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I can't send you a message due to your privacy settings. Send me one.Can you message me about this please. I have some questions. I would rather not ask them in the public eye please.
But lying with a harlot does make a one flesh relationship. Rather than making her a polyandrist it makes her a raging adulteress.Jesus defined marriage as “what God has joined together” (Matt 19:9). But when does this happen? Mary was a virgin and betrothed to Joseph, and then later on, Joseph “took to him his wife, and did not know her till she had brought forth her first Son” (Matthew 1: 18-25). This ‘taking’ is what we call marriage today. However, Joseph “did not know her,” he had no intercourse with her. (Note: Although our source text is in Greek, the word use in Matthew is similar to the Old Testament. Terms like “know her” and “went in to her” refer to sexual intercourse)
Intercourse is not equal to marriage in God’s eyes. It would mean that prositutes have multiple husbands (polyandry) which is Biblically impossible, since marriage is what God joins together and God would not join a wife to multiple husbands. If not intercourse, neither are a marriage contract, dowry, vows, etc. There are many examples of marriages in Scripture that do not include any of these. There is only one aspect that is present in every marriage in Scripture. The woman is given to the man, she becomes subject to him and he becomes her head. In the first marriage we read that “He brought her to the man” (Gen 2:22). In Scripture, a woman is married to a man, when her head (the father) is giving her to the man to be his wife; he is passing his headship over to the bride’s husband. It does not matter whether this is done with a public ceremony, or a dowry, or a simple giving (as with the first marriage). Widows give themselves (Ruth, Abigail). Interestingly, it is always the bride that moves towards the groom, whether he takes her or she is given to him. The woman becomes exclusively his own.
But lying with a harlot does make a one flesh relationship. Rather than making her a polyandrist it makes her a raging adulteress.
But one flesh is the phrase that is used by Christ to describe “marriage” as the phrase used in the Creation account to describe the first “marriage.” So, if you lie with a harlot Jesus says you married her. Moses agrees. Mazeltov! This of course means that sex forms a marriage. You will be unable to find any other scripture to say otherwise. I encourage you to look. Many men have. None have succeeded.Yes, the Bible teaches us that he who is joined to a harlot is one body with her, for “the two,” he says “shall become one body.” (1 Cor 5:5). And that is the problem with calling the one flesh union a marriage by definition. Since marriage is what God brings together, and God does not so such thing (polyandry is sin, see Gen 20:2-6). If having intercourse is the one flesh union, and the one flesh union is marriage, then what is the problem with adultery?
So we read that a woman can become one flesh with multiple men, but they are not considered her husbands (marriages) in Gods eyes. On the contrary, it is an illegal one-flesh union. Therefore Paul said, two verses later (v. 8), to flee sexual immorality and that it is a sin against ones own body. (The harlot is not married to another man, therefore it is not adultery.)
Note what Paul said at the end of his instruction on marriage. He refers to virgins being “given in marriage,” and for a widow to be married to whom she wishes, “but only in the Lord.” (1 Cor 7:38-39). In Pauls days, marriage was as much of a common thing as in our days, but true marriage is what God created on the sixth day, as Jesus also said: “what God joins together.” So, one could say the the one-flesh union is marriage, but not by definition. Not all one-flesh unions are marriages in the Biblical sense. The one flesh union is a marriage only if the woman is given (or gave herself) to the man in the Lord.
But one flesh is the phrase that is used by Christ to describe “marriage” as the phrase used in the Creation account to describe the first “marriage.” So, if you lie with a harlot Jesus says you married her.
Moses agrees. Mazeltov! This of course means that sex forms a marriage. You will be unable to find any other scripture to say otherwise. I encourage you to look. Many men have. None have succeeded..
So what makes a marriage? Paul says sex makes you one flesh with a harlot, Moses taking a virgin endows her to be your wife. You’re relying on idiosyncrasies in the English translation to try and deny it so you tell me.Jesus also said that marriage is “what God joins together.” Would you suggest God joins the harlot to her clients in marriage?
If you believe having intercourse with a harlot is making her your wife, your idea on the nature of marriage is polygamy rather than polygyny, because the harlot has intercourse with many men. But we know from Scripture, that it is a sin for a woman to have more than one husband. God prevented it to happen with Sarah and called it a sin (Ex 20:2-6). Furthermore, the text in 1 Corinthians 6, speaking of the one flesh union with a harlot, tells us that it is a sin and sexual immorality. Besides, the image of marriage is used to illustrate God’s relationship with His people. But when the people go after other gods, it is called adultery and harlotry.
Well, allow Moses to answer:
Deuteronomy 22:28-29
28“If a man finds a young woman who is a virgin, who is not betrothed, and he seizes her and lies with her, and they are found out,
29 then the man who lay with her shall give to the young woman’s father fifty shekels of silver, and she shall be his wife because he has humbled her; he shall not be permitted to divorce her all his days.”
Moses said “she shall become his wife,” not, “she has become his wife.” (Now, we must not equal the humbling of the virgin to marriage. The humbling is related to the prohibition to divorce her.)
And in Exodus 22:16-17 Moses said:
16“If a man entices a virgin who is not betrothed, and lies with her, he shall surely pay the bride-price for her to be his wife.
17 If her father utterly refuses to give her to him, he shall pay money according to the bride-price of virgins.”
So, the father was allowed to refuse giving her in marriage (and to give her to someone else). According to Moses (and Paul), intercourse in not marriage by definition, but it does obligate the man to take her as his wife.
And round and round we go...
Yes, the Bible teaches us that he who is joined to a harlot is one body with her, for “the two,” he says “shall become one body.” (1 Cor 5:5). And that is the problem with calling the one flesh union a marriage by definition. Since marriage is what God brings together, and God does not so such thing (polyandry is sin, see Gen 20:2-6). If having intercourse is the one flesh union, and the one flesh union is marriage, then what is the problem with adultery?
So we read that a woman can become one flesh with multiple men, but they are not considered her husbands (marriages) in Gods eyes. On the contrary, it is an illegal one-flesh union. Therefore Paul said, two verses later (v. 8), to flee sexual immorality and that it is a sin against ones own body. (The harlot is not married to another man, therefore it is not adultery.)
The answer to the third question is, Yes. Sha'ul/Paul declares that a man becomes one flesh with a prostitute, and Scripture elsewhere condemns prostitution (Deuteronomy 23; Proverbs 23), so, ipso facto, it is a one-flesh violation of the Law.Jesus said in Matthew 19: “So then, they are no longer two but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let not man separate.”
If we can agree that Jesus was speaking of marriage, then Jesus said that marriage is “what God has joined together.” And indeed, it also speaks of the two (they in OT) become one flesh.
The joining together is what God does, the becoming one flesh is what the two do.
Now the questions are:
- Are we also speaking of ‘marriage’ (Biblically) if only the “becoming one flesh” part is done, without God joining the two together?
- Or does the “becoming one flesh” ‘make’ God to join the two (even if multiple men are involved as with a prostitute)?
- Or Is it possible to “become one flesh” illegally (Biblically, as in rebelling against Gods will to join the two together as with adultery and prostitution)?
The answer to the third question is, Yes. Sha'ul/Paul declares that a man becomes one flesh with a prostitute, and Scripture elsewhere condemns prostitution (Deuteronomy 23; Proverbs 23), so, ipso facto, it is a one-flesh violation of the Law.
Before we can even come close to answering the 1st or the 2nd questions, you would have to articulate what you believe constitutes YHWH joining the two together. What do you believe is the evidence of that joining together? And what is the scriptural support for your belief?
What is your answer to the question what does form a marriage?But what are your answers to the other two questions?
What is your answer to the question what does form a marriage?
Jesus defined marriage as “what God has joined together” (Matt 19:9). But when does this happen? Mary was a virgin and betrothed to Joseph, and then later on, Joseph “took to him his wife, and did not know her till she had brought forth her first Son” (Matthew 1: 18-25). This ‘taking’ is what we call marriage today. However, Joseph “did not know her,” he had no intercourse with her. (Note: Although our source text is in Greek, the word use in Matthew is similar to the Old Testament. Terms like “know her” and “went in to her” refer to sexual intercourse)
Intercourse is not equal to marriage in God’s eyes. It would mean that prositutes have multiple husbands (polyandry) which is Biblically impossible, since marriage is what God joins together and God would not join a wife to multiple husbands. If not intercourse, neither are a marriage contract, dowry, vows, etc. There are many examples of marriages in Scripture that do not include any of these. There is only one aspect that is present in every marriage in Scripture. The woman is given to the man, she becomes subject to him and he becomes her head. In the first marriage we read that “He brought her to the man” (Gen 2:22). In Scripture, a woman is married to a man, when her head (the father) is giving her to the man to be his wife; he is passing his headship over to the bride’s husband. It does not matter whether this is done with a public ceremony, or a dowry, or a simple giving (as with the first marriage). Widows give themselves (Ruth, Abigail). Interestingly, it is always the bride that moves towards the groom, whether he takes her or she is given to him. The woman becomes exclusively his own.
18 for you have had five husbands, and the one you now have is not your husband. What you have said is true.”
John 4:18 | ESV
What does Jesus mean here? The word for, have had, is the word used for, have, so why is the last fellow she has now not her husband, but the other five were?
And where is this articulated in scripture. The phrase “what God has joined together” does not explain how God joins them together. In fact the whole passage is about dissolving a marriage not forming one. The phrase is being used out of context if you’re applying it to forming a “marriage”.As I said:
Except...”only in the Lord” (1 Cor 7:39).
So from what I read in Scripture, there is the thing man does (exchange of headship followed by intercourse) and there is the thing God does (joining the two together). The first part only constitutes ‘marriage’ if the second part is included. And we know when it is not. God would not join a woman to multiple husbands, or two of the same sex, etc. Without the second part, it is a fake marriage, not Biblical.
This is the best argument for sex not forming a marriage in all of scripture. Since we’re not given the details we can’t draw any rules for forming a marriage from this incidental mention but a few possibilities present themselves. The most obvious is that she hasn’t had sex with the current man, and this would explain her astonishment at Jesus telling her an intimate detail of her life.18 for you have had five husbands, and the one you now have is not your husband. What you have said is true.”
John 4:18 | ESV
What does Jesus mean here? The word for, have had, is the word used for, have, so why is the last fellow she has now not her husband, but the other five were?
Jesus said in Matthew 19: “So then, they are no longer two but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let not man separate.”
If we can agree that Jesus was speaking of marriage, then Jesus said that marriage is “what God has joined together.” And indeed, it also speaks of the two (they in OT) become one flesh.
The joining together is what God does, the becoming one flesh is what the two do.
Before we can even come close to answering the 1st or the 2nd questions, you would have to articulate what you believe constitutes YHWH joining the two together. What do you believe is the evidence of that joining together? And what is the scriptural support for your belief?
But what are your answers to the other two questions?