by jimwalton » Tue Jun 27, 2017 1:45 pm
I see what you're getting at, and you're basing it on technicalities. You may be right, but I don't think so. We can talk.
What you say is true about adultery being defined as someone married having sex with someone to whom he or she is not married—sexual activity outside of marriage by those who are married. The focus of Ex. 20.14, for instance, is to protect the sanctity of the home and the dignity and purity of the marriage state. The focus is on paternity more than on sexual ethics (though, to be honest, it's difficult to identify in the OT or in other ancient Near Eastern literature a well-developed system of sexual ethics. The overriding concerns about sex were primarily social, more so than ethical.). In a broader sense, though, it possibly touches on the dignity of human beings, depending on how one reads it. Proverbs 5.3-23; 6.24-35; 7.5-27 reinforce both the ideas of the wrongness of adultery, but also the dangers of sex outside of marriage. Though, you are right, no explicit command.
When we get to Jesus, though, we read that he ups the ante. He explicitly forbids (Mk. 7.21-23) sexual immorality (πορνεῖαι, porneiai—as distinct from adultery), adultery (μοιχεῖαι—of the married), and lewdness (ἀσέλγεια, aselgeia). We have to look at those, as you did.
πορνεῖαι (porneiai). The steady meaning of this term in Greek literature is prostitution, but Paul uses it even in cases there there is no payment for sex. In the Greco-Roman world, it is unlikely that it ruled out all consensual extramarital sex, but generally meant sex bought by the act with no further obligation (prostitution). The Greeks and Romans reviled women who had more than one sexual partner, but endured the men who did so (except for adultery). Paul's writings signaled a vast change by incriminating both men and women who behaved "like whores".
Looking a little deeper, though, for the polytheists of Greece and Rome, a "porne" was a normally a slave whore, the sex toy of the owner. Some had to parade naked in public places. Greek vase paintings who men beating them, evidently for fun. This was the institution behind the word, which, when it doesn't mean sex for hire, it probably emphasizes brutality. For the polytheists, the essence of porneia was treating another human being as a thing (back to Ex. 20.14)—touching back to the idea of the dignity of a human being.
Adultery (μοιχεῖαι) has already been touched on.
Lewdness (ἀσέλγεια) means "license; licentiousness; sensuality; lewdness; lasciviousness; wantonness; debauchery; unrestrained sexual instinct; open flaunting." In the day it meant irresponsibility, sexual or otherwise. Sarah Ruden writes, "Any Greek or Roman (or inhabitant of a Greek or Roman city) of Paul's time who set himself against his own arousal would have gone insane, because no one could escape the sexual stimulation in this social and outdoor culture. There is no evidence that Paul beat his head against this culture by going further than to preach that overwhelming lust could be channeled in marriage (1 Cor. 7.1-8). He does not suggest that either God or man can defeat the urge itself. Irresponsible follow-through has to be the idea here." The word carries the special sense of sexual excess. Jesus and Paul didn't have anything against sex or sexual desire per se, but they did seem to object, as does Proverbs, to the evil manifested in exploitative or promiscuous sex. According to Jesus, not just the physical act but also the thoughts of illicit sex were sin.
By the time we get to 1 Corinthians 6.17-19; Eph. 5.3, Paul enlarges these thoughts about sexual ethics and says that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit—the very habitation of very God. And, as we know, the Temple of Jerusalem was not like the other temples of their contemporaries—places for ritual and cultic sex. Those were considered sacrilege in the Temple, and our bodies, like the Temple, are not meant for profanations like this.
Again, the word Paul uses is porneia, and this is the context of his "temple" text. Porneia has no place. It and the kingdom of God are incompatible. The community needs to steer clear of sexual sin. Paul's point is not just in the terms but in all of what he says. The way of purity is what is in mind. Just as nothing improper entered the temple (and certainly no illicit sex), so also anything notion of disorderliness, misconduct, undisciplined attitudes and behaviors hereto be kept away from our bodies. Paul consistently links lewdness (ἀσέλγεια) with impurity (and therefore to be kept out of God's "temple". A large part of what makes sexual misbehavior "impure", even sex between consenting single adults, is its lack of restraint. People in God's kingdom are to be defined by self-control and purity, not lust and freewheeling. James Brownson says, "The NT expects Christians to conform their internal dispositions, as well as their external behaviors, to this gracious order empowered by the Holy Spirit through our union with Christ. The failure to do so is 'impurity,' a disordered life where things are not in their proper places. Paul’s reference to sexual misbehavior with the term 'impurity' must be understood in this larger context."
The biblical concept extends beyond the technical definitions of terminology. 1 Thessalonians 4.3-7 links the two concepts explicitly: Stay sanctified, avoid sexual immorality. It's quite fair to say that sexual immorality, in the most general and broadest sense possible, is irreconcilable with a godly life.
Hebrews 13.4 completes the picture. Craig Keener writes, "The 'marriage bed' was an idiom for intercourse. Male sexual immorality was rife in Graeco-Roman society, which also accepted prostitution; pedophilia, homosexual intercourse, and sex with female slaves were common in Greek practices until a man was old enough for marriage." All was included in the prohibition. Marriage should be your first experience of intercourse.