Got Milk? Lactation and Purification among Covenanters

Full title
Got Milk? Lactation and Purification among Covenanters
Research notes

Reader Checked|OA 27/06/2014||hw/not checked/04/08/2013

Reference type
Author(s)
Straus, Lisa M.
Year
2013
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Horizons in Biblical Theology
Volume
35
Issue / Series Volume
1
Pages
42-60
Label
05/08/2013
Abstract

This paper examines texts in 4Q266.6.ii in the Dead Sea Scrolls that regulated impurities attributed to parturient women living among the Covenanters. It contrasts how the regulations of 4Q266 differed from those in Leviticus 12. The thesis of the paper is that the Covenanters regarded new mothers as impure, but excluded and protected newborns from the impurities of their mothers. In particular, the paper will examine the possibility that a lactating mother was required to hire a wet-nurse to feed her infant during the first seven days of life if the baby were male or fourteen days of life if the baby were female, lest the mother's impurity from childbirth render the infant impure. Once the 7-14 days of impurity passed, new mothers were no longer impure to the touch and could therefore resume care for their infants. They were however still impure with regard to the sancta, or holy things, including the sanctuary. This paper will use texts outside of the Qumran community to interpret possible explanations for the Covenanters' understanding of the impurity of parturient women and the purity of their newborns.