adela Yarbro Collins [Chico, Calif.: Scholars, 1995], 117-36). 275 Ruth and Tamar For earlier comparisons of these two, see Westermann, Genesis; Danna Nowell Fewell and David Gunn, Compromising Redemption:

Reading

Characters in the Book of Ruth. Literary Currents in Biblical Interpretation (Louisville: Westminster, 1.990); and Athalya Brenner, "Naomi and Ruth," in A Feminist Companion to Ruth (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1993); and Soggin, "judah and Tamar." 275 the daughters of Lot Smith recognizes the similarity in which the unusual sexual behavior provides the desired result without the direct intervention of Cod. Smith notes the similarity to the other women of Genesis who are also childless, Sarah, Rivka, and Rachel, though in their case, since their barrenness is the issue, God intervenes directly. Smith considers the closest parallel to Tamar to be Rivka, because oi the birth oi twins ("The Story oi Tamar"). It is also worth noting the parallel to Leah, who masqueraded as Rachel and who first "hired" Jacob's sexual services by using mandrakes.

The Royal Way 278 the names of the characters For some oi them see Gary Rendsburg, "David and his Circle in Genesis XXXVIII,"

Vet us Testamentum 36 (.1986):

438-46.

Outsider Women: Exile and Ezra 283 Ezekiel 16 For a comprehensive analysis of this chapter, see Moshe Greenberg, Ezekiel 1-20, Anchor Bible 22 (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubled a v. 1983). For a study of its gender ideology, see Carol J. Dempsey, "The 'Whore' of Ezekiel 16: The Impact and Ramifications of Gender-Specific Metaphors in Light of Biblical Law and Divine Judgment" in Gender and Law in the Hebrew Bible and the Ancient Near East, Victor Matthews, Bernard Levinson, and Tikva Frymer-Kinsky, eds. JSOT Supplement 206 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press. 1998), 57-58. 284 book of Kings For details of the passages that condemn the kings, see Lyle M. Eslinger, "Through the Fire," in Into the Hands of t he Living God, Journal, for the Study of the Old Testament Supplements 84 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1989). The explicit passages in which the kings provoked God by causing Israel to sin are: 1 Kings 14:16; 15:26, 30; 16:2, 25, 30; 21:22; 22:51-3; 2 Kings 3:2-3; 10:29-31; 13:3, 11; 14:24; 15:9, 18, 24, 30; 16:2-3, 25, 30; 17:1-6; 21:22; 22:51-53. Only 17:7 if. declares "Israel sinned," and even there the specific offenses named are illustrated in the narratives as kingly events. 284 book of Chronicles For the ideology of the book and its matter-of-fact way of treating intermarriage, see Sara Japhet, First and Second Chronicles: A Commentary

Notes to pages 196-203

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(Louisville: Westminster/John Knox, 1993), and The Ideology of the Book of Chronicles and Its Place in Biblical Thought (Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 1989). 284 Edomite Reading with the Septuagint: and 1 Esdras 9:36. It is tempting to preserve the Masoretic texts' 'Amorite" and see it as a code for the old Judeans, but Amorite/ Edomite is an easy scribal substitution. 285 "holy seed" For the new concept of holiness, see James Kugel ("The Holiness of Israel and the Land in Second Temple Times," in Texts, Temples and Traditions: A Tribute to Menahem Haran, ed. Michael Fox [ Winona Lake. Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1996J, 2i-32), who demonstrates the ongoing development of the "holiness" concept: in post-biblical writings. 289 "peoples of the land" See the discussion by Sara Japhet , "People and Land in the Restoration Period," in Das Land Israel in biblischen Zeit: Jerusalem Symposium hj.Hi, ed. George Strecker (Göllingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1982), 103-25. Japhet refers to this as an "early midrash." For particular discussion of this midrash, see Yehezkel Kaufman (toledot ha'emuna hayisraelit [Jerusalem 1972j IV 293: Michael Fishbane, Biblical Interpretation in Ancient Israel (New York: Oxford University Press, 1985); and Sara Japhet, "Law and 'the Law' in Ezra Nehemiah," Proceedings of the Nin th World Congress of Jewish St udies (Jerusalem: Magnes, 1988), 99-115. See also the genealogy of Sheshan in 1 Chron. 2:34-41 discussed by Sara Japhet, "The Israelite Legal and Social Reality as Reflected in Chronicles: A Case Study," in Shaarei Talmon: Studies in the Bible, Qumran and the Ancient Near East Presented to Shemaryahu Talmon, ed. Michael Fishbane and Emanuel Τον (Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1992), 79-91. 289 "enter the congregation" In Judaism this term means to "join the people" and is a term for intermarriage, but in Deuteronomy it means to "enter the sacred precincts." The rabbis, who understand marriage, forbid only Moabite men, using Ruth as a way to permit wives from Moab and Amnon here. 289 "new Exodus" See the discussion by Michael Fishbane, "The Exodus Motif," 111 Biblical Text and Texture: A Literary Reading of Selected Texts (Oxford: Oneworld, 199«), 121-39289 Ezra is concerned with foreign wives Tamara Eskanazi and Elanore P. Judd ("Marriage to a Stranger in Ezra 9-10," Second Temple Studies 2: Temple and Community in the Persian Period, ed. Tamara Eskenazi and Kent Richards. J S O T supp. 175 [Sheffield: JSOT, 1994J, 266-85) place the event 111 the context: of immigrant communities seeking to establish boundaries. The ν point out that Ezra arrives late: earlier returnees considered the Judaeans appropriate partners. Tamara Eskanazi ("Out from the Shadows: Biblical Women in the Postexilic Era," JSOT) 11902 : 25-43) draws on the specifics of women's position in documents from Elephantine to conclude that Jewish women could inherit land and argues that the fear of mixed marriages makes the most: economic sense if women could inherit in Judah at this lime, a conclusion with which Harold Washington concurs ( "The Strange Woman of Proverbs .1-9 and Post-Exilic judaean Society," in Second Temple Studies 2, 217-42). Daniel Smith-Christopher ("The Mixed Marriage Crisis in Ezra 9-10 and Nehemiah 13: A Study of the Sociology of the Post-Exilic Jewish Community,'" Seeon il Temple Studies 2, 243-61) considers that the original returnees may have married the local wives precisely because they brought land as dowries. He also notes that since the Persian empire encouraged intermarriage,

Notes to pages 298-304

426

the breakup was an act of political defiance. In contrast, Washington holds that the Persians demanded each group maintain its ethnic identity. 289 Hzra does not want these children This makes obvious sense if the purpose of the regulation is to keep land within the previously exiled community. Harold Washington ("The Strange Woman") points out that membership in the civictemple community was determined by descent within the paternal estate, and real property was distributed according to lineage. 289 struggles over who owned the land Ezekiel mentions that those left behind in Judah claim that the land was given to them, and says it will be returned to the exiled (Ezek. 11:15). According to Peter Ackroyd (Exile and Restoration: A Study of Hebrew Thought of the Sixth Century B.C. [London: SCM. 1968J), only about 10 percent of the people went into exile, but I do not know h o w he arrives at that exact figure. 290 Malachi See, with reservation, Beth Glazier-X4acdona1d, "Intermarriage, Divorce and the Bat-'el Nekar: Insights into Mai. 2:io-iH," Journal of Biblical Literature 106 (1987): 603-11. To me it seems most probable that the "wives of your youth" whom Malachi does no: want people to divorce are wives acquired in Babylon whom the returnees have left behind. 291 "strange" woman . . . in the book of Proverbs See Claudia Clamp, "What's So Strange About the Strange Woman?" in The Bible and the Politics of'Exegesis: Essays in Honor of Norman K. Gottwald on his Sixty fifth Birthday, ed. David Jobling, Peggy Day, and Gerald Sheppard (Cleveland: Pilgrim Press, 1991), 17-31; and Joseph Blenkinsopp, "The Social Context of the 'Outsider Woman' in Proverbs 1-9," Biblica 72 (1991): 457-73. They differ primarily on dating; Blenkinsopp dates Proverbs 1-9 to the time of Ezra Xehemiah, and Camp to a century later. 291 Hellenism For this, see Tikva Frymer-Kensky, "Gifts of the Greeks," in In the Wake of the Goddesses.

Oracles of the Conquest of Canaan: Rahab and Deborah RAHAB For earlier studies see Robert Culley, "Stories of the Conquest: Joshua 2, 6, 7 and 8," Hebrew Annual Review 8 (1984): 25-44; 8 (1984): 25-44; Immaculate and Powerful: The Female in Sacred Image and Social Reality, ed. Clarissa W. Atkinson, Constance H. Buchanan, and Margaret R. Miles (Boston: Beacon, 1985); Phyllis Bird, "The Harlot as Heroine: Narrative Art and Social Presupposition in Three Old Testament. Texts," Semeia 46 (1989): 119-39; Yair Zakovitch, " H u m o r and Theology or the Successful Failure of Israelite Intelligence: A Literary-Folkloric Approach to Joshua 2," in Text and Tradition: The Hebrew Bible and Folklore, ed. Susan Niditeh (Atlanta: Scholars. 1990), 75-90, and Frank Cross, "Reply to Zakovitch," ibid., 99-106; Tikva Frymer-Kensky, "Reading Rahab," in Tehillah le-Moshe: Biblical and Judaic Studies in Honor of Moshe Greenberg, ed. Mordechai Cogan, Barry Eichler, and Jeffrey Tigay (Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1997), 57-67. 298 quotes the very verses of the S o n g of the Sea The connection was noted by ancient rabbis in Mekhilta Shirata 9. As Zakovitch notes, biblical quotations reverse the order of the original.

Notes to page 298

427

298 Rahab is the first of the nations See Cordon Mitchell, "Together in the Land: A Reading of the Book of Joshua," Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 134 (1993): 152-90. DEBORAH Studies on the history include: Baruch Halpern, "The Resourceful Israelite Historian: The Song of Deborah and Israelite Historiography," Harvard Theological Review 76 (1983): 379-401; Lawrence Stager, 'Archaeology, Ecology, and Social History: Background Themes to the Song of Deborah," Congress vol. (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1988), 221-34; Nadav Ν a'aman, "Literary and Topographical Notes on the Battle of Kishon (Judges IV-V)," Vetus Testamentum 40 Í1990'): 423-36; J. David Schloen, "Caravans, Kenites, and Casus belli: Enmity and Alliance in the Song of Deborah," Catholic Biblical Quarterly 55 (1993 ): 18-38. Philological, exegetical, and literary studies: Heinz-Dieter Neef, "Der Sieg Deboras und Baraks über Sisera: Exegetische beobachtungen zum aufbau und werden von Jdc. 4:1-24," Zeitschrift für die Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft 101 (1989): 28-49; Peter Ackroyd, "Composition of the Song of Deborah [Judges 5:2]," Vetus Testamentum 2 (1952): 160-62; Joseph Blenkinsopp, "Ballad Stvle and Psalm Style in the Song of Deborah: A Discussion," Biblica 42 (1961}: 61-76; Morris Seale, "Deborah's Ode and the Ancient Arabian Qdsichf Journal of Biblical Literature 81 (1962): 343-47; Peter C. Craigie, "Song of Deborah and the Epic of Tukulti Ninurta," Journal of Biblical Literature 88 (1969): 253-65; Craigie, "Some Further Notes 011 the Song oi Deborah," Vet us Testamentum 22 (1972): 349-53; Alexander Globe, "Literary Structure and Unity of the Song of Debo rah," Journal of Biblical Literature 93 (1974): 493-512; D. F. Murray, St udies in the Historical Books of the Old Testament (Leiden: Brill, 1979), .155-89; Jan Ρ Fokkelman, "The Song of Deborah and Barak: Its Prosodie Levels and Structure," in Pomegranates and Golden Bells: Studies in Biblical, Jewish, and Near Eastern Rit ual, Law, and Literature in Honor of Jacob Milgrom, eel. David P. Wright, David Noel Freedman, and Avi Hurvitz. (Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1995), 595-628. Ideational and feminist studies: Jürgen Kegler, "Debora: Erwägungen zur Politischen Funktion einer Frau in einer patriarchalischen Gesellschaft," Traditionen der Befreiung (Munich: Kaiser, 1980). 37-59; Priscilla Denham, "It's Hard to Sing a Song of Deborah" (Judges 4:1-24). in Spinninga Sacred Yarn: Women Speak from the Pulpit (New York, N.Y.: Pilgrim Press, .1.982), 58-64; Barnabas Lindars, "Deborah's Song: Women in the Old Testament," Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester 65 (1.983): 158-75; JoAnn Hacken, "In the Days of Jael: Reclaiming the History of Women in Ancient Israel," in Immaculate and Powerful (Boston: Beacon Press, 1985), 15-38; J. Cheryl Exum, " 'Mother in Israel': A Familiar Story Reconsidered," in Feminist Interpretation of the Bible, Lett y Rüssel, ed. (Philadelphia: Westminster. 1985), 73-85; Yairah Amit, "Judges 4: Its Content, and Form," Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 39 (1987): 89-111; Guy Couturier, "Debora, une autorité politico-religiuse aux origines d'Israël," Sciences Religieuse (Studies in Religion) 18 (1989): 213-28; Da una Nolan Fewell, "Controlling Perspectives: Women, Men and the Authority of Violence in Judges 4-5," Journal of the American Academy of Religion 58 (1990): 389-411; Fokkelien van Dijk-I femmes, "Mothers and a Mediator in the Song oi Deborah," in A Feminist Companion to Judges, ed. Athalya Brenner (Sheffield: JSOT, 1993), 110-14; Daniel Block, "Deborah A m o n g the Judges: T h e Perspective of the Hebrew Historian," in Faith,

Notes to pages 298-304

428

Tradition, and History: Old Testament Historiography in its Near Eastern Context, ed. A. R. Millard, James Hoilmeier, and David Baker (Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1994), 229-53: Ellen van Wolde, "Deborah and Ya el in Judges 4," in On Reading Prophetic Texts: Gender Specific and Related Studies in Memory of Fokkelien van Dijk-IIemmes, ed. Bob Becking and Meindert Dijkstra (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1996), 283-95. 298 the Israelites went up to her for judgment Van Wolde points out that 'she would sit" in the qotel form is background information. Then in 5b "the people went" is in the vayiqlol, which she considers "foregrounding" (Ellen van Wolde, "Deborah and Yael in Judges 4"). 299

into the hand of a woman Barnabas Lindars suggests that the whole purpose of the story is to intrigue the readers with this idea and delay their knowledge of Yael until later ("Deborah's Song: Women in the Old Testament Judges 4-5J," Bulletin if the John Rylands University Library of Manchester 65 [1983J: 1.58-75). Lindars may press the centrality of this theme a little too much, but it is a good corrective to the. many commentators, such as J. Alberto Soggin (fudges: A Commentary

(Philadelphia:

Westminster Press, 1991), who marginalize

the

women. On this, see Stephen Hanselman ("Narrative Theory, Ideology and Transformation" in Judges 4 in Anti-Covenant, Mieke Bai, ed. (Sheffield, Almond Press, 1989), pp. 95-120. 299 yet another woman See S. D. Goitein, "Women as Creators of Biblical Genres," Prooflexts 8 (1988): 1-33. 300 an anagram of "she spoke" See Ellen van Wolde, "Deborah and Ya el in Judges 4." l i e r explanation oi the name Barak is less convincing: the lightning that Deborah fires up with her words.

Oracles of Saul: Hannah and the Witch of Endor For studies see Walter Brueggemann, "I Samuel .1: A Sense of Beginning," Zeitschrift für Alt testamentliches Wissenschaft 102 (1990): 33-48; Randall Bailey, "The Redemption oi Y H W H : A Literary Critical Function of the Songs of Hannah and David," Biblical Interpretation 3 (1995): 213-31; Carol Meyers, "The. Hannah Narrative in Feminist Perspective," in Go to the Land I Will Show You: Studies in Honor of Dwight W. Young, ed. Joseph Coleson and Victor Matthews (Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1996), 117-26. The literary nature of the story has been analyzed by Robert Polzin, Samuel and the Deuteronomist: A Literary Study of the Deuteronomic History, Part 2, I Samuel (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989). For standard commentary information, see Hans Hertzberg, I & II Samuel: A Commentary, Old Testament Library (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1976), and Kyle McCarter, I Samuel, Anchor Bible (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1980). 303 Elkanah doesn't understand See the discussion by David Silber, "Kingship, Samuel and the Story of Hannah," Tradition 23 (1988): 64-75, and Yairah Amit, "Judges 4: Its Content and Form." Vetus Testamentum 40 (1990): 4-20. 304 "A razor will not come on his head" The Septuagint has a longer version, containing the full Nazirite vow, "He will be a Nazirite. . . . He will not drink wine or

Notes to pages 196-203

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strong drink and a razor will not come on Ms head." Arguing f r o m the fragmentary 4Q Sam. 1 wyvn wskr, McCarter argues that the original Hebrew text must have included 'And wine and st rong drink he will not drink." There are many minor differences in this text between the Greek and Hebrew manuscripts. I have translated the Hebrew. For a complete textual list of these variams, see McCarter. I note only a few. The Greek and Hebrew texts actually differ in more than details. Stanley Waters shows that they have different attitudes toward some of :he themes of the story (Waters, "Hannah & Anna: The Ci reek and HebrewTexts of ι Sam. i," JBL 107 Í1988Ì: 385-412. Both Peninah and Hannah are more prominent in the Hebrew. 304 "in difficult spirit" Reading with the Hebrew, rather than "unfortunate," as McCarter reads with the Greek. 304 and ate The Greek says "and she came to the chamber and ate." But they were on pilgrimage and had no chamber. 304 no longer (sad) For the translator's addition, see Job 9:27: "I will give up my (sad ) face and be cheerful." 305 she herself names the child Meyers points out that this is indicative of control and brings other aspects of Hannah's dominance: her name is mentioned fourteen limes, and she is the subject of verbs three times more often than she is the object. Moreover, only she appears in all the dialogues in this story. 306 The story never says they don't come The longer Septuagint makes it clear that Elkanah also came, that he brought the sacrifice, and they slaughtered it together. Meyers believes that the Septuagint has expanded the text to make it: clear thai they observed the cultic behavior of the time of the Septuagint, but at this early period, women had a greater cultic role. 306 requested For a study of the parallels involved in this word, see Polzin, who also incorporates the theme of her supposed drunkenness, suggesting that the text wishes to hint at both error and drunken mistakenness in the request for kingship. 307 Hannah foreshadows Silbers suggests the story and the psalm actually foreshadow Saul's downfall as well as his coming. The coat that she brings Samuel every year (as recorded in 1 Sam. 3) is the very coat: that Saul ripped and that symbolized the kingship. 308 a poem that Hannah would have composed This is a unanimous opinion; see Herlzberg, McCarter, and Bailey. Bailey stresses that only "the childless wife has borne seven" is related to Hannah. 308 an appropriate psalm It is made even more appropriate by the Septuagint, which expands verse 9 to read "He gives what is vowed to the one making a vow and blesses the years of the righteous." For this as expansion and for the textual history of the psalm and its variants, see Theodore Lewis, "The Textual History of the Song of Hannah: Samuel II: 1-10." Vciiuv Testamentum 44 Î1994): 18-46. 308 significance at the opening of the book of Samuel Brevard Child suggests that this opening psalm and David's Thanksgiving psalm at the end establish a dominant: messianic perspective. Bru eggemann connects also the prose passages that begin and end the book of Samuel, which show together that Israel's historical process is "bonded" by God. Bailey, however, points out that the subject of the

Notes to pages 298-304

430

poems is Y H W H as the agent oi change. He believes that the songs öfter reassurance even though the stories framed by the songs do not show Y H W H raising the poor or being the deliverer for the sacrificed priests of Nob (1 Sam. 22) or for Tamar (2 Sam. 13). Since the stories might cause the readers to doubt. Cod, the poems reassure them. 309 The two songs Polzin presents a complete list of the parallels between the two songs, and notes the significance of "Tall, tall," (high, high).

The Necromancer at Endor For studies see W. A. M. Beuken, "1 Samuel 28: The Prophet as 'Hammer of Witches," "Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 6 (1978): 3-17; David Gunn, The Fate of King Saul, J S O T supp. 14 (Sheffield: JSOT,

1980); Michael O'Connor, "The

Necromancer's Dinner and the Lightness of Ruth" (paper presented at conference on "The Hebrew Bible: Sacred Text and Literature" at the Center for Judaic Studies at Wayne State University, Detroit, Mich., Nov. .:, 1988, with thanks to Michael O'Connor for giving me the manuscript); Uriel Simon, Ά Balanced Story: The Stern Prophet and the Kind Witch," Proofiexts 8 (:988V 159-7.1; Mordechai Cogan, "The Road to En-dor," in Pomegranates and Golden Bells: Studies in Biblical, Jewish and Near Eastern Ritual, Law and Literature in Honor of Jacob Milgrom, ed. David Wright, David Noel Freed man, and Avi Hurvitz (Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, .1995), 319-26: (with caution) Pamela Tamarkin Reis, "Eating the Blood: Saul and the Witch of Endor," JSOT73

(1.997): 3-23; and Susan Pigoff, "I Samuel 28—Saul and the Not So Wicked

Witch of Endor," Review and. Expositor 95 (1998): 435-44. Peter Miscall presents an analysis of this story in 1 Samuel: A Literary Reading f Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1986), 167-82. For standard commentary information, see Hans Hertzberg, I úr II Samuel: A Commentary, Old Testament Library (Philadelphia: Westminster, .1976), and Kyle McCarter, I Samuel, Anchor Bible (Garden City N.Y.: Doubleday, 1980). For later treatment of this story, see K. A. D. Smelik, "The Witch of Endor: I Samuel 28 in Rabbinic and Christian Exegesis till 800 A.D.," Vigil:ac Christianae 33 (1977): 160-79. 310 counterpart to Hannah Michael O'Connor notes the relationship between the two. Both women take charge, and the necromancer's telling the king to shut up and eat is like Hannah's telling Eli to shut up and let her pray. To O'Connor, their relationship indicates that the public expression of women's religion, orthodox (Hannah) or unorthodox, would have 110 place in the new monarchic culture. 311 no word through the official divinatory channels Mordechai Cogan suggests that the priests would not use the Urim and T h u m m i m for him because he slaughtered the eighty-five priests at Nob (1 Sam. 22:18-19). Cogan presents examples of Near Eastern kings using multiple means of divination and also of die "righteous sufferer" in the wisdom poem "I will praise the lord of wisdom," Ludlul bel nemeqi, who complains that he tries all means of divine communication to no avail ("The Road to En-dor"). 311 "with your adversary" The Hebrew ārēka could be a scribal error for sareka, or an Aramaism. The Septuagint reads reeka, "your companion." 312 'ôb For a discussion, see Harry 11 offner, "Second Millennium Antecedents to the

Notes to pages 196-203

431

Hebrew 'ôb, "Journal of Biblical Literature 86 (1967): 385-401. For comparative material for the classics, see Michael O'Connor; lor Mesopotamia, see Irving Finkel, "Necromancy

in Ancient

Mesopotamia,"

Archiv

fur Orientforschung

29-30

(1983-84): ι 17. 312 Circe It is worth noting that Tiresias mentions dangers to come, but it is Circe who tells Odysseus how to overcome them. On this see Judith Yarnall, Transformations of Circe: The History of an Enchantress (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1994)· 312 may be a loan from the Semitic word qsm This suggestion is from O'Connor, who notes that the trench can also be called a megaron or bothron. The Latin word for the trench, mundus, may be a translation from the more ordinary use of the word hosmos. Alternatively, the trench may be called "world," since it is the connector of this world to the netherworld. 312 skull Finkel presents examples of the use of skulls. He cites a ritual in which a dog's skull is used to pour a libation to dispel a ghost, but suggests that the major purpose of the skull was for ventriloquism. 312 a "divine being" This is the only time that elohiin refers to a ghost, but at this point: the necromancer does not: know the identity of the numinous being a ρ prejaching her. 312 now channels the words Pigoff calls the "witch" a "prophetic mediator," pointing to the questions that: Saul asks, "What: do you see?" (v. 13) and "What is his iorm?" (v. 14), as evidence that Saul does not see, and therefore logically does not hear (Pigoff "I Samuel 28"). 312 to be disturbed For the danger 111 disturbing the dead, see William W. Hallo, "Disturbing the Dead," in λ iin hah le-Nahum: Biblical, and Other Studies Presented to Nahum M, Sa ma in Honour of his yoth Birthday, ed. Marc Brettler and Michael Fishbane, J S O T supp. 154 (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1993), 183-92. The term could be used ior tomb disturbance. Hallo points out that, the term rgz, used here, is also used in Phoeneeian inscriptions. Simon, looking for a reason for Samuel's lack oi compassion, suggests that Samuel may have been personally injured by having his spirit raised. 312 his old denunciations Miscall points out: that Samuel's speech condenses the entire narrative of 1 Sam. 16-27 int« the fulfillment of his denunciation in 1 Sam. .13:13-1.4 and 1 Sam. 15:22-29. 313 "your servant" In Simon's excellent discussion of her speech, he suggests that this appellation restores royal dignity to Saul. He is certainly right, that the term elevates the man to w h o m the woman is speaking. We should note, however, that when Abigail comes to petition David during his outlaw year, she also calls herself "your servant," using both amah and siphah (1 Sam. 25:24, 27). Polzin makes the point that 'amah functions in the Deuteronomistic history to refer to the woman involved in establishing and legitimating David as king (Robert Polzin, David and the Dcuteronomist: A Literary Study of the Deuteronomic History, Part 3: 2 Samuel. (Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 1992). Pigoff makes the same point about siphah. Ruth addresses Boaz in a similar manner (Ruth 2:13), for this is the language with which a woman petitions a man who is not her husband.

Notes to pages 298-304

432

314 goes to his la it- Miscall refers to the use of derek, "way," to mean goal, journey, o r m i s s i o n i n 1 S a m . 9 : 6 , 8, a n d t S a m . 1 5 : 1 8 - 2 0 .

314 her only fatted calf Simon suggests that: she is like the poor man in Nathan's parable, unlike Abraham, who had many animals. As usual, Pamela Tamarkin Reis oilers a very different interpretation ("Eating the Blood"). Assuming that a response of eager hospitality would be bizarre, she claims that the witch is maneuvering him. Looking for evil, she sees the word for zebah, "slaughter" of the calf, an indication that she did not cook it, that: she had Saul eat blood and thus brought him into compact with her. dooming him but saving her life. But zebah is the appropriate term, since meat was not to be eaten without: appropriate offering to God, and the story does not bear out Reis's interpretation. 314 her meal resonates with theirs Pigoff noted the relationship of Samuel's feast with the meal "catered by a witch—the prophetic mediator of Samuel's word of doom" ("1 Sam. 28," 440). 314 effective Cogan suggests that the very reliability of such practices made them dangerous, and cites a Hebrew article by Yehezkel Kaufman, "Concerning the Story of the Necromancer," in his Mikivshonah shel ha-yetsira ha-miqrait (Tel Aviv: I)vir. 1.966). Cogan notes that this story, which is very old, shows an aversion to such necromancy long before Deuteronomy.

Abigail For earlier studies see Jon Levenson, "I Sam. 25 as Literature and as History," Catholic Biblical Quarterly 40 (1978): 11-28; Natan Klaus, " N e ' u m Abigail" (Abigail's Speech), Beth Mikra; Robert Polzin, "Providential Delays (2 Sam. 24:1-26:25)," in Samuel and the Deuteronomist: A Literary Study of the Deuteronomic History, Part 2 (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1.989), 205-15; Moshe Garsiel, "Wit, Words and a Woman: I Samuel 25," in OH Humour and the Comic in the Hebrew Bible, ed. Yehuda Radclay and Athalya Brenner (Sheffield: Almond, 1990), 163-68; and Alice Bach, The Pleasure of her Text: l ern imst Readings of Biblical and Historical Texts (Philadelphia: Trinity Press International, 1990), 25-44. See also the treatment in Kyle McCarter. Samuel I, Anchor Bible (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1980). 3.1.5 two "wise women" See Claudia Camp, "The Wise Women of 2 Samuel: A Role Model for Women in Early Israel?," Catholic Biblical Quarterly 43 (1981): 14-29, and above, pp. 58-63 .

320 the tied (book) of the living The verb sarar means "to tie," and N. H. Tur-Sinai explained that the "tying-up" of the living, which also appears 111 Job 1.4:17, is the same as the "book of the living" referred to in Ps. 60:29 (N. H. Tur-Sinai. The Book of Job: A New Commentary, rev. ed. [Jerusalem: Kiryath Se 1er. 1967J). At: the golden calf episode. Moses asks that if God would not forgive the people's sin. God should erase him from "the book you have written" and God replied that: the one who sinned "I will erase from my book" (Exod. 32, 32-33). Keeping the document tied prevents names from falling out accidentally. 321 nāgîd Levenson suggests it was her good sense rather than prophecy that made her know David would be king. But the God centered nature of her language, and the frequent repetition of God's name, make it more likely that she speaks

Notes to pages 196-203

433

from prophecy. Her function as oracle would not: be affected by the source of her inspiration. 322 Nabal died Polzin points out :hat Nabal's death is "proleptic" of Saul's.

Huldah For studies, see Duane Christensen, "Huldah and the Men of Analhoth: Women in Leadership in the Deuteronomic History," Society of Biblical Literature Seminar Papers, K)S4, 399-404: Lowell K. Handy, "The Role oi' Huldah 111 Josiah'-s Cult Reform," Zeitschrift Iiir /MileslamentIiches Wissenschaft 106 (1994): 40-53; Diana Edelman, "Huldah the Prophet of Yahweh or Asherah?" in A Feminist Companion to Samuel and Kings, ed. Athalya Brenner (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1994), 231-50; David A. GlattGilad, "The Role of Huldah's Prophecy in the Chronicler's Portrayal of Josiah's Reform," Biblica 77 (1996): 16-31. 324 Chronicles For this, see David Glatt-Gilad, "The Role of Huldah's Prophecy." 325 Jeremiah Edelman brings the many verbal parallels between Huldah and Jeremiah. Her own conclusion, however, that Josiah sent his men to Huldah as prophetess of Asherah, the intercessor goddess, is improbable. Even in the inscriptions that: bless in the name of Y H W H and his Asherah, the active party whose blessing is invoked is Y H W H , and the verb is in the masculine singular. 325 King Esarhaddon The Mesopotamia!! parallels are brought by Handy, "The Role of Huldah." 326 biblical interpretation Claudia Camp remarks on Huldah's claiming authority over the text: and over the people's history in interpreting their situation (Camp, "Female Voice, Written Word: Women and Authority in Hebrew Scripture," 111 Embodied Love: Sensuality and Relationship as Feminist Values, ed. Paula M. Cooey, Sharon A. Farmer, and Mary Ellen Ross (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1987).

The Later Adventures of Biblieal

Women

Some of the post-biblical traditions of biblical stories (primarily Second Temple sources) have been collected by James Kugel. Traditions of t he Bible: A Guide to the Bible as It Wis at the Start of the Common Era (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999). Classic rabbinic sources have been collected in Hebrew in the multivolume Torah Šelemah: A Talmudic-Midrasliic

Encyclopedia of the Five Books of Moses, ed. Menahem

Kasher (in progress from the Torah Shelemah Institute, Jerusalem, 191)2 present ·. In English, the classic source for Jewish traditions is Louis Ginsberg, Legends of the Jews (Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society, 1911). Early Christian sources can be searched 011 CD-ROMs of the church fathers. 340 Garden of Eden See Bernard Prusak, "Women: Seductive Siren and Source of Sin? Pseucle'jigraphical Myth and Christian Origins," 111 Religion and Sexism, ed. Rosemary Reuther (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1974), 89-116. 340 retold For discussion with examples, see "Gifts oi the Greeks," in Tikva FrymerKensky, In the Wake of the Goddesses: Women, Culture and the Biblical Transformation of Pagan Myth (New York: Free Press, 1993), 202-12,276-81.

Notes to pages 298-304

434

340 Joseph . . . the saddiq For these stories see James Kugel, In Potiphar's House: The Interpretive Life of Biblical Texts (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1994), and Shalom Goldman, The Wiles of Women/The Wiles of Men: Joseph arid Potiphar's Wife in Ancient Near Eastern, Jewish, and Islamic Folklore (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1993). 340 the tale of the engagement of Rivka For a discussion of this aspect of the Rivka story, see Alexander Role, ' An Enquiry into the Betrothal of Rebekah," 111 Die Hebräische Bible und ihr zweifache Nachgeschicte: Festschrift für Rolf Rendtorff; ed. Erhard Blum, Christian Macholz, and Ekkehard Stagemann (Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener Verlag. 1990}, 27-30. Rofé presents convincing linguistic evidence for late vocabulary and syntax and persuasive argument for the lateness of some of the underlying assumptions of the story. He argues that the whole story was written to inculcate the ideas about no intermarriage and 110 leaving the land, ideas vitally important during the Second Temple period. However, there is no reason to assume that the story itself does not rest on earlier versions, written or oral 341 trace that this battle left For a discussion of the hidden polemic, see Yairah Amit, "The Hidden Polemic over Those 'Who dwell in Samaria,' " in Hidden Polemics in Biblical Narrative,

trans. Jonathan Chipman (Leiden: Brill, 2000),

189-220; and see notes to Dinah chapter. 341 Post-biblical Israel John Collins, "The Epic of Theodotus and the Hellenism of the Hasmoneans," Harvard Theological Review 73 (1980): 91-104; Stanley Gevvirtz, "Simeon and Levi in 'the Blessing of Jacob' 'Gen. 49: 5-7)," Hebrew Union College Annual 52 (1981): 93-128; Reinhard Pummer, "Genesis 34 in the Jewish Writings oi the Hellenistic and Roman Periods," Harvard Theological Review 75 (1982): 177-88; James Kugel, "The Story oi Dinah in the Testament of Levi," Harvard Theological Review 85 (1992): 1—34; Tjitze Baarda, "The Shechem Episode in the Testament: of Levi: A Comparison with Other Traditions," in Sacred History and Sacred Texts in Early Judaism: A Symposium in Honor of A. S. van der Wo in le. ed. J. Ν. Bremmer and F. Garlia Martinez (Kampen, The Netherlands: Pharos, 1992), 11-73; and Angela Standhartinger, " 'Um zu Sehen Die Töchter des Landes' Die Perspective Dinas in der Jüsiach-HeHenistischen Diskussion ihn Gen. 34," in Religious Propaganda and Missionary Competition in the New Testament World: Essays Honoring Dieter Georgi (Leiden: Brill, 1994), 89-116. 341 Josephus Antiquitäten Judaicae IV 6, 6-12, §1.26-51. 1 rely 011 the translation of Η. St. J. Thackeray and Ralph Marcus in the Loeb Classical Library. For a study of Josephus's version, see \V. C. Van Unnik, "Josephus's Account: of the Story of Israel's Sin with Alien Women in the Country of Midian (Num. 25: if)," in Travels in the World of the O.T: Studies Presented to M. A. Beek, ed. Η. van Voss et al. (Assen: van Gorcum, 1974), 241-61, and William Klassen, "Jesus and Phineas: A Rejected Role Model," Society of Biblical Literature Seminar Papers ( .1986), 490-500. 342 Pseudo-Philo See Dorothy Sly, "Changes 111 the Perception of the Offense 111 Numbers 25:1," Proceedings in the Eastern Great Lakes and Midwest Biblical Society 11 (1991): 200 209. Sly lists the other references in Philo: Moses 195 305; Virtues 34-46; Spec 55-57. Translation from Life oJ: Moses, Loeb Classical Library. 344 Phineas required several miracles For the slightly variant, lists, see B T Sanhédrin 82b and Numbers Rabbah 20-25.

Notes to pages 196-203

435

344 Judah and Tamar See the study by Esther Menn, "judah and Tamar (Genesis 38)," in Ancient Jewish Exegesis: St udies in Literary Form and Flermeneutics, supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaic Studies 51 (Leiden: Brill, 1997). 344 Tamar . . . descendant of . . . Shem Pseudo-Jonathan 38:6, Genesis Rabbah 85:10, Numbers Rabbah 13:4. 345 Judah's public confession See C. E. Hayes, "The Midrashic Career of the Confession of Judah (Genesis 38:26), Parts 1 and 2," Veto Testamentum 45 (1995): 52-81. 345 Rahab . . . righteous convert Song of Songs Rabbah 27:4. 345 associated with Ruth Midrash Ruth Zutra 1 , 1 . 345 with Jethro Song of Songs Rabbah 1:22; Numbers Rabbah 3:2. 345 Joshua's convert See Olsar hamidrashim y it ha rech 3. 345 to the merit of the people from whom they came Talmud Jerusalmi, Rosh Hashanah 57b. 345 innkeeper Sifrei Numbers 88, 5; Targum (ad loc). 345 Rahab was ten years old . . . converted at fifty. Mekhilta de Rabbi Ishmael yitro 1.5. 346 Moses prayed unsuccessfully Tanna deb ei Eliyahu Zutra 22.1. 346 Hezekiah . . . prayer J T Sanhednn 10, 28, 3:2; B T Berakhot: 4, 8b Kohelet: Rabbah 5, 5:1. 346 revered as the progenitress of both prophets and kings Sifrei behaalotka 20; Ruth Rabbah 1:2; Job Zutra 1, 34; Peskita de Rav Kahana 13, 5. 346 Ezekiel and Jeremiah Pesikta de Rav Kahana 13, 12. 346 four great beauties Megilla 16a Otsar Midrashim hupat Eliyahvu 5. 346 "Rahab, Rahab" Ta'anil 5b, Megillah 16a. 347 Renaissance Christian commentator Tyndale See Ilona Ν. Rashkow, Upon the Dark Places: Antisemitism and Sexism in English Renaissance Biblical (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1990), p. 97.

Translation

INDEX

Aaron, 1 3 2 , 2 2 0 , 2 2 2 , 2 2 4 Abigail, 18, 65, 1 5 3 , 3 1 4 , 3 1 5 - 2 3 , 326, 327, 328, 340, 346 A b i m e l e c h , 1 5 , 19, 2 1 , 38, 9 5 - 9 7 , 1 1 6 , 1 4 5 , 276

Ahab, 1 1 0 , 143, 3 1 0 - 1 1 , 325 d a u g h t e r of, 85 j u d g m e n t on, 2 0 9 - 1 2 , 2 1 4 A h a z , King, 1 1 1 Ahaziah, 85, 86, 88, 2 1 2 , 2 1 3

Abishai, 3 2 1

Ahijah, 67, 68

A b r a h a m , 38, 66, 70, 1 2 7 , 200, 295,

Ahinoam, 153, 322

3 1 4 , 3 3 3 , 344, 347

A h i t o p h e l , 146, 1 5 6

and Hagar, 2 3 4 - 3 6

A l e x a n d e r the Great, 339

and Isaac, 14, 97, 99, 1 1 2 , 1 1 5 - 1 6 ,

Amalek, 139 Amaziah, 325

149 lineage of, 7, 1 2 , 203, 204, 236, 2 4 3 , 260, 278, 285 r e n a m e d by G o d , 2 3 1 in R i v k a stories, 5 - 1 5 , 20, 22, 180,

A m m o n i t e s , 1 0 2 - 1 7 , 204, 206, 236, 257, 258, 2 5 9 - 6 0 , 263, 278, 284, 289, 290, 342 A m n o n , 6 1 , 156, 1 5 7 - 6 9 , 1 8 3 , 278,

246 and Sarah, 5 , 1 2 - 1 3 , 22, 9 3 - 9 8 , 1 6 2 , 225, 234, 2 4 1 - 4 2 , 276, 3 2 7 A b r a m (Abraham): renamed

Ammiel, 281

by G o d , 2 3 1

and Sarai, 9 3 - 9 5 , 1 2 5 , 145, 2 2 5 - 3 6 , 303 A b s a l o m , 60-62, 1 5 5, 1 5 6 , 1 5 7 , 158, 1 6 5 - 6 9 , 278, 279

279,284 A m o r t i e s , 199, 203, 205, 206 A m o s , 202, 2 1 0 , 324, 336 A n a t , 3 1 , 32 angels, m e s s a g e s of, 230 animal sacrifice, 1 1 2 - 1 3 , 1 1 5 anonymity, and archetype, 114-15 A q u a t epic, 56

Achilles, 1 1 0

Aquinas, St. T h o m a s , 3 4 7 - 4 8

Achsah, 1 0 0 - 1 0 1 , 1 1 4

Arakites, 205

A d a m , 182

A r a m e a n s , 204

Adomjah, 156, 168,278

Archelos, 1 0 7

A d o n i s , 262, 263

Artemis, 1 1 0 - 1 1 , 1 1 2

adultery, laws of, 1 4 5 - 4 6

A r v a d i l e s , 205

Aeschylus, 1 1 2

Asa, King, 324

Agamemnon, 110, 1 1 2

A s h e r a h , 88

438

Index

Ashodites, 290

C

Ashurbanipal, 50 Athaliah, 74, 85-88

Caleb, 35, 1 0 0 - 1 0 1 , 140

A z aria h, 3 2 4 - 2 5

Calebiles, 3 1 5 - 1 6 Calvin, John, 1 8 1 , 347, 348 Canaan, xxiv, 34, 1 1 1 , 348 genealogy of, 2 0 5 - 6

B

as Other, 199-200, 2 0 2 - 6 , 284-85, 289

Balaam, 30, 2 1 7 - 1 8 , 2 2 1 - 2 2 , 2 5 7 - 5 8 , 342,343

cannibal mothers, 1 7 3 - 7 4 chastity, importance of, 9, 167,

Balak, 1 0 5 - 6 , 2 1 8 , 2 2 1 , 257 Barak, 34, 46-49, 52-55, 298-99 Bathsheba, 6 1 , 144-56, 278, 279-82, 284, 330, 347, 348 Bath shua, 278

185-88 children: abuse of, 354 cannibalism of, 1 7 3 - 7 4 child sacrifice, 1 1 0 - 1 3 , 1 1 5 , 126, 342

Bat-Shu a, 268, 344 battle vows, 1 0 6 - 7 , 1 1 0 , 1 1 7 , 140

m a r r y i n g off, 180

B e n - A m m i , 225, 259, 278

methods of acquiring, 103

Benjamin, 1 2 2 , 1 2 3 , 1 2 9 - 3 0 , 1 3 2 ,

m patriarchy, 9 9 - 1 0 1 , 170» 1 7 2 - 7 3 , 185

1 3 4 - 3 7 , 164, 275 Ben Sira[hJ, 262, 263, 339, 342

punished for parents 1 misdeeds,

Bethuel, 6, 8 , 1 1 , 1 2 , 2 1 Bible: active readers of, x x v - x x v i

126 Cinyras, 262 Covenant, a m o n g the Carcasses, 233

cultural context of, xxiv, 3 5 0 - 5 4 gender neutrality in, x v i

Cozbi, 43, 2 2 0 - 2 3 , 238, 257, 3 4 3 - 4 4

h o w to read stories in, xxii-xxiv parallels to, 339 patriarchy in times of, xiii-xvii, XXVI, 9 1 , 1 7 0 - 7 1 , 350

D

philosophical filter for, xxv social revolution depicted in, x v

Dan, 2 3 1

theory vs. reality in, xvi

David, 207-8, 3 1 2 - 1 3 , 3 3 3

value-free reading of, xxv

and Abigail, 65, 3 1 5 - 2 3 , 326, 328

w o m e n ' s stories in, xv, xvii-xix; see

and Bathsheba, 1 4 3 - 5 6 , 278,

also w o m e n

2 8 0 - 8 1 , 284

biblical state law, 271

and Goliath, 309, 335

Bidqar, 2 1 3

and Jonathan, 145, 2 4 1 , 279

Bilhah, 1 7 1 , 2 3 1

a s k i n g , 60-62, 108, 139, 1 4 0 - 4 2 ,

Bilhya, 28

1 4 3 - 4 4 , 145-46, 149, 162, 197,

Boaz, 2 4 2 - 5 5 , 258, 263, 264» 278, 347

212» 281» 284» 301» 308-9» 326»

Branchidai oracle, 1 3 1

328

Index lineage of, 39, 156, 253, 254, 257, 264, 275, 276, 2 7 8 - 8 1 and oracles, 18, 19, 60-62, 65, 280,

439 Er, 253, 264-67, 340, 344 Esarhaddon, king oi Assyria, 325 Esau, 1 6 - 2 1 , 1 7 1 , 192, 204, 275, 318-20,322

3 1 9 , 323, 326, 328 and Saul, 103, 108, 2 4 1 , 279, 309, 3 2 0 - 2 1 , 328 T a m a r as daughter of, 1 5 7 - 5 9 , 162, 164, 168-69, 170, 278, 279, 284 and Uriah, 146-56, 164, 2 1 1 - 1 2 , 280,281,284 D e b o r a h , 4 5 - 5 3 , 58, 60, 61, 149,

Esther, 335 Euripides, 1 1 2 Exodus: laws of, 1 7 1 saviors of, 2 4 - 3 3 Ezekiel, 88, 2 1 6 , 283-84, 346 Ezra, 25 5, 284-90, 340, 3 4 1

298-300, 3 0 1 , 327, 328, 337, 347 Delilah, 74, 77-84, 149, 340 Delphic oracle, 329, 330 Deuteronomy, laws of, 1 1 1 , 1 1 4 , 130,

F

1 7 1 , 1 7 2 - 7 3 , 1 7 7 , 188, 206, 2 1 5 , 287,289-90 Dinah, 119, 120, 160, 161, 162, 163, 1 7 1 ,

family, vulnerability of, 1 8 5 - 8 6 feminist, use oi term, xxvi

177, 179-83. 187-98,253, 265,271,

firstborn, determination of, 18

275, 276, 334, 340-42, 347, 352

Foucault, Michel, 260

divorce, 1 8 1 , 25 5, 2 7 1 , 340

Freud, Sigmund, 260

D u m u z i , 160, 186

G

Ε Gad, 215 Eden, Garden of, 340

Garden of Eden, 340

Edomites, 204, 206, 236, 284, 289

Genesis, ancestor stories of, 9 9 - 1 0 0 ,

116

E g y p t , xxtv, 260, 284, 289 Ehud, 257

Gilead, 1 0 2 - 1 7

El am, 287

G i l g a m e s h Epic, 92

Elazar, 132, 220, 222

Girgashiies, 205

Ell, 3 0 3 - 5 , 306, 309, 3 1 0 , 3 1 4 , 3 2 1

Goliath, 309, 335

Eham, 146,281

grace, h e r m e n e u tics of, 3 5 2 - 5 3

Elijah, 65, 69, 1 1 0 , 2 0 9 - 1 0 , 2 1 2 , 224,

G r e e k civilization, xxiv

230,333 Elimelekh, 70, 7 1 - 7 2 , 2 4 2 - 4 3 , 244, 246,248-54 Elisha, 64-72, 2 1 0 , 2 1 2 , 242, 297, 333

H

E l k a n a h , 3 0 1 - 3 , 305, 306, 308, 3 1 4 Enlil, 186, 1 8 7 Epic of Theodotus, 341

Hagar, 98, 1 2 5 , 1 8 3 , 2 2 5 - 3 7 , 238, 302, 303,334

Index

440

H a m , 205

Isaiah, 202, 2 1 0 , 286, 3 1 7

Hamathit.es, 205

lshmael, 2 1 , 96, 97, 204, 2 3 0 - 3 2 ,

H a m m u r a b i , laws of, 126, 148-49, 1 8 1 , 227, 228, 261 Hamor, 188-95 Hannah, 230, 3 0 1 - 9 , 3 1 0 , 3 1 4 , 326, 327-28

234-37 Ishmaelites, 236 ishtar, 3 1 - 3 2 , 1 8 1 Isis, 3 1 , 32, 262 Israel:

H a r a n , 12

ancestral family of, 5 - 1 5

Heber, 51, 53

conversion process in, 345

H e b r e w language, xxii

cultural heritage of, xxiv

Hellenism, 3 3 9 - 4 1 , 343, 344

as defined by Other, 2 0 4 - 5

Herodotus, 1 3 1

God. as leader of, 1 3 1 - 3 2

Hel, 200, 205

J a c o b described as, 182

Hezekiah, King, 3 4 1 , 346

j u d g e s of, 46, 6 0 - 6 1 , 1 1 8

I Iilkiah. 324

as "maiden," xxi-xxii, 283-84, 336, 337

Hirah, 264, 265, 268, 272, 279 H i r a m , King, 279

marital m e t a p h o r of» 283-84»

Hittites, xxiv, 199, 203, 206, 2 8 4 - 8 5

335-36

Hivil.es, 199, 202, 203, 205, 206

mothers of, 282

Horus, 3 1 , 262

national survival of, xx

H o s e a, 336

no king in, 1 1 8 , 1 3 7 , 170, 284

Huldah, 300, 3 0 1 , 3 1 4 , 323, 324-26»

patriarchy in, xiii-xvii, 5 , 9 1

327, 328, 337, 347

redemption of, 28, 29, 32 royal lineage of, 2 7 8 - 8 2 as seed, 285-86 testing of, 2 0 1 - 3

I

uniqueness of, 342 vulnerability of, x v i - x v i i , x x - x x i , 44

idomeneus, King, 107, 1 1 2 leoucl, 1 1 0

Issachar, 276

Inanna, 160, 180, 1 8 1 , 186, 187 incest, 185, 260-63 inheritance, importance oi", 14, 72, 1 7 1 Iphigenia, 1 1 0 - 1 1 , 1 1 2 , 1 1 3

J

Isaac, 127, 2 6 5 , 3 4 4 and A b r a h a m , 14, 97, 99, 112» 115-16»149 birth of, 66, 96, 225 lineage of, 12, 1 7 - 2 0 , 2 1 , 234, 236, 260,285

Jacob, 1 4 - 2 3 , 30, 70, 242, 3 4 1 Dinah as daughter of, 1 6 1 , 168, 179, 1 8 8 - 9 7 and E s a u , 1 6 - 2 1 , 1 7 1 , 275, 3 1 8 - 2 0 , 322

martyr's faith oi, 348

inheritance of, 1 7 - 2 0

and Rivka, 5, 6, 7, 1 2 - 2 2 , 93, 98,

as Israel, 182

180, 200, 260, 276, 327

and Laban, 12, 2 1 , 23» 44, 1 0 1

441

Index and Leah, 1 5 , 23, 101, 162, 179, 276

and Tamar, 149, 1 7 1 , 1 7 2 , 1 8 1 , 242, 2 5 2 , 2 5 3 , 2 6 4 - 7 7 , 278-82, 340,

lineage of, 200, 236, 265, 275, 278,

344-45, 347, 348

285-86 and Rachel, 15, 2 2 - 2 3 , 1 0 1 , 162, 171,276

J u d g e s , 46, 60-61 family relationships depicted in, 100, 1 1 5

sons of, 23, 109, 168, 1 7 2 , 1 9 1 - 9 2 , 1 9 4 - 9 7 , 278 j a e l (Yael), 34, 45, 50-57, 84, 33 5, 340,

historical period of, 1 1 8 - 3 8 , 2 3 8 , 309 Judith, 55-56, 335, 340

346, 348 jebusites, 199, 203, 205, 284-85 jehoiada, 87, 88 jehoram, 212, 213

Κ

jehoshaphat, King, 2 4 1 , 325 j e h o s h e b a , 85-87

Keturah, 204

Jehu, 86, 88, 2 1 2 - 1 4 , 325

Kilyon, 252

Jephthah, 40, 1 0 2 - 1 7 , 134, 139, 140,

kings:

149, 268, 3 3 6 - 3 7 , 348

foreign wives of, 2 8 1 - 8 2

Jeremiah, 2 5 1 , 262, 3 2 4 - 2 5 , 336, 346

inauguration of, 3 0 1

J e r o b o a m , 67, 68, 341

lack of, 1 1 8 , 1 3 7 , 170, 284

J e r o m e , Saint, 347

royal lineages of, 2 7 8 - 8 2

Jerusalem, 203, 254, 283-84, 3 3 5 - 3 6

seeds of, 284-86, 290

Jesse, 253, 3 1 6 Jesus Christ, 3 4 7 - 4 8

substitute, 2 1 9 Kronos, 1 1 0

jethro, 3 1 , 297, 345, 346 Jezebel, 74, 85, 149, 2 0 9 - 1 4 , 283 jezreel, 322 Joab, 58-62, 1 4 3 , 148, 1 5 1 - 5 3

L

Joash,88 J o h n 1 lytvanus. 341 jonadab, 158 Jonathan, 1 1 0 , 1 3 5 , 140, 145, 2 4 1 , 279 J o s e p h , 7 4 - 7 7 , 1 6 0 - 6 1 , 168, 1 7 1 , 196, 265,275,340

Laban, 10, 1 1 , 1 2 , 16, 2 1 , 23, 44, 1 0 1 , 204, 265 Lady Wisdom, 329 latifundization, 2 1 0 " L a w of the Slandered Bride," 1 7 1 - 7 2 , 188

josephus, 2 1 7 - 1 8 , 220, 3 4 1 , 342, 343

laws, biblical, xxiv

Joshua, 30, 34-36, 39-42, 1 3 2 , 140,

Leah, 15, 23, 98, 1 0 1 , 160, 179-80,

2 0 0 - 2 0 1 , 287, 298, 3 1 0 , 345 josiah, 3 2 4 - 2 6 j u d a h , 352 as Jerusalem, 254 lineage of, 196, 253, 264, 2 7 5 - 7 7 , 278-82, 348 and S h u a , 2 6 4 - 6 5

226, 252, 264, 2 7 5 - 7 6 , 278, 302 Levi, 109, 1 1 9 daughters of, 2 6 - 2 7 as Dinah's brother, 194-97, 341 levir ate, law of, 1 7 1 n, 2 6 6 - 7 1 , 274, 340 Levite, as outsider, 1 1 9

Index

442 Levite and his concubine, 96, 1 1 8 - 2 8 ,

mirrors, social, 3 5 3 - 5 4

162, 163, 2 1 7 , 229, 242, 268,

Mishniac law, 343

336-37, 351

Moab, 225, 259-60, 263, 264, 278

Leviticus, 1 4 7

Moabites, 204, 206, 236, 257-60, 263,

Lipit-Ishtar, laws of, 184 L o i , 39, 1 1 6 , 124, 1 2 5 , 126, 1 8 4 , 2 0 4 , 2 0 6 , 2 2 5 , 2 5 8 - 6 3 , 264, 269,

284, 289, 290, 340, 342, 343 Molech offering, 1 1 1 , 342 Moses, 19, 2 7 - 3 2 , 35, 36, 60, 61, 72,

2 7 5 - 7 6 , 278, 282

84, 86, 1 1 9 , 1 3 2 , 1 3 9 , 2 0 0 , 2 0 1 ,

Luther, Martin., 348

2 1 7 - 2 0 , 222, 223, 257, 287, 297, 298, 299, 3 1 0 , 327, 333, 342, 3 4 5 - 4 6 , 347 M o s h e (Moses), 2 7 - 2 8

M

Myrrha, 262

Mahlon, 252, 253, 254 Maiden Z i o n , 336 Malachi, 255, 290, 340

Ν

Manasseh, 2 1 5 marriage: alliances forged via, 177» 282, 3 5 5

Ν a'amah, 278 N a a m a n , 297

and divorce, 1 8 1 , 255, 271» 340

Nabal, 1 5 3 , 3 1 5 - 2 2 , 328

e n d o g a m o u s , 265

Naboth, 2 1 0 - 1 2 , 2 1 3

e x o g a m o u s , 192, 3 4 1 - 4 4

Nahmanides, 236, 334

financial procedures in, 1 8 6 - 8 7

Nahor, 5, 6, 8

nature of, 120

N a o m i , 7 1 , 2 3 9 - 5 6 , 258, 267-68, 278,

nuclear, 1 8 2 in patriarchy, 120, 336

279, 303 Nathan, 6 1 , 62, 1 4 1 , 1 5 4 - 5 5 , 156, 280,

as threshold action, 3 3 4 - 3 5 "Marriage of Sud, T h e , " 186, 187

322, 323, 330 N e a r Lastern laws, 1 4 9 - 5 0 , 186, 2 7 1

Mary, 230

N e c r o m a n c e r at Endor, 3 1 0 - 1 4 , 327

Mattathias. 224, 342

Nehemiah, 290-91

Meander, 107

Ningal, 186

Mephiboshelh, 1 4 1

Ninlil, 180, 186, 187

Mesha, king of Moab, 1 1 1 , 2 5 7

N o a h , 27, 205, 344

Mesopotamia, xxiv

Nunbarshegunu, 186

Micah, 1 1 9 , 202

Nuzi marriage contracts, 94

Micaiah, 325 Michal, 140, 145, 146, 1 5 3 , 322, 346 Middle Assyrian laws, 148, 1 5 5 , 165, 267, 270

Ο

midwives, 2 4 - 2 6 Milkah, 5, 6, 8, 1 2 Miriam, 28, 108, 327

oaths and v o w s , 106-7» 110» 1 1 1 » 117» 134» 136» 140

Index Obed, 253, 264, 278, 303, 3 1 7 Odysseus, 3 1 2

443 importance oi inheritance in, 14, 72,171

Oedipus, 260

incest in, 185, 260-63

Omride dynasty, 174

marriage in, 120, 336; see ids ο

Onan, 264, 265, 266-67, 269, 340 Onanism, 340 oracles, 1 6 - 1 7 , 1 9 - 2 0 , 37, 3 2 7 - 3 0 Abigail, 3 1 5 - 2 3

marriage right to dispose of family m e m b er s in, 1 7 1 - 7 2 w o m e n in, see w o m e n

Deborah, 298-300, 301

Paul, Saint, 347

Delphic, 329, 330

Peninah, 3 0 1 - 3 , 306

Hannah, 3 0 1 - 9 , 3 1 0

Peretz, 39, 252, 253, 264, 2 7 4 - 7 5 , 278,

Huldah, 3 2 4 - 2 6

280,317

N e c r o m a n c e r at Endor, 3 1 0 - 1 4

Perizzites, 199, 203, 284-85

prophecy as gift of Spirit to, 324

Pharaoh, 24-29, 93-95, 260

Rahab, 297-98, 300

Philistines, 202

Or pah, 239-40, 246, 254

Philo, 2 1 7 , 343

Osiris, 262

Philo of Byblos, 1 1 0

Other, 199-208

Phineas, 43-44, 2 1 5 , 2 1 6 , 2 2 0 - 2 4 ,

foreign w o m e n as, 2 0 3 - 4 , 206-8, 283-91

342, 3 4 3 - 4 4 Pinhas, 1 3 2

genealogy of, 2 0 5 - 6

Potiphar, wife of, 74-77, 1 6 0 - 6 1 , 340

Israel deiined by, 204-5

prophets, roles oi, 48, 65

Israel tested by, 2 0 1 - 3

puberty, advent, oi, 1 1 3 - 1 5

land polluted by, 204-5

purification, use of term, 147

Othniel, 1 0 0 - 1 0 1 Ovid, 262

Ρ

Rabbinic texts, 3 4 2 - 4 3 Rachel, 15, 2 2 - 2 3 , 98, 1 0 1 , 226, 2 3 1 ,

Paktyas, 1 3 0 - 3 1 Paltiel, 1 5 3 patriarchy : as about control, 179, 1 8 5 - 8 6 in biblical times, xiii-xvii, xxvi, 5, 9 1 , 1 7 0 - 7 1 , 350 children in, 9 9 - 1 0 1 , 170, 1 7 2 - 7 3 , 185

252, 264, 276, 302 Rahab, 34-44, 57, 58, 149, 297-98, 300, 3 1 4 , 326, 327, 328, 335, 345-48 rape, 1 2 4 - 2 7 , 129, 13 5 - 3 6 , 15 5, 160-69, 1 8 1 - 8 3 , 187-88, 3 5 1 , 3 54 Rashi, 1 8 1 , 347

and consent, 183, 187

Rebecca, see Rivka

economic constraints of, 7 2 - 7 3

R e h o b o a m , 85, 278

heirs appointed in, 1 7 1

Reuben, 1 6 1 , 1 7 1 , 196, 2 1 5

h o n o r in, 180

right of consent, 1 8 3 - 8 5 , 187

Index

444 Rivka, 5 - 2 3 , 243» 244, 246» 280» 302» 328, 334, 340, 348 and Isaac, 5, 6, 7, 1 2 - 2 2 , 93, 98, 180, 200, 260, 276, 327 and Jacob, 1 7 - 2 3 , 62. 200, 3 1 9 lineage of, 8, 200, 260 as m o t h e r of Israel, 58

and David, 103, 108, 2 4 1 , 279, 309, 3 2 0 - 2 1 , 328 death of, 1 4 3 and Jonathan, 1 1 0 , 13 5, 140 a s k i n g , 128, 1 3 4 - 3 5 , 1 3 9 - 4 1 , 308, 315,327-28 and necromancer» 3 1 0 - 1 4

R o m a n law, 187

Secaniah, 287

Ruth, 1 1 8 , 2 3 8 - 5 6 , 269, 2 8 1 , 340, 345,

Servius, 1 1 2

347 and Boaz» 242-55» 258, 263, 264» 278 lineage of, 238, 253, 257, 264, 2 7 5 - 7 7 , 278, 279, 282, 303 and N a o m i , 2 3 9 - 5 6 . 258, 267-68, 2 7 8 , 2 7 9 , 303

Seth,262 sexual hospitality, 94 sexuality, tied to power, 1 2 4 - 2 6 Shalem, 324 Shamgar, 51 Sheba ben Bichri, 58, 61 Shechem, 120, 1 6 1 , 163, 179, 181-83» 187, 188-97, 3 4 1 Shelah, 265, 266, 267-69, 273-74» 344 Shem, 204, 344

S

Shiloh, rape of girls of, 13 5-36» 140» 164

Sabine w o m e n , rape of, 1 3 6

Shimon, 109

Samaritans, 3 4 1

Shua,264-65

Samson, 77-84, 200, 340

Shunammite, 6 4 - 7 3 , 242, 329, 330

Samuel, 60, 61, 138, 1 3 9 - 4 0 , 287, 303,

Sibyls, 330

305-9, 3 1 1 - 1 4 , 3 1 5 , 327, 328

Sidon, 205

S a lib a 11 at the Haronite, 290

Sidonians, 202, 206

Sarah, 23, 1 1 6 , 1 4 5 . 2 6 7 , 2 8 0 , 3 1 4 ,

Sihon, king oi Amorites, 1 0 5 - 6

328, 334, 3 4 1 , 348 and A b r a h a m , 5, 1 2 - 1 3 , 22, 93-98, 162, 225, 234, 2 4 1 - 4 2 , 276, 3 2 7 and Isaac, 5, 12, 1 4 - 1 5 , 66, 234, 276

Simeon, 1 1 9 , 194-97, 3 4 1 Sinites, 205 Sisera, 46, 47, 49-57, 84, 114» 298-99» 340, 346 social issues, 3 50-54

lineage of, 7, 276

social order, hierarchy of, x v

renamed by G o d , 2 3 1 , 234

Solomon, 149, 289

in Rivka stories, 5, 6, 7, 10, 1 2 - 1 5 Sarai (Sarah): and A b r a m , 93-95, 125, 145, 2 2 5 - 3 6 , 303 and Hagar, 1 2 5 , 183, 2 2 5 - 3 6 , 302, 303 renamed by God, 231» 234 Saul, 1 5 3 , 306-7

David as lather of, 156, 207-8» 278 as king, 197, 284, 290, 308» 330 lineage of, 278-79, 280 w i s d o m of, 61, 1 7 3 wives of, 206-8, 283, 284 Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 56 Sud,186 Sumer, 160, 1 8 6 - 8 7

445

τ

voice (oi Cod): w o m a n as, xvii, xviii-xix, 295,

T a m a r (David's daughter), 156, 1 5 7 - 6 9 , 170, 183, 266, 278, 279,

327-30 see also oracles

284, 336, 348-49, 3 5 1 T a m a r (Judah and), 149, 1 7 1 , 172, 1 8 1 , 2 4 2 , 252, 253, 2 6 4 - 7 7 , 278-82, 340, 344-45, 347, 348

w

Ten C o m m a n d m e n t s , 1 7 2 Terah, 12, 97, 204, 225, 260, 278, 344

widows, as single mothers, 354

T h e b e z , w o m a n at, 84

wife, disposable, 93-98, 242

Theodotus, Epic of, 3 4 1

wife-sisterhood, 93-94, 98

T h o m a s Aquinas, Saint, 347-48

W i s d o m of Ben Sirah, 339

Tiresias. 3 1 2

Wise W o m a n of Abel, 5 8 - 6 1 , 3 1 5

travelers, violence against, 1 2 2

Wise W o m a n of Tekoa, 18, 58,

trickster stories, 1 8 - 2 0 , 44 Tyndale, 181

6 1 - 6 3 , 108, 279, 3 1 5 , 3 1 9 women: biblical roles oi, x v - x v i , 5 biblical stories about, xv, xvii-xix bride-price of, 1 8 6 - 8 7

U

cannibal mothers, 1 7 3 - 7 4 chastity of, 9, 167, 185-88

Ugarit text, xxiv

as coin oi the realm, 1 2 5

Uriah, 145, 146, 1 4 8 - 5 6 , 164, 2 1 1 ,

control oi, 124

280, 2 8 1 , 284 Ulnapishlim. 92 Uzzah, 278

disposable wives, 93-98, 242 foreign, xx, 3, 43, 74, 88, 177, 203-4, 206-8, 2 1 2 , 2 1 4 , 2 1 5 , 2 1 7 - 1 8 , 225, 255, 2 8 1 - 8 2 , 2 8 3 - 9 1 , 340-46 gender blindness about, x v i - x v i i

¥

Israel as m e t a p h o r of, xxi-xxii, 283-84, 3 3 6 , 3 3 7

victim, w o m a n as, xvii, xviii, xix, xx-xxi, 9 9 - 1 0 1 , 33 5, 3 3 6 - 3 7 victor, w o m a n as, xvii-xviii, xix, xx, 3, 335 villains, w o m e n as, xix, 88 virgin:

and metaphors, 3 3 3 - 3 8 n o right of consent for, 1 8 3 - 8 5 , 187 as "Other,'"' x v - x v i , 74 in patriarchal systems, xiv-xvii, 32-33,124

bride-price for, 1 8 6 - 8 7

p o w e r and autonomy of, 3 2 - 3 3

Israel as, xxt, 283-84, 336, 337

property rights of, 7 2 - 7 3

purposes of, 1 8 4 - 8 5

as single mothers, 3 54

and right oi consent, 1 8 3 - 8 5

as social barometer, xxi, 1 1 6

w o m e n as, xvii, xix, xx, 177, 183

and social issues, 3 5 0 - 5 4

Index

446

women

(continued)

Ζ

surrogate m o t h e r h o o d oi, 2 2 6 - 2 7 , 231 violence against, 1 1 6 , 1 2 4 - 2 9 ,

Z a m b r i a s (Zimri), 2 2 0 - 2 3 , 342 Zarephat, w i d o w of, 330

160-69, 1 8 1 - 8 3 , 187-88, 3 5 1 ,

Zebulun, 276

354

Zelophehacl, daughters of, 72, 108

vulnerability of, x x - x x i

Zemarites, 205

wartime fate of, 1 3 2 - 3 3

Z e r a h , 274, 278

see also specific women

Ziba, 1 4 1 Z i m r i , 43, 2 2 0 - 2 3 , 3 4 3 - 4 4 Z i o n , Maiden, 336 Z i p p o r a h , 28, 2 9 - 3 2 , 223 Zoroaster, 263

Yael, 34, 45, 5 0 - 5 7 , 84, 335» 340, 346» 348 Yehiel, 287 Yehoiyacla ben Elyashuv, 290 Yochebed, 28

About the Author

T i k v a F r y m e r - K e n s k y is a p r o f e s s o r of H e b r e w Bible at the Divinity School at the University oi Chicago. She is the a u t h o r oi m a n y w o r k s oi biblical scholarship and spirituality, including in the Wake of the Goddesses: Women, Culture and the Biblical of Pagan Myth and Motherpraver: Spiritual Chicago.

Companion.

Transformation

The Pregnant

Woman's

She lives in N e w York City and

A Note on the Type

This book was set in Monotype Dante, a typeface designed by Giovanni Mardersteig (1892-1977). Conceived as a private type tor the Ofiicina Bodoni in Verona, Italy, Dante was originally cut only for hand composition by Charles Malin, the famous Parisian punch cutter, between 1946 and 1952. Its first use was in an edition of Boccaccio's Trat ta tell0 in laude di Dante that appeared in 1954. The Monotype Corporation's version of Dante followed in 1957. Although modeled on the Aldine type used for Pietro Cardinal Bembo's treatise De Aetna in 1495, Dante is a thoroughly modern interpretation, of the venerable face. Composed by Digital Composition, Berry ville, Virginia Printed and bound by Berry ville Graphics, Berry ville. Virginia Designed by An the a Lingeman

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