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OET-RV EXO Chapter 21

OETEXO 21 ©

This is still a very early look into the unfinished text of the Open English Translation of the Bible. Please double-check the text in advance before using in public.

21:1 Rules about slaves

(Deu. 15:12-18)

21These are the rules that you must present to them:

Hebrew slaves

2If you buy a Hebrew slave, he should serve for six years, then in the seventh year he must be set free without having to pay you anything.[ref] 3If he came by himself, he can go free by himself. If he’s married with a wife, then his wife must be set free with him. 4If his master gave him a wife and she bore him sons or daughters, then the wife and her children are her master’s, and only the husband must be set free. 5But if he plainly says, “I love my master, my wife, and my children so I voluntarily choose not to be set free,” 6then his master must take him to the place of worship. He must bring him to a door or to a doorpost, and his master must bore a hole his ear with an awl. Then he must serve him for life.

7And if a man sells his daughter as a female slave, she won’t be sent away after six years like the male slaves. 8If the man who bought her wanted her to become his slave-wife, but later he isn’t pleased with her behaviour, he must allow her to be bought back by her relatives. He has no authority to sell her on to outsiders, because that would break the understanding of proper treatment of her. 9Or if he selected her to become his son’s slave-wife, then he must treat her like a daughter would expect to be treated. 10If he go on to take another slave-wife, he mustn’t reduce the first one’s food or clothing, or her marital rights, 11but if he doesn’t provide these three things to her, then she can go free without having to pay anything.

21:12 Rules about violence to others

12Whoever strikes someone and that person dies, must definitely be put to death.[ref] 13But if it wasn’t premeditated—if God had let it happen as an accident—then I’ll assign a place where the one who hit them can flee to.[ref] 14However, if someone had schemed to trap and kill their neighbour, then even if the killer clings to my altar, you must take them for execution.

15Anyone who strikes their father or mother must certainly be put to death.

16Anyone who abducts another person—either to sell or to keep as a slavethat person must certainly be put to death.[ref]

17Anyone who curses their father or mother must certainly be put to death.[ref]

18If two people fight and one hits their neighbour with a stone or with their fist, and the injured one doesn’t die but is bedridden, 19if that person eventually rises and can walk about outside using a staff, then the person who struck them is free, other than reimbursing the costs of their lost work and their medical expenses.

20If a master hits their male or female slave with a staff and the slave dies, then the death must certainly be avenged. 21However, if the slave is able to stand within a couple of days, then the owner won’t be punished because the slave is their property.

22If two people fight together and strike a pregnant woman and cause her to deliver the baby, if there’s no serious injury, then he must certainly be fined whatever the husband of the woman demands and the judges allow. 23But if there’s serious injury, then you must give a life for a life, 24an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a hand for a hand, a foot for a foot,[ref] 25a burn for a burn, a wound for a wound, and a bruise for a bruise.

26If a master hits their male or female slave’s eye and damages it, they must let the slave go free in compensation for the eye. 27Or if the master knocks out a tooth of a male or female slave, they must let the slave go free in compensation for the tooth.

21:28 Rules about property

28If a bull gores a man or a woman and they die, the bull must certainly be killed by throwing rocks at it. The owner of the animal is to be considered innocent, but its meat mustn’t be eaten. 29But if the bull had a habit of goring in the past and its owner was warned but didn’t keep it fenced in, and it kills a man or a woman, then the bull must be killed by throwing rocks at it and its owner must also be put to death. 30If a ransom payment is demanded instead, the owner may buy back their life by paying the full amount demanded. 31Those rules also apply if the bull gores a person’s son or daughter. 32If the bull gores a male or female slave, its owner must give thirty silver shekels to the slave owner and the bull must be killed by throwing rocks at it.

33If someone uncovers a pit for storage, or digs a new one and leaves it uncovered, and a cow or a donkey falls into it, 34the owner of the pit must pay compensation. The pit owner must pay in cash, but the dead animal will then belong to them. 35If one person’s bull attacks someone else’s bull and it dies, then they should sell the live animal and divide the money as well as dividing up the dead animal. 36But if it was known that the bull had a habit of goring in the past and its owner hadn’t kept it fenced in, then that owner must certainly give a live bull for the dead one, but the dead animal will become theirs.


21:2-6: Lev 25:39-46.

21:12: Lev 24:17.

21:13: Num 35:10-34; Deu 19:1-13; Josh 20:1-9.

21:16: Deu 24:7.

21:17: Lev 20:9; Mat 15:4; Mrk 7:10.

21:24: Lev 24:19-20; Deu 19:21; Mat 5:38.

OETEXO 21 ©

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