One of the difficulties of the current modern age is the application of contemporary perspectives to that of, say, biblical times.
For instance, Torah detractors grumble about a number of incidents that, by today's sentiments, are brutal and sexist.
We have a lot of mass murder at the hands of the shoftim and melachim. Dovid, our paragon of divine servitude, was up to his eyeballs in blood. Women don't seem to get a fair shake either (Pilegesh b'Givah? Shiver).
While reading a book review of a novel retelling The Iliad from the female perspective, the reviewer, Geraldine Brooks (a favorite of mine) notes:
Henry James famously warned historical novelists never to go back more than 50 years beyond their own era, since “the old consciousness” would surely elude them.
Brooks herself writes of historical characters, and she does say she does not concur with his opinion.
There are a rare few who can go back and see, but the rest of us have limited imaginations, I think.
Feminists often cite the Bible or Jewish law as being sexist. Yet that is their misapplication of modern sensibilities. The world, in general, was crueler—to everyone.
In another fifty years, society will probably view us as being more brutal and sexist as they are. I'm not saying everything was awesome millennia ago, but it was different. It is not fair to see their norms through our eyes, for they knew things that we don't anymore.
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