Oh Ish, this is just awful. I've never questioned your scholarship before but what about Christ's actions in this story was unjust?
He didn't free her. Her accusers, who would have had to throw the first stones anyway, simply dropped the case. It would have been unjust if Christ had wanted to push the issue would it not? And now you have a fallible, false Bible to boot? This story reinforces the Law which Christ was adhering to strictly. You can do better than this.
Hey Zec, question on brother I may be off my game
Here's my thinking on this. Ok let me counter,
He DID free her according to the story "neither do I condemn you. Go and sin no more...don't tell your husband what happened or he'll kill you (sorry I had to add that)".
Regarding your 2nd contention: "
And now you have a fallible, false Bible to boot?"
So maybe I didn't explain it well, I am NOT someone who embraces bible emendations lightly.
Any modern bible translation will either not have this story in it, or will have a footnote making sure the reader knows "hey, this probably wasn't originally here just so you know, but since it's TRADITION already we're gonna leave it in."
I am an absolute believer in the autographia, the scriptures in the original languages as originally penned. I'm also a lover, though a novice still learning, in the area of textual criticism of the bible. This is men and women who love the bible and deeply desire to have it as precise as possible. Just so you know where I'm coming from.
If you pick up a NA28 critical Greek text, or a UBS5, they'll both tell you what I'm telling you. It's unlikely based on the manuscript evidence we have, that this story really happened.
I hope you see where I'm coming from here, I am NOT saying the bible is fallible; I AM saying it's a known fact that there are variances in the Greek and Hebrew manuscripts; this is a known. I love the original languages and I'm not trying to take anyone's favorite translation from them. If you love this story then keep loving it. I would simply treat it as a midrash.
I love Jewish midrashim, extrabiblical stories which shed light or teach ethics but are generally regarded as just that...extra-biblical.
By the way, I cede the point that Yeshua may not have stoned her if such a situation occurred.
Slumber's post raises an interesting point that he probably didn't intend.
Maybe the reason "divorce is so easy in the bible" is simply because the actual fact of deciding you don't want your wife anymore, whatever the drama experienced in the runup or the aftermath, can be summarized in one sentence, written down so that it is permanent evidence, not subject to reconsideration on a whim.
Interesting take on that. Yes, in Jewish tradition it's called a "gett" (YIddish word the Hebrew slips my mind right now).
The gett she shows to her future husband and the rabbi officiating marriage as evidence she is marrigable also for consideration of how much money to write in her next ketubah.
Also, the husband can not give her the "gett" without paying her the amount specified in her Ketubah! he can take a loan or something but he must pay her, even today, this kind of alimony fee. If she was a virgin when they married it's double!
The reason for divorce is also indicated so if she is barren for example it will be very difficult to find another suitor in places where monogamy is enforced.
The only thing I see in the writ of divorce passage (Dt 24) is a requirement that the man reduce his decision to a writing and give it to the woman, which is her permission to go be remarried (and by giving her the writing, he forecloses the possibility that he would deny it later, or say he was misunderstood, or even change is mind and claim her back having sent her away (before or after she married someone else).
Yes this is a case where tradition illuminates. In order for a "gett" to be issued, a beit-din "literally: house of judgement" a court of 3 judges, must agree to the divorce.
If it's a wrongful divorce the gett will not be given and the husband can not put her out. In Israel today this legal system is still employed; even though there is a secular government, divorce and marriage is handled by the rabbinical judicial system.
There's nothing in that passage on its own that speaks to the rightness or wrongness of such a decision, and whether the woman would have any right of redress. In fact, the whole issue of "what to do when people don't do what they're supposed to do" is a question for the judges. That would handle whether a man had rightly or wrongly put away his wife, as well as whether the wife had any rights outside of what's written.
exactly. Only the sequence is that she doesn't get the "gett" until the judges agree. Interestingly enough this is also the tradition for soldiers in King David's day. They would give their wives a gett before going to war in case their bodies weren't found so the wife wouldn't be trapped unable to marry. When they returned they would remarry.
There's an interesting Jewish opinion about David and Bathsheba that technically it wasn't adultery because she was "divorced" but it was a wink wink situation so everyone understood it was still a clear violation.
I'd be interested in hearing from
@IshChayil here. IC, what do the rabbis say about equitable issues in marriage? Surely there has been discussion over the past few thousand years re how to handle abusive situations. Otherwise, Slumber's whole parody there is sort of funny but essentially pointless.
Yes, wives may file for divorce in abuse cases.
They can file for abuse if hubby isn't sleeping with them enough, and a myriad of other reasons. The gemara teaches that the rabbinical courts used to torture guys if they refused to divorce a wife who wanted a divorce for valid reasons. Now they don't 'have that power of course.
Your comments about the ketubah have me thinking…. As the church and state stepped in and took over marriage, it lost its character as an enforceable agreement between parties. The church took over the idealistic part, the fairy tale promises with no real teeth, and the state allowed people to make big vague promises to each other with no specified remedies. This left a huge whole in the fabric of society, and the patch has been this godawful no-fault divorce regime that takes away a man's children and income without cause (other than "if mama ain't happy ain't nobody happy").
True!
Sorry I had missed your questions, because you abbreviated my handle I didn't get the alerts and I'm bouncing all over the place tonight. oh somewhere you had asked about the "yatsia" going out of the wife. This is considered a judicial process and is expanded heavily on in talmud tractate "ketuboth"