TITLE: POLYGAMY, POLYGYNY, CONCUBINES, & JESUS; Another Look for Christians. COPYRIGHT © JANUARY 14, 1995 All rights reserved. Copyright © 01/14/'95; 01/12/Õ96 (Revised) This file, in its entirety, may be posted on or copied off of computer networks like Internet or WWW by anyone so inclined. This is an ASCII text only copy of a Macintosh MicrosoftWord5 file made for non-Macintosh folks, so it is very plain and basic in its form (footnotes, indentation and page layout). The document is 6" wide and Palatino 12 plain font in the original. So when your text only version comes up , just Select All and change it to Palatino or Geneva or Helvetic10. This should clean it up considerably and make it more readable. There are no bold or underline options. The distinctions between footnotes of sources and footnotes of reference are lost. So please be patient with the footnote numbering. The footnotes are put at the end of the paragraphs instead of in the text itself, making it more readable. By L. Tyler P.O. Box 620763, SanDiego, CA 92162-0763 ruth1lee2@aol.com or polyboy@delphi.com This is dedicated to all those who have suffered through divorce and the complexities of remarriage, and to all of the following: 1. The shattered Kenyan polygynist husbands and their families who are made to feel like second class citizens in the local church because of their polygyny, made to feel less loved by Christ and made to feel less a child of God by the local "Christians". 2. The broken hearted Chinese polygynist wives and their children in their local churches who are shunned by the proper members and made to feel less welcome and spiritually inferior because of their polygynous families. 3. The devastated Burmese polygynist husbands who believe in and have received the Lord Jesus Christ, but who are rejected and shunned by the local "Christian"church/ leader because they love their wives too much to divorce them. 4. The grieved, stumbled, offended and broken hearted born-again and Spirit sealed Indian wives and children of the born-again and Spirit sealed husband who loved his wives and children too much to renounce and repudiate them in order to be baptized and accepted by the local"Christian' church, and so now live in Christ, denied fellowship by their local congregation of "Christians". 5. The discouraged Mid-Eastern polygynist husbands who genuinely wanted to know Christ and the fellowship of the saints but who were embittered and kept from saving faith by the campaign of "Christian" leaders/churches against them and their polygyny. It would be no surprise if they were the most active in the community in resisting the Gospel and those who preach it. Talk about closing a door and making an enemy of the Gospel! 6. The troubled Liberian polygynist wives and children who genuinely wanted to know Christ and the fellowship of the saints but who were embittered and kept from saving faith by the campaign of "Christian" leaders/churches against them and their polygyny. It would be no surprise if they were the most active in the community in resisting the Gospel and those who preach it. Talk about closing a door and making an enemy of the Gospel! 7. The broken hearted, stumbled, offended and grieved Kenyan polygynist wives and their children whose husbands and fathers were forced to reject and renounce them in order to be baptized and join the local "Christian" church.; especially in the case where a carnal husband used the church rule as an excuse to get rid of a wife and children he didn't want. 8. The disconsolate Pakistani polygynist husbands who are stumbled, grieved, offended and broken in their faith and love for the Lord Jesus Christ because of how badly they and their loved ones have been treated by the local "Christian" leader/church. 9. The grief stricken Bengali polygynist wives and children who are stumbled, grieved, offended and broken in their faith and love for the Lord Jesus Christ because of how badly they and their loved ones have been treated by the local "Christian" leader/church. 10. The miserable Thai polygynist husbands who, with grave doubts and troubled hearts, succumbed to "Christian" pressure to renounce and reject (Malachi 2:13-17) all of their wives except one to satisfy the demands of some misguided "Christian" leader, or association of "Christians". *Consider what Saint Augustine said in the fourth century AD. "But here there is no ground for a criminal accusation: for a plurality of wives was no crime when it was the custom; and it is a crime now, because it is no longer the custom. There are sins against nature, and sins against custom, and sins against the laws. In which, then, of these senses did Jacob sin in having a plurality of wives? As regards nature, he used the women not for sensual gratification, but for the procreation of children. For custom, this was the common practice at that time in those countries. And for the laws, no prohibition existed. The only reason of its being a crime now to do this, is because custom and the laws forbid it." [Footnote: >.14 A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. iv; p. 289] I hope that dear brother Augustine is having a wonderful time in Heaven. I also hope that Jesus has shared with Him meaning of Prov. 5:18, 19----- a husband's sensual gratification by and with his wife's breasts, being enraptured and intoxicated with and by her lovemaking; the sensual gratification of the marital joys of the Song of Solomon; the joyful marital living of Eccles. 9:7,8,9; and the sensual gratification of the blissful exchange of intimate marital affection required in 1 Cor. 7:2,3,4,5. I don't understand how he could have missed these obvious God given instructions to blissfully and wholeheartedly love our mates in marriage. *What does St. Augustine (4th Century AD) say about the practice of polygyny and concubinage? Consider the following: "The only reason of its being a crime now to do this, is because custom and the laws forbid it. Whoever despises these restraints, even though he uses his wives only to get children, still commits sin, and does an injury to human society itself, for the sake of which it is that the procreation of children is required. In the present altered state of customs and laws, men can have no pleasure in a plurality of wives, except from an excess of lust; and so the mistake arises of supposing that no one could ever have had many wives but from sensuality and the vehemence of sinful desires. Unable to form an idea of men whose force of mind is beyond their conception, they compare themselves with themselves, as the apostle says [2 Cor. x. 12], and so make mistakes. Conscious that, in their intercourse though with one wife only, they are often influenced by mere animal passion instead of an intelligent motive, they think it an obvious inference that, if the limits of moderation are not observed where there is only one wife, the infirmity must be aggravated where there are more than one.">.80 [Footnote: >80 A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. iv; pp.289ff.] *Were these Old Testament saints less Godly than we? I think not. But what of those who say that having more than one wife in those days was a falling short of the will of God and reflected a weakness in the character of those who participated in polygyny? St. Augustine has a good word, as follows: "But those who have not the virtues of temperance must not be allowed to judge of the conduct of holy men, any more than those in fever of the sweetness and wholesomeness of food. . . If our critics, then, wish to attain not a spurious and affected, but a genuine and sound moral health, let them find a cure in believing the Scripture record, that the honorable name of saint is given not without reason to men who had several wives; and that the reason is this, that the mind can exercise such control over the flesh as not to allow the appetite implanted in our nature by Providence to go beyond the limits of deliberate intention. . . . the holy patriarchs in their conjugal intercourse were actuated not by the love of pleasure, but by the intelligent desire for the continuance of their family. . . .nor did the number of their wives make the patriarchs licentious. But why defend the husbands, to whose character the divine word bears the highest testimony. . . ." [Footnote: >.23 A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. iv; p.290] *St. Augustine (4th Century AD) had a gentler way of saying it that I feel more reflects the God of Gen. 1 and 1 Cor. 13. Consider the following: ÒThat the good purpose of marriage, however, is better promoted by one husband with one wife, than by a husband with several wives, is shown plainly enough by the very first union of a married pair, which was made by the Divine Being Himself, with the intention of marriages taking their beginning therefrom, and of its affording to them a more honorable precedent. In the advance, however, of the human race, it came to pass that to certain good men were united a plurality of good wives, --- many to each; and from this it would seem that moderation sought rather unity on one side for dignity, while nature permitted plurality on the other side for fecundity. For on natural principles it is more feasible for one to have dominion over many, than for many to have dominion over one.Ó [Footnote: >..34 2b A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church; Vol. V; p. 267] Consider St. AugustineÕs point in the following:Ò . . . no one doubts . . . who reads with careful attention what use they made of their wives, at a time when also it was allowed one man to have several, whom he had with more chastity than any now has his one wife . . . But then they married even several without any blame . . Ó>65 [Footnotes:>.64 Please see THE INSTITUTES OF BIBLICAL LAW, by R. Rushdonney, p. 364. >30 (Deut. 21:15,16). >31 (Ex. 21:10). >32 (Genesis 30 and 2 Samuel 7). >..65 St. Augustin: On The Trinity; p. 406.] *Please consider the points of view of an influential and significant leader from the early church, St. Augustine :ÒThat the holy fathers of olden times after Abraham, and before him, to whom God gave His testimony that "they pleased Him," [Heb. 11:4-6] thus used their wives, no one who is a Christian ought to doubt, since it was permitted to certain individuals amongst them to have a plurality of wives, where the reason was for the multiplication of their offspring, not the desire of varying gratification. . . . In the advance, however, of the human race, it came to pass that to certain good men were united a plurality of good wives, --- many to each; and from this it would seem that moderation sought rather unity on one side for dignity, while nature permitted plurality on the other side for fecundity. For on natural principles it is more feasible for one to have dominion over many, than for many to have dominion over one.Ó>72 [Footnote: >..72 A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. V; p. 267] So for St. Augustine (4th century AD) ". . . good men were united [to] a plurality of good wives. . ." in a "feasible" form of polygyny that involved "moderation", "dignity" and "fecundity". Clearly he didn't label it sin and he didn't say that the practice of polygyny made these "good" people sinners. This is the position of St. Augustine, a significant post-Pentecost leader in the 4th Century AD church, speaking in the era of the Church in which we live today. Here we see St. Augustine describing most of the Bible's polygynists as "holy patriarchs" who deserved the "honorable name of saint" because their "character .. bears the highest testimony", the Word of God. It sure doesn't sound like they are a back slidden lot of fleshly saints! Quite to the contrary! Any "elder" today would do well to be so spoken of as these polygynous patriarchs. I understand Rev. Gerhard Jasper to make the following points: (1) In Old Testament times a Jewish polygynist's marriage was fully recognized as marriage, protected by the Law and the elders; (2) the Jewish polygynist's faith in or faithfulness to God was not questioned because of his polygyny; (3) the polygyny of the Jewish polygynist did not keep him from being admitted to the congregation with full membership.>44. Moses did not forbid polygamy>8 (Dt. 21:15,16) >8 but apparently it was unusual among average people .>45. [Footnotes:>.f89 Please see p. 362, THE INTSTITUTES OF BIBLICAL LAW, by R. Rushdonney. >44. Trobisch, MY WIFE MADE ME. . . P.18; (AFRICAN THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, Rev. Gerhard Jasper of Lutheran Theological College in Makumira, Tanzania; Februrary 1969, p. 41). >45. Please see THE INTERNATIONAL BIBLE COMMENTARY; p. 407.] Exodus 21: 7 "And if a man shall sell his daughter as a handmaid, she shall not go out as the bondmen go out. 8 If she is unacceptable in the eyes of her master, who had taken her for himself, then shall he let her be ransomed: to sell her unto a foreign people he has no power, after having dealt unfaithfully with her. 9 And if he have appointed her unto his son, he shall deal with her after the law of daughters. 10 If he take himself another, her food, her clothing, and her conjugal rights he shall not diminish. 11And if he do not these three things unto her, then shall she go out free without money." WHY DOESN'T GOD CONDEMN HIM FOR TAKING ANOTHER WIFE IF IT IS A SIN? MKJV DEUT. 21:15 ¦ If a man has two wives, one beloved and another hated, and they have borne him sons, the beloved and the hated; and [if] the first-born son was of her that was hated, 16 then it shall be in the day when he makes his sons to inherit what he has, he may not cause to [inherit] the son of the beloved first-born before the son of the hated one, he who [is truly] the first-born. 17 But he shall acknowledge the son of the hated as the first-born by giving him a double portion of all that he has. For he [is] the beginning of his strength. The right of the first-born is his. What was the actual status of polygamy in New Testament time, the First Century AD? Christian elders agree that during Jesus' physical and visible walk on earth, the Jews practiced polygamy>24.Ó [Footnote: >24. Trobisch; MY WIFE MADE ME..P. 23. ; "Polygamy was not definitely forbidden among the Jews till the time of R. Gershom (c. A.d. 1000), and then at first only for France and Germany. In Spain, Italy,m and the East it persisted for some time longer, as it does still among the Jews in Mohammedan counties". HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE, p.584. ; A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. V, p. 267.; A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. iv, p.290.; A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. VIII, p. 258. ; St. Augustin: On The Trinity, p. 402.; HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE, p.259, 583ff.] Let's look at the following evidence: DOUGLASÕ NEW BIBLE DICTIONARY : MARRIAGE: ."Monogamy is implicit in the story of Adam and Eve, since God created only one wife for Adam. Yet polygyny is adopted from the time of Lamech (Gn. 4:19), and is not forbidden in Scripture . . ..It is difficult to know how far polygamy was practised, but on economic grounds it is probable that it was found more among the well-to-do than among the ordinary people. Polygamy continues to the present day among Jews in Moslem, Hindu, Buddhist, Asian, Oriental, and African countries." >25 [>25 IVCF, Editor J.D.Douglas; 1962,W. B. Eerdmans Publishing, p.787] Eerdmans' Douglas' New Bible Dictionary: ÒConcubine. A secondary wife acquired by purchase or as a war captive, and allowed in polygamous society such as existed in the Middle east in biblical times....Where marriages produced no heir, wives presented a slave concubine too their husbands in order to raise an heir (Gen. 16). Handmaidens, given as a marriage gift, were often concubines (Gen. 29:24,29). Concubines were protected under Mosaic law (Exod. 21:7- 11; Dt. 21:10-14), though they were distinguished from wives (Jdg. 8:31) and were more easily divorced (Gen.21:10-14)Ó [Footnote: >26 IVCF, Editor J.D.Douglas; 1962,W. B. Eerdmans Publishing.] FUNK & WAGNALLS NEW ENCYCLOPEDIA: CONCUBINAGE, ÒRefers to the cohabitation of a man and a woman without sanction of legal marriage. Specifically, concubinage is a form of polygyny in which the primary matrimonial relationship is supplemented by one or more secondary sexual relationships. Concubinage was a legally sanctioned and socially acceptable practice in ancient cultures, including that of the Hebrews; concubines, however, were denied the protection to which a legal wife was entitled. In Roman law, marriage was precisely defined as monogamous; concubinage was tolerated, but the concubine's status was inferior to that of a legal wife. Her children had certain rights, including support by the father and legitimacy in the event of the marriage of the parentsÓ. [Footnote: >27 1986, Funk & Wagnalls NEW ENCYCLOPEDIA.] Eugene Nida's (American Bible Society) book Customs and Cultures>.29 . . documents the current practice of polygyny by Christians in non Western countries, and how it is still practiced in China, SE Asia, India, Africa and parts of South America. Eugene Nida points out that when polygamists become Christians they are told of their limitations in church offices and are asked not to take any additional wives because it stumbles western Christians (Rom 14, l Cor. 8 and 10). They are not usually asked to abandon their other wives to a premature widowhood because of l Cor>. 7:1-15. [Footnote: >.29 1954, Harper & Brothers, New York] Tacitus, who died in 117 A.D., was a Roman historian who provided us with one of the earliest detailed descriptions of the Germans and their Germanic tribes, which later migrated into western Europe and included the English and the French. >30 These Germans of his time were unique. They strictly observed the marital tie and were generally content with one wife for each husband, in marked contrast to most of the "barbarians" of the time who often practiced polygyny. The few exceptions to this Germanic monogyny was when they were sought for a polygynous marriage because of their high birth>31 [Footnotes:>30 Source: Tr. Maurice Hutton, in Tacitus: Dialogus, Agricola, Germania, Loeb Classical Library (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1914). WOMEN'S LIVES IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE - A SOURCEBOOK; p. 36.;>31 WOMEN'S LIVES IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE - A SOURCEBOOK; p. 37.] ". . . a man's 'house' might consist of his mother; his wives and the wives' children; his concbines and their children . . . and slaves of both sexes. Polygamy was in part the cause of the large size of the Hebrew household; in part thecause of it may be found in the insecurity of early times, when safety lay in numbers . . . Polygyny and bigamy were recognized features of the family life. From the Oriental point of view there was nothing immoral in the practice of polygamy. The female slaves were in every respect the property of their master and became his concubines; except in certain cases, when they seem to have belonged exclusively to their mistress . . . At all events, polygyny was an established and recognized institution form the earliest times">8 HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE; p.259. HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE: ÒThe relative positions of wives and concubines were determined mainly by the husband's favour. The children of the wife claimed the greater part, or the whole, of the inheritance; otherwise there does not seem to have been any inferiority in the position of the concubine as compared with that of the wife, nor was any idea of illegitimacy, in our sense of the word, connected with her children. . . . The female slaves were in every respect the property of their master, and became his concubines; except in certain cases, when they seem to have belonged exclusively to their mistress, and could not be appropriated by the man except by her suggestion or consent (Gn 16:2,3). The slave-concubines were obtained as booty in time of war (Jg 5:30), or bought from poverty-stricken parents (Ex 21:7); or, possibly, in the ordinary slave traffic with foreign nations.Ó >12 [Footnote: >12. HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE; p.259.] HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE: . Ò. . Elkanah, the husband of Hannah and Peninnah, is an interesting example of a man of no particular position who nevertheless had more than one wife; this may be an indication that bigamy, at least, if not polygamy, was not confined to the very wealthy and exalted. At all events, polygyny was an established and recognized institution from the earliest of times.Ó>39 [Footnote: >39. HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE; p.259.] ÒPolygamy meets us as a fact: e.g. Abraham, Jacob, the Judges, David, Solomon; 1 Ch 7:4 is evidence of its prevalence in Issachar; Elkanah (1 Sam.1:1ff) is significant as belonging to the middle class; Jehoida (2 Ch 24:3) as a priest. . .Legislation . . . safeguarded the rights of various wives, slave or free; and according to the Rabbinical interpretation of Lv 21:13>40. . . .the high priest was not allowed to be a bigamist. . . The marriage figure applied to the union of God and Israel . . . implied monogamy as the ideal state. . . Being .. apparently legalized, and having the advantage of precedent, it was long before polygamy was formally forbidden in Hebrew society, though practically it fell into disuse; the feeling of the Rabbis was strongly against it. Herod had nine wives at once. . . Its possibility is implied by the technical continuance of the Levirate law, [Deut. 25:5-10] and is proved by the early interpretation of 1 Ti 3, whether correct or not. Justin reproaches the Jews of his day [A.D.] with having 'four or even five wives,' and marrying 'as they wish, or as many as they wish.' The evidence of the Talmud shows that in this case at least the reproach had some foundation. Polygamy was not definitely forbidden among the Jews till the time of R. Gershom (c. A.D. 1000), and then at first only for France and Germany. In Spain, Italy, and the East it persisted for some time longer, as it does still among the Jews in Mohammedan countries>41. [Footnote: (>.(40. Septuagint Lev. 21:13 "He shall take for a wife a virgin of his own tribe.". .>41. HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE; p.583ff.] Ò The difference between a wife and a concubine depended on the wife's higher position and birth, usually backed by relatives ready to defend her.Ó >13 [Footnote: >13. 1989, HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE; p.585.] The bottom line is what does God say and how does He view concubines. Reflect on the following: MKJV 2 Sam.12: 11 ÒSo says the LORD, Behold, I will raise up evil against you out of your own house, and I will take your wives before your eyes and give [them] to your neighbor. And he shall lie with your wives in the sight of this sun.Ó MKJV 2 Sam 16: 21 ÒAnd Ahithophel said to Absalom, Go in to your father's concubines, that he left to keep the house. And all Israel shall hear that you are abhorred by your father. And the hands of all who [are] with you will be strong. 22 And they spread Absalom a tent on the top of the house, and Absalom went in to his father's concubines in the sight of all Israel.Ó MKJV2Sam.20:3 ÒAnd David came to his house at Jerusalem. And the king took the ten women, [his] concubines, whom he had left to keep the house, and put them in ward, and fed them but did not go in to them. And they were shut up till the day of their death, living in widowhood.Ó In these passages you see God calling and recognizing as "wives" DavidÕs concubines. If that is the way God sees them, only a fool would treat them as less than a wife (Malachi 2). Malachi 2 makes it pretty clear how God feels about those who break their covenants with their concubines and wives. The maidservant status of Hagar and Jacob's wives is clothed in marital status>74 . It is a profound statement that in all of the explicit moral injunctions of Lev. 18, 19, &20; Deut 12 & 27 there is not one denunciation of polygyny or concubinage. Concubinage apparently, because it involved maidservants, seems to have a lower status as reflected in Ex. 21:7-9 with Lev. 19:20 in contrast to Deut. 22:23-26. [Footnote: >74 in Ex. 21:7-9] MKJV EXODUS 21: 7 ÒAnd if a man sells his daughter to be a maidservant, she shall not go out as the menservants do. 8 If she does not please her master, who has betrothed her to himself, then he shall let her be redeemed. He shall have no power to sell her to a strange nation, since he has dealt deceitfully with her. 9 And if he has betrothed her to his son, he shall deal with her as with daughters. 10 If he takes himself another [wife], her food, her clothing, and her duty of marriage shall not be lessened. 11 And if he does not do these three to her, then she shall go out free without money.Ó MKJV LEVITICUS 19:20 ÒAnd whoever lies with a woman with semen, and she is a slave-girl, betrothed to a husband and not at all redeemed, nor freedom given her, there shall be an inquest. They shall not be put to death, because she was not free.Ó MKJV DEUT. 22: 23 ÒIf a girl [who is] a virgin is engaged to a husband, and a man finds her in the city and lies with her, 24 then you shall bring them both out to the gate of that city, and you shall stone them with stones that they die; the girl because she did not cry out in the city, and the man because he has humbled his neighbor's wife. So you shall put away evil from among you. 25 But if a man finds an engaged girl in the field, and the man forces her and lies with her, then only the man that lay with her shall die. 26 But you shall do nothing to the girl. No sin [worthy] of death [is] in the girl; for as when a man rises against his neighbor and slays him, even so is this matter. 27 For he found her in the field, the engaged girl cried out, but [there was] none to save her.Ó Perhaps Deut. was subsequent and current replacing Lev. 19:20. What about Ex. 21:7-9? It was expected that the female slave would become her master's wife or concubine, or become the wife or concubine of her master's son, and the law protected her rights if he was unwilling to do so.>16. Her owner could not sell her to foreigners because he had "trifled" with her (see LXX), "seeing he hath dealt deceitfully with her.">17. [Footnotes:>16. Please see the discussion in THE INTERNATIONAL BIBLE COMMENTARY; p.126ff & p.172ff.; >17. Ex. 21:8; The Holy Scriptures according to the Masoretic Text]. God's Law forbade a king from "multiplying" wives>.75 to himself without making such a command to we nonkings. It appears from later scripture about Godly and God blessed kings of Israel that God makes a distinction between MULTIPLYING wives & horses to yourself and adding wives & horses to yourself. None of us object to King David having more than one horse but many object to King David having more than one wife, yet it is the same command "he shall not multilply hoses . . . wives to himself." By 2 Samuel 5-12 God had ÒgivenÓ him seven wives plus a number of concubines. We see His implied blessing on DavidÕs polygyny . This implied blessing of his polygyny would have to mean that David, with concubines and seven wives, had not yet violated the prohibition against a king multiplying wives and horses to himself. [Footnotes:>75 De 17:15 ÒYou shall only set him king over you whom Jehovah your God will choose: from among your brethren shall you set a king over you; . . . 16 Only he shall not multiply horses to himself, . . . 17 Neither shall he multiply wives to himself, that his heart turn not away; neither shall he greatly multiply to himself silver and gold.Ó NO PROHIBITION FROM HAVING SOME HORSES , SOME WIVES and some gold] In Deut. 21:15-17 God intervenes and acknowledges and vindicates the second wife in a polygamous marriage where the sin of partiality >76 was being practiced. If polygyny were sin why didn't God condemn it in this passage instead of covering it with the dignity and holiness of His Law? The wife is vindicated, not condemned. [Footnote: >76 (James 2:1-7)] Deut. 21:15 ¦ ÒIf a man have two wives, one beloved, and one hated, and they have borne him children, [both] the beloved and the hated, and [if] the first-born son be hers that was hated; 16 then it shall be, in the day that he makes his sons to inherit [that] which he has, [that] he may not make the son of the beloved first- born before the son of the hated, who is the first-born; 17 but he shall acknowledge as first-born the son of the hated, by giving him a double portion of all that he has; for he is the firstfruits of his strength: the right of the firstborn is his.Ó What about the LeviteÕs? These keepers of the tabernacle, did they have special rules that kept them from polygyny? Not according to the following, because when his concubine was mercilessly murdered by rape, the nation of Israel rose to vindicate him and avenge her murder. Judges 19:1 ¦ ÒAnd it came to pass in those days, when [there was] no king in Israel, that there was a certain Levite, . . . who took to him a concubine out of Bethlehem-Judah. 2 And his concubine played the whore against him, and went away from him to her father's house to Bethlehem-Judah, and was there four whole months. 3 And HER HUSBAND rose up and went after her, to speak friendly to her, [and] to bring her again; . . . And she brought him into her father's house; and when the father of the damsel saw him he rejoiced to meet him. 4 And his FATHER-IN-LAW, the damsel's father, retained him, and he abode with him three days; . . .5 . . . And the damsel's father said to his SON-IN-LAW, . .Ó SO A CONCUBINE IS NOT A HARLOT. Just like any other wife, she can become a harlot while married (Ezek. 16 and Hosea). HARLOTRY IS AN EVIL THAT EITHER A WIFE OR A CONCUBINE CAN PRACTICE WHILE MARRIED. Not only is a concubine not a harlot, the Holy Spirit by the writer of the book of Judges declared the Levite to be the concubine's "husband", declared the father of the concubine to be the Levite's "father-in-law", and declared the Levite to be the "son-in-law" of the concubine's father. This is a very strong legitimization of the husband-concubine marital status. It is the same legitimization of the relationship that the Holy Spirit used in Matthew 1, calling the espoused Mary "wife" and the espoused Joseph "husband". If God so recognizes them and describes them, then who are we to do any less. By the Holy Spirit here in Judges 19 we see that a concubine had a "husband" who was the "son-in-law" of her father, his "father-in-law". A wife has a "husband" who is the "son-in-law" of her father, her husband's "father-in-law". I understand that Rev. Joseph Conrad Wold>*, a Lutheran missionary in Liberia, maintains the following points: 1. Some missionaries have become like the Pharisees, knit picking legalists; 2. For unbelievers it is more of a question of who is or is not a polygamist rather than who is and who isn't a Christian; 3. Rejecting polygamy has become the rejecting of polygamists; 4. If Cornelious>45 could be born again without circumcision, then surely polygamists should be able to be born again without cutting away their wives, breaking their solemn promises and forcing their beloved and faithful wives into adultery for survival; 5 Let the polygamist be lost because he refused to love and obey Jesus, rather than because he loved his wives too much to cause them to suffer, or was to virtuous to be a hypocrite.>70 He makes such an impassioned case I hope you take the time to read the original. Truly the commandments of men, condemning as sin and forbidding polygamy, make of no effect the commandments of God for so many. [Footnote: >*GOD'S IMPATIENCE IN LIBERIA, Rev. Joseph Conrad Wold, pp. 179ff. >45 (Acts 10 & 11). @>.@70 Trobisch, MY Is polygyny with wives and concubines a sin today? St. Basil (4th Century AD) wrote that "On polygamy the Fathers are silent, as being brutish and altogether inhuman. The sins seems to me worse than fornication.">74 "Herard of Tours, A.D. 858, declares any greater number of wives than two to be unlawful. . . Leo the Wise, Emperor of Constantinople, was allowed to marry three wives without public remonstrance, but was suspended from communion by the patriarch Nicholas when he married a fourth.">75 St. Augustine (4th Cent. AD) indicates that the Roman Catholic Church was the power behind the move to not allow polygyny or concubinage among the church members of his time..>76 So even in the early church we find a wide diversity of reactions to the polygyny and concubinage of the Bible. This, in its own way, bears witness to the fact that there is no clear scriptural teaching against polygyny and concubinage. They obviously fall in the category of things discussed in Rom. 14, 1 Cor. 8 and 1 Cor 10. [Footnote: >.74 A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. VIII; p. 258. >.75 A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. V; p. 267. >76 St. Augustin: On The Trinity; p. 402.] The marriage figure applied to the union of God and Israel. . . .. implied monogamy as the ideal state. Polygamy is, in fact, always an unnatural development from the point of view both to religion and of anthropology; 'monogamy is by far the most common form of human marriage; it was so also amongst the ancient peoples of whom we have any direct knowledge' (Westermarck, Hum. Marr. p. 459). Being, however, apparently legalized, and having the advantage of precedent, it was long before polygamy was formally forbidden in Hebrew society >n130 , though practically it fell into disuse; the feeling of the Rabbis was strongly against it.Ó>n131 [Footnotes:>.n129 Always? What about the divorce statistics in our modern and monogamous America? Also, Solomon and the Shulamite seemed to have a great deal of domestic happiness in their polygamy according to the Song of Solomon 6. >.n130 "Polygamy was not definitely forbidden among the Jews till the time of R. Gershom (c. A.d. 1000), and then at first only for France and Germany. In Spain, Italy,m and the East it persisted for some time longer, as it does still among the Jews in Mohammedan counties". HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE; p.584. >..n131 HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE; pp. 583-587.] ÒMonogamy is implicit in the story of Adam and Eve, since God created only one wife for Adam. Yet polygamy is adopted from the time of Lamech (Gn. iv. 19), and is not forbidden in Scripture. It would seem that God left it to man to discover by experience that His original institution of monogamy was the proper relationship. . .Ó >n132 [Footnote: >..n132 The New Bible Dictionary, J.D. Douglas Ph.D ; p.787.] ÒThe gradual evolution in the OT of monogamy as the ideal is therefore of the highest interest. The earliest codes attempt in various ways to regulate the custom of polygyny. The Deut. code in particular actually forbids kings to multiply wives (Dt 17.17); this is the fruit, apparently of the experience of Solomon's reign.Ó>n133 [Footnote: >.n133 HASTINGS DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE; p.259..] From: IN%"bfree@mainelink.net" After Polygamy Was Made A Sin: The Social History of Christian Polygamy John Cairncross, 1974 Published by Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd, London "Orthodoxy in Western Europe, or for that matter in the Chri stian world as a whole, has been fiercely opposed to polygam y in any shape or form since at least A.D.600, and has shown itself particularly ruthless in suppressing the hated monst er whenever it raised its head in their own ranks. This constant opposition explains both why the C hristian polygamists rarely put their views into practice an d why their writings are often to be found in scarce, or out -of-the-way editions." PREFACE With this introduction, Mr. Cairncross launches into a very scholarly, thoroughly researched, exposition on Christian po lygamy, as can be attested to by the Bibliography of more th an 90 references, some dating back as far as the 16th centur y. Ostensibly, Mr. Cairncross is a historian, merely laying out the (albeit fascinating) accoun t of a suprisingly large number of arguments made in favor o f, and even attempts to introduce, polygamy, in the Protesta nt world, some by well known theologians or authors. But to this, admittedly unbiased, reviewer, within the overview of centuries of debate on this issue, it is possible to see a pattern emerging: that of men who truly believe in the right eousness of their cause, willing to take a stand for the Tru th, to boldly express that which is often considered Heresy by the powers that be. Some of them would pay the ultimate price for their vision. Their contribution is not lessened, nor their Cause weakened, by the fact that a few who would t ake up their arguments were merely interested in their own g ratification or justification of their dubious lifestyles. M ost of those who would pick up this standard were men above reproach. It is no coincidence that this issue was first brought to th e fore in Europe, after a silence of many centuries, soon af ter the beginning of the Protestant Reformation in the early 1500s. It was at this time that men begin to really seek G od for themselves, and to take His Word as a personal source of Revelation, once again. What many found there could not be denied: Their was nothing against polygamy in the Bible , and indeed much to suggest it was one type of marriage tha t God had ordained for his people. "When the great Reformer , Martin Luther nailed his protest against papal indulgences to the church door in Wittenburg in 1517, he started an ear thquake. .the Catholic hierarchy was rapidly undermined, an d in its place was set the Gospel. .both the Old and New Tes to be literally inspired and deserving of reverence."(pg.2) Thus it was that in 1534, the "German city of Munster procla imed polygamy as the ideal form of marriage. The event is u nique in the history of Christian Europe, and the reaction t o this announcement explains why the experiment was never re peated. For it was greeted with a unanimous revulsion and h orror."(pg.1) Mr. Cairncross never adequately examines the reason for this opposition, (perhaps because a purely histo ric look would never be able to discover the true source), b ut he makes it clear that this opposition was always present (both from the Catholic church, and future Protestant leade rs) to meet what ever person or group would dare to propose such a thing. The Munsterites were one radical group of a n ew Protestant sect, the Anabaptists. Much of the knowledge we have of them, and their year-long polygamist experiment, comes directly from the historians of their enemies, for the y were besieged by Catholic and Protestant foes immediately, and when they fell a year late! Some were put to death. So whiliving men we e the accounts of this time are filled with vitriolic denunc iations of the Musterites and their morals, "in fact, Munste r under Anabaptist rule was a centre of extremely austere mo rality. It's only crime, by orthodox standards, was to have introduced polygamy, and a highly Puritan type at that!" (pg .24) While this episode was over quickly, "Puritan polygam y was not extinguished under the ashes of the ruined city. The influence of the Munsterite ideas was profound." (pg.27) So it was that the stage was set for repeated serious for ays into the debate on polygamy. A few years later, "Phillip of Hesse felt impelled by his re verence for the sacraments to mend his first marriage by con tracting a second one even while his wife was alive. And he did so with the sanction of the Fathers of the Reformation. The first palidin of German Protestantism (Phillip) was, with Luther's and Melanchthon's permission, a bigamist. Prote stant historians have never recovered from the shock." (pg. 31) Phillip debated this issue with the Reformer's for many years before and after his (supposedly secret) 2nd marriage. "If, he asked, it should suddenly be possible to overthrow the celibacy of the clergy, why should the institution of b igamy be a priori excluded? The only effective answer would have been that polygamy is condemned by Christian doctrine. But this was a stand that Luther and his colleagues never took - and for very good reasons. They could not. They themselves did not believe t hat polygamy was against divine or natural law." (pg. 48) L uther did state that "A Christian, before adopting polygamy, must first have a calling from God." (pg. 49) Fair enough. We should all hear from God before daring to any God-ordained true "holy" matrimony. Singu lar or Plural. ory of many later reformersthe st: The Italian Ochino, a Franciscan until the age of 55, was a fiery orator, and a "man distinguished by the sanctity of his life, of a vast culture, venerable, white-haired, and t all, of a majestic bearing". It was only when Ochino left t he Catholic church and "fled to Switzerland where he became a Calvinist that the move towards Anabaptism began". (pg.65- 66) He wrote a brilliant thesis on polygamy that was "efferv escent, witty, and convincing." Many of the points containe d in this paper are very similar to those found on God's Fre e Men website. He was eventually exiled for his teachings, along with his four children, during winter 1563, by the Cit y Fathers of Zurich. 3 of his children died as a result. (Chapter IV.) The Christian polygamist story moves eventually to France an d England. European life, in many arguments for polygamy, is contrasted unfavorably with that of primitive cultures, and Islamic lands, where it is practiced. Prostitution, divorce early unheard of in these place s, but they flourish, and are implicitly approved of, in Eur ope, where monogamy is the standard. "Between about 1680 an d 1750, the campaign for polygamy (in England) was in full s wing, and plural marriage was almost as vigorously canvassed as in Germany during the same period." (pg. 126) ted author of Para Milton, author of Paradise Lost, wrote a ma nuscript in the 1650s, "Da Doctrina", a lengthy theological document. It was lost until 1825, when it was discovered a nd translated, creating a pre-Victorian uproar in London. T he famous author had dared to justify polygamy! His argumen ts are lucid and concise: " Polygamy is prohibited to no one , even under the gospel." Milton "administers the coup de g race to his opponents when he observed that God himself (in Ezekiel 23:4) represents Himself as having `espoused two wiv es' which would have been unthinkable had `the practice been dishonourable or shameful'. On the contrary, he maintains, polygamy is `lawful and honourable'." (pg.129) "In England of the 1730s, the disease had turned into an epi an observed: `Pk dated 1737, an Irish clergyman, polygamy is a doctrine daily defended in common conversation and often in print by a great variety of plausible arguments ." (pg.141) 2 chapters on the Mormons, and their persecution because of felt, "with mous beliefs, follow. Mormon wives considerable justification, that their conditions of life we re far superior to those of the corresponding classes in the counties from which they had come and indeed to those in mo st parts of America". (pg. 193) A huge home for Mormon poly gamous wives, expected to provide a haven for those escaping from their husbands' tyranny, was left without occupants. In the nineteenth century, Protestant missions were expandin g rapidly, and missionaries around the globe were confrontin g polygamy among their new converts. In 1844, a conference of missionaries of various denominations "unanimously agreed that `if a convert, before becoming a Christian, has married more than wives than one, he shall be permitted to keep them all; but such a person shall not be ligible to any office in the church'." (pg.198) An American traveler of this time propagated his polygamous convictions in print in his home country, but chose to remai n anonymous. A "Christian Philanthropist", published in 186 y and Philosophy of Marriage, o r Polygamy and Monogamy Compared", it ran to a 2nd edition and 1875 and apparently even to a third. " Like almost all of his predecessors, he does not realize tha t he is part of a long tradition." (pg.198) This work can b e found elsewhere on this website. It would appear that the re is a common bond between many of these Christian polygami sts that cannot be accounted for, since they were often unfa miliar with each other's works. Is it possible that there i s a more subtle, more powerful force at work in these men's lives, binding them together in a remarkable quest to restor e a Divine plan to our Western society? [Note: The above is also true of the author of this website. All arguments in favor of polygamy found here were first di scovered by direct inspection of God's Word - before any of the earlier authors mentioned in this report were ever known to the author of God's Free Men. Only after this truth was first revealed from the Scriptures alone were the confirmati ons of earlier writers discovered.] Some Christian churches in Africa today allow polygamy. A p astor in Cameroon stated: "People have no right to condemn p olygamy which even Christ did not condemn in the case of Abr aham". (pg.214) Cairncross sums up "for a long time to come, there will stil l be an imbalance between the number of men and women able o r willing to marry. Which may explain why, even now, some Ca tholic theologians in Germany are reported to be giving cons ideration to the possibility of sanctioning polygamy." He closes with a quote from Shaw: "Women will al ways prefer a tenth share of a first-rate man to the exclusive claim to a third rate one." (pg.218)ir Reviewed and contributed by: neb XXIII. BIBLIOGRAPHY of the mother file. >1. A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. IV; edited by Philip Schaff (D.d., LL.D.); W.B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids Mich; 1956 >2. A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. V; edited by Philip Schaff (D.d., LL.D.); ; W.B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids Mich; 1956; p. 267 >3. A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. VIII; edited by Philip Schaff (D.d., LL.D.) and Henry Wace (D.D.) ; W.B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids Mich; 1956 >4. A Select Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of The Christian Church, Vol. XIV; edited by Philip Schaff (D.D., LL.D.) and Henry Wace (D.D.) ; W.B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids Mich; 1956 >5. Amplified Bible, The; 1965, Zondervan Publishing House >6. ANALYTICAL GREEK LEXICON, THE: Harper & Brothers, New York >7. Arndt & Gingrich: A GREEK-ENGLISH LEXICON OF THE NEW TESTAMENT and Other Early Christian Literature ; By W.F.Arndt & F. W. Gingrich; The Univ. of Chicago Press, Chicago, Ill.; Cambridge at the Univ. Press.; 1957 >8. ASV: The Holy Bible, American Standard Version 1901 & 1929; Thomas Nelson & Sons, New York >9. Gold Cord, by Amy Carmichael, Christian Literature Crusade, Fort Worthington, Penna.; London's Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge, Holy Trinity Church, Marylebone Rd., N.W. (N.Y. The Macmillan Company). >10. CUSTOMS AND CULTURES, Anthropology for Christian Missions, by Eugene A. Nida1954, Harper & Brothers, New York >11. Darby's 1890 translation: Most of the scriptures quoted in this work, if not otherwise indicated, are from the a modernized version of J. N. Darby's translation, the OnLine Bible computer program of "Online Bible f ", Ken Hammil 1-908-741-4298; [E-Mail: khamel@aol.com]. >12. DIVORCE, John Murray, Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co. \ >13. G. Duty's book on divorce and remarriage , Downers Grove, Ill. >14. HASTING'S DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE; 1989, Hendrickson Publishers, Inc., Peabody, Mass;, Editor James Hastings, DD., >15. I LOVED A GIRL; Walter Trobisch, Inter-Varsity Press, Downers Grove, Ill. >16. INTERNATIONAL BIBLE COMMENTARY, THE; Editor, F.F.Bruce; 1979; Zondervan Publishing House, Grand Rapids Michigan. >17. Jay Adam'sÕ book on divorce and remarriage >18. JEWISH: The Holy Scriptures according to the Masoretic Text, 1955, The Jewish Publication Society. >19. KINSHIP & MARRIAGE, Robin Fox, 1967, Penguin Books, Inc., USA & England >20. LAMSA: The Holy Bible from Ancient Eastern Manuscripts, 1940, Holman Co., by G. Lamsa. >21. MARRIAGE EAST AND WEST; David & Vera Mace, 1960, Dolphin Books, Double Day & Co., Inc. Garden City, NY >22.MARRYING AGAIN; David Hocking, 1977, Fleming H. Revell Co. >23. MKJV: MODERN KING JAMES VERSION, 1993, by Jay P. Green Sr., in Online Bible 2.5.1; the OnLine Bible computer program of "Online Bible f ", Ken Hammil 1- 908-741-4298; [E-Mail: khamel@aol.com]. >24. MY WIFE MADE ME A POLYGAMIST; Walter Trobisch, 1971, Inter-Varsity Press, >25. NASB: Holy Bible New American Standard; Broadman & Holman Publishers, Nashville Tenn.; The Lockman Foundation, 1977 >26. NEB: NEW ENGLISH BIBLE, 1970; Oxford/Cambridge University Press >27. NEW BIBLE DICTIONARY, THE; Editor J.D.Douglas Ph.D; 1962; W. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. >28. NEW TESTAMENT GREEK FOR BEGINNERS, By, J. Gresham Machen, D.D, Litt. D.,1959 >29. NIV: "Scripture taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION. Copyright @ 1973, 1978, 1984 International Bible Society." Used as required by Zondervan Bible Publishers. >30. NKJV: New King James Version, 1984, Thomas Nelson, Inc. >31. OnLine Bible computer program of "Online Bible f ", Ken Hammil 1-908-741-4298; [E-Mail: khamel@aol.com]. >32. PLEASE HELP ME! PLEASE LOVE ME!; Walter Trobisch, Inter- Varsity Press, >33. St. Augustin: On The Trinity; translated by Arthur West Haddan, B.D.; W.B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids Mich; 1956 >34. StrongÕs Lexicon, Open Bible "Online Bible f", Ken Hammil 1- 908-741- 4298. Also Baker Book House, Grand Rapids, Mich. >35. Thayer: Greek English Lexicon of the New Testament; Joseph Henry Thayer, D.D.; American Book Co., New York, 1889 >36. The Septuagint of the Old Testament and Apocrypha With an English Translation; Zondervan Publishing House, Grand Rapids, Michigan; 1972; Samuel Bagster & Sons, Ltd. London >37. WOMEN'S LIVES IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE - A SOURCEBOOK; Edited by Emile Amt; Routledge, Chapman, Hall; NY, NY; 1993 >38. Wuest's THE NEW TESTAMENT, An Expanded Translation, Kenneth S. Wuest, 1961 >39. YLT; Young's Literal Translation, 1898: OnLine Bible computer program of "Online Bible f ", Ken Hammil 1-908-741-4298; [E-Mail: khamel@aol.com]. TOPICS: FOREVER MARRIAGES CROSS CULTURALLY, FORMAL AND INFORMAL CHRISTIAN MARRIAGE, COMMON LAW MARRIAGE, CHRISTIAN DIVORCE, CHRISTIAN REMARRIAGE, CHRISTIAN CONCUBINES, CHRISTIAN POLYGYNY (POLYGAMY), RACISM, ETHNOCENTRICITY, AND THE SWEARING OF OATHS TITLE (of the mother file): DIVORCE, REMARRIAGE, CONCUBINES, & JESUS; Another Look for Christians. COPYRIGHT © JANUARY 14, 1995 All rights reserved. Copyright © 01/14/'95; 01/12/Õ96 (Revised) This file, in its entirety, may be posted on or copied off of computer networks like Internet or WWW by anyone so inclined. This is an ASCII text only copy of a Macintosh MicrosoftWord5 file made for non-Macintosh folks, so it is very plain and basic in its form (footnotes, indentation and page layout). The document is 6" wide and Palatino 12 plain font in the original. So when your text only version comes up with Palatino 14, just select all and change it to Palatino 12 or 10. There are no bold or underline options. The distinctions between footnotes of sources and footnotes of reference are lost. So please be patient with the footnote numbering. The footnotes are put at the end of the paragraphs instead of in the text itself, making it more readable. You may find extra >Õs and some >Õs where rÕs should be. DidnÕt get to proof that far yet. Please be patient. By L. Tyler P.O. Box 620763, SanDiego, CA 92162-0763 rtyle19@wavenet.com TABLE OF CONTENTS of the mother file. (These page numbers are correct with Palatino 14 ,left and right margins of 1.25"each, and top and bottom margins at 1" each.) I. INTRODUCTION: PRIORITIES RECONSIDERED. P. 4 II. DIVORCE! A PLAGUE AND ITS CONSEQUENCES. P. 8 III. DIVORCE DEFINED. P. 23 IV. VARIETIES OF MARRIAGE IN THE BIBLE, OLD AND NEW TESTAMENTS -- LET THE WORD SPEAK ABOUT POLYGYNY AND CONCUBINES! P. 25 V. WHAT DO CHRISTIAN LEADERS SAY ABOUT CONCUBINES & POLYGYNY? P. 50 VI. ADULTERY DEFINED: A SURPRISE! ISNÕT POLYGYNY ADULTERY? P. 66 VII. SO, WHAT ABOUT CONCUBINES & POLYGYNY TODAY IN MY COUNTRY? P. 73 VIII. ARE POLYGYNISTS AND CONCUBINES LIVING IN ERROR TODAY? P. 82 IX. MARRIAGE, CONCUBINES, CIVIL LAW, PERSONAL LIBERTY AND A LOVING CONSCIENCE! P. 87 X. DOES GOD FORGIVE BROKEN VOWS, DIVORCE AND ADULTERY? P. 91 XI. CAN YOU COME BACK TOGETHER & REMMARY AFTER ADULTEROUS REMARRIAGE? P. 99 XII. WHAT ABOUT THE HEALTH QUESTIONS INVOLVED IN SUCH REUNIONS? P. 108 XIII. CAN ADULTERY, DIVORCE, VOWS AND REPENTANCE RESULT IN POLYGYNY/CONCUBINAGE? P. 112 XIV. ADULTERY, DIVORCE, CONCUBINES, POLYGYNY AND THE UNSAVED. P. 119 XV. THE MARRIED MAN WHO WOULD ADD WIVES/CONCUBINES TO HIS "HAREM". P. 121 XVI. ARE POLYGYNY & CONCUBINES OPTIONS FOR THE ABANDONED MAN? P. 126 XVII. POLYGYNISTS, CONCUBINES AND THE LEADERS OF GOD'S PEOPLE. P. 129 XVIII. POLYGYNY & CONCUBINES AND THE WESTERN CHRISTIAN WOMAN. P. 130 XIX. WHAT'S WRONG WITH POLYANDRY? P. 134 XX. HUSBAND RULE OVER THE WIFE? IF SERVANT-TEACHERS RULE .P. 137 XXI. THREE CHEERS FOR MONOGAMY! THE BEST FOR MOST! P. 141 XXII. LISTEN TO THE WORD! P. 145 XXIII. BIBLIOGRAPHY P. 147 APPENDIX ONE -- WHAT ABOUT INTERRACIAL AND INTERETHNIC MARRIAGE? P.150 APPENDIX TWO -- WHAT DO YOU THINK? THE FEEDING OF TWO LEGGED OXEN. P.157 APPENDIX THREE -- A WEDDING COVENANT FOR NONSWEARERS - P. 159 APPENDIX FOUR -- WHAT MAKES A WEDDING/MARRIAGE? - P. 161 APPENDIX FIVE -- MARRYING THE UNSAVED AND "SAINTS" LIVING IN ERROR. - P.163 APPENDIX SIX -- WHEN DO I HAVE TO MARRY? - P. 167 APPENDIX SEVEN -- THE ERRR OF SWEARING, OF OATHS AND SWEARING OATHS. -P.182 The mother file may be obtained from the following at your convenience. ftp: gopher.etext.info name: ftp password: your email adress location: pub/Politics/Essays title: divorce.remarriage.concubines