Mark I liked what you wrote above about Numbers 30 and the woman’s vow, and I do have a genuine question that perhaps you can help me with. To ask it I have to explain a little of my thinking that may help with another discussion.
“Laws” – God’s laws - existed before Moses. Abraham kept them (Gen 26:5).
So then, despite the time shift, perhaps we could use Isaac and Rebekah to run through Num 30 and if so I can give you my question from Gen 24? My question concerns the law of the father, that is how the damsel was under the authority of the father, and then this authority was transferred in some way and at some time so that she was then under the law of the husband.
So we have Rebekah’s father and family’s acceptance and especially Rebekah herself being consulted and consenting to the process by this transfer of authority would take place (Gen 24:50-58)
But we also need Isaac's acceptance, so far only his father had made the offer by his servant (as agent).
Gen 24:67 And Isaac brought her into his mother Sarah's tent, and took Rebekah, and she became his wife; and he loved her: and Isaac was comforted after his mother's death.
For the principles set out in Num 30 to bind Isaac, there would have had to have been an exchange of vows on Rebekah's arrival (hearing), and Isaac would have to be her husband, so already married? or maybe just betrothed? and Rebekah would have had to repeat her vow before v67
BUT
Isaac could not revoke Rebekah's vow to become his wife if he was not ALREADY her husband.
If he was already married, it was too late to revoke her vow to be his wife.
I would genuinely be interested in a resolution to this from the Old Testament.
However, even though I may still have a question about the mechanics of the Old Testament law, I can still see that Christ was entirely in line with the man’s responsibility as Moses stated, bearing his wife’s guilt (if she should fall into adultery where before there was none) as he had placed a stumblingblock before his wife bringing about the circumstance through his own misconduct.
“Laws” – God’s laws - existed before Moses. Abraham kept them (Gen 26:5).
So then, despite the time shift, perhaps we could use Isaac and Rebekah to run through Num 30 and if so I can give you my question from Gen 24? My question concerns the law of the father, that is how the damsel was under the authority of the father, and then this authority was transferred in some way and at some time so that she was then under the law of the husband.
So we have Rebekah’s father and family’s acceptance and especially Rebekah herself being consulted and consenting to the process by this transfer of authority would take place (Gen 24:50-58)
But we also need Isaac's acceptance, so far only his father had made the offer by his servant (as agent).
Gen 24:67 And Isaac brought her into his mother Sarah's tent, and took Rebekah, and she became his wife; and he loved her: and Isaac was comforted after his mother's death.
For the principles set out in Num 30 to bind Isaac, there would have had to have been an exchange of vows on Rebekah's arrival (hearing), and Isaac would have to be her husband, so already married? or maybe just betrothed? and Rebekah would have had to repeat her vow before v67
BUT
Isaac could not revoke Rebekah's vow to become his wife if he was not ALREADY her husband.
If he was already married, it was too late to revoke her vow to be his wife.
I would genuinely be interested in a resolution to this from the Old Testament.
However, even though I may still have a question about the mechanics of the Old Testament law, I can still see that Christ was entirely in line with the man’s responsibility as Moses stated, bearing his wife’s guilt (if she should fall into adultery where before there was none) as he had placed a stumblingblock before his wife bringing about the circumstance through his own misconduct.