Adultery
(Exodus 20:14) The parties to this crime, according to Jewish law, were a married woman and a man who was not her husband. The Mosaic penalty
was that both the guilty parties should be stoned, and it applied as well to the betrothed as to the married woman, provided
she were free. (22:22-24) A bondwoman so offending was to be scourged, and the man was to make a trespass offering. (Leviticus 19:20-22) At a later time, and when owing, to Gentile example, the marriage tie became a looser bond of union, public feeling in regard
to adultery changed, and the penalty of death was seldom or never inflicted. The famous trial by the waters of jealousy, (Numbers 5:11-29) was probably an ancient custom, which Moses found deeply seated—(But this ordeal was wholly in favor of the innocent, and
exactly opposite to most ordeals. For the water which the accused drank was perfectly harmless, and only by a miracle could
it produce a bad effect; while in most ordeals the accused must suffer what naturally produces death, and be proved innocent
only by a miracle. Symbolically adultery is used to express unfaithfulness to covenant vows to God, who is represented as
the husband of his people.)