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3 - The sources of impurity: menstruation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 November 2009

Hyam Maccoby
Affiliation:
University of Leeds
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Summary

The bodily discharges that cause serious impurity are menstruation, childbirth, and ‘running issues’ from either male or female (i.e., abnormal discharge of semen, in the case of the male, and abnormal uterine bleeding, in the case of the female). Another discharge that causes less serious impurity is normal discharge of semen, whether by involuntary nocturnal emission, or by voluntary sexual activity.

How do these discharges relate to the greatest source of impurity, the human corpse? Is there a common theme here? Jacob Milgrom argues that there is.

Moreover, in the Israelite mind, blood was the archsymbol of life … Its oozing from the body was no longer the work of demons, but it was certainly the sign of death. In particular, the loss of seed in vaginal blood … was associated with the loss of life. Thus it was that Israel – alone among the peoples – restricted impurity solely to those physical conditions involving the loss of vaginal blood and semen, the forces of life, and to scale disease, which visually manifested the approach of death … All other bodily issues and excrescences were not tabooed, despite their impure status among Israel's contemporaries, such as cut hair or nails in Persia and India and the newborn child as well as its mother in Greece and Egypt. Human feces were also not declared impure (despite Deut. 23:12; Ezek. 4:12). Why, wonders Dillman, does not the Bible label human feces impure, as do the Indians (Manu 5.138ff), Persians (Vend. 17.11ff) and Essenes (Jos. War 2.8,9; cf 11QT46:15)? The answer is clear. […]

Type
Chapter
Information
Ritual and Morality
The Ritual Purity System and its Place in Judaism
, pp. 30 - 46
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1999

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