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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › OrpahOrpah - Wikipedia

    Orpah (Hebrew: עָרְפָּה ʿOrpā, meaning "neck" or "fawn") is a woman mentioned in the Book of Ruth in the Hebrew Bible. She was from Moab and was the daughter-in-law of Naomi and wife of Chilion. After the death of her husband, Orpah and her sister-in-law Ruth wished to go to Judea with Naomi. However, Naomi tried to persuade both Ruth ...

  2. Aug 20, 2019 · Orpah is the widowed daughter-in-law of Naomi and sister-in-law to Ruth. When Naomi decides to return to Judah, her daughters-in-law start out with her, but Naomi releases them. She encourages them to return to their mothers and find new husbands.

  3. Oprah Gail Winfrey (/ ˈ oʊ p r ə /; born Orpah Gail Winfrey; January 29, 1954), also known mononymously as Oprah, is an American talk show host, television producer, actress, author, and media proprietor.

    • Orpah in The Book of Ruth
    • Mother of Giants
    • Orpah The Witch
    • Orpah as A Promiscuous Woman
    • Why Is Orpah Portrayed So negatively?
    • Orpah in Medieval Exegesis
    • Modern Poetic Readings of Orpah’S Life

    The Book of Ruth, set during the time of the judges, tells how a family of four from Bethlehem in Judah—Elimelech, his wife Naomi, and their two sons, Mahlon and Chilion—migrates to Moab during a famine. Elimelech dies soon after their arrival in Moab and the two sons marry local Moabite women, Orpah and Ruth. After ten years in Moab, both Mahlon a...

    The Babylonian Talmud (Sotah 42b) identifies Orpah as the mother of Goliath, based on a midrashic reading of a passage in the book of 2 Samuel (21:18–22) that describes four Philistine warriors as ילידי הרפה “sons of the giant (harafah).” The rabbis understand the word harafah not as “the giant” but as a personal name of a woman, Harafah, and note ...

    According to the Talmud (b. Sanhedrin 95a), in a fantastic tale with many folkloristic elements, Abishai ben Zeruiah, arrives in Philistia to save King David from the hands of Ishbi be-Nob, Orpah’s son, who had captured him and was trying to kill him, in revenge for David’s killing of his brother Goliath: Thus, Orpah here has becomes a witch-like c...

    The Orpah/Harafah connection explains how Orpah becomes identified as the mother [or ancestor] of Goliath and the other three warriors in 2 Samuel 21, but what still needs explaining is how a Moabite woman ends up as the mother of Philistines from Gath.For the rabbis, Orpah was a Moabite princess, as she and Ruth are both daughters of King Eglon of...

    The rabbis loved creating oppositional pairs of virtuous and wicked characters. Examples are Isaac and Ishmael, Jacob and Esau, Esther and Vashti, and of course David and Goliath. 1. Just as Goliath is a foil for David, so Orpah, Goliath’s mother or ancestor, is a foil for Ruth. If Goliath was a wicked person, his parents and ancestors must have be...

    In the Middle Ages, the peshat commentary tradition on the Book of Ruth had little to say about Orpah. We may find here and there a hint of disapproval, but the attitudes are for the most part neutral. One exception is the typological commentary by Isaac ben Joseph ha-Kohen (15th cent) in which each character in the book plays a role in the drama o...

    When we turn to the modern period, we find several Hebrew and Yiddish poems that show much more sympathy for Orpah’s situation and justify her decision to stay in her ancestral home. These poets are addressing the figure of Orpah as portrayed in the Book of Ruth, unencumbered by rabbinic baggage.

  4. Jun 21, 2021 · What Can We Learn from Orpah? Orpah is not often depicted in a positive light in the Bible, because she didn't choose to stay with Naomi, and Ruth did. Orpah served as a foil to Ruth, showing the great sacrifice that Ruth made to stay with her mother-in-law. Ruth's choice led to poverty and singleness for a long period of time.

  5. Jan 14, 2024 · Orpah was a Moabite woman who grew up worshipping multiple pagan gods. The Moabites descended from Lot’s incestuous relationship with his eldest daughter (Genesis 19:37) and lived east of the Dead Sea in an area called Moab.

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  7. Orpah. ORPAH ôr’ pə ( עָרְפָּ֔ה, meaning uncertain; neck, gazelle, youthful have been suggested). A Moabitess who married Chilion, one of two sons of Elimelech and Naomi, after the family had migrated to Moab from Judah in time of famine during the period of the Judges ( Ruth 1:1-4 ).

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