Leviticus 18

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Leviticus 18
 chapter 17

"Tabernacle", Biblical illustrations, Sweet Media, 1984.
Book Book of Leviticus
Bible part Old Testament
Order in the Bible part 3
Category Torah

Leviticus 18 is the eighteenth chapter of the Book of Leviticus in the Hebrew Bible or the Old Testament of the Christian Bible.[1][2] According to the Hebrew Bible, it narrates part of the instructions given to Moses by God on biblical Mount Sinai. The chapter deals with a number of sexual activities considered unclean or abominable. Although the chapter is principally concerned with incest, it also contains laws related to bestiality and "lying with a man as with a woman." This single reference in verse 22 has, in recent years, made the interpretation of this verse a focus of debate among Christians and Jews regarding homosexual activity (see Homosexuality and Christianity and Jewish views of homosexuality).

Leviticus 18 is generally regarded as part of the holiness code of Leviticus 11–26, and its sexual prohibitions are largely paralleled by Leviticus 20 (except that chapter has more emphasis on punishment).

Text

Structure

International Standard Version groups this chapter as follows:

Incest

Main article: Incest in the Bible

The Bible lists several types of relationship which it regards as incestuous unions; one list appears in the Deuteronomic Code, and two lists occur in the Holiness Code of Leviticus. These lists only mention relationships with female relatives; excluding lesbianism, this implies that the list is addressed to men. Since the lists would then describe women with whom it is forbidden for a man to have a relationship, they also indirectly imply a list of men with whom it is forbidden for a woman to have a relationship. These lists then compare as follows (blue = forbidden for men only, pink = forbidden for women only, purple = forbidden for both men and women):

Leviticus 18Leviticus 20Deuteronomy
Grandparent's spouse (including other grandparent)
Parent's spouseParent
Stepparent
Parent-in-law
Uncle/AuntParent's sibling
Uncle's/Aunt's SpouseFather's sibling's spouse
Mother's sibling's spouse
Parent's childHalf-Sibling (mother's side)
Father's childSibling
Half-Sibling (father's side)
Step sibling
Sibling-in-law (if the spouse was still alive)
Nephew/NieceSibling's child
Nephew/Niece-in-lawSpouse's Brother's Child
Spouse's Sister's Child
Spouse's childChild
Stepchild
Child-in-law
Spouse's grandchild (including grandchild)

One feature of all the lists is that sexual activity between a man and his own daughter is not explicitly forbidden. The Talmud argues that this is because the prohibition was obvious, especially given the proscription against a relationship with a granddaughter. [3] The shortness of the list in Leviticus 20, and especially of that in Deuteronomy, are explained by classical Jewish scholarship as being due to the obviousness of the missing prohibitions.[4][5] Note also that the explicit prohibition against engaging in sexual activity with "both a woman and her daughter",[6] implicitly forbids sexual activity between a man and his daughter. Some biblical scholars have instead proposed that it was originally in the list, but was then accidentally left out from the copy on which modern versions of the text ultimately depend, due to a mistake by the scribe.[7]

Apart from the questionable case of a man marrying his daughter, the list in Leviticus 18 roughly produces the same rules as were followed in early pre-Islamic Arabic culture.[4] However, most tribal nations also disliked exogamous marriage—marriage to completely unrelated people.[4] In several prominent cases in the Torah, the incest rules are ignored in favour of marriage to a close relative; Jacob is described as having married his first wife's sister,[8][9][10] and Abraham as having a father in common with Sarah[11] (rather than a mother, which would have been permitted by the list). These are not seen as illegal marriages as the incest laws were not given until Moses.

Sexuality

For more details on this topic, see The Bible and homosexuality.

Verse 22

The text of 18:22 :

"Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it is abomination." KJV
'You shall not lie with a male as with a woman; it is an abomination.' Revised Standard Version and English Standard Version
'And with a male thou dost not lie as one lieth with a woman; abomination it [is].' Youngs Literal Translation
'Do not have sexual relations with a man as one does with a woman: that is detestable' CEV

Some people interpret this to mean that the verse prohibits male homosexual acts. The major area of debate has then been over the hermeneutical question of whether and how this text applies to the modern Christian or Jewish situation (see The Bible and homosexuality and Biblical law in Christianity for that debate). As noted in the separate article on Leviticus, the book uses the word "abomination" 16 times, with the Hebrew word "sheqets" being used in describing dietary prohibitions (for example prohibiting shellfish and pork), mostly in Leviticus 11, and once for physical uncleanness (Leviticus 7:21), while "tô‛êbah" is used often for idolatry (Dt. 32:16) and specific other sins (Deuteronomy 24:4), for people who disobey God (Deuteronomy 25:16), and collectively for lists of sins. (Leviticus 18:27–30; Proverbs 6:16-19).

However, there are debates as to the meaning of the verse, with some authors[12] stating that v.22 condemns "homosexuality" or "homosexual relations" and other authors maintaining that v.22 condemns only males penetrating males (anal intercourse).[13] The Talmud maintains the law prohibits all male homosexual activity including pederasty;[14] however, modern scholarship does not reach this consensus. Since the practice is allotted the death penalty for both the active and the passive partners in Leviticus 20[15] the law appears to have only applied when both participants were men above the age of majority which is set at 20 years old in the Torah.[16]

In any event, some people interpret Leviticus as delineating between the sins of sexual immorality and child sacrifice, for which God judged the native inhabitants of the land (Leviticus 18:27–28), and the ceremonial ordinances, such as dietary laws, which functioned to distinguish the children of Israel from neighboring nations (Leviticus 20:22–26; see also Deuteronomy 14:21).

Notes

  1. Halley, Henry H. Halley's Bible Handbook: an abbreviated Bible commentary. 23rd edition. Zondervan Publishing House. 1962.
  2. Holman Illustrated Bible Handbook. Holman Bible Publishers, Nashville, Tennessee. 2012.
  3. Yebamot 3a
  4. 1 2 3 Jewish Encyclopedia, s.v. Incest
  5. Samuel ben Meir, Commentary, ad loc.
  6. Leviticus 18:17
  7. Cheyne and Black, Encyclopaedia Biblica, Marriage : choice of bride
  8. Genesis 29:16
  9. Genesis 29:23
  10. Genesis 29:28
  11. Genesis 20:12
  12. Greenberg 1988:191, Wenham 1979:259, Kahn 1984:49
  13. Babylonian Talmud Sanhedrin 54a and b; Josephus, Against Apion 2.199; and Philo, Abraham 135. Some modern authors stating this view include Alter 2004:623, 632; Boyarin 1995:339, 343; Brooten 1996:61; Cohen 1990:6; Daube 1986:447; Milgrom 2000:1568; Olyan 1994:185; Thurston 1990:16; and Walsh 2001:208.
  14. sanhedrin 54b
  15. http://www.mechon-mamre.org/p/pt/pt0320.htm
  16. http://www.mechon-mamre.org/p/pt/pt0327.htm

References

Further reading

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