What were you saying about love again? I think I missed it while I was ducking your jab.That is a speculation and not fact.
What were you saying about love again? I think I missed it while I was ducking your jab.That is a speculation and not fact.
If my point was that a man ought to have a secret wife, then you would be correct. However, that was not my point. My only point and i mean ONLY point is that the Law does not say, thou shalt not have a secret wife. That’s it. That’s all I’m saying. That really is all I’m saying....Solomon is an example so silly as to be meaningless.
Solomon was the King, in a society that embraced polygamy, and had "seven hundred wives, princesses, and three hundred concubines,". I doubt even HE knew all their names much less each wife knowing when every single other wive/concubine was added.
No practical bearing on the question of whether a man ought to tell his first what is going on.
Not many families will openly admit that there is another “wife” due to the legal ramifications. So based on your thought, the withholding of information, they are deceiving everyone around them, are they not?If a man marries a woman and they can not tell anyone the nature of the relationship it is misleading and yes a lie. Our God is a God of Truth and righteousness. Nothing about what you are suggesting is truthful or just.
By the same token, when the nuns were telling the German soldiers, “we haven’t seen any Jews”, and they had just hidden a Jewish family in the basement, we’re they sinning? Or being righteous? It could have also been phrased in such a way that the German soldiers made their own conclusion based on how the nuns directed remarks.Not many families will openly admit that there is another “wife” due to the legal ramifications. So based on your thought, the withholding of information, they are deceiving everyone around them, are they not?
I totally agree it’s not wise, but I’m trying to figure out the line of required disclosure. Is it a sin for him to withhold ANY information, or just a sin for him to not tell about the other wife, or is it not a sin at all? Where is that line and/or is there one? I am the first to say I would LOVE if my husband was required to share every tidbit of information and any intimate conversation he has with someone else. I am NOT a fan of him having the ability to “withhold” information that is private or just between him and another. But that isn’t my right to know everything. That’s not something that is required of him. I don’t see anywhere in scripture that commands him, “thou shall share all details of everything with your wife”... and that includes if he has another wife.In the case of a relationship between a husband and wife, not being upfront with First Wife could create, and I believe it will, trust issues with first wife. I would imagine First Wife’s imagination would wonder ‘what else have I not been told?’ Even if he has been honest about everything else.
There are instances, in the past, where I have not been totally upfront and honest about something so I could cover my tracks for an upcoming present I was making or buying. Christmas time was when I have been the biggest offender if being honest. Then, there are things in the military when I carried a secret and top secret clearance, I would, from time to time, lie. Was it a sin?I am NOT a fan of him having the ability to “withhold” information that is private or just between him and another. But that isn’t my right to know everything. That’s not something that is required of him.
You have a good point.Not many families will openly admit that there is another “wife” due to the legal ramifications. So based on your thought, the withholding of information, they are deceiving everyone around them, are they not?
I don’t think that it is comparable.You have a good point.
My two cents worth...Does God ever bless people for lying?
Great postMy two cents worth...
Absolutely yes with Rahab! (You beat me to it @Asforme&myhouse) She lied and told the people searching for the Israelite spies "dey went dataway" when they were hiding in her house. She then let them down and helped them escape alive. I would no doubt call it a blessing if "my" house was supernaturally preserved and my family gathered in it spared death.
The commandment is "Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor."
It indicates a problem when in a righteous society someone "loves and makes a lie," but in this world there may be circumstances when in keeping with the spirit of "Be wise as serpents and innocent as doves" one could deliberately mislead ungodly people (like Rahab did) to protect God's servants. The motivation (heart condition) being key.
Abraham probably sought YHWH and instructed his wife in keeping with the leading he recieved. It has always bugged me when people say that Abraham's actions were because he lacked faith. I just don't see that. No way, no how!
In general though, and especially in loving relationships, it indicates a lack of trust and/or fear when one feels a need to lie. Perfect love casts out fear.
Samson is another one that people love to down on, but when you go back and actually read the text, you see that almost everything he did was because that was what God wanted him to do.
If you read through the whole story carefully in context and in light of Hebrews 11 it’s quite fascinating. I personally think that Samson is a type and shadow of Christ when He destroys his enemies. Something about not drinking of the fruit of the vine until the kingdom of God has come... which is after His robe is dipped in the blood of His enemies. It’s all type and shadowyUmm, you done caught my attention with that’n.
Where do you see that explained?
What were you saying about love again? I think I missed it while I was ducking your jab.
You believe you are right about everything and never have I seen you humble yourself to the fact you might not know it all. I just ask that when addressing me in any post please stop thinking I am attacking you or taking jabs at you.
You have accused me of much in other posts