Let me see if this may help to clarify and shed light on what I see as the better approach to this subject. I'll comment in between your lines to correspond to your words I'll highlight your words in italics and my words in bold. However, just know that I am not yelling or emphasizing with the bold. I will emphasize my points with capital letters. Also, if nothing else, please read the parable/story at the end. I know all of this is long so I hope you will all seriously contemplate this.
You said:
Thank you for your comments, Dr. Red. However, while everyone here agrees on the law of love in both testaments, we do NOT all agree with the rest of your statements in this paragraph. In fact there is considerable disagreement.
I say:
Understandably so. Covenant theologians, Dispensational Theologians, Progressive Dispensationalists, Promise theologians such as Dr. Walter Kaiser, and New Covenant Theologians all differ in specifics in this area. I would never debate that issue in here because there is no way one post or several could change someone's mind when they have placed themselves in some position on this. Only time and many hoursof dialogue would help in that.
My point is that love is something we can all agree to. I'll explain more below.
You Say:
And, in fact, there are disagreements as to the points you raised. For example, does a wife's right/ownership of her husband's body constitute a right of ACCESS or a right of CONTROL? If the former, she has a right to him, whether he continues to love her or becomes disenchanted. If the latter, she gets to stand between him and God, the giver of wives, and veto God's choice. You seem to take this latter approach. I and others take the former.
I say:
You are approaching Scripture here it seems to me on a grid or philosophical table that the Jewish mind would not understand or recognize. I'm not sure if you are reading the Greek directly or if you are looking up words in the Greek dictionary or lexicon but in either case the idea behind this phrase is straight forward. Whatever nuance or distinction you want to draw out in this phrase the point of it is solitary and encompassing. In other words, the word has no limitations in regard to sexual relations (which is the context and the primary mode of thought or the semantical domain).
Our golden rule of hermeneutics, whether reading scripture, legal texts such as a constitution or legal code, is to allow the immediate context to define a word if at all possible.Thus, the man when he marries is pledging to give up rights to his body. Ownership goes to the wife. She has as much say over his body as he does. Likewise, ownership of the wife's body goes to the man. he has as much say over it as the man does.
This is neither nor, as in your offer above and below. It is not access right or control rights but MUTUAL RIGHTS among the two. For Paul, and the Jewish theological system of thought, when a man and woman come together they formed the "ONE FLESH" union. This was the OT thought as well as the NT thought of Christ and the apostles. Thus for one to disregard the other and to move ahead is a severe violation of the one flesh union. One could just as easily argue that it is sin for the wife to hold the man back as it is for the man to hold the wife back. True indeed. But that is the issue at hand because of the union.
To exaplin it any other way would leave us with a disharmonious God/Trinity. The Trinity is the base to where we build our idea of perfect harmony among relationships. Suppose we were to say, since the Father is the head of the Son that if the Son does not like the Father's plan the Father has the right to just go ahead without the Son's persmission. Though this would never happen because of the impeccability of Christ, we can see that even though the Father is the Head of Christ, and Christ is the head of man, and man is the head of woman (1 Cor. 11) we would never contemplate God the Father doing something that he and his Son were not in agreement upon. Even when the Son was going to the cross we see harmony in that he consented to the will of the Father. And yet he still said that no one took his life but that he laid it down willingly. Christ did not want the pain of the cross, but he also consented to it. It was MUTUAL HARMONY even though the Father was the HEAD over Christ.
Let me move this to the practical level. Suppose a man "feels" or "thinks" he has met another woman who should be his next wife. After prayer he thinks this is right. But he and his wife have yet to reach an agreement. Should the man move ahead regardless of what it might do to his first wife? Absolutely not lest we ignore the law of love for both God and neighbor. There is no COMMAND in Scripture for a man to take another wife if he knows the first wife is clearly not ready. For that matter there is no command in Scripture that a man even has to marry at all. A man can choose to remain single and celibate for the kingdom work, but if one is not able to do this then marriage is not a sin and it is holy, good, honorable, and pleasing to the Lord. But again, a man cannot go to his wife and say: "Wife, God has commanded for me to marry again." The man is not functioning underneath the headship of Christ at that point and he has stepped outside the bounds and thus is no longer a good authority. He should continue to pray, seek the Lord, love his wife, and work with her to mature her in whatever area that is holding her back from following him.
Also, when you place this in a logical syllogism step by step it becomes clear as to the higher law in this matter:
Scenario:
In a One Flesh Union that was Based on Monogamy
The first wife is not yet mature enough to handle a change in the original covenant terms
If the man goes ahead the wife has said she cannot handle this and she will divorce.
Man has a choice to exercise mercy and patience or use the law and position to move ahead.
Mercy triumphs over justice in the laws of God's kingdom. James says: "Speak and act as those who are who going to be judged by the law that gives freedom, because judgment without mercy will be shown to anyone who has not been merciful. Mercy triumphs over justice" (James 2:12).
It would violate the laws of love, mercy, grace, patience, and a persevering humble spirit to move ahead when there is not unity, or at least enough unity for the one flesh relationship to remain in tact.
This is also a safeguard against the issue of Malachi's day. God knew the intent and deceptive ways of all of man's heart. A man who disregards this wisdom and rule of love could easily plow ahead and use this as an excuse in his heart to simply put away a younger wife. God who is omniscient did not fail to see the intent and future actions of men. If a man knows he can just move ahead and if a wife does not like it and she leaves then he has "legally" or "morally" gotten rid of his wife and such is a serious violation. God hates divorce and thus when God wrote his Bible he made sure not to give this type of right to man. No man can go to God and before man and say, "I am the man and God has told me to marry another wife regardless of what my first wife thinks." There is no biblical support for this and a man who does this is most likely walking in either ignorance, deception (mysticism as if God speaks in such a way that is contrary to his written revelation), or willfull rebellion. Again, there is not a single text that demands or commands that a man has to marry. And if a man purposefully moves ahead knowing that this will hurt his wife and possibly lead her into sin (such as her leaving) then the man is guilty of being harsh, unkind, unloving, and he violates the law Peter gave to the man when he said to men: "in the same way be considerate as you live with your wives, and treat them with respect as the WEAKER partner" (1 Peter 3:7).
Since the woman is weaker the mercy law applies. It violates the law to do to others as you would have them do to you if one moves ahead without the other being on board.
You Say:
You mentioned it being wrong/sinful for a man to go forward based on his "sovereign position as a man." It would seem, however, that what you advocate is the right of any woman in the marriage to hold him back based on her "sovereign position as a woman." While no-one here (hopefully) advocates riding roughshod over the emotions of our wives, particularly when they have been brought up in a monogamist mindset, the NT is equally clear (1Cor 11:3) that there IS a line of authority. Popular or not. So if a man has spent the time in prayer and listening to his own Head that he should, and if his Head is telling him to move forward, he'd best obey, let the chips fall where they may.
I Say:
First, I commend you for wanting to honor the emotions of a wife. Your intent is good. i am grateful and thankful for that positive note.
Secondly, your teleological ethic is very disturning in the next few phrases. Judaiam and Christianity is not a teleological ethic but a deontological ethic. And thus we draw our conclusions by the written revelation that supersedes all inner promptings and ideas in our minds. The ultimate authority is in something that has ALREADY be SPOKEN in a WRITTEN REVELATION. Should anything I pray about contradict or go against what has already been written then the inner prompting or guidance is wrong.
For example, Above is my point. A man is doing the exact same thing he is saying his wife should not do when he says: "My head is telling me I must marry this other woman." If that is so then a text or example in the bible must be directly stated that there is a requirement for a man to marry another even when the first wife is not in harmony. NO SUCH text or example exists. It is a mystical or feelings based error on the man's part to press ahead. It is teleological ethics instead of deontological ethics. By teleological ethics I mean the man looks to prayer and a supposed direct guidance from his HEAD to justify the end or the goal, to gain another wife.
That is not the biblical ethic or love or the biblical ethic of allowing what God has ALREADY said to be the deontological (duty bound, highest law required) rule to guide the decision of the man.
If a man operates in this domain he could place anything he wanted above that of what his wife really needs and then use the "authority" line to be his justification. Such is not how harmony, love, or good relationships develop. The Trinity is again the base for how we build relationships. All the members of the Trinity are ONE yet each member is also a distinct being. The Father has AUTHORITY over the Son yet the Son and Father do not do anything without mutual agreement together because they operate in a sphere of ultimate love for one another. No member of the Trinity would ever dare contemplate doing something without the other members being in agreement. To do so would destroy their relationship and unity. We too should follow that model in our own personal lives.
Now let me address the levirate law. Some men who are not thinking it through may run to this and say: "this law gives me the right to marry another even if my first wife does not agree."
That is not the CONTEXT of CULTURE of the levirate law in the OT. If you recall ALL WOMEN who with their fathers agreed to marry in Israel were giving consent to plural marriage because that WAS THE CURRENT SYSTEM.
In other words, if you were a woman in the OC your consent to marriage was consent to the possibility of having in the future multiple sister wives. That was how the LEGAL CONTRACT OR COVENANT WAS ENTERED.
There are numerous laws today that when you sign up to something by signing up to it you have given your consent to many regulations and rules that come along with it. If you don't want those regs and rules then do not sign up. That is how it worked in the OC with the law of marriage. Every woman in Israel knew hat if she married that the rule was for the possibility of a plural union.
But, if a man enters a covenant or legally binding contract based upon a stipulation that later changes then it is a contractual, covenant, and legal error for the man to push, press, or demand that the wife has to go along with it. Though the man may suffer his honestly and integrity and his dedication to his HEAD, Christ, is at stake if he fails to honor the original covenant and then he or she is in violation of the law of love in the Bible and also the legal stipulations of either scripture and/or the land or authority that oversees the contract.
Now if a man comes to the doctrine and believes it and the wife leaves him then so long as the man was not trying to force his way or what he believes to be Christ's way then he has not sinned and the wife then bears the burden.
But to do press, force, or move ahead without the first wife's agreement is a terrible violation of covenant, contract, and biblical law because when the woman who entered the covenant, contract, or legal arrangement entered it she did so based upon something else. The covenant a man enters into in marriage, consciously or unconsciously is a life long union. If these issues were not dealt with before then whatever was the ideas expressed between the two when entering the contract, covenant, or union it is those ideas that bind and when new ideas arise until harmony can be established, such as with this area, it is foolish for a man to move ahead.
Remove the issue from plural marriage. Suppose a man and woman agreed to marry and they pledged to one another that they would always live inside of the USA. This was the agreement that both pledged. But then the man felt the calling to go overseas to do missions work. As the man he could simply say: "I am the head. Either come with me or else I'm going with or without you."
A man could argue this based upon the reasoning and logic presented above because you are saying the man gets some type of direct revelation from God that can trump or go over what has already been specifically stated in the bible (or in the origianal covenant, contract, or legal agreement). But the wise man, the loving man, the man who understands and lives with his wife in a considerate way will say: "Ya know, I did agree to this. I was not wise or knowledgeable in how I set this marriage up. I ask you to forgive me and I ask the Lord to forgive me. I pray you will change and adjust and see the need to do this. But until the Lord moves in your heart I will trust that he is sovereign and that in time he will change your heart on this matter. Until then I'll wait and see what the Lord does."
A man who understands that God is totally sovereign over the heart of all people (Prov. 21:1; Eph 1:11) will not go back on his promise. He will entrust himself to God who has authority over the hearts and lives of all people. If he entered in a promise agreement with his first wife based upon monogamy he will not demand and command that she comply with his desires. He WILL teach, guide, pray with, encourage, and disciple but he will not break the union in order to do something that no text in the Bible ever demands nor was it the original agreement that the woman entered into (unlike it was in the OC)
In legal theory we call this simply: "breach of contract." The rules cannot change in the middle unless both parties agree to he new set of rules. This was in Paul's mind when he wrote 1 Cor. 7. It applies to so much more than just plural marriage. It is a wisdom principle that when defied many rough days, hardships, and splits in unions (marriages, business partnerships, etc) occur, which need not be. God did not intend for it to be that way.
His goal and his will is for there to be harmony. it is not about one's rights over or under another's rights. That is based upon justice. In that code people work on a justice standard. God's code is now more than ever about love and respect. The only way for a couple to ever get past my right versus his rights arguments is for the two to come to grips with the mercy and love doctrine. Sure, man is the head. The woman is to submit and follow. But if the head leads the woman into something that she is not ready for and without her being in harmony with the word and the man then greater damage will occur than if there is only one error, which would be a person's not understanding or agreeing to something in Scripture. Compunding that error with a breach of contract or a breach of the covenant is unloving, unkind, and is not in agreement with the laws of love as specifically spelled out in Scripture.
I'll close with these two stories :
A young man I have taught said he had discovered that he was the head of his wife and that she was not obeying him. She would not follow. He was all about headship, authority, rule, submission, obedience. I told him then I as his professor and authority wanted him to run a mile for his final exam. But he said, "I'm not ready. Professor that was not in the original sylllabus!" Oh I know, I said but I'm over this class and you must either obey or fail. You are under my authority. He cried: "I'll go to the Dean." I said that will do you no good because I have already prayed about it with him and he supports me. Now go along, get to running." So he goes out to run (more like walk his mile with a few yards of running huffing and puffing). He let's me know when he returns that he will never tell another person to take this course. I'm the worst person ever.
I knew he could not run a mile. Looking at him would tell anyone that. So then I said: "well since you did not run the mile you fail. How do you like me changing the rules in the middle of the game? Oh sure, I have the right to do so just like you have the right to demand your wife to follow you. But were you ready to run the mile? No! How do you think your wife is ready to run the mile with you yet when she has not been prepared just like this class had not prepared you to run the mile? See, there is a difference in having the right and authority to do something and the wisdom and skill in knowing when and how to do it. If the subject in the class of life, whether classroom or marriage, is not ready for the HEAD's instruction then the body cannot really handle it. The fellow hung his head and understood. Just because the HEAD is in the position of authority does not mean the body is ready and capable of following the head, especially when the body signed up for something different and then it changed in mid stream. I told the student that had this been a class where each day they had to run 25 to 50 yards that by the end heen ready. Also, had this been in the original syllabus then it would not have been a shock.
In reality, the student did not fail. He passed and went away with something more than knowledge. He went away with wisdom, skill, and understanding. A wise and loving man would never require his flesh, his body, his love to do something that she is not ready for. He would suffer himself, just like Christ suffered for us, before he damaged his bride and lead her into sin. Just like that student did not sign up for gym many wives and husbands entered their contract/covnenants and then the rules changed in midstream. Many of which are not ready and if a man is forcing his rights onto his body, who is not ready, she will fail and the man will have pushed her into such a failure.
I don't see how any man of love and integrity could feel, think, or claim that such honors God. A man can be so harsh and so cruel that he leads his wife into sin and he is the cause of her adultery (Matt.5:32).
God forbid that any who associate with this group would fall into that and have ot give an account for that on judgment day. Let it not be so. It does not have to be so if the law of mercy and love leads the way over the law of position and authority or personal rights.
Dr. RED; Th.D.