RESPONSE: This is one of those Bible problems where we
read back into a passage all of our current cultural sensitivities and run into deep misunderstandings as a result. Let’s just read the passage in question to begin:
Deut 22:28-29: When a man comes upon a virgin who has never been engaged and grabs and rapes her and they are found out, the man who raped her has to give her father fifty pieces of silver. He has to marry her because he took advantage of her. And he can never divorce her.
At first
glance, this seems to command that a rape victim must marry her abuser! Could anything
be more cruel or unfair? Looked at this
way, this passage has been pointed to by many skeptics and atheists as evidence
that the Bible is immoral, and misogynist.
How can the law that comes from this ancient Tribe be considered the law
of an all-good God?
But
wait. Before we settle on the premise of
your question, namely that this passage condones that which is evil, we have to
objectively understand it first. To do that,
we have to get out of our own perspective and travel back into a very different world, the world of the ancient near east.
In many ways
we might say this world is morally inferior to our own, because it tolerated
slavery and patriarchy and polygamy. People in this strange world aren’t assumed to
be equal before the law, and personal liberties aren’t taken to be the most important part of public policy. Isn't this horrible and wrong?
But these kinds of thoughts lead to an interesting side conversation with three points to make:
First, on
what basis do we judge this law as immoral?
The skeptic who rejects the idea of God and objective moral absolutes is
in a bit of a conundrum here.
They presume that morals are relative to different times and cultures, built
into us by social and chemical evolution, with no objective basis.
But then
they look at this sex law of the ancient Israelites and make the bold claim
that it’s wrong. Not just ineffective or
inconvenient to us, but actually wrong in an objective sense. But how can one make such a claim unless they know what good actually
is? And if there is no objective right,
then by what standard do we called this rape law backward, regressive or
immoral?
Secondly,
the modern, Western critic of Mosaic Law rarely realizes that their basis for critiquing
the Bible is the Bible itself. In other
words, the development of Western sensibilities regarding things like personal liberty,
sexual boundaries, and individualism are built on premises which would not be self-evident
to us, unless the Bible had first paved the way.
Moral
developments we take for granted, do not pop into the world out of
nothing. We can thank the work of primitive revelations through figures such as Moses,
which lead most today to believe that might does not equal right - an idea which was decidedly not “self-evident” to most people at most times in human history.
Third, the
modern critic of Moses usually has no handle on the moral excesses of their own
era when they make sport of the excesses of another. We most recoil at Mosaic Law in the places where that law describes a people bent severely toward honor and
chastity and tribal security. We might
see these as “lopsided moral developments” not because they are evil, but
because some part of the good objective moral code, which we all acknowledge, has
gotten out of whack.
But if we see ourselves as truly objective, we ought to be able to see similar lopsided moral
developments inside our own culture – developments which might also stem from
some piece of the objective moral law.
Yet, out of whack, they lead us into all kinds of evil as well – evil which people in Moses time would spot easily and criticize us for.
Turning now
to those cultural moral excesses of Moses time, we must realize they put a high value on virginity. This is in contrast to our own age,
whose commitment to sexual restraint hovers somewhere near zero. Also, their culture believed women needed to
be protected under the oversight of a leading male (their husband or father),
in part because the world was filled with rapacious and
predatory men whose power is only checked by other powerful men.
Once you understand
that context, you can begin to understand why the rule above could be
considered fair and just - benevolent even! When
considering Mosaic Law, the modern believer (or skeptic) never has to accept the
temporal conditions as ideal or good. We
don’t have to love patriarchy or polygamy or slavery. No! We
are however, trying to discern whether, given the non-ideal temporal cultural
conditions, the law’s transcendent principles can legitimately be considered good.
The
evidence says yes.
First, note
that the woman raped does not have to marry the man, the man has to marry the
woman. You might think this is mere
semantics – they are married in either case, the victim and the abuser! Yes, but the way the law puts its demand helps
us realize that the consequence is a punishment to the abuser and a grace to the victim.
This is
further spelled out by the following rule: he cannot divorce her. This means the rape exempts the man from being
able to make use of the divorce permission Moses would give later (Deut
24:1). Marriage in this culture was not
a romantic institution (though marriages could be very loving) so much as one of economic
and social stability. And women had very
few tools to sustain themselves economically on their own, unlike today.
So to be forced to marry the woman he violates, the man is forced by law to take on the responsibility of providing care for her – forever. He can’t even make use of the “out clause” which Moses gave for “impurity”. The rape means he is on the hook to provide for her, no matter the state of her future fidelity to him!
So to be forced to marry the woman he violates, the man is forced by law to take on the responsibility of providing care for her – forever. He can’t even make use of the “out clause” which Moses gave for “impurity”. The rape means he is on the hook to provide for her, no matter the state of her future fidelity to him!
Again,
given the high value of virginity, the man has not only violated her
physically, but he has taken away from her a primary “dowry” she brings to any
marriage union. Having stripped her of that, if he doesn’t marry her, it is
likely no one else would. And thus a
raped woman is left to a life of poverty and likely prostitution or slavery to survive.
Interestingly,
we have an example of just how in that cultural context, it would be the rape
victims who might covet such a law, as a benevolent provision for justice. In the time of King David, his daughter Tamar
is raped by her half-brother Amnon. In 2
Samuel 13:13 she very much seems to have wanted Amnon to marry her after the
rape! Why? Because she knows that in that
culture it would be very difficult to find someone to marry her and she would
rather be married to Amnon and have lifelong security than to be desolate and
single.
In fact, this
is exactly what happens to Tamar because Amnon – to add to the enormity of his
crimes – disgustedly rejects the very woman he, seconds ago, could not live without (2 Sam
13:15). So she lived without marrying
the rest of her life (2 Sam 13:20).
But one may
still protest, even if she gains a lifetime of security in compensation for her
honor being violated, surely that is a life sentence of awkwardness and
bitterness, even if she is cared for. We
must understand another piece of accompanying Mosaic legislation that mitigates
this concern. For in Exodus 22:16-17 we
read:
“If a man seduces a virgin who is not betrothed and lies with her, he shall give the bride price for her and make her his wife. If her father utterly refuses to give her to him, he shall pay money equal to the bride price for virgins."
If we put the
laws together, this addendum clearly states that the woman does not have to
marry her rapist if her father refuses to give her to him. And even in that culture, as in ours, it is
difficult to imagine a dad granting permission for her to marry a man that she
utterly hated. Even under the absolute
jurisdiction of their fathers, women in the Ancient Near East could have some say in
their own marriage decisions (Gen 24:57).
If the father then refused to grant permission, the rapist would still have
to pay the bride price (since he had stolen her marriageability by his action)
and not get a bride.
So in fact,
the Bible does not condone rape, since it clearly commands the death penalty
for a man who rapes a married or betrothed woman (Deut 22:22-27). And as for young virgins so violated, God’s law
actually spared them the double cruelty of a lifetime of destitution, sold into slavery or
prostitution.