• Biblical Families is not a dating website. It is a forum to discuss issues relating to marriage and the Bible, and to offer guidance and support, not to find a wife. Click here for more information.

Random Comments

January 10: Currently reading Debi Pearl's Created to Be His Help Meet, when I came across her citing an unfortunate statistic about the prevalence of divorce among Christians: "It is a shameful matter of statistics that the fundamentalist Christian home is not as enduring as the general population's."
Finally finished reading Created to Be His Help Meet, and I simply can't give it an unqualified recommendation. Generally speaking, Mrs. Pearl does an excellent job of consistently asserting that the vast majority of wifely suffering arises from refusing to be a help meet or to be obediently submissive in general. However, that quote I posted 3 weeks ago came from near the beginning and resonated enough with me that it sat on my mental shoulder throughout the remainder of the book. I suppose she probably believes she has discovered the full prescription for why it would be the case that fundamentalist Christian homes have in recent decades been more likely to end up broken than homes in general: not enough submission going on here. But she never again addressed the subset of fundamentalist Christian homes, and in ignoring what she had set up as such a cogent question she consequently failed to consider what one can probably consider to be an indisputable fact: it's extremely unlikely that fundamentalist Christian wives are more rebellious and independent than are wives in general -- especially secular wives.

I loved most of the book until near the end, but it ends in a puddle of verbal vomit, in my opinion, because the wind-down of the book is a list of circumstances in which Debi and Michael Pearl give their full blessing for women to be not only disobedient but rebellious and antagonistic. In my opinion, the Pearls demonstrated their own fundamentalist blind spot by providing women far too much leeway to seize control of their families, and all I could envision when I considered the women whose letters about familial overthrow they applauded were, well, the typical battle-ax women I've experienced at fundamentalist churches. Give them a sinful inch, and they take a pious mile.

Could it possibly be the case that fundamentalist wives are among the most likely to grind down their imperfect husbands with loud proclamations of piety aimed at demasculating them?
 
Could it possibly be the case that fundamentalist wives are among the most likely to grind down their imperfect husbands with loud proclamations of piety aimed at demasculating them?
The reality is that the enemy of our souls fixes his sights on the marriages that have the most potential to hinder his kingdom. Every marriage will receive opposition according to its potential.
This is why polygynous marriages receive great opposition, if not the greatest.
Ecclesiastes 4:12 (KJV)
And if one prevail against him, two shall withstand him; and a threefold cord is not quickly broken.
 
Finally finished reading Created to Be His Help Meet, and I simply can't give it an unqualified recommendation. Generally speaking, Mrs. Pearl does an excellent job of consistently asserting that the vast majority of wifely suffering arises from refusing to be a help meet or to be obediently submissive in general. However, that quote I posted 3 weeks ago came from near the beginning and resonated enough with me that it sat on my mental shoulder throughout the remainder of the book. I suppose she probably believes she has discovered the full prescription for why it would be the case that fundamentalist Christian homes have in recent decades been more likely to end up broken than homes in general: not enough submission going on here. But she never again addressed the subset of fundamentalist Christian homes, and in ignoring what she had set up as such a cogent question she consequently failed to consider what one can probably consider to be an indisputable fact: it's extremely unlikely that fundamentalist Christian wives are more rebellious and independent than are wives in general -- especially secular wives.

I loved most of the book until near the end, but it ends in a puddle of verbal vomit, in my opinion, because the wind-down of the book is a list of circumstances in which Debi and Michael Pearl give their full blessing for women to be not only disobedient but rebellious and antagonistic. In my opinion, the Pearls demonstrated their own fundamentalist blind spot by providing women far too much leeway to seize control of their families, and all I could envision when I considered the women whose letters about familial overthrow they applauded were, well, the typical battle-ax women I've experienced at fundamentalist churches. Give them a sinful inch, and they take a pious mile.

Could it possibly be the case that fundamentalist wives are among the most likely to grind down their imperfect husbands with loud proclamations of piety aimed at demasculating them?

I am ordering this book and might suggest it for our women's group in the fall.

I like the comment from the author on Amazon:

Somewhere over the passing years and changing culture, women have lost their way. This book is written to lead them back home. Regardless of how you began your marriage or how dark and lonely the path that has brought you to where you are now, I want you to know that it is possible today to have a marriage so good and so fulfilling that it can only be explained as a miracle. It took four years, thousands of hours, many tears, revisions and distractions, but I finally finished my book. I had no idea God had so much to say to us ladies until I began going through God's Word verse by verse, writing the different sections of Created to Be His Help Meet. Many times as I read a passage, I would say to my husband, “I'm not going to include those verses in my book because if I do the ladies (of any religious group you can think of including my own) will not like my book or promote it.”

My dear husband would say to me, “If God thought it was important enough to inspire it as part of his Word to us, then you should include it.” And so I would cringe and add one more controversial subject after another. So in obedience with Titus 2, where God commands the aged women to teach the younger women, I have obeyed and given you the very best I can do – 27 chapters, 296 pages, including letters from my readers, recounting counseling sessions, wisdom gleaned from my daughters, my own very personal stories, and, of course, the Word of God. It includes subjects as varied as planning meals to answering extremely intimate questions.
 
Finally finished reading Created to Be His Help Meet, and I simply can't give it an unqualified recommendation. Generally speaking, Mrs. Pearl does an excellent job of consistently asserting that the vast majority of wifely suffering arises from refusing to be a help meet or to be obediently submissive in general. However, that quote I posted 3 weeks ago came from near the beginning and resonated enough with me that it sat on my mental shoulder throughout the remainder of the book. I suppose she probably believes she has discovered the full prescription for why it would be the case that fundamentalist Christian homes have in recent decades been more likely to end up broken than homes in general: not enough submission going on here. But she never again addressed the subset of fundamentalist Christian homes, and in ignoring what she had set up as such a cogent question she consequently failed to consider what one can probably consider to be an indisputable fact: it's extremely unlikely that fundamentalist Christian wives are more rebellious and independent than are wives in general -- especially secular wives.

I loved most of the book until near the end, but it ends in a puddle of verbal vomit, in my opinion, because the wind-down of the book is a list of circumstances in which Debi and Michael Pearl give their full blessing for women to be not only disobedient but rebellious and antagonistic. In my opinion, the Pearls demonstrated their own fundamentalist blind spot by providing women far too much leeway to seize control of their families, and all I could envision when I considered the women whose letters about familial overthrow they applauded were, well, the typical battle-ax women I've experienced at fundamentalist churches. Give them a sinful inch, and they take a pious mile.

Could it possibly be the case that fundamentalist wives are among the most likely to grind down their imperfect husbands with loud proclamations of piety aimed at demasculating them?

I read another book long ago called "Me obey him?" And it had the same flaw. After making a great case for why women can and should obey their husbands she shoots herself in the foot by adding the "as long as he doesn't ask her to go against the word of God" which in effect causes the wife to be always on guard judging her husband.

I think the encouragement and wisdom on Debi's book outweighs the flaw. My sis in law said it was the only book she had read on relationships that didn't leave her wishing she had a better husband.....only that she was a better wife.

That is HUGE!
 
That moment when you ask God for guidance on what you should be doing, and He lets you know that the reason nothing is working is that He's been shutting all the doors.
Oh.
Righteo then, carry on, carry on.
 
I am ordering this book and might suggest it for our women's group in the fall.

I'd just recommend reading it all the way through for yourself before preparing to recommend it to others.

Keep in mind, also, that it's not friendly to polygamy.
 
I haven't picked up a g3c yet but if the quality of the G2c is any indication, it should be good. I picked one of those up a couple years back before covid for $160 after rebates and it's a solid little shooter.

$160 for the G2C is awesome! I did see some incredible deals like that a couple years ago before COVID. I wish I had picked one up back then.

My understanding is that the G2C and G3C are basically the same, with the 3 having a slightly upgraded finish (Tenifer like older Glocks), uses Glock compatible sights, and comes with a 3rd magazine included (worth about $25).

They both seem like very solid little general purpose handguns, especially for the price.
 
I've been known to identify as a concubine. :p
Is that just because you weren't Steve's "legal wife" at the time? I wouldn't see the state's certification as a difference between a wife and concubine. Just curious. Thanks. You always have good insights.
 
Most Christian books are anti-poly.
I don't disagree, but often the manner in which a book is anti-poly correlates with that book also representing a rigid Big Church fundamentalism that reflects something more than just falling into lockstep with the overall culture on the poly issue and others.
 
$160 for the G2C is awesome! I did see some incredible deals like that a couple years ago before COVID. I wish I had picked one up back then.

My understanding is that the G2C and G3C are basically the same, with the 3 having a slightly upgraded finish (Tenifer like older Glocks), uses Glock compatible sights, and comes with a 3rd magazine included (worth about $25).

They both seem like very solid little general purpose handguns, especially for the price.
Neat! Yeah I think years ago they had their hiccups, but Taurus' star is rising now in terms of overall quality and value.

I'm looking to get a big semi auto 12 gauge waterfowl shotgun sometime this year if anything comes back in stock. Gonna make my way out to the Mississippi River flyaway and try to get some snowgeese for the freezer. Apparently they are overpopulated and destroying their arctic habitat so their is no limit on them during a special season. Don't know if you hunt or not.
 
For a time when you have a string of quiet moments . . .

Nostalgic for the Future
February 2, 2022 ejcurtin 4 Comments


Despite its pedigree as a fundamental element in civilization’s greatest stories, nostalgia has come to be associated with treacly sentimentality, defeatism, and spurious spiritual inclinations. Homer, Vergil, Dante, the Biblical writers, and their ilk would demur, of course, but they have been dead for a few years, so progress’s mantra urges us to get on with it. This is now.

But now is always, and like its twin – exile – nostalgia is perpetual. The aching for “home” – from Greek algos, pain + nostos, homecoming – is not simply a desire for the past, whether in reality or imagination, time or place, but a passionate yearning for the best from the past to be brought into the future.

Nostalgia may be more a long ache of old people, but it is also a feeling that follows everyone along life’s way. Its presence may be shorter in youth, and it may be brief, intermittent, and unrecognized, but it is there. Surely it grows with experience. As everyone knows, a taste, a smell, a sight, a sound, a song – can conjure up a moment’s happiness, a reverie of possibility. Paradise regained, but differently. A yearning recognized, as with seeing for the first time how Van Gogh’s blue paint opens a door to ecstasy or a line of poetry cracks open a space in one’s heart for prospective love. Hope reborn as an aperture to the beyond reimagined and made possible.

There is no need to ever leave where we are to find that we are already no longer there, for living is a perpetual leaving-taking, and the ache of loss is its price.

But like all pains, it is one we wish to relieve in the future; and in order to make a future, we must be able to imagine or remember it first. We are all exiled in our own ways. Home was yesterday, and our lost homes lie in our futures, if we hold to the dream of homecoming, whatever that may mean to each person. But it also has a universal meaning, since we dwell on this earth together, our one home for our entire human family.

You may think I am engaging in fluff and puff and flimsy imaginings. But no.

All across the world there are hundreds of millions of exiles, forced by wars, power politics, poverty, starvation, destructive capitalism, and modernization’s calamitous consequences to leave their homes and suffer the disorientation of wandering. Emigration, immigration, salvaging bits of the old in the new strange lands – thus is their plight. So much lost and small hopes found in nostalgic remembering. Piecing together the fragments.

But in a far less physical sense, the homeless mind [remainder at: http://edwardcurtin.com/nostalgic-for-the-future/]
 
upload_2022-2-3_22-50-45.jpeg.
 
Crypto Spikes As Mexican Billionaire Says Bitcoin Is A 'Better Option Than Fiat Money'

BY TYLER DURDEN
FRIDAY, FEB 04, 2022 - 11:57 AM


Cryptos are on the rise this morning following the better than expected payrolls print, following comments from Mexico’s third richest man, Ricardo Salinas, who said bitcoin is a better option than fiat money, noting that the cryptocurrency is unseizable and can be transferred instantly worldwide, contrary to fiat and the gold standard.

“The gold standard has always been subject to governmental intervention,” Salinas said.

“And fiat allows you to finance endlessly.”

Bitcoin has spiked back above $40,000... [remainder at: https://www.zerohedge.com/crypto/cr...ionaire-says-bitcoin-better-option-fiat-money]
 
Here Is What's Behind Today's Stunning Payrolls Beat

BY TYLER DURDEN
FRIDAY, FEB 04, 2022 - 01:11 PM


For those who only look at headlines, today's payrolls report was a veritable shock: coming in at 467K, it was almost 4x the consensus median expectation of 125K, and was orders of magnitude above Goldman's forecast of -250K. Putting the stunning, 3-sigma beat in context, it came above all 78 estimates, and was more than double the highest forecast of 225K from HSBC. Even more ludicrous were historical adjustments which saw December increased from 199K to 510K, November from 249K to 647K and so on.

. . . <snip> . . .

What is the take home message? It's two fold:
  • First, we can effectively ignore covid's effect going forward. As Southbay notes, "It would appear that COVID is no longer a brake on employment or on the economy" which is good news: the end of the artificial covid restrictions couldn't come too soon.
  • Second, while the January report was stellar, its all downhill from here, because "January's win is a loss for February payrolls" or put otherwise, this month's strong payrolls will come at a price: i) Seasonal Adjustment will unwind - reducing payrolls in future months and ii) Seasonal workers will be laid off, resulting in a roughly 100K downside to February and/or subsequent months.
[remainder at: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/here-whats-behind-todays-stunning-payrolls-beat]
 
Back
Top