I have been enjoying Don Milton's reprint of Martin Madan's Thelyphthora reviewed by @Jennifer in this thread.
Madan, brings lots of pieces together to support his 1780's argument for polygyny. This morning, in support of one point, he cites Acts 10:15 in the middle of Peter's famed vision of clean and unclean animals in the sheet.
As we know from Peter's explanation in 10:28 that the vision is NOT about food, but about people. Jewish tradition taught that Gentiles were unclean and therefore untouchable, a concept never taught in Scripture. The voice in his vision (v.15) states, 'what God has cleansed, do not call unclean.'
Madan says that to limit 'God's immutable laws' that are 'for all times, places, and ages of the world' on a 'pretense of greater purity and holiness' is to deserve the same response and chastisement Peter got: 'What God hath cleansed, that call thou not common or unclean.'
He hits the nail on the head. Christendom ( Christen-dumb?) paints monogamy as somehow 'more righteous' or polygamy as straight up 'unclean' when God does the opposite. Just as in the example with Peter, tradition rules in how even righteous men view polygyny.
'What God has cleansed (marriage, mono or poly) do not call unclean.'
Madan, brings lots of pieces together to support his 1780's argument for polygyny. This morning, in support of one point, he cites Acts 10:15 in the middle of Peter's famed vision of clean and unclean animals in the sheet.
As we know from Peter's explanation in 10:28 that the vision is NOT about food, but about people. Jewish tradition taught that Gentiles were unclean and therefore untouchable, a concept never taught in Scripture. The voice in his vision (v.15) states, 'what God has cleansed, do not call unclean.'
Madan says that to limit 'God's immutable laws' that are 'for all times, places, and ages of the world' on a 'pretense of greater purity and holiness' is to deserve the same response and chastisement Peter got: 'What God hath cleansed, that call thou not common or unclean.'
He hits the nail on the head. Christendom ( Christen-dumb?) paints monogamy as somehow 'more righteous' or polygamy as straight up 'unclean' when God does the opposite. Just as in the example with Peter, tradition rules in how even righteous men view polygyny.
'What God has cleansed (marriage, mono or poly) do not call unclean.'