1, 2, 3.
Speaker BWelcome to the Rap Report with your host, Andrew Rapoport, where we provide biblical interpretation and application.
Speaker BThis is a ministry of striving for eternity and the Christian podcast community.
Speaker BFor more content or to request a speaker for your church, go to strivingforeternity.org well, this is another crossover episode.
Speaker BI am the host of the Rappaport, Andrew Rappaport, where we are part of the Christian podcast community.
Speaker BAnd I'm here with a fellow podcaster from the Christian podcast community and we're sharing it on his podcast as well.
Speaker BAnd it is street talk theology and Pastor Dominic Ramadi.
Speaker AIs that what you want me to say?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BIt's good to introduce yourself.
Speaker BI like to throw him off, folks.
Speaker BHe's a New Yorker.
Speaker BCome on.
Speaker BHe should be.
Speaker BHe should be on the ball all the time, always expecting a curveball because he's a New Yorker.
Speaker AHe throws me under the bus all the time.
Speaker BWell, your city throws our whole state of New Jersey under the bus.
Speaker BSo it, it's only fitting.
Speaker BSo if you've been following with us for the past few episodes, we have been working together our way through Exodus 21, and there's a lot in this.
Speaker BPastor Dom, you.
Speaker BI think you would agree there's a lot in this, A lot of meat in this one chapter that is very fitting for today.
Speaker AYeah, I think sometimes we, we read this and we.
Speaker ASome I always try to tell people you just don't want to read to read it, but Andrew had pointed this out when we started doing this.
Speaker AExodus 20:1.
Speaker AThere's a lot here, not only exegetically, but hermeneutically that lines up for today.
Speaker AAnd I think, I think we're trying to, we're trying to do our best to do that.
Speaker AAnd yeah, there is a lot here for sure.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd so if you've missed the previous episodes, I encourage you to go back and listen because they do build one on top of another.
Speaker BAnd so it is helpful to make sure that you have all of that.
Speaker BSo we left off as we.
Speaker BWe started in chapter in Exodus 21, we started talking a whole thing about slaves.
Speaker BThere seemed to be this issue with people that would have a slave and, and there was a divorce.
Speaker BSome people argue, well, God, God endorses divorce because the slave, it puts himself into slavery, marries someone.
Speaker BWell, when his time is up, of the slavery, he would go out without the wife and children.
Speaker BWe explained all of that.
Speaker BIf you're really interested.
Speaker BWell, then go back and listen.
Speaker BWe talked about what to do if someone's Daughter was given over as a slave, kind of to be a wife, and the guy wasn't happy with her.
Speaker BWhat happens in that circumstance?
Speaker BIf you're curious, go back and listen to the last episodes.
Speaker BNow, what we're covering, we started to look at the issues of a man striking another person.
Speaker BSo you have two people in a fight now.
Speaker BI'm just saying Pastor Dom gets into a fight.
Speaker BHe's a New Yorker.
Speaker BHe's gonna fight dirty.
Speaker BHe's gonna win, because that's how New Yorkers are.
Speaker BRight, Dom?
Speaker AI'm gonna wind up getting stoned, according to you.
Speaker BSo we.
Speaker BBut we talked about the relationship between parents and children.
Speaker BThat's where we left off.
Speaker BAnd so.
Speaker BBut this does play into what we're going to see, the context.
Speaker BIt starts in verse 12.
Speaker BWe won't read there, but it starts in verse 12 where it says if a man strikes another man and.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd it causes death.
Speaker BSo we talked about the different consequences if two people get in a fight and one kills the other or doesn't.
Speaker BWe talked about that.
Speaker BAnd then we talked in, you know, about if.
Speaker BIf there's someone who, who is.
Speaker BStrikes his father or mother or, you know, we.
Speaker BThere was that there.
Speaker BWe talked about if someone kidnaps a man.
Speaker BThis is verse 16.
Speaker BWhether.
Speaker BNow, now this.
Speaker BI. I want to say, because I can't remember now if we mentioned this in that last episode, but did we leave off.
Speaker ADid we leave off on 15 or we leave off on 18?
Speaker AAndrew?
Speaker BI. I think we.
Speaker BWe finished up to 17 because we finished up where if someone curses a father or mother.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo why don't.
Speaker BWhy don't we do this?
Speaker BWhy don't you read at least?
Speaker BLet's read 15.
Speaker BLet's read 15 to 21, if you don't mind.
Speaker BAnd we'll see if we could get down past 21.
Speaker BWe'll see.
Speaker AOkay, 15.
Speaker AAnd again we are in Exodus 21, verse 15.
Speaker AAnd he who strikes his father or his mother shall be put to death.
Speaker AHe who kidnaps a man.
Speaker AThis is verse 16.
Speaker AWhether he sells him or he is found in his hand shall surely be put to death.
Speaker AAnd he who curses his father or his mother shall surely be put to death.
Speaker AAnd if man contend with each other, and one strikes the other with the stone with his fist, and he does not die, but remains in bed.
Speaker AIf he gets up and walks around outside on his staff, then he who struck him shall go unpunished.
Speaker AHe shall only pay for his loss of time.
Speaker AAnd he shall take care of him until he's completely healed.
Speaker AIf a man strikes his male or female slave with a rod and he dies at his hand, he shall surely be punished.
Speaker AVerse 21 will stop there now.
Speaker ABut if it, but if for a day or two he is able to stand, no punishment shall be taken, for he is his property.
Speaker BAll right, so, so what we have is just to recap.
Speaker BWe last picked up where the parent child relationship and that so serious is God to the family relationship.
Speaker BThat verse 15, verse 17, if someone strikes their father or mother, they should be put to death.
Speaker BAnd then, then basis even if they were to curse their father or mother, they should be put to death.
Speaker BAnd we talked about this, Pastor Dom.
Speaker BThat would be a change to our culture, right?
Speaker AEspecially.
Speaker AYeah, especially now when, you know, years ago, it's a shame.
Speaker AI mean, years ago there was.
Speaker AMany years ago there was a lot of respect for parents.
Speaker AAnd today we've lost that today.
Speaker ASo today the criminal court systems would be really packed if this was in, if this was in vogue for today.
Speaker AThat's for sure.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd so in the middle of that, we did mention last episode if a man, someone who kidnapped someone.
Speaker BSo this was the whole issue of the African slave trade.
Speaker BAnd we mentioned this a bit, but worth repeating because so many people get this wrong.
Speaker BSo many people will say, Pastor Dom, that the Bible supports slavery.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BWell, it does.
Speaker BWe, we saw that earlier in this chapter.
Speaker BDifferent kind of slavery than what most people think of slavery.
Speaker BWe'll, we'll touch on that in a bit.
Speaker BBut the, the thing that people do is they make a logical fallacy.
Speaker BThey'll say the Bible supports slavery.
Speaker BTherefore the Bible supported the African slave trade where they kidnapped people and made them slaves.
Speaker BBut verse 16 denies that.
Speaker BIn fact, in the south, when African slave trade was, was going on in America, they actually took that verse out of their Bible so that when they would read the Bible for, for the African slaves, they didn't want them knowing that the Bible condemns the kidnapping of another person.
Speaker AIt's a complete opposite of what happened in this slave trade.
Speaker AI mean it's just a complete opposite.
Speaker BAnd it is because as we're going to see, the Bible doesn't teach that people are property.
Speaker BAnd that's going to be the big difference.
Speaker BAnd that's why if you kidnap somebody, whether he sells them or is found in his hand, he gets put to death.
Speaker BSo kidnapping another person is, is the idea of taking an ownership and that's worthy of death according to the Bible.
Speaker ANot only that, I mean, and even the slaves that Were in the.
Speaker AThat were here working for the master.
Speaker AAfter six years, if they came in there with a wife and a child, they can leave if they wanted.
Speaker BIf.
Speaker AIf the master acquired a wife and child for them, and if they wanted to stay and be married and give themselves to the master, they had that choice.
Speaker ASo there was no.
Speaker AThis is way different than the African slave trade, for sure.
Speaker BThat is correct.
Speaker BAnd so now we pick up in verse 18 for the.
Speaker BFor what we're going to look at here.
Speaker BAnd it says, if.
Speaker BIf men contend with each other and one strikes the other with a stone or his fist, but he does not die, he remains in bed.
Speaker BSo this is the idea.
Speaker BIf you think back to what we said in verse 12, it's two guys that get into fight.
Speaker BOne, you know, if the one dies, he gets put to death.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd then it said in verse 14, if the guy acts, you know, like.
Speaker BBut in verse 13, if it was an accident, he can flee to a city of refuge.
Speaker B14 said if he did it purposely, he was planned as premeditated.
Speaker BHe did it at a deceit, then he dies.
Speaker BSo now Moses is returning to this.
Speaker BAnd now it's two men who are fighting each other, and one strikes the other with a stone or with his fist.
Speaker BSo it's not just a pushing match, you know.
Speaker BYou know, Pastor Dom wants to push me out of the way because he wants to make sure we.
Speaker BHe pays the bill when we go to the restaurant.
Speaker BIt happens.
Speaker BHe's.
Speaker BHe's a violent kind of guy that way, you know, he wants to make sure he.
Speaker BHe gets the rewards in heaven, that guy, you know.
Speaker BAnd so.
Speaker AOh, you got a big text of Jesus.
Speaker AYou see, he's.
Speaker AAndrew's using ISO.
Speaker AJesus using me in the text.
Speaker BWell, I'm isogening what happens when you and I go to restaurants.
Speaker AThat's not.
Speaker BThat's different than, you know, when it comes to Scripture.
Speaker BI'm more careful with Scripture.
Speaker AYou are.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo here you have the situation where he's.
Speaker BMoses is returning to two men getting in a fight.
Speaker BBut he's being more specific now.
Speaker BThey're.
Speaker BThey're contending with each other.
Speaker BBut one is striking with a stone or a fist.
Speaker BSo he means him harm.
Speaker BAnd it says, but he does not die.
Speaker BHe remains in bed.
Speaker BAnd it says in verse 19, if he gets up and walks around outside on his staff, then he who struck him shall go unpunished.
Speaker BOkay, Just pay for the loss of time, and he shall take care of him until he's completely healed.
Speaker BNow, I It's interesting.
Speaker BWhose responsibility is it to take care of him?
Speaker AThe one, the one who, the one who hurt.
Speaker AThe one who hurt him.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo when, when Pastor Dom and I are at that restaurant, he hurts me because I fall over because he was trying to pay the bill.
Speaker BHe's got to take care of me.
Speaker BYou know, it's gonna happen.
Speaker AI gotta pay the bill.
Speaker AI gotta take care of you.
Speaker BBut, but notice the, the thing so the person doesn't die in this case, unlike what we saw earlier.
Speaker BSo Pastor Dom here, as we look at this, the, the guy is able to recover in a few days.
Speaker BTherefore, the idea here is he, he has, he might have been out of work, he lost some time from work, and there's.
Speaker BHe's.
Speaker BThat time has to be replenished to him.
Speaker BSo if in the case of, if it's Pastor Dom and I, and, you know, I, I knock him down and he's, he's out of work for a few days and the church says, well, Pastor Dom, you haven't been, you know, working these three weeks.
Speaker BYou haven't been preaching.
Speaker BWe're not going to pay you for these three weeks.
Speaker BThen I would have to pay Pastor Dom for the three weeks he's.
Speaker BHe's out of pay.
Speaker BYou know, maybe his church, they only pay him, you know, per.
Speaker BThe debt, per day, you know, And I also have the responsibility of taking care of him.
Speaker BSo not only do I have to pay for his time, but I would have to take out of my own time to care for him, to make sure he's healed, which I think, I think.
Speaker BPastor Dom, let me know what you think.
Speaker BBut I think this also means, hey, if there's some medical care, if there's medical expenses, I would have that responsibility to take care of you and pay whatever bills it takes to help you heal.
Speaker BDo you see that?
Speaker BSimilar.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I wonder.
Speaker AI wonder.
Speaker AThe attitude.
Speaker AYou got to wonder.
Speaker AIt's, it's of the attitude of the person that hurt him now has to turn around and kind of befriend him.
Speaker ANot only befriend him, but take care of him.
Speaker AWhich is, which is interesting, right?
Speaker AI mean, so you can, I mean, you can't hold a grudge.
Speaker ANow here you, here you are, the guy that, the guy that you hurt, you're gonna actually take care of.
Speaker ASo it's almost a type of reconciliation, right?
Speaker AThere is some type of reconciliation there, correct.
Speaker BAnd I can't help but to think of a parable that Jesus told that does make me find value.
Speaker BThat parable a little bit more.
Speaker BAnd it's the.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker BWhen Jesus is asked who is his neighbor, and he talks about a parable we know of as the parable, the Good Samaritan.
Speaker BAnd the reason I find it interesting is knowing this is the law.
Speaker BThe.
Speaker BThe robbers are, you know, should have had the.
Speaker BBy law, they should have been taking care of this.
Speaker BThis guy that they robbed, that they beat.
Speaker BAnd here you have the.
Speaker BThe, you know, the Jewish leaders, you know, that are explained as they walk by the Levite and the Pharisees see him and, and they do nothing.
Speaker BBut they knew the law.
Speaker BThey should have did it.
Speaker BBut a Samaritan did what we see here.
Speaker BThe man who striked him should have done.
Speaker BHe takes care of him, says, okay, let me.
Speaker BLet me pay the expenses.
Speaker BYou know, here's some money for any of the.
Speaker BAny for the room, plus any of the medical.
Speaker BI see that as a really.
Speaker BKind of.
Speaker BAs something that really would have hit in the face of the Jewish leaders.
Speaker BBecause keep in mind, the typically typical Jewish men at the age of 13 would have the.
Speaker BThe Torah, the first five books, memorized word for word as part of their bar, what we call bar mitzvah.
Speaker BAnd so they would know this passage.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker ASo some.
Speaker AThat's an interesting parable because I think that the.
Speaker AThe question.
Speaker AAnd you can correct me if I'm wrong, I think the question is.
Speaker AThe wrong question is who is my neighbor?
Speaker AThe right answer is to be a neighbor, right?
Speaker ANot who.
Speaker AOnce you say, who is my neighbor?
Speaker AYou know, I don't mind being neighbors with Andrew because I love him.
Speaker ABut the problem is, what about the guy that you may not love as much as I love Andrew?
Speaker ASo it's not about who is my neighbor, it's being neighbor.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BBecause the reality is that if you.
Speaker BWell, I mean, even Christ said, you know, it's easy to love someone who's, you know, who's a friend, who's lovable, but it's loving your enemy that's.
Speaker BThat's the hard part.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo this is a basic care.
Speaker BThis is now a case where you have.
Speaker BThe two men were fighting.
Speaker BWe first dealt with the fact that one kills the other.
Speaker BHere.
Speaker BThe person doesn't die, but there's restitution that needs to be made.
Speaker ANow, he had to be a neighbor, right.
Speaker ATo the person he armed.
Speaker BYeah, yeah.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BBut in this case, you know, I'm just going to point this out because people talk about restitution nowadays too.
Speaker BYou know, people are talking that there needs to be restitution for people who were.
Speaker BThat are black in America because their, their families, you know, because of the, the slave trade.
Speaker BBut I want you to notice this guy doesn't pay restitution to someone else in, in what Moses says here he had is made to the person he hurt.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNow I will say, Pastor Dom, I'm going to get myself in trouble.
Speaker BI, I do support, you know, the idea of reparations.
Speaker BI do.
Speaker BAnd that surprises you, I'm sure, but I do.
Speaker BI've always said this for years.
Speaker BI think that if we're going to say that blacks should get reparations because of slavery, because of things that their ancestors had to suffer, and that whites should have to pay it because descendants of their.
Speaker BDescendants of slave owners, which my family never was.
Speaker BWe were Russian and Romanian.
Speaker BThere wasn't the African slave trade.
Speaker BBut I really think, Pastor Dom, that if we're gonna be accurate to it, I think that Democrats who were the party that supported slavery were the party of the kkk, the party that fought against the civil rights movement up until they realized, ooh, we can give them welfare and then they'll keep voting for us.
Speaker BThe.
Speaker BThat try to keep blacks enslaved today on welfare.
Speaker BI think Democrats should pay the, the reparations to all the blacks, and then the blacks should turn around and give that money to all of the, the, you know, white Republicans that fought to free them.
Speaker BThat'd be fair, right?
Speaker AYou know, you know, you know, you know, my brother always has to throw a little politics into the game, right?
Speaker BI mean, like, if you're gonna say, hey, it's, it goes.
Speaker BIt doesn't go.
Speaker BGo all the way.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BBut when we look at this though, Pastor Dom, I think that we see that with the Bible is laying out is that there is a responsibility.
Speaker BIf you hurt someone, you have the responsibility to pay for their lost wages, to help with their, their care.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIt's if.
Speaker BNow if the person is.
Speaker BDies, it was different.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BSo the, the contrast here is being somebody who doesn't die.
Speaker BThey get injured, but they can walk away.
Speaker BEven, even if it, it takes a couple days to walk around on a staff.
Speaker BThe idea is he, he recovers.
Speaker BAnd that's going to be a really important thing, especially as we get into verse 22, Pastor Dom, which we're gonna see if we do it in this episode or next.
Speaker BBut we got, we got a treat for folks for that, don't we?
Speaker BFor when we get to verse 22, we got a treat.
Speaker AYeah, I think, I think, I think I Think you, you made a good point on that.
Speaker AYou sent me something.
Speaker AListen to.
Speaker ABut I'll wait for, I'll wait till we get to there.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo as we look at this with up to verse 19, we see it.
Speaker BHe's got the responsibility to care.
Speaker BLook, check out what it says in verse 20, 21.
Speaker BIt man strikes a male or female servant with a rod and he dies at his hand, he will surely be punished.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BBut if for a day or two he is able to stand, no punishment shall be taken to him, for he is his property.
Speaker BNow this one word, property people get into a big issue.
Speaker BIs this the idea of the African slave trade where they would say, this is my property.
Speaker BIn other words, I own this person?
Speaker BWell, the word property in the Greek literally is translated as silver or money.
Speaker BNow as we look at this, Pastor Dom, I'm going to be curious, see what you think.
Speaker BBecause looking at, we just looked at it with the man who has to take care of.
Speaker BIn verses 18 and 19, take care of the person.
Speaker BWe're dealing with a person in verse 20, you have a slave and they die.
Speaker BWhat is the punishment for the.
Speaker BFor the person who kills his own slave,
Speaker Ayou shall be punished.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo what would, what do you think?
Speaker BThe, the, the punishment.
Speaker BIf we look in the context, right.
Speaker BWe've been seeing eye for an eye.
Speaker BYeah, that's the context here.
Speaker BSo if, if the servant was to die, the context would say so does the.
Speaker BSo does the man who strikes his own slave.
Speaker BBecause the contrast we had the man who's contrasted, when we looked at in verse 12, the man who strikes someone and dies contrasted with the case where the person doesn't die.
Speaker BNow, it's not two free men, it's one, a master and his slave.
Speaker BSo if the slave was to die, so does the master, because he dies at the hand of the master or under the master.
Speaker BSo I think now when we look and we see what we saw in verses 18 and 19, that's compared to verses 21, right?
Speaker BIf he can get up after a day or two and able to stand, no punishment shall be given.
Speaker BWell, first off, whose responsibility was the health care for the slave?
Speaker BWe looked at this previously, Pastor Dom, but whose responsibility was that?
Speaker BWho had the responsibility of caring for the health of a slave?
Speaker AThe master.
Speaker BOkay, so in verse, when we saw with the.
Speaker BIn, in verse 20, or sorry, verse 19, you had two guys fighting.
Speaker BThe guy who has to take care of him there is the guy that did the harm, right?
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BOkay, so if the master already has the Responsibility to take care of his health.
Speaker BIs there any reason to reiterate that?
Speaker ANot.
Speaker ANo, it's already.
Speaker AIt was ready in the context.
Speaker BCorrect.
Speaker AReady in the context.
Speaker BYou see, folks, how.
Speaker BPastor Dom, it's.
Speaker BHe's looking at the context because that's what helps us here.
Speaker BThat's why we're working through this whole chapter one verse at a time.
Speaker BSo he already has that responsibility.
Speaker BSo now do you, Pastor Dom, as we look at this, verse 19, verse 21 here, you got a slave who survives, just like the man who survives in verse 19.
Speaker BAnd there's no punishment form.
Speaker BWell, what was, Was there a punishment for the man?
Speaker BYou know, you and I got into an argument.
Speaker BI push you down, we.
Speaker BYou got.
Speaker BYou were able to recover.
Speaker BWas there a punishment?
Speaker BNot according to verse 19.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIt says he.
Speaker BHe who struck him will go unpunished.
Speaker AUnpunished.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BSo, so here the argument that people say, well, this is.
Speaker BThis slavery is property.
Speaker BThe idea.
Speaker BNow, there is one difference here, Pastor Dom.
Speaker BIf you and I got into an argument and you lost out of wages, I had to pay your wages, didn't I?
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BWho pages the wages of the slave?
Speaker BThe master already does that.
Speaker AYeah, the master, he's already paying anyway.
Speaker BYeah, he already has that responsibility.
Speaker BSo there's.
Speaker BSo the thing is, is that the two things that.
Speaker BIf it's two free men that get into an argument that the two things that they.
Speaker BThat the guilty person has to do for the innocent person is already paid by the master.
Speaker BHe already has that responsibility.
Speaker BSo that we.
Speaker BWith that, we see this context of that, if it's a free man or it's a slave, they go away unpunished.
Speaker BI want to point this out, Pastor Don, because you may have heard this argument too.
Speaker BAs people will say, see, it's.
Speaker BIt's proof that it's property because the guy doesn't get punished for harming a slave, but he also doesn't get punished in harming a free person either.
Speaker BIn the same way.
Speaker AYeah, same.
Speaker AYeah, same, same deal.
Speaker AThe context is important.
Speaker BAnd because this word property, actually, it literally means silver or money.
Speaker BWho.
Speaker AActually, the actual word is money.
Speaker AYeah, the literal translation.
Speaker BThat's the literal translation.
Speaker BAnd so who is it that's out of money if the master hurts the slave?
Speaker AThe master.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BYou see, so, so the issue here is they, they say, you know, well, for he is the money.
Speaker BIn other words, he's the one that's producing the money for the master.
Speaker BSo he, he is taking an indirect Punishment because he's.
Speaker BWhen his slave is not working, he's not making the money.
Speaker AAnd I got the literal translation, like you said, only if he remains a day or two days, he is not avenged, for he is his money.
Speaker AOr if he's not able to work, the master is the one that's going to be.
Speaker AIs going to lose out.
Speaker BCorrect.
Speaker BIt's the whole master slave relationship.
Speaker BAnd we, I want to reiterate all that because we did in previous episodes, but it was an employer employee type of relationship.
Speaker BThe, the.
Speaker BThe.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo the, the person, the master makes the money from the workers, but if he hurts a worker and that guy's not working, he's not making the money.
Speaker AHe's the one that's out.
Speaker BYeah, he's out the money.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo you see here that there's this protection that we have for the person who is killed versus the person who's injured.
Speaker BAnd you know, I know I've been doing most of the talking here, Pastor Dom, as you've been looking up the, the literal Bible there.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut, but I think that we can see when we look at the context, we do the comparison in, in the whole text, I think this is an argument against people who try to say, because the word may say property or, or they say that because the guy is, is not facing a punishment because it's a slave, that they try to argue that's proof that the Bible teaches that it's a slave is property.
Speaker AWell, we just proved that that's not the case.
Speaker AReally.
Speaker AI mean, again, looking at context, looking at the original language, those things are important.
Speaker AThat's why the Bible says to study, to show yourself approved.
Speaker AThe watchman.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AI think that's the, the important part.
Speaker AI think a lot of people just read this and they want to, they do want to use Isegesis, basically just make it speak to what they wanted to say.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AAnd the reason I'm following along is because this is important stuff.
Speaker AI think the stuff that we're talking about now, it's important it relates it today.
Speaker AAnd we want to be careful of just misrepresenting what the word of God says.
Speaker ASo I think it's.
Speaker AI think these conversations are important.
Speaker BAnd what other you got people, Andrew,
Speaker Awhen you got people that are just gonna look at the Bible and make it want to say what they think it should say, that's.
Speaker AThat's where we get these issues.
Speaker ASo, you know, I think what Andrews, what we're just trying to do here is to have proper exegesis so we can bring it in rightly to today.
Speaker AAnd I think we've done that.
Speaker AAnd people who disagree, then you need to study and look.
Speaker AAnd sure, Andrew will be up for debate if you want to debate him on this, but with respect, but I think that the scriptures say what they say.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd we'll wrap this part up with this is the fact that if you really want the evidence that the Bible doesn't teach that humans can be owned by other humans, that they could be property is.
Speaker BAnd we don't have time to look into it.
Speaker BBut if you look through the scriptures, if a man law, if a man cattle was to go off to the neighbor, the, the because it went astray, the neighbor does not have to return the cattle.
Speaker BBut if the slave goes astray.
Speaker BSorry, I have that reversed.
Speaker BIf the cattle goes astray, the.
Speaker BThe person has to return the cattle because it's property.
Speaker BBut if the slave goes away, they don't have to be returned.
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BBecause they're not property.
Speaker BAnd also slaves got paid a half day's wage because they were there to make up money that they owed to people.
Speaker BSo with that, I think that'd be a good, a good part to stop for this before we get into the next section that we want to look at.
Speaker BSo with that, maybe we'll give a little word from our sponsors.
Speaker BBecause, Pastor Dom, it's good to have sponsors.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd you love, you love our sponsors.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AEspecially those pillows you love.
Speaker BWell, you love some of the sponsors, I should say.
Speaker BYou, you love the My Pillow sponsor because you like your, your My pillow as much as I do.
Speaker BAnd if you guys get a good, want to get a good night's sleep, you will do the same.
Speaker BYou'll make sure that you get my pillow.
Speaker BSleep is really, really important.
Speaker BI mean, if you guys could take a look at Dom and realize he looks like he's 60, 70, 80 years old.
Speaker BHe's only 30 years old.
Speaker BHe just didn't get sleep when he was younger.
Speaker BAnd that's why he looks so old.
Speaker BThat's why he didn't have a mypillow when he was younger.
Speaker BAnd so now he's got a mypillow and you know, it's, he's doing much better.
Speaker BBut seriously, a good night of sleep is really important.
Speaker BFolks don't, don't really realize.
Speaker BAnd I'm one who, when I was younger, I didn't take my sleep valuable enough.
Speaker BBut it is really important to get a good night's sleep for, for health reasons.
Speaker BIt's when your body is going to rejuvenate.
Speaker BAnd if you have some.
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Speaker BAnd, and it's really difficult.
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Speaker BI could sleep really quickly, but I have slept longer because of my pillow, because that was where I struggled.
Speaker BI didn't.
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Speaker BThey continue sponsoring us.
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Speaker BSo when you help our sponsors, that helps us.
Speaker BOf course, if you really want to help us at Striving for Attorney, just go to striving fraternity.org and you can donate there.
Speaker BThat's the best way.
Speaker BAnd so the, you know, the, the, the sponsors Pastor Dom doesn't like is the cold plunge.
Speaker BHe does not want to get into a nice cold plunge for health.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo, but if he did, I think if he did, he would want to go to strivingforternity.org plunge to get himself a nice cold plunge because that would really help rejuvenate him.
Speaker BI mean, he wouldn't need coffee anymore.
Speaker BYou know, he would have that cold plunge and be awake and alert the whole day.
Speaker BBut he might, he might be more the kind of guy that wants to get himself a sauna.
Speaker BAnd so I got my sauna at Pod Company and you can go to StrivingFraternity.org Pod Pod.
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Speaker BNice.
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Speaker BAnd it's easy to set up.
Speaker BCould even be portable.
Speaker BMaybe I'll take it.
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Speaker BSo those are some of the sponsors that we have at Striving Fraternity.
Speaker BSo if you guys could, you know, reach out to our sponsors, it is a big help.
Speaker BWell, Pastor Dom, as we continue looking through Exodus 21, we.
Speaker BWe do come to a very interesting passage here that kind of deals with some Things that a lot of people are.
Speaker BAre up for debate nowadays.
Speaker BSo as we were continuing our study, and this is a crossover from the Rap Report, I'm Andrew Rapper from the Rap Report, Pastor Dom from Street Talk Theology.
Speaker BPastor Dom, why don't you read verses 22 and 25?
Speaker BAnd we said previously that we have a treat for folks in this episode.
Speaker ASo, Andrew, I'm gonna.
Speaker AI'm gonna.
Speaker ABecause I know this will help in exegeting, is I'm gonna read this from the literal translation, right?
Speaker AFrom the Hebrew.
Speaker AIs that.
Speaker BOkay, you're gonna read.
Speaker BYou're gonna read in Hebrew.
Speaker BI want to hear the.
Speaker BI want to hear you speak Hebrew.
Speaker AI'm gonna read the.
Speaker AI'm gonna read in English the literal translation.
Speaker BOkay, that'll help.
Speaker AI think that'll help when.
Speaker AWhen we speak about this, I'm gonna start a woman song 22.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker AAnd when men strive and have struck a pregnant woman and her children have come out and there is no harm to them, he is certainly fined as the husband of the woman.
Speaker AHe certainly find as the husband of the woman lays on him.
Speaker AAnd he was given through the judges.
Speaker AAnd if there is harm to them, then you have given life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot, burning for burning, wound for womb, stripe for strife.
Speaker AIs that good right there?
Speaker BYeah, I think that's.
Speaker BThat's good.
Speaker BSo if folks have been tracking with us in the past few episodes that we've covered, there's something I think they might have picked up in.
Speaker BWhen you were reading, right.
Speaker BThe idea of whether there was an injury or not.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BWhether a person dies or is injured.
Speaker BAnd I had sent you.
Speaker BYou and I were going to record this, and I. I happened to be listening to another podcast, and I heard someone ask a question.
Speaker BSo Pastor Dom, let me play something from a.
Speaker BFrom.
Speaker BThis is coming from the.
Speaker BFor folks who know who Charlie Kirk is, he would go on college campuses and answer questions, and this was a question he got asked.
Speaker BI'm going to play the first part, and then.
Speaker BThen we will discuss it.
Speaker BAnd then I want to pick up where.
Speaker BWhere Charlie gives an answer.
Speaker BBecause I. I think.
Speaker BI think as we look at the context here, we might be able to give a better answer.
Speaker BSo this is the question that came up from this passage.
Speaker CI want to talk about the debate of abortion.
Speaker CSo I know that it's something very controversial.
Speaker CSome people are pro choice, some people are pro life.
Speaker CBefore I start, I want to make sure that I understand your opinion fully.
Speaker CSo I don't take.
Speaker CYou know what I've heard online, what is your stance on abortion?
Speaker DLife begins at conception.
Speaker COkay, so where do you so conception.
Speaker CSo is that when sperm enters the egg?
Speaker DIs that during, when new DNA is formed?
Speaker COkay, when new DNA is formed.
Speaker CSo the egg by itself you don't think is anything, Sorry, the egg of a woman by itself, do you think it's something.
Speaker DBut it's not a life.
Speaker DCorrect.
Speaker COkay, that's okay.
Speaker CSo my question is, when you talk about abortion and why you think you, why you support it, why you don't support it?
Speaker CSorry, why you don't support it, what do you use as your evidence of.
Speaker CDo you use scientific evidence?
Speaker CDo you talk about the Bible?
Speaker DDo you use both Mainly scientific and self evident reason.
Speaker COkay, so are you someone who's a follower of the Bible?
Speaker DI am, but that's not relevant to this discussion.
Speaker DBut we could talk about it if you'd like.
Speaker CI find it relevant because when I'm going to talk about abortion, there's, there's quotes in the Bible that I think support pro choice in my opinion.
Speaker CBible, Exodus, Exodus 21:22 through 25.
Speaker CWhen men strive together and hit a pregnant woman so that her child come out so miscarriage, but there is no harm to the woman, the one who hit her shall surely be fined as the woman's husband shall impose on him and he shall pay as the judge determined.
Speaker CBut if there is harm to the woman, you shall pay life for life, foot for foot, burn for burn, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.
Speaker CSo I know that that could be interpreted different ways.
Speaker CThe Bible is interpreted in many ways.
Speaker CDifferent, there's different types, different interpretations.
Speaker CBut this says if a person causes a miscarriage through a woman that they will pay for the abortion.
Speaker CSo they, they will pay, another one will punish them.
Speaker BOkay, so as we look at that, Pastor Dom, now I think you and I both agree.
Speaker BWe, we, I would disagree with Charlie Kirk saying not to use the Bible.
Speaker AYeah, you want to use the Bible.
Speaker AWe don't.
Speaker AAnd you know, Andrew, you know, for, for Charlie and you know when you're, sometimes when you're in a position like that and something comes up, you know, sometimes, you know, it's, you know, you're just trying to speak and sometimes, you know, you'll go back and say, well I could have said this or could have said that.
Speaker ASo I, I, but I think, I think you're right, we need to use the Bible for this stuff.
Speaker AYou know what I'm saying?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BThis is the thing is the Bible is our answer for truth.
Speaker BNow he wants to use science.
Speaker BAnd I forget what he first said.
Speaker BBasically, common sense.
Speaker AYeah, science.
Speaker BWell, he said science.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd like natural law, I think he said, but where do you get that natural law?
Speaker BYou get it from the Bible.
Speaker BAnd so I.
Speaker BBut as we look at what she said, I want to replay this because there's.
Speaker BThere's interesting what happens here.
Speaker BThe way she reads.
Speaker BShe is.
Speaker BShe is.
Speaker BIt took me a bit to find out, but she is reading from the English Standard Version, and she adds a word to this.
Speaker BCheck it out.
Speaker CExodus 21, 22, 25.
Speaker CWhen men strive together and hit a pregnant woman so that her child come out.
Speaker CSo miscarriage.
Speaker BDid you hear that?
Speaker BMiscarriage.
Speaker BThat's not in there.
Speaker AYeah, that's not in the text.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BAnd so she added that she's.
Speaker BNow that's her interpretation.
Speaker BBut is that a good interpretation, Pastor Dom?
Speaker BHow about you read that?
Speaker BThe literal again?
Speaker AYeah, the literal.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI'll.
Speaker AI'll go literally on.
Speaker ALet me just.
Speaker AWait one second.
Speaker ALet me get the literal translation on 22, then.
Speaker BMm.
Speaker AAnd when men strive and have struck a pregnant woman and her children have come out and there is no harm to them, he is certainly fined as the husband of the woman lays on him.
Speaker AAnd he has given.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd he has given through the job, through the judges.
Speaker BOkay, so the.
Speaker BThe literal is children come out.
Speaker BThe.
Speaker BThe word there for children means a boy or a youth or a child.
Speaker BAnd the word come out.
Speaker BI know this is going to shock you, Pastor Dom.
Speaker BLiterally means come out.
Speaker AYeah, that's exactly what it means.
Speaker BSo, I mean, as I look at this, Pastor Dom, I.
Speaker BLet's go back to context.
Speaker BIt's something you keep bringing up, right.
Speaker BWhen we look at the context here, the context is saying that you have a case where we saw the context before with the.
Speaker BThe.
Speaker BThe.
Speaker BThe two guys that get into an argument with the slave.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd the whole idea there was whether they live or die.
Speaker AYou know, Andrew, the LSB gives an interesting take on that.
Speaker AAnd I think it's.
Speaker AI think it's.
Speaker AI think it's well said.
Speaker AIt says she gives birth prematurely.
Speaker BCorrect.
Speaker BI like the.
Speaker BI like the LSB here because the legacy Standard ver.
Speaker BBible because of that, because it makes it clear that the child didn't die.
Speaker BYou see, the girl said a miscarriage, and Charlie did call her out on that because she then says, you know, she was then saying the opposite.
Speaker BHe was like, well, you said miscarriage.
Speaker BBut she wants to read into this, that the child died.
Speaker ALet's just say, let's.
Speaker AEven if the child died, it's still not an abortion.
Speaker AI mean, well, you know, it would
Speaker Bbe, it would be murder then, and it would be handled differently.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker AIt would be murder.
Speaker AIt wouldn't be, it would be murder for sure.
Speaker BBecause it says if, if we look at this thing with what we had been seeing yet, if no injury.
Speaker BWell, where do we see that before?
Speaker BWell, we saw that with the two guys that struggle.
Speaker BSame thing.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIn the context we saw with the
Speaker Bmaster and the slave.
Speaker BRight, that, that's the context.
Speaker BThe, the injury is seen in three different examples.
Speaker BSo I think that if we look at this, staying with the contacts, Pastor Dom, we have, we have this case where we have the two people are, are struggling.
Speaker BThey, the woman gets in, in the middle or, you know, she, she gets knocked down somehow.
Speaker BShe's with child and because she struck, she's knocked down.
Speaker BShe gives birth early.
Speaker APrematurely.
Speaker BPrematurely.
Speaker BAnd yet there's no injury.
Speaker BIt says he shall surely, he shall surely be fined as the husband's.
Speaker BThe, the woman's husband set for him and he shall pay what the judge decides.
Speaker ARight, exactly.
Speaker BSo in this case, there's, there's no injury, which we saw in the others.
Speaker BNow we, you know, we looked at that in the case of someone who's two free men fighting, you got to pay for their time that they're out of work.
Speaker BYou got to pay for the health care.
Speaker BBut for the master, he already had to take care of those two things.
Speaker BSo that was already kind of covered.
Speaker BAnd so here you have the case where now the, the husband, if there's no injury, he shall surely be fined as the woman's husband will set for him, and he shall pay as the judge decides.
Speaker BSo in other words, the, in a case where a woman is struck.
Speaker BThis is, this is crazy.
Speaker BIn our day and age, someone strikes a wife.
Speaker BIn the other cases where someone is struck but they recover, there's no injury there.
Speaker BThere wasn't a punishment.
Speaker BBut here, this is something our, our, our culture misses.
Speaker BThe, the Bible has a high view for women.
Speaker BIn the case where the, the woman is struck and there's no injury, unlike the other two times, in this case, the husband gives a punishment.
Speaker BThere is a punishment.
Speaker BIf there's no injury, the husband says, this is what you're going to give me.
Speaker BAnd a judge has to agree.
Speaker ASo let me ask you this, Andrew.
Speaker AThis is, so this is a good point you're bringing up.
Speaker AThis is dealing with.
Speaker AIf she gives Birth prematurely.
Speaker AAnd there's no injury context.
Speaker ASuppose the child would have died.
Speaker BWell, that's verse 23.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker AThere it is.
Speaker ASo words, then.
Speaker AIt's eye for eye, tooth for tooth, right?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo, I mean, you can see by reading, by reading this contextually, it's telling you if the child don't die, then.
Speaker AThen you see what has to be done.
Speaker AThere's no injury, there shall be a fine, as the judge and the husband deems.
Speaker ABut in reading in the context of the child does die, then it's hand for hand, foot for foot, tooth for tooth, then there would be a death penalty.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd most people know the eye for eye, tooth for tooth reference, but they often skip the.
Speaker BWhere it started in verse 23 with life for life.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo the, the contrast here, as you see, if you've been tracking with us through these episodes, you've probably already picked up before we got there because you already saw that this, this whole chapter is talking about the difference in handling of someone who dies versus someone who is injured and recovers.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAgain, it goes back to the, the exegesis of the Bible.
Speaker AJust be.
Speaker AYou already know the context.
Speaker AIt's already telling you that if the child dies or if somebody dies, it's going to be life for life.
Speaker AThis is dealing with the other issue of the child don't die, then there should be some type of restitution and things of that nature.
Speaker AI mean, it's just the context is important.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd the, the reason I think it really is helpful is as we saw in the other examples, there wasn't a punishment for someone who recovers.
Speaker BBut in this case, when you strike a woman and there is no injury.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BShe gives birth premature, but there's no injury.
Speaker BThere is a punishment.
Speaker BAnd this is part of.
Speaker BI think, because the Bible has a high view of how we are to treat women.
Speaker BWe don't do this in our culture today, Pastor Dom, do we?
Speaker ANot at all.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI mean, people.
Speaker BPeople have me.
Speaker BIt used to be in our day, when we were.
Speaker BWhen we were kids, you know, Moses was still running around and, and you know.
Speaker ASpeak for yourself, buddy.
Speaker BWell, you just look like you're.
Speaker BYou're running around in Moses's day.
Speaker BI actually was.
Speaker BI guess so.
Speaker BBut the thing that we see, though, is the fact that we used to have this view that a man should never hurt a woman.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BAnd that really has been different nowadays.
Speaker BI mean, I just watched a video I showed my wife of some guy just on the street.
Speaker BA woman is just Walking, she's, she's not even paying attention.
Speaker BAnd the guy, just as he walks past her, he puts his, his hands together, puts his elbow and just smacks her in the face.
Speaker BAnd he kept walking.
Speaker BHe just wanted to hit her because she was there.
Speaker BYou have the guy who stabbed the Ukrainian woman on the, on the, the train.
Speaker BYou know, all of those things.
Speaker BYou look at this, if you strike the woman, even if there's no injury, there is a penalty, unlike the other cases.
Speaker AThat's a great point.
Speaker AAnd Jesus, Jesus, our Lord and Savior, had a very high view of woman.
Speaker AWho were the first responders in the resurrection.
Speaker AIn those days, women couldn't even testify in a court of law.
Speaker AHere they are testifying to the resurrection.
Speaker BThat's an excellent point, Pastor Dom.
Speaker BYeah, when you say they couldn't, you know, in that culture at that time, they didn't have the same view of women as the Bible had.
Speaker BAnd that's one of the things where people try to say, oh, the Bible puts down women.
Speaker BDoes the Bible put down women, Pastor Dom?
Speaker AThe Bible puts up women.
Speaker AI mean, look at the first responders.
Speaker AYou know, you think about the first responders to the resurrection were women.
Speaker AAnd when a woman couldn't even testify in a court of law, their word would have to be backed up by, by, by, by men.
Speaker AHere Jesus uses women as the first responders, the first witnesses to the resurrection.
Speaker AAnd obviously look at even the, the apostles, when the women went and tell them, hey, we've seen Jesus alive, they had to go check it out because they just, you know, this is the way that, that was that culture.
Speaker ASo Jesus had a very high view of women.
Speaker BYeah, let's.
Speaker AWhat do you tell the apostle John?
Speaker AHe says, thy, he told him that that's your mother and that's your son, so you're going to take care of your mother.
Speaker ASo, yes, I agree.
Speaker BSo as we look at this, I mean, let's, let's go back to what Charlie Kirk, how he responded to this, because we have his response and because I think this would be helpful before we continue on with the rest of the text here.
Speaker DThat is not what this law says.
Speaker DBut let me just ask, are you a Christian?
Speaker CYes.
Speaker DOkay, then continue.
Speaker BSo, no, I, I just want to stop there really quickly.
Speaker BPastor Dom, notice what he said.
Speaker BAre you a Christian?
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BShe says, yes.
Speaker BHe says, continue.
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BBecause she's bringing up the Bible.
Speaker BThis is actually a good thing he did, because what he's saying is, okay, you're, you're a Christian then, then, because when, when I'm on the streets evangelizing Pastor Dom and someone, you know, challenges me and they want to challenge me with the Bible, but they're not a Christian.
Speaker BThey're not taking the Bible serious.
Speaker AYou know, Andrew, when I listen, when I, again, I listened to it this morning because I wanted to be fresh with it.
Speaker AAnd I think, I think if I'm not mistaken, Charlie references something in the New Testament, which he has no idea where it is.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo I, I, that's kind of when she said, and I want to be carefully, I'm not questioning our Christianity, but I think Charlie referenced the Gospel of John or something in the New Testament and she says, no, I've never read that before.
Speaker AAm I right on that?
Speaker BYeah, I didn't, I didn't keep that clip in here, but yes.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd so I was wondering, you know, because it was something that if you were a Christian, you might have known.
Speaker AI think it was from the Gospel of John.
Speaker AAnd I'm not saying we have to go back and look at that, but that was a little puzzling to me when she said she was a Christian and Charlie was quoting the New Testament and she says, well, I never heard of that before.
Speaker ASo that was a little troubling.
Speaker BYeah, it may, it did make me wonder if she was cherry picking things and she wasn't really a Christian.
Speaker BBut, but here's, but I, I like what Charlie said next because he wanted to double down.
Speaker BHe wanted to confirm.
Speaker BShe says she's a Christian.
Speaker BLots of people say they're a Christian.
Speaker BRight, Pastor Dom?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo here's here, listen to how he wants her to answer whether she's a Christian.
Speaker DSo do you believe in the inerrant word of God?
Speaker CYes.
Speaker DOkay, good.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker BSo, right.
Speaker BHe wants, do you believe in the word of God?
Speaker BThe inerrant word of God.
Speaker BWhy?
Speaker BBecause that's what he's now going to appeal to.
Speaker BShe's appealing to the Bible, saying, we've already seen why the Bible didn't teach what she claimed it did.
Speaker BBecause we looked at the context and, and Pastor Dom's right.
Speaker BWhen you're out there and you're being challenged on the street, you don't think of everything.
Speaker BI mean, you know, he's trying to argue from a science perspective.
Speaker BI would have just read the context.
Speaker BThat's what I do when someone brings up the Bible because usually just reading the context gives an answer.
Speaker BBut I think he was good here in making her commit to saying, yes, she believes in the word of God because now he can use the word of God against her.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker BAll right, let's listen.
Speaker CSo it says that as the woman's husband shall impose on him and he shall pay his own.
Speaker CThe judge is determined.
Speaker CSo the judge is determined.
Speaker CAnd it's talking about the husband.
Speaker CSo therefore, it's talking about a person, not God himself, not his judgment.
Speaker CSo it's saying if someone has an abortion, we have the right to choose what to do to them.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker DDidn't you say it was a miscarriage, not an abortion?
Speaker BYou see how he caught that?
Speaker AJust.
Speaker AYeah, he's.
Speaker BHe's good that way.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker CIt says when man strive together and hit a pregnant woman.
Speaker CSo that's causing her to lose the.
Speaker CThe baby.
Speaker CThat's outside cause.
Speaker BOkay, Pastor Dom, did.
Speaker BDid.
Speaker BDid she lose the baby?
Speaker BFrom when we looked at the context,
Speaker Athe baby did not get lost.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BIt was just born early.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BPrematurely or premature.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker COutside cause.
Speaker CTherefore, it could mean abortion.
Speaker CBecause some people find that aggressive abortion is through violence, some such as hitting, because not everyone has access to medical.
Speaker DWas it the intent for them to kill the baby?
Speaker CIt's unclarified, so that I cannot tell you.
Speaker CHowever, what I will say is that it says that it's.
Speaker CThe judges determine, the husband determines.
Speaker CSo God's not making the choice for us what to do with a person who does that to someone's child, does that to their own child.
Speaker CBut it does say that if the woman is harmed, her.
Speaker CHer, herself, not the child, then they are liable, by God, their life for her life, their foot for her foot.
Speaker CSo what I'm saying is, if somebody needs an abortion for health care, let's say a woman's baby's not going to make it, and if the baby stays in her womb, she will die.
Speaker CAnd they refuse her an abortion, they refuse her that health care, and she dies.
Speaker CShould the doctor be liable under God?
Speaker BSo here's what she was trying to get to, is that last bit.
Speaker BShe's trying to say, we'll see if.
Speaker BIf you refuse the woman health care in such a way that the baby dies, then.
Speaker BThen, you know, there's got to be a responsibility here.
Speaker BNow, first off, she said that she didn't know if the intent was to kill the child, which Charlie had asked.
Speaker BBut if we read this again, and if men struggle with each other and strike a woman with child so that she gives birth prematurely, it doesn't seem to be the intent.
Speaker BThey strike the woman.
Speaker BBut who are they struggling?
Speaker BThe two men are struggling, yes.
Speaker BSo her argument, first off, when we look at it, she's saying it's, it's an abortion, but there's nowhere in the context it's an abortion.
Speaker AYou think the two men are fighting over the woman?
Speaker BNo, I, I kind of picture.
Speaker BAnd, and you could see, you could probably picture this, right.
Speaker BIf, if, if you and I are getting into a fight, right.
Speaker BOur wives are going to come there and try to.
Speaker AHey, hey, hey.
Speaker BThey're going to get in the middle because why, because we're not going to strike a woman.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AWell, yeah, so there, that's why, in other words, the, the striking of the woman would probably be something that just happened.
Speaker AMaybe the woman's trying to break up the fight or something like that or whatever.
Speaker BThat's, that's how I, I can picture this very simply being being explained.
Speaker BAnd so her argument missed that it
Speaker Astarts off with two men beefing.
Speaker BCorrect.
Speaker AIt's not like a man hitting a woman or it's.
Speaker AAnd I can see like if, you know, two men are beefing, the wife is trying to, you know, stop a husband or stuff.
Speaker AYeah, that's.
Speaker AAnd again, context is important.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd this is how I see.
Speaker BTo answer this is to walk through, you know, what the text actually says.
Speaker BAnd when we see that, we've seen her argument has fallen apart many ways.
Speaker BOne, because this is dealing nothing with abortion.
Speaker ANothing.
Speaker BAnd if you're going to argue for abortion, well, you're in verse 23.
Speaker BBut if there's any injury, and this doesn't even say death, if there's any injury to who, to the woman, to the child, or both, it doesn't say.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ABut it does say if it's the further injury, if it goes all the way to death, it's life for life.
Speaker BCorrect.
Speaker BSo her argument would be that, oh, well, the judge, the judge is going to decide what, how much has to be paid.
Speaker BBut that's in a person where there's no injury.
Speaker BBut if there is an injury, the you have this phrase, then you shall pay life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot, burn for burn, bruise for bruise, wound for wound.
Speaker BI think what you have here is you have a case where this is the extent of the law.
Speaker BIt doesn't mean that there can't be mercy, but it means you can't go beyond.
Speaker BSo if I steal money from Dom, I take a hundred bucks from him.
Speaker BI don't, you know, he doesn't say, hey, now you got to give me 2,000.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BUnless it's, I held it For a long time.
Speaker BAnd there's interest.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BYou could do reasonable interest.
Speaker BBut the idea is if.
Speaker BIf I got into.
Speaker BWe.
Speaker BPastor Dom and I get into an argument, we get into a struggle, and I knock his tooth out.
Speaker BHe doesn't get to kill me over that.
Speaker BHe could take my truth out.
Speaker BHe takes my tooth.
Speaker AYeah, well.
Speaker AWell, I don't need to take your two.
Speaker AJust get me another one.
Speaker BBut the idea is you can't go beyond.
Speaker BYou can't take my life because I, I took your tooth.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIt's the limit.
Speaker BIt's kind of the upper limit of the punishment.
Speaker BIt.
Speaker BIt doesn't mean there has to be that punishment.
Speaker AAnd it goes.
Speaker AWhat you said before about reparations a little bit.
Speaker AWhen people are going beyond, you know, what, what is.
Speaker AWhat is allowed, you know what I'm saying?
Speaker AI mean, it's like, in other words, if.
Speaker AIf my grandfather was.
Speaker AWas harmed by somebody or something, I can't turn around and say, we'll give it to me, because that, you know, that would go beyond the scope of.
Speaker AYou know what I'm saying, Andrew?
Speaker BSo it's an excellent point.
Speaker BYeah, no, that's an excellent point because of the fact that this is the argument I make when people talk to me about reparations.
Speaker BI ask, why would I have to pay you?
Speaker BIf you're, if someone's black, why do I have to pay you reparations?
Speaker BI. I never owned a slave.
Speaker BMy family didn't own slaves.
Speaker BAnd the person I'm talking to wasn't a slave.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BTheir families might have been, but, you know, my family came over to this country and they struggled and made a living, and I benefited from that.
Speaker BAnd, and for the.
Speaker BThose that are here, they benefited from it.
Speaker BNot, I mean, not that we would want that to be the case that they had that struggle, but they still benefited from it.
Speaker BAnd I think that one of the things, instead of trying to say, oh, well, you know, I should try to get money from others, we should look at this and say, the, as you said, you.
Speaker BYou can't go beyond.
Speaker BYou can't punish.
Speaker BMore.
Speaker BLike, if, If I owned a slave, then, yes, maybe there's reparations, but if I never owned a slave, I shouldn't have to pay the reparations.
Speaker AYeah, this is good.
Speaker AThis is good.
Speaker AJust a good chapter man, I'll tell you.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo I think, and this is a good place we could, we could stop pick up for the next time, because we're going to pick up again with some of the, you know, eye for eye type of it's going to give us some more detail that'll come our way in the next episode.
Speaker AAnd if you have any questions, Andrew, just give them your email.
Speaker ASo if they have any questions, and I'll give them mine just in case.
Speaker BYeah, if you have any, if you have any, you know, things you want to argue, just.
Speaker BPastor Dominic no,
Speaker AI.
Speaker AListen, you can email me and I'll just, I'll just forward them to Andrew.
Speaker BIf you have, if you say, hey, man, I learned a lot from this, then you can email me.
Speaker BJust reach out@AndrewAPReport.org you can get a hold of me there.
Speaker BBut until.
Speaker BUntil next episode, Pastor Dom, that's a wrap.
Speaker AYeah.