Last week began a series of posts on the women in Matthew 1. You can read that introduction here. Today--the second woman mentioned in Jesus' genealogy. And yes, she is quite the addition.
“And
Salmon the father of Boaz by Rahab.” (Matthew 1.5)
Wow—this bad, bad woman is uncomfortably close to our reverenced King David in
genealogy, let alone Jesus himself. Rahab? Whose name is never
mentioned in Sunday school classes without its suffix—“The
Harlot”? Seriously, how many kids grow up thinking that was just
her full name—“Rahab Theharlot”? They have no idea what the
word means, right? So it's logical.
Rahab's
story is found in Joshua 2, where she takes the Israelite spies onto
her roof and hides them from her countrymen who would kill them.
Basically, on top of being a whore, she commits treason and treachery
against her own country. This just keeps getting better and better.
Much
has been written (mostly by male commentators of the Bible) about
Rahab's sinfulness. Perhaps students of Scripture should be reminded
that more often than not, prostitution is not a voluntary occupation.
We don't know her details, so we don't know her choices. One choice,
though, we do know. It's the one where she defends the two men of God
by risking her own life, and affirms,
“I
know the Lord has given you this land. For the Lord your God is the
supreme God of the heavens above and the earth below.”
And
she begs them to rescue her. She is talking about rescuing her and
her family when the Israelites come into the city of Jericho and it
falls. The scarlet cord she hangs from her window assures her that
she and her family will be noticed and saved. But I think she's
talking about more.
Rescue
from her way of life. Rescue from her empty idolatry that promised
happiness but delivered slavery. Rescue from the hatred of and
simultaneous use by men. Rahab's story is an old one, and it is a
current one, too. Women still live in slavery to men's lust for
ownership. But that is not the last word.
“For you know that God paid a
ransom to save you from the empty life you inherited from your
ancestors. And it was not paid with mere gold or silver, which lose
their value. It was the precious blood
of Christ, the sinless, spotless Lamb of God.”
(1 Peter 1.18-19)
Rahab
needs rescue. I need rescue. Humans need rescue. And Matthew includes
her in Jesus list of ancestors because that's precisely what He came
to give. Rescue from an empty life that teases us with gold and gives
out dust.
The
good news of Christmas is that there is rescue. We are not doomed to
remain harlots to whatever we have given our lives to that isn't
healthy and whole. We can choose to cling to the scarlet cord that is
Jesus' blood and take the rescue he offers.
Rahab
is one of Jesus' foremothers for a reason.
- Good Christian, fear: for sinners here
- The silent Word is pleading.
- Nails, spear shall pierce him through,
- The Cross be borne for me, for you;
- Hail, hail the Word Made Flesh,
- The babe, the son of Mary!
The
baby of the manger pleads your case. He offers a scarlet cord. He
chooses to rescue, at his own cost.
Because
it's Christmas.
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