Suspected Adultery

Numbers 5:11–31 describes a procedure for cases in which a man suspects his wife of adultery but is unable to prove it. The suspected adulteress—called a sotah, a “straying woman”—is brought before a priest at the sanctuary and made to undergo an ordeal that involves drinking a solution called “bitter waters.” If the woman has committed adultery, the waters are said to cause her belly to swell and her “thigh” (often a euphemism for genitals) to “fall,” perhaps a description of a prolapsed uterus. If she has not committed adultery, she retains the ability to become pregnant.

Because the sotah ritual could be performed only in the Tabernacle or Temple, it was not utilized in the rabbinic period. In fact, m. Sotah 9:9 states that the ritual ceased to be performed even before the Temple was destroyed. (Whether or to what extent it was ever actually performed is unknown.) Yet a full tractate of the Mishnah and Talmud, tractate Sotah, is devoted to discussing and elaborating on this ordeal. The rabbis set a very high—arguably unrealistic—bar for subjecting a woman to the ordeal, which suggests that these discussions were more an intellectual exercise and an expression of rabbinic values than a legal prescription or attempt at genuine memory.

Related Primary Sources

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Grounds for the Sotah Ordeal

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How does he warn her? If he says to her in front of two [witnesses], “Do not speak with that man” and she spoke with him, she is still permitted to her husband and permitted to eat terumah. If she…

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Admonishing the Sotah

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4. They bring her up to the great court which is in Jerusalem, and [the judges] solemnly admonish her in the same way that they admonish witnesses in capital cases. And they say to her, “My daughter…

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The Sotah and the Grain Offering

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[The husband] brings her meal offering in a basket of palm twigs and places it upon her hands in order to weary her. With all other meal offerings, their beginning and their end are in ministering…

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The Sotah Ordeal

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3. If before [the writing on] the scroll was rubbed out, she said, “I refuse to drink,” her scroll is stored away, and her meal offering is scattered over the ashes. And her scroll is not valid to be…

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Discontinuation of the Sotah Ordeal

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When murderers multiplied, the [ceremony of] breaking a heifer’s neck ceased. That was from the time of Eliezer ben Dinai, who was also called Teḥinah ben Perishah and was later renamed “son of the…