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THE FAMILY HOUSEHOLD
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Bible Study
Resource: Women of the Bible
A family group in ancient Egypt -
in reality, the
family was much larger than this
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TRIBE/CLAN/FAMILY
There were four units of society in ancient Israel, descending in size:
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the tribe, which functioned as a single unit when attacked by outsiders
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the clan, a loose association of extended
families living in the same area and having common ancestors
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the family household, or extended family with the same
ancestor; they often lived in adjoining tents/houses and acknowledged rights and duties in relation to other families in the clan (Leviticus 25:25, 47-49, Jeremiah
32:6-15)
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the nuclear family consisting of parents and unmarried children.
When the word ‘family’ is used in the Bible, it usually means either the clan or the extended family group, and includes not only parents, children, aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents, etc., but also the people who worked with and for the group, and their families
as well. A ‘family’ could very easily include as many as two hundred people, or as few as
fifteen. The size of families meant they could provide enough labor and skills to sustain a large number of people.
Because of its size and diversity, the clan could work successfully only if it worked in harmony. People were inter-dependent, and
individualism as we know it in the modern world did not exist. The rights and liberties of the individual, which we take for granted, would have worked against the unity that the clan needed in order to survive.
Ancient cultures were therefore group-oriented. Women and men saw themselves not so much as individuals, but as members of a group, of their own family in particular. They did not think about what they themselves wanted, but what would be good for the group.
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ON THIS PAGE
The
Family Household
Tribe/Clan/Family
Women in the Clan/Family
People Attached to the Family
Activities
Women's
Work
Tasks Expected of a Woman
Activities
Women
and Religion
Religious Ceremonies
Women in Ancient Religions
Activities
Interesting
Websites
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The women were expected to grind
all the grain needed
to feed their family
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WOMEN IN THE CLAN/FAMILY
There were two spheres of influence within the family: women's, and men's.
The two groups listened to each other’s opinions, but maintained separate powers within their separate spheres. Ideally, neither group dominated the other.
The women’s sphere was the household and everything that related to it.
A woman made the decisions within her household.
Women performed tasks together, gave each other support and help, and had their own stories, jokes and entertainment.
Within any ancient clan there was a central family, who gave the clan its name. The matriarch was the woman within the central
family with the highest social standing,
and she received the greatest respect. She was responsible for the well-being of all the members of the clan, and was expected to oversee all the tasks mentioned in Proverbs 31 (see the section on ‘Women’s Work). She made the day-to-day rules for the clan and resolved disputes between women. The women of the central family shared in the status of the matriarch and supported her in her duties and responsibilities.
There were various grades of status, and married women might be wives or concubines. A concubine was a secondary wife, or a wife without dowry, and therefore of lower status than a wife.
She had fewer legal rights than a wife who had brought bride-money into
the family.
PEOPLE ATTACHED TO THE FAMILY
Attached to this central family were its servants, female and male, and their families. Servants could be free-born or
slaves:
a free servant was paid in wages to perform specific
tasks; free servants could be domestic servants or agricultural laborers
a bond servant was contracted to work for a specific period of
time
a foreign slave had been captured in a war or a raid and was bought at
market
a ‘houseborn’ slave was born of a woman who was already a slave within the
household
a Jewish ‘debt’ slave was sold by her/his family to repay a
debt; they were released on payment of the debt, during Jubilee Year (Leviticus 25:39-43, 47-55) or after six years of service (Exodus 21:2-4, Deuteronomy
15:12).
Slaves did many types of work. If they had ability and luck they might be physicians or accountants or business managers. Many slaves achieved wealth and high status;
others were forced to work at less pleasant tasks, for example in mines or quarries.
There were strict laws about the treatment of slaves (Exodus 21, Genesis 17:12-12). Slavery was an entrenched part of the ancient world, but Jews believed that slaves ought to be treated well. Jews were always conscious of their past, and the way they had been harshly treated when they
themselves were slaves in Egypt. For case studies of three slaves who
appear in the Bible, see BIBLE
TOP TEN: SLAVERY
With all these varying types of people, the clan was diverse in its racial mix and its status levels. As well, it contained people of every age, from very old people to new-born babies.
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In the Bible, all the members of the clan/family were under the authority of the oldest male, and had to abide by his decisions. However, stories about women in the Bible show that, in practice, women often took the lead in decisions affecting the family and acted on their own initiative.
The stereotype of submissive women in historical times is not consistent with the women we read about in the Bible. A woman’s role depended, to a large extent, on the circumstances of her life and the strength of her own personality.
Jewish women had authority in the home, and this authority was built into the law. For example, when Sarah and Abraham
argued about what should happen to Hagar and Ishmael, God told Abraham that he must do what Sarah told him to
do: the senior woman of the clan had legal power over the women and children of her family.
Men and women were equally responsible before God and in law for their actions; for example, a man and a woman who were convicted of adultery both faced the death penalty (Leviticus 20:10).
Laws relating to food applied to woman and to men equally. The books of Deuteronomy and Numbers show that both women and men had the same moral responsibilities. Men had other obligations, such as making the annual pilgrimages, but women often accompanied their husbands on these journeys.
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ACTIVITIES
Who’s the boss?
Look at some of the social structures you encounter in your daily life, for example, your family, your group of
friends, neighbors, etc.
1. Who is in charge of the group?
2. Who has real authority? Who makes the decisions? Is it the person in charge, or is it another member of the group?
3. How is authority exercised in the group? Through respect, intimidation, affection?
4. How do the structures of these groups compare with the structure of the family/clan of biblical times?
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WOMEN’S WORK
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What tasks was a woman expected
to do?
We tend to imagine ancient women confined to
their looms and their kitchens, and these tasks of course occupied a
large part of their time, but they also did many other forms of
work.
You can get an idea of these tasks by reading Proverbs
31:10-31, a poem describing the
‘Woman of Worth’. Proverbs 31 lists all the attributes of an
ideal woman, listing her goals and tasks. These included:
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finding a respected, learned
and well-to-do man to be her husband
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spinning and weaving cloth,
to make the family's clothing and in the earlier period the
tents they lived in
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making and selling finished
items of clothing
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designing and making suitable
clothing for all members of the household, for both winter and
summer
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dressing herself well and
attractively
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keeping herself physically
and mentally strong and fit
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giving religious
instruction to her children: she was their first teacher
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gathering food and assembling
a varied and healthy diet for the members of the household
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administering the finances of
the family and overseeing the family business, with all the
necessary skills
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buying investment
property wisely
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supervising investments and
making a profit from them, then re-investing the profits
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performing charitable work
and caring for the poor
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organizing and supervising
the tasks of all the servants in the household
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overseeing the emotional and
physical well-being of all the members of the household
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being available at all times
to anyone who needed her.
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A loom with warp threads
weighted
with stone or clay weights
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You will notice that the list
hardly mentions children. This is not because children were
unimportant, in fact quite the reverse. It was taken for granted
that children were the central concern of a woman’s life. Children
were the great blessing given by God, and not having children was
counted as a very great misfortune. The household that a woman
governed was centered on the maintenance of a healthy and happy
extended family.
For more about women and the work they did, see
the second section of BIBLE
ARCHAEOLOGY: WORK
ACTIVITIES
The Ideal Woman/Man
Read Proverbs 31:10-31. It describes the Woman of Worth and lists
all the attributes of an ideal woman.
How many of the tasks are performed in one way or another by women
today?
How many do you expect to perform during your own life?
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WOMEN AND RELIGION
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Passover meal
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What
role did women have in religious ceremonies?
The
Jews of the ancient world lived in a religious culture. Religion was
completely integrated into their daily lives, so that everything
they did, said, ate, thought and made had religious implications.
The laws that governed their lives were not state laws as ours are,
but laws laid down by God.
Jewish law emphasized the
equality of the sexes before God. The role that men played in
worship in the outside world was counterbalanced by the leading role
of the mother in worship and religious instruction within the home.
Jewish women were seen to be
shapers of the Jewish future, because their role was to educate
their children. This responsibility was appropriate because Jews
have always seen women as more spiritual and open to religious ideas
than men, and as closer to God.
Women were in charge of
maintaining the ‘Jewishness’ of the family. Women
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presided over religious
celebrations within the home
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supervised their children’s
religious education
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were in charge of maintaining
complicated food laws, essential for a good Jewish family
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prepared and supervised the
frequent Jewish festivals.
Women could not be priests, but
neither could most men, as priests came from certain families, and
their role was hereditary.
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WOMEN IN ANCIENT RELIGIONS
The dominant role that women played in religious leadership within
the Jewish home may have derived from the active role that women in
ancient societies had in other religions, particularly the fertility
religions. It is now generally accepted that religion in Canaan from
the 12th century BC onwards was based on the main agricultural festivals
of the barley and wheat harvest of spring, and the fruit harvest of
autumn. Israelites worshipped at ancient local sanctuaries, and there was
no centralized priesthood or system of sacrifice. It was only later,
through the work of the prophets, especially those of the 8th century BC
(Hosea, Amos, Isaiah, Micah) and reforming kings of Judah such as Hezekiah
and Josiah, that the organizations of religion as presented in the stories
about the Patriarchs and Matriarchs actually began to emerge.
In the agricultural religions, the forces of nature were often personified as
goddesses with female qualities. The goddesses of nature were
life-giving, maternal and protective. They defended their families
and interacted with the clan of gods in much the same way that human women
interacted with their own families. Some of them, like Anat the
protectress of the family, could be quite terrifying and warlike,
which seems to suggest that ordinary women were expected to be
strong defenders of their own families.
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An ancient fertility goddess
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It was natural that women served
as priestesses in the worship of the goddesses in most of the
ancient cultures. This happened for example
· in Canaan, in the worship of Asherah the
earth-mother, and of Anat
· in Egypt, particularly in the worship of
life-giving Isis
· in Greece, for goddesses such as Hera the
queen of creation, Aphrodite the goddess of beauty and physical
love, and Demeter the earth mother and source of fertility.
The worship of Asherah and Anat persisted in
Israel, at least until the post-exilic period after 538BC (see the
references in Judges 3:7, 1 Kings 15:13, 1 Kings 18:19, 2
Chronicles, 15:16, Jeremiah 44:15ff).
Women continued to serve the natural forces representing fertility
in humans and in Nature, even after the male priesthood forbade them
to do so.
Until quite late in the biblical period, most families also had
their household deities, similar to the lares and penates
of the Romans (for an early example of this, see Rachel’s
household gods in Genesis 31:19-35).
These household gods were personal spirits who guarded a particular
home and the family who lived in it.
(For more on this, go to BIBLE
ARCHAEOLOGY: ANCIENT RELIGIONS)
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ACTIVITIES
A Woman’s Place?
1. What are the roles that women take in modern religion? Draw from
your own experience of religious and community events and festivals,
but try to include a range of religious denominations in your
response.
2. Are you for or against an increased role for women in religious
ceremonies?
3. Interview older people you know about the changes they have seen
in the roles that women perform
· during religious
worship
· in activities related
to religious groups.
4. Ask them what they think of the changes they have seen in church
worship and ceremony. Do you agree?
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A reconstruction of the ziggurat at Ur,
the city Sarah came from
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INTERESTING
SITES
- stories, pictures, reconstructions
SLAVERY IN THE ANCIENT WORLD, WITH
THREE CASE STUDIES FROM THE BIBLE
BIBLE TOP TEN: SLAVERY
THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF WORK DONE
BY MEN AND WOMEN
BIBLE ARCHAEOLOGY:
WORK
BELIEFS AND PRACTICES OF ANCIENT
RELIGIONS
BIBLE
ARCHAEOLOGY: ANCIENT RELIGIONS
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________________________________________________________________
Women of the Bible:
Family, Work, Religion
Bible Study Resource
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