truth dancer wrote:Harmony and others say that Jesus specifically condemned plural marriage and yet there is not statement anywhere in the New Testament where He said any such thing. And although it is not official doctrine I believe that Jesus lived in a plural marriage. People who know the cultural practices of the day say that His relationship with Mary and Martha could not be explained except as that of husband and wives.
Ummm... Charity, there may be a handful of LDS folks who believe this but my observation is the VAST majority of Christian leaders, experts, historians, completely disagree with you. Jesus clearly taught that a marriage was between one man and one woman, they were to cleave unto each other and none other. In spite of your beliefs I do not think this is argued by anyone but a handful of LDS true believers.
Many of the leading Christians are wrong about a lot of things.
You say Jesus clearly taught marriage was between one man and one woman. I have asked repeated: Show me those plain and clear teachings. I will accept any New Testament scripture that says this. Oh, not your interpretation of a scripture, but Jesus' actual words, as you say there are such.
truth dancer wrote:What it all boils down to is that any of God's commandments will bring blessings to those who live them. But if God has not commanded them, and yet people try to live that way anyway, they are not blessed, and God condemns them for it. This is the case with plural marriage.
This is exactly what Harmony is saying. If God didn't command men taking wives and concubines and Joseph Smith & Co did, then they were not blessed.
And where Harmony and I differ is that I say it is very plainly in the Doctrine and Covenants that God did command. And they were blessed. Persecuted, but blessed. Blessings aren't just in having quiet, peaceful lives. Blessings are in spiritual growth, which very often does not come with an easy life.
I have examined the claims, and do not think there is any case to be made at all, that Section 132 was "made up" by Joseph Smith. It is a case in the minds of critics, that since plural marriage could not be approved by God, then there has to be another reason for the revelation. It is a Vogelian argument. Refuse to accept the real reason, and then grasp at straws to try to bolster your faulty reasoning.
truth dancer wrote:[
In my opinion, there is a wonderful, clear teaching/commandment given by Jesus Christ himself, Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
TD, you are saying that Jesus taught one husband/one wife in the Golden Rule? So then if someone says they would like to live a plural marriage and would happy to accept either polgyny or polyandry that means automatically that this is God's command? I want you to show me one PLAIN one husband/one wife teaching.
And your idea of what the Golden Rule allows puts you on shaky ground. So if it is okay with you if your husband cheats on your because you can cheat on him, there is no such thing as adultery? Or if someone steals your car, but says he is fine with anyone else stealing his car, then that was God's command?truth dancer wrote:
Based on this commandment, I find it impossible to rationalize the behavior of these men who took many wives and concubines during the early days of the church. Unless these guys would be happy to have their wives sleep with the high council while they were unable to have a real relationship with a woman, or to have their hearts completely broken as their wives were unavailable to them but having affairs with their buddies, these men clearly did not act in accordance to this commandment.
No one is defending any abuses of plural marriage. If there were men and women who did not treat their spouses well, that is a sin on their head. Just as no one today defends any abuses of mongamy. Today it is one man/one wife, and do we see many husbands and wives abusing that relationship? Of course. That does not condemn the institution, only the misbehaving individual.
Entrance into a plural marriage was a matter of agency. You may talk about pressure to live what they thought was commanded by God. But that kind of "pressure" is on any person who accepts any belief system. If any husband was iving up to his responsbilities and treating his plural wives well, if their hearts were broken, it was because of their own personal issues, and they would have done just the same in monogamy.