Let me recap this story so far: Judah drifts away from God and his family, making a series of compromising choices by aligning himself with Canaanite culture. One of those was to marry a Canaanite woman. His children were ‘evil’, and the Lord killed them because He sees absolutely everything.
So we continue.
“Judah then said to his daughter-in-law Tamar, “Live as a widow in your father’s household until my son Shelah grows up.” For he thought, “He may die too, just like his brothers.” So Tamar went to live in her father’s household. 12 After a long time Judah’s wife, the daughter of Shua, died. When Judah had recovered from his grief, he went up to Timnah, to the men who were shearing his sheep, and his friend Hirah the Adullamite went with him. 13 When Tamar was told, “Your father-in-law is on his way to Timnah to shear his sheep,” 14 she took off her widow’s clothes, covered herself with a veil to disguise herself, and then sat down at the entrance to Enaim, which is on the road to Timnah. For she saw that, though Shelah had now grown up, she had not been given to him as his wife. 15 When Judah saw her, he thought she was a prostitute, for she had covered her face. 16 Not realizing that she was his daughter-in-law, he went over to her by the roadside and said, “Come now, let me sleep with you.” “And what will you give me to sleep with you?” she asked. 17 “I’ll send you a young goat from my flock,” he said. “Will you give me something as a pledge until you send it?” she asked. 18 He said, “What pledge should I give you?” “Your seal and its cord, and the staff in your hand,” she answered. So he gave them to her and slept with her, and she became pregnant by him. 19 After she left, she took off her veil and put on her widow’s clothes again.” (Genesis 38 v 11-19)
Judah made Tamar a promise he never intended to keep. Shelah, another of his sons, would never marry her. She had been with Er and Onan, and they died; he was not risking his third son with this woman.
So Tamar goes home, puts on her widow’s clothes, and waits.
In the waiting, nothing happened. Shelah grew up, and yet no message came. There was never going to be a message.
Both of Tamar’s husbands had dealt with her badly, and now their father discards her. She has no future, for she has no husband, no children and no one to take care of her. So she comes up with a plan.
Her prostitute act worked, and the clever thing she did was to get his seal, his cord and his staff. We may scratch our heads at what she did, but her world had written her off. People do the most audacious things when they are desperate. Judah, not knowing it was Tamar, slept with her, and she got what she needed. This was a desperate woman with desperate measures. Judah walked away thinking no one had seen, and it was all forgotten. Nothing was further from the truth.
Today, on Palm Sunday, we celebrate how the crowds waved palms and shouted Hosanna, but most of them misunderstood what kind of king he was and what kind of rescue he had come to bring. They were expecting liberation from Rome. He had come to do something far deeper.
In Matthew 21 v 14, after overturning the money tables, it says, “The blind and the lame came to him at the temple.”
Tamar’s story has that same quality of unexpected rescue. She was a woman the system had forgotten — wronged, discarded, without recourse. And yet God had not forgotten her. The rescue, when it came, looked nothing like anyone would have planned or approved of. It was messy, uncomfortable, and hidden from view. But it was real.
That is often how God works. He enters the forgotten places. He sees what the respectable world walks past. The woman sitting by the road in desperation, the widow with no future, the one that polite society has quietly written off — these are precisely the people the gospel has always been good news for.
Judah thought no one had seen. But God sees everything. And the story was far from over.

