Why Erdogan Sat Out the Iran War
A four-century-old peace treaty still holds.
May 29, 2026
A perspective from the Code of Hammurabi.
This week’s Torah reading of Naso contains what might be the Pentateuch’s most discomfiting passage for moderns: the ordeal of the woman suspected of adultery. As Numbers 5:11–31 explains, if “the spirit of jealousy come upon” a husband, he can take his wife to the Temple, where the priest performs an elaborate ritual. If innocent, the ritual results in her pregnancy; if not, in a terrible illness. While similarities between biblical passages and other ancient Middle Eastern texts are often enlightening, it is often the differences that tell more.
A four-century-old peace treaty still holds.
Clan loyalties outweigh partisanship.
The message: Jews don’t belong.
The dangers of the new idolatry.
A perspective from the Code of Hammurabi.
This week’s Torah reading of Naso contains what might be the Pentateuch’s most discomfiting passage for moderns: the ordeal of the woman suspected of adultery. As Numbers 5:11–31 explains, if “the spirit of jealousy come upon” a husband, he can take his wife to the Temple, where the priest performs an elaborate ritual. If innocent, the ritual results in her pregnancy; if not, in a terrible illness. While similarities between biblical passages and other ancient Middle Eastern texts are often enlightening, it is often the differences that tell more.
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