Both are correct; this is why rape is subsumed under adultery. Amnon was guilty on all three counts.
Technically, he should have been stoned.
Technically, he should have been stoned.
Is there not an umbrella verse in that same passage that says anyone who does this is stoned? I know I should go look but I’m being lazy.Leviticus 20
17¶'And a man who taketh his sister, a daughter of his father or daughter of his mother, and he hath seen her nakedness, and she seeth his nakedness: it is a shame; and they have been cut off before the eyes of the sons of their people; the nakedness of his sister he hath uncovered; his iniquity he beareth.
Again "cut off" is the phrase that the interpretation hangs on.
Wait, adultery?Both are correct; this is why rape is subsumed under adultery. Amnon was guilty on all three counts.
Technically, he should have been stoned.
Two ways: it's essential in context to know how people defined adultery back then. The main category was a non-husband having sex with a married woman, but it also included a variety of behaviors that were considered to be sexually humiliating. Rape qualifies in that regard without question. In addition, in the case of an unmarried woman, rape was and continues in many locales to be considered a crime against the woman's future husband.Wait, adultery?
How was this that?
Where do you find that verse when concerning an unmarried woman?Ummm, that was clearly rape, the penalty is stoning, in my remembrance.
That's alright: you may be thinking about a later passage, Leviticus 20:13, wherein male homosexual intercourse is pegged to required stoning or some such.Is there not an umbrella verse in that same passage that says anyone who does this is stoned? I know I should go look but I’m being lazy.
NopeIs there not an umbrella verse in that same passage that says anyone who does this is stoned? I know I should go look but I’m being lazy.
I'll take what the scripture defines as adultery instead.Two ways: it's essential in context to know how people defined adultery back then. The main category was a non-husband having sex with a married woman, but it also included a variety of behaviors that were considered to be sexually humiliating. Rape qualifies in that regard without question. In addition, in the case of an unmarried woman, rape was and continues in many locales to be considered a crime against the woman's future husband.
I'm about to head to a meeting with a Bib Fam brother, but I'll throw this in the mix: where exactly does Scripture define adultery in a way that isn't circular?I'll take what the scripture defines as adultery instead.
I was just thinking of the man who raped an unbetrothed virgin, how he wasn't stoned, but I will look closer.I'm about to head to a meeting with a Bib Fam brother, but I'll throw this in the mix: where exactly does Scripture define adultery in a way that isn't circular?
It's essential to know what the then-current cultural understandings of words and concepts were, because Scripture doesn't constantly pause itself to provide thorough definitions of every word in usage.
Think, "uncovering the nakedness of" . . .
I’m thinking of a passage that I cannot find.Where do you find that verse when concerning an unmarried woman?
Deuteronomy 22:24-29 KJVI’m thinking of a passage that I cannot find.
But it defines rape as a situation where sex happens within the village where she could have cried out and gotten him to stop, but didn’t.
Or out in the country where no one could have heard her.
Thank you!Deuteronomy 22:24-29 KJV
[24] Then ye shall bring them both out unto the gate of that city, and ye shall stone them with stones that they die; the damsel, because she cried not, being in the city; and the man, because he hath humbled his neighbour's wife: so thou shalt put away evil from among you. [25] But if a man find a betrothed damsel in the field, and the man force her, and lie with her: then the man only that lay with her shall die: [26] But unto the damsel thou shalt do nothing; there is in the damsel no sin worthy of death: for as when a man riseth against his neighbour, and slayeth him, even so is this matter: [27] For he found her in the field, and the betrothed damsel cried, and there was none to save her. [28] If a man find a damsel that is a virgin, which is not betrothed, and lay hold on her, and lie with her, and they be found; [29] Then the man that lay with her shall give unto the damsel's father fifty shekels of silver, and she shall be his wife; because he hath humbled her, he may not put her away all his days. …
Which is exactly why I say transfer of ownership is what constitutes marriage, not one flesh. God took the woman to Adam and gave her to him. THEN he took her physically. This is borne out in every instance I can find of TTWCM. There are several instances where one flesh is not called TTWCM. It always conforms to ownership transfer though. *at least as far as I've been able to find*Thank you!
I had forgotten about the betrothed part.
So it looks more like adultery if betrothed but a simple attempt at making a marriage if she isn’t. And the father has the right to deny the marriage and collect the bride price.
Thank you!
I had forgotten about the betrothed part.
So it looks more like adultery if betrothed but a simple attempt at making a marriage if she isn’t. And the father has the right to deny the marriage and collect the bride price.
Where do we see that the father has thr right to deny in this verse, I guess im not seeing it.Which is exactly why I say transfer of ownership is what constitutes marriage, not one flesh. God took the woman to Adam and gave her to him. THEN he took her physically. This is borne out in every instance I can find of TTWCM. There are several instances where one flesh is not called TTWCM. It always conforms to ownership transfer though. *at least as far as I've been able to find*
Exodus 22:17Where do we see that the father has thr right to deny in this verse, I guess im not seeing it.
I'm not saying he doesn't but i don't this this is your proof verse.
This was what I was hoping someone would see too. This was my understanding up to date. Nice job.So, having raped Tamar, the correct penalty / way forward would have been for all of the following to occur:
1) Amnon to ask David for Tamar as his wife. David could have refused (quite likely, given the circumstances).
2) Amnon to pay the bride price for Tamar to David, whether or not David gave Tamar to him.
3) Amnon to be banished from Israel for incest - taking Tamar with him if she was now his wife, or leaving her behind if David had refused this.
No stoning. If I've read that incorrectly, someone correct me.