But,
back to the Bible. We left off with the genital mutilation of the Abraham
household, and we’re about to jump into the story of Lot and the destruction of
Sodom and Gomorrah. This starts with an interlude in which God and a couple
angels show up at Abraham’s tent to promise him once again that Sarah will bear
him a son and he’ll have buttloads of descendants who get to have other
people’s land given to them. Literally this chapter starts with God showing up
to make the exact same promise he made at the end of the previous chapter (and
about twelve times in previous chapters as well). The repetition is getting
pretty mind-numbing. We get it: Abraham will have many descendants, and they
get free land at other people’s expense. It’s as if the authors are hoping that
if they keep drumming it into your head over and over, it’ll numb you into
accepting that the atrocities that show up later in fulfilling the promise are
justified.
So after
the latest iteration of the same old promise, the angels get up and leave on
their way to Sodom. God explains to Abraham that they’re going to see if the
place is as bad as he’d heard (he doesn’t know?), and if it is then they’re
going to destroy it. What follows is a portion of the story that I don’t recall
ever being covered in my Sunday school.
Abraham
starts negotiating with God. Starting out with kissing the divine ass a bit, he
then suggests that such a great and wonderful god wouldn’t destroy a city if
there were 50 righteous people there. And God agrees that OK, if there are 50,
then he won’t destroy the city. And it goes on…
“Gen
18:27 “Abraham answered and said ‘Behold, I have undertaken to speak to the
Lord, I who am but dust and ashes. 28 Suppose five of the fifty righteous are
lacking. Will you destroy the whole city for lack of five?’ And [God] said, ‘I
will not destroy it if I find forty-five there.’”
So this
goes on, with Abraham mixing self-abasement and flattery, until he has talked
God down to sparing the city for 10 righteous people. Just a funny little aside
since it seems to have no effect on the course of the story – at no point does anything in the ensuing narrative even imply an attempt to find these ten righteous men. I wonder if it
was thrown in there just to be humorous.
Moving
on to the portion of the story we’re mostly familiar with, we rejoin the
angels, disguised as men, as they arrive at Sodom and are greeted by Lot. He
immediately offers them shelter in his home, convincing them to abandon their
plan to spend the night in the town square. Before too long, every single man
in the city shows up, demanding that Lot send his guests out so they can have
sex with them (I have to wonder… is the image of roving rape mobs the one
fundamentalists have in their heads whenever they think of gay men?). Lot
heroically steps out of the house, and gives a courageous speech standing up
for everyone in his household.
OK, that
last part was a lie. This is what Lot actually said to the crowd.
“Gen.
19:6 Lot went out to the men at the entrance, shut the door after him, 7 and
said ‘I beg you, my brothers, do not act so wickedly. 8 Behold, I have two
daughters who have not known any man. Let me bring them out to you, and do to
them as you please. Only do nothing to these men, for they have come under the
shelter of my roof.’”
Now, I
have a daughter. Just thinking of her being raped makes me so angry I break out
in a sweat. But this guy… this guy offers up both of his virgin daughters to be
gang raped by a mob. And at this point the mob hadn’t even threatened him yet.
He hadn’t tried to reason with them or anything, with this option being tossed
out as the last ditch effort. No… “Rape my daughters, please,” was his go-to
move.
Now,
given Uncle Abraham’s willingness to pimp his own wife out to save his own ass,
and the general contempt the Bible displays for all things female, perhaps this
attitude (as nauseating as it is) shouldn’t be all that surprising. But you
find out a few verses later that these girls are also betrothed to be married,
and their fiancés are asleep in the house blissfully unaware of their would-be
father in law’s efforts to get their intended wives gang-raped. So I’m pretty
sure that even by Biblical standards this Lot guy is a complete tool.
But the
men of Sodom want nothing to do with raping girls when there are strange men
around they can rape instead, and now the threats start flying. So the angels
drag Lot back into the house and blind everyone in the mob. When Lot seems
unwilling to flee the city, the angels drag him and his family away (except for
the girls’ fiancés, who think the impending destruction of the city is just a
joke).
Once
they’re out of the city the angels tell them to flee and not look back. Lot’s
(nameless) wife looks back, and is turned into a pillar of salt. Because that
makes sense.
Now we
get to another part of the Lot story that doesn’t come up much in Sunday
school. Afraid to stay in a nearby city, he takes his daughters up into the
hills to live in a cave. After awhile, the girls start to despair of ever
finding a man to give them babies. So they hatch a plan:
“Gen
19:31 And the firstborn said to the younger ‘Our father is old, and there is
not a man on earth to come in to us after the manner of all the earth. 32 Come,
let us make our father drink wine, and we will lie with him, that we may
preserve offspring from our father.’ 33 So they made their father drink wine
that night. And the firstborn went in and lay with her father. He did not know
when she lay down or when she arose.”
The next
night they got him drunk again, and the younger daughter repeated the process.
Both women got pregnant, and the Moabites and Ammonites were descended from
those incest babies.
Now…
whoever wrote this passage may not be familiar with a little concept
colloquially known as “whiskey dick.” It’s pretty simple. If a guy gets drunk
enough, he can’t get it up. Lot here is apparently sufficiently blotto that he’s
able to sleep through sex. One might think performance would be an issue here.
Or that perhaps the “getting so drunk he didn’t even notice getting fucked”
scenario is a dodge to make the girls look like the villains in their
molestation by their father. Or perhaps even more likely… someone noticed that
the Sodom story made Lot look like a complete shit for offering his daughters
to a rape mob, and they decided to tack this story on as a way of saying “No,
look! They were incestuous whores and totally deserved it!” Plus it created an
opportunity to smear the ancestry of the Ammonites and Moabites (any bets on
whether some Hebrews will be in conflict with Moabites and Ammonites later in the
book?).
Since
that seems to be it for Lot for the moment, and the narrative switches back to
Abraham, this seems like as good a place as any to break. Until next time!
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