This is in my top 3 stories of the bible ... so awesome.When Elijah talks to those who believed in Baal, he speaks to them according to their understanding, as if Baal was a god and had conscious existence:
1Ki 18:27 And it came to pass at noon, that Elijah mocked them, and said, Cry aloud: for he is a god; either he is talking, or he is pursuing, or he is in a journey, or peradventure he sleepeth, and must be awaked...
Well there you go, he'd just have been a boring old prophet if he'd used absolutely correct language all the time when he had to communicate effectively with these people.I love Elijah's mockery soooo much and how he comes off as being a good sport
I'd heard that, always nice to have confirmation I believe that's similar to the "draught house" when the old Baal temple was put to better use as a public convenience (2Ki 10:27)?In the Hebrew He has some mockery that doesn't always come across in the English like "perhaps he is at the bush"
This is in my top 3 stories of the bible ... so awesome.
Another tool in the toolkit. I could see that being just the right way to get into the discussion in some situations.More on topic, I thought of another word, if you don't mind being pigeonholed as lower class: baby mamma. It doesn't really give the connotation of 'my woman' so I'm not a fan. But in certain crowds or workplaces it is not uncommon for men to have 1 or more babymamma's and little question is usually given to the details of those relationships since they're usually complicated and/or socially unapproved to begin with.
It can be useful, mostly in the sense of "this is how it's like a mistress (since that's a word people already understand), and this is how it's different". Definitely another tool in the communication toolkit, though.I was joking earlier about concubine (given the frequent threads debating it's definition), but "mistress" seems like a potentially useful and not wholly inaccurate term, despite its cultural baggage. I feel like someone may have mentioned that on the forums at some point, but don't recall for sure.