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Showing posts with label Naamah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Naamah. Show all posts

Friday, October 31, 2025

Four Excellent Questions

 

Sacred Bull. Photo by Carolyn Whitson

Dr. Alice C. Linsley

Recently a member of the Bible and Anthropology Facebook group asked four excellent questions that I believe would interest readers of this blog.

1. Could you suggest a "beginners" book for Biblical Anthropology?

The science of Biblical Anthropology draws all its data from the canonical Scriptures. Begin by reading the 66 books of the Bible. Take notes on anthropologically significant data such as family relationships (kinship), marriage practices, burial customs, sacred symbolism, gender roles, beliefs about the High God and life after death, territorial claims, the geographical positions of settlements and cities (especially in relation to each other), and religious practices. As there are hundreds of biblical populations, it is useful to focus mainly on the Hebrew ruler-priest caste. My book The First Lords of the Earth: An Anthropological Study also might be helpful.


2. How do I make sense of the genealogies in Genesis?

The so-called genealogies in Genesis are king lists that reveal a marriage and ascendancy pattern that is distinctively Hebrew. That pattern is evident when we diagram the material. This diagram is an example.




The descendants of Cain and Seth intermarried. Naamah (Gen. 4) married her patrilineal cousin Methuselah (Gen. 5). Cousin brides, such as Naamah, often named their firstborn sons after their fathers. The cousin bride's naming prerogative is a distinctive feature of the Hebrew marriage and ascendancy pattern.


3. Should I take Exodus at literal value? The 10 plagues seem fantastical, and I wonder if they were added into the story to make a theological point.

Genesis tells us about the early Hebrew ruler-priests (4000-2000 BC) who dispersed widely in the ancient world. They lived long before Judaism emerged as a world religion. Exodus is a critical book for Judaism. It shapes the Jewish narrative as the people of Israel with a claim to the land, and places Moses as a central figure. Most of the "plagues" have been identified with natural causes. However, the timing of these events could only be by God's authority and power, and that seems to be the theological point.




4. What is meant by sacred symbolism?

Sacred symbols for the early Hebrew include animals such as the ram, the falcon, and the bull calf. These are Messianic symbols. The sun was the symbol of the High God for the Hebrew, so solar symbolism is found throughout the Bible. Divinely appointed persons are said to be "overshadowed", or they have a solar symbol in their names such as the initial Y. This article explains further: Appointment by Divine Overshadowing




Thursday, August 3, 2023

The Marriage and Inheritance of Hebrew Daughters

 


Dr. Alice C. Linsley

The daughters of the Hebrew ruler-priests are perhaps the least understood biblical population because many remain nameless in the biblical texts. However, these daughters were the brides and mothers who kept the bonds between the Hebrew clans strong. 

The exchange of brides between the descendants of two brothers was common. It is an example of “matrimonial moiety” (see Glossary). The early Hebrew moieties - the Horite Hebrew and the Sethite Hebrew - were tied together by the bride exchange among their rulers.

This is an example of matrimonial moiety, a system whereby kin groups (moieties), such as the lineages of Cain and Seth, are linked by a pattern of recurrent marriage between the clans.




Lamech the Elder was a descendant of Cain. His daughter, Naamah, married her patrilineal cousin methuselah and named their first-born son Lamech, after her father. The maternal ancestry of the Hebrew rulers can be traced mainly through the cousin brides.


Females of High Social Status

Most of the persons named in the Bible are men simply because only men served as priests and the Hebrew were a ruler-priest caste. More male ancestors are named because they assumed governance over their fathers’ territories or become high officials in the territories of their maternal grandfathers. The few wives and daughters who are named have special significance. Naamah, the first woman named after Eve, is an example. She is the key to understanding the cousin bride’s naming prerogative. She married her patrilineal cousin Methuselah and named their first-born son “Lamech” after her father.

Abraham's wife Sarah was of such high social status that she was sought by the King of Egypt. Rarely were such political "marriages" consummated because the ruler already had a queen by whom he received a rightful heir. The more sons competing for the ruler's position, the greater threat was posed to him by assassination.

Sarah and Abraham had the same father - Terah. However, they had different mothers because the high-ranking Hebrew rulers had two wives. The pattern of two wives is found throughout the Bible among the Hebrew rulers. However, the data needed to identify which wife is the first and which is the second is not always available. Some wives are not named. Moses' Kushite wife is an example, as are King Joash's two wives, chosen for him by the priest Jehoiada. 

In Genesis 36, we read about a female clan chief named Anah. She is the mother of Dishon and Oholibamah. Adah, the daughter of Elon the Hittite, married a Horite Hebrew named Esau. Apparently, bride exchanges took place between the Hittite and Hebrew rulers, suggesting that they were close kinsmen. This is likely the meaning of the Hittite recognition of Abraham as a "great prince" among them in Genesis 23.


Inheritance  

Daughters received inheritances from their mothers in the form of herds, tents, textiles, sacred objects believed to enhance fertility, jewelry, and servants. Numbers 27:8 makes it clear that daughters could inherit land. If a landowner died without a male heir his land was to go to a ranking daughter. If he died without a son or daughter, his property was to go to his brothers.

The teraphim that Rachel hid in her camel bags were probably figurines of the great patriarch Terah and his principal wife. Her possession of these ancestor figurines represented a claim to inheritance.

When Jacob proposed a plan to escape from servitude to Laban, his two wives were quick to support him, saying: "Are we still likely to inherit anything from our father's estate? Does he not think of us as outsiders now?" (Gen. 31:14) Laban sons became jealous of Jacob, saying, "Jacob has taken everything that belonged to our father; it is at our father's expense that he has acquired all this wealth." (Gen. 31:1) Clearly, Jacob's wealth was that of his wives, their servants and their flocks and herds. Other than his initial grant as a sent-away son, Jacob received no inheritance from Isaac. Nor was he to receive anything from Laban. That is why Rachel took the ancestor figurines.

Zelophehad's daughters argued that the name of their deceased father would be lost among his people were they not to inherit. However, Zelophehad's name would be perpetuated through one of his daughters. Were she to marry a patrilineal cousin, she would name her first-born son Zelophehad after her father, according to the cousin bride's naming prerogative.

Moses granted the five daughters' petition to inherit their father's holding, and we read this law: "If a man dies without a son, then the inheritance shall pass to his daughter." (Num. 27:8)