Deuteronomy 25:12

12 you are to cut off her hand; show no pity.

Deuteronomy 25:12 Meaning and Commentary

Deuteronomy 25:12

Then thou shall cut off her hand
Which was to be done not by the man that strove with her husband, or by any bystander, but by the civil magistrate or his order. This severity was used to deter women from such an immodest as well as injurious action, who on such an occasion are very passionate and inconsiderate. Our Lord is thought to refer to this law, ( Matthew 5:30 ) ; though the Jewish writers interpret this not of actual cutting off the hand, but of paying a valuable consideration, a price put upon it; so Jarchi; and Aben Ezra compares it with the law of retaliation, "eye for eye", ( Exodus 21:24 ) ( Leviticus 24:20 ) ( Deuteronomy 19:21 ) ; which they commonly understand of paying a price for the both lost; and who adds, if she does not redeem her hand (i.e. by a price) it must be cut off:

thine eye shall not pity [her];
on account of the tenderness of her sex, or because of the plausible excuse that might be made for her action, being done hastily and in a passion, and out of affection to her husband; but these considerations were to have no place with the magistrate, who was to order the punishment inflicted, either in the strict literal sense, or by paying a sum of money.

Deuteronomy 25:12 In-Context

10 From that time on, his family is to be known in Isra'el as 'the family of the man who had his sandal pulled off.'
11 "If men are fighting with each other, and the wife of one comes up to help her husband get away from the man attacking him by grabbing the attacker's private parts with her hand,
12 you are to cut off her hand; show no pity.
13 "You are not to have in your pack two sets of weights, one heavy, the other light.
14 You are not to have in your house two sets of measures, one big, the other small.
Complete Jewish Bible Copyright 1998 by David H. Stern. Published by Jewish New Testament Publications, Inc. All rights reserved. Used by permission.