A woman does not drink the Sotah waters if:
- She admits guilt
- Witnesses testify to adultery
- She refuses to drink
In these cases:
- She loses her ketubah
If:
- The husband withdraws permission
- Or had relations with her after the warning
Then:
- She does not drink
- But retains her ketubah
The ritual collapses due to the husband’s action.
A dispute:
- Beit Shammai: She does not drink and receives the ketubah
- Beit Hillel: She must either drink or forfeit the ketubah
This highlights tension between financial rights and ritual closure.
Certain women:
- An aylonit
- Elderly or infertile women
Generally:
- Do not drink
- And do not receive a ketubah
Reason:
- The Sotah punishment involves fertility‑related consequences.
- A Kohen’s wife may drink and return to her husband
- A eunuch’s wife may drink
- Beit Din may issue warnings when the husband is incapacitated
However:
- Drinking itself may still be suspended
One‑sentence takeaway
Sotah 24 teaches that the Sotah ordeal applies only under specific conditions, carefully balancing ritual purpose, marital responsibility, and financial justice.
