The paper examines the ‘endangered ancestress ’ theme in Genesis, in which the matriarchs, Sarah and Rebecca, are passed off to alien rulers as the sisters of their respective husbands, in Sarah’s case twice. Rather than viewing these incidents as clumsy duplication, the paper reads them as a literary device in a continuous narrative. The paper argues that when read in this way, these incidents serve to underline the singular status of Sarah in contrast to Rebecca and subsequent matriarchs. Sarah is shown to be the unique foremother of Israel. Alone of all her sex, she represents a pristine new beginning, analogous to human beginnings in Eden
The women of the Old Testament were not merely ancillary to the men. From the matriarchal era down t...
Many Americans learn more about the Bible through popular culture than through reading the Bible its...
The purpose of this study is to investigate Sarah and Ruth – the matriarchs and women of The Old Tes...
Sarah, the wife of Abraham and the mother of Isaac in Genesis, is a central biblical character becau...
The women in Genesis played a vital part in shaping Israel\u27s foundation, growth, and development,...
The expulsion of Hagar and her son Ishmael from the household of Sarah and Abraham (Genesis 21:8-21)...
This paper examines the influence of Genesis 38 on the Book of Ruth. Both texts feature women—Tamar ...
It is commonplace to assert that the Book of Genesis in the Old Testament is based on an androcentri...
The great mothers of Israel There are three great women important for the Christian faith: Sarah, Re...
The purpose of this study has been to examine and identify a negation of the mother and the maternal...
For centuries, the story of Lot’s daughters in Genesis is one which has both abhorred and intrigued ...
The Book of Genesis is principally a description of the emergence of interconnected families with sp...
This thesis explores the role and status of the biblical matriarchs in Genesis Rabbah, the fifth cen...
This article analyses Philo of Alexandria's and Josephus Flavius's interpretations of Sarah from the...
The retelling of the bible is a common method of biblical interpretation within the Dead Sea Scrolls...
The women of the Old Testament were not merely ancillary to the men. From the matriarchal era down t...
Many Americans learn more about the Bible through popular culture than through reading the Bible its...
The purpose of this study is to investigate Sarah and Ruth – the matriarchs and women of The Old Tes...
Sarah, the wife of Abraham and the mother of Isaac in Genesis, is a central biblical character becau...
The women in Genesis played a vital part in shaping Israel\u27s foundation, growth, and development,...
The expulsion of Hagar and her son Ishmael from the household of Sarah and Abraham (Genesis 21:8-21)...
This paper examines the influence of Genesis 38 on the Book of Ruth. Both texts feature women—Tamar ...
It is commonplace to assert that the Book of Genesis in the Old Testament is based on an androcentri...
The great mothers of Israel There are three great women important for the Christian faith: Sarah, Re...
The purpose of this study has been to examine and identify a negation of the mother and the maternal...
For centuries, the story of Lot’s daughters in Genesis is one which has both abhorred and intrigued ...
The Book of Genesis is principally a description of the emergence of interconnected families with sp...
This thesis explores the role and status of the biblical matriarchs in Genesis Rabbah, the fifth cen...
This article analyses Philo of Alexandria's and Josephus Flavius's interpretations of Sarah from the...
The retelling of the bible is a common method of biblical interpretation within the Dead Sea Scrolls...
The women of the Old Testament were not merely ancillary to the men. From the matriarchal era down t...
Many Americans learn more about the Bible through popular culture than through reading the Bible its...
The purpose of this study is to investigate Sarah and Ruth – the matriarchs and women of The Old Tes...