Original Research - Special Collection: Eben Scheffler Festschrift

Reverend Mother and Tamar (Gn 38) trapped between ‘artificial’ barrenness and ‘normative’ motherhood: Any fitting biblical hermeneutic?

Madipoane J. Masenya
HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies | Vol 75, No 3 | a5158 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/hts.v75i3.5158 | © 2019 Madipoane J. Masenya | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 15 June 2018 | Published: 14 August 2019

About the author(s)

Madipoane J. Masenya, Department of Biblical and Ancient Studies, University of South Africa, South Africa

Abstract

Reverend Mother’s entry into ordained ministry did not quench her maternal instinct to experience the fruit of her own body. Her craving was thus not for a man as a husband but for a baby, the fruit of her own womb. As a result of her unconventional choice to fulfil her desire technologically, the church ‘[…] stripped her of her authority, position, and title’ (Henry 2010). In many a family-oriented, communal, hetero-patriarchal (African) Christian setting, a setting in which many a woman, persuaded by a specific biblical hermeneutic, finds herself trapped between ‘artificial’ infertility and a deep desire to have a baby, what kind of hermeneutic may emerge if Genesis 38 is read side by side with Reverend Mother’s narrative? The present article is an attempt to engage the preceding question critically.

Keywords

Nora; Tamar; Judah; Levirate marriage; Motherhood; Artificial insemination; Genesis 38

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