There is an argument that God describes himself as married (possibly metaphorically) to two women at the same time in Ezekiel 23 and Jeremiah 3.
The argument would be that God is trying to describe certain Jews as being like bad adulterous women, because they really are bad. So he would not describe himself as being like a polygynist (even metaphorically) unless polygyny is not bad, because it would carry the same idea that if you do something bad in a metaphor (at least this one) you are bad, at least if you are going to be consistent for this metaphor.
I am not saying that God literally married the women. I am not saying that God did not create a body and literally marry the women with the body, but if he did the metaphor is still valid, just as Hosea might have married a literal woman, and yet a lesson was taught out of the events. There is no reason he could not have created a literal body and had literal physical relations.
How would one respond to people who say God referred to himself as being like a thief in a metaphor? Although in 1 Thessalonian 5 it is the day that is like a thief and in Mathew 24 it could either be the day or God (embodied in the Son of Man) but one could try to argue that the implication is that it is God who is like a thief.
I have some ideas, but I want to hear other peoples perspectives.
The argument would be that God is trying to describe certain Jews as being like bad adulterous women, because they really are bad. So he would not describe himself as being like a polygynist (even metaphorically) unless polygyny is not bad, because it would carry the same idea that if you do something bad in a metaphor (at least this one) you are bad, at least if you are going to be consistent for this metaphor.
I am not saying that God literally married the women. I am not saying that God did not create a body and literally marry the women with the body, but if he did the metaphor is still valid, just as Hosea might have married a literal woman, and yet a lesson was taught out of the events. There is no reason he could not have created a literal body and had literal physical relations.
How would one respond to people who say God referred to himself as being like a thief in a metaphor? Although in 1 Thessalonian 5 it is the day that is like a thief and in Mathew 24 it could either be the day or God (embodied in the Son of Man) but one could try to argue that the implication is that it is God who is like a thief.
I have some ideas, but I want to hear other peoples perspectives.