David and Batsheva/2
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David and Batsheva
Exegetical Approaches
Guilty of Adultery and Murder
David sinned egregiously, committing both adultery and murder.
"וַיִּשְׁלַח דָּוִד וַיִּדְרֹשׁ לָאִשָּׁה"
Batsheva's role
וַיֹּאמֶר דָּוִד לְאוּרִיָּה רֵד לְבֵיתְךָ
וַאדֹנִי יוֹאָב
Natan's parable
Punishment
חָטָאתִי לַי"י
רַק בִּדְבַר אוּרִיָּה הַחִתִּי
How can David stay married to Batsheva?
Why did he merit dynastic rule?
Not Guilty of Adultery or Murder
Bavli Shabbat, Rid, R. Yaakov Fidanque, Malbim,
Sources:Though David's actions deserved a measure of censure, he did not violate the Biblical prohibitions of adultery or murder.
Batsheva was not legally married – This position asserts that David did not commit adultery since Batsheva did not have marital status when he slept with her. There are two variations of this idea:
- Divorced – According to R. Yonatan in the Bavli and the rest of these sources, in David's era anyone who went to battle divorced their wives so as to prevent them from becoming a "chained woman" (עגונה) if the soldier were not to return from war.1 The sources disagree regarding the nature of the divorce:
- Full divorce – According to R. Tam and R. Yaakov Fidanque, marriages were fully dissolved as soon as the husband left to war. If so, when David approached Batsheva she was no longer a married woman and there was no possible issue of adultery. The sin lay in the fact that David knew that the divorce was given only for technical reasons and that under other circumstances the couple would have stayed married.
- Conditional – According to Rashi and the Rid, in contrast, the divorces were conditional on the husband not returning home. As such, when David slept with Batsheva her status was unknown, and it was only after Uriah's death that she was retroactively considered divorced. This understanding absolves David of technical guilt, but leaves his actions as still very problematic from a moral perspective.
- Illegitimate marriage – Alternatively, this approach could posit that Uriah was not Jewish as his epithet "the Hittite" implies. If so, Batsheva was never legally married to him and in taking her David was not committing adultery.
"וַיִּשְׁלַח דָּוִד וַיִּדְרֹשׁ לָאִשָּׁה" – Malbim suggests that the phrase "וַיִּדְרֹשׁ לָאִשָּׁה" means that David was seeking to know not the identity of Batsheva, but her marital status (whether she was someone who had been given a divorce from her husband).
"וַיֹּאמֶר דָּוִד לְאוּרִיָּה רֵד לְבֵיתְךָ" – This approach must explain why David deemed it necessary that Uriah sleep with his wife. If Batsheva had no married status, then David should not have felt the need to cover anything up. If her status was in doubt due to the conditional nature of the divorce, then would not inviting Uriah to sleep with his wife ensure that she was in fact married retroactively?2
Rebuke via parable – The Rid suggests that Natan's use of a parable to rebuke David supports this position. If the sin was one of adultery, Natan would have simply accused the king of sleeping with another's wife. The method chosen proves that the crime was not self-evident.3
"וַיִּקַּח אֶת כִּבְשַׂת הָאִישׁ הָרָאשׁ" – Natan's parable does not contain a direct parallel to the sin of adultery, focusing instead on the taking advantage of a poor man by taking his lamb. R. Medan points to this as further evidence that David's sin lay in taking advantage of another, rather than in sleeping with a married woman.
How can David stay married to Batsheva? This question is one of the main motivations behind this position's reading of the story. Had David committed adultery, Batsheva should have been prohibited to him. It would be illogical for him to repent while staying married to her. Moreover, it would mean that Shelomo, the next king, was illegitimate.
Uriah's death – These sources absolve David of guilt in Uriah's death in various ways:
- Rebellious – According to the Bavli, Uriah was considered a rebel against the king due to his referring to Yoav as "my master"
- Legitimate war casualty
- No messenger for transgressions
Guilty of Murder but not Adultery
Ralbag