Neither woman would be your "wife." You deny the whole concept and reject the whole institution.
Just using my name on holiday cards, social media, amoungst friends, etc. Shouldn't be a problem?
Defining terms correctly has an impact on the understanding people get and I totally agree that terms like "marriage" and "wife" carry too much baggage. But it's not only here that we found it necessary to define our terms. For example, we avoided the term "Home-schooling" with our children because we didn't want people thinking we just brought the government's ungodly schooling system into our home. We never "went" to church; we would meet with the church.So this really begets the need for this idea of a new kind of relationship that isn't 'marriage' but which nevertheless follows the teachings of scripture on male-female relations.
Amen!But it is important to be honest as a Christian.
One person might think of a thing as "semantics" or "mincing words", but the other might think of it as being precise.I'm not trying to play with semantics
I wonder how the system would respond if, instead, you claimed she was your concubine?
Of course, there's always Swamp Witch. Zec's pop promised to not litigate if you use his legal term.
So we need to completely deconstruct the language surrounding "marriage" and possibly even openly claim to reject it?
Of course, it's a bit of a handicap that we don't fully understand what concubine means... but then again, neither does anybody else. So if we can talk about gravity, I don't see why we can't talk about concubines.
However this is all on the theory that distancing from marriage is tactically useful.
Bingo. There are different ways to approach this question (and of course our little band of merry men is exploring all of them), but to me this is essentially a political question (in the technical sense, not in the modern sense).In the historical, language, and Biblical sense, concubine would be accurate. However I'd bet it'll cause more second guessing than something more common like partner or woman.
I've used it, but again, it sometimes misfires if the person you're talking with takes it the wrong way.Using the language of polyamory had been discussed before and I'm not opposed to it but others have expressed vociferous opposition.
Zec wins! We can close this thread now. Reminding ourselves (or discovering anew) what the problem is we're trying to solve provides the necessary guidance.The real issue here is how to avoid legal problems while signaling that our women are claimed, treasured and protected and most importantly, unavailable. Anything that accomplished that should be fine.
The status difference exists in our broader culture regardless of how we feel about that. So the question becomes: How to communicate within our subculture that our women are similarly situated, while communicating to others the key substantive points (claimed, treasured, protected, and unavailable) without saying anything that is going to be misunderstood, let alone send us to jail.I actually kind of like that fiancee idea. Would it cause a status difference to exist between the legal "wife" and the fiancee though?