One of the fallacious arguments I have heard from the monogamy only crowd is that Deut. 17 prohibits the king from having more than one wife. If the king shouldn't do it, then neither should anyone else.
Here is the text in question (ESV translation)
"Only he must not acquire many horses for himself or cause the people to return to Egypt in order to acquire many horses, since the LORD has said
to you, ‘You shall never return that way again.’ And he shall not acquire many wives for himself, lest his heart turn away, nor shall he acquire for himself excessive silver and gold."
Obviously this is not a mandate of monogamy only for the king. The fact that God prohibits the king from excessive polygyny only makes sense in the context of regular polygyny being perfectly legitimate.
God said exactly the same thing about acquiring horse that He did about wives.
...not acquire many horses for himself
...not acquire many wives for himself
Nobody makes the foolish mistake of saying that this really means:
"The king may only have one horse". It isn't a problem for the king to have some horses, but he isn't to obsess about getting a bunch of them. He is to hope in God, not the strength of horses, riches, and foreign alliances. Likewise, with wives, it was ok for the king to have some, but not an excessive number (often involving alliances).
It seems to me that Solomon clearly violated all aspects of this command, while his father David did not.
Solomon
1. His heart was turned away from the Lord, like this passage said would happen.
2. He had 1000 women and crazy amounts of horses (getting them from Egypt), and ridiculous quantities of gold and silver.
3. He also violated Debut. 7 where Israel is commanded not to intermarry with the various Canaanite groups. Also this passage talks about the people being turned away from the Lord. That happened with Solomon (1 Kings 11).
Contrast that with David.
1. David had a lot of wives, around 20 probably
2. David had a lot of horses, gold,.and silver.
3. Though David sinned terribly in the matter of Uriah and Bathsheba, David never turned away from the Lord.
The horses, wives, gold, and silver were not a problem for David. They did not become his gods. His heart belonged to Yahweh.
1 Kings 15:5 esv
"...David did what was right in the
eyes of the LORD and did not turn
aside from anything that he
commanded him all the days of his life, except in the matter of Uriah the Hittite."
Clearly for this passage to make any sense, David did not violate Deut. 17
Here is the text in question (ESV translation)
"Only he must not acquire many horses for himself or cause the people to return to Egypt in order to acquire many horses, since the LORD has said
to you, ‘You shall never return that way again.’ And he shall not acquire many wives for himself, lest his heart turn away, nor shall he acquire for himself excessive silver and gold."
Obviously this is not a mandate of monogamy only for the king. The fact that God prohibits the king from excessive polygyny only makes sense in the context of regular polygyny being perfectly legitimate.
God said exactly the same thing about acquiring horse that He did about wives.
...not acquire many horses for himself
...not acquire many wives for himself
Nobody makes the foolish mistake of saying that this really means:
"The king may only have one horse". It isn't a problem for the king to have some horses, but he isn't to obsess about getting a bunch of them. He is to hope in God, not the strength of horses, riches, and foreign alliances. Likewise, with wives, it was ok for the king to have some, but not an excessive number (often involving alliances).
It seems to me that Solomon clearly violated all aspects of this command, while his father David did not.
Solomon
1. His heart was turned away from the Lord, like this passage said would happen.
2. He had 1000 women and crazy amounts of horses (getting them from Egypt), and ridiculous quantities of gold and silver.
3. He also violated Debut. 7 where Israel is commanded not to intermarry with the various Canaanite groups. Also this passage talks about the people being turned away from the Lord. That happened with Solomon (1 Kings 11).
Contrast that with David.
1. David had a lot of wives, around 20 probably
2. David had a lot of horses, gold,.and silver.
3. Though David sinned terribly in the matter of Uriah and Bathsheba, David never turned away from the Lord.
The horses, wives, gold, and silver were not a problem for David. They did not become his gods. His heart belonged to Yahweh.
1 Kings 15:5 esv
"...David did what was right in the
eyes of the LORD and did not turn
aside from anything that he
commanded him all the days of his life, except in the matter of Uriah the Hittite."
Clearly for this passage to make any sense, David did not violate Deut. 17
Last edited: