Read Sex, Marriage and Family in World Religions Online
Authors: Witte Green Browning
I. Browning, Don S. II. M. Green, M. Christian (Martha Christian), 1968— .
III. Witte, John, 1959–.
BL65.S4S48 2006
201Ј.7282—dc22
2005051799
Casebound editions of Columbia University Press books are printed on permanent and durable acid-free paper.
Printed in the United States of America
c 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
c o n t e n t s
Preface and Acknowledgments
xi
About the Contributors
xv
Introduction
xvii
Michael S. Berger 1
Introduction
1
The Hebrew Bible
12
The Elephantine Marriage Contract
21
Hellenistic Jewish Philosophy in the Wisdom of Ben Sirach
(Ecclesiasticus)
22
The Damascus Document of the Dead Sea Scrolls
24
Josephus on Marriage Law
26
Mishnah on Procreation, Marriage, and Divorce
28
The Babylonian Talmud
31
Aggadic Midrash on Marriage and Family
35
The Babylonian Talmud on Marital Sex
38
vi contents
The Babylonian Ordinance from the Academy on Divorce
39
The Ordinances of Rabbi Gershom (The Light of the Exile)
40
Medieval Marriage Contracts from the Cairo Geniza
42
Love Poetry from the Golden Age of Spain
43
The Order of the
Get
45
Maimonides on Sex
49
Jewish Mysticism on Marriage and Sex
52
The Book of the Pious
of Medieval Germany
56
“The Epistle on Holiness” (“Iggeret Ha-qodesh”)
59
Exchange Between Napoleon and the Jewish “Sanhedrin” on Issues of
Marriage
62
Contemporary Developments in Jewish Marriage Contracts
66
Reform Opinion on Patrilineal and Matrilineal Descent
73
Luke Timothy Johnson and Mark D. Jordan 77
Introduction
77
Creation and the Fall in the Book of Genesis
89
The Greco-Roman Context
89
Hellenistic Jewish Moral Instruction
91
Gospels of Matthew and Luke
92
Paul’s Letters to the Corinthians and Ephesians
94
Apocryphal Christian Texts
98
Augustine of Hippo
100
John Chrysostom
105
Peter Lombard
110
The Fourth Lateran Council
114
Thomas Aquinas
115
Mechthild of Magdeburg
119
Martin Luther
120
Anglican
Book of Common Prayer (1549)
125
John Calvin
128
The Council of Trent
133
c o n t e n t s
vii
George Fox
137
A Contemporary Critique of Sexual Ethics
138
A Womanist Critique of Family Theology
142
A Contemporary Liturgy for Same-Sex Unions
146
Azizah al-Hibri and Raja’ M. El Habti 150
Introduction
150
Creation and the Identity of Origin of Women and Men
156
The Fall from the Garden and Gender Equality
162
The Marriage Contract
166
Consent to Marriage
168
Mahr
: The Obligatory Marital Gift
171
Other Stipulations in the Marriage Contract
174
Marital Relations
177
Polygamy
185
Marital Conflict
190
Divorce
200
Sexual Ethics
206
Rights Within the Family
211
Paul B. Courtright 226
Introduction
226
Rig Veda 10.85: The Marriage Hymn
232
The
Gr
.
hya-Sutra
s: The Wedding Ceremony
236
Laws of Manu
240
The
Ka¯masu¯tra
250
Divine Marriage: Síva and Pa¯rvatı¯
255
The Karma of Marriage: The King’s Wife, the Brahmin’s Wife, and the
Ogre
261
A Contemporary Hindu Marriage Ceremony
270
“Counting the Flowers,” a Short Story by Chudamani Raghavan,
Translated from the Tamil by the Author
291
viii contents
Introduction
299
The Beginning of the World
309
The Joys of Ascetism
313
Married Life Versus the Life of the Ascetic
316
Songs by Buddhist Women
318
The Conversion of the Nun, Pat
.
a¯ca¯ra¯
322
The Buddha Accepts His Aunt, Gotamı¯, as a Nun
325
The Buddha’s Renunciation of His Family
329
Confusion Over the Buddha as a Fertility God
338
Buddhism as a Threat to the Indian Family
341
The Buddha’s Advice for Laity
343
An Early Buddha Lineage
346
East Asian Buddhism: An Overview
351
The Sutra on the Filial Son
353
The Ghost Festival Sutra
356
The Sutra on the Profound Kindness of Parents
359
The Blood Bowl Sutra
363
Introduction
367
The
Book of Poetry (Shi jing)
372
The
Analects (Lunyu)
of Confucius
375
Mencius on Filial Piety
377
Historical Incidents from the
Zuo zhuan
378
Record of Ritual
381
The
Record of Ritual of the Elder Dai
393
The
Classic of Filial Piety
394
Lives of Model Women
400
Admonitions for Women
402
Filial Sons
404
Mr. Yan’s Family Instructions
405
The
Classic of Filial Piety for Women
408
c o n t e n t s
ix
Yuan Cai on Concubines
414
Zhu Xi on Family and Marriage
416
Sexual Offenses in the Code of the Qing Dynasty
423
Advice to Local Officials on Handling Sexual Offenses
427
Qing Legal Cases Concerning Sexual Offenses
436
Chen Duxiu on the Way of Confucius and Modern Life
438
Feng Youlan on the Philosophy at the Basis of
Traditional Chinese Society
441
Index
451
p r e f a c e a n d a c k n o w l e d g m e n t s This volume is one of a series of new volumes to emerge from the project on Sex, Marriage, and Family and the Religions of the Book, undertaken by the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University. The project seeks to take stock of the dramatic transformation of marriage and family life in the world today and to craft enduring solutions to the many new problems that transformation has occasioned. The project is interdisciplinary in methodology: It seeks to bring the ancient wisdom of religious traditions and the modern sciences of law, health, public policy, the social sciences, and the humanities into greater conversation and common purpose. The project is interreligious in inspiration: it seeks to understand the lore, law, and life of marriage and family of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam in their genesis and in their exodus, in their origins and in their diasporas. The project is international in orientation: it seeks to place current American debates over sex, marriage, and family within an emerging global conversation. This combination of interdisciplinary, interreligious, and international inquiry featured in our project as a whole is at the heart of the methodology of this volume, but we have deliberately decided to address not only Judaism, Christianity, and Islam but reach further and include the axial religious traditions of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Confucianism.
We wish to express our deep gratitude to our friends at the Pew Charitable Trusts in Philadelphia for their generous support of our Center for the Study xii preface and acknowledgments
of Law and Religion (and its predecessor organizations, the Law and Religion Program and the Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Religion at Emory University). We are particularly grateful to Pew’s president, Rebecca Rimel, and program officers Luis Lugo, Susan Billington Harper, and Diane Winston for masterminding the creation of this center, along with sister centers at ten other American research universities—a bold and visionary act of philanthropy that is helping to transform the study of religion in the American academy.
We also wish to express our deep gratitude to our Emory center colleagues, April Bogle, Eliza Ellison, Anita Mann, Amy Wheeler, and Janice Wiggins, for their extraordinary work. Over the past four years these five colleagues have helped to create a dozen major public forums, an international conference with 80 speakers and 750 participants, and scores of new journal, electronic, and video publications. They are now overseeing the production of 30 new books to come out of this project on Sex, Marriage, and the Family, along with ad-ministering a new center project, commenced in the autumn of 2003, on the Child in Law, Religion, and Society. For their editorial and production work on this volume we also wish to express our appreciation to three Emory Law students, Timothy Rybacki, Jonathan Setzer, and Matthew Titus.
We wish to thank Wendy Lochner and her colleagues at Columbia University Press for taking on this volume and working so assiduously to see to its timely publication.
We would also like to thank our friends at Columbia University Press for their permission to reprint excerpts from various of their imprints herein, as well as the authors, editors, and publishers for their permission to reprint herein excerpts from the following texts: Augsburg Fortress Press for permission to reprint Docs. 2-10, 2-17; Baker Books for permission to reprint Docs. 1-17, 2-19; Barnes & Noble Books for permission to reprint Doc. 4-6; Beth Din of America for permission to reprint Doc. 1-58; Broadview Press for permission to reprint Doc. 2-13; Catholic University of America for permission to reprint Doc. 2-11; Central Conference of American Rabbis for permission to reprint Docs. 1-60, 1-61; Clarendon Press for permission to reprint Doc. 6-20; Eastern Book Linkers for permission to reprint Doc. 4-2; Free Press for permission to reprint Doc. 6-11; Harvard University Press for permission to reprint Docs. 2-2, 6-22; Jewish Publication Society for permission to reprint Docs. 1-1, 1-2, 1-3, 1-4, 1-5, 1-6, 1-7, 1-8, 1-9, 1-10, 1-11, 1-12, 1-13, 1-39, 1-40, 1-41, 1-42; Judaica Press (Davka Corp.) for permission to reprint Docs. 1-27, 1-28, 1-29, 1-30, 1-31, 1-32, 1-33, 1-34, 1-35, 1-36; KTAV for permission to reprint Doc. 1-37; Littman Library of Jewish Civiliza-tion for permission to reprint Docs. 1-48, 1-49, 1-50, 1-51; Orbis Books for permission to reprint Doc. 2-23; Oxford University Press for permission to reprint Docs. 1-57, 4-4; Pali Text Society for permission to reprint Docs. 5-2, 5-3, 5-4; Paulist Press for permission to reprint Doc. 2-16; Penguin Press UK for permission to reprint Docs. 1-16, 4-1, 4-3; Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends for permission to reprint Doc. 2-21; B. Porten for permission p r e f a c e a n d a c k n o w l e d g m e n t s xiii
to reprint Doc. 1-14; Rabbinical Assembly, International Association of Conser-vative/Masorti Rabbis for permission to reprint Doc. 1-59; Chudamani Raghavan for permission to use “Counting the Flowers,” Doc. 4-8, which appeared in the original Tamil as “The Nagalinga Tree”; Random House for permission to reprint Doc. 2-3; St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press for permission to reprint Doc.
2-12; Stanford University Press for permission to reprint Doc. 6-13; TAN Books and Publishers for permission to reprint Doc. 2-20; Temple University Press for permission to reprint Doc. 4-5; University of Arizona Press for permission to reprint Doc. 6-21; University of California Press for permission to reprint Docs.
6-10, 6-15; University of Chicago Press for permission to reprint Doc. 1-47; University of Hawaii Press for permission to reprint Docs. 6-1, 6-2, 6-3, 6-4; University of Notre Dame Press for permission to reprint Doc. 2-15; Wadsworth/
Thomas Learning for permission to reprint Docs. 5-1, 5-5, 5-6, 5-7, 5-8, 5-9; Westminster John Knox Press for permission to reprint Docs. 2-1, 2-9, 2-22, 2-24; Wheeler Publishing for permission to reprint Doc. 4-7; Wisdom Publications for permission to reprint Doc. 5-10, 5-11; Yale University Press for permission to reprint Doc. 6-24.
a b o u t t h e c o n t r i b u t o r s
Michael S. Berger
is associate professor of religion, fellow in the Institute of Jewish Studies, and senior fellow in the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University.
Don S. Browning
is Alexander Campbell Professor of Ethics and the Social Sciences, Emeritus, University of Chicago Divinity School, and Robert W. Woodruff Visiting Professor of Interdisciplinary Religious Studies at Emory University.
Azizah Y. al-Hibri
is professor of law at the University of Richmond School of Law.
Alan Cole
is associate professor of religious studies and director of East Asian studies at Lewis and Clark College.
Paul B. Courtright
is professor of religion and Asian studies and senior fellow in the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University.
Patricia Buckley Ebrey
is professor of history at the University of Washington.
Raja M. El-Habti
is director of research at KARAMAH: Muslim Women Lawyers for Human Rights.
M. Christian Green
is visiting lecturer on ethics at Harvard Divinity School and senior fellow in the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University.