M
majick275
Guest
so we’re back to “you don’t understand the scriptures” as the extent of your analysis?
No. You had included far too many topics of discussion in one post for me to be able to comment in any depth on any of them. If you want to isolate one of those topics and discuss them in greater depth, that is possible. But I will be reducing my paritcipation on these boards in any case, so the window of opportunity for that will be limited.so we’re back to “you don’t understand the scriptures” as the extent of your analysis?
I need to know which quotes you are referring to. You had quoted several passages, and they require separate discussions.I would be interested in you responding to the LDS scriptures I had cited. specifically I would like for you to explain how they are something other than a condemnation of that practice.
This is history rather than scripture. I don’t know too much about this. I would have to look it up, and I am not sure that I will, because I will be leaving this board.Let’s start with the one from the original D&C.
History of the Church, vol. 2, pg. 247 (August 1835) "The clerk of every church should keep a record of all marriages solemnized in his branch. All legal contracts of marriage made before a person is baptized into this Church should be held sacred and fulfilled. Inasmuch as this Church of Christ has been reproached with the crime of fornication and polygamy, we declare that we believe that one man should have one wife, and one woman but one husband, except in the case of death, when either is at liberty to marry again."(This was included in the first published Doctrine and Covenants and accepted unanimously by the Twelve before being published. This passage in every D&C edition until 1876 when D&C 132 was first introduced to the Doctrine and Covenants).
What exactly is your critique of this passage of scripture?(Then if you have time I’d like to discuss Jacob chapter 2)
I will come back to you on that later on, as I have to leave the computer right now.Well the first WAS canonized scripture and accepted by common consent. It’s removal was not.
I think Jacob 2 specifically condemns the practice of polygamy.
26 Wherefore, I the Lord God will not suffer that this people shall do like unto them of old.
27 Wherefore, my brethren, hear me, and hearken to the word of the Lord: For there shall not any man among you have save it be one wife; and concubines he shall have none;
That sure seems obvious to me.
Jacob 2 :
26 Wherefore, I the Lord God will not suffer that this people shall do like unto them of old.
27 Wherefore, my brethren, hear me, and hearken to the word of the Lord: For there shall not any man among you have save it be one wife; and concubines he shall have none;
28 For I, the Lord God, delight in the chastity of women. And whoredoms are an abomination before me; thus saith the Lord of Hosts.
Read the whole chapter for proper context.
amgid,You have not understood the scripture correctly.
Not so obvious. It condemns the abuse of polygamy, not polygamy itself. It is addressed to a group of people who were themselves trying to abuse polygamy, and they were citing examples of polygamy abuse in the OT to justify their own practices—or rather, their desires to do so. Here is the quote:I think Jacob 2 specifically condemns the practice of polygamy.
26 Wherefore, I the Lord God will not suffer that this people shall do like unto them of old.
27 Wherefore, my brethren, hear me, and hearken to the word of the Lord: For there shall not any man among you have save it be one wife; and concubines he shall have none;
That sure seems obvious to me.
See post #21.When you make comments like this, in which the citation given is clear to everyone - including LDS members - and your argument in opposition is “you have not understood the scripture correctly”, or other dismissals such as “that is irrelevant to the discussion” when the point brought up is clearly relevant (and, again, not just clear to Catholics but clear to everyone), you do yourself - and your church - a great disservice. If you cannot defend what is written, for what is clear to understand, you respond that the poster does not understand; for that which is relevant, you declare irrelevant. It doesn’t ‘work’ here just as it doesn’t work in real life and it is almost embarrassing for me to watch as I feel I could make a better case to justify polygamy than you are doing at present.
I may be mistaken in my idea that you wish to be thought credible. If your only goal is contention with no basis in fact, then you are accomplishing your goal. If your goal is to use facts and logic (or even, as some LDS have used, spiritual testimony) to debate a particular LDS position, then you’re, again (for you seemed to have backed off of this method of ‘debate’ for a time), going out of your way to assure that nothing you say can be taken as credible.
You know something Ben, I repent of saying I wouldn’t be rude to you. It looks like you deserve it. You are certainly asking for it. I am kind of good at that you know. You might say I have a talent. You can get your money’s worth form me.It may be that your only goal here is to provide baseless contention. If so, I can accept that and write you off as a ‘troll’ as in my usenet days of old. If you wish to try to maintain credibility, however, you’re going to have to make concessions - as is the way in all Christian apologetics - when that which is clear and understood by everyone is simply beyond contention. You accept and move on and, particularly in this discussion, I am embarrassed for you that I admit that I could make a better argument in favor of polygamy than you are accomplishing all the while admitting that which has been written previous to the revelation being made public.
amgid,See post #21.
You know something Ben, I repent of saying I wouldn’t be rude to you. It looks like you deserve it. You are certainly asking for it. I am kind of good at that you know. You might say I have a talent. You can get your money’s worth form me.
amgid
I think that I have made a good case for God “approving” polygamy, not just “allowing” it. The law of polygamy was operable before the Law of Moses was given. The “divorce” issue that you had mentioned relates to the Law of Moses.I think you make a good case for the Lord “allowing” polygamy in times past. I find this similar to Moses allowing divorce.
I don’t agree. The “NT requirements to have but one wife” comes exclusively form Paul, and his advice on that is a bit questionable. Paul was anti-women! If you were to follow Paul’s advice, you wouldn’t want to get married at all!The NT requirements to have but one wife seem to indicate that monogamy is more righteous than polygamy.
The fact that God spoke in such affirmative terms to David about his plural wives, and also so completely supported Moses against Aaron and Miriam who had opposed his marriage to the Ethiopian woman, suggest more in the line of “promoting polygamy as a good thing,” rather than disapproving of it as a potentially bad thing.I still find nothing in your analysis that promotes polygamy as a good thing.
Not at all. You have ignored Jacob 2:23, where it is made clear that the Nephites’ desire to practice polygamy came as a result of their “not understanding the scriptures” (i.e. not understanding the principle of polygamy correctly, but abusing it).Jacob 2:24 does seem to specifically condemn it. (not just the abuse of it).
I don’t agree, see above.I continue to see it as something that the Lord allowed under the Old covenant but weaned the people off of under the New.
I don’t accept that. Adam and Eve were a very special case. They were the progenitors of the human race. God needed only two people with whom to begin the human race, and that is what He created. If God had made two wives for Adam, you have said, why didn’t He make three? If He had made three wives for him, you would have said, why didn’t He make four? One was adequate for the task, and that is what He made.I think the ultimate example of what God intended for families is that of Adam and Eve. In the beginning before sin entered into the world He made the perfect place for humans (garden of Eden) and placed in it one man and one woman. He did not give Adam many wives, he gave him one.
Just because the “direction” is not recorded in the Bible, it does not men that it was never given. Who says that the Bible must contain everything that God has ever communicated to man on earth? Perhaps it was given, but it was recorded in the Bible. I see no example in the OT of God DIRECTING monogamy either! If you want to go by that criterion, then we should not be getting married at all! We recognize polygamy as being divinely sanctioned for the same reason as we recognize monogamy as being divinely sanctioned. The fact that it was practiced by the most righteous prophets and patriarchs of ancient time, in numerous instances with obvious divine approval, we conclude that the “direction” must at some point have been given, even though not recorded in the Bible.I don’t see any example even in the OT of the Lord DIRECTING polygamy as a divine principle.
You are now straying into a different topic of discussion, which is not the same as the one you started with. Let’s stay on topic.Only JS seems to do that and if you’ve read Todd Compton’s book “in sacred loneliness” his motives don’t seem pure.
The same here. Let’s keep to the topic of the discussion.I also find it noteworthy that the D&C originally contained the stern denial (and denouncement) of polygamy even when JS was practicing it. That sure seems deceptive AND hypocritical. (and downright wicked)
Well, Ben, I was planning to leave this board, but you have persuaded me to hang around a little longer so I can be rude to you! I am just waiting for the right opportunity. And knowing you, I am sure I won’t have to wait very long!amgid,
You so obviously missed my point - that to be taken seriously you should set your standard of debate to be on par of those with whom you debate - that I am left to question, once again, if you are here merely to be contentious or to honestly engage in debate. If it is the latter I am simply trying (yet not succeeding, obviously) to help you in understanding that in debate you must concede that which is factual or obvious without a dismissal of ‘you do not understand’ or ‘that is irrelevant’ and either make concessions or defend what you can without dismissal.
That you boast of your talent to be rude is rather shocking to me. Not only is rudeness a violation of the rules listed here, but it is not a very attractive trait in ‘real life’. Perhaps you feel free to exercise your talent on the Internet where there is a guarantee of some anonymity, but I would dearly hope that you would not make it a rule to exercise what you call your talent amongst those with whom you come in contact with personally.
It is difficult to gauge your sincerity - every time I am willing to concede that you might be sincere, you begin to veer in the direction of seeking not to defend your belief but only to draw attention to yourself by not abiding by the ‘rules’ of debate or, in this case, a warning to me, I suppose, that you will not abide the ‘rules’ of this board. You are able, when you care, to abide by both sets of rules yet when you stray, what is one to think? If you don’t care, that’s fine, I will take your lack of concern that you are serious into consideration when I read your messages.
I don’t know how to make myself any clearer - I am trying to aid you so that you may be thought serious in your debates. If you ever said that you would not be rude - to myself or anyone - it was not in a message to me. But you have been less rude and I think that to your credit and would certainly not wish to see you return to an old habit, no matter how much a talent you believe it to be.
We obviously have differing opinions. I disagree with your views.I would think Adam and Eve would be the ultimate opportunity for God to express his will on marriage. It is the first one we have record of and thus a logical example. The need to be fruitful and multiply would certainly seem to be better accomplished by polygyny if it was acceptable to God. The fact that God chose monogamy for our first parents tells me quite a lot.
I was comparing the principle of Moses law on divorce as being applicable. The marked difference between what was permitted in the OT versus what is taught in the NT seems to support the higher law being monogamy. If you choose to discard Pauls’s teachings on marriage then I ask to whom do you turn? I don’t see any other biblical (or BoM which claims the “fullness” of the gospel) teachers showing polygamy as part of the new covenant.
I don’t see God speaking so affirmatively to David about polygamy in that scripture but in any case it’s the “old law” before Christ. As to Moses I’m not sure that his marriage to the Ethiopian woman was during the lifetime of his other wife. Still, it’s before Christ. The patriarchs that you promote as the most righteous all show remarkable flaws of character in scripture and once again are all before Christ.
I understand your point on Jacob pointing out the problem with abusing polygamy but the wording of those verses sure seems to denounce it in any form.
I fully understand your position on the Bible not containing all of Gods word. I repeat though that the LDS claim that the BoM contains the “fullness” of the Gospel would seem to indicate that if polygamy is indeed a celestial principle then we should see it promoted there. We do not. We do see specific direction of monogamy in the NT. (and the BoM and the original D&C). I would submit that even in the OT marriage is promoted and example given of monogamy being the first choice of God.
I don’t think we are off topic with the D&C prohibition and JS activities because it goes to scriptural support for polygamy. What those do in combination with the other observations I have made is to show a unanimous prohibition of polygamy even using LDS sources. The timing of changes to scripture coupled with JS actions shows that he was acting contrary to what he was proclaiming as the word of God. This makes the after the fact “revelation” that is now D&C 132 somewhat suspect. JS appears to be trying to justify his sins to the LDS membership rather than revealing the will of the Lord. His own wife sure seemed to believe that.
For a prophet to “reveal” scripture (BoM, original D&C) that appears consistent with existing scripture (Bible) but then secretly act contrary to it and when caught produce a “revelation” that contradicts everything preceding it but appears to show his sin as actually being a work of righteousness looks a lot like a false prophet. (or at least a fallen one)