1
If someone is found slain in the land which the LORD your God gives you to possess, lying in the field, and it isn't known who has struck him; +
2
then your elders and your judges shall come out, and they shall
measure to the cities which are around him who is slain.
3
It shall be that the elders of the city which is nearest to the slain man shall take a
heifer of the herd, which hasn't been worked with, and which has not drawn in the yoke.
4
The elders of that city shall bring the heifer down to a
valley with running water, which is neither plowed nor sown, and shall break the heifer's neck there in the valley.
5
The priests the sons of Levi shall come near; for them the LORD your God has
chosen to
minister to him, and to
bless in The LORD's name; and according to their word shall every controversy and every assault be decided.
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All the elders of that city, who are nearest to the slain man, shall wash their hands over the heifer whose neck was broken in the valley.
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They shall answer and say, "Our hands have not shed this blood, neither have our eyes seen it.
8
Forgive, The LORD, your people Israel, whom you have redeemed, and don't allow innocent
blood among your people Israel." The blood shall be forgiven them.
9
So you shall put away the innocent blood from among you, when you shall do that which is right in The LORD's eyes.
10
When you go out to battle against your enemies, and the LORD your God delivers them into your hands, and you carry them away captive, +
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and see among the captives a beautiful woman, and you have a desire to her, and desire to take her as your wife;
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then you shall bring her home to your house. She shall shave her head and trim her nails.
13
She shall take the clothing of her
captivity off of herself, and shall remain in your house, and bewail her
father and her mother a full month. After that you shall go in to her and be her husband, and she shall be your wife.
14
It shall be, if you have no delight in her, then you shall let her go where she desires; but you shall not sell her at all for money. You shall not deal with her as a slave, because you have humbled her.
15
If a man has two wives, the one beloved, and the other hated, and they have borne him children, both the beloved and the hated; and if the firstborn son is hers who was hated; +
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then it shall be, in the day that he causes his sons to inherit that which he has, that he may not give the son of the beloved the rights of the firstborn before the son of the hated, who is the firstborn;
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but he shall acknowledge the firstborn, the son of the hated, by giving him a double portion of all that he has; for he is the beginning of his strength. The right of the firstborn is his.
18
If a man has a stubborn and rebellious son, who will not obey the voice of his father or the voice of his mother, and though they chasten him, will not listen to them; +
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then his father and his mother shall take hold of him and bring him out to the elders of his city, and to the gate of his place.
20
They shall tell the elders of his city, "This our son is stubborn and rebellious. He will not obey our voice. He is a
glutton and a drunkard."
21
All the men of his city shall
stone him to
death with stones. So you shall remove the evil from among you. All
Israel shall hear, and fear.
22
If a man has committed a sin worthy of death, and he is put to death, and you hang him on a tree; +
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his body shall not remain all night on the tree, but you shall surely bury him the same day; for he who is hanged is accursed of God; that you don't defile your land which the LORD your God gives you for an inheritance.
De 21:1-9. EXPIATION OF UNCERTAIN MURDER.
1-6. If one be found slain . . . lying in the field, and it be not known who hath slain him--The ceremonies here ordained to be observed on the discovery of a slaughtered corpse show the ideas of sanctity which the Mosaic law sought to associate with human blood, the horror which murder inspired, as well as the fears that were felt lest God should avenge it on the country at large, and the pollution which the land was supposed to contract from the effusion of innocent, unexpiated blood. According to Jewish writers, the Sanhedrin, taking charge of such a case, sent a deputation to examine the neighborhood. They reported to the nearest town to the spot where the body was found. An order was then issued by their supreme authority to the elders or magistrates of that town, to provide the heifer at the civic expense and go through the appointed ceremonial. The engagement of the public authorities in the work of expiation, the purchase of the victim heifer, the conducting it to a "rough valley" which might be at a considerable distance, and which, as the original implies, was a wady, a perennial stream, in the waters of which the polluting blood would be wiped away from the land, and a desert withal, incapable of cultivation; the washing of the hands, which was an ancient act symbolical of innocence--the whole of the ceremonial was calculated to make a deep impression on the Jewish, as well as on the Oriental, mind generally; to stimulate the activity of the magistrates in the discharge of their official duties; to lead to the discovery of the criminal, and the repression of crime.