9 BIBLICAL QUARANTINE And the leper in whom the plague is, his clothes shall be rent, and his head bare, and he shall put a covering upon his upper lip, and shall cry, Unclean, unclean. All the days wherein the plague shall be in him he shall be defiled; he is unclean: he shall dwell alone; without the camp shall his habitation be (Lev. 13:45-46).
We come now to the longest passage in the Bible that deals with a specific law. This is the law of plague or leprosy. It fills two very long chapters in the Bible, Leviticus 13 and 14. Leviticus 13 presents the law as it applied to the priest: examining whether or not a person had been afflicted with plague or leprosy. Leviticus 14 deals with the specified sacrifices that enabled a person who had been healed from the plague or leprosy to be cleansed judicially and then re-enter the congregation of the Lord. Leviticus 14 also deals with the extremely peculiar phenomenon, namely, plague of garments and houses.
The theocentric meaning of this law is that Mosaic-era leprosy was a sign of God's curses in history and eternity. God's curses separate some men from others. Mosaic-era leprosy testified to the ultimate separation of heaven from hell, of the New Heaven and New Earth from the lake of fire (Rev. 20:14-15). Community is therefore evidence of God's grace. Autonomy, as a theory of separation, is a demonic social theory. God's final curse against self-professed autonomous man is eternal separation.
This law was given by God directly to Moses and Aaron (v. 1). The priesthood enforced this law, not the Levites (v. 2). This means, first of all, that there was a civil function for the priesthood. The civil magistrate had to enforce the declaration of the priest. Second, while the text does not say so, this law indicates that a priest had to reside in every city. He did not offer sacrifice there. Jerusalem was the exclusive place of official sacrifice. The priesthood performed a civil function: declaring people and things unclean within the boundaries of a city.
I argue in this chapter that the leprosy of Leviticus was not a communicable biological disease but rather a judicial affliction. It was not what is known today as Hansen's disease. The quarantine law governing this affliction applied only within a city. Thus, it was a very peculiar disease.
The Plague on a House Instead of going into great detail about the nature of either plague or leprosy as it affected the individual human being, I want to discuss the plague on a house. The plague was not simply inside the confines of the house; it was literally on it. By beginning here, I focus on what I believe is the crucial point: this plague was judicial in its frame of reference, not biological.(1) We can recognize this more clearly in the case of inanimate objects. The house law, which was given in the wilderness period, specified that when the people came into the land of Canaan, and built houses or inherited houses, those houses would sometimes be subjected to the curse of plague. It began: "When ye be come into the land of Canaan, which I give to you for a possession, and I put the plague of leprosy in a house of the land of your possession. . ." (Lev. 14:34). This law was restricted to Canaan, as we shall see.
God said that He would put the plague of leprosy on a house. When the owner of the house discovered an outbreak of mold in the house's walls, he was required to go to the priest and inform him of the fact:
And he that owneth the house shall come and tell the priest, saying, It seemeth to me there is as it were a plague in the house: Then the priest shall command that they empty the house, before the priest go into it to see the plague, that all that is in the house be not made unclean: and afterward the priest shall go in to see the house: And he shall look on the plague, and, behold, if the plague be in the walls of the house with hollow strakes, greenish or reddish, which in sight [are] lower than the wall; Then the priest shall go out of the house to the door of the house, and shut up the house seven days (Lev. 14:35-38).
The Sanctity of the Priest
It is important to understand that before entering the house, the priest saw to it that everything inside the house was first removed. It is specifically said that this would keep everything inside the house from becoming unclean. "Then the priest shall command that they empty the house, before the priest go into it to see the plague, that all that is in the house be not made unclean: and afterward the priest shall go in to see the house" (Lev. 14:35). After the house was emptied, the priest would go into the house. This indicates very clearly that the problem was not the spread of disease inside the house, but rather the judicial sanctity of the priest. If this sanctified agent were to enter the house when the house was under suspicion, this would make all of the implements and furniture of the house unclean if the house was found to be unclean. The boundary here was primarily judicial rather than biological. The house was not judicially unclean until the priest crossed its doorway boundary. He himself would not become unclean. When he did cross it, if he then corroborated the symptoms, everything inside the house at the time of his entrance would become unclean.
Note carefully that the text does not say that the things inside the house would become unclean after the priest entered the house only if the house itself was biologically unclean. The text says that everything in the house would become legally unclean merely by the priest's entering into the house in order to inspect it. This indicates that it was the priest's legal status, as an agent of God, that produced the unclean judicial status of the things inside the house. The house itself was only under suspicion. Everything in the house therefore came under suspicion. It was the entrance of the priest into the house that transformed suspicion into the actual legal status of being unclean. When the priest crossed the boundary of the house -- that is to say, when he crossed the door or threshold -- his legal status as a holy agent of God created the unclean status of everything inside. Conclusion: these two chapters are primarily concerned with legal status rather than biological condition. If this was not the case, then why wasn't it mandatory to burn the furniture that had been moved outside the house?
A Week of Testing
The priest, upon finding signs of the plague in the stones of the house, would then shut the house up for seven days. At the end of this period, he would return and look again. If the plague had spread in the walls of the house, then the priest had the afflicted stones removed and cast into an unclean place. This meant outside the the city. Then the stones in the house near the now-missing stones would be scraped, and the dust scraped from these stones would also be cast outside the city into the specified unclean place. Then the owner would replace the missing stones. If the plague returned after the first stones had been removed, the priest would come again to see if the plague had spread into the walls of the house. If it had, the priest would then break down the walls of the house, the stones, the timber, the mortar, and everything that constituted the house, and all these materials would then be carried outside the city and cast into the unclean place (14:39-45).
The person living in the house during its time of testing became unclean every time he entered the house. He was required to wash his clothes daily. Anyone eating inside the house also became unclean, and was required to wash his clothes daily (14:47). This indicates that the problem of the house was not biological; it was judicial. Washing one's clothing was not a biological defense; it was a ritual defense. People in ancient Israel did not contract biologically transmitted diseases to which houses were equally vulnerable.
Even the thought of a house's being vulnerable to a disease indicates the judicial nature of these chapters. Houses today do not get diseases. Clothing does not get diseases. We are not required to burn clothing because some kind of visible mold or disease has broken out in the clothing. We may wash it or boil it or dispose of it, but we are not required by law to burn it. "Wherefore if ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world, why, as though living in the world, are ye subject to ordinances, (Touch not; taste not; handle not; Which all are to perish with the using;) after the commandments and doctrines of men?" (Col. 2:20-22). Similarly, we do not find instances where houses come under attack by such dangerous spores or microbes that it becomes necessary to tear down the house and throw the remains outside the city. Yet it is obvious that such external afflictions were, if not common, at least possible in Old Covenant Israel. This indicates that these afflictions were part of the burden of being covenanted to God -- in close proximity to the house of God, or to the covenanted people of God -- and therefore greater responsibility was inescapable for the person residing inside the cities of Israel.
It was the priest's declaration of a suspected house that would make ritually unclean everything inside the house at the time that he entered it. It was not a biological organism that would make everything inside the house unclean. Individuals who entered the house would become ritually unclean, which is why they had to wash their clothes (14:46-47). It was legal status that was in question, not biological status. The proof of this is the requirement that a house that had been pronounced unclean and re-plastered, when found to be healed, had to have a ritual cleansing. The priest cleansed the house with two birds, cedar wood, scarlet, and hyssop (14:49-53). He killed one of the birds in an earthen vessel over running water. He took the cedar wood and the hyssop and the scarlet and the living bird and dipped them into the blood of the slain bird and in the running water then he would sprinkle the house seven times. The text actually says that the house was cleansed with the blood of the dead bird, the running water, the living bird, the cedar wood, the hyssop, and the scarlet (14:52). The legal status of unclean went from the house to the dead bird, and from there to the live bird. The priest then was to let the living bird out of the city into the open fields, thereby making an atonement for the house, in order to make it clean (14:53). An unclean thing could not legally remain inside the city. The bird flew away, carrying the unclean legal status of the house. Conclusion: the threat was judicial; so was the cure.
The Diseased Individual: Separation or Inclusion Walls, clothing, skin: they are all boundaries. They separate the inside from the outside. Mold that was visible from the outside marked the house, clothing, or person as legally unclean. If the problem was not dealt with ritually, it altered the legal status of whatever was inside the boundary.
With this background in mind, let us turn now to the diseased individual. It is very easy for the commentator to spend a lot of space describing the details of the physical afflictions. R. K. Harrison spends several pages on such details.(2) It is easy for a person to believe that these physical details are in some way related to the details of diseases in our day -- easy, but incorrect. The leprosy spoken of in these chapters was not what we call leprosy today, or Hansen's disease.(3) It was something entirely different. The treatment required by the text applies to no known skin disease, which would not disappear in a few weeks; the Bible's quarantine test period would have been medically ineffectual.(4) Thus, Milgrom concludes, "these rules are grounded not in medicine but in ritual."(5) It was an aspect of the impurity system; it was associated with death, as we see in the case of Miriam: "Let her not be as one dead, of whom the flesh is half consumed when he cometh out of his mother's womb" (Num. 12:12).(6)
Milgrom concludes that this skin disease was inflicted because of rebellion against God: religious rather than civil crimes.(7) The problem is, the text does not say this explicitly, although the sins of Miriam (Num. 12:14-15), Gehazi (II Ki. 5:27), and Uzziah (II Chron. 26:17-21) did result in their affliction.
Total Infection: Covenantal Inclusion
One of the most remarkable aspects of this plague was the law governing the degree of affliction. "Then the priest shall consider: and, behold, if the leprosy have covered all his flesh, he shall pronounce him clean that hath the plague: it is all turned white: he is clean" (Lev. 13:13). What this says is that if an individual was completely covered with leprosy, turning his flesh entirely white, he was then pronounced clean. This means that he had legal access to the tabernacle or to any other element of corporate worship in Israel. He posed no threat to his neighbors, either ritually or biologically. He was not contagious.(8) We would normally think of the leprosy as being an affliction that required him to be totally separate, permanently. This is not the case. A partial affliction of leprosy did require his separation. So did all of the other sores and discolorations of the flesh that are described in Leviticus 13. Nevertheless, the individual who was completely afflicted became legally clean.
This fact is additional evidence of my thesis that the fundamental issue was not biological, but rather judicial. Rabbi S. R. Hirsch believed that this disease was sent directly by God.(9) Surely this was true in the case of a plague-infested house. "When ye be come into the land of Canaan, which I give to you for a possession, and I put the plague of leprosy in a house of the land of your possession" (Lev. 14:34). The legal issue was not biological contagion; it was obedience. "Take heed in the plague of leprosy, that thou observe diligently, and do according to all that the priests the Levites shall teach you: as I commanded them, so ye shall observe to do. Remember what the LORD thy God did unto Miriam by the way, after that ye were come forth out of Egypt" (Deut. 24:8-9). She had sinned by challenging the prophetic office of Moses (Num. 12:1-2). She was shut out of the camp for seven days (Num. 12:15) -- not because of the leprosy, which had been total, but because of her rebellion (Num. 12:14).
When an individual was so completely afflicted by the whitening of his skin, he became like God: pure white (Dan. 7:9; Rev. 1:14). This is why God discusses man's sins as scarlet, and promises that they will be white as snow: "Come now, and let us reason together, saith the LORD: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool" (Isa. 1:18). The red splotchy marks on the body made the individual legally unclean. If the white leprosy replaced those marks, he became legally clean.
This means that the individual could be restored to his status as clean in one of two ways: either by becoming totally afflicted by the leprosy or by becoming totally unafflicted by any of the diseases of the skin. What would otherwise have been regarded as total affliction became a means of judicial liberation.
In my opinion, this points directly to Christ's suffering on the cross. He became totally afflicted, yet this led to his death, resurrection, and ascension, and it also led to the liberation of His people. Bearing the comprehensive judgment of God in his flesh, He liberated mankind. In a much more limited sense, the Israelite who bore the total affliction of leprosy in his own flesh liberated himself judicially from the penalty of exclusion from the city.
Mandatory Atonement What must be stressed here is that this law was not based on considerations of public biological health; it was based on public judicial health. For the individual to be restored to full communion within the congregation, he had to make four of the five sacrifices of Leviticus: the burnt offering (14:13), the cereal offering (14:10), the sin offering (14:19), and the guilt offering (14:13). Only the voluntary peace offering was absent.(10)
Reparation and Adoption
The main problem here is to explain the guilt offering. The guilt offering was a reparation offering: the settling of a debt. Why did leprosy involve a debt to God? The commentators have trouble with this question.(11) I see the answer in the way in which this offering was to be administered: anointing the right ear lobe, the right thumb, and the right big toe with oil (v. 17). The boring of the man's ear to the doorpost was the bondservant's mark of his voluntary adoption as a permanent household servant in another man's family (Ex. 21:6; Deut. 15:17). The amputation of the right thumb and right big toe was a mark of a defeated warrior (Jud. 1:7), leaving him with reduced balance and with the greatly reduced ability to draw a bowstring. The person anointed with oil had his ear, thumb, and toe symbolically restored. He re-entered the army of the Lord and could lawfully remain inside the camp of God's holy army. Because he had been outside the camp, and therefore outside the priestly army of the Lord, he had to demonstrate that he was willing to pay a kind of priestly re-entrance fee -- a fee analogous to the payments required of those who sought adoption into the family of Levi (Lev. 27:2-8).(12) The reparation offering constituted this payment. The alien seeking adoption had to be circumcised. Because this barrier did not exist for a formerly leprous Israelite, he was required to cross a different barrier.
Disinheritance
This indicates that these specified diseases were primarily regarded as judicial afflictions rather than biological afflictions. They marked covenantal death: disinheritance. Furthermore, the requirement that the individual be cast out of the congregation means that he would have to be forced outside the boundaries of any city. On the other hand, a diseased person who lived in a rural area (as did most of the inhabitants of Israel at the beginning) would not have to leave his home or his family. He was not eligible for the army, however, being excluded from Passover in Jerusalem and also from the holy camp during wartime, but he could remain in his home. He became the judicial equivalent of an uncircumcised resident alien: a stranger in his own land.
This law was a major threat to those residents who owned no land in Israel, or whose land had been leased to another family until the jubilee year. Such individuals had no legal claim to any place of residence. They could not enter a city during a time of a foreign invasion. Without lawful access to Passover, held in a holy place (the tabernacle or temple), they lost their citizenship. They became charity cases in need of mercy.
There was another resident of the city who, above all, would have been threatened by the laws governing plague and leprosy. This was the individual who had fled to a city refuge in order to escape the judgment of the blood avenger (kinsman redeemer) (Num. 35). Only with the death of the high priest could he safely venture outside the city (Num. 35:28). Thus, for an individual who was residing in a city of refuge in order to escape death at the hands of a blood-avenger, exile from the city was the equivalent of a death sentence. Partial leprosy was one way that God could bring judgment to a man who had committed premeditated murder, but who had persuaded the judges in the city of refuge that the death of the other individual was an accident. God would merely have to bring the plague of partial leprosy on him, and the priest would require him to leave the protection of the city of refuge.
Legal Status, Not Medical Status The text does not tell us that an individual afflicted by any of these diseases was inherently evil. There is no indication that he must have committed any kind of sin in order to be afflicted in such a way. The disease would come upon him at the discretion of God. The priest was not to inquire regarding a potential trespass on the individual's part. Nevertheless, in order for the individual to be restored after the disappearing of the disease, he did have to make a trespass offering (sacrifice four) along with three other sacrifices. The priest in his capacity as a leprosy inspector was therefore neither a religious counselor nor a public health official in the modern sense, i.e., biological defense. He was the individual who declared a person legally clean or legally unclean. He declared a person's judicial status in the eyes of God.
The individual who was declared unclean was then sent outside the city. He was required to tear his clothes, to leave his head bare, and to put a covering on his upper lip. He also had to cry "Unclean, unclean" (Lev. 13:45). The rending of one's garments was an indication of mourning (II Sam. 1:11).(13) Job's three friends came to mourn with him; they tore their garments in his presence (Job 2:12). When the person afflicted with leprosy tore his garment, he was testifying to his legal status, not his biological status. His legal status was reflected in his biological status, not the other way around. Leprosy was a sign, therefore, of covenantal death: the judicial status of a dead man, which authorized his legal and physical separation by an official, in this case a priest. "To live outside the camp was to be cut off from the blessings of the covenant."(14)
Economic Costs From an economic standpoint, the most significant aspect of all of these laws is that neither the State nor the church was required by God to support the afflicted person financially. An individual could lose his house. Nevertheless, the State was not required to rebuild a new house for him. Similarly, an individual would lose his job, his place of residence, his access to the fellowship of the saints in corporate worship, and almost everything else that an urban resident would enjoy. Nevertheless, neither the State nor the ecclesiastical hierarchy was required to provide any kind of relief or other aid to this individual. This does not mean that voluntary charity was not appropriate. Obviously, it was very appropriate. Nevertheless, the State was not enjoined to compensate the individual for the losses that the individual would sustain. He sustained the losses, not because he was a biological threat to society, but because he was a judicial threat to society. He was a person whose legal status before God had changed. This change had manifested itself as a biological affliction: the mark of covenantal death.
No other diseases in the Bible came under the same exclusion rules. This indicates that these diseases were to be regarded as the direct hand of God against an individual. It was not assumed that an individual had caught the disease from another individual. It was not assumed that this individual could pass on the disease to another individual. It was assumed that if the priest, acting as a judicial agent of God, did not declare the individual unclean, and if the community did not take steps to remove the individual from the protection of the city, then God might allow the plague to spread. This spreading, again, was fundamentally judicial, not biological. This was true of plague in general in the Mosaic community. Plague was seen as a direct judgment of God against the people for their sins. That is to say, these public health measures were judicial measures.
The reason why we know this to be the case is that the individual who lived in the countryside was not under the same restraints. Because the individual's presence in the countryside was not a threat to his neighbors, there is reason to believe that the curse of God had something to do with the presence of the city. We may not be able to understand all of these ramifications. The point is, the individual was not quarantined inside the city; he was quarantined by removing him from within the city. The one exception to this was King Uzziah (II Chron. 26:21). He was forced to dwell in a separate house, and he was cut off for the rest of his life from the house of God. This judgment had come upon him immediately after his presumptuous sin of offering sacrifice in the temple. It was clear from this incident that the judgment was regarded as judicial -- coming directly from the hand of God -- and not biological. As the king, he was granted immunity from exclusion from David's city, but only by means of a boundary separating him from the city.
There is no question that quarantine was legal for those dwelling inside the cities of Israel. Men were cut off from their homes, their families, their livelihood, and especially from the household of faith. They could not participate in the covenant rituals and feasts of Israel. This was the ultimate civil quarantine in ancient Israel, other than execution.(15) It meant excommunication from Passover and the loss of citizenship.
Quarantines Today
The question then arises: Is priestly quarantining biblically legitimate today? There is no indication that any of these named diseases survived the fall of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. There is also no indication that the laws of quarantine by a priest continue into the New Covenant. On the contrary, they could not have survived the demise of the priesthood. The quarantine laws were part of the Levitical laws of the Mosaic Covenant, and, I think, to some degree were connected to jubilee land laws of Leviticus 25. These laws all perished with the fall of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. With the collapse of the judicial boundaries of the nation of Israel, there was a collapse of those ritual boundary laws that had governed the people of Israel even before they entered into the land of Canaan. There was no longer any tabernacle to be excluded from, and there was no unclean place outside either the camp or the city to which anyone could be banished. In other words, these laws related to plague, and plague in Mosaic Israel was judicial rather than biological.
In New Testament times, we can study biological afflictions as a separate class of phenomena, and we can also see them as the judgments of God. We do not have the ability to identify the specific sin, either corporate or personal, that leads to most sicknesses, with the exception of venereal diseases. Neither did the priest of the Mosaic Covenant in most cases. The priest was not asked to identify the sin that had led to the individual's affliction. The priest was required only to identify the affliction and deal with it judicially. We can therefore say that in New Testament times, afflictions of a biological nature can be dealt with either through medical techniques or by public health techniques. Contagious people can either be cured or they can be quarantined. The quarantining process, however, is based on considerations of the contagious nature of the disease, not the judicial status of the individual. Public health laws in the modern world are to be governed by statutes, and statutes must be predictable. Individuals must know in advance the penalties or sanctions that will be imposed for specific kinds of behavior. Thus, an individual who comes down with a disease cannot be said to be a threat to the community merely because he has come down with a disease. The judicial diseases of the Mosaic Covenant are no longer with us. Therefore, the diseases that afflict us today are like the common diseases that afflicted people inside and outside of Mosaic Israel. They are to be dealt with in similar ways: by medical care, by quarantine, by prayer, or by anointing by the elders (James 5:14).
To Protect the Public
The idea of quarantine in the 13th chapter of Leviticus is based on the need to protect the public. The spread of the disease, or other forms of God's judgment, was to be halted by removing the afflicted individual from within the city. The concern was public health, but it was not a concern about biological contagion. It was concern about the willingness of God to afflict other individuals with the disease or other afflictions because of their unwillingness to enforce His law. Thus, the quarantining process of Leviticus 13 was primarily judicial. In fact, it would probably be safe to say that it was entirely judicial. Only by the extension of the principle of the protection of others within the city is it legitimate to classify today's diseases as being subject legally to the Bible's quarantining process.
Does this qualification alter the legal status of the civil government? For example, does this mean that in modern times the civil government is required to finance an individual who has been quarantined? The State has brought sanctions against him in the name of the health of the community. This was also the case in Mosaic Israel. The State has put him under quarantine because he is biologically contagious. This was not the case in the Mosaic Israel. Does the shift from judicial affliction to biological affliction change the legal requirements of the civil government? Does the change from the contagious legal status of the individual to his contagious biological status change the requirements of the civil government? In other words, do the quarantine laws of the civil government go through a fundamental transformation between the Old Covenant and the New Covenant?
It is part of English common law that when a city is on fire, the authorities have the right to knock down an individual's house in order to stop the spread of that fire. It is also part of common law that the city and the community do not owe anything to the individual who has had his house knocked down in this way. It is presumed that the fire would have destroyed the house anyway. It is also assumed that by destroying the individual's house, other houses within the community will be protected. This law was for generations basic to the protection of cities. If the fire-fighters had to worry about the cost of repayment each time they knocked down a house, it is unlikely that they would have had the same kind of incentive to knock down the houses. Obviously, if the price of an action goes up, less of it will be demanded. In this case, it means that the city would have been less likely to be protected from the "plague" of fire because of legal obligations to repay those people who were unfortunate enough to be caught in the line of fire, and whose houses, if knocked down, would have allowed the creation of a fire break. It was assumed that the safety of the city was of greater importance than the loss to the individual. Because the house probably would have burned down anyway, it really was not a net loss to the owner.
Consider a contemporary individual who has contracted a contagious disease. He has become a threat to the community. If the community is required by law to finance this individual until such time as he recovers biologically from the disease, it is less likely that the community will take the necessary steps to isolate him. Common law therefore does not require the civil government to compensate the quarantined individual. Neither does biblical law. This is why quarantine is a devastating event in the life of the individual. Historically, quarantined people have not been permitted to leave their homes. Others have not been able to come into those homes without falling under the ban. While it is assumed that charity will be forthcoming to help the quarantined individual in his time of need, it has been assumed until very recently that the State has no legal obligation to support that person during the period of his confinement. To do so would raise the cost of confining individuals, and it would therefore lead to an unwillingness on the part of public health officials to confine them. This would increase the risk of contagion and disease in the community.
The contagious nature of the disease, in effect, is a form of violence. It is violence conducted by a third party, namely, the biological organisms that transmit the disease, but it is still a form of violence. The carrier places other people at risk. Thus, common law determined that an individual who becomes a threat to the community must be removed from the community so as to reduce the likelihood of this indirect form of violence. Public health measures are directed against the disease primarily and against its carriers secondarily.
Civil Authority There can be little doubt that the priest in this instance did possess civil authority. He could declare a person judicially unclean. Because God threatened the whole community with judgment, the State was required to enforce the decision of the priest. Because he was entrusted with the legal authority to act as God's agent in this case, his word had to be obeyed. There are few other cases of similar priestly power in the Old Covenant. This indicates that there was something other than public health considerations involved in this form of leprosy. There was a special judicial condition that the word of a public health official could not deal with successfully. Yet a transgression of these boundaries was a real threat to the community, which is why the civil power of the city was invoked.
That no similar provision exists in the New Covenant era indicates that this plague was not biological but judicial. The special boundary condition of the nation of Israel ended with the fall of Jerusalem. When the walls of the temple were torn down, the judicial boundaries of the cities of Israel lost their special status. With the end of the Mosaic priesthood, the urban quarantine laws of the Mosaic Covenant ceased. Had the laws been directed against an essentially biological threat to the health of the community, there is no reason why the local civil magistrate could not have assumed the priest's policing function. But with the rending of the curtain of the temple at the death of Christ (Matt. 27:51), the need for a physical barrier between God and man ceased except insofar as the elements of the sacraments are physical. The judicial barrier still exists, but legal access to the presence of God is now exclusively sacramental. The priesthood of all believers is a judicial reality. The State no longer has any valid legal authority to enforce any aspect of the now-annulled distinction between clean and unclean -- a distinction that was judicial rather than biological. The Levitical quarantine laws were finally annulled at the same time, and for the same reason, that the Mosaic dietary laws were annulled: A.D. 70.
The boundary laws of clean and unclean were based on the physical holiness of God's dwelling place. The Ark of the Covenant was physically set apart in the holy of holies, His place of residence. He was unwilling to remain with His people if they transgressed certain physical boundaries, since these boundaries were representative of His covenantal authority over them. The concentric boundary rings around the Ark represented God's hierarchy of authority: the closer that a person was allowed to come to the Ark of the Covenant, the higher his judicial authority. This is why the high priest possessed greater authority than the king, and therefore also greater responsibility.(16) These concentric geographical boundaries ceased to exist at the crucifixion of Christ when the veil of the temple was torn. God departed from Israel definitively (judicially) at the crucifixion; He departed progressively (culturally and politically) over the next generation (the Book of Acts); He departed finally in A.D. 70. God would no longer dwell in the temple. All other holiness boundaries in Israel therefore ceased. They no longer served any judicial purpose. This included the judicial boundaries of clean and unclean (Acts 10).
The plagues of the New Covenant era are communicated biologically, not judicially. Plagues can no longer be stopped by a priest who takes immediate defensive action and skewers a pair of mixed-covenant fornicators with his spear (Num. 25:6-8).(17)
Death as a Boundary
The ultimate negative sanction in history is death. It is itself a boundary. This boundary was definitively overcome by the resurrection of Christ. He crossed and recrossed it, thereby ending it as the ultimate judicial threat to man. Christ's definitive boundary violation testified to the demise of all the others in ancient Israel. This definitively ended the Old Covenant. It also definitively ended the Mosaic priesthood, whose representatives had attempted to banish the Son of God from their presence through the imposition of the death penalty.
The death of Christ at Calvary was the death of the ultimate high priest (Heb. 9). This ended the need for a city of refuge. The man hiding in the city of refuge from the wrath of the blood-avenger could go home again in safety when the high priest died (Num. 35:28). The earthly office of high priest ended with the fall of Jerusalem -- a public manifestation of what had taken place legally at Calvary. With the death of Christ, the office of blood-avenger was also transferred exclusively to Him, the ultimate kinsman-redeemer and blood-avenger (same office). No earthly office of blood-avenger remains. With the end of the city of judicial refuge, there was no longer any threat to the biblical legal status of a man hiding inside the city. The expulsion laws of the Mosaic Covenant's judicial plague have ended. The earthly office of blood avenger has also ended.
Conclusion Wenham has summarized the Levitical laws of quarantine. He correctly relates them to the Levitical holiness laws.
It seems likely that even in OT times "skin diseases" and their treatment were regarded as symbolic of sin and its consequences. When a man was afflicted with a disfiguring skin disease he did visibly "fall short of the glory of God" (Rom. 3:23), the glory that he had been given in his creation (Ps. 8:6 [Eng. 5]). His banishment from human society and God's sanctuary was a reenactment of the fall, when Adam and Eve were expelled from Eden (Gen. 3). The infection of garments and houses with "skin disease" served as a reminder of the interaction of man and his environment. . . . The laws of Leviticus were not abrogated by Jesus; in fact he tells the healed "lepers" to observe them (Matt. 8:4; Luke 17:14). But the new era of salvation made obsolete the idea that the diseased should be banished from human and divine society. Jesus' ministry and that of his disciples (Matt. 10:8) was one which brought reconciliation between God and man. Therefore the old laws isolating men because of their unsightly appearance had become inappropriate and out of date. Like the rules about unclean animals, they did not fit in with the new program, which was to climax in the creation of a new heaven and a new earth, in which men of every class and nation would be redeemed (Rev. 7:9).(18)
The quarantine laws of Leviticus had more to do with quarantining the people from the presence of God than they did with quarantining sick people from healthy people. The blemished person had to be kept away from God's presence in the temple. The laws of leprosy were related to the temple's laws of purity far more than they were to modern public health laws. This is why any conclusions that we attempt to draw from these laws must be done by analogy, not directly.
What can we say with confidence? First, the civil government did possess lawful authority to remove people from their homes in order to protect others in the community from the judgment of God. This judgment came in the form of plague. The contagion was judicial, but the threat did exist.
Second, the priest possessed the civil authority to remove houses and people from a city. His judicial declaration as an ecclesiastical agent had to be enforced by the civil magistrate.
Third, the victim of the plague had to bear the expenses associated with the results of the quarantine. Because there was no command in the Old Testament that the State support quarantined individuals, it is not possible to derive from this law any biblical injunction for State welfare programs. The only legitimate conclusion to draw from this law by analogy is that there is no State welfare function. The job of the civil government is to protect people from violence, not support people who have been afflicted, either naturally or judicially. To argue any other way is to make the State into an agency of healing rather than an agency of protection. The State is an agency that is supposed to bring negative sanctions against evil-doers. There is no biblical warrant for the concept of the State as a healer. The job of the State is to prohibit behavior that threatens other individuals physically. If this threatening behavior is breathing upon others, then the State must see to it that the individuals who are a threat to others are not put into close contact with those who might be injured as a result.
If the State in the Mosaic Covenant was not told by God to support those who fell victim to diseases that mandated quarantine, then there is no biblical case for the State as an agency of tax-financed healing today. If the victim of leprosy in the Mosaic Covenant was forced out of his home by the State, and made to wander outside the city, and still the State was not responsible for his financial support, then the case for modern socialized medicine cannot be based on any biblical text.(19) It must be based on the argument from silence. It must be based on the conclusion that there has been a fundamental change in the function of civil government in the New Testament: from protector (Old Covenant) to healer. We have yet to see the exegetical case for such a change. While the presuppositions of the twentieth century's political order favor such a view of the State -- as did the presuppositions of the ancient pagan world -- humanist presuppositions are not a valid substitute for biblical exegesis.
Summary This law was a law of the priesthood, not the Levites.
The priesthood performed a civil function: declaring people and things located inside cities judicially unclean.
The civil magistrate was required to enforce the word of the priest.
The leprosy of Leviticus was not modern leprosy or Hansen's disease.
The plague struck houses.
This indicates that it was judicially transmitted, not biologically.
The affliction was restricted to post-conquest Canaan.
Before entering the house, the priest was to have everything inside removed.
The house became unclean only when the priest entered it, i.e., crossed its boundary.
This indicates that the priest's sanctity was the basis of the house's judicial status of unclean.
This legal boundary violation was judicial.
Afflicted stones in the house's walls had to be cast outside the city after a week.
Upon entering the house, a person became unclean each time.
He had to wash his clothes: a ritual defense.
A re-plastered house had to have a ritual cleansing: the sacrifice of one bird, the escape of another.
Walls, clothing, and skin are boundaries.
The defensive treatment conforms to no known skin disease.
If the person was entirely afflicted -- pure white -- he was pronounced clean.
He posed no threat to his neighbors.
The required offering was a guilt (reparation) offering.
Oil was administered on the thumbs, right toe, and ear: all marks of subordination.
He could re-enter God's holy army.
The afflictions marked covenantal death.
The rural leper could remain home, although he was not allowed in Jerusalem or any city.
He was judicially as an uncircumcised resident alien.
A man who had fled a blood-avenger to dwell inside a city of refuge was not protected outside the city.
God could bring judgment against such a person by inflicting leprosy on him.
The afflicted person is not said to have committed any evil.
The priest was not a public health official; he was a judge who declared a leper's legal status.
Neither church nor State was required to support the afflicted, homeless person.
No other diseases came under such rigorous laws of exclusion.
The person was not quarantined inside a city; he was quarantined through exclusion from a city.
This law could not survive the demise of the Mosaic priesthood.
The nation's boundary laws collapsed in A.D. 70.
New Covenant quarantines must be based on biological contagion, not judicial contagion.
The quarantine law was supposed to protect the public.
If the taxpayers had to finance the quarantined individual, there would be an economic incentive not to impose a quarantine.
Public health considerations -- protection against a biological invader -- govern New Covenant quarantining.
The priest did possess civil authority to declare a quarantine.
This indicates the existence of a unique judicial condition that the civil magistrate could not lawfully declare.
The clean-unclean distinction has no validity today.
There is no priestly caste to declare such a legal status.
The clean-unclean distinction was based on God's judicial presence in the tabernacle-temple.
God departed definitively from Mosaic Israel at the crucifixion.
Death is a boundary.
Christ's resurrection overcame it definitively.
This definitively ended the offices of earthly high priest and the blood avenger.
This also ended the leprosy quarantine laws.
Footnotes:
1. The rabbis interpreted this law as applying only to Israelites and proselytes, not to resident aliens. Jacob Milgrom, Leviticus 1-16, vol. 3 of The Anchor Bible (New York: Doubleday, 1991), p. 772. This view is called into question because Naaman, a Syrian military leader, contracted the disease (II Ki. 5). He was not an Israelite or a proselyte. The Syrians had invaded Israel (v. 2); this boundary violation may have been the basis of his leprosy, despite his honor before God (v. 1). Naaman's cure was to dip himself seven times in the Jordan River, the boundary that separated Israel from the world (v. 14).
2. R. K. Harrison, Leviticus: An Introduction and Commentary (Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity, 1980), pp. 140-47.
3. Milgrom, Leviticus 1-16, p. 816. Harrison, rare among modern commentators, denies this: Leviticus, p. 138. Milgrom traces this confusion to the ninth-century Arab physician, John of Damascus: Leviticus 1-16, p. 816.
4. Milgrom cites Marvin Engel, a dermatologist: Leviticus 1-16, p. 817.
5. Ibid., p. 818.
6. Ibid., p. 819.
7. Ibid., p. 821.
8. Gordon J. Wenham, The Book of Leviticus (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans, 1979), p. 203.
9. Samson Raphael Hirsch, The Pentateuch, translated by Isaac Levy, 5 vols. (2nd ed., Gateshead, London: Judaica Press, [1867-78] 1989), III, p. 331: Leviticus 13:2.
10. Wenham, Leviticus, pp. 209-10.
11. Ibid., p. 210.
12. See Chapter 36, below.
13. Wenham, Leviticus, p. 200. He cites Ezekiel 24:17, 22: covering the moustache while mourning for the dead.
14. Ibid., p. 201.
15. Being confined to a city of refuge at least had a temporal limit: the death of the high priest (Num. 35:25).
16. See Chapter 4, above.
17. This act had been authorized by Moses, as the supreme civil ruler (Num. 25:5).
18. Wenham, Leviticus, pp. 213, 214.
19. When I raised this argument in my debate with Ron Sider in the spring of 1981 at Gordon-Conwell Seminary, his rhetorical response was clever. He cried, "Unclean, unclean!" He then admitted that he had never heard anything like this before. But he made no attempt to answer my argument exegetically.
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