sweetlissa said:
Instead of this how about I ask a hypothetical question.
Suppose a woman comes...[goes] through the bible...and agrees that there is no sin involved [in polygyny]. So what does she do?
Scripturally, she is commanded to follow [her husband], right?
Scripturally, she cannot divorce him, right?
So as a believer and a patriarch and as a patriarch's wife, what do you tell her?
I would tell her, "Honey, I know you are hurt and I know this seems so unfair. But, God commands us to submit to our husband and follow his lead." Isn't that pretty much what you would have to say, if you were to follow God?
You wouldn't say, "Oh, honey, of course you can abandon him." Or "he will just have to abandon the new wife until you agree to it." Would you? Because neither of those would be scriptural. So the KINDEST thing we can do it share the TRUTH in LOVE but we have to make sure it is the TRUTH...
SweetLissa
Excellent points, Lissa, and they strike a chord with me.
It was my SECOND wife, B, who studied the Word, and concluded that polygyny was acceptable before YHVH. She entered into Covenant with me, and joined my first wife as a beloved helpmeet in my house -- over ten years ago.
And I will tell you that "
of course you can abandon him" is EXACTLY what secular and even allegedly "Christian" counselors will ALL tell her; it is what TV, and popular culture, and even the family who abused her and ignored her as a child will tell her. It is EXACTLY what Satan will try to make sure she hears!
Be ready for it.
It was the "world", and the consistent pressure from the adversary that wore B down, at least in part. (There are also strongholds of the enemy that result from childhood abuse, and remain in place so long as unforgiveness has a place in us; throw in fear and you have the "rest of the story".) But the problem ultimately was, and remains, rebellion. As our Savior also said, "If you will not believe His Writings, neither will you believe my words."
I pray that she will eventually hear "two or more witnesses" who will confirm for her exactly what you advised above!
My own story is essentially the "opposite" (in almost every way) from the scenario posited in this thread. But part of the moral is the same, from a pragmatic (as opposed to
only a Biblically-
permissible) perspective.
Marriage is already "hard" in a pagan society that puts egalitarian "tradition" ahead of what the Word actually says. My advice is to husbands:
unless you hear directly from God (which I have no authority to judge), don't make it worse, don't surrender ground to the enemy up front, by alienating the helpmeet of your youth.
Not only is it important for two to "walk together in agreement", but a cord of three strands is not easily broken.