Oath
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encyclopedia
An oath (from Anglo-Saxon
āð,
also called plight) is either a statement
of fact
or a promise
calling upon something or someone that the oath maker considers sacred, usually God, as a witness to the binding nature
of the promise or the truth of the statement of fact. To swear
is to take an oath, to make a solemn vow. Those who conscientiously object to
making an oath will often make an affirmation instead.
The essence of a divine oath is an
invocation of divine agency to be a guarantor of the oath taker's own honesty
and integrity in the matter under question. By implication, this invokes divine
displeasure if the oath taker fails in their sworn duties. It therefore implies
greater care than usual in the act of the performance of one's duty, such as in
testimony to the facts of the matter in a court of law.
A person taking an oath indicates
this in a number of ways. The most usual is the explicit "I swear,"
but any statement or promise that includes "with * as my witness" or
"so help me *," with '*' being something or someone the oath-taker
holds sacred, is an oath. Many people take an oath by holding in their hand or
placing over their head a book of scripture
or a sacred object, thus indicating the sacred witness through their action:
such an oath is called corporal. However, the chief purpose of such an
act is for ceremony or solemnity, and the act does not of itself make an oath.[citation needed]
Historical
development as a legal concept
Making vows and taking oaths became
a symbolic concept in law practice that developed over time in different
cultures.
Jewish
tradition 13th century BCE
The concept of oaths is deeply
rooted within Judaism. It is found in Genesis
8:21, when God swears that he will "never again curse the ground because
of man and never again smite every living thing." This repetition of the
term never again is explained by Rashi, the pre-eminent biblical
commentator, as serving as an oath, citing the Talmud Shavous 36a for this ruling.[1]
The first personage in the biblical tradition
to take an oath is held to be Eliezer,
the chief servant of Abraham, when the latter requested of the former that he not take a
wife for his son Isaac from the daughters of Canaan, but rather from among
Abraham's own family.
The foundational text for oath
making is in the "When a man voweth a vow unto the Lord, or sweareth an
oath to bind his soul with a bond, he shall not break his word; he shall do
according to all that proceedeth out of his mouth” (Numbers 30:3). According to
the Rabbis, a neder
(usually translated as “vow”) refers to the object, a shvua (usually translated
as “oath”) to the person. The passage (Bamidbar 30:2-17) distinguishes between
a neder and a shvua, an important distinction between the two in halacha:
a neder changes the status of some external thing, while a shvua initiates an
internal change in the one who swears the oath.
Roman
tradition c. 509 BCE
In the Roman
tradition, oaths were sworn upon Iuppiter Lapis
or the Jupiter Stone located in the Temple of Jupiter,
Capitoline Hill. Iuppiter Lapis was held in the Roman Tradition to be an Oath Stone, an
aspect of Jupiter is his role as divine law-maker responsible for order and
used principally for the investiture of the oathtaking of office.
Bailey (1907) states: We have, for
instance, the sacred stone (silex) which was preserved in the temple of
Iuppiter on the Capitol, and was brought out to play a prominent part in the
ceremony of treaty-making. The fetial, who on that occasion represented the
Roman people, at the solemn moment of the oath-taking, struck the sacrificial
pig with the silex, saying as he did so, 'Do thou, Diespiter, strike the Roman people as I strike this pig here to-day,
and strike them the more, as thou art greater and stronger.' Here no doubt the
underlying notion is not merely symbolical, but in origin the stone is itself
the god, an idea which later religion expressed in the cult-title specially
used in this connection, Iuppiter Lapis.In Chapter Two: The 'Antecedents' of
Roman Religion. Source: [1]
(accessed: June 24, 2012)
Greek
tradition c.400 BCE
Walter Burkert has shown that since Lycurgus of Athens (d. 324 BCE), who held that "it is the oath which
holds democracy together", religion, morality and political organization
had been linked by the oath, and the oath and its prerequisite altar had become
the basis of both civil and criminal, as well as international law.Burkert, Greek
Religion, trans. Raffan, Harvard University Press (1985), 250ff.
Christian
tradition first century A.D.
As late as 1880, Charles Bradlaugh was denied a seat as an MP in the Parliament of the United Kingdom
as because of his professed atheism
he was judged unable to swear the Oath of Allegiance in spite of his proposal to swear the oath as a
"matter of form".
Various religious groups have
objected to the taking of oaths, most notably the Religious
Society of Friends (Quakers) and Mennonites.
This is principally based on Matthew 5:34-37,
the Antithesis of the Law. Here, Christ is written to say "I say to you: 'Swear not at all'". The Apostle James
stated in James 5:12,
"Above all, my brothers, do not swear—not by heaven or by earth or by
anything else. Let your "Yes" be yes, and your "No," no, or
you will be condemned." Beyond this scriptural authority, Quakers place
importance on being truthful at all times, so the testimony opposing oaths
springs from a view that "taking legal oaths implies a double standard of
truthfulness"Faith and Practice of Baltimore Yearly Meeting of the
Religious Society of Friends (1988) p. 19 suggesting that truthfulness in legal
contexts is somehow more important than truthfulness in non-legal contexts and
that truthfulness in those other contexts is therefore somehow less important.
Not all Christians
interpret this reading as forbidding all types of oaths, however. Opposition to
oath-taking among some groups of Christian caused many problems for these
groups throughout their history. Quakers were frequently imprisoned because
of their refusal to swear loyalty oaths.
Testifying in court was also difficult; George Fox,
Quakers' founder, famously challenged a judge who had asked him to swear,
saying that he would do so once the judge could point to any Bible passage where Jesus or his apostles
took oaths. (The judge could not, but this did not allow Fox to escape
punishment.) Legal reforms from the 18th century onwards mean that everyone in
the United Kingdom now has the right to make a solemn affirmation instead of an oath. The United States
has permitted affirmations since it was founded; it is explicitly mentioned in
the Constitution. Only President Franklin Pierce
has chosen to affirm rather than swear at his inauguration.
In
Islamic tradition c.7th century
Islamic theology takes the
fulfillment of oaths extremely seriously. So much so that one of the sayings of
the Muslim prophet Mohammad, commonly referred to as ahadith
(singular hadith) instructs Muslims to "Make oaths only on Allah almighty,
the Master of all beings, and protect them more than your lives" (Sahih
Bukhari 45: 15).
Germanic
tradition c.8th century
Germanic warrior culture
was significantly based on oaths of fealty, directly continued into medieval
notions of chivalry.
A prose passage inserted in the
eddic poem Helgakviða
Hjörvarðssonar relates: Hedin was coming home
alone from the forest one Yule-eve, and found a troll-woman; she rode on a wolf, and had
snakes in place of a bridle. She asked Hedin for his company. "Nay,"
said he. She said, "Thou shalt pay for this at the bragarfull."
That evening the great vows were taken; the sacred boar was brought in, the men
laid their hands thereon, and took their vows at the bragarfull. Hedin
vowed that he would have Sváva, Eylimi's daughter, the beloved of his brother
Helgi; then such great grief seized him that he went forth on wild paths
southward over the land, and found Helgi, his brother. Such Norse traditions
are directly parallel to the "bird oaths" of late medieval France,
such as the voeux du faisan (oath on the pheasant) or the (fictional) voeux du paon
(oath on the peacock).Huizinga, The Autumn of the Middle Ages
(ch. 3); Michel Margue, "Vogelgelübde" am Hof des Fürsten.
Ritterliches Integrationsritual zwischen Traditions- und Gegenwartsbezug (14. –
15. Jahrhundert)
In
general 20th century law
In law, oaths are made by a witness
to a court
of law before giving testimony and usually by a newly-appointed government
officer to the people of a state
before taking office. In both of those cases, though, an affirmation can be usually substituted. A written statement, if the
author swears the statement is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the
truth, is called an affidavit. The oath given to support an affidavit is frequently
administered by a notary, who will certify the giving of the oath by affixing her or
his seal to the document. Willfully delivering a false oath (or affirmation) is
the crime
of perjury.
In the United States
and some other countries, it is customary to raise the right hand while
swearing an oath, whether or not the left hand is laid on a Bible or other text. This custom has been
explained with reference to medieval practices of branding palms [2],
However the practice is referred to in the Old Testament ("Their mouths
speak untruth; their right hands are raised in lying oaths", Psalm 144:8).
In England the common form of court oath is to swear with the right hand on the
Bible, though alternatives are available.
There is confusion between oaths and
other statements or promises. The current Olympic Oath,
for instance, is really a pledge and not properly an oath since there is only a
"promise" and no appeal to a sacred witness. Oaths are also confused
with vows,
but really, a vow is a special kind of oath.
In
English popular custom
Common examples of oaths include:
- I swear on my mother's life
- I swear on my grandmothers grave
Types
of oaths
- Hippocratic Oath
- Hittite military oath
- Oaths of allegiance
- Oaths of citizenship
- Oath of office
- Pauper's oath
- Veterinarian's Oath
Famous
oaths
- Anti-Modernist oath
- Bhishma
- Ironclad oath
- Oaths in Freemasonry
- Oath More Judaico
(Jewish)
- Oaths of Strasbourg
- Scout Oath
- Tennis Court Oath
- Omertà
Fictional
Other
meanings
The word "oath" is often
used to mean any angry expression which includes religious or other strong
language used as an expletive.
The entire wiki article can be found at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oath
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