You might think that, and yet...
Ask the Muslims who call themselves "Palestinians" how that's working out for them...You might think that, and yet...
Florida school shooting: Pennsylvania students get stones
"Every classroom has been equipped with a five-gallon bucket of river stone," Mr Helsel said at the state's House Education Committee on 15 March.
"If an armed intruder attempts to gain entrance into any of our classrooms, they will face a classroom full of students armed with rocks and they will be stoned.
"We have some people who have some pretty good arms. They can chuck some rocks pretty fast."
Hey brother sorry I spaced this out. I was reading tractate Ketuboth tonight and came across part of the reference and remembered you.Thanks @eye4them.
@IshChayil that’s an interesting midrash, I’d be very interested in reading it if you have the source reference handy.
I think a strong argument can be made for this as "letter of the law vs spirit of the law".Is there any indication in any of these commentaries about how many (if any) women went and married another man once their husbands set foot outside the city and went away to war? Were the men required to be MIA or dead?
Might this have been an example of letter being administered but few who enacted based in spirit of that custom?
Would the prophet be condemning David just as much for "love thy neighbor" and implying that he was a scoundrel for following the exact letter of the law (sex with an unmarried woman) but ignoring its spirit by taking a wean based on a technicality when her husband could very easily have determined to be very much alive and well?
The Lord...visits the iniquity of the fathers on the children and the children’s children, to the third and the fourth generation. (Exodus 34:6-7 = Deuteronomy 5:8-10)
“Because of their iniquity, and also because of the iniquities of their fathers they shall rot away like them.” (Leviticus 26:39)
I read a Midrash about the child being ill gotten gain. I'll find it.One thing I don't get is why did the child have to die? Anyone have any idea how this fits in the whole "the children shall not be put to death for the sins of the fathers?"
Here's the one about David
In contrast with the prevalent view that perceives David as sinning with Bathsheba, a contrary approach maintains that David was blameless and that whoever claims that he sinned is in error. The Talmud relates that Rabbi, who was descended from the Davidic line, sought to defend David: he argued that when Nathan the prophet reproached David, telling him (II Sam. 12:9): “Why then have you flouted the command of the L-rd and done what displeases Him?”, he chastised him about something that he wanted to do, but did not commit. (David might have intended to sin, but his actions did not exceed the bounds of the halakhah). David did not engage in adultery, because it was customary during the monarchy of the Davidic line for a man to write a conditional writ of divorce for his wife when he set out for war, which stipulated that, if he were to die in battle, his wife would be retroactively divorced from the time of his departure for the battlefield. This practice was meant to prevent women from becoming agunot (“chained” women barred from remarrying). Since Uriah had prepared such a writ of divorce for Bathsheba and he was killed in the fighting, Bathsheba was no longer a married woman when David had sexual relations with her. Furthermore, since Bathsheba was then unmarried, this act of intercourse constituted an act of marriage. Despite its unseemly nature, the act did not formally constitute a transgression. Nor did David commit any crime in the death of Uriah, since the latter was rebellious. He did not obey David when the king ordered him to go down to his house, but rather refused, arguing (II Sam. 11:11): “My master Joab and Your Majesty’s men are camped in the open,” and the mastery of another is not to be mentioned before the king. Uriah was deemed to be rebellious against David, a crime punishable by death, even without being tried before the Sanhedrin, as was the accepted procedhawkishShabbat 56a). The Talmud presents this attempt to exonerate David as tendentious, and seemingly criticizes the attempt to find him completely blameless, just as it shows that this advocacy comes from the circles of David’s descendants, who occupy the position of Nasi(Patriarch).
Well there is this...
The Lord...visits the iniquity of the fathers on the children and the children’s children, to the third and the fourth generation. (Exodus 34:6-7 = Deuteronomy 5:8-10)
“Because of their iniquity, and also because of the iniquities of their fathers they shall rot away like them.” (Leviticus 26:39)
One thing I don't get is why did the child have to die?
Very interesting take, the innocent child is literally dying for the sins of others. I hadn't thought of that.IDK, but I think it might have had something to do with being the “Son of David” as a picture of the Messiah to come. This is just off the top of my head, so ?
I want to make sure I'm following, are you suggesting it wasn't an act of G-d to kill the child, but that G-d via Nathan was only foretelling what was going to happen anyway?The child was sick. The child expired.
I do not think that it suffered any more than any other one year old sick child.
Only the parents felt a sense of loss.
Only the parents experienced punishment.
IMHO
I'm not going to die on this hill, but I do think it's an interesting parallel to the propitiation of Christ. I won't write a book or sermon on it, but if Abraham and Isaac have their moment of foreshadow, I would think David and his son could too. It's all the more plausible given the association of Messiah with King David (meshiach ben David). There are bigger fish to fry, so no biggie.The child was sick. The child expired.
I do not think that it suffered any more than any other one year old sick child.
Only the parents felt a sense of loss.
Only the parents experienced punishment.
IMHO
Not at all, I am saying that He took the child’s life, but in a way that did not cause it to feel the brunt of the punishment.I want to make sure I'm following, are you suggesting it wasn't an act of G-d to kill the child, but that G-d via Nathan was only foretelling what was going to happen anyway?
I agree that there is a bit of a parallel.I'm not going to die on this hill, but I do think it's an interesting parallel to the propitiation of Christ.
I think there is a completely different approach to ancestors in Christianity and Judaism, and this illustrates it.The Talmud presents this attempt to exonerate David as tendentious, and seemingly criticizes the attempt to find him completely blameless, just as it shows that this advocacy comes from the circles of David’s descendants, who occupy the position of Nasi(Patriarch).