BetteTheRed
Resident Heretic
- Pronouns
- She/Her/Her
What I have found fascinating after many years of bible study is that even if you read the same texts every three years that you almost always change your mind about the text every three years.
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Absolutely. I even think that after reading and discussing 19 chapters of Genesis here on WC2, I could go back to Genesis 1 and see it a little differentlyWhat I have found fascinating after many years of bible study is that even if you read the same texts every three years that you almost always change your mind about the text every three years.
Do you think Abraham and Sarah are actually half siblings? Do they really have the same father but different mothers?
I think your rightMaybe this was a common occurrence in those days of multiple wives and concubines.
I am actually curious to see that and how it compares to modern definitions. Different countries and cultures seem to go different directions on it. Canada's is actually pretty narrow, basically just direct bloodline (parent-child, blood siblings, and similar). Cousins, even first, are completely fair game in our system, at least legally. Social acceptance might be a different matter.If memory serves me correctly, the laws against incest in Leviticus will spell out the restrictions in great detail.
ANd in European Royal houses much later....there may have been an attempt at a bit more separation but cousins marrying was pretty common. IIRC some of the later Hapsburg Royals showed signs that the lack of genetic diversity was taking a toll.Incest was pretty common among royalty and upper classes in the ancient Near and Middle East in general. Look at the Ptolemies, the Greek dynasty in Egypt that ended with Cleopatra. Their family tree was more of a family web with brothers marrying sisters, aunts and uncles marrying nieces and nephews, and so on. And that was not a Greek thing but something they adopted from the Egyptians. The famed Tutankhamun (King Tut) was married to his half-sister, just to give one example that comes to mind.
If one looks at Scripture as telling a historically accurate account the laws in Leviticus are not part of this story--indeed as the narrative flows they don't yet exist. TO this point in Genesis there has yet to be an injunction about it.If memory serves me correctly, the laws against incest in Leviticus will spell out the restrictions in great detail.
Absolutely. God has provided very little in the way of moral guidance so far in the narrative. Noah got a few instructions against murder and taking the flesh of a living animal.If one looks at Scripture as telling a historically accurate account the laws in Leviticus are not part of this story--indeed as the narrative flows they don't yet exist. TO this point in Genesis there has yet to be an injunction about it.
I'd rather read it as what happens when patriarchal societies create the laws until someone or something( God?) steps up to change things....,it still remains an error in my mind. And it still happens today with societies and individuals using ancient holy books to justify this abuse.As we read through Genesis, we definitely need to keep in mind that these events took place before the Law was given.
Are you saying that when the Law is given, it is less patriarchal than the book of Genesis?I'd rather read it as what happens when patriarchal societies create the laws until someone or something( God?) steps up to change things....,it still remains an error in my mind. And it still happens today with societies and individuals using ancient holy books to justify this abuse.
Patriarchal society's are what they are whenever, wherever.Are you saying that when the Law is given, it is less patriarchal than the book of Genesis?