Numbers 30
The law of vows distinguishes between men (who must fulfill all vows) and women, whose vows are subject to paternal or spousal ratification or annulment: a father may nullify his daughter's vow 'on the day he hears it,' and a husband may ratify or annul his wife's vow similarly, establishing a legal asymmetry that reflects patriarchal household structure but also provides vulnerability protection. A woman whose husband dies or divorces her must fulfill her vows (she is accountable to the LORD directly), and a widow's or divorced woman's vow is binding, establishing that only widows and divorced women have unmediated relationship to covenant obligation, a striking exception to the general principle of paternal or spousal mediation. The law's emphasis on the moment of hearing ('on the day he hears it') suggests that knowledge transforms obligation; the father or husband is responsible for vow governance only while aware of the vow. The vow's binding power is grounded in the covenant itself: 'Every vow and every binding oath to deny oneself that a woman makes to the Lord and her father hears about... if her father says nothing about it, all her vows take effect,' establishing that silence constitutes consent and that the initial vow creates presumptive obligation unless actively rejected. The law's attention to women's vows and their potential vulnerability (a husband could manipulate his wife's covenantal obligations) suggests that Numbers 30 addresses a concrete problem of household power dynamics and attempts to create protections while maintaining patriarchal structure. The chapter's concluding affirmation—'These are the decrees the Lord gave Moses concerning relationships between a man and his wife, and between a father and his young daughter still living in his house'—frames the entire law as governing family relationships and the distribution of covenantal power within households, making Numbers 30 a proto-legal text for family law that will reappear in later Jewish tradition.