by Joel Blazing Pants » Sun May 19, 2019 5:38 pm
> No, not so. We generally regard law as prescriptive legislation set down in legal documents to serve as precedents that expects obedience and conformity as a response. We look at it as a systematic collection of rules to guide future decisions. This was not at all the perspective of the ancient world. Instead, they were to them collections of the king's wisdom (such as Hammurabi or Solomon) to show how wise the king was in the thoughts of their deity. They were generally set down as examples of some of the verdicts this particular king gave to show what a wise king he was in establishing the order of the gods. It's a completely different mindset and purpose than "laws."
Deuteronomy 12 opens with "These are the decrees and laws you must be careful to follow in the land that the Lord, the God of your ancestors, has given you to possess—as long as you live in the land"
The chapters following this are a continuation of this title.
So on today's episode of "The Bible doesn't say what it says"....
> First of all, as has already been stated, these are not laws; they are not legislation. The writer is giving legal wisdom (not actual cases) so a judge can gain wisdom from it and render a decision.
So have you actually read the bible, or just the things the church tells you to read?
> Dt. 22.13-30 is divided into 2 parts: the first involving a false accusation and the second (vv. 20-21) a true accusation. You can see that the judge is already being guided. The law involves procedures similar to our modern ones: procuring evidence, a public hearing, calling witnesses, considering intent and motive, and rendering a decision with an appropriate sentence.
Talk about making a mountain out of a molehill, there was no trial, the defense was that the father needs to bring in the woman's bloodied sheets from her torn hymen, if she could not do that, she was guilty.
> There is no attempt to defend a guilty woman in vv. 20-21; the first section, however, goes to great lengths to protect an innocent woman from false accusation against an abusive husband or trump-up charges.
Great lengths include giving her a chance to bring some bloodied sheets or die. You are aware that the hymen doesn't always tear for a girl's first time right? If a girl was one of the unlucky ones, she would be executed even though she was innocent.
Real protections for the innocent right there.
> The intent was to rehabilitate the man while protecting the woman. After having been publicly shamed (now everyone in town knows he's a sexual offender), he is forced to take her in, care for her, and assume husbandly responsibilities.
But if the woman is guilty, she doesn't get rehabilitated, she gets death. It's funny that there is no bible verse requiring a MAN to be a virgin or die....but yeah, this is all about protections for the woman.
> After having been publicly shamed (now everyone in town knows he's a sexual offender), he is forced to take her in, care for her, and assume husbandly responsibilities. The townspeople will be watching him.
None of the scripture says this is a public affair, outside of stoning the woman. You're altering scripture...that's a deadly sin right there.
> If the charges are true (vv. 20-21, the verses to which you are referring), they are executed. Adultery was a capital crime in the ancient Near East. We are not told why, but it was a widespread cultural practice. We can speculate that adultery was a threat to family life, and therefore the community at large, as well as a complicating factor in inheritances. It also destroyed order in the community.
If God called for it, it must be good! But don't do what God does, it's not like he's viewed as a standard or anything.
> She is not required to marry the rapist. It is a decision the father and daughter make together. Nor will she be executed if she refuses. Wow. She is the innocent victim and is to be treated as such.
She wouldn't be executed for marrying the rapist, she'd be executed for trying to marry someone else and not being a virgin. She has had her life's happiness stripped away from her completely, man, you are completely ignoring the damn scripture, it's rather annoying, to be honest.
> I don't remember having this particular discussion with you before, but if we did, I'm disappointed that an actual correct exegesis of the text doesn't sway your distorted interpretations, but that you persist in them despite the evidence and accurate information. If correct information doesn't change your mind, perhaps continuing the discussion is fruitless.
"Your honor, I know the evidence points to him being guilty, but at the same point in time, when I add completely irrelevant and baseless information to the evidence, it's no longer pointing to where it was so therefore, he isn't guilty!"
Right.