Rahab
Remember focus
on the Positive!
Rahab. Rahab was the mother of Boaz. She is identified as a harlot;
however, harlot can mean harlotry in the sense of
Tamar the regular
equivalent to the Hebrew word, but perhaps, it is used here in the
broader sense of the word meaning a woman who kept a public house.
She is also praised for her faith and good works by aiding the spies of
Joshua in Hebrews 11:3 and James 2:25.

Rahab was one of the most beautiful women in the world, the mere
mention of her name exciting inordinate desire (Meg. l5a; Ta'an. 5b).
Later Jewish commentators, Rashi among them, interpret , the Hebrew
term for "harlot," as "one who sells food," basing their view on Targum
Jonathan (to Josh. ii. 1), which renders it by  (= "innkeeper"; comp.,
however, David Ḳimḥi ad loc.). In the Talmudic literature, however, it
is accepted that Rahab was a harlot. She was ten years old when the
Israelites came out of Egypt, and she pursued her immoral calling
during the forty years that the Israelites were wandering in the
wilderness. There was not a prince nor a ruler that had not had
relations with her; and she was therefore well informed of what was
going on outside Jericho (Mek., Yitro, 'Amalek, 1; Zeb. 116b). At the
conquest of that city by the Israelites, Rahab became a sincere
proselyte to the cult of Yhwh.

She is a woman of Jericho who sheltered the spies sent by Joshua to
search out the land. Having arrived at Jericho, the two spies remained
at Rahab's house, situated in the wall of the city and having a window
on the outside (Josh. ii. 1, 15). Rahab was ordered by the king of
Jericho, who had been informed of the arrival of the spies,
to deliver
them to him; she, however, hid them on the roof and declared that
they had come and gone without her knowing who they were (ii. 3-6).
In her conversation with the spies upon the roof, Rahab proved to
have been
well informed of the progress of the Israelites since they
had crossed the Red Sea. She told them that she was certain of their
final conquest of the land, and asked them to reward her by sparing
herself and her whole family-her father, mother, brothers, and sisters,
all of whom lived in the interior of the city (ii. 8-14). After she had let
the spies down through the window of her house, they enjoined her to
take her whole family into her house, which she should distinguish by
placing a scarlet string or rope in the window through which they had
made their escape (ii. 15-21). At the conquest of Jericho by the
Israelites, Joshua ordered the two spies to rescue Rahab and her
family, whose descendants thenceforward dwelt in Israel.

She then married
Joshua and became the ancestress of eight priests
who were prophets as well,
Jeremiah among them, and of the
prophetess
Huldah(Meg. 14b). Rahab was also one of the proselyte
women styled "the pious" ("ḥasidot"; Midr. Tadshe, in Epstein, "Mi-
Ḳadmoniyyot ha-Yehudim," Supplement, p. xliii.). The words "and
the
families of the house of them that wrought fine linen," etc. (I Chron.
iv. 21), are considered by the Rabbis to refer to the house of Rahab
(Ruth R. ii. 1).

The conversion of Rahab is regarded by the Rabbis as more complete
than that of Jethro and Naaman; for while the latter two did not free
themselves entirely from a belief in other gods, Rahab acknowledged
that Yhwh was the only God
both in heaven and on earth (Mek., l.c.;
Deut. R. ii. 19). This acknowledgment of Rahab called forth the
admiration of God Himself, who said: "On earth thou couldest see with
thine eyes that there is no other God besides Me; but to acknowledge
also that I am the only God in heaven needs special faith. I promise
thee, therefore, that one of thy descendants [referring to Ezekiel] shall
see what no prophet before him shall have seen" (comp. Ezek. i. 1);
thus making
Ezekiel also one of Rahab's descendants (Midr. Shemuel,
in Yalḳ., Josh. 10). Rahab's reward was alluded to by Hezekiah in his
prayer for recovery from his sickness (comp. II Kings xx. 2), when he
said that as Rahab was greatly recompensed for the rescue of only two
men, he who rescued so many from idolatry certainly deserved some
reward (Eccl. R. v. 2).E. C. M