@Well loved wife very nicely said but I don't understand what hover courting is?
I think if two people decide they want to get to know each other with possibility of marriage-that’s courting.
doesn’t mean we can’t follow Biblical principles...Until a woman binds herself to the man
‘hover courting’ is where a family or parents are so restrictive of the couple‘s time and conversations. Where the couple can’t be out of ear shot, out of view or ever left to private conversations.
it was the father who makes this choice, not the woman, or at least has final sign off.
Not in a Ketubah’ed wedding. The daughter, by custom had the final ‘say’ though she wasn’t supposed to say anything. The groom to be would pour a glass of wine once the negotiating had been concluded and place it in front of her. If she consented to the terms she would take a drink/sip. Then he would drink from the same cup and state that he would not drink from this cup until they both could drink from it together (at his fathers house). This is a later custom from at least as far back as the time of Christ.
This may not have been the case for the daughter of a poor man who was indenturing her to a rich man. There’s just not enough evidence that I have seen to say one way or another.
Genesis 24:8 seems to indicate that her consent was customary as much as 2000 years pre Christ.
And if the woman will not be willing to follow thee, then thou shalt be clear from this my oath: only bring not my son thither again.
Vrs 56-58 seems to support this also. And he said unto them, Hinder me not, seeing the LORD hath prospered my way; send me away that I may go to my master.
And they said, We will call the damsel, and inquire at her mouth.
And they called Rebekah, and said unto her, Wilt thou go with this man? And she said, I will go.
I would take 1st century customs as informative of that time and place but not indicative per se of what the OT law teaches; a lot changed by then.
Genesis 24 indicates what the custom was for that family, or for their culture. But this is pre-law and that culture was the Mesopotamians. Again, potentially relevant but not directly indicative of what the OT law teaches. Especially considering that culture practiced things such as bride auctions and dowry/bride price; which indicate women often had no choice in the matter in that culture.
Romani custom has bride auctions, dowries, and bride prices. It's been that way as far back as memory permits and brides have always had the final say, yes or no. There's a difference between a wife who has a choice and a slave who is owned. That's not say that women weren't pressured to say yes by their fathers or brothers. The thing is they had to agree. I'm saying this as someone from a culture who still practices this according to several millennium of tradition and not someone who's looking at a custom that's foreign to them. Looking in the window of a house doesn't let you know the temperature of the house. A person who's been in that house can tell you if the A.C. works.Especially considering that culture practiced things such as bride auctions and dowry/bride price; which indicate women often had no choice in the matter in that cultur
I’d be leery of assuming that the family of Abraham followed those Mesopotamian customs just because they lived in the region. I’m sure that there was a specific reason why Abraham wanted his daughter in law to be from his family specifically though I confess I don’t know exactly what those reasons were.
but I cant recall anywhere that I’ve read (cannon or not) that indicated that the woman didn’t have a say in the matter unless she was indentured or a slave and even those mentions are inferred or assumed.
Vrs 56-58 seems to support this also. And he said unto them, Hinder me not, seeing the LORD hath prospered my way; send me away that I may go to my master.
And they said, We will call the damsel, and inquire at her mouth.
And they called Rebekah, and said unto her, Wilt thou go with this man? And she said, I will go.
You will be released from my oath if, when you go to my clan, they refuse to give her to you—then you will be released from my oath.’
Great analogyRomani custom has bride auctions, dowries, and bride prices. It's been that way as far back as memory permits and brides have always had the final say, yes or no. There's a difference between a wife who has a choice and a slave who is owned. That's not say that women weren't pressured to say yes by their fathers or brothers. The thing is they had to agree. I'm saying this as someone from a culture who still practices this according to several millennium of tradition and not someone who's looking at a custom that's foreign to them. Looking in the window of a house doesn't let you know the temperature of the house. A person who's been in that house can tell you if the A.C. works.
Genesis 24:8 seems to indicate that her consent was customary as much as 2000 years pre Christ.
And if the woman will not be willing to follow thee, then thou shalt be clear from this my oath: only bring not my son thither again.
I did notice that in spite of all the information that they did know, there was much that they didn’t know or couldn’t confirm, perhaps because most of the poorer ‘contracts ‘ were oral only. I think this is one of those places that I’d be leery of trying to prove a position strictly by omission.
Love this! I've seen it so much in the homeschool type movements. It paralyzes pair bonding in young people.What I define as ‘hover courting’ is where a family or parents are so restrictive of the couple‘s time and conversations. Where the couple can’t be out of ear shot, out of view or ever left to private conversations. Character is rarely able to be seen. We all can talk and explain what we think or believe but hover courting doesn’t let life happen. Important conversations can’t or don’t happen. For example a man asks the gal what do you think about topic (xyz) and she feels she can’t speak freely, due to listening/prying ears, or concerned she’ll offend her daddy’s heart by having her own beliefs... so she answers somewhat according to ‘the line of belief ‘ and stays safe. Or the girl is to googly-eyed to ask how much debt are you in?
Getting to know someone isn’t all sitting at the table with coffee and talking. It’s a HUGE part, but a gal can say I like fish, the guy thinks ohh, she’s a keeper now I’ll have a fishing buddy... they go fishing after the wedding and find out she’s not a fisher woman, she doesn’t know how to fish or cook it... she likes to eat it. In real life he would’ve taken her fishing before the ‘I do’ as another way of getting to know her/incorporating her into the family. Another example- what do they believe about child training? Let’s babysit... you see if she coddles or corrects. You see if he’s passive or corrects a child and how each one does the correcting. Anyway, you can’t cover every life topic in living it before marriage but you can see something more of their character when you’re ‘living a courtship.’
Love this! I've seen it so much in the homeschool type movements. It paralyzes pair bonding in young people.
So how do you strike a balance between that and free for all dating and sex?