Board index Specific Bible verses, texts, and passages Deuteronomy

Deuteronomy 22 and the stoning of adulterers

Postby J Lord » Sun Jan 15, 2017 5:02 pm

It's hard to believe you believe in a God who commands torture. If you don't think stoning is torture you can just call it killing. I don't really care about this distinction. The text that indicates a women should be stoned the evidence of her virginity cannot be found is in Deut 22.
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Re: Deuteronomy 22 and the stoning of adulterers

Postby jimwalton » Fri Feb 03, 2017 7:29 am

Stoning was a method of execution. If you talk to our military personnel who are trying to extract ISIS information from captives, they'll assure you that torture is very different from execution, with a different motive and to a different end. But let's talk about Dt. 22.13-20.

First of all, the paragraph divides into two parts. Vv. 13-19 involve a case of false accusation, and 20-21 a case in which the charges prove to be true. The former goes to great lengths to protect the woman against false accusations and an abusive husband; the second makes no attempt to defend the guilty. You'll notice the legal process:

1. The parents are summoned to defend the accused woman.
2. There is a public hearing.
3. Objective evidence is required.
4. If the woman is innocent, the tables are turned and the man is automatically on the stand.
5. If the woman is innocent and the man is guilty, he is punished.
6. The honor of the woman is secured.
7. The man must guarantee her economic wellbeing for life.

So you're probably, then, talking about vv. 20-21 where the couple is actually guilty.

This is an instance of case law. The Bible is not a law record, explaining all the ins and outs, details and reasons. It's case law (an illustration of maybe what could happen), outlining possibilities and expressing intent (do whatever is necessary to establish guilt or innocence and act accordingly). In its casuistry, it gives principles and generic illustrations, expecting that mature judges will understand the intent and create laws accordingly, ruling over the community in fairness.

The specifications for how to establish innocence or guilt are not limited to what is written here. It asks for evidence proving guilt or innocence. And if she's guilty, she should be punished, and if innocent, acquitted. This is not a problem. It was up to the judges, accusers, defenders, and the community to establish reasonable ways to ascertain "virginity." "Fair process" is both implied and understood. God didn't provide the information. Instead the people are charged with figuring it out and doing it fairly.

Adultery was a capital crime in all the law codes of the ancient Near East. We're not told why, but a reasonably educated guess is that their society worked on the basis of inheritance, and it was necessary for social stability to be able to insure that one's children and heirs were actually one's own. Their financial system and land ownership was founded in paternity. Adultery was an attack on a man's household, stealing his rights to procreate, and endangering the orderly transmission of his estate to his heirs. Their culture was totally oriented to community values, and not to individual ones. The integrity of the woman's household was based on her ability to demonstrate proof of her virginity. The bloody sheets from the broken hymen were used as evidence that she was virginal. How else was one to tell in a culture where tampons had yet to be invented? Even if a woman didn't bleed all over the wedding sheets, this is casuistic law, not hard-core guides. The woman could still plead her case with her evidences. Communities were often small, and the truth could be determined.

Capital punishment is a way society responds to those acts that pose the most significant threats to the dissolution of society and its destruction. Stoning was a particular response by which society corporately responded on behalf of society ("society" was wronged more than a particular individual).

None of these will make much sense in modern contexts, but they don't have to. There is no reason to claim that our society need be structured the way theirs is or that our punishments should be the same. If someone is concerned about the justice of God (which I suspect would be the kind of questions you are challenged with), God’s justice in many cases in the OT is relative to how the culture itself is shaped and what its values are, though not in any case reflecting something that is inappropriate to his character.
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Re: Deuteronomy 22 and the stoning of adulterers

Postby TrakeM » Tue Jun 27, 2017 9:08 pm

So, stoning someone for adultry is in keeping with god's character? I would agree, I just disagree on whether this is a character that could be the character of any deity. It seems to me that this is clearly the character of primitive man, not a deity.

"God’s justice in many cases in the OT is relative to how the culture itself is shaped and what its values are"\
Isn't this pretty damning? god's justice should be perfect and morally pure and just, right? I mean, if god's "justice" is just the values of primitive man, then clearly god is no better than primitive man and is clearly not god. If my sense of justice and morality are greater than that of the god of the old testament since he just affirms the morality of the primitive men that wrote the book, then this isn't much of a god. Shouldn't god's justice be perfect, not relative to the people who were writing him? Isn't your god perfect and just in all ways at all time? Isn't he greater than man, and especially primitive man that wrote the bible?
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Re: Deuteronomy 22 and the stoning of adulterers

Postby jimwalton » Wed Jun 28, 2017 8:39 am

Glad to talk. Christians believe that morality is based on the character of God. What God is is right; what God is not is wrong. Murder is wrong because God is life, He created life, He values life, and He invested life with value and significance. Societies can only function properly if there is respect for life. Therefore killing is wrong.

Lying is wrong because God is truth, and truth is the foundation of meaningful relationships. Society can't function properly if we can't trust each other. The judicial system won't work if we can't trust the testimonies of the witnesses. Businesses can't function if there is no trust. Families will fall apart where there is no truth. Therefore lying and giving false testimony is wrong.

Adultery is wrong because God is faithful, and faithfulness is the foundation of meaningful relationships. Society can't function properly if we're just animals screwing with whomever we want, or raping each other. People don't have the dignity they deserve that way—they're just sexual victims. Families can't function that way. Society will crumble if sexual abuse is uncontrolled and rampant. Maybe you disagree with me, but we can keep talking about it.

Therefore adultery is a capital offense, like murder. As I mentioned in a previous post, all of the cultures of the ancient Near East saw adultery as a capital crime. They perceived it as destructive to the very core of society and dignity. This is how, then, stoning someone for adultery is in keeping with God's character. God values human life and dignity, he values truth and faithfulness in relationships, because eventually we will cease to be human if crimes like this are allowed to persist. We will turn into animals, abusers, victimizers, and society will become nothing more than kill or be killed, perpetrators and victims, and monsters. Patrick Buchanan said, "A modern society that outlaws the death penalty does not send a message of reverence for life, but a message of moral confusion. When we outlaw the death penalty, we tell the murderer that, no matter what he may do to innocent people in our custody and care, women, children, old people, his most treasured possession—his life—is secure. We guarantee it in advance. Just as a nation that declares that nothing will make it go to war finds itself at the mercy of warlike regimes, so a society that will not put the worst of its criminals to death will find itself at the mercy of criminals who have no qualms about putting innocent people to death."

God's justice is in many cases relative to how the culture shaped itself, but that doesn't mean God's justice is built on man's opinions and values. It just implies that God accommodates real human situations in the application of various principles of justice. We do the same thing in our system of justice. Certain situations are allowed to persist, not because they are right, but because of how they function and where they lead us. For instance, let's supposed a cop goes undercover and joins a crime circle to catch the kingpin. He may function like that under the radar for years to set up the sting. What? Are we allowing known crime to continue for YEARS without shutting it down? You bet we are, because we are after a certain goal that can only be achieved with a certain accommodating strategy.
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Re: Deuteronomy 22 and the stoning of adulterers

Postby TrakeM » Sat Jul 01, 2017 12:26 am

If you define good as whatever god does, then the statement god is good means nothing. If you define moral as whatever god does/says, then the statement god is moral means nothing. If god is to be judged by some standard of morality outside of god, then god isn't really the author of morality and thus isn't god.

Funny how god constantly agrees with whoever is writing and reading him? Odd thing that.

Executing someone for adultery is wrong. Most people can see that clearly when they see some muslim in an islamic theocracy stone some woman to death for adultery. The idea that this is perfect justice is insane. Once again, I conclude that your god's concept of morality is far inferior to my own. Killing someone for adultery is immoral. Always has been.
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Re: Deuteronomy 22 and the stoning of adulterers

Postby jimwalton » Sun Jul 02, 2017 7:14 am

> If you define good as whatever god does, then the statement god is good means nothing.

I don't. That's not how I define good. We get our definition from the nature of God, not from his behavior. It's safe to say that his behavior is always good, but that's not how we define good.

> If you define moral as whatever god does/says, then the statement god is moral means nothing.

I don't. that's not how I define "moral." We get our standard from the nature of God, not from what he does/says. It's safe to say that what he says and does is always moral, but that's not how we define "moral."

> Executing someone for adultery is wrong.

From what moral standard does this derive, and how do you know it's a moral standard? You keep asking me for scientific evidence. Now it's your turn. Give me the scientific evidence that "executing someone for adultery is wrong." Or at least justify it by proving the objective moral standard behind your assertion.
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Re: Deuteronomy 22 and the stoning of adulterers

Postby TrakeM » Sun Jul 02, 2017 1:05 pm

If you define good as whatever god's nature is, then the statement god's nature is good has no meaning. God's nature isn't really very well defined. How do you know what god's nature is aside from what he does?

Morals aren't objective. We made them up. Many of them are necessary for a society to flourish. Some of them are seen in animals like gods (believe it or not, we've done experiments that seem to show that dogs have a concept of fairness). I see no reason to think that morals objectively exist. They are incredibly important, but that doesn't mean they are objective. That being said, take a look at what your religioin has done to your sense of morality. Neither of us have objectively morality. You can't objectively show that your god exists so you don't have objective morality. The difference is my sense of objective morality says that it has always been wrong to stone someone to death for committing adultery or saying "let us go serve other gods". Your sense of morality says that those things have been moral at certain times under certain conditions.
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Re: Deuteronomy 22 and the stoning of adulterers

Postby jimwalton » Sun Jul 02, 2017 3:42 pm

We know about God's nature because He revealed it to us in two ways: in nature and in Scripture. By observing what the world is like, by digesting what the Bible says, and by observing how God works in the world is how we know what God's nature is, and that's the basis of objective morality.

> Morals aren't objective. We made them up.

Except that there are morals we all accept as valid, such as "It's wrong to kill a baby for the fun of it." You won't find anyone anywhere, in any culture, in any part of history, that believed killing a baby for the fun of it is right. Thus morals are objective, and we need to discern the source of the standard that we all share.
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Re: Deuteronomy 22 and the stoning of adulterers

Postby TrakeM » Sun Jul 02, 2017 6:27 pm

You keep claiming that you have objective morality, but you can't objectively show that your god exists. You don't have objective morality because you can't objectively show that your god exists.

Just because virtually everyone agrees on something doesn't mean it's objective.
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Re: Deuteronomy 22 and the stoning of adulterers

Postby jimwalton » Mon Jul 03, 2017 2:19 pm

> you can't objectively show that your god exists

No one can do this. I can show that this existence is logical, more reasonable than the alternatives, concordant with science, and consistent with experience. But I cannot objectively show that God is true. I can only infer the most reasonable conclusion. As I have firmly established, not everything that falls into the category of knowledge and reason is subject to the objectivity of the scientific method.

What I can do is weigh the evidences and draw conclusions, which is what I have done. You have, I would assume, done the same, and yet we have arrived at polar opposites in our conclusions. Time and eternity will tell which of us is correct. Until then we follow the evidence where it leads and continue to reason through the arguments and evidences.

> Just because virtually everyone agrees on something doesn't mean it's objective.

I completely agree.
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