wolfpurplemoon: A cute cartoon character with orange hair, glasses, kitty ears and holding a coffee, the colours are bright and pinkish/purple (wolfbiblemoon)
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Judges has been a pretty grim read, but these last three chapters really up the revulsion.

* A man gives his concubine to a mob and they rape her until she dies. He then cuts her body into 12 parts and sends a part to each tribe of Israel. Which is awful enough.

* They come and ask him why he sent them body parts and he explains, so the tribe that the mob came from (the Benjaminites) is then slaughtered (not without losses for the other tribes though) leaving just 600 men. What the mob did was awful, but the reaction is ridiculously over the top as women and children are included in the slaughter.

* Noone wants to give these 600 men any women to marry, but they can't let a tribe die out so find some virgins in a city of Israel who didn't send any men to join in the slaughter. So everyone is killed expect the 400 virgin women. And then to make up the numbers the rest of the Benjaminites have to kidnap girls from the city of Shiloh.

The excuse for everything that has occurred in Judges seems to be this:

In those days there was no king in Israel: every man did that which was right in his own eyes.

Roman Law a success?

Date: 2010-06-25 04:12 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
And what happened to Rome, the epitome of a "law" state? I would argue that when a legal system or ruler fancies itself to be free of divine sanction or origin, it is doomed to fail. Even worse, if it goes against Israel or blasphemes God.

Re: Roman Law a success?

Date: 2010-06-25 05:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] raven-moon.livejournal.com
Well, considering that the Christian Church from about 300 or so onward built its own laws on those of Rome, as did what you would no doubt refer to as 'Christendom,' I'd say that Roman law was pretty successful. In fact, all of Christian Europe clung to the idea (to say nothing of the socio-political, legal, and administrative structure) of Rome well past its demise in fact. Given that the last "Holy Roman Emperor" abdicated the throne in 1806, I don't think 'Rome,' in its totality as concept, ideal and methodology was really what one could call doomed.....

Nice try. Why don't you crack a history book once in a while?

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