This is the sort of
story that could easily be made into a film.
There is love (well, passion at any rate), pride, sex, deceit, betrayal,
lies, violence, greed, murder - all the hallmarks of what apparently describes
a good film or makes for excellent newspaper headlines in the tabloids.
Dinah is raped and
Jacob's sons, especially Simeon and Levi, are really upset about this,
understandably. They feel that their
sister has been defiled and that because they have been set aside by God, they
are special, holy, a cut above the others, better than the townspeople of
Shechem. So they trick the men of
Shechem into getting circumcised - the thought of getting their hands on the
flocks and herds of Jacob and his sons persuades the townsmen to undergo this
painful procedure. Then when they are
still recovering, Simeon and Levi walk into town and kill all the men. The rest of the brothers then follow on,
taking the little children and wives captive, looting and plundering everything
they could lay their hands on. Jacob is
appalled, saying that his name would now be mud and all the inhabitants of the
land would join together to destroy him and his household.
It’s a case of two
wrongs do not make a right. Repaying
evil with evil is not the right thing to do.
How can theft and murder be the right response to rape? Yes, it is easy to sit here and take the
moral high ground, and if I had a sister , or if it had been my daughter, I may
well think differently. For instance, Christians in Pakistan are 2.5% of the
population. Women believers there are
often raped, young girls and women may be kidnapped and forcibly converted to
Islam and then married to a much older man.
If Christian women work as servants in a rich Muslim's house, they are
treated like dirt and often beaten, maltreated, raped. Many are raped and then thrown onto the
streets where they have no choice but to turn to prostitution. I was reading only last week of a pregnant
mother who was brutally beaten up as a warning to the family to stop trying to
get the police to prosecute the rapists of their 12 year old niece. The mother (who was five months pregnant)
ended up losing the baby. The family are
Christians, and the rapists are Muslims.
It is truly
heartbreaking to hear of God's people being treated this way, His sons and
daughters being persecuted and I just sit here warm and cosy in my nice house,
in front of my computer when their faith, their lack of hatred against their
oppressors, their warmth, their courage, their smiles in the face of
persecution, puts me to shame.
And what about
Dinah? She is mentioned only briefly in
the bible, firstly to tell us she has been born (Genesis 30:21) and then here
where she is raped, given to Shechem and then nothing more is heard of her. Imagine her reaction when after being raped
her own brothers agree to give her in marriage to the man who attacked her! She
is actually being kept in Shechem's house when the men of the town are killed,
and her brothers then take her back to the camp. And Jacob?
He is more concerned about what will happen to him and his household
than about what has happened to Dinah.
Evil
is never the right response. The
consequences of this action followed Simeon and Levi and their descendants
ended up losing that part of the Promised Land that they had been given. We are told to keep the peace as far as
possible though (1 Peter
3:11 Let him eschew evil,
and do good; let him seek peace, and ensue it - KJV) and whilst this doesn't mean being a doormat and
letting others attack us without taking any steps to defend ourselves, it
certainly doesn't mean taking revenge in such a brutal and deceitful way.
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