To my point: any Scriptural citation I give, it seems, you will interpret personally. Why should I give credence to the authority of your personal interpretation?
The problem we have so far is that you haven’t given any Scriptural reference or basis. I understand that it doesn’t have to be stated directly in the text, but at the least it should be based on it. Your evidence should also factor in my objections as well because they speak directly against your point.
Please show me a direct quote from the text that asserts that “God wants a man to love two women.” You cannot do it, because it’s not part of the text. Oh… it might just be your interpretation of the text … but it’s not in the text itself.
Seems like you’re trying to set up a strawman. Keep in mind that I’m okay with inference and direct evidence.
My claim is in the text but with more wording of course.
Jacob loved Rachel and God knew it:
Genesis 29:30 Then Jacob also went in to Rachel, and he also loved Rachel more than Leah
Here is God’s observation:
Genesis 29:31
When the LORD saw that Leah was unloved.
The way God acts on that observation reveals that He wanted Leah loved which would lead to Jacob loving BOTH Rachel and Leah (TWO women!):
Genesis 29:31 When the LORD saw that Leah was unloved,
He opened her womb
Leah confirms that God helped her so that her husband would love her:
Genesis 29:32,33 So Leah conceived and bore a son, and she called his name Reuben;[fn] for she said, “The LORD has surely looked on my affliction. Now therefore, my husband will love me.”
33 Then she conceived again and bore a son, and said, “
Because the LORD has heard that I am unloved
Show me that God impregnates. Always and everywhere. And, if you can’t do that (and you cannot

), then show me that your literalistic interpretation of the Scripture in question is authoritative. Otherwise, it’s just personal opinion
False dichotomy. There’s direct evidence and then there’s inference. You have shown ZERO evidence for your analysis and/or inference. Explaining what secondary causation or occasionalism is does not demonstrate how it applies to the Bible.
Here is God’s intervention with the impregnation process (in bold font). If “impregnation” is the problem then we can at least say He took them from infertile to fertile - the same way He did with Sarah during her elderly age:
Genesis 29:31 When the LORD saw that Leah was unloved,
He opened her womb
Do you want the passages about Sarah bearing children in “old” age and the “virgin” Mary event, as well?
Is Leah ‘infertile’? Is she “of old age”?
She was which is indicated by her womb needing to be opened. The same wording is used in Rachel’s case if you refer to Genesis 29:31 where it says she was barren, and Genesis 30:22 where it says God opened her womb.
Similar language is used elsewhere like in Genesis 20:17, 18. So opening or closing the womb relates to fertility.
cont’d