Back when I was researching marriage, polygamy, etc... I also went into the topic of lust. So now I shall post my findings.
Anyone ever wonder about this lust topic? I mean, what is this lust and why is it adultery? When is it adultery? It's interpreted in so many ways these days, and in the past. So what did Jesus mean when He spoke of it directly, which is the only place where such is worded that way as to mean what so many say it means. The Bible gives the same message though out. This is an odd statement just sitting there... manipulating doctrine and getting interpreted in hundreds of ways all by itself. Well here's the scripture for ya. The source of the issue.
I've seen that dual application gender thing applied all kinds of places. My ex-fiancee had a severe problem with the above scripture. She "lusted" after me at times. As such, she always made sure to stop our kissing at the wrong times. Great job, Bible translators!
So what is this lust manner of looking at a girl? Well, the Greek word that is translated lust is interpreted through Greek understanding. Problem: Jesus was not speaking Greek. He spoke Aramaic. His people spoke Aramaic. You wouldn't preach to simple Jewish fishermen in Greek anymore than you would preach to a Turkish guy in English. It just don't work!
So... a Semitic language translated to Biblical Greek. Are there any examples of that kind of translation, to compare so that we may translate it back the way it came? The language of the New Testament is pretty rare. It has mostly only been found in there and the Septuagint. They were translated into the Greek of the people, rather than the prideful eloquent Greek way of writing. But the language of the Old and New Testaments in Greek are the same. So... I took this word for lust... and I found a way to search the Septuagint. I searched for all derivatives of the word... all similar words. It didn't come up too often. But each time it was the same Hebrew word that translated into it. That word... was Covet.
As in... thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's... what?
Yes, that word. Covet. It's not about sex. Who are these people that make everything sexual?
SO... covet... to want to have something that belongs to another person. That changes the verse considerably.
Second fact. Hebrew/Aramaic... and Greek... were very different... but had something in common. They had no general word for a female. They had a word for unmarried females... and a word for married females. With groups they could pick and choose accordingly, I suppose. However, this word for female in Greek... guess what it just happens to be... yep, you're right... the married version!
So then here is the scripture, as it should be.
This can also be stretched to say that a man who wants to take someone else's car, is already a thief in his heart... and the heart is where God looks... and what God will judge.
Anyone ever wonder about this lust topic? I mean, what is this lust and why is it adultery? When is it adultery? It's interpreted in so many ways these days, and in the past. So what did Jesus mean when He spoke of it directly, which is the only place where such is worded that way as to mean what so many say it means. The Bible gives the same message though out. This is an odd statement just sitting there... manipulating doctrine and getting interpreted in hundreds of ways all by itself. Well here's the scripture for ya. The source of the issue.
Now, take it at face value. ANYONE who looks at ANY female with this "lust" has automatically committed adultery. Compound this with the equal gender ideas of the western world and NO ONE can look at ANYONE in this "lust" manner... EVER!But I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart. Matthew 5:28
I've seen that dual application gender thing applied all kinds of places. My ex-fiancee had a severe problem with the above scripture. She "lusted" after me at times. As such, she always made sure to stop our kissing at the wrong times. Great job, Bible translators!
So what is this lust manner of looking at a girl? Well, the Greek word that is translated lust is interpreted through Greek understanding. Problem: Jesus was not speaking Greek. He spoke Aramaic. His people spoke Aramaic. You wouldn't preach to simple Jewish fishermen in Greek anymore than you would preach to a Turkish guy in English. It just don't work!
So... a Semitic language translated to Biblical Greek. Are there any examples of that kind of translation, to compare so that we may translate it back the way it came? The language of the New Testament is pretty rare. It has mostly only been found in there and the Septuagint. They were translated into the Greek of the people, rather than the prideful eloquent Greek way of writing. But the language of the Old and New Testaments in Greek are the same. So... I took this word for lust... and I found a way to search the Septuagint. I searched for all derivatives of the word... all similar words. It didn't come up too often. But each time it was the same Hebrew word that translated into it. That word... was Covet.
As in... thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's... what?
Yes, that word. Covet. It's not about sex. Who are these people that make everything sexual?
SO... covet... to want to have something that belongs to another person. That changes the verse considerably.
Ok. This makes much more sense in light of other things said in the Bible. But there is still one more problem. It doesn't fit right. What if you need a girl? Are you not to desire to have any girl? That's not right.But I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman, with the desire to have her, has already committed adultery with her in his heart. Matthew 5:28
Second fact. Hebrew/Aramaic... and Greek... were very different... but had something in common. They had no general word for a female. They had a word for unmarried females... and a word for married females. With groups they could pick and choose accordingly, I suppose. However, this word for female in Greek... guess what it just happens to be... yep, you're right... the married version!
So then here is the scripture, as it should be.
All Jesus was doing was explaining that they didn't have to take the girl to be in adultery with her. Simply wanting to take her was enough. He lifted coveting from a secondary sin position to a primary sin position. He combined 2 commandments, and simply repeated what was said all though out the Bible. That girl is some other guy's. Do not even want her.But I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman who belongs to another man, with the desire to have her, has already committed adultery with her in his heart. Matthew 5:28
This can also be stretched to say that a man who wants to take someone else's car, is already a thief in his heart... and the heart is where God looks... and what God will judge.