I'm not going to be able to do this justice. It's 1:30a and I have someone waiting for me. I'll do what I can, more tomorrow (later today).
First, windblown, if you'd consider sharing something about your experience, I think all or at least most of us here could receive that simply as your experience. YMMV, as we say. "Intellectuals" can debate and bicker and challenge and get scary all day long if you're trying to state a general proposition as general truth, but no one can argue with you about what your experience has been. That's all you.
And at the same time, maybe the details aren't that big a deal. Your two verses say a lot. For someone who is not able to engage in philosophical debate, you have a funny way of showing it.
FWIW, what I've been thinking about all day is the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, and now it looks like you've beaten me to it.
What
my experience has been is that "knowledge puffs up, but love builds up". I think wisdom says, "the more you know, the more you realize you don't know". Our culture says, "read this book and you'll have acquired the formula for ____", you'll be able to apply the technique, you'll be able to make legitimate claims and assessments.
I will not have time to develop what I see as the general problem with pop Christian self-help books. Another time, perhaps.
Disclaimer: I'm going to hold up TLS2 and steve as illustrations of the general points I want to make. They are not the only individuals I could have used; they are just the only ones that everyone here will recognize. I mean no criticism of them as individuals, express or implied.
The defect is in the book. By presenting a way of measuring and keeping score, or trying to figure out "whether your love tank is as full as it should be", it distracts and disables us all. The medium is the message.
Exhibit A: TLS2 wants to know how she's going to be able to ensure that her love tank is full in a plural marriage. Full in the way she expects it to be full, now that she has read a book that tells her what she can legitimately demand.
In my experience, this is a typically female 'mis'application of the book, which was supposed to be about figuring out how your partner needs to receive love so you can do a better job of meeting their needs.
Exhibit B: steve expects recognition for what he does according to his love language, regardless of whether he is actually filling anyone's love tank according to what
that person has been taught to expect after reading the book.
In my experience, this is a typically male 'mis'application of the book, which was supposed to be about figuring out how your partner needs to receive love so you can do a better job of meeting their needs.
Nothing in the teachings of Christ or the apostles persuades me that I should be concerned about what I get out of a relationship or concerned with justifying my actions or inactions within that relationship to get myself off the hook.
The actual substantive content of the book is simplistic and trite. We all need to communicate more openly and be more concerned with what our partners need from us (truly need, not what they think they want or what they read about in a magazine or book, but not what we decide they need, either), and we all need to commit ourselves to a process through which wives
experience the love Paul talks about in Eph 5 and husbands
experience that respect and cooperation. That is an organic process that is best served by keeping everyone's eyes on Christ and on each other. Deep, intimate knowledge of your spouse comes from time spent looking into their eyes, not time spent reading a book about how to keep their love tank full (which you will then ignore if you're more focused on your own needs or on justifying your own habits).
Last thought: windblown's cite of Rom 4:15 is spot on. Where we make up rules, we principally create transgression.
In my experience with this teaching, an unnecessary and totally predictable amount of energy gets diverted toward figuring out who's doing it wrong. Plaintiff says she needs to receive love language 3; Defendant says his love language is 5, so he should get credit for giving that. Plaintiff says she's still unsatisfied because her love tank isn't as full as it should be of what she thinks it should be full of; Defendant says he's doing the best he can and she should appreciate what he's putting in there even if it's not what she asked for. Who's right? Who's wrong? Who wins? Who loses? Who is
justified?
These are rhetorical questions. I don't care what your answers are; everybody's got an opinion. I care that we have to waste time talking about it. Where no law is, there is no transgression.
More later. Peace to all.