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Text -- Exodus 21:1-36 (NET)

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Context
The Decisions
21:1 “These are the decisions that you will set before them:
Hebrew Servants
21:2 “If you buy a Hebrew servant, he is to serve you for six years, but in the seventh year he will go out free without paying anything. 21:3 If he came in by himself he will go out by himself; if he had a wife when he came in, then his wife will go out with him. 21:4 If his master gave him a wife, and she bore sons or daughters, the wife and the children will belong to her master, and he will go out by himself. 21:5 But if the servant should declare, ‘I love my master, my wife, and my children; I will not go out free,’ 21:6 then his master must bring him to the judges, and he will bring him to the door or the doorposts, and his master will pierce his ear with an awl, and he shall serve him forever. 21:7 “If a man sells his daughter as a female servant, she will not go out as the male servants do. 21:8 If she does not please her master, who has designated her for himself, then he must let her be redeemed. He has no right to sell her to a foreign nation, because he has dealt deceitfully with her. 21:9 If he designated her for his son, then he will deal with her according to the customary rights of daughters. 21:10 If he takes another wife, he must not diminish the first one’s food, her clothing, or her marital rights. 21:11 If he does not provide her with these three things, then she will go out free, without paying money.
Personal Injuries
21:12 “Whoever strikes someone so that he dies must surely be put to death. 21:13 But if he does not do it with premeditation, but it happens by accident, then I will appoint for you a place where he may flee. 21:14 But if a man willfully attacks his neighbor to kill him cunningly, you will take him even from my altar that he may die. 21:15 “Whoever strikes his father or his mother must surely be put to death. 21:16 “Whoever kidnaps someone and sells him, or is caught still holding him, must surely be put to death. 21:17 “Whoever treats his father or his mother disgracefully must surely be put to death. 21:18 “If men fight, and one strikes his neighbor with a stone or with his fist and he does not die, but must remain in bed, 21:19 and then if he gets up and walks about outside on his staff, then the one who struck him is innocent, except he must pay for the injured person’s loss of time and see to it that he is fully healed. 21:20 “If a man strikes his male servant or his female servant with a staff so that he or she dies as a result of the blow, he will surely be punished. 21:21 However, if the injured servant survives one or two days, the owner will not be punished, for he has suffered the loss. 21:22 “If men fight and hit a pregnant woman and her child is born prematurely, but there is no serious injury, he will surely be punished in accordance with what the woman’s husband demands of him, and he will pay what the court decides. 21:23 But if there is serious injury, then you will give a life for a life, 21:24 eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot, 21:25 burn for burn, wound for wound, bruise for bruise. 21:26 “If a man strikes the eye of his male servant or his female servant so that he destroys it, he will let the servant go free as compensation for the eye. 21:27 If he knocks out the tooth of his male servant or his female servant, he will let the servant go free as compensation for the tooth.
Laws about Animals
21:28 “If an ox gores a man or a woman so that either dies, then the ox must surely be stoned and its flesh must not be eaten, but the owner of the ox will be acquitted. 21:29 But if the ox had the habit of goring, and its owner was warned, and he did not take the necessary precautions, and then it killed a man or a woman, the ox must be stoned and the man must be put to death. 21:30 If a ransom is set for him, then he must pay the redemption for his life according to whatever amount was set for him. 21:31 If the ox gores a son or a daughter, the owner will be dealt with according to this rule. 21:32 If the ox gores a male servant or a female servant, the owner must pay thirty shekels of silver, and the ox must be stoned. 21:33 “If a man opens a pit or if a man digs a pit and does not cover it, and an ox or a donkey falls into it, 21:34 the owner of the pit must repay the loss. He must give money to its owner, and the dead animal will become his. 21:35 If the ox of one man injures the ox of his neighbor so that it dies, then they will sell the live ox and divide its proceeds, and they will also divide the dead ox. 21:36 Or if it is known that the ox had the habit of goring, and its owner did not take the necessary precautions, he must surely pay ox for ox, and the dead animal will become his.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Hebrew a person descended from Heber; an ancient Jew; a Hebrew speaking Jew,any Jew, but particularly one who spoke the Hebrew language


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Daughter | EXODUS, THE BOOK OF, 3-4 | SABBATICAL YEAR | Israel | EZEKIEL, 2 | BIBLE, THE, IV CANONICITY | PAPYRUS | Book | Revelation | PENTATEUCH, 3 | PENTATEUCH, 2B | Crucifixion | COVENANT, BOOK OF THE | PUNISHMENTS | EXODUS, THE BOOK OF, 2 | LAW OF MOSES | LAW IN THE OLD TESTAMENT | Servant | SLAVE | MURDER | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Exo 21:1 There follows now a series of rulings called “the decisions” or “the judgments” (הַמִּש...

NET Notes: Exo 21:2 The adverb חִנָּם (hinnam) means “gratis, free”; it is related to the verb “to be gracious, show...

NET Notes: Exo 21:3 The phrase says, “if he was the possessor of a wife”; the noun בַּעַל (ba’al) can mean “po...

NET Notes: Exo 21:4 The slave would not have the right or the means to acquire a wife. Thus, the idea of the master’s “giving” him a wife is clear ̵...

NET Notes: Exo 21:5 Or taken as a desiderative imperfect, it would say, “I do not want to go out free.”

NET Notes: Exo 21:6 Or “till his life’s end” (as in the idiom: “serve him for good”).

NET Notes: Exo 21:7 The word אָמָה (’amah) refers to a female servant who would eventually become a concubine or wife; the sale price ...

NET Notes: Exo 21:8 The deceit is in not making her his wife or concubine as the arrangement had stipulated.

NET Notes: Exo 21:9 Or “after the manner of” (KJV, ASV); NRSV “shall deal with her as with a daughter.”

NET Notes: Exo 21:10 See S. Paul, “Exodus 21:10, A Threefold Maintenance Clause,” JNES 28 (1969): 48-53. Paul suggests that the third element listed is not mar...

NET Notes: Exo 21:11 The lessons of slavery and service are designed to bring justice to existing customs in antiquity. The message is: Those in slavery for one reason or ...

NET Notes: Exo 21:12 See A. Phillips, “Another Look at Murder,” JJS 28 (1977): 105-26.

NET Notes: Exo 21:13 Heb “and God brought into his hand.” The death is unintended, its circumstances outside human control.

NET Notes: Exo 21:14 The word עָרְמָה (’ormah) is problematic. It could mean with prior intent, which would be connected wi...

NET Notes: Exo 21:15 This is the same construction that was used in v. 12, but here there is no mention of the parents’ death. This attack, then, does not lead to th...

NET Notes: Exo 21:16 Literally “and he is found in his hand” (KJV and ASV both similar), being not yet sold.

NET Notes: Exo 21:17 The form is a Piel participle from קָלַל (qalal), meaning in Qal “be light,” in Piel “treat lightly, c...

NET Notes: Exo 21:18 Heb “falls to bed.”

NET Notes: Exo 21:19 The word appears to be the infinitive from the verb “to sit” with a meaning of “his sitting down”; some suggest it is from the...

NET Notes: Exo 21:20 Heb “will be avenged” (how is not specified).

NET Notes: Exo 21:21 This last clause is a free paraphrase of the Hebrew, “for he is his money” (so KJV, ASV); NASB “his property.” It seems that i...

NET Notes: Exo 21:22 The word בִּפְלִלִים (biflilim) means “with arbitrators.” The point then...

NET Notes: Exo 21:25 The text now introduces the Lex Talionis with cases that were not likely to have applied to the situation of the pregnant woman. See K. Luke, “E...

NET Notes: Exo 21:26 Interestingly, the verb used here for “let him go” is the same verb throughout the first part of the book for “release” of the...

NET Notes: Exo 21:27 Heb “him”; the referent (the male or female servant) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

NET Notes: Exo 21:28 The text uses סָקוֹל יִסָּקֵל (saqol yissaqel), a Qal infinitive a...

NET Notes: Exo 21:29 Heb “he was not keeping it” or perhaps guarding or watching it (referring to the ox).

NET Notes: Exo 21:30 The family of the victim would set the amount for the ransom of the man guilty of criminal neglect. This practice was common in the ancient world, rar...

NET Notes: Exo 21:31 Heb “according to this judgment it shall be done to him.”

NET Notes: Exo 21:32 See further B. S. Jackson, “The Goring Ox Again [Ex. 21,28-36],” JJP 18 (1974): 55-94.

NET Notes: Exo 21:34 Here the term “animal” has been supplied.

NET Notes: Exo 21:35 Heb “divide the dead.” The noun “ox” has been supplied.

NET Notes: Exo 21:36 The point of this section (21:28-36) seems to be that one must ensure the safety of others by controlling one’s property and possessions. This s...

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