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LAWS AGAINST IDOLATROUS
ACTS AND CUSTOMS
Deuteronomy 13, 14
HAVING thus set forth the law which was to crown and complete the
long resistance of faithful Israel to idolatry, our author goes on
to prohibit and to decree punishment for any action likely to lead
to the worship of false gods. He absolutely forbids any inquiry into
the religions of the Canaanites. "Take heed to thyself that thou
inquire not after their gods, saying, How do these nations serve
their gods? even so will I do likewise." All that was acceptable to
Yahweh was included in the law of Israel, and beyond that they were
on no account to go in their worship. "What thing soever I command
you, that shall ye observe to do: thou shalt not add thereto nor
diminish from it." But it should be observed that the inquiry here
forbidden has nothing in common with the scientific inquiries of
Comparative Religion in our time. Curiosity of that kind, supported
by the motive of discovering how religion had grown, was unknown at
that early age of the world, probably everywhere, certainly in
Israel. The only curiosity powerful enough to result in action then
was that which tried to learn how the ritual might be made more
potent in its influence over Yahweh by gathering attractive features
from every known religion. That was one of the distinguishing
characteristics of Manasseh’s reign. The Canaanite religions, the
religions of Egypt and Assyria, were all laid under contribution;
and wherever there was a feature which promised additional power
with God or the gods, that was eagerly adopted. Israel had lost
faith in Yahweh, owing to the successes of Assyria. In unbelieving
terror men were wildly grasping at any means of safety. They
worshipped Yahweh, lest He should do them harm, but they joined with
Him the gods of their foes, to secure if possible their favor also.
Inquiry into other religions, with the intent of adopting something
from them which would make either Yahweh or the strange gods, or
both, propitious to them, was rife. Like the heathen population who
had been transported by Assyria into the territory of the ten
tribes, men "feared Yahweh, and served their graven images." All
that is here sternly condemned, and Judah is taught to look only to
the Divine commands for effective means of approach to their God.
The prohibition, therefore, does not import mere fanatical
opposition to knowledge. It is a necessary practical measure of
defense against idolatry; and only those can disapprove of it who
are incapable of estimating the value which the true religion in its
Old Testament shape had and has for the world. To preserve that was
the high and unique calling of Israel. Any narrowness, real or
supposed, which this great task imposed upon that people, is amply
compensated for by their guardianship of the spiritual life of
mankind.
But if inquiry into lower religions was forbidden, there could be
nothing but the sternest condemnation for those who had inquired,
and then endeavored to seduce the chosen people. Deuteronomy,
therefore, takes three typical cases-first, seduction by one who was
respected because of high religious office, then seduction by one
who had influence because of close bonds of natural affection, and
lastly that of a community which would be likely to have influence
by force of numbers-and gives inexorably stern directions how such
evil is to be met. There can be little doubt that the cases are not
imaginary. In the evil days which the Deuteronomist had fallen upon
they were probably of frequent occurrence, and they are,
consequently, provided against as real and present evils. Naturally
the writer takes the most difficult case first. If an Israelite
prophet, with all his religious prestige as a confidant of Yahweh,
and still more with the prestige of successful prediction in his
favor, shall attempt to lead men to join other gods to Yahweh in
their worship-for that and not rejection of Yahweh for the exclusive
service of strange gods is almost certainly meant-then they were not
to listen to him. They were to fall back upon the original principle
of the Mosaic teaching as it was restated in Deuteronomy, that
Yahweh alone was to be their God. Some lynx-eyed critics have
discovered here the cloven hoof of legalism. They think they see
here the free spirit of prophecy, to which untrammeled initiative
was the very breath of life, subjected to the bondage of written
law, and so doomed to death. But probably such a mood is
unnecessarily elegiac. It is not to written law that prophecy is
subjected here. It is the actual life-principle of Yahwism in its
simplest form which prophecy is required to respect; that is,
ultimately, it is called upon simply to respect itself. Its own
existence depended upon faithfulness to Yahweh. If it had a mission
at all, it was to proclaim Him and to declare His character. If it
had a distinction which severed it from mere heathen soothsaying, it
was that it had been raised by the inspiration of Yahweh into the
region of "the true, the good, the eternal," and its whole power lay
in its keeping open the communication with that region. It is
therefore only the law of its own inner being to which prophecy is
here bound; and the people are instructed that, whatever reputation
or even supernatural power it might have attained to, it was to be
obeyed only when true to itself and to the faith.
Nothing was to make men stagger from that foundation. Not even the
working of miracles was to mislead the people, for only on the plane
of Yahweh’s revelation had even miracle any worth. This is the sound
and wholesome doctrine of true prophecy, and other utterances on the
subject in our book must be taken in conjunction with it. Religious
faithfulness, not foretelling, is the essence of it, and by that the
prophet is to be inexorably judged. If any prophet, therefore, leads
men to strange gods, his character and his powers only make him more
dangerous and his punishment more inexorable. "That prophet, or that
dreamer of dreams, shall be put to death." He comes under the ban.
"So shalt thou put away the evil from the midst of thee."
Similarly, when family ties and family affection are perverted to be
instruments of seduction, they are to be disregarded, just as
religious reputation and miraculous power were to be set aside. If a
brother, or a son, or a daughter, or a wife, or a friend, shall
secretly entice a man to "serve other gods," then he shall not only
not yield, but he must slay the tempter. It is characteristic of the
Deuteronomist that, by the qualifications of the various
relationships he mentions, he should show his sympathy and his
insight into the depths of both family affection and friendship.
"Thy brother, the son of thy mother," "the wife of thy bosom," "the
friend which is as thine own soul," even these, near as they are to
thee, must be sacrificed if they are false to Israel and to Israel’s
God. Nay more, "Thou shalt surely kill him; thine hand shall be upon
him to put him to death, and afterwards the hand of all the people,
and thou shalt stone him with stones that he die." Upon him, too,
the ban shall be laid.
Nor, finally, shall their multitude shield those who suffered
themselves to be perverted. If a city should have been led away by
sons of Belial, i.e., by worthless men, to worship strange gods,
then the whole city was to be put to the ban. It was to be
immediately stormed, every living creature put to death, and all the
spoil of it burnt "unto Yahweh their God"; and the ruins were to be
a "mound for ever"-that is, a place accursed. Only on these terms
could Yahweh be turned away from the fierceness of His anger at such
treason and unfaithfulness among His people. The Canaanites had been
condemned to death that their idolatries and vices might not corrupt
the spiritual faith of Israel. There was no other way, if the
treasure which had been committed to this nation was to be
preserved. As Robertson Smith has said, "Experience shows that
primitive religious beliefs are practically indestructible except by
the destruction of the race in which they are engrained." But if so,
it was perhaps even more necessary that idolaters within Israel
should be also extirpated. We may think the punishment harsh; and
our modern doctrines concerning toleration can by no ingenuity be
brought into harmony with it. But the times were fierce, and men
were not easily restrained. In more civilized communities excessive
severity in punishment defeats itself, for it enlists sympathy on
the side of the criminal. But among a people like the Hebrews,
probably severity succeeded where mercy would have been flouted. In
India our administrators have had to confess that the horrible
recklessness and severity of punishment in the Mahratta states of
the old type suppressed crime as the infinitely more just and better
organized but milder British police organizations could not then do.
"Probably the success of barbarous methods of repressing crime is
best explained by their origin in and close connection with a
primitive state of society. Because punishments were inhuman, they
struck terror where no other motive would deter from crime." In
other and Scriptural words, the hardness of men’s hearts made such
harshness unavoidable.
Taking the whole of this thirteenth chapter into consideration,
therefore, we see how high and severe were the demands which Old
Testament religion, as taught in Deuteronomy, made upon its
votaries. It presupposes on the part of the people an insight into
the fundamentally spiritual nature of their faith entirely
unobscured by ritual and sacrifice. They were expected to pass
beyond the teachings of accredited spiritual guides, beyond even the
evidence of supernatural power, and to test all by the moral and
spiritual truth, once delivered to them by prophet and by miracle,
and now a secure possession. Spiritual truth received and lived by
is thus set above everything else as the test and the judge of all.
Other things were merely ladders by which men had been brought to
the truth in religion. Once there, nothing should move them; and any
further guidance which purported to come from even the heavenly
places was to be tried and accepted, only if it corroborated the
fundamental truths already received and attested by experience in
actual life. Loyalty to ascertained truth, that is, is greater than
loyalty to teachers, or to that which seems to be supernatural; and
the chief power for which a prophet is to be reverenced is not that
by which he gives a true forecast of the future, but that which
impels him to speak the truth about God.
Even at this day, and for believers in Christ, after all the
teaching and experience of eighteen Christian centuries, this is a
high, almost an unattainable, standard to set up. Even today it is
thought an advanced position that miracles as a security for truth
are subordinate and inferior to the light of the truth itself as
exhibited in the lives of faithful men. Yet that is precisely what
the Deuteronomist teaches. He has no doubt about miracles. He
regards them as being Divinely sent, even when they might be made
use of to mislead; but he calls upon his people to disregard them if
they seem to point towards unfaithfulness to God. Their supreme
trust is to be that Yahweh cannot deny Himself. If he seem to do so
by giving the sanction of miracle to teaching which denies Him, that
is only to prove men, to know whether they love Yahweh their God
with all their heart and with all their soul. The inner certainty of
those who have had communion with Yahweh is to override everything
else. "Whosoever loves God with a pure heart," says Calvin, "is
armed with the invincible power of the Divine Spirit, that he should
not be ensnared by falsehoods." This has always been the confidence
of religious reformers who have had real power. Luther, for example,
took his stand upon the New Testament and his own personal
experience; and by what he knew of God he judged all that the most
venerable tradition, and the authority of the Church, and the
examples of saintly men claimed to set forth as binding upon him.
"Here stand I: I can do no other: God help me." He felt that he had
hold of the heart of the revelation of God as it was made in Christ,
and he rejected, without scruple, whatever in itself or in its
results contradicted or obscured that. Inspired and upheld by this
consciousness, he faced a hostile world and a raging Church with
equanimity. It is always so that abuses have been removed and
innovations that are hurtful warded off in the Church of God.
But there is a difficulty here. As against the historical examples
which show how much good may be wrought by this unshaken mind when
accompanied by adequate insight, many, perhaps even more, instances
can be adduced where unbending assertion of individual conviction
has led to fanaticism and irreligion; or, as has even more
frequently been the case, has blinded men’s eyes, and made them
resist with immovable obstinacy teachings on which the future of
religion depended. On the altar of uncompromising fidelity to the
letter of the faith delivered to them, men in all ages have offered
up love and gentleness and fairness, and that open mind to which
alone God can speak. How then can they be sure, when they disregard
their teachers and defy even signs from heaven, that they are really
only holding up the banner of faith in an evil day, and are not
hardening themselves against God? The answer is that, since the
matter concerns the spiritual life, there are no clear, mechanical
dividing lines which can be pointed out and respected. Nothing but
spiritual insight can teach a man what the absolutely essential and
the less essential elements of religion are. Nothing else can give
him that power of distinguishing great things from small which here
is of such cardinal importance. Probably the nearest approach to
effective guidance may be found in this principle, that when all
points in a man’s faith are to him equally important, when he frets
as much in regard to divergence from his own religious practices as
in regard to denial of the faith altogether, he must certainly be
wrong. Such a temper must necessarily resist all change; and since
progress is as much a law in the religious life as in any other, it
must be found at times fighting against God. Otherwise, stagnation
would be the test of truth, and the principles of the Christian
faith Would be branded as so shallow and so easily exhausted, that
their whole significance could be seized and set forth at once by
the generation which heard the apostles. That was far from being the
case. The post-apostolic Church, for instance, did not understand
St. Paul. It turned rather to the simpler ideas of the mass of
Christians, and elaborated its doctrines almost entirely on that
basis. During the centuries since then many lessons of unspeakable
value have been learned by the Christian world. The Church has been
enriched by the thoughts and teachings of multitudes of men of
genius. The providential chances and changes of all these centuries
have immensely widened and deepened Christian experience. Stagnation
consequently cannot be made the test of Christian truth. We must be
open to new light on the meaning of Divine revelation, or we fail
altogether, as the Israelites would have done had they refused to
accept the teaching of any prophet after the first. This much may,
however, be said on the affirmative side, that when a man has
thoughtfully and prayerfully decided that the central element of his
faith is attacked, he cannot but resist, and if he is faithful he
will resist in the spirit of the passage we are discussing. His
assertion of his individual conviction, even if it be mistaken, will
do little harm. Time will be in favor of the truth. But mistake will
be rare, indeed, when men are taught to assert in this manner only
the things by which the soul lives, when only the actual channels of
communion with God are thus defended to the uttermost. These any
thoughtful, patient man who looks for and yields to the guidance of
the Holy Spirit of Christ will almost infallibly recognize, and by
these he will take his stand, for he can do no other.
But precautions against idolatry are not exhausted by the war
declared upon men who might attempt to lead the Israelite into evil.
Besides insidious human enemies, there were also insidious customs
originating in heathenism, and still redolent of idolatry even when
they were severed from any overt connection with it. Ancient
rituals, ancient superstitions, hateful remnants of bloodthirsty
pagan rites, were being revived in the Deuteronomist’s day on every
hand, because faith in the higher religion that had superseded them
had been shaken. Like streams from hidden reservoirs suddenly
reopened, idolatrous and magical practices were overflowing the
land, and were finding in popular customs, harmless in better days,
channels for their return into the life of those who had formerly
risen above them.
Some of these were more hurtful than others, and two are singled out
at the beginning of chapter 14 as those which a people holy unto
Yahweh must specially avoid: "Ye shall not cut yourselves, nor make
any baldness between your eyes for the dead." The grounds for
avoiding these practices are first given, and we may probably assume
that they are the grounds also for the other enactments which
follow. They are these: "Ye are the children of Yahweh your God,"
and "Thou art a holy people unto Yahweh thy God, and Yahweh hath
chosen thee to be a peculiar people unto Himself, out of all peoples
that are upon the face of the earth." The last of these reasons is
common to the Exodus code with Deuteronomy, and comes even more
prominently into view in the Levitical law. Just as Yahweh alone was
to be their God, they alone were to be Yahweh’s people, and they
were to be holy to Him, i.e., were to separate themselves to Him;
for in its earliest meaning to be holy is simply to be separate to
Yahweh. This whole dispensation of law, that is, was meant to
separate the people of Israel from the idolatrous world, and in this
separation we have the key to much that would otherwise be hard to
comprehend. Looked at from the point of view of revelation, petty
details about tonsure, about clean and unclean animals, and so on,
seem incredibly unworthy; and many have said to themselves, How can
the God of the whole earth have really been the author of laws
dealing with such trivialities? But when we regard these as
provisions intended to secure the separation of the chosen people,
they assume quite another aspect. Then we see that they had to be
framed in contrast to the idolatries of the surrounding nations, and
are not meant to have further spiritual or moral significance.
But the first reason given is a higher and more important one, which
occurs here for the first time in Deuteronomy: "Ye are the children
of Yahweh your God." In heathen lands such a title of honor was
common, because physically most worshippers of false gods were
regarded as their children. But in Israel, where such physical
sonship would have been rejected with horror as impairing the Divine
holiness, the spiritual sonship was asserted of the individual much
more slowly. In Yahweh’s command to Moses to threaten Pharaoh with
the death of his firstborn son, and in Hos 11:1, Israel collectively
is called Yahweh’s firstborn and His son. In Hos 1:10 it is
prophesied that in the Messianic time, "in the place where it was
said unto them, Ye are not My people, it shall be said unto them, Ye
are the sons of the living God." But here for the first time this
high title is bestowed upon the actual individual Israelites. It was
perhaps implied in the Deuteronomist’s view of God’s fatherly
treatment of the nation in the desert, and still more in his demand
for the love of the individual heart. Yet only here is it brought
plainly forth as a ground for the regulation of life according to
Yahweh’s commands. Each son of Israel is also a son of God; and by
none of his acts or habits should he bring disgrace upon his
spiritual Father. Likeness to God is expected and demanded of him.
It is his function in the world to represent Him, to give expression
to the Divine character in all his ways. This is the Israelite’s
high calling, and the religious application of noblesse oblige to
such matters as follow, gives a dignity and importance to all of
them such as in their own nature they could hardly claim.
"Ye shall not cut yourselves, nor make any baldness between your
eyes for the dead." Israel was not to express grief for the dead in
these ways, first because that was the custom of other nations, and
secondly still more because the origin and meaning of such rites was
idolatrous, and as such altogether unworthy of Yahweh’s sons.
"Both," says Robertson Smith, "occur not only in mourning, but in
the worship of the gods, and belong to the sphere of heathen
superstition." Elsewhere he explains the cutting of themselves to be
the making of a blood covenant with the dead, just as the priests of
Baal in their worship tried to get their god to come to their help
by making a covenant of blood with him at his altar. This naturally
tended to bring in the superstitions of necromancy, and opened the
way also for the worship of the dead. Many traces of its previous
existence among the Israelite tribes are to be found in the
Scriptures; and the probability is that as ancestor-worship ruled
the life and shaped the thoughts of Greeks and Romans till
Christianity appeared, so Yahwism alone had broken its power over
Israel. But such superstitions die hard, and in the general
recrudescence of almost forgotten forms of heathenism at this time,
this cult may very well have been reasserting itself. As for the
shaving of the front part of the head, that had a precisely similar
import. "It had exactly the same sense as the offering of the
mourner’s blood." "When the hair of the living is deposited with the
dead, and the hair of the dead remains with the living, a permanent
bond of connection unites the two."
The prohibition as food of the animals and birds called "unclean"
was another measure obviously of the same nature as the prohibition
of heathen mourning practices; but in its details it is more
difficult to explain. Probably, however, it was a more potent
instrument of separation than any other. In India today the gulf
between the flesh-eater and the orthodox vegetarian Hindu is utterly
impassable; and in the east of Europe and in Palestine, where the
Jewish restrictions as to food are still regarded, the orthodox Jew
is separated from all Gentiles as by a wall. In traveling he never
appears at meals with his fellow-travelers. All the food he requires
he carries with him in a basket; and at every place where he stops
it is the duty of the Jewish community to supply him with proper
food, that he may not be tempted to defile himself with anything
unclean. But it is very difficult for us now to bring the individual
prohibitions under one head, and it seems impossible to explain them
from any one point of view.
Some of the animals and birds prohibited were probably, then,
animals eaten in connection with idolatrous feasts by the
neighboring heathen. Isa 65:4 shows that swine’s flesh was eaten at
sacrificial meals by idolaters, and from the expression "broth of
abominable things is in their vessels" it is clear that the flesh of
other animals was so used. All these would necessarily be prohibited
to Israel; but beyond a few, such as the swine, which was sacrificed
to Tammuz or Adonis, and the mouse and the wild ass, we have no
means of knowing what they were. That this is a vera causa of such
prohibitions is shown by the facts mentioned by Professor Robertson
Smith, that "Simeon Stylites forbade his Saracen converts to eat the
flesh of the camel, which was the chief element in the sacrificial
meals of the Arabs, and our own prejudice against the use of
horse-flesh is a relic of an old ecclesiastical prohibition framed
at the time when the eating of such food was an act of worship to
Odin." The very ancient and stringent prohibition of blood as an
article of diet is probably to be accounted for in this way also.
Blood was eaten at heathen sacrificial feasts; without other reason
that would be sufficient. These are the general lines which must
have determined the list of clean animals in the view of the
lawgiver, since he brings them in under the head of idolatry and
under the two general grounds we have, discussed.
Jewish writers, however, especially since Maimonides, have regarded
these prohibitions as aiming primarily at sanitary ends, and as a
proof of their efficacy have adduced the unusually high average
health of the Jews, and their almost complete exemption from certain
classes of disease. No such point of view is suggested in the
Scriptures themselves, for it would surely be rather far-fetched to
class possible disease as an infringement of the holiness demanded
of Israel, or as a thing unworthy of Yahweh’s sons.
Nevertheless a general view of the list of clean animals here given
would support the idea that sanitary considerations also had
something to do with the classification. The practical effect of the
rule laid down is to exclude all the carnivora among quadrupeds, and
so far as we can interpret the nomenclature, the raptores among
birds. "Amongst fish, those which were allowed contain
unquestionably the most wholesome varieties." Further, the nations
of antiquity which developed such categories of clean. and unclean
animals seem in the main to have taken the same line. The ground of
this probably is the natural disgust with which unclean feeders are
always regarded. Animals and birds especially which feed, or may be
supposed to feed, on carrion, are everywhere disliked, and as a rule
they are unsuitable for food. Grass-eating animals, on the other
hand, are always regarded as clean. Scaleless fish, too, are
generally more or less slimy to the touch, and with them reptiles
are altogether forbidden. All this seems to show that a natural
sentiment of disgust, for whatever reason felt, was active in the
selection of the animals marked unclean by men of every race. The
pre-Mosaic customary law on this subject would, of course, have this
characteristic in common with similar laws of primitive nations.
When the worship of Yahweh was introduced, most of this would be
taken over, only such modifications being introduced as the higher
religion demanded. In some main elements, therefore, the Mosaic law
on this subject would be a repetition of what is to be found
elsewhere. Hence a general tendency to health may be expected; for
besides the guidance which healthy disgust would give, a long
experience must also have been registered in such laws. The
influence of them in promoting health has recently been acknowledged
by the Lancet; and though that reason for observing them is not
mentioned in Scripture, we may view it as a proof that the Jewish
legislators were under an influence which brought them, perhaps even
when they knew it not, into relation with what was wholesome in the
practices and customs of their place and time.
Beyond these three reasons for the laws regarding food, all is the
wildest speculation. If other reasons underlie these laws, we cannot
now ascertain what they were. For a time it was the custom to
ascribe the Jewish laws to Persian influence, though from the nature
of the case such laws must have been part of the heritage of Israel
from pre-Mosaic time. Even today Jewish writers ascribe them to the
evil effect which bad food has upon the soul, either by infecting it
with the characteristics of the unclean beasts, or by rendering it
impenetrable to good influences. But, as usual, it is the
allegorical interpreters who carry off the palm. Animals that chew
the cud were to be eaten, because they symbolized those who "read,
mark, learn, and inwardly digest" the Divine law: those which divide
the hoof are examples of those who distinguish between good and bad
actions; and in the ostrich one interpreter finds an analogue to the
bad commentators who pervert the words of Holy Scripture.
Hitherto in chapter 14 we have been dealing with material to which a
parallel can be found only in the small code of laws contained in
Leviticus 17-26, commonly called the Law of Holiness, and in the
Priestly Code. But the two remaining directions regarding food,
which are contained in the twenty-first verse, are parallel to
prohibitions in the Law of the Covenant. The first, "Ye shall not
eat of anything that dieth of itself, for thou art a holy people
unto Yahweh thy God," is parallel to Exo 22:31. "And ye shall be
holy men unto Me: therefore ye shall not eat anyflesh that is torn
of beasts in the field," and to Lev 17:15, "Every soul that eateth
that which dieth of itself, or that which is torn of beasts, whether
he be home-born or a stranger, he shall wash his clothes, and bathe
himself in water, and be unclean until the evening." The ground for
prohibiting such food, was, of course, that the blood was in it. But
there is a divergence between the parallel laws, which is seen
clearly when we take into account the destination of the flesh of
the animal so dying. In Exodus it is said, "To the dogs shall ye
cast it." In Deuteronomy the command is, "To the stranger within thy
gates ye shall give it, and he shall eat of it, or ye may sell it
unto a foreigner." In Leviticus it is taken for granted that an
Israelite and also a stranger may eat either of the nebhelah, that
which dieth of itself, or the terephah, that which is torn; and if
either do so it is prescribed only that he should wash, and should
be unclean until the evening.
Here, therefore, we have one of the cases in which the traditional
hypothesis-that the Law of the Covenant was given at Sinai when
Israel arrived there, the laws of the Priestly Code probably not
many weeks after, and the code of Deuteronomy only thirty-eight or
thirty-nine years later, but before the laws had come fully into
effect by the occupation of Canaan - raises a difficulty. Why should
the Sinaitic law say that terephah is not to be eaten by any one,
but cast to the dogs, and the Levitical law in so short a time after
make the eating of that and nebhelah mere cause of subordinate
uncleanness to both Israelite and stranger, while Deuteronomy
permits the Israelite either to give the nebhelah to the stranger
that he may eat it, or to make it an article of traffic with the
foreigner? Keil’s explanation is certainly feasible, that in Exodus
we have the law, in Leviticus the provision for accidental, or
perhaps willful, disobedience of it under the pressure of hunger,
while in Deuteronomy we have a permission to sell, lest on the plea
of waste the law might be ignored. But the position Of the "ger," or
stranger, is not accounted for. In Leviticus he is bound to the
worship of Yahweh, and can no more eat nebkelah or terephah than the
native Israelite can, while in Deuteronomy he is on a lower stage
than the Israelite as regards ceremonial cleanness, and much on the
same level as the nokhri, the foreigner, who in Deuteronomy is dealt
with as an inferior, not bound to the same scrupulosity as the
Israelite. {Deu 15:3, Deu 15:23} There does not appear to be any
explanation of such a change in less than forty years; more
especially as the moment at which the change would on that
hypothesis be made was precisely the moment when the stranger was
about for the first time to become an important element in Israelite
life. If, on the other hand, the order of the codes be Exodus,
Deuteronomy, Leviticus, then the Exodus law, which does not consider
the stranger, would suit the earliest stage of Israel’s history,
when the stranger would generally be a spy. Later, he crept into
Israelite life, and gradually received more and more consideration;
especially in the days of Solomon, when the Chronicler estimates the
number of the strangers at over a hundred and fifty thousand. But he
was not recognized at that stage as fully bound to all an
Israelite’s duties, or as possessed of all an Israelite’s
privileges, and that is precisely the position he occupies in
Deuteronomy. In the Priestly Code, however, at a time when the
stranger had practically become a proselyte, the ideal Kingdom of
God includes the "stranger," and gives him a position which differs
little from that of the home-born. That would make these different
laws answer to different periods of Israel’s history, and would
coincide with what has been otherwise found to be the order of
Israel’s legal development.
The second prohibition, which runs parallel to what we find in
Exodus, is the somewhat enigmatical one that a kid should not be
sodden in its mother’s milk. What it was in this act which made it
seem necessary to issue such a command cannot now be ascertained
with any certainty. Most probably it was connected in some way with
heathen ceremonies, perhaps at a harvest feast; for, as we have
seen, it is a ruling motive throughout all this section that the
Israelites should reject everything which among their neighbors was
connected with idolatry.
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