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LAWS OF PURITY (CHASTITY
AND MARRIAGE)
IN dealing with the ten commandments it has been already shown
that, though these great statements of religious and moral truth
were to some extent inadequate as expressions of the highest life,
they yet contained the living germs of all that has followed. But we
cannot suppose that the reality of Israelite life from the first
corresponded with them. They contained much that only the experience
and teaching of ages could fully bring to light; therefore we cannot
expect that the actual laws in regard to the relations of the sexes
and the virtue of chastity should stand upon the same high level as
the Decalogue. The former represent the reality, this the ultimate
ideal of Israelite law on these subjects. But neither is unimportant
in forming an estimate of the value of the revelation given to
Israel, and of the moral condition of early Israel itself, nor can
either be justly viewed altogether alone. The actual law at any
moment in the history of Israel must be regarded as inspired and
up-borne by the ideal set forth in the ten commandments. But it
must, at the same time, be a very incomplete realization of these,
and its various stages will be best regarded as installments of
advance towards that comparative perfection.
In regard to the relations of the sexes and the virtue of purity
this must be peculiarly the case. For though chastity has been
safeguarded by almost all nations up to a certain low point, it has
never been really cherished by any naturalistic system. Nor has it
ever been favored by mere humanism. Consequently there is no point
of morals in regard to which man has more conspicuously failed to
work out the merely animal impulse from his nature than in this. And
yet, for all the higher ends of life, as well as for the prosperity
and vigor of mankind, purity in the sexual relations is entirely
vital. One great cause of the decay of nations, nay, even of
civilizations, has been the abandonment of this virtue. This was the
main cause of the destruction of the Canaanites. It may even be said
to have been the cause of the wreck of the whole ancient world. We
should consequently measure what the Mosaic influence did for purity
of life, not by comparing early Israelite laws with what has been
accomplished by Christianity, but with the condition of the Semitic
peoples surrounding Israel, in and after the Mosaic times.
What that was we know. Their religions, far from discouraging sexual
immorality, made it a part of their holiest rites. Both men and
women gave themselves up to natural and unnatural lusts, in honor of
their gods. To the north, and south, and east, and west of Israel
these practices prevailed, and as a natural result the moral fabric
of these nations’ life fell into utter ruin. In private life
adultery, and the still more degrading sin of Sodom were common. The
man had a right to indiscriminate divorce and remarriage, and
marriage connections now reckoned incestuous, such as those between
brother and sister, were entirely approved. In all these points
Israel as a nation was without reproach. The higher teaching this
people had received in respect to the character of God, and it may
be some reminiscence of Egyptian custom, which was in some respects
purer than that of the Semitic peoples, raised them to a higher
level. Yet in the main the early Israelite view of women was
fundamentally the uncivilized one.
But at all periods of Israelite history, even the earliest, women
had asserted their personality. In the eye of the law they might be
the chattels of their male relatives, but as a fact they were dealt
with as persons, with many personal rights. They had no independent
position in the community, it is true. They could take no part in a
festival so important as the Passover, nor were they free to make
vows without the consent of their husbands. In other ways also
social restraints were laid upon them. Nevertheless their position
in early Israel was much higher than it is in the East today, and
their liberty was in no wise unreasonably abridged. In David’s day
women could appear in public to converse with men without scandal
(Cf. 1Sa 25:18 ff.; 2Sa 14:1 ff.). They also took part in religious
festivals and processions, giving, life to them by beating their
timbrels, by singing, and by dancing (Cf. Exodus 15 and 1Sa 18:6
f.). They could be present also at all ordinary sacrifices and at
sacrificial feasts; and, as we see in the case of Deborah and
others, they could occupy a high, almost a supreme, position as
prophetesses. In the main, too, the relations between husband and
wife were loving and respectful, and in Israel’s best days, when the
people still remained landed yeomanry, the wife, by her industry
within the house, supplemented and completed her husband’s labor in
the fields. The Israelite woman was consequently a very important
person in the community whatever her status in law might be; and if
she had not the full rights which are now granted to her sex in
Western and Christian lands, her position was for the times a noble
and independent one. That all this was so was largely due to the
improvements which Mosaism wrought on the basis of that ancient
Semitic custom which we sketched at the beginning of this chapter,
and with which it seems natural to suppose the Israelite tribes had
also begun.
Bearing these preliminary considerations in mind, we now go on to
consider the actual legislation in regard to the relations of the
sexes. But here we must once more, recall the fact that, in regard
to all matters vitally affecting the community, there had always
been a custom, and even before written law appears that custom had
been adopted and modified in Yahwism by Moses himself. That this was
actually the case here is rendered highly probable by the history of
legislation in this matter. In the Book of the Covenant there is no
mention of sexual sin, save in one passage, {Exo 22:16} where the
penalty for seduction of a virgin who is not betrothed is that the
seducer shall offer a "mohar" for her, and marry her without
possibility of divorce, if her father consent. If he will not, then
the "mohar" is forfeited to the father nevertheless, as compensation
for the degradation of his daughter. But it is obvious that there
must have been laws or customs regulating marriage other than this,
for without them there could have been no such crime as is here
punished. Obviously, also, there must have been laws or customs of
divorce. But of what these laws of marriage and divorce were Exodus
gives us no hint. Deuteronomy, the next code, which on the critical
hypothesis arose at a much later time as a revision of the Book of
the Covenant, contains much more, i.e., it draws out of the
obscurity of unwritten custom a more extensive series of provisions
in regard to purity. The Law of Holiness then adds largely to
Deuteronomy, and with it the main points of the law of purity have
attained to written expression. But the influence of the higher
standard set in the Decalogue also makes itself felt, -not in the
law so much as in the historic books and the prophets-and our task
now is to trace out first the legal development, then the
prophetical, and to show how the whole movement culminated and was
crowned in the teaching of Christ.
Beginning then with Deuteronomy, we find that the chastity of women
was surrounded by ample safeguards. Religious prostitution was
absolutely prohibited. {Deu 23:18} Further, if any violence was done
to a woman who had been betrothed, the punishment of the wrong was
death; if done to a woman who was not betrothed, the wrong was
atoned for by payment of fifty shekels of silver to her father, and
by offering marriage without possibility of divorce. If marriage was
refused, then the fifty shekels was retained by the father in
consideration of the wrong done him. When the woman was a sharer in
the guilt the punishment in all cases was death; while pre-nuptial
unchastity, when discovered after marriage, was punished, as
adultery also was, with the same severity. {Deu 22:13-18} In women
who were free, therefore, purity was demanded in Israel as
strenuously as it ever has been anywhere, though in man the only
limit to sexual indulgence was the demand, that in seeking it he
should not infringe upon the father’s property in his daughter, or
the husband’s in his wife or his betrothed bride.
Admittedly the original underlying motive for this moral severity
was a low one, the mere proprietary rights of the father or husband.
But it would be a mistake to suppose that purely ethical and
religious motives had no place in establishing the customs or
enactments which we find in Deuteronomy. With the lapse of time
higher motives entwined themselves with the coarse strand of
personal proprietary interest, which had originally, though perhaps
never alone, been the line of limitation. Gradually there grew up a
standard of higher purity; and when Deuteronomy was written, though
the original line was still clearly visible, it was justified by
appeals to a moral sense which reached far beyond the original
motives of the customary law. The continually recurring burden of
Deuteronomy in dealing with these matters is that to work "folly in
Israel" is a crime for which only the severest punishment can atone.
To "extinguish the evil from Israel," and to put away such things as
were "abominations to Yahweh their God," are the great reasons on
which the writer of Deuteronomy founds the claim for obedience in
these cases. Obviously, therefore, by his time, under the teaching
of the religion of Yahweh, Israel had risen to a moral height which
took account of graver interests than the rights of property in
legislating for female purity. The cases included in the law had
been determined by considerations of that kind; but the sanctions by
which the commands were buttressed had entirely changed their
character. The holiness of God and the dignity of man, the
consideration of what alone was worthy of a "son of Israel," have
taken the place of the coarser sanctions. In this way a possibility
of unlimited moral progress was secured, since the cause of purity
was indissolubly bound to the general and irresistible advance of
religious and moral enlightenment in the chosen people.
Moreover the personality of the woman was acknowledged in the entire
acquittal of the betrothed woman who had been exposed to outrage in
the country, where her cries could bring no help. In the earliest
times most probably the punishment of death would have been
inflicted equally in that case, since the husband’s property had
been deteriorated to such a degree as to make it unworthy of him.
But in the Deuteronomic provision quite other things are drawn into
the estimate. The moral guilt of the person concerned is now the
decisive consideration. The woman has ceased to be a mere chattel,
and the full claims of her personality are in the way to be
recognized. These were great advances, and for these it is vain to
seek for other causes than the persistent upward pressure of the
Mosaic religion. The moral superiority of Israel at the time of the
conquest over the much more cultured Canaanites, as also over the
nomadic tribes to which they were more nearly related, is due, as
Stade says, ultimately to their religion; and no reader of the Old
Testament, in our time at least, can fail to see that their moral
progress ill the land they conquered depended entirely upon the same
cause. At the Deuteronomic epoch purity had already been placed upon
a worthy basis, as a moral achievement of the first importance, and
impurity had taken its proper place as a degrading sin. But much
still remained to be done before these principles could be extended
into all domains of life equally.
How far they had penetrated in early times may perhaps best be seen
in the Deuteronomic references to divorce. Before Deuteronomy there
is no law of divorce, nor indeed is there any after it. We may
perhaps even say that there is in it not so much the statement of a
law of divorce, as a reference to custom which the writer wishes to
correct or reinforce in one particular respect only. Notwithstanding
the Jewish view, therefore, which finds in Deu 24:1-4 a divorce law,
we must adduce the passage as a new and striking proof of what we
have all along asserted, that neither Deuteronomy nor any other of
the legal codes can be taken as complete statements of what was
legally permitted or forbidden in Israel. Behind all of them there
is a vast mass of unwritten customary law, and divorce was doubtless
always determined by it. That this was the case will be seen at once
if the passage we are now concerned with be rightly translated. It
runs thus: "When a man taketh a wife and marrieth her, and it shall
be (if she find no favor in his eyes, because he hath found in her
some unseemly thing) that he writeth her a bill of divorcement, and
giveth it into her hand, and sendeth her out of his house, and she
go forth out of his house and goeth and becometh the wife of another
man, and if the latter husband also hate her, and write her a bill
of divorcement, and give it in her hand and send her out of his
house, or if the latter husband die who took her to him to wife,
then her former husband who sent her away may not take her again to
be his wife after that she has permitted herself to be defiled." All
the passage provides for, therefore, is that a divorced woman shall
not be remarried to the divorcing man after she has been married
again, even though she be separated from her second husband by
divorce or death.
There is consequently no law of divorce here stated. There is merely
a reference to a general law or custom by which divorce was
permitted for "any unseemly thing," and according to which a chief
wife at any rate could be divorced only by a "bill of divorcement,"
and not by mere word of mouth, as is common in many Eastern lands
today. Mosaic influence may have procured this last slight increase
in rigor, and Deuteronomy certainly adds three other restrictions,
viz. that after remarriage a woman cannot be again married to her
first husband, and that pre-nuptial wrong done to a woman by her
husband, or a false accusation by him after marriage, takes away his
right of divorce altogether. But the woman has no right of divorce
at all, so firmly fixed throughout all Old Testament time was the
belief in the inferiority of women. On the whole, therefore, divorce
in Israel remained, after the law had dealt with it, much on the
level to which the tribal customs had brought it. So far as the
legislation dealt with it, it tended to restriction; but when all is
said it remains true that the Israelite law of divorce was in the
main much what it would have been had there been no revelation. But
the spirit of the religion of Yahweh was against laxity in this
matter, and this more rigorous feeling finds expression in the
evident distaste for the remarriage of a divorced woman which is
expressed Deu 24:4. Remarriage is not forbidden; but the woman who
remarries is spoken of as one who has "let herself be defiled." No
such expression could have been used, had not remarriage after
divorce been looked upon as something which detracted from perfect
feminine purity. The legislator evidently regarded it as the higher
way for a divorced woman to remain unmarried so long at least as the
divorcing husband lived. If she remained so, the possibility of
reunion was always kept open, and the law evidently looked upon the
ultimate annulment of the divorce as the course which was most
consonant with the ideal of marriage.
It is thus clearly seen how our Lord’s statement {Mat 19:8} -" Moses
because of the hardness of your hearts suffered you to put away your
wives, but from the beginning it hath not been so"-is true.
And when we leave the law and come to history and prophecy, we find
this view to have been a prevalent one from early times. In one of
the earliest connected historical narratives, that of J, {Gen 2:24}
the union of husband and wife is said to be so peculiarly intimate
that it makes them one body, so that separation is equivalent to
mutilation. And the prophets remain true to this conception of
marriage, as the one which fitted best into their deeper and loftier
views of morality. From Hosea onwards {Hos 2:19} they represent the
indissoluble bond between Yahweh and His people as a marriage
relation, founded on free choice and unchangeable love. The
possibility of divorce is no doubt often admitted, and the conduct
of Israel is represented as justifying that course. But the
prophetic message always is that the love of God will never permit
Him to put away His people; and the people are often addressed as
faithless and faint-hearted, because they yield to the temptation of
believing that He has cast them off. {Isa 1:1} Evidently, therefore,
the prophetic ideal of marriage was that it should be indissoluble,
that it should be founded upon free mutual love, and that such a
love should make it impossible for either husband or wife to give
the other up, however desperate the errors of the guilty one might
have been.
Perhaps the finest expression of this view occurs in Isaiah 54 in
the exhortation addressed to exiled Israel and beginning. "Sing, O
barren, thou that didst not bear." There the ideal Israel is urged
to lay aside all her fears with this assurance: "For thy Maker is
thine husband; Yahweh of Hosts is His name: and thy Redeemer, the
Holy One of Israel, the God of the whole earth shall He be called.
For Yahweh hath called thee as a woman forsaken and grieved in
spirit; how can a wife of youth be rejected? saith thy God." The
full meaning of this last touching question has been well brought
out by Prof. Cheyne (Isaiah, 2, p. 55): "Even many an earthly
husband (how much more then Yahweh!) cannot bear to see the misery
of his divorced wife, and therefore at length recalls her; and when
his wife is one who has been wooed and won in youth, how impossible
is it for her to be absolutely dismissed." The rising tide of
prophetic feeling on this subject culminates in the pathetic scene
depicted by Malachi, who in Mal 2:12 ff. reproves his people for
their cruel and frivolous use of divorce. Drawn away by love of
idolatrous women, they had divorced their Hebrew wives; and these in
their misery crowded the Temple, covering the altar of Yahweh with
"tears and weeping and sobbing," till He could endure it no more. He
had been witness of the covenant made between each of these men and
the wife of his youth; yet they had broken this Divinely sanctioned
bond. He therefore warns them to take heed, "for Yahweh the God of
Israel saith, I hate putting away, and him who covers his garment
with violence." The Rabbinic interpreters, not being minded to give
up the privilege of divorce, have wrested these words into "for
Yahweh the God of Israel saith, if he hate her put her away." But,
so wrested, the words bring down the whole context in one ruin. They
are intelligible only if they denounce divorce, and in this sense
they must undoubtedly be taken.
There remains for consideration, however, a marriage which the
Deuteronomist permits, which seems to run counter to all the finer
feelings and instincts of his later time. It is dealt with in Deu
25:5-10, and is notable because it is a clear breach of the definite
rule that a man should not marry his deceased brother’s wife. But it
will be obvious at once that the permission of this marriage stands
upon quite a different footing from the prohibition. It is permitted
only in a special case for definite ends; and while the sanction of
the prohibition is the infliction of childlessness, {Lev 20:21} the
man who refuses to enter upon marriage with his deceased brother’s
wife is punished only by being put to shame by her before the elders
of his city. We have not here, therefore, a law in the strict sense.
It is only a recognition of a very ancient custom which is not yet
abolished, though evidently public feeling was beginning to make
light of the obligation. Its place in the twenty-fifth chapter, away
from the marriage laws, {which are given in Deu 21:10 ff., Deu 22:13
ff., and Deu 24:1-4} and among duties of kindness, seems to hint
this, and we may consequently take the law as a concession. That the
custom was ancient in the time of Deuteronomy may be gathered from
the fact that in Hebrew there is a special technical term, yibbem,
for entering on such a marriage. The probability is, indeed, that
levirate marriage was a pre-Mosaic custom connected with
ancestor-worship. It certainly is practiced by many other races,
e.g., the Hindus and Persians, whose religions can be traced to that
source. Under that system, it was necessary that the male line of
descent should be kept up in order that the ancestral sacrifices
might be continued, and to bear the expense of this the property of
the brother dying childless was jealously preserved. In India, at
present, both purposes are served by adoption, either by the
childless man or by the widow. In earlier times, when fatherhood was
to a large extent a merely juridical relationship, when, that is to
say, it was a common thing for a man to accept as his son any child
born of women under his control, whether he were the father or not,
the same end was also attained by this marriage. Originating in this
way, the practice was carried over into the Israelite social life
when it changed its form, and the motives for it were then brought
into line with the new and higher religion. The motive of keeping
alive the name and memory of the childless man was substituted for
that of securing the continuance of his worship; and the purpose of
securing the permanence of property, landed property especially, in
each household, was substituted for that of supplying means for the
sacrifice. Later, the motive connected with the transmission of
property possibly became the main one. For, since the levirate
marriage came in, according to the strict wording of our passage,
whenever a man died without a son, whether he had daughters or not,
this marriage would seem to have been an alternative means of
keeping the property in the family to that of letting the daughters
inherit. But the spirit of the higher religion, as well as a more
advanced civilization, was unfavorable to it. The custom evidently
was withering when Deuteronomy was written, though in Judaism it was
not disallowed till post-Talmudic times.
The impression, therefore, which the laws and customs regulating the
relations of men and women in Israel give to the candid student must
be pronounced to be a strangely mixed one. It would probably not be
too much to say that it is at first a deeply disappointing one. We
have been accustomed to fill all the Old Testament utterances on
this subject with the suffused light of Gospel precept and example,
till we have lost sight of the lower elements undeniably present in
the Old Testament laws and ideas concerning purity. But that is no
longer possible. Whether of enmity or of zeal for the truth, these
less worthy elements have been dragged forth into the broad light of
day, and in that light we are called upon to readjust our thoughts
so as to accept and account for them. Evidently at the beginning the
Israelite tribes accepted the uncivilized idea of woman. On that as
a basis, however, customs and laws regarding chastity, marriage, and
divorce were adopted, which transcended and passed beyond that
fundamental idea. The moral complicity of woman, or her innocence,
in cases where her chastity had been attacked, came to be taken into
account. Polygamy, though never forbidden, received grievous wounds
from prophets and others of the sacred writers; and as marriage with
one became more and more the ideal, the higher teachers of the
people kept the indissolubleness of marriage before the public mind,
till Malachi denounced divorce in Yahweh’s name. In regard to the
bars to marriage there was little change, probably, from the days of
Moses; but the old family rules were reinforced by a deep and
delicate regard for even the less palpable affections and relations
which grew up in the home.
The final attainment, therefore, was great and worthy enough; but
the cruder and less refined ideas, which had been inherited from
pre-Mosaic custom, always make themselves felt, and have even
dominated some of the laws. They dominated, even more, the practice
of the people and the theory of the scribes; so that on the very eve
of His coming who was to proclaim decisively the indissolubility of
marriage, the great Jewish schools were wrangling whether mere
caprice, or some immodesty only could justify divorce. Nevertheless
the Decalogue, with its deep and broad command, culminating in
prohibition even of inward evil desire, had always had its own
influence. The teachings of the prophets, which breathe passionate
hatred of impurity, had I taught all men of good-will in Israel that
the wrath of God surely burned against it But the stamp of
imperfection was upon Old Testament teaching here as elsewhere. Like
the Messianic hope, like the future of Israel, like all Israel’s
greatest destinies, the promise of a higher life in this respect was
darkened by the inconsistencies of general practice; and uncertainty
prevailed as to the direction in which men were to look for the
harmonious development of the higher potencies which were making
their presence felt. It was in them rather than in the law, in the
ideals rather than in the practice of the people, that the hidden
power was silently doing its regenerating work. The religion of
Yahweh in its central content surrounded all laws and institutions
with an atmosphere which challenged and furthered growth of every
wholesome kind. The axe and hammer of the legislative builder was
rarely heard at work; but in the silence which seems to some so
barren, there slowly grew a fabric of moral and spiritual ideas and
aspirations, which needed only the coming of Christ to make it the
permanent home of all morally earnest souls.
With Him all that the past generations "had willed, or hoped, or
dreamed of good" came actually to exist. He made what had been
aspiration only the basis of an actual Kingdom of God. As one of its
primary moral foundations He laid down the radical indissolubility
of marriage, and made visible to all men, the breadth of the law
given in the Decalogue by forbidding even wandering desires. In
doing this He completely surpassed all Old Testament teaching, and
set up a standard which Christian communities as such have held to
hitherto, but which from lack of elevation and earnestness they seem
inclined in these days to let slip. That such a standard was ever
set up was the work of a Divine revelation of a perfectly unique
kind, working through long ages of upward movement. Humanity has
been dragged upwards to it most unwillingly. Men have found
difficulty in living at that height, and nothing is easier than to
throw away all the gain of these many centuries. All that is needed
is a plunge or two downwards. But if ever these plunges are taken,
the long, slow effort upwards will only have to be begun again, if
family life is to be firmly established, and purity is to become a
permanent possession of men.
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