Righteous Old Testament

Righteous Asenath

Also known as Asenath wife of Joseph

The Egyptian wife of Joseph and mother of Manasseh and Ephraim.

Feast Day
December 14
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Righteous Asenath

Life

Asenath is an Old Testament figure named in the Book of Genesis as the Egyptian wife of the patriarch Joseph and the mother of his two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim. She is commemorated in the Orthodox Church among the Holy Forefathers, the company of righteous men and women of the Old Covenant remembered on the Sunday before the Nativity of Christ.

Scripture records little of her life beyond her marriage and motherhood. She is identified as the daughter of Potiphera, a priest of On (Heliopolis) in Egypt, and was given to Joseph as his wife by Pharaoh after Joseph rose to authority in the land.

Contributions & Legacy

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Scriptural Account

Asenath appears in three notices in the Book of Genesis. When Pharaoh raised Joseph to high office in Egypt, he gave him Asenath, the daughter of Potiphera, priest of On, to be his wife (Genesis 41:45). Before the years of famine came upon Egypt, she bore Joseph two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim (Genesis 41:50-52). Genesis 46:20 again names her as the mother of these two sons, who were born to Joseph in Egypt.

The biblical text gives no further narrative of Asenath's own life. Her sons Manasseh and Ephraim became the ancestors of two of the tribes of Israel, so that through her descendants she stands within the lineage of the people of the Old Covenant.

Later Tradition

Beyond the brief scriptural notices, Asenath became the subject of later interpretive traditions. Rabbinic sources preserve differing accounts of her origin: one holds that she was an Egyptian who converted to the faith of Israel, while another tradition identifies her instead as a daughter of Dinah.

A separate Greek work known as 'Joseph and Aseneth' elaborates her story at length, portraying her conversion from Egyptian idolatry, her marriage to Joseph, and the birth of their sons. This text is an apocryphal pseudepigraphon — it is not part of any biblical canon and is generally dated by scholars to the period between roughly 200 BC and AD 200. Its origin and authorship remain debated, with proposals ranging from a Hellenistic Jewish setting in Egypt to a Christian composition. Its narrative details are a matter of non-canonical tradition rather than established fact and are not received as Scripture.

Commemoration

Asenath is remembered in the Orthodox Church among the Holy Forefathers, the righteous ancestors of the Old Testament commemorated together on the Sunday before the Nativity of Christ. An individual veneration of Asenath apart from this collective commemoration is not clearly attested, and no distinct cult, relics, or shrine is recorded in the sources consulted.

Notes

Among the Holy Forefathers, commemorated on the Sunday before the Nativity of Christ. Individual veneration is not clearly attested; flagged for clergy review.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints