Here's a youtube video made by some well-spoken caveman concerning Christian Polygamy that has sparked some conversation. It may be worthwhile to weigh in on the discussion in the comments section.
Nice! I like that approach. Nothing like using a man's own words to help undermine his own position (in a tactful and impersonal manner).If I had an anonymous YT account (I really ought to create one) I would actually start by agreeing with his first sentence, then reframe it. How's this look?
Indeed, if your mind is "trained on sin" rather than on Christ, polygamy "sounds like fun". So does monogamy, which is one reason so many of them fail in divorce, which God hates. For that matter, many are finding that the bachelor life also "sounds like fun" under those circumstances (ever hear of MGTOW?).
But if you're a man focused on serving Christ, you know that marriage entails a responsibility to love and care for your woman. Therefore, the more marriages you have, the greater the responsibility you assume. Of course, not all Christian men are called to such a ministry.
There is a non Zec reply on this already. One of us?
Oh, heh. Sorry. I'm Open Mouth.
Welp... now I gone and done it.If I had an anonymous YT account (I really ought to create one)
The more I think about this passage (Genesis 20) the more I like it as an apologetic. It's one that people likely aren't already familiar with, so there's a novelty factor. It debunks that poly was "merely" some temporary provision of the Law, or that it was solely an accommodation of Jewish culture, or given only to the Jewish people. It debunks that poly is adultery (in that it compares them side by side), and also debunks that God never explicitly condones or blesses poly. And it does it all in one short, easily-understood story.Shibboleth said:As for whether the Bible considers polygamy as a form of adultery, prayerfully consider Genesis 20. King Abimelech, who was already married and had several concubines (v. 17-18), nearly commits adultery with Abraham's wife Sarah, but God stops him. Abimelech's defense (v. 5) was that he had acted out of integrity and innocence, because he didn't realize she was married, since Abraham hid that fact from him. The kicker? God Himself agrees with Abimelech (v. 6) that, despite his existing wife and concubines, he had acted out of integrity in taking a woman he thought was single.