Gomer (wife of Hosea)

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Illustration of Hosea and Gomer from the Bible Historiale, 1372.

Gomer (

KJV
) but Hosea is told to marry her according to Divine appointment. She is also described as the daughter of Diblaim.

Children

Hosea 1 relates how Hosea has three children, a son called Jezreel, a daughter Lo-Ruhamah and another son Lo-Ammi. All the names are described in the text as having symbolic meaning, reflecting the relationship between God and Israel. Jezreel is named after the valley of that name. Lo-Ruhamah is named to denote the ruined condition of the kingdom of Israel and Lo-Ammi is named in token of God's rejection of his people.[1][2] Although the latter two children are not specifically said to be Hosea's, James Mays says that this is "hardly an implication" of Gomer's adultery.[3] In Hosea 3:1, however, it says that she is "loved by another man and is an adulteress" (NIV). Hosea is told to buy her back, and he does so for 15 shekels and a quantity of barley.

According to some scholars such as Walter Brueggerman and Kirsten Abbott, the story of Hosea and his relations with his wife Gomer includes metaphors pertaining not only to

Covenant Theology (Israel violating the covenant relationship with YHWH), which has been emphasised by previous interpreters, but also to a Creation Theology (YHWH will undo the fertility of the earth in response to Israel following other fertility-providing gods). From a feminist perspective, Abbott argues that even if the story of the marriage was only a metaphor, it was still used "in the service of a gendered, hierarchical, and dualistic model of reality" and the choice of imagery has patriarchal and misogynistic aspects.[4]

Cultural references

  • In the 1969 film The Milky Way by Luis Buñuel, the two protagonists encounter a man in a black cape who tells them to sleep with a prostitute, have children with her and name them "Ye Are Not My People" and "No More Mercy". Afterwards they meet a prostitute who wants to become pregnant and gives the same names for the children as those predicted by the man in the cape.
  • Brooke Fraser has a song called "Hosea's Wife" in her album Albertine.
  • Third Day has a song called "Gomer's Theme" on their album Conspiracy No. 5, which is the source of their fans calling themselves "Gomers."
  • Francine Rivers' 1991 novel Redeeming Love tells the story of a prostitute named Angel in the 1850s American West, based on the story of Gomer.
  • Michael Card has a song called "Song Of Gomer" on his album The Word.
  • Estonian writer Ain Kalmus' 1950 novel Prophet tells the tragic love story of Gomer and Hosea.
  • (Mesu Andrews') 2013 novel "(Love In A Broken Vessel)" features Gomer as a main character as well as her marriage to Hosea.
  • Robert DeLong references "Hosea married Gomer..." in his song Mud in My Eyes
  • Bob Dylan's "Key West (Philosopher Pirate)" from Rough and Rowdy Ways seems to allude to the marriage of Hosea and Gomer: "Twelve years old, they put me in a suit /Forced me to marry a prostitute /There were gold fringes on her wedding dress."
  • In the film Walk on the Wild Side, character Dove Linkhorn relates the tale of Hosea and Gomer to explain how he will deal with his girlfriend Hallie.
  • In the 1998 film Left Luggage Mr Kalman calls Chaja "A Gomer" while arguing with his wife about Chaja's appointment as nanny to the children as she wearing a mini skirt and a revealing top, which the Hassidic Mr Kalman cannot approve of ("She's practically naked!"). The listening children seem to know what that means, as Avrum announces to Dov that "Daddy called her a Gomer!", while Chaja later has to ask what the term is. It is explained to her that "In the Bible, Gomer is a wicked promiscuous woman", and that to Mr Kalman, "any woman in a mini skirt would be".
  • The 2012 film Amazing Love is a retelling of the Book of Hosea and features Gomer prominently as one of the central characters.[5]

References

  1. ^ Hosea 1
  2. ^ "www.Bibler.org - Dictionary - Gomer". 2012-09-01. Archived from the original on 9 Oct 2014.
  3. ^ Mays, James L. (1969). Hosea. SCM. p. 28.
  4. ^ "Kirsten Abbott "Creation Motifs in Hosea", Sea Changes Journal, December 2005". Archived from the original on 2008-12-10. Retrieved 2010-10-30.
  5. ^ Downes, Kevin (2012-11-06), Amazing Love (Drama), Hosea Productions, retrieved 2023-01-25