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- Asenath - Wikipedia
Portrayal Asenath is mentioned in three verses of the Bible, all in the Book of Genesis First appearing in Genesis 41:45, Asenath is said to have been given by the Pharaoh to Joseph as a wife [11] Here, she is referred to as the daughter of Potipherah, priest of On (Gk Heliopolis) [12]
- Who Is Joseph’s Wife in the Bible? Who Is Aseneth?
Daughter of the Egyptian priest Potiphera, Aseneth becomes the wife of Joseph and mother of Ephraim and Manasseh She is an intriguing biblical figure Although Aseneth appears only three times in the Bible, she left a lasting impression on later Jewish authors
- Who was Asenath in the Bible? What Do We Know About Her?
How was Asenath part of Joseph's story in the Bible? Learn more about Asenath and what we can take away from her life
- Topical Bible: Asenath
Asenath is a significant yet somewhat enigmatic figure in the biblical narrative, primarily mentioned in the Book of Genesis She is best known as the wife of Joseph, the son of Jacob and Rachel, and the mother of his two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim
- Asenath: Bible | Jewish Womens Archive
The minor character Asenath, mentioned in the Bible as Joseph’s wife and mother of Manasseh and Ephraim, became the heroine of an ancient Jewish novel written between 100 BCE to 200 CE, likely in Egypt
- ASENATH, mysterious wife of Joseph of Egypt - Women In The Bible
Joseph is successful and, among other favours, Pharaoh arranges that Joseph marry a high-born Egyptian woman called Asenath Asenath has two sons who will be essential to the Israelites’ later history: Manasseh and Ephraim, who will be the forefathers of two of the twelve tribes of Israel
- 7 Powerful Truths About Asenath in the Bible: Grace, Inclusion, and God . . .
Discover Asenath in the Bible, who she was, why Joseph married her, and what her story teaches about grace, inclusion, covenant blessing, and God’s hidden plan
- Joseph and Asenath - TheTorah. com
Ninety-one manuscripts of Aseneth (the Greek form of Asenath), sometimes called Joseph and Aseneth, dating from the 6th to the 17th centuries C E , preserve all or part of the narrative
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