It is said in Jewish rabbinical literature that Serah is actually Asher’s stepdaughter, thus making Asher a father of a blended home. She was the daughter of a woman named Hadurah, who had become a widow early in her life. History records that Hadurah married Asher when Serah was 3 years old and that he raised her as his own.
So loved and welcomed into the family was Serah that she is the only granddaughter mentioned in the entire lineage of Jacob, her grandfather. History records that it was Serah’s tremendous piety and virtue that won her such a high place of honor in her adoptive home.
This same piety and virtue, though, was not something Asher could have claimed for himself when he was a young man, although he later went on to live a life accented with great wisdom. Yet in his youth, Asher did something that was terribly wrong—by anyone’s standards. He joined in on a selfish and hard-hearted scheme to have his half-brother Joseph thrown into a pit and later sold as a slave to a traveling caravan headed to Egypt.
Perhaps due to his own early misdeeds, the ensuing guilt as he watched his beloved father grieve, as well as the subsequent near-starvation of his people at the start of the seven-year drought, Asher became a changed man. We’ll never know for sure what brought about his transformation, but what we do know for sure is the legacy he left behind. It is a legacy of great wisdom, faith, character and service to his nation at large, a legacy not only attached to him but to generations of his descendants.
Asher’s legacy ought to give each of us hope. Asher made mistakes early in life—big ones that harmed his original family. He certainly didn’t have it all together. In addition, he was raised in one of the most historically dysfunctional homes recorded in the Bible. Sprinkle on top of that the added burdens of a blended family of his own—four sons and a stepdaughter—while married to a woman who had been married once before, and most might not have considered that Asher would have produced much of anything lasting at all.
Yet he did. In fact, his is a great legacy and a model for kingdom parenting today.
We read, “All these were the sons of Asher, heads of the fathers’ houses, choice and mighty men of valor, heads of the princes. And the number of them enrolled by genealogy for service in war was 26,000” (v. 40). According to Jewish legend, Serah went on to perform her own conquests, as well.
No wonder Asher was a happy man. He did not look at his five children as getting on his last nerve. Rather, he was a satisfied man with an intention for his offspring and those brought in under his care. As a result, he and his descendants truly lived out the blessing that was given to him by his father (