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Peter_Plato
Guest
“They” being the “elders of the congregation” that came up with the idea. It wasn’t one of the judges or even a group of them.I never said that it was. I was pointing out an example where people where obligated to rape. It comes from the book of Judges. I don’t think it was moral but they thought it necessary. I am surprised that you also find the Judges immoral.
The influence of the judges had just about run its course by that time (Eli and and his sons were either corrupt or ineffectual and Eli’s protege, Samuel, was the last Judge before King Saul was anointed.)
The decision in question was made by the “elders of the congregation” which would be analogous to the “leaders of the community” or even “the Council of Elders” or “the Sanhedrin” in later times.
Does it surprise you also that the Sanhedrin initiated the crucifixion of Jesus? Isn’t it entirely consistent to think that if a leadership cohort could come to a decision to crucify the embodiment of moral goodness, the “Just Man,” in the New Testament that a similar claim could have been made about the moral weakness of the council of elders in the Old?
Human leadership is consistently portrayed as failing in the Old Testament. Read the litany of evil kings (…”he did evil in the sight of The Lord…") in the books of Kings and Chronicles. These were supposed to have been an upgrade or improvement of leadership from their predecessors, the judges.