I tried that once. Didn’t end wellWell I really thought it began with, "I'll take THAT one!" and the rest is a contractual fulfillment.
I tried that once. Didn’t end wellWell I really thought it began with, "I'll take THAT one!" and the rest is a contractual fulfillment.
Not the actions; the result. Obviously Shechem was not married to Dinah even after he violated her.How do I explain away the actions of pagans, rapists and a semi-apostate man child? For clarification purposes is that your question?
I’m sure this will not be answered or the answer will attempt to sidestep the obvious.Not the actions; the result. Obviously Shechem was not married to Dinah even after he violated her.
What result? I hate to validate @NickF here but I may have to sidestep. How in the Hahira, Georgia are these passages about forming a “marriage”?Not the actions; the result. Obviously Shechem was not married to Dinah even after he violated her.
I’m confused about what it is you’re saying then.It never states that Samson slept with Delilah. He may have; it does say that he loved her, but the woman in question, whom he slept with, goes unnamed. Also, it is not specifically stated whether Dinah's engagement with Shechem, was consensual or not.
Me tooI’m confused about it is what you’re saying then.
Okay but that highlights the obscurity of this example even more. Why do you have to go this far afield to find a verse to support the position?Basically, you do not recall correctly. When I spoke of Samson sleeping with a woman, that was not Delilah.
There are few references mentioned in Scripture of intercourse outside of marriage. These two examples give us all we really need to refute the sex = marriage argument.Okay but that highlights the obscurity of this example even more. Why do you have to go this far afield to find a verse to support the position?
Maybe she had a valid reason, maybe she thought she did when she didn't. Abraham kept the secret of his true relationship with Sarah twice, and on one of those occasions the king who took her as his own was quite distraught about the deception. If Abraham had been honest with him, perhaps the whole situation wouldn't have happened. Or perhaps he would have been killed.I'll throw in another example. Tamar tricks Judah into impregnating her. She keps it a secret, but holds onto his signet ring. He orders that she be executed. She then reveals that he is the father of her babies. Why all the secrecy, if all she would have had to do, is reveal to him who she was?
Actually, I will contend that Scripture TELLS us why, and history bears out the result.Why all the secrecy, if all she would have had to do, is reveal to him who she was?
What makes you think these were instances of sex outside of marriage? Just because these men were bad husbands does meant they hadn’t incurred the obligations and responsibilities of husbands.There are few references mentioned in Scripture of intercourse outside of marriage. These two examples give us all we really need to refute the sex = marriage argument.
Never assume that Tamar (or anyone else in scripture) actually did the best thing. What is recorded is what they did. What they did might have been a mistake.I'll throw in another example. Tamar tricks Judah into impregnating her. She keps it a secret, but holds onto his signet ring. He orders that she be executed. She then reveals that he is the father of her babies. Why all the secrecy, if all she would have had to do, is reveal to him who she was?