I've decided to start a new thread b/c this this is aimed at not whether or not being more attractive male-wise is likely to increase your chances of scoring multiple wives, but the only peripherally attached question of "What should we even want, and is it ok to desire more?"
Imma do this word by word like I alluded to on that thread.
OREGO (G3713) - Translated desire or covet after or reach out after. Presumed to be related to the noun Oros, meaning hill or mountain. Possibly in the sense of 'wishing to heap up'.
This word is used in the positive sense twice and negatively once. Paul tells Timothy (1Ti3:1) that a man who DESIRES the office of a bishop, he desires a good thing. (That second desire is epithymia.. which we'll get to.)
The other positive is Heb 11:16 speaking of the better country those that died in faith desired, not having received their promises while living.
And the negative? 1 Timothy 6:10.
For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, (orego) they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows.
The only negative orego in the bible, is desiring money which led some to err from the faith and pierced themselves through with many sorrows.
EPITHYMIA (G1939) mostly translated lust and it's related verb EPITHYMEO (1937) are both translated ust, covet, and desire. From epi and thymos. (over-wrath? over-fierceness? desire fiercely? I dunno..)
Positives: 11/55
Jesus' desire to eat the passover with the disciples before He suffers. (Luke 22:15)
Paul's desire to die and be with Christ (Phillipians 1:23)
Paul's desire to see the Thesselonians' faces (1Thess2:17).
The desire of OT prophets and righteous men to see Jesus and His works (Matthew 13:17)
(Twice in Luke this form of desire refers to a starving man desiring food of low quality to keep from starving) 15:16 and 16:21
The unfulfilled future desire to see one of the days of the Son of Man (Luke 17:22)
The Spirit's Lust against the flesh (Gal 5:17)
The desire to do a bishop's good work (1 Tim3:1)
The desire to see others show all diligence in ministering to the saints (Heb 6:11)
The angel's desire to look into the mysteries of the Gospel and the Holy Spirit (1Pet 1:12)
Negatives: WOOO 44/55. 4/5ths of the time this desire is listed negatively... so:
I'm going to just cherry pick what supports the gist of what I'm saying. I invite you with some amusement to look into the ones I omitted, while at the same time assuring you that I haven't left out anything that I would find inconvenient to my position.
Mark 4:19 : The lust for "other things" are listed along with the cares of the world and the deceitfulness of riches as the weeds that choke out the implanted seed in the parable of the 4 soils.
Like a bajillion lusts of the flesh and the world...
Col 3:15 listed right before covetousness, in the things that need to be mortified. This connection with covetousness (pleonektas) will be explored later
Serving our own diverse lusts is listed a handful of times as an evil activity.
1 John 2:16 For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world.
(I feel like this deserves a special mention. The ambition to gather wealth, power, and status in order to attract wimmins is somehow to be reckoned separately from the desire of the flesh and the desire of eyes, and the pride of life. Are you sure about that? Allow me to confess something. The idea of having multiple women appeals very much to the desire of my eyes and my flesh. The idea of having the power and status and wealth it takes to attract multiple wimmins appeals very much to my pride. The status of having all this plus the wimmin that would prove me beyond a shadow of a doubt to be the alpha-est alpha wolf among my peers also appeals to my pride. Maybe it's only because I am a broken, fleshly man in a forum full of ascetic spiritual men who only desire to be caretakers of all the poor neglected wimmins?)
Rev 18:14 Babylon will finally be denied of all the STUFF it increased and lusted after. Babylon is very much the city of the ambitious!
Acts 20:33 and Romans 7:7 make it clear that this desire is coveting, if what you desire belongs to someone else.
James 4:2 Your desires will be unfulfilled by God, no matter how much you pray, if it is to be spent on your own pleasures
Imma cut this post short because i have a thing to do. I intend to do Zeloo and pleonektos later.
Imma do this word by word like I alluded to on that thread.
OREGO (G3713) - Translated desire or covet after or reach out after. Presumed to be related to the noun Oros, meaning hill or mountain. Possibly in the sense of 'wishing to heap up'.
This word is used in the positive sense twice and negatively once. Paul tells Timothy (1Ti3:1) that a man who DESIRES the office of a bishop, he desires a good thing. (That second desire is epithymia.. which we'll get to.)
The other positive is Heb 11:16 speaking of the better country those that died in faith desired, not having received their promises while living.
And the negative? 1 Timothy 6:10.
For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, (orego) they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows.
The only negative orego in the bible, is desiring money which led some to err from the faith and pierced themselves through with many sorrows.
EPITHYMIA (G1939) mostly translated lust and it's related verb EPITHYMEO (1937) are both translated ust, covet, and desire. From epi and thymos. (over-wrath? over-fierceness? desire fiercely? I dunno..)
Positives: 11/55
Jesus' desire to eat the passover with the disciples before He suffers. (Luke 22:15)
Paul's desire to die and be with Christ (Phillipians 1:23)
Paul's desire to see the Thesselonians' faces (1Thess2:17).
The desire of OT prophets and righteous men to see Jesus and His works (Matthew 13:17)
(Twice in Luke this form of desire refers to a starving man desiring food of low quality to keep from starving) 15:16 and 16:21
The unfulfilled future desire to see one of the days of the Son of Man (Luke 17:22)
The Spirit's Lust against the flesh (Gal 5:17)
The desire to do a bishop's good work (1 Tim3:1)
The desire to see others show all diligence in ministering to the saints (Heb 6:11)
The angel's desire to look into the mysteries of the Gospel and the Holy Spirit (1Pet 1:12)
Negatives: WOOO 44/55. 4/5ths of the time this desire is listed negatively... so:
I'm going to just cherry pick what supports the gist of what I'm saying. I invite you with some amusement to look into the ones I omitted, while at the same time assuring you that I haven't left out anything that I would find inconvenient to my position.
Mark 4:19 : The lust for "other things" are listed along with the cares of the world and the deceitfulness of riches as the weeds that choke out the implanted seed in the parable of the 4 soils.
Like a bajillion lusts of the flesh and the world...
Col 3:15 listed right before covetousness, in the things that need to be mortified. This connection with covetousness (pleonektas) will be explored later
Serving our own diverse lusts is listed a handful of times as an evil activity.
1 John 2:16 For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world.
(I feel like this deserves a special mention. The ambition to gather wealth, power, and status in order to attract wimmins is somehow to be reckoned separately from the desire of the flesh and the desire of eyes, and the pride of life. Are you sure about that? Allow me to confess something. The idea of having multiple women appeals very much to the desire of my eyes and my flesh. The idea of having the power and status and wealth it takes to attract multiple wimmins appeals very much to my pride. The status of having all this plus the wimmin that would prove me beyond a shadow of a doubt to be the alpha-est alpha wolf among my peers also appeals to my pride. Maybe it's only because I am a broken, fleshly man in a forum full of ascetic spiritual men who only desire to be caretakers of all the poor neglected wimmins?)
Rev 18:14 Babylon will finally be denied of all the STUFF it increased and lusted after. Babylon is very much the city of the ambitious!
Acts 20:33 and Romans 7:7 make it clear that this desire is coveting, if what you desire belongs to someone else.
James 4:2 Your desires will be unfulfilled by God, no matter how much you pray, if it is to be spent on your own pleasures
Imma cut this post short because i have a thing to do. I intend to do Zeloo and pleonektos later.