We all see things on Greece and Rome all the time. The pop history version(from Christians and Hollywood) would have you think that non-Jewish/Christian society was a big free-love clusterfuck. I am tired of seeing this ignorance.
So to shine a light on the issue, I figured why not go over the Biblical and historical Christian mores, just a bit. Many people mistake modern Western mores for being "traditional" or "Christian". This is not the case. The mores of even the 19th century would shock many today.
Take this example. A 12 year old noble girl marries a 26 year old knight, only for her parents to have her marry some other guy a year later. Then the first husband comes back and it causes a problem. The problem back then was which marriage was valid.
No one blinked at Richard I marrying his 11 year old sister to the king of Sicily. Nor did anyone care about Louis XV's 14 or 15 year old concubine in 1700's. Despite this, I don't see anyone condemning Western Christian society. Must think 50's sitcoms were the social norm then.
And despite the fact that the Catholic church licensed prostitutes, and cardinals, bishops, and Popes having their concubines, courtesans, castrati, and young men(cough), I don't see them painted as being decadent(to put it mildly) in the popular view. Or by our modern trads.
The Bible does not give a minimum age for marriage. Jewish law sets it at 12 but that was the invention of the rabbis, who as we know, added all those mean old burdens to the pure "law of god". It was 12 in Catholic law, though this was flexible. In England it was 10 at one point
Here are some samples from good old canon law to make the point. The mores then would have been about as alien as those of the ancient world often are today. Many will tend to treat the Romans(for example) like foreigners, as opposed to these medieval Christians.
Here is a link to a canon law(church rules) collection on the topic of marriage. It also says that improper or excessive(too much or too enjoyable) sex with one's own wife is also sinful. Just to underline the priorities and type of thinking here.
Here is another example. The only problem with this was that a marriage was already contracted with her older sister. And these canon law codes were strict(in theory) about enforcing who could marry who. Marriage barred possible marriage with any relatives of the spouse.
Contrary to what they will tell you, the Torah was used as a source for canon law. Though it was mitigated by local custom and often old Roman law as well. It would be strange that a group supposedly having nothing to do with the thing would cite the Torah all the time.
This here is "why incest and other forbidden marriages were acceptable in the Bible, but not now." It reminds me very much of rabbinical writings, in particular the argument about how expanding connections and roles. These same people complained about Zeus and Hera marrying.
We see here the Biblical laws on taking captured women as wives or concubines. Not unusual in the ancient world, or in the middle ages for that matter.
We see here in the Life of Boniface that Christians took captives from the pagan Frisians, much like in the Biblical laws. This action was glorious, since it was done by Christians. Nothing like those barbarians over in that other direction.
Here, the Bible says that you may sell your daughter into slavery and concubinage. Consent(nominal anyway) to a marriage is mentioned quite a bit in canon law. However, that is an addition from later times and Roman law. Consent or permission is not required in the Bible.
Rape as such is not a big deal in the Bible for the reasons people think of today. It is an offense against a father or betrothed, and only merits severe punishment in the case of a married or betrothed female. Otherwise, it would be a way to force a marriage.
David's concubines were made to have public sex with his son Absalom, it was part of the David's punishment from Yahweh that this would happen. David later responds by confining the concubines for life.
Abraham and Jacob both had concubines, of their own and given by their wives. The Levite from Judges 19 sent out his concubine to be raped and killed, and comes out in the morning, telling her to get a move on. Then finds she is dead. Not much concern there.
Christian books admit that concubinage is itself not sinful because the patriarchs and prophets would have sinned, and Yahweh would have, otherwise. But the church limited it, because Romanized mores made monogamy the norm. In other words, a special standard for the chosen people
These are posts from this site, in response to someone criticizing Biblical mass killings and baby slaughter. I think they help make my point.
If my intent is not clear enough, think about this, and then think about how Christians often paint the Greeks and Romans.
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It's surface level accurate. Christianity did spawn liberalism, egalitarianism, feminism. It also indirectly made communism. The western assumption ultimately is that class is determined purely by how much money you have. This has been the case since the bourgeois rose in power.
It's horrifying to most that you can't simply buy status as a brahmin. A problem this leads to though, is that society needs those roles we deem lesser or menial. Instead of telling people those roles are divinely ordained, in western society they are considered your failure.
Especially true in America where there's a lingering idea that everyone can be a rich manager or stock player. Ignore all the work that needs done, we can import Mexicans for that.
It sounds like something later Christians backdated to justify their gentile focus. The fact that we see remains of an early conflict over gentile converts and Jewish law tells me that the founders didn't teach ditching the Torah and Jewish custom, and didn't focus on gentiles
If Jesus or whoever had went around preaching this clearly we wouldn't have seen a problem with it early on.
The epistle of James is a point for point attack on Pauline ideas. We later see attempts to have it both ways
The centurion story is probably an addition to make it look like the movement was always accepting of gentiles. But then, Jesus also called a gentile woman a dog and ignored her requests for an exorcism in another example
Before the 2nd Punic War there were no marble temples or villas in Rome. In the 180s bce the first marble temple was dedicated. It wasn't until decades later the first citizen built a like mansion. The temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus was a wooden structure until...
...the 80s bce. To put this on a timeline, Julius Caesar was a young man by then and this was the most important religious site in Rome. Greek style statuary came in around the same time frame, and until then most temples had clay or wood images of the gods.
Roman society in general was devoid of most arts like theater, poetry, and sculpture. No literature, they had writing but didn't write things for entertainment. The first theater ever built in Rome was after 200 bce, and the Senate had it demolished as a threat to morality.
Greek influence did far far more than the Jews at this point.
They wouldn't have considered sex to be degeneracy. Before early modernity or so, there wasn't much sense of privacy. People in medieval towns would walk naked to go bathe
People shared beds with other people, strangers or family depending on the situation. People would have sex and use the bathroom in front of other people. This only started to change 300 years ago, a bit earlier in some places. Among the wealthier first, who could afford it.
Medieval courts of say, the 11th century had dogs running around and men fighting duels to the death. 17th century palaces like Versailles had courtiers and servants alike shitting out in the open
The new testament is full of gnosticism and often looks like something gnostic that later got edited by mora rabbinic leaning Jews. Paul's epistles go back and forth with numerous contractions even within the same text because of this editing.
For example he says eating meat sacrificed to idols is okay and can't hurt you...then goes on to say absolutely don't do it or God may kill you. You had an editor trying to make it more rabbinic. Paul also calls the Torah a ministry of death graven in stone...
...and denies that God gave the Torah(he says angels gave it to Moses, in line with gnosticism) and certainly doesn't have Jesus as the source of the law.
But then we get the editor again trying to dial all this back.
I've seen this so many times from various angles. Starting in high school where I beat the fuck out of a guy and his gf was hitting on me a day later. I was disgusted at the time. Something about her complete lack of loyalty. I figured she'd feel bad about it all. Nope.
Even at my most cold and violent I always did understand basic loyalty. I wouldn't turn on my bro or my gf like that, I guess I thought back then women were similar to to that. She says she loves the guy, surely that counts for at least as much as it would for me.
You might tell me that it's just a phase. No, I've seen the pattern recur. In college a guy lost his gf of several years because he got punched in a drunken fight at a house party. Laid out in front of her, left him 3 days later.