Difference between revisions of "Barren Women/0"

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<p>Tanakh records six cases of women who for a long time had difficulty conceiving but then miraculously give birth to a son. These six stories include:</p>
 
<p>Tanakh records six cases of women who for a long time had difficulty conceiving but then miraculously give birth to a son. These six stories include:</p>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li>Avraham and Sarah's giving birth to Yitzchak (Bereshit 17-21)</li>
+
<li>Sarah (and Avraham) and the birth of Yitzchak (Bereshit 17-21)</li>
<li>Yitzchak and Rivkah's&#160;giving birth to Esav and Yaakov (Bereshit 25)</li>
+
<li>Rivkah (and&#160;Yitzchak) and the birth of Esav and Yaakov (Bereshit 25)</li>
<li>Yaakov and Rachel's&#160;giving birth to Yosef (Bereshit 29-30)</li>
+
<li>Rachel (and Yaakov) and the birth of Yosef (Bereshit 29-30)</li>
<li>Manoach and his wife's&#160;giving birth to Shimshon (Shofetim 13)</li>
+
<li>Manoach's wife&#160;(and Manoach) and the birth of Shimshon (Shofetim 13)</li>
<li>Elkanah and Channah's&#160;giving birth to Shemuel (Shemuel I 1)</li>
+
<li>Channah&#160;(and Elkanah) and the birth of Shemuel (Shemuel I 1)</li>
<li>The woman from Shunam giving birth to a son (Melakhim II 4)</li>
+
<li>The woman from Shunam and the birth of her son (Melakhim II 4)</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 
<p>The similarities between some of these stories were already noted by Chazal, who state that Sarah, Rachel, Rivkah, Channah, and the Shunamit all gave birth on Rosh HaShannah.<fn><a href="BavliRoshHaShanah10b-11b" data-aht="source">Bavli Rosh HaShanah 10b-11b</a> states that Sarah, Rachel, and Channah all gave birth on Rosh HaShannah.&#160;<a href="TanchumaVayera17" data-aht="source">Tanchuma Vayera 17</a> has a slightly different list, including Sarah, Rivkah, Rachel, and Leah. Zohar Beshalach assumes that Rosh HaShannah is the regular day when barren women give birth, adding the Shunamit to the list.</fn> These stories all contain parallels to each other, although not all of the shared elements are found in all of the stories.</p>
 
<p>The similarities between some of these stories were already noted by Chazal, who state that Sarah, Rachel, Rivkah, Channah, and the Shunamit all gave birth on Rosh HaShannah.<fn><a href="BavliRoshHaShanah10b-11b" data-aht="source">Bavli Rosh HaShanah 10b-11b</a> states that Sarah, Rachel, and Channah all gave birth on Rosh HaShannah.&#160;<a href="TanchumaVayera17" data-aht="source">Tanchuma Vayera 17</a> has a slightly different list, including Sarah, Rivkah, Rachel, and Leah. Zohar Beshalach assumes that Rosh HaShannah is the regular day when barren women give birth, adding the Shunamit to the list.</fn> These stories all contain parallels to each other, although not all of the shared elements are found in all of the stories.</p>

Version as of 23:34, 5 January 2017

Barren Women

This topic has not yet undergone editorial review

Introduction

Tanakh records six cases of women who for a long time had difficulty conceiving but then miraculously give birth to a son. These six stories include:

  • Sarah (and Avraham) and the birth of Yitzchak (Bereshit 17-21)
  • Rivkah (and Yitzchak) and the birth of Esav and Yaakov (Bereshit 25)
  • Rachel (and Yaakov) and the birth of Yosef (Bereshit 29-30)
  • Manoach's wife (and Manoach) and the birth of Shimshon (Shofetim 13)
  • Channah (and Elkanah) and the birth of Shemuel (Shemuel I 1)
  • The woman from Shunam and the birth of her son (Melakhim II 4)

The similarities between some of these stories were already noted by Chazal, who state that Sarah, Rachel, Rivkah, Channah, and the Shunamit all gave birth on Rosh HaShannah.1 These stories all contain parallels to each other, although not all of the shared elements are found in all of the stories.

Content Parallels

  • Old husbands – Avraham (Bereshit 18:12), Yaakov (Bereshit 37:3), and the Shunamit's husband (Melakhim II 4:14) are all described as old.2 In the cases of Avraham and the Shunamit's husband the adjective is used to explain why they are childless. Yaakov, on the other hand, is simply described as being old at the birth of his son.
  • Doting husbands – Yitzchak (Bereshit 24:67), Yaakov (Bereshit 29:18,20,30), and Elkanah are all said explicitly to have loved their barren wife (Shemuel I 1:5).  By Yaakov and Elkanah, this serves to highlight their love for one wife over another.3
  • Replacement maid – Both Sarah (Bereshit 16) and Rachel (Bereshit 30:1-8), despairing of giving birth, offer their maid to their husband as a wife ("וַתִּתֵּן... לְאִשָּׁה"), hoping to use them as a surrogate ("אִבָּנֶה מִמֶּנָּה"). The husband takes the maid as an additional wife, and the maid immediately proceeds to become pregnant and give birth. Interestingly, while the relationship between Sarah and her maid Hagar immediately sours, leaving the son to be named by Hagar, their is no conflict between Rachel and her maid Bilhah, and both of Bilhah's sons are named by Rachel.
  • Second wife – Both Rachel and Channah compete with a second, more fertile, wife, as does Sarah, once she gives Hagar to her husband. See Rachel and Channah for more details.
  • Prayer – Yitzchak (Bereshit 25:21) prays for Rivkah to give birth, as does Channah (Shemuel I 1:10-11). Rachel may have prayed, as it is mentioned twice that God listened to her (Bereshit 30:6,22), but no actual prayer is mentioned.
  • Prophetic promise or blessing of son – Avraham receives two promises that Sarah will have a son, once by God (Bereshit 17:15-22) and once by angels (Bereshit 18:9-15). Manoach's Wife is also promised by an angel to give birth to a son (Shofetim 13:3-5), as well as the Shunamit, who receives the promise from the prophet Elisha (Melakhim II 4:16). Channah does not receive an explicit promise of a son, but Eli the priest blesses her that God will fulfill her request, which was for a son (Shemuel I 1:17). Rivka does not receive a promise prior to becoming pregnant, but does receive divine guidance relating to her pregnancy (Bereshit 25:22-23).
  • Promise of son's later importance – In three cases a divine promise is made regarding the child's future: Avraham is promised that Yitzchak will inherit his covenant (Bereshit 17:19), Rivkah is promised that her twin sons will each become a nation (Bereshit 25:23), and Manoach's Wife is promised that Shimshon will begin to save Israel from the Pelishtim (Shofetim 13:5).
  • Divine intervention – Four of the women receive explicit divine aid before they conceive: By Sarah we are told "וַי"י פָּקַד" (Bereshit 21:1), by Rivkah we are told "וַיֵּעָתֶר לוֹ י"י" (Bereshit 25:21), by Rachel we are told "וַיִּזְכֹּר אֱלֹהִים" (Bereshit 30:22), and by Channah we are told "וַיִּזְכְּרֶהָ י"י" (Shemuel I 1:19).
  • Name calling – In all of the cases, besides the Shunamit,4 the verses tell how the father or mother gave the son a name. In Sarah's case, Avraham names the son Yitzchak (Bereshit 21:3), although this name was preordained by God (Bereshit 17:19), and Sarah relates the name to her laughter (Bereshit 21:6, and cf. Bereshit 17:17, 18:12-13,15). By Rivkah, both parents name the first son Esav, while Yitzchak names the second son Yaakov (Bereshit 25:25-26), and the narrator seems to give an explanation for the names. Rachel names her son Yosef, explicitly connecting the name to her desire for children (Bereshit 30:23-24), as does Channah, when she names her son Shemuel (Shemuel I 1:20). Manoach's Wife names her son Shimshon, but no explanation is given (Shofetim 13:24).
  • Favorite son – In four of the cases, there are clear signs that the parents favor the son more than his other siblings5: Yitzchak is the only son of Avraham who receives an inheritance (Bereshit 25:5-6), Yaakov is explicitly loved more by Rivkah (Bereshit 25:28), Yosef receives a coat as a sign of his father's favor (Bereshit 37:3-4), and Shemuel also receives coats from his mother (Shemuel I 2:19).

Literary Allusions

  • "לַמּוֹעֵד... כָּעֵת חַיָּה" and "לַמּוֹעֵד אֲשֶׁר דִּבֶּר" – Both Avraham (Bereshit 18:14)6 and the Shunamit (Melakhim II 4:16) are promised that they will have a son "לַמּוֹעֵד... כָּעֵת חַיָּה".‎ Following this, it is recorded that Sarah gave birth at the date God promised Avraham (Bereshit 21:2), just as the Shunamit gave birth on the date promised by Elisha (Melakhim II 4:17), and in both cases the verse uses the wording "לַמּוֹעֵד אֲשֶׁר דִּבֶּר".‎7
  • Replacement maid – The language used by Sarah and Rachel, when offering their maid to their husband, is extremely similar. Sarah says "הִנֵּה נָא עֲצָרַנִי י"י מִלֶּדֶת בֹּא נָא אֶל שִׁפְחָתִי אוּלַי אִבָּנֶה מִמֶּנָּה" (Bereshit 16:2), while Rachel says "הִנֵּה אֲמָתִי בִלְהָה בֹּא אֵלֶיהָ וְתֵלֵד עַל בִּרְכַּי וְאִבָּנֶה גַם אָנֹכִי מִמֶּנָּה" (Bereshit 30:3). The description of their actions also uses similar terms: "וַתִּתֵּן אֹתָהּ לְאַבְרָם אִישָׁהּ לוֹ לְאִשָּׁה. וַיָּבֹא אֶל הָגָר וַתַּהַר... וַתֵּלֶד הָגָר לְאַבְרָם בֵּן" (Bereshit 16:3-4,15) and "וַתִּתֶּן לוֹ אֶת בִּלְהָה שִׁפְחָתָהּ לְאִשָּׁה וַיָּבֹא אֵלֶיהָ יַעֲקֹב. וַתַּהַר בִּלְהָה וַתֵּלֶד לְיַעֲקֹב בֵּן." (Bereshit 30:4-5).

Analysis

  • Degree of similarity – 
  • Distinctive phrases
    • כָּעֵת חַיָּה – The phrase "כָּעֵת חַיָּה" is only found by Sarah and the Shunamit.
    • אִבָּנֶה מִמֶּנָּה – The phrases "אִבָּנֶה מִמֶּנָּה" or "וְאִבָּנֶה גַם אָנֹכִי מִמֶּנָּה" are only found by Sarah and Rachel.

Points of Contrast

  • Description of barrenness – The barrenness of the women is described using differing terminology. Sarah (Bereshit 11:30), Rivkah (Bereshit 25:21), Rachel (Bereshit 29:21), and Manoach's Wife (Shofetim 13:2) are described as barren ("עֲקָרָה"). Sarah (Bereshit 11:30), Channah (Shemuel I 1:2), and the Shunamit (Melakhim II 4:14) are described as not having children. Sarah (Bereshit 16:1), Rachel (Bereshit 30:1), and Manoach's Wife (Shofetim 13:2) are also described as not having given birth ("לֹא יָלְדָה"), while Channah (Shemuel I 1:5,6) is described as having a closed womb ("סָגַר רַחְמָהּ").

Conclusions