har'-lot: This name replaces in the Revised Version (British and American) "whore" of the King James Version. It stands for several words and phrases used to designate or describe the unchaste woman, married or unmarried, e.g. zonah, ishshah nokhriyah, qedheshah; Septuagint and New Testament porne. porneia is used chiefly of prenuptial immorality, but the married woman guilty of sexual immorality is said to be guilty of porneia (
Mt 5:32;
19:9; compare
Am 7:17 Septuagint). These and cognate words are applied especially in the Old Testament to those devoted to immoral service in idol sanctuaries, or given over to a dissolute life for gain. Such a class existed among all ancient peoples, and may be traced in the history of Israel. Evidence of its existence in very early times is found (
Ge 38). It grew out of conditions, sexual and social, which were universal. After the corrupting foreign influxes and influences of Solomon's day, it developed to even fuller shamelessness, and its voluptuous songs (
Isa 23:16), seductive arts (
Pr 6:24), and blighting influence are vividly pictured and denounced by the prophets (
Pr 7:10;
29:3;
Isa 23:16;
Jer 3:3;
5:7;
Eze 16:25; compare
De 23:17). Money was lavished upon women of this class, and the weak and unwary were taken captive by
them, so that it became one of the chief concerns of the devout father in Israel to "keep (his son) from the evil woman," who "hunteth for the precious life" (
Pr 6:24,
26). From the title given her in Prov, a "foreign woman" (23:27), and the warnings against "the flattery of the foreigner's tongue" (6:24; compare
1Ki 11:1;
Ezr 10:2), we may infer that in later times this class was chiefly made up of strangers from without. The whole subject must be viewed in the setting of the times. Even in Israel, then, apart from breaches of marriage vows, immoral relations between the sexes were deemed venial (
De 22:28 f). A man was forbidden to compel his daughter to sin (
Le 19:29), to "profane (her) and make her a harlot," but she was apparently left free to take that way herself (compare
Ge 38). The children of the harlot, though, were outlawed (
De 23:2), and later the harlot is found under the sternest social ban (
Mt 21:31,
32).