Monday, June 7, 2021

Marrying Within the Tribe - A Precedent for Verse Reinterpretation?

The plan was to discuss next whether or not it is halachically possible to have an act be permissible in one context and prohibited in another. I will get to that discussion. However, a reader of this blog, Rafi Ganz, sent me a copy of his article on the topic of marrying within the tribe. I owe him a great debt of gratitude for bringing these sources to my attention. Please check out his blog where he recently posted his thoughts, which I draw upon extensively in this post. 

In the previous post I described in detail what I am trying to accomplish. I explored two potential precedents for reinterpreting a verse and changing the accepted Halacha. The prohibition against marrying a Moabite, and the exclusion of gentiles from many categories in Halacha.

My conclusion was, that if the appropriate criteria are met (as I described in detail), a verse can be reinterpreted even when it has practical Halachic ramifications and remain within the accepted boundaries of Orthodoxy. Thanks to Rafi, I now have a third precedent.

Tribal Intermarriage

In the story of the daughters of Zelaphechad, the law is established granting women the right to inherit property if there are no male siblings. A faction of the members of the Tribe of Menashe were concerned that their tribe could potentially lose property to another tribe should such a woman marry a male member of another tribe.  In response to their concern, Moshe instructed: