Sick Day, But I've Still Got Something For You.
Hello friends,
It’s been a rough weekend, so while I finish the next chapter, I have two things to hold you over.
First, a Q&A conversation from someone inquiring about the entire system of slavery that God is dismantling.
Second, I’ll post links to all the chapters already completed, in case you missed any. Scroll through this list below and see if anything jumps out at you as new.
We’ll be back with the regularly-scheduled post on Wedsneday.
Here’s the Q&A:
Letter from A.G.:
Hi.
I saw your comments about slavery in the Old Testament, I have a question: then what is the meaning of these verses? that is, a slave can leave its owner at any moment? then what is the point of this system? Why were these laws given? What about sexual slavery in Exodus 21, 7?
Response:
Hi A.,
Great questions! Let’s dig in.
You said:
I saw your comments about slavery in the Old Testament, I have a question: then what is the meaning of these verses? that is, a slave can leave its owner at any moment?
Because God was re-defining what it means to be a worker, or to have people work for you.
Everyone in the ancient world assumed that slavery was okay. It’s what everyone did. No one questioned it. It was simply part of how the world worked.
But God wanted something different in Israel.
God forbade the Israelites from treating people as slaves. To drive this home, He filled the Torah with specific commands to destroy slavery.
Deuteronomy 23:15–16 is part of that:
“You shall not give up to his master a slave who has escaped from his master to you. He shall dwell with you, in your midst, in the place that he shall choose within one of your towns, wherever it suits him. You shall not wrong him.”
It clarifies that any servant/slave/worker/anyone-at-all is free to leave a bad work situation whenever they feel the need to. It destroys the system of slavery, because workers cannot be slaves. They can’t be kept. The Law requires that they are free as soon as they escape, as soon as they want to be free.
More than that, they can live freely wherever they choose. They aren’t second-class citizens. They are full citizens with full rights to live wherever they please. You cannot oppress them or wrong them.
God is re-writing what it means to be a worker or to hire workers. He is abolishing slavery one law at a time.
You said:
then what is the point of this system? Why were these laws given? What about sexual slavery in Exodus 21, 7?
Exodus 21:7–11 discusses arranged marriage and the hiring of handmaidens, not sexual slavery.
Many translations still say “sell his daughter as a slave,” but the text doesn’t use the typical word for slave, ebed. It uses the word for maid or handmaid, amah. This could mean either the man is hiring this young girl as a maid for his household, or that she is being married as a secondary wife, as Laban did when he gave Zilpah and Bilhah to Jacob. They served initially as handmaidens to Rachel and Leah, but they became wives in their own right.
The laws in Exodus 21:7–11 protect women in such cases:
[7] “When a man sells his daughter as an amah, she shall not go out as the male servants do. [8] If she does not please her master, who has designated her for himself, then he shall let her be redeemed. He shall have no right to sell her to a foreign people, since he has broken faith with her. [9] If he designates her for his son, he shall deal with her as with a daughter. [10] If he takes another wife to himself, he shall not diminish her food, her clothing, or her marital rights. [11] And if he does not do these three things for her, she shall go out for nothing, without payment of money.
This means:
The man who hires or marries her has no rights over her. He cannot sell her as a slave if he displeases her. In any other ancient civilization, he could. In Israel, he cannot. She is a full person with full rights. He can’t sell her away if he decides he doesn’t like her.
If he doesn’t like her, he has broken faith with her. In most ancient societies, it was the other way around: she didn’t please him, so she failed him. Not so in Israel. If he hires or marries her, and he doesn’t like her, he has broken faith. He is the one failing, not her.
Handmaids, wives, or even secondary wives are not to be treated as lesser. A man who arranges a handmaiden or wife for his son must treat her as he treats his own daughters.
If he ever deprives her of her food, clothing, or marital rights, she is released from him. This protects her from abuse — she is not legally tied to a household that will not care for her. She is not a slave to be kept on a whim. She is free to leave any abusive situation.
Again, this completely re-wrote the rules. No other ancient civilization had such rules that affirmed and esteemed the woman in this situation as an equal. In this passage, God is restoring to women rights that they had been denied in virtually every other society.
God was teaching Israel: everyone is made in the image of God. Everyone has rights. Everyone is to be honored, esteemed, and respected.
And now for the chapter links:
Let's Do This. Chapter 1 of the Book I've Avoided Writing: Slavery and the Bible.
When someone tells you they’re hurting — listen.
Why Dive into Slavery and the Bible? What's the Goal? Why Take This On?
As we’re making our way through this new book, I’m going to be writing a lot more of these introductory comments to each chapter. In previous books, the entire post could simply be the chapter. But in this case, we might a few extra words to catch people up, in case people are jumping in mid-way.
How God Outlaws Slavery in a Single Verse at the Start of the Old Testament Law
Chapter 3: God’s One-Sentence Abolition of Slavery
God's Third Law That Eliminates Slavery (And Closes Any Loopholes) (Leviticus 19:17-18)
When we talk about slavery, it’s impossible to ignore race.
Comparing the Bible to Other Ancient Law Codes Proves How Boldly God Outlaws Slavery
When people assume the Bible condones slavery, they often explain it by saying, “The Bible was a product of its time. It can’t be expected to outlaw slavery when no one at the time did.”
The Word Causing the Problems: “Slave” and “Servant” and the Word That Means Both
Chapter 7: The Word Causing the Confusion (Ebed)
The Term “Slavery” — and How the Bible Doesn’t Have A Word For it
Our next troublesome word is “slavery” — and the fact that the Hebrew language doesn’t have a word for it.
To Buy or to Gain? Does the Bible Allow You to Buy People — or Hire Them?
Throughout Exodus and the rest of the Law, many translations present passages like Exodus 21:2, “you may buy an ebed.”
Slave Master, Boss, or Lord? Untangling One Final Troublesome Word.
We have one final troublesome word to address before we dig into the richness of Exodus 21. That word is “master.”
God Grounded the Law in the Fear of the LORD — To Destroy All the Ways We Corrupt It
How do you describe evil?
“When you buy a slave…” (Ex 21:2). How does this fit with God abolishing slavery?
Israel stood in terror as God descended on Sinai. From the darkness clouding the mountain, God thundered out the Ten Commandments, echoed by lightning and earthquakes. His words resonated in their souls: “I brought you out of the house of slavery. You shall have no other gods besides Me
“The wife and her children shall be her master’s” (Exodus 21:3-4)
What happened to the family of an ebed?
"When a man sells his daughter as a slave..." Exodus 21:7-11 As One of the Worst-Translated Passages in History.
This particular passage, perhaps more than any other in this chapter, sounds horrid, at first glance.
God's Protections for Young Women in a Passage Everyone Claims as the Opposite
[This article is Part 2 of the chapter exploring Exodus 21:7-11. You can read Part 1 here.]