Scripture Central

Genesis 37-41 I Come Follow Me I Handmaidens, Harems and Heroines I Lynne Hilton Wilson

Mar 2, 2026
Explores overlooked women in Genesis 37–41 and their cultural contexts. Discusses Dinah’s ambiguous fate and the violent fallout in Shechem. Covers Tamar’s bold levirate ruse that secures lineage. Examines Potiphar’s wife’s power, accusation, and questions of agency. Notes Asenath’s likely conversion and her sons’ place in Israel’s story.
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INSIGHT

Dinah's Ambiguous Story Shapes Family Violence

  • Dinah's fate is ambiguous and pivotal, possibly rape or arranged marriage, highlighting ancient practices and family shame that drive violent reprisals.
  • Lynne Hilton Wilson notes Dinah stayed in Shechem during the circumcision ruse and only returned after brothers massacred the men, raising troubling gaps in the narrative.
INSIGHT

Violence Hidden Behind Ritual Compliance

  • Simeon and Levi used deceit — mass circumcision followed by slaughter — turning a potential intermarriage into premeditated massacre.
  • Wilson emphasizes the brutality and unanswered consequences for abducted wives and children left out of the text.
INSIGHT

Jacob's Missing Daughters Create Textual Uncertainty

  • Jacob's daughters who comfort him after Joseph's supposed death are uncertainly identified as literal daughters, granddaughters, or daughters-in-law.
  • Wilson cites Josephus and later texts that expand Jacob's daughters, showing later tradition filled biblical gaps.
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