Aseneth’s Eight-Day Transformation as Scriptural Justification for Conversion

Full title
Aseneth’s Eight-Day Transformation as Scriptural Justification for Conversion
Updated By
Research notes

NR\Reader checked\02/02/2015

Reference type
Author(s)
Thiessen, Matthew
Year
2014
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Journal for the Study of Judaism
Volume
45
Issue / Series Volume
2
Pages
229-249
Work type
Label
19/05/2014
Abstract

The author of Joseph and Aseneth writes a lengthy narrative about Aseneth’s conversion, thereby providing a justification for Joseph’s marriage to an Egyptian woman. The author explicitly connects her seven-day period of withdrawal to creation, thus portraying her conversion as a divinely wrought new creation. In addition, her eight-day conversion process imitates two similar processes from Jewish scripture. First, Aseneth’s transformation parallels the circumcision of the newborn male eight days after his birth. Second, on the eighth day Aseneth partakes of an angelic existence, conversing with an angel, eating the food of angels, and being dressed in angelic garb. This elevation in her status parallels the consecration of the priestly class in Lev 8, which goes through a period of seven days before it can serve as priests on the eighth day. This process thus stresses the distance between non-Jew and Jew, while at the same time providing a scriptural rationale for how Aseneth overcame it.

Primary Texts: Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
Composition / Author
Passage
8:9
Composition / Author
Passage
12:1-2