Difference between revisions of "Adultery" - New World Encyclopedia

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'''Adultery''' is generally defined as consensual [[human sexuality|sexual intercourse]] by a [[marriage|married]] person with someone other than his or her lawful spouse. Thus, adultery is a special case of [[fornication]], which refers to consensual sexual intercourse between two people not married to each other. The common synonym for adultery is [[infidelity]] as well as unfaithfulness or in colloquial speech, "cheating."
  
==Definitions==
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Views on the gravity of adultery have varied across [[culture]]s and [[religion]]s. Generally, since most have considered marriage an inviolable if not [[sacred]] commitment, adultery has been strictly censured and severely [[punishment|punished]]. For any society in which [[monogamy]] is the [[norm]], adultery is a serious violation on all levels—the individuals involved, the spouse and [[family]] of the perpetrator, and the larger [[community]] for whom the family is the building block and the standard or "school" for interpersonal relationships. The [[Sexual Revolution]] of the mid-twentieth century loosened strictures on sexual behavior such that fornication was no longer considered outside the norms of behavior and certainly not criminal if both parties were of age. Nevertheless, adultery still has serious ramifications and is considered sufficient cause for [[divorce]].
===Adultery===
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{{toc}}
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From a spiritual perspective, however, the act of adultery causes more than just [[emotion]]al or legal problems. The violation of trust involved in sexual activity with someone while married to another is deep, and sexual intimacy is not just a physical and emotional experience but a spiritual one. When one has a sexual relationship with another it is not just their "heart" that is given but their [[soul]]. While the heart cannot be taken back and mended without difficulty, it is all but impossible to take back the soul.
  
'''Adultery''' is generally defined as consensual [[sexual intercourse]] of fornication by a [[marriage|married]] person with someone other than his or her lawful spouse. In many jurisdictions, an unmarried person who is sexually involved with a married person is also considered an adulterer. The common synonym for adultery is [[infidelity]] as well as unfaithfulness or in [[colloquial speech]], cheating. It was also known in earlier times by the legalistic term "alienation of affection".[http://www.thefreedictionary.com/alienation+of+affection]
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==Definitions==
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'''Fornication''' is a term which refers to any [[Human sexuality|sexual activity]] between [[marriage|unmarried]] partners. '''Adultery''', on the other hand, refers specifically to extramarital sexual relations in which at least one of the parties is married (to someone else) when the act is committed.
  
The sexual partner of a person committing adultery is often referred to in legal documents, especially [[divorce]] proceedings, as a co-respondent, while the person whose spouse has been unfaithful is often labeled a [[cuckold]]. Originally, the latter term was applied only to males, but in more recent times women have been characterized in this way too.
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Adultery was known in earlier times by the legalistic term "criminal conversation" (another term, [[alienation of affection]], is used when one spouse deserts the other for a third person). The term originates not from ''[[adult]]'', which is from [[Latin]] a-dolescere, to grow up, mature, a combination of ''a'', "to," ''dolere'', "work," and the processing combound ''sc''), but from the Latin ''ad-ulterare'' (to commit adultery, adulterate/falsify, a combination of ''ad,'' "at," and ''ulter,'' "above," "beyond," "opposite," meaning "on the other side of the bond of marriage").<ref>''Longman Dictionary of Latin.'' (Berlin: Longman,  1950).</ref>
  
A marriage in which both spouses agree that it is acceptable to have sexual relationships with other people is termed [[open marriage]] and the resulting sexual relationships, though still adulterous, are not treated as such by the spouses.
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Today, although the definition of "adultery" finds various expressions in different legal systems, the common theme is sexual activity between persons when one of both is married to someone else.
  
===Fornication===
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For example, [[New York]] State defines an adulterer as a person who "engages in sexual intercourse with another person at a time when he has a living spouse, or the other person has a living spouse."<ref>[https://www.lectlaw.com/files/sex09.htm Minnes 130.00 Sex offenses; definitions of terms] New York State Sexual Statutes, The 'Lectric Law Library. Retrieved June 6, 2019.</ref>
'''Fornication''' is a term which refers to any [[Human sexual behavior|sexual activity]] between unmarried partners. Sex between unmarried persons is distinguished from [[adultery]] by use of the term 'simple fornication'; whereas relations in which at least one of the parties is married, is considered 'adultery'.
 
  
The [[etymology|origin]] of the word derives from Latin. The word ''fornix'' means "an archway" or "vault" (in [[Ancient Rome|Rome]], [[prostitute]]s could be solicited there). More directly, ''fornicatio'' means "of the archway"; thus a [[euphemism]] for prostitution.
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A marriage in which both spouses agree that it is acceptable for the husband or wife to have sexual relationships with other people other than their spouse is a form of non-[[monogamy]]. The resulting sexual relationships the husband or wife may have with other people, although could be considered to be adultery in some legal jurisdictions, are not treated as such by the spouses.
  
Fornication is dealt with differently in various religions, societies and cultures.
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==Laws and penalties==
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[[Image:Man and woman undergoing public exposure for adultery in Japan-J. M. W. Silver.jpg|thumb|250px|Man and woman undergoing public exposure for adultery in Japan, around 1860]]
  
==Laws and Penalties==
 
 
===Adultery===
 
===Adultery===
Historically, adultery has been subject to severe [[sanction]]s including the [[death penalty]] and has been grounds for [[divorce]] under fault-based divorce [[family law|laws]]. In some places the method for punishing adultery is [[stoning]] to death.[http://www.7days.ae/2006/06/12/execution-unlikely.html]
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Historically, adultery has been subject to severe [[punishment]]s including the [[death penalty]] and has been grounds for [[divorce]] under fault-based divorce [[family law|laws]]. In some places the death penalty for adultery has been carried out by [[stoning]].<ref>[http://edition.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/africa/09/19/nigeria.stoning/ Anger over adultery stoning case] ''CNN'', February 23, 2004. Retrieved June 6, 2019.</ref>
  
In the original [[Napoleonic Code]], a man could ask to be divorced from his wife if she committed adultery, but the adultery of the husband was not a sufficient motive unless he had kept his [[concubine]] in the family home.
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For example, the influential [[Code of Hammurabi]] contains a section on adultery. It mirrors the customs of earlier societies in bringing harsh penalties upon those found guilty of adultery. The punishment prescribed in Hammurabi's Code was death by drowning or burning for both the unfaithful spouse and the external seducer. The pair could be spared if the wronged spouse pardoned the adulterer, but even still the king had to intervene to spare the lovers' lives.
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{{readout|In some cultures, adultery was defined as a crime only when a wife had sexual relations with a man who was not her husband; a husband could be unfaithful to his wife without it being considered adultery.|left}} For example, in the Graeco-Roman world we find stringent laws against adultery, yet almost throughout they discriminate against the wife. The ancient idea that the wife was the [[property]] of the husband is still operative. The lending of wives was, as [[Plutarch]] tells us, encouraged also by Lycurgus.<ref>Plutarch, "Lycurgus" XXIX, ''Plutarch Lives, I, Theseus and Romulus. Lycurgus and Numa. Solon and Publicola'' (Loeb Classical Library, 1914, ISBN 0674990528).</ref> There was, therefore, no such thing as the crime of adultery on the part of a husband towards his wife. The recognized license of the Greek husband may be seen in the following passage of the Oration against Neaera, the author of which is uncertain though it has been attributed to [[Demosthenes]]:
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<blockquote>We keep mistresses for our pleasures, concubines for constant attendance, and wives to bear us legitimate children, and to be our faithful housekeepers. Yet, because of the wrong done to the husband only, the Athenian lawgiver Solon, allowed any man to kill an adulterer whom he had taken in the act.<ref>Plutarch, "Solon," ''Plutarch Lives, I, Theseus and Romulus. Lycurgus and Numa. Solon and Publicola'' (Loeb Classical Library, 1914, ISBN 0674990528).</ref></blockquote>
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Later on in Roman history, as William Lecky has shown, the idea that the husband owed a fidelity like that demanded of the wife must have gained ground at least in theory. This Lecky gathers from the [[legal maxim]] of [[Ulpian]]: "It seems most unfair for a man to require from a wife the chastity he does not himself practice."<ref>William Lecky, "Codex Justin., Digest, XLVIII, 5-13" ''History of European Morals'' (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, 2005, ISBN 1425548385).</ref>
  
In some [[jurisdiction]]s, including [[Korea]] and [[Taiwan]], adultery is still illegal. In the [[United States]], laws vary from state to state. For example, in [[Pennsylvania]], adultery is technically punishable by 2 years of imprisonment or 18 months of treatment for insanity (for history, see Hamowy). That being said, such statutes are typically considered [[blue law]]s, and are rarely, if ever, enforced. In the [[U.S. Military]], adultery is a [[court-martial]]able offense only if it was "to the prejudice of good order and discipline" or "of a nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces" [http://usmilitary.about.com/od/justicelawlegislation/a/adultery.htm]. This has been applied to cases where both partners were members of the military, particularly where one is in command of the other, or one partner and the other's spouse. The enforceability of criminal sanctions for adultery is very questionable in light of [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]] decisions since 1965 relating to privacy and sexual intimacy, and particularly in light of ''[[Lawrence v. Texas]]'', which apparently recognized a broad constitutional right of sexual intimacy for consenting adults.
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[[Image:Jules Arsène Garnier - Le supplice des adultères.jpg|thumb|right|275 px|''Le supplice des adultères,'' Jules Arsène Garnier]]
  
In [[Canadian]] law, adultery is defined under the [[Divorce Act]]. Though the written definition sets it as extramarital relations with someone of the opposite sex, the [[Civil Marriage Act|recent change in the definition of marriage]] gave grounds for a [[British Columbia]] judge to strike that definition down. In a 2005 case of a woman filing for divorce, her husband had cheated on her with another man, which the judge felt was equal reasoning to dissolve the union.
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In the original [[Napoleonic Code]], a man could ask to be divorced from his wife if she committed adultery, but the adultery of the husband was not a sufficient motive unless he had kept his [[concubine]] in the family home.
  
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In contemporary times in the [[United States]] laws vary from state to state. For example, in [[Pennsylvania]], adultery is technically punishable by two years of imprisonment or 18 months of treatment for insanity.<ref>Ronald Hamowy, ''Medicine and the Crimination of Sin: "Self-Abuse" in 19th Century America.'' 2, 3 [https://www.mises.org/journals/jls/1_3/1_3_8.pdf ''Medicine and the Crimination of Sin: Self-Abuse''] Retrieved June 6, 2019.</ref> That being said, such statutes are typically considered [[blue law]]s, and are rarely, if ever, enforced.
  
The laws on fornication have historically been tied with religion, however in many countries there have been attempts to secularise constitutions, and laws differ greatly from country to country.
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In the [[U.S. Military]], adultery is a [[court-martial]]able offense only if it was "to the prejudice of good order and discipline" or "of a nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces."<ref>Rod Powers, [https://www.thebalancecareers.com/adultery-in-the-military-3354158 Adultery in the Military] ''US Military Careers'', November 1, 2018. Retrieved June 6, 2019.</ref> This has been applied to cases where both partners were members of the military, particularly where one is in command of the other, or one partner and the other's spouse. The enforceability of criminal sanctions for adultery is very questionable in light of [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]] decisions since 1965 relating to privacy and sexual intimacy, and particularly in light of ''[[Lawrence v. Texas]],'' which apparently recognized a broad constitutional right of sexual intimacy for consenting adults.
  
 
===Fornication===
 
===Fornication===
===United States of America===
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The laws on fornication have historically been tied with [[religion]], however in many countries there have been attempts to secularize constitutions, and laws differ greatly from country to country. Rather than varying greatly along national lines, views on fornication are often determined by religion, which can cross borders.
Historically, in the context of the [[law]]s of states of the [[United States]], fornication is generally defined as ([[vagina|vaginal]]) [[sexual intercourse]] between two unmarried persons of opposite sex and has been a [[crime]]. Most of these laws were either repealed, are not enforced, or were struck down by the courts as unconstitutional. See also ''[[State of New Jersey v. Saunders]]'', [[Court decision|381 A.2d 333]] (N.J. 1977), ''[[Martin v. Ziherl]]'' 607 S.E.2d 367 (Va. 2005).
 
 
 
With respect to fornication between same-sex persons, or [[sodomy]], the U.S. Supreme Court decision in ''[[Lawrence v. Texas]]'' rendered the states' remaining laws unconstitutional.
 
  
Some states though, continue to enforce laws on fornication and adultery.<ref>For example, North Carolina courts regard Lawrence v. Texas as applying to sodomy laws only and continue to enforce laws on fornication and adultery. (Note: "criminal conversation" is a euphemism for extramarital sex)
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Laws dealing with fornication are usually defined as intercourse between two unmarried persons of the opposite gender. These have been mostly repealed, not enforced, or struck down in various courts in the western world.<ref>''State of New Jersey v. Saunders'', 381 A.2d 333 (N.J. 1977), ''Martin v. Ziherl'' 607 S.E.2d 367 (Va. 2005). </ref>
[http://www.aoc.state.nc.us/www/public/coa/opinions/2002/011570-1.htm]
 
[http://www.aoc.state.nc.us/www/public/coa/opinions/2005/031630-1.htm]</ref>
 
  
===Islamic Countries===
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Fornication is a [[crime]] in many [[Muslim]] countries, and is often harshly punished. However, there are some exceptions. In certain countries where parts of [[Islamic law]] are enforced, such as [[Iran]] and [[Saudi Arabia]], fornication of unmarried persons is punishable by lashings. This is in contrast to adultery, where if one of the convicted were married, their punishment would be [[death penalty|death]] by stoning.
Fornication is a crime in many [[Muslim]] countries, and is often harshly punished. However, there are some exceptions. In [[Pakistan]], for example, occasionally a charge is filed in order to prevent the accused from leaving the judistriction (for instance it is often used against drug smugglers, against whom it may not be possible to show a [[prima facie]] case for trial, but a charge of fornication, which requires a lower threshold, can be filed in the interim as the investigation unfolds.) In certain countries where parts of Islamic law are enforced, such as [[Iran]] and [[Saudi Arabia]], fornication of unmarried persons is punishable by lashings. This is in contrast to adultery, whereas if one of the convicted were married, their punishment would be death by stoning.  Historically speaking, [[corporal punishment]] for sexual crimes are part of law enforcement in the Abrahamic faiths when comprehensively carried out.
 
  
==Adultery in selected cultural and religious traditions==
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==Religious Views==
[[Image:Man and woman undergoing public exposure for adultery in Japan-J. M. W. Silver.jpg|thumb|250px|Man and woman undergoing public exposure for adultery in Japan, around 1860]]
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Among the world religions, adultery and fornication are generally considered major [[sin]]s: <blockquote>No other sin has such a baneful effect on the spiritual life. Because it is committed in secret, by mutual consent, and often without fear of the law, adultery is especially a sin against God and against the goal of life. Modern secular societies can do little to inhibit adultery and sexual promiscuity. Only the norms of morality which are founded on religion can effectively curb this sin.<ref>Andrew Wilson (ed.), [http://www.unification.net/ws/theme059.htm Adultery] ''World Scripture'' (1991). Retrieved June 6, 2019.</ref></blockquote>
 
 
===Primitive and Ancient societies===
 
Among 'savages' generally adultery is rigorously condemned and punished. But it is condemned and punished only as a violation of the husband's rights. Among such peoples the wife is commonly reckoned as the property of her spouse, and adultery, therefore, is identified with theft. But it is theft of an aggravated kind, as the property which it would spoliate is more highly appraised than other chattels. So it is that in some parts of Africa the seducer is punished with the loss of one or both hands, as one who has perpetrated a robbery upon the husband (Reade, Savage Africa, p. 61). But it is not the seducer alone that suffers. Dire penalties are visited upon the offending wife by her wronged spouse in many instances she is made to endure such a bodily mutilation as will, in the mind of the aggrieved husband, prevent her being thereafter a temptation to other men (Schoolcraft, Historical and Statistical Information Respecting the History, Condition and Prospects of the Indian Tribes of the United States, I, 236; V, 683, 684, 686; also H.H. Bancroft, The Native Races of the Pacific States of North America, I, 514). If, however, the wronged husband could visit swift and terrible retribution upon the adulterous wife, the latter was allowed no cause against the unfaithful husband; and this discrimination found in the practices of savage peoples is moreover set forth in nearly all ancient codes of law. The Laws of Manu are Striking on this point. In ancient India, "though destitute of virtue or seeking pleasure elsewhere, or devoid of good qualities, yet a husband must be constantly worshipped as a god by a faithful wife"; on the other, hand, "if a wife, proud of the greatness of her relatives or [her own] excellence, violates the duty which she owes to her lord, the king shall cause her to be devoured by dogs in a place frequented by many" (Laws of Manu, V, 154; VIII, 371).
 
 
 
In the Graeco-Roman world we find stringent laws against adultery, yet almost throughout they discriminate against the wife. The ancient idea that the wife was the property of the husband is still operative. The lending of wives practiced among some savages was, as [[Plutarch]] tells us, encouraged also by Lycurgus, though, be it observed, from a motive other than that which actuated the savages (Plutarch, Lycurgus, XXIX). The recognized license of the Greek husband may be seen in the following passage of the Oration against Neaera, the author of which is uncertain, though it has been attributed to Demosthenes: "We keep mistresses for our pleasures, concubines for constant attendance, and wives to bear us legitimate children, and to be our faithful housekeepers. Yet, because of the wrong done to the husband only, the Athenian lawgiver Solon, allowed any man to kill an, adulterer whom he had taken in the act" (Plutarch, Solon).  
 
 
 
In the early Roman Law the ''jus tori'' belonged to the husband. There was, therefore, no such thing as the crime of adultery on the part of a husband towards his wife. Moreover, this crime was not committed unless one of the parties was a married woman (Dig., XLVIII, ad leg. Jul.). That the Roman husband often took advantage of his legal immunity is well known. Thus we are told by the historian [[Spartianus]] that [[Verus]], the imperial colleague of [[Marcus Aurelius]], did not hesitate to declare to his reproaching wife: "Uxor enim dignitatis nomen est, non voluptatis." (Verus, V).
 
 
Later on in Roman history, as the late William E.H. Lecky has shown the idea that the husband owed a fidelity like that demanded of the wife must have gained ground at least in theory. This Lecky gathers from the [[legal maxim]] of [[Ulpian]]: "It seems most unfair for a man to require from a wife the chastity he does not himself practice" (Codex Justin., Digest, XLVIII, 5-13; Lecky, History of European Morals, II, 313).  
 
  
 
===Judaism===
 
===Judaism===
In [[Judaism]], adultery was forbidden in the seventh commandment of the [[Ten Commandments]], but this did not apply to a married man having relations with an unmarried woman. Only a married woman engaging in sexual intercourse with another man counted as adultery, in which case both the woman and the man were considered guilty [http://www.studylight.org/enc/isb/view.cgi?word=adultery&search.x=0&search.y=0&search=Lookup&action=Lookup].
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In [[Judaism]], adultery was forbidden in the seventh commandment of the [[Ten Commandments]], but this did not apply to a married man having relations with an unmarried woman. Only a married woman engaging in sexual intercourse with another man counted as adultery, in which case both the woman and the man were considered guilty.<ref>David Werner Amram, [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/865-adultery Adultery] ''Jewish Encyclopedia''. Retrieved June 6, 2019.</ref>
In the Bible, fornication is defined as idolatry or adultery, that is, the breaking of the [[covenant]] vow with God or the breaking of the holy wedding vows. To worship another god (idol) is to cheat on God, and is against the [[First Commandment]]. In the Bible, God says that those Israelites who worship idols have fornicated against Him<ref>see [[Book of Hosea|Hosea]] 1-3, [[Book of Ezekiel|Ezekiel]] 16 and [[Book of Jeremiah|Jeremiah]] 2:20-36.</ref>.
 
  
In the [[Mosaic Law]], as in the old Roman Law, adultery meant only the carnal intercourse of a wife with a man who was not her lawful husband. The intercourse of a married man with a single woman was not accounted adultery, but [[fornication]]. The penal statute on the subject, in [[Leviticus]], xx, 10, makes this clear: "If any man commit adultery with the wife of another and defile his neighbor's wife let them be put to death both the adulterer and the adulteress" (see also [[Deuteronomy]] 22:22). This was quite in keeping with the prevailing practice of polygamy among the Israelites.
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In the Mosaic Law, as in the old Roman Law, adultery meant only the carnal intercourse of a wife with a man who was not her lawful husband. The intercourse of a married man with a single woman was not accounted adultery, but fornication. The penal statute on the subject, in [[Leviticus]], 20:10, makes this clear: "If any man commit adultery with the wife of another and defile his neighbor's wife let them be put to death both the adulterer and the adulteress" (also [[Deuteronomy]] 22:22). This was quite in keeping with the prevailing practice of [[polygyny]] among the Israelites.
 
   
 
   
In [[halakha]] (Jewish Law) the penalty for adultery is stoning for both the man and the woman, but this is only enacted when there are two independent witnesses who warned the sinners prior to the crime being done. Hence this is rarely carried out, but a man is not allowed to continue living with a wife who cheated on him, and is obliged to give her a [[get (divorce document)|get]] or bill of divorce written by a [[sofer]] or scribe.
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In [[halakha]] (Jewish Law) the penalty for adultery is stoning for both the man and the woman, but this is only enacted when there are two independent witnesses who warned the sinners prior to the crime being committed. Hence this is rarely carried out. However a man is not allowed to continue living with a wife who cheated on him, and is obliged to give her a "[[get (divorce document)|get]]" or bill of [[divorce]] written by a [[sofer]] or scribe.
  
Orthodox Judaism restricts sexual activity to a legally permissible marriage between a Jewish man and a Jewish woman. A man and women are even prohibited from being in a closed room alone together if they are not married, a law called ''[[yichud]]'', nor are they allowed to have physical contact (a law referred to as ''[[negiah]]'').
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The Hebrew word translated “fornication” in the Old Testament was also used in the context of [[idolatry]], called "spiritual whoredom." Israel’s idolatry is often described as a wanton woman who went “whoring after” other gods (Exodus 34:15-16; Leviticus 17:7; Ezekiel 6:9 KJV).<ref>[http://www.gotquestions.org/fornication-adultery.html What is the difference between fornication and adultery?] GotQuestions.org. Retrieved June 6, 2019.</ref>
  
 
===Christianity===
 
===Christianity===
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Throughout the [[Old Testament]], adultery is forbidden in the [[Ten Commandments]], and punishable by death. In the [[New Testament]], [[Jesus]] preached that adultery was a [[sin]] but did not enforce the punishment, reminding the people that they had all sinned. In John 8:1-11, some [[Pharisees]] brought Jesus a woman accused of committing adultery. After reminding Jesus that her punishment should be [[stoning]], the Pharisees asked Jesus what should be done. Jesus responded, "If any one of you is without sin, let him be the first to throw a stone at her."<ref>[https://biblehub.com/john/8-7.htm John 8:7] ''BibleHub''. Retrieved June 4, 2019.</ref> Jesus then forgave the woman and told her not to commit adultery.
  
Throughout the [[Old Testament]], adultery is forbidden in the [[Ten Commandments]], and punished by death. In the [[New Testament]], [[Jesus]] took a softer stance on adultery, although he preached that it was a [[sin]]. In one story (John 8:1-11), some [[Pharisees]] brought Jesus a woman accused of committing adultery. After reminding Jesus that her punishment should be [[stoning]], the Pharisees asked Jesus what should be done. Jesus responded, "If any one of you is without sin, let him be the first to throw a stone at her." Jesus forgave the woman and told her not to commit adultery.
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[[Paul of Tarsus|Saint Paul]] put men and women on the same footing with regard to marital rights.<ref>[https://biblehub.com/1_corinthians/7-3.htm 1 Corinthians 7:3] ''BibleHub''. Retrieved June 4, 2019.</ref> This contradicted the traditional notion that relations of a married man with an unmarried woman were not adultery.  
 
 
In the sixteenth century, the Catechism of the Council of Trent<ref>{{cite web
 
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  | accessdate = 2007-02-26 }}</ref> defines adultery as follows: "To begin with the prohibitory part (of the Commandment), adultery is the defilement of the marriage bed, whether it be one's own or another's. If a married man have intercourse with an unmarried woman, he violates the integrity of his marriage bed; and if an unmarried man have intercourse with a married woman, he defiles the sanctity of the marriage bed of another."<ref>{{cite web
 
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==== Nature of adultery====
 
Adultery is defined as carnal connection between a married person and one unmarried, or between a married person and the spouse of another. It is seen to differ from fornication in that it supposes the marriage of one or both of the agents. Nor is it necessary that this marriage be already consummated; it need only be what theologians call matrimonium ratum. Sexual commerce with one engaged to another does not, it is most generally held, constitute adultery. Again, adultery, as the definition declares, is committed in carnal intercourse. Nevertheless immodest actions indulged in between a married person and another not the lawful spouse, while not of the same degree of guilt, are of the same character of malice as adultery (Sanchez, De Mat., L. IX. Disp. XLVI, n. 17). However [[St. Alphonsus Liguori]], with most theologians, declares that even between lawful man and wife adultery is committed when their intercourse takes the form of [[sodomy]] (S. Liguori L. III, n. 446).
 
 
 
In the law of Jesus Christ regarding marriage the Mosaic discrimination against the wife is emphatically repudiated: the unfaithful husband loses his ancient immunity (Matthew 19:3-13). The obligation of mutual fidelity, incumbent upon husband as well as wife, is moreover implied in the notion of the Christian sacrament, in which is symbolized the ineffable and lasting union of the Heavenly Bridegroom and His unspotted Bride, the Church, St. Paul insists with emphasis upon the duty of equal mutual fidelity in both the marital partners (1 Corinthians 7:4); and several of the [[Fathers of the Church]], as [[Tertullian]] (De Monogamia, cix), [[Lactantius]] (Divin. Instit., LVI, c. xxiii), [[St. Gregory Nazianzen]] (Oratio, xxxi) and [[St. Augustine]] (De Bono Conjugati, n. 4), have given clear expression to the same idea. But the notion that obligations of fidelity rested upon the husband the same as upon the wife is one that has not always found practical exemplification in the laws of Christian states. Despite the protests of Mr. Gladstone, the English Parliament passed in 1857 a law by which a husband may obtain absolute divorce on account of simple adultery in his wife, while the latter can be freed from her adulterous husband only when his infidelity has been attended with such cruelty "as would have entitled her to a divorce a mensâ et toro." The same discrimination against the wife is found in some early [[New England]] colonies. Thus, in [[Massachusetts]] the adultery of the husband, unlike that of the wife, was not sufficient ground for divorce. And the same most likely was the case in Plymouth Plantation (Howard, A History of Matrimonial Institutions, II, 331-351). 
 
 
 
====Guilt of adultery====
 
It is clear that the severity of punishment meted out to the adulterous woman and her seducer among savages did not find their sanction in anything like an adequate idea of the guilt of this crime. In contrast with such rigour is the lofty benignity of Jesus Christ towards the one guilty of adultery (John 8:3, 4), a contrast as marked as that between the Christian doctrine regarding the malice of this sin and the idea of its guilt which prevailed before the Christian era. In the early discipline of the Church we see reflected a sense of the enormity of adultery, though it must be admitted that the severity of this legislation, such as that, for instance, which we find in canons 8 and 47 of the [[Council of Elvira]] (c. 300), must be largely accounted for by the general harshness of the times.
 
 
Considering now the act in itself, adultery, forbidden by the sixth commandment, has in it a twofold malice, in common with fornication it violates chastity, and it is, besides, a sin against justice. Drawing a distinction between these two elements of malice, certain casuists, early in the seventeenth century, declared that intercourse with a married woman, when her husband gave his consent, constituted not the sin of adultery, but of fornication. It would, therefore, they contended, be sufficient for the penitent, having committed this act, to accuse himself of the latter sin only in confession. At the instance of the Archbishop of Mechlin, the Academy of Louvain, in the year 1653, censured as false and erroneous the proposition: "Copula cum conjugata consentiente marito non est adulterium, adeoque sufficit in confessione dicere se esse fornicatum." The same proposition was condemned by [[Innocent XI]] on March 2, 1679 (Denzinger, Enchir., p. 222, 5th ed.). The falsity of this doctrine appears from the very etymology of the word adultery, for the term signifies the going into the bed of another (St. Thom., II-II:154:8). And the consent of the husband is unavailing to strip the act by which another has intercourse with his wife of this essential characterization. Again, the right of the husband over his wife is qualified by the good of human generation. This good regards not only the birth, but the nourishment and education, of offspring, and its postulates cannot in any way be affected by the consent of parents. Such consent, therefore, as subversive of the good of human generation, becomes juridically void. It cannot, therefore, be adduced as a ground for the doctrine set forth in the condemned proposition above mentioned. For the legal axiom that an injury is not done to one who knows and wills it (scienti et volenti non fit injuria) finds no place when the consent is thus vitiated.  
 
  
But it may be contended that the consent of the husband lessens the enormity of adultery to the extent that whereas, ordinarily, there is a double malice—that against the good of human generation and that against the private rights of the husband with the consent of the latter there is only the first-named malice; hence, one having had carnal intercourse with another's wife, her husband consenting, should in confession declare the circumstance of this permission that he may not accuse himself of that of which he is not guilty: In answer to this, it must be said that the injury offered the husband in adultery is done him not as a private individual but as a member of a marital society, upon whom it is incumbent to consult the good of the prospective child. As such, his consent does not avail to take away the malice of which it is question. Whence it follows that there is no obligation to reveal the fact of his consent in the case we have supposed (Viva, Damnatae Theses, 318). And here it may be observed that the consenting husband may be understood to have renounced his right to any restitution.  
+
This parity between husband and wife was insisted on by early Christian writers such as Lactantius, who declared:
 +
<blockquote>For he is equally an adulterer in the sight of God and impure, who, having thrown off the yoke, wantons in strange pleasure either with a free woman or a slave. But as a woman is bound by the bonds of chastity not to desire any other man, so let the husband be bound by the same law, since God has joined together the husband and the wife in the union of one body.<ref>[http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf07.iii.ii.viii.lxii.html ''Epitome of the Divine Institutes'', chapter 56] Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Retrieved June 9, 2019.</ref></blockquote>
  
The question has been discussed, whether in adultery committed with a Christian, as distinct from that committed with a Pagan, there would be special malice against the sacrament constituting a sin against religion. Though some theologians have held that such would be the case, it should be said, with Viva, that the fact that the sinful person was a Christian would create an aggravating circumstance only, which would not call for specification in confession.
+
In the sixteenth century, the Catechism of the [[Council of Trent]] defined adultery as follows:
 
+
<blockquote>To begin with the prohibitory part (of the Commandment), adultery is the defilement of the marriage bed, whether it be one's own or another's. If a married man have intercourse with an unmarried woman, he violates the integrity of his marriage bed; and if an unmarried man have intercourse with a married woman, he defiles the sanctity of the marriage bed of another.<ref>[http://www.cin.org/users/james/ebooks/master/trent/tcomm06.htm ''The Catechism of Trent'']. ''Nazareth Resource Library''. Retrieved June 6, 2019.</ref></blockquote>
It need hardly be said that when the parties to adultery are both married the sin is more grievous than when one of them is single. Nor is it sufficient for a married person whose guilty partner in this act was also married to declare in confession the fact simply of having committed adultery. The circumstance that both parties to the sin were married is one that must be made known. Again the adulterer in his confession must specify whether, as married, he violated his own marriage pledge or; as single he brought about the violation of the marriage pledge of another. Finally, in case only one of the parties to adultery is married, a more heinous sin is committed when the married person is the woman than when she is the unmarried agent. For in the former instance the due process of generation is not infrequently interfered with, to the injury of the lawful husband; moreover, uncertainty of parentage may result, and even a false heir may be imposed upon the family. Such a distinction as is here remarked, therefore, calls for specification in the confessional.
 
 
 
==== Obligations of adulterers====
 
As we have seen, the sin of adultery implies an act of injustice committed against the lawful spouse of the adulterer or adulteress. By the adultery of a wife, besides the injury done the husband by her infidelity, a spurious child may be born which he may think himself bound to sustain, and which may perhaps become his heir. For the injury suffered in the unfaithfulness of his wife restitution must be made to the husband, should he become apprised of the crime. Nor is the obligation of this restitution ordinarily discharged by an award of money. A more commensurate reparation, when possible, is to be offered. Whenever it is certain that the offspring is illegitimate, and when the adulterer has employed violence to make the woman sin, he is bound to refund the expenses incurred by the putative father in the support of the spurious child, and to make restitution for any inheritance which this child may receive. In case he did not employ violence, there being on his part but a simple concurrence, then, according to the more probable opinion of theologians, the adulterer and adulteress are equally bound to the restitution just described. Even when one has moved the other to sin both are bound to restitution, though most theologians say that the obligation is more immediately pressing upon the one who induced the other to sin. When it is not sure that the offspring is illegitimate the common opinion of theologians is that the sinful parties are not bound to restitution. As for the adulterous mother, in case she cannot secretly undo the injustice resulting from the presence of her illegitimate child, she is not obliged to reveal her sin either to her husband or to her spurious offspring, unless the evil which the good name of the mother might sustain is less than that which would inevitably come from her failure to make such a revelation. Again, in case there would not be the danger of infamy, she would be held to reveal her sin when she could reasonably hope that such a manifestation would be productive of good results. This kind of issue, however, would be necessarily rare.
 
  
 
===Islam===
 
===Islam===
In the Qu'ran, sex before marriage is strictly prohibited. Islam stresses that sexual relations should be restricted to the institution of marriage in order for the creation of the family; and secondly as a means to protect the family, certain relations should be considered prohibited for marriage.Fornication and adultery are both included in the Arabic word 'Zina'. Belonging primarily to the same category of crimes, entailing the same social implications and having the same effects on the spiritual personality of a human being, both, in principle, have been given the same status by the Qur'an.
+
In the [[Qur'an]], sexual activity before [[marriage]] is strictly prohibited. [[Islam]] stresses that sexual relations should be restricted to the institution of [[marriage]] in order for the creation of the [[family]]; and secondly, as a means to protect the family, certain relations should be considered prohibited outside of marriage.  
  
In [[Pakistan]] adultery is criminalized by a law called the [[Hudood Ordinance]], which specifies a maximum penalty of [[death penalty|death]], although only [[imprisonment]] and [[corporal punishment]] have ever actually been used. It is particularly controversial because a woman making an accusation of [[rape]] must provide extremely strong evidence to avoid being charged under it herself.
+
Premarital and extramarital sex (adultery) are both included in the Arabic word ''[[Zina]].'' Belonging primarily to the same category of [[crime]]s, entailing the same social implications, and having the same effects on the spiritual personality of a [[human being]], both, in principle, have been given the same status by the Qur'an. Zina is considered a great [[sin]] in Islam, whether it is before marriage or after marriage. In addition to the [[punishment]]s rendered before death, sinners can expect to be punished severely after death, unless purged of their sins by a punishment according to [[Shari'a]] law.
  
It is notable that same kinds of laws are in effect in some other Muslim countries also such as [[Saudi Arabia]]. However, in recent years high-profile rape cases in Pakistan have given [[Hudood Ordinance]] more exposure than similar laws in other countries.
+
===Hinduism===
 
+
[[Hinduism]], by the holy book, the ''[[Bhagavad Gita]],'' forbids acts of fornication. It is considered offensive in Hindu society as well, and it is still forbidden by Hindu law.
===Dharmic Faiths Stances on Fornication===
 
====Hinduism====
 
Hinduism, by the holy book, the [[Bhagavad Gita]], forbids acts of Fornication. It is considered offensive in the Hindu society as well.  Due to the recent impact of the western culture, the Hindu society seems to be coming to change its strict policies.  The age group most affect by western sexual influence is the teenage group, which is more easily influenced by western movies.  However, it is still forbidden by Hindu law.
 
 
 
Alternative hindu schools of thought such as the [[Tantric]] branches of [[Hinduism]], the Hindu practices native to India that ''predates'' centuries of conservative Islamic influence, is markedly less reserved, teaching that enlightenment can be approached through divine sex. Divine sex is one path whereby one can approach [[Moksha]] (Nirvana), a oneness with a higher spiritual level. As such, the Tantric practices, through writings such as the  [[Kama Sutra]] seek not to repress sexuality, but to perfect it. By perfecting the act of divine sex, including masturbation, as seen depicted at the 10th century Hindu temple of [[Khajuraho]],  one clears the mind of earthly desires, leaving the soul on a higher level devoid of such worries, filled with bliss, and relaxed.
 
 
 
====Buddhism====
 
In the Buddhist tradition, under the Five Precepts and the Eightfold Path, one should neither be attached to nor crave sensual pleasure. The third of the Five Precepts is "To refrain from sexual misconduct." For most Buddhist laypeople, sex outside of marriage is not "sexual misconduct," especially when compared to, say, adultery or any sexual activity which can bring suffering to another human being. Each may need to consider whether, for them, sexual contact is a distraction or means of avoidance of their own spiritual practice or development. To provide a complete focus onto spiritual practice, fully ordained Buddhist monks may, depending on the tradition, be bound by hundreds of further detailed rules or vows that may include a ban on sexual relations. Vajrayana or Tantric Buddhism, on the other hand, teaches that sexual intercourse can be actively used to approach higher spiritual development.
 
 
 
=== Wiccan ===
 
The "Charge of the Goddess" is an instruction of unknown antiquity that is recognized by many [[Neopagan]]s. One part of it reads: "All acts of pleasure are my rituals." As such, the [[Wiccan]]s consider such activity not only normal, and healthy, but also sacred, as well as charged magically. Sex magic is considered one of the more potent branches of thelema, with sex being key to the [[Great Rite]], itself. The Council of American Witches issued a statement about their religion during their Spring Witchmeet of 1974, held in Minneapolis, MN. It says, in part:
 
 
 
''"We value sexuality as pleasure, as the symbol and embodiment of Life, and as one of the sources of energies used in magickal practices and religious worship."''
 
  
 +
Alternative Hindu schools of thought such as the [[Tantra|Tantric]] branches of Hinduism, the Hindu practices native to [[India]] that predates centuries of conservative Islamic influence, is markedly less reserved, teaching that [[enlightenment]] can be approached through divine sex. Divine sex is one path whereby one can approach [[Moksha]], a oneness with a higher spiritual level. As such, the Tantric practices seek not to repress sexuality, but to perfect it. By perfecting the act of divine sex, one clears the mind of earthly desires, leaving the [[soul]] on a higher level devoid of such worries, filled with bliss, and relaxed.
  
 +
===Buddhism===
 +
In the [[Buddhism|Buddhist]] tradition, under the [[Five Precepts]] and the [[Eightfold Path]], one should neither be attached to nor crave sensual pleasure. The third of the Five Precepts is "To refrain from sexual misconduct." For most Buddhist laypeople, sex outside of marriage is not "sexual misconduct," especially when compared to, say, adultery or any sexual activity which can bring suffering to another human being. Each may need to consider whether, for them, sexual contact is a distraction or means of avoidance of their own spiritual practice or development. To provide a complete focus onto spiritual practice, fully ordained Buddhist monks may, depending on the tradition, be bound by hundreds of further detailed rules or vows that may include a ban on sexual relations. [[Vajrayana]] or Tantric Buddhism, on the other hand, teaches that sexual intercourse can be actively used to approach higher spiritual development.
  
 
==Adultery in Literature==
 
==Adultery in Literature==
 +
The theme of adultery features in a wide range of [[literature]] through the ages. As [[marriage]] and [[family]] are often regarded as basis of society a story of adultery often shows the [[conflict]] between social pressure and individual struggle for [[happiness]].
  
The theme of [[adultery]] features in a wide range of [[literature]] through the ages. This is hardly surprising, as the fact of adultery has been a part of the [[human condition|human existence]] for as long as there has been [[marriage]]. As a theme it automatically brings its own conflict, between the people concerned and between sexual desires and a sense of loyalty; it brings intense emotions into the foreground, and has consequences for all concerned.
+
In the [[Bible]], incidents of adultery are present almost from the start. The story of [[Abraham]] contains several incidents and serve as warnings or stories of [[sin]] and [[forgiveness]]. Abraham attempts to continue his blood line through his wife's maidservant, with consequences that continue through history. [[Jacob]]'s family life is complicated with similar incidents.
 
 
As marriage and family are often regarded as basis of society a story of adultery often shows the conflict between social pressure and individual struggle for happiness.
 
 
 
In the [[Bible]], incidents of adultery are present almost from the start. The story of [[Abraham]] contains several incidents and serve as warnings or stories of sin and forgiveness. Abraham attempts to continue his blood line through his wife's maidservant, with consequences that continue through history. [[Jacob]]'s family life is complicated with similar incidents.
 
  
 
[[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]] wrote three plays in which the perception of adultery plays a significant part. In both ''[[Othello]]'' and ''[[The Winter's Tale]]'' it is the (false) belief by the central character that his wife is unfaithful that brings about his downfall. In "[[The Merry Wives of Windsor]]," an adulterous plot by Falstaff prompts elaborate and repeated revenge by the wronged wives; the comedy of the play hides a deeper anxiety about the infidelity of women.
 
[[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]] wrote three plays in which the perception of adultery plays a significant part. In both ''[[Othello]]'' and ''[[The Winter's Tale]]'' it is the (false) belief by the central character that his wife is unfaithful that brings about his downfall. In "[[The Merry Wives of Windsor]]," an adulterous plot by Falstaff prompts elaborate and repeated revenge by the wronged wives; the comedy of the play hides a deeper anxiety about the infidelity of women.
  
In ''[[The Country Wife]]'' by [[William Wycherley]], the morals of [[English Restoration]] society are satirised. The object of the [[rake]] hero is to seduce as many married ladies as possible, while blinding their husbands to what is going on by pretending to be [[impotent]]. The scheme is very successful, and it is assumed that he goes on adding more notches to his belt after the final curtain.
+
In ''[[The Country Wife]]'' by [[William Wycherley]], the morals of [[English Restoration]] society are satirized. The object of the hero is to seduce as many married ladies as possible, while blinding their husbands to what is going on by pretending to be [[impotence|impotent]].  
 
 
The following works of literature have adultery and its consequences as one of their major themes. (M) and (F) stand for ''adulterer'' and ''adulteress'' respectively.
 
 
 
Other authors who have included adultery in their work are [[F. Scott Fitzgerald]]in his work, ''[[The Great Gatsby]]'', [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]] in ''[[The Scarlet Letter]]'', and [[John Irving]] in ''[[The World According to Garp]]''.  Obviously, adultery has been a popular theme in literature and will continue to be as long as marriage and adultery exist.
 
 
 
==Closing Thoughts==
 
  
Adultary, as we have seen, is the fornication of a married individual with someone outside of their marriage. Adultary as existed as long as the institution of marriage, and they perhaps go hand in hand.  It seems that every culture and religion, past and present, has had to deal with the issue of adultery, and usually quite harshly.  The punishments implemented for adultary include imprisonment or death often by stoning.  The underlying causes of adultary are varied and complicated.  Perhaps adultary stemps from insecurity or a longing for attention.  Adultary can also start with an unhappy marriage.  Or, it might be possible that humans are not inherently monogamous, and instead must work to keep a committed relationship.  The consequences of adultery are as varied as its causes.  Adultary, once discovered, can lead to many consequences such as loss of trust, depression, regret, divorce, and hatred just to name a few.  Marriage is an institution not the be entered into lightly, and perhaps people should take more time to consider the implications of this union before entering into it.  Only through introspection and honesty can we avoid the practice of adultary.
+
Other acclaimed authors who have featured adultery in their novels include [[F. Scott Fitzgerald]] in his work, ''[[The Great Gatsby]],'' [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]] in ''[[The Scarlet Letter]],'' and [[John Irving]] in ''[[The World According to Garp]].''
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
<div class="references-small">
 
 
<references />
 
<references />
</div>
 
 
==Sources and references==
 
*This article incorporates text from the public-domain  [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01163a.htm Catholic Encyclopedia]
 
* [http://usinfo.state.gov/mena/img/assets/4756/121305_muslim_family_laws.pdf Best Practices: Progressive Family Laws in Muslim Countries] August 2005
 
*Hamowy, Ronald. ''Medicine and the Crimination of Sin: "Self-Abuse" in 19th Century America''. pp2/3 [https://www.mises.org/journals/jls/1_3/1_3_8.pdf ''Medicine and the Crimination of Sin: Self-Abuse'']
 
*Best Practices: Progressive Family Laws in Muslim Countries (August 2005} [http://usinfo.state.gov/mena/img/assets/4756/121305_muslim_family_laws.pdf]
 
*Hamowy, Ronald. ''Medicine and the Crimination of Sin: "Self-Abuse" in 19th Century America''. pp2/3 [https://www.mises.org/journals/jls/1_3/1_3_8.pdf]
 
* Moultrup, David J. (1990). Husbands, Wives & Lovers. New York: Guilford Press.
 
* Glass, S. P., & Wright, T. L. (1992). Justifications for extramarital relationships: The association between attitudes, behaviors, and gender. Journal of Sex Research, 29, 361-387.
 
* Pittman, F. (1989). Private Lies. New York: W. W. Norton Co.
 
* Rubin, A. M., & Adams, J. R. (1986). Outcomes of sexually open marriages. Journal of Sex Research, 22, 311-319.
 
* Vaughan, P. (1989). The Monogamy Myth. New York: New Market Press.
 
* [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3658/is_200504/ai_n13641677 INFIDELITY IN COMMITTED RELATIONSHIPS II: A SUBSTANTIVE REVIEW Journal of Marital and Family Therapy,  Apr 2005  by Blow, Adrian J,  Hartnett, Kelley]
 
* [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3658/is_200504/ai_n13641667 INFIDELITY IN COMMITTED RELATIONSHIPS I: A METHODOLOGICAL REVIEW Journal of Marital and Family Therapy,  Apr 2005  by Blow, Adrian J,  Hartnett, Kelley]
 
 
==External links==
 
* [http://www.marriagebuilders.com/graphic/mbi5059_qa.html Coping with Infidelity]
 
* [http://www.theravive.com/services/adultery_help.htm Adultery Help]
 
* [http://www.divorcereform.org/stats.html Marital Statistics]
 
 
  
 +
==References==
 +
*Glass, S.P., and T.L. Wright. "Justifications for extramarital relationships: The association between attitudes, behaviors, and gender," ''Journal of Sex Research'', 29 (1992): 361-387.
 +
*Hamowy, Ronald. [https://www.mises.org/journals/jls/1_3/1_3_8.pdf ''Medicine and the Crimination of Sin: Self-Abuse'']. Retrieved June 11, 2019.
 +
*Lecky, William. ''History of European morals from Augustus to Charlemagne''. Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library. 2005. ISBN 1425548385
 +
*Moultrup, David J. ''Husbands, Wives & Lovers''. New York, NY: Guilford Press, 1990. ISBN 0898621054
 +
*Pittman, F. ''Private Lies: Infidelity and Betrayal of Intimacy''. New York, NY: W. W. Norton Co., 1989. ISBN 0393307077
 +
*Rubin, A.M., & J.R. Adams. "Outcomes of sexually open marriages," ''Journal of Sex Research'' 22 (1986): 311-319.
 +
*Vaughan, P. ''The Monogamy Myth''. New York, NY: New Market Press, 1989. ISBN 1557045429
 +
*Wilson, Andrew (ed.). ''World Scripture: A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts''. New York, NY: Paragon House, 1991. ISBN 0892261293
  
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Latest revision as of 17:15, 8 September 2019


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Adultery is generally defined as consensual sexual intercourse by a married person with someone other than his or her lawful spouse. Thus, adultery is a special case of fornication, which refers to consensual sexual intercourse between two people not married to each other. The common synonym for adultery is infidelity as well as unfaithfulness or in colloquial speech, "cheating."

Views on the gravity of adultery have varied across cultures and religions. Generally, since most have considered marriage an inviolable if not sacred commitment, adultery has been strictly censured and severely punished. For any society in which monogamy is the norm, adultery is a serious violation on all levels—the individuals involved, the spouse and family of the perpetrator, and the larger community for whom the family is the building block and the standard or "school" for interpersonal relationships. The Sexual Revolution of the mid-twentieth century loosened strictures on sexual behavior such that fornication was no longer considered outside the norms of behavior and certainly not criminal if both parties were of age. Nevertheless, adultery still has serious ramifications and is considered sufficient cause for divorce.

From a spiritual perspective, however, the act of adultery causes more than just emotional or legal problems. The violation of trust involved in sexual activity with someone while married to another is deep, and sexual intimacy is not just a physical and emotional experience but a spiritual one. When one has a sexual relationship with another it is not just their "heart" that is given but their soul. While the heart cannot be taken back and mended without difficulty, it is all but impossible to take back the soul.

Definitions

Fornication is a term which refers to any sexual activity between unmarried partners. Adultery, on the other hand, refers specifically to extramarital sexual relations in which at least one of the parties is married (to someone else) when the act is committed.

Adultery was known in earlier times by the legalistic term "criminal conversation" (another term, alienation of affection, is used when one spouse deserts the other for a third person). The term originates not from adult, which is from Latin a-dolescere, to grow up, mature, a combination of a, "to," dolere, "work," and the processing combound sc), but from the Latin ad-ulterare (to commit adultery, adulterate/falsify, a combination of ad, "at," and ulter, "above," "beyond," "opposite," meaning "on the other side of the bond of marriage").[1]

Today, although the definition of "adultery" finds various expressions in different legal systems, the common theme is sexual activity between persons when one of both is married to someone else.

For example, New York State defines an adulterer as a person who "engages in sexual intercourse with another person at a time when he has a living spouse, or the other person has a living spouse."[2]

A marriage in which both spouses agree that it is acceptable for the husband or wife to have sexual relationships with other people other than their spouse is a form of non-monogamy. The resulting sexual relationships the husband or wife may have with other people, although could be considered to be adultery in some legal jurisdictions, are not treated as such by the spouses.

Laws and penalties

Man and woman undergoing public exposure for adultery in Japan, around 1860

Adultery

Historically, adultery has been subject to severe punishments including the death penalty and has been grounds for divorce under fault-based divorce laws. In some places the death penalty for adultery has been carried out by stoning.[3]

For example, the influential Code of Hammurabi contains a section on adultery. It mirrors the customs of earlier societies in bringing harsh penalties upon those found guilty of adultery. The punishment prescribed in Hammurabi's Code was death by drowning or burning for both the unfaithful spouse and the external seducer. The pair could be spared if the wronged spouse pardoned the adulterer, but even still the king had to intervene to spare the lovers' lives.

Did you know?
In some cultures, adultery was defined as a crime only when a wife had sexual relations with a man who was not her husband; a husband could be unfaithful to his wife without it being considered adultery.

In some cultures, adultery was defined as a crime only when a wife had sexual relations with a man who was not her husband; a husband could be unfaithful to his wife without it being considered adultery. For example, in the Graeco-Roman world we find stringent laws against adultery, yet almost throughout they discriminate against the wife. The ancient idea that the wife was the property of the husband is still operative. The lending of wives was, as Plutarch tells us, encouraged also by Lycurgus.[4] There was, therefore, no such thing as the crime of adultery on the part of a husband towards his wife. The recognized license of the Greek husband may be seen in the following passage of the Oration against Neaera, the author of which is uncertain though it has been attributed to Demosthenes:

We keep mistresses for our pleasures, concubines for constant attendance, and wives to bear us legitimate children, and to be our faithful housekeepers. Yet, because of the wrong done to the husband only, the Athenian lawgiver Solon, allowed any man to kill an adulterer whom he had taken in the act.[5]

Later on in Roman history, as William Lecky has shown, the idea that the husband owed a fidelity like that demanded of the wife must have gained ground at least in theory. This Lecky gathers from the legal maxim of Ulpian: "It seems most unfair for a man to require from a wife the chastity he does not himself practice."[6]

Le supplice des adultères, Jules Arsène Garnier

In the original Napoleonic Code, a man could ask to be divorced from his wife if she committed adultery, but the adultery of the husband was not a sufficient motive unless he had kept his concubine in the family home.

In contemporary times in the United States laws vary from state to state. For example, in Pennsylvania, adultery is technically punishable by two years of imprisonment or 18 months of treatment for insanity.[7] That being said, such statutes are typically considered blue laws, and are rarely, if ever, enforced.

In the U.S. Military, adultery is a court-martialable offense only if it was "to the prejudice of good order and discipline" or "of a nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces."[8] This has been applied to cases where both partners were members of the military, particularly where one is in command of the other, or one partner and the other's spouse. The enforceability of criminal sanctions for adultery is very questionable in light of Supreme Court decisions since 1965 relating to privacy and sexual intimacy, and particularly in light of Lawrence v. Texas, which apparently recognized a broad constitutional right of sexual intimacy for consenting adults.

Fornication

The laws on fornication have historically been tied with religion, however in many countries there have been attempts to secularize constitutions, and laws differ greatly from country to country. Rather than varying greatly along national lines, views on fornication are often determined by religion, which can cross borders.

Laws dealing with fornication are usually defined as intercourse between two unmarried persons of the opposite gender. These have been mostly repealed, not enforced, or struck down in various courts in the western world.[9]

Fornication is a crime in many Muslim countries, and is often harshly punished. However, there are some exceptions. In certain countries where parts of Islamic law are enforced, such as Iran and Saudi Arabia, fornication of unmarried persons is punishable by lashings. This is in contrast to adultery, where if one of the convicted were married, their punishment would be death by stoning.

Religious Views

Among the world religions, adultery and fornication are generally considered major sins:

No other sin has such a baneful effect on the spiritual life. Because it is committed in secret, by mutual consent, and often without fear of the law, adultery is especially a sin against God and against the goal of life. Modern secular societies can do little to inhibit adultery and sexual promiscuity. Only the norms of morality which are founded on religion can effectively curb this sin.[10]

Judaism

In Judaism, adultery was forbidden in the seventh commandment of the Ten Commandments, but this did not apply to a married man having relations with an unmarried woman. Only a married woman engaging in sexual intercourse with another man counted as adultery, in which case both the woman and the man were considered guilty.[11]

In the Mosaic Law, as in the old Roman Law, adultery meant only the carnal intercourse of a wife with a man who was not her lawful husband. The intercourse of a married man with a single woman was not accounted adultery, but fornication. The penal statute on the subject, in Leviticus, 20:10, makes this clear: "If any man commit adultery with the wife of another and defile his neighbor's wife let them be put to death both the adulterer and the adulteress" (also Deuteronomy 22:22). This was quite in keeping with the prevailing practice of polygyny among the Israelites.

In halakha (Jewish Law) the penalty for adultery is stoning for both the man and the woman, but this is only enacted when there are two independent witnesses who warned the sinners prior to the crime being committed. Hence this is rarely carried out. However a man is not allowed to continue living with a wife who cheated on him, and is obliged to give her a "get" or bill of divorce written by a sofer or scribe.

The Hebrew word translated “fornication” in the Old Testament was also used in the context of idolatry, called "spiritual whoredom." Israel’s idolatry is often described as a wanton woman who went “whoring after” other gods (Exodus 34:15-16; Leviticus 17:7; Ezekiel 6:9 KJV).[12]

Christianity

Throughout the Old Testament, adultery is forbidden in the Ten Commandments, and punishable by death. In the New Testament, Jesus preached that adultery was a sin but did not enforce the punishment, reminding the people that they had all sinned. In John 8:1-11, some Pharisees brought Jesus a woman accused of committing adultery. After reminding Jesus that her punishment should be stoning, the Pharisees asked Jesus what should be done. Jesus responded, "If any one of you is without sin, let him be the first to throw a stone at her."[13] Jesus then forgave the woman and told her not to commit adultery.

Saint Paul put men and women on the same footing with regard to marital rights.[14] This contradicted the traditional notion that relations of a married man with an unmarried woman were not adultery.

This parity between husband and wife was insisted on by early Christian writers such as Lactantius, who declared:

For he is equally an adulterer in the sight of God and impure, who, having thrown off the yoke, wantons in strange pleasure either with a free woman or a slave. But as a woman is bound by the bonds of chastity not to desire any other man, so let the husband be bound by the same law, since God has joined together the husband and the wife in the union of one body.[15]

In the sixteenth century, the Catechism of the Council of Trent defined adultery as follows:

To begin with the prohibitory part (of the Commandment), adultery is the defilement of the marriage bed, whether it be one's own or another's. If a married man have intercourse with an unmarried woman, he violates the integrity of his marriage bed; and if an unmarried man have intercourse with a married woman, he defiles the sanctity of the marriage bed of another.[16]

Islam

In the Qur'an, sexual activity before marriage is strictly prohibited. Islam stresses that sexual relations should be restricted to the institution of marriage in order for the creation of the family; and secondly, as a means to protect the family, certain relations should be considered prohibited outside of marriage.

Premarital and extramarital sex (adultery) are both included in the Arabic word Zina. Belonging primarily to the same category of crimes, entailing the same social implications, and having the same effects on the spiritual personality of a human being, both, in principle, have been given the same status by the Qur'an. Zina is considered a great sin in Islam, whether it is before marriage or after marriage. In addition to the punishments rendered before death, sinners can expect to be punished severely after death, unless purged of their sins by a punishment according to Shari'a law.

Hinduism

Hinduism, by the holy book, the Bhagavad Gita, forbids acts of fornication. It is considered offensive in Hindu society as well, and it is still forbidden by Hindu law.

Alternative Hindu schools of thought such as the Tantric branches of Hinduism, the Hindu practices native to India that predates centuries of conservative Islamic influence, is markedly less reserved, teaching that enlightenment can be approached through divine sex. Divine sex is one path whereby one can approach Moksha, a oneness with a higher spiritual level. As such, the Tantric practices seek not to repress sexuality, but to perfect it. By perfecting the act of divine sex, one clears the mind of earthly desires, leaving the soul on a higher level devoid of such worries, filled with bliss, and relaxed.

Buddhism

In the Buddhist tradition, under the Five Precepts and the Eightfold Path, one should neither be attached to nor crave sensual pleasure. The third of the Five Precepts is "To refrain from sexual misconduct." For most Buddhist laypeople, sex outside of marriage is not "sexual misconduct," especially when compared to, say, adultery or any sexual activity which can bring suffering to another human being. Each may need to consider whether, for them, sexual contact is a distraction or means of avoidance of their own spiritual practice or development. To provide a complete focus onto spiritual practice, fully ordained Buddhist monks may, depending on the tradition, be bound by hundreds of further detailed rules or vows that may include a ban on sexual relations. Vajrayana or Tantric Buddhism, on the other hand, teaches that sexual intercourse can be actively used to approach higher spiritual development.

Adultery in Literature

The theme of adultery features in a wide range of literature through the ages. As marriage and family are often regarded as basis of society a story of adultery often shows the conflict between social pressure and individual struggle for happiness.

In the Bible, incidents of adultery are present almost from the start. The story of Abraham contains several incidents and serve as warnings or stories of sin and forgiveness. Abraham attempts to continue his blood line through his wife's maidservant, with consequences that continue through history. Jacob's family life is complicated with similar incidents.

Shakespeare wrote three plays in which the perception of adultery plays a significant part. In both Othello and The Winter's Tale it is the (false) belief by the central character that his wife is unfaithful that brings about his downfall. In "The Merry Wives of Windsor," an adulterous plot by Falstaff prompts elaborate and repeated revenge by the wronged wives; the comedy of the play hides a deeper anxiety about the infidelity of women.

In The Country Wife by William Wycherley, the morals of English Restoration society are satirized. The object of the hero is to seduce as many married ladies as possible, while blinding their husbands to what is going on by pretending to be impotent.

Other acclaimed authors who have featured adultery in their novels include F. Scott Fitzgerald in his work, The Great Gatsby, Nathaniel Hawthorne in The Scarlet Letter, and John Irving in The World According to Garp.

Notes

  1. Longman Dictionary of Latin. (Berlin: Longman, 1950).
  2. Minnes 130.00 Sex offenses; definitions of terms New York State Sexual Statutes, The 'Lectric Law Library. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  3. Anger over adultery stoning case CNN, February 23, 2004. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  4. Plutarch, "Lycurgus" XXIX, Plutarch Lives, I, Theseus and Romulus. Lycurgus and Numa. Solon and Publicola (Loeb Classical Library, 1914, ISBN 0674990528).
  5. Plutarch, "Solon," Plutarch Lives, I, Theseus and Romulus. Lycurgus and Numa. Solon and Publicola (Loeb Classical Library, 1914, ISBN 0674990528).
  6. William Lecky, "Codex Justin., Digest, XLVIII, 5-13" History of European Morals (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, 2005, ISBN 1425548385).
  7. Ronald Hamowy, Medicine and the Crimination of Sin: "Self-Abuse" in 19th Century America. 2, 3 Medicine and the Crimination of Sin: Self-Abuse Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  8. Rod Powers, Adultery in the Military US Military Careers, November 1, 2018. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  9. State of New Jersey v. Saunders, 381 A.2d 333 (N.J. 1977), Martin v. Ziherl 607 S.E.2d 367 (Va. 2005).
  10. Andrew Wilson (ed.), Adultery World Scripture (1991). Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  11. David Werner Amram, Adultery Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  12. What is the difference between fornication and adultery? GotQuestions.org. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  13. John 8:7 BibleHub. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  14. 1 Corinthians 7:3 BibleHub. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  15. Epitome of the Divine Institutes, chapter 56 Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Retrieved June 9, 2019.
  16. The Catechism of Trent. Nazareth Resource Library. Retrieved June 6, 2019.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Glass, S.P., and T.L. Wright. "Justifications for extramarital relationships: The association between attitudes, behaviors, and gender," Journal of Sex Research, 29 (1992): 361-387.
  • Hamowy, Ronald. Medicine and the Crimination of Sin: Self-Abuse. Retrieved June 11, 2019.
  • Lecky, William. History of European morals from Augustus to Charlemagne. Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library. 2005. ISBN 1425548385
  • Moultrup, David J. Husbands, Wives & Lovers. New York, NY: Guilford Press, 1990. ISBN 0898621054
  • Pittman, F. Private Lies: Infidelity and Betrayal of Intimacy. New York, NY: W. W. Norton Co., 1989. ISBN 0393307077
  • Rubin, A.M., & J.R. Adams. "Outcomes of sexually open marriages," Journal of Sex Research 22 (1986): 311-319.
  • Vaughan, P. The Monogamy Myth. New York, NY: New Market Press, 1989. ISBN 1557045429
  • Wilson, Andrew (ed.). World Scripture: A Comparative Anthology of Sacred Texts. New York, NY: Paragon House, 1991. ISBN 0892261293

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