Several days ago, one of my daughters—a recent
college graduate—phoned me to report that she
had finally begun to read Women
in Scripture: A Dictionary of Named and Unnamed
Women in the Hebrew Bible, the
Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical Books, and the New
Testament, a copy of which she had
received months earlier, and that she was amazed
to be finding it both comprehensible and
fascinating. Of course, I was pleased that my
daughter had begun to read her mother’s book.
More important, I was delighted that though she
had no specialized tools for reading a work of
biblical scholarship, she found it engaging.
If she is at all like the
general reader, this book may indeed have
accomplished its goal: presenting the new
scholarship in the academy, on all biblical
females—the unnamed as well as those with
names—in a form that would be accessible,
understandable, and meaningful for a wide
audience, both in the academy and beyond.
The idea for Women in
Scripture grew out of a conversation I had
more than seven years ago with a man who works
in my building. He knew I taught Bible and
wanted to know something about Miriam for a
session of his Sunday school class that he was
to lead. When I pointed out some interesting
features of the Miriam story, such as the
likelihood that she, and not Moses, is the
author of the famous Song of the Sea in
Exodus 15 and that she may well be the first
biblical “theologian,” his response was one
that I often hear from undergraduate students
when they are first exposed to academic biblical
study: “Why have I never heard about all this?”
And then he asked where he could read about
Miriam.
Those questions provided
the spark that ignited a long and exhilarating
process of planning, writing, and editing a
unique resource for the study of the Bible by
those interested in the role of women in the
Bible and the biblical world. For one thing,
although it is technically a reference book, it
is, as one reviewer proclaimed, “eminently
browsable.” But more significant, it is
comprehensive in a way no other book dealing
with roughly half the population of the biblical
world—women—had ever attempted or achieved.
Women in Scripture
is comprehensive in several ways, one of which
is the result of a decision I made at the
outset: that it would include materials from the
full Jewish and Christian canon. It would deal
not only with the female figures of the Hebrew
Bible (Old Testament) and of the New Testament,
but also with those of the Apocryphal/Deuteronomical
Books, which are considered canonical by the
Roman Catholic and Greek Orthodox churches.
Having made that decision, I called upon two
prominent scholars—Toni Craven, professor of
Hebrew Bible at Brite Divinity School at Texas
Christian University, and Ross Kraemer,
professor of Christian origins at Brown
University—for help. I would take on the
responsibility for materials in my field, Hebrew
Bible; and I asked Toni to deal with female
figures in the Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical Books
and Ross to deal with those in the New
Testament.
Our first task, once we
had established that the books would have a
dictionary format, was to create a list of
entries. We began with the easy part, women with
names, from Abigail to Zosara. This would form
Part I of our book. Straightforward as it may
seem to list biblical women alphabetically, this
task was complicated in a number of ways.
For one thing, some names
are used for more than one woman. Think of the
number of Marys—six or seven—in the New
Testament or the seven different Maacahs in the
Hebrew Bible. Another problem is that some names
assumed to be those of men sometimes can also
denote women. Whenever we came across such
examples, we tried to give women the benefit of
the doubt—as when “Nahash” refers to an
Ammonite king in 1 Samuel 10-12 and to the
mother of Abigail in 2 Samuel 17:25.
However, another
difficulty arose from the fact that the names of
some women are known from extra-biblical sources
but are not specified in the Bible. For example,
the “Wife of the Queen of the South” of
Daniel 11:17 is undoubtedly Cleopatra, and the
dancer who brought about the death of John the
Baptist is not named but is probably Salome.
Should these figures be considered “named
women”? One other issue is the appearance of
the same named woman in more than one part of
the canon, as is the case for eleven figures.
Eve appears in all three sections, for example;
and the other ten appear in two parts of the
canon.
As we began to solve some
of the problems of identifying named women, and
not simply women’s names, we turned our
attention to the unnamed women of scripture.
There the notion of comprehensiveness took on
new dimensions when we decided to include all
mentions of females, not simply characters in
narratives. Even the casual reader of the Bible
will realize that many important figures, men as
well as women, are not mentioned by name. Think
of the young woman in Judges 11, whose father’s
desperate vow on the eve of battle led to her
early death; she is referred to only as “Jephthah’s
daughter.” Similarly, the woman who anoints
Jesus in all four gospels, surely a significant
New Testament figure, remains anonymous. Also
unnamed is the famous martyr-Mother, who
witnesses the persecution of her seven sons in 2
Maccabees 7 and 4 Maccabees 8.
The omission of women’s
names may result from biblical androcentrism,
literary strategy, concern with male lineage, or
other factors. Whatever the reason, we decided
not to let the biblical lack of names preclude
the presence of these women in our dictionary.
But how would we list them? Clearly entries for
them could not mesh with the alphabetical
ordering of entries discussing named women. Our
solution was to create an entirely separate
section of the book. Entries for the plethora of
unnamed women would appear in the order in which
each woman first appears, book by book and
chapter by chapter, following the sequence of
biblical books in the New Revised Standard
Version (NRSV). This section—Part II—begins
with the first created female in Genesis 1:26-28
and ends with the “elect sister” of 2 John
1:13. Although this ordering seems to privilege
Christian readers, in that the NRSV preserves an
order of biblical books that differs from the
sequence of the Hebrew Bible in its original
languages and in Jewish translation, we chose to
follow it simply because it would be familiar to
the widest possible group and not because we
feel that the Christian canon is the only
authoritative arrangement.
Creating a listing for all
the unnamed females was itself a challenge and
produced another kind of comprehensiveness.
Because we could find no way to search for all
those figures electronically, we looked for them
by painstakingly scrutinizing each biblical
book, chapter by chapter, verse by verse. We
expected, of course, to find numerous historic
and literary figures, but we were surprised at
the numerous general and generic references to
women. Such mentions abound in legal passages,
in allusions to the general populace in biblical
prophecy, in various groupings of women in the
New Testament epistles and so on. Because it is
not always possible to distinguish between
specific female characters and generic female
figures or collective female groupings, we
decided to include them all.
We did, however, make one
concession that would eliminate unnecessary
repetition. In some instances, we have combined
the discussions of certain types, such as “widow,”
in one entry rather than have a separate entry
for each time such a person is mentioned. Thus,
a major entry on widows would be found at their
first mention, and subsequent occurrences would
be marked by a reference back to that entry.
Part II grew to be the
major section of the book, with entries for
women of every imaginable description, engaged
in a myriad of activities and relationships.
There the reader can learn about the women at
the cross, queens, Hebrew female babies in
Egypt, wise women, serving girls, women as
musicians, virgins, sorcerers, a woman who
mutilates a man’s genitals, brides,
supplicants, wise women, and prophets—to name
just a few of the more than 600 entries of this
section.
There is more. Our search
for unnamed women produced yet another “category”
of female figures, namely, those that are not
human beings. Although less numerous than all
the named and unnamed women, these 49 figures
are no less significant. They are the female
deities, the abstract qualities personified as
females, and the symbolic representation of
political entities (cities and countries) as
women. Some of these non-human females have
names, such as the goddesses Asherah and Nanea
and the demon Lilith. Others are abstractions.
Wickedness and wisdom, for example, are each
portrayed as a woman. And cities or other
territories are given various female
designations such as princess (Princess
Jerusalem of Lamentations), woman (Woman Nineveh
in Nahum), mother (Church as Mother in 2 Esdras),
sister (Sister Sodom in Ezekiel and Sister
Church in 1 Peter), and daughter (Daughter Zion
and other such terms, found dozens of times in
the Hebrew Bible).
Collecting these images
meant the creation of Part III of Women in
Scripture. Not only does it contain articles on
the various female deities and personifications,
but it also contains entries that examine the
very possibility of female images for God.
Metaphors for God using male imagery—God as
warrior, king, and father—are plentiful. But
little noticed female imagery is brought to
light so that the nurturing female aspect of
divine nature becomes visible.
The list of entries in
these three parts became enormous—well beyond
the capability of just the three of us to write
all of them. We thus enlisted the help of more
than 70 talented scholars, men as well as women,
from America, Europe, and Israel. Drawing upon
the most current biblical scholarship, they have
described and analyzed the female figures of the
Bible, from the most famous to the most obscure,
with great clarity and insight. Their expertise
involves various methodologies, including
literary approaches and social science
perspectives. In addition, they provide
bibliographies for all but the shortest entries,
suggesting resources that would be helpful to
any reader, and also give cross-references to
related entries.
There is still more. To
make the book truly useful for non-specialists,
we decided to include, at the beginning of the
book, several essays that introduce the general
reader to the Bible—by providing basic
information about the nature and contents of
each part of the canon—as well as to the
methods of biblical scholarship. Particularly
fascinating are two additional essays we
solicited. One, by Howard University professor
Alice Ogden Bellis, describes the emergence and
development of “Feminist Biblical Scholarship”
in its many manifestations from nineteenth
century suffragist commentaries to the
contemporary flowering of feminist strategies of
reading and interpreting scripture. The other,
by Karla Bohmbach of Susquehanna University,
enlightens us on “Names and Naming” by
exploring how names were chosen and given in the
biblical world and by examining their range of
meanings.
In addition to the new
information contained in many of the entries and
essays, the materials in Women in Scripture in
the aggregate produced some surprises,
especially in respect to the distribution of
named and unnamed women in the various books and
sections of the Bible. For example, the two
greatest concentrations of female figures in the
Hebrew Bible occur in Genesis (31 named and 41
unnamed women) and 1 Chronicles (46 named and 15
unnamed women). The concentration in Genesis is
no doubt a function of the fact that Genesis is
replete with family stories, which include both
women and men; and Genesis also has several
genealogies, some of which include females in
their lineages. The concentration in 1
Chronicles is likewise linked to the sporadic
appearance of women in the genealogies that
dominate its first nine chapters.
Women, both named and
unnamed, are also prominent in the Book of
Judges, where they often play public roles. But
thereafter, in the narratives about the
monarchies, they make mostly cameo appearances,
usually as relatives of biblical kings.
Prophetic books have relatively few female
figures, with or without names. Indeed, five
prophets (Obadiah, Jonah, Habakkuk, Zephaniah,
and Haggai) contain no females at all.
Of the eighteen
Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical Books, three
likewise have no mention of women; but three
(Judith, Esther, and Susanna) bear women’s
names (though only two of the thirty-nine books
of the Hebrew Bible—Ruth and Esther—do so).
The sixteen named women in this section of the
canon are concentrated in only nine books,
whereas unnamed figures appear throughout the
fifteen books containing females.
The profile for women in
the New Testament reveals that ten of the
twenty-seven books (including all four gospels)
mention both named and unnamed women. Four books
(2 Thessalonians, 1 and 3 John, and Jude) are
devoid of references to particular women, named
or unnamed. Nine—all of them epistles—contain
no named women. Another six mention only women
from the Hebrew Bible but no women from the
authors’ own milieu.
Taken all together, the
essays and entries represent the best and most
user-friendly scholarship about all female
figures in the Bible, many of whom have been
misunderstood by 2,000 years of biblical
interpretation done largely by men. All too
often, contemporary perceptions about biblical
women are based on post-biblical traditions—art,
music, films, literature, and theology—that
obscure or distort the information in the
biblical text itself. For example, from
antiquity to the present, Eve has been called a
temptress or a sinner, yet those terms are
nowhere to be found in the Eden narrative.
Furthermore, Mary Magdalene has been viewed as a
reformed prostitute, although such information
about this prominent disciple and spokeswoman
does not appear in the gospels.
Now the reader has access
to scholarship that reclaims the scriptural
images for these and other women. It does so by
including a feminist perspective, an approach
that seeks to understand a text specifically for
the way it functions as a representation of
women’s lives and experiences and also to
evaluate whether sexism is encoded in the text.
The result, we hope, makes Women in Scripture an
indispensable companion for anyone studying the
Bible.