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3. He also ordered that
those whose bodies were afflicted with leprosy, and that had a gonorrhea,
should not come into the city; (24)
nay, he removed the women, when they had their natural purgations, till the
seventh day; after which he looked on them as pure, and permitted them to come
in again. The law permits those also who have taken care of funerals to come in
after the same manner, when this number of days is over; but if any continued
longer than that number of days in a state of pollution, the law appointed the
offering two lambs for a sacrifice; the one of which they are to purge by fire,
and for the other, the priests take it for themselves. In the same manner do
those sacrifice who have had the gonorrhea. But he that sheds his seed in his
sleep, if he go down into cold water, has the same privilege with those that
have lawfully accompanied with their wives. And for the lepers, he suffered
them not to come into the city at all, nor to live with any others, as if they
were in effect dead persons; but if any one had obtained by prayer to God, the
recovery from that distemper, and had gained a healthful complexion again, such
a one returned thanks to God, with several sorts of sacrifices; concerning
which we will speak hereafter. 4. Whence one cannot
but smile at those who say that Moses was himself afflicted with the leprosy
when he fled out of Egypt, and that he became the conductor of those who on
that account left that country, and led them into the land of Canaan; for had
this been true, Moses would not have made these laws to his own dishonor, which
indeed it was more likely he would have opposed, if others had endeavored to
introduce them; and this the rather, because there are lepers in many nations,
who yet are in honor, and not only free from reproach and avoidance, but who
have been great captains of armies, and been intrusted with high offices in the
commonwealth, and have had the privilege of entering into holy places and
temples; so that nothing hindered, but if either Moses himself, or the
multitude that was with him, had been liable to such a misfortune in the color
of his skin, he might have made laws about them for their credit and advantage,
and have laid no manner of difficulty upon them. Accordingly, it is a plain
case, that it is out of violent prejudice only that they report these things
about us. But Moses was pure from any such distemper, and lived with countrymen
who were pure of it also, and thence made the laws which concerned others that
had the distemper. He did this for the honor of God. But as to these matters,
let every one consider them after what manner he pleases.
5. As to the women,
when they have born a child, Moses forbade them to come into the temple, or
touch the sacrifices, before forty days were over, supposing it to be a boy;
but if she hath born a girl, the law is that she cannot be admitted before
twice that number of days be over. And when after the before-mentioned time
appointed for them, they perform their sacrifices, the priests distribute them
before God.
6. But if any one
suspect that his wife has been guilty of adultery, he was to bring a tenth deal
of barley flour; they then cast one handful to God and gave the rest of it to
the priests for food. One of the priests set the woman at the gates that are
turned towards the temple, and took the veil from her head, and wrote the name
of God on parchment, and enjoined her to swear that she had not at all injured
her husband; and to wish that, if she had violated her chastity, her right
thigh might be put out of joint; that her belly might swell; and that she might
die thus: but that if her husband, by the violence of his affection, and of the
jealousy which arose from it, had been rashly moved to this suspicion, that she
might bear a male child in the tenth month.
Now when these oaths were
over, the priest wiped the name of God out of the parchment, and wrung the
water into a vial. He also took some dust out of the temple, if any happened to
be there, and put a little of it into the vial, and gave it her to drink;
whereupon the woman, if she were unjustly accused, conceived with child, and
brought it to perfection in her womb: but if she had broken her faith of
wedlock to her husband, and had sworn falsely before God, she died in a
reproachful manner; her thigh fell off from her, and her belly swelled with a
dropsy. And these are the ceremonies about sacrifices, and about the
purifications thereto belonging, which Moses provided for his countrymen. He
also prescribed the following laws to them:
Footnotes
(24) We may here note, that Josephus frequently calls the
camp the city, and the court of the Mosaic tabernacle a temple, and the
tabernacle itself a holy house, with allusion to the latter city, temple, and
holy house, which he knew so well long afterwards.
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