Helaman said:
"1_Kings 11:3-4: Solomon multiplied wives (up to 1,000!) which was prohibited and prophesied that a king would do in Deuteronomy 17:17. But that passage in 1_Kings 11:3-4 says his father David's heart was "perfect". Indeed, as the previous verse of Deuteronomy 17:16 also prohibits a king from multiplying horses, no one would read that to think that it suggests that a king was somehow not able to have/add more than one horse! As such, there is a clear difference between multiplying and merely adding. And this can be seen as the difference between Solomon and his father David. Where Solomon had multiplied (i.e., stored-up, hoarded), David had only added his 18+ wives. (In Genesis 25:1, "Then AGAIN Abraham took a wife... Keturah". The word,"AGAIN", there translates to add --or "augment"-- in the Hebrew. And, indeed, Abraham was adding his third wife Keturah to himself.) So, Solomon's sin was multiplying wives (which turned his heart away from God) while his father David had simply added wives. Hence, adding more than one wife is biblically acceptable (just as David did), whereas multiplying wives (just as Solomon did) is what was prohibited in Deuteronomy 17:14,17." (
www.biblicalpolygamy.com)
Some of the Laws that Joseph ignored .
He seemed to pick and choose those that he liked
Lev 18:18 Neither shalt thou take a wife to her sister, to vex [her], to uncover her nakedness, beside the other in her life [time].
Lev 18:20 Moreover thou shalt not lie carnally with thy neighbour's wife, to defile thyself with her.
The law about multiplying horses is not applicable to this subject , it is simply a favorite distraction of the Mormons . Reading the verse in context explains what it means
.Deu 17:16 But he shall not multiply horses to himself, nor cause the people to return to Egypt, to the end that he should multiply horses: forasmuch as the LORD hath said unto you, Ye shall henceforth return no more that way.
This was about using the horses to return to Egypt. In effect tempting the people to return via the horse.
This has zip to do with sexual practices
* * * 16. he shall not multiply horses to himself--The use of these animals was not absolutely prohibited, nor is there any reason to conclude that they might not be employed as part of the state equipage. But the multiplication of horses would inevitably lead to many evils, to increased intercourse with foreign nations, especially with Egypt, to the importation of an animal to which the character of the country was not suited, to the establishment of an Oriental military despotism, to proud and pompous parade in peace, to a dependence upon Egypt in time of war, and a consequent withdrawal of trust and confidence in God. ( 2Sa 8:4 1Ki 10:26 2Ch 1:16 9:28 Isa 31:3 ).
Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
But the following verse is instructive.
Deu 17:17 Neither shall he multiply wives to himself, that his heart turn not away: neither shall he greatly multiply to himself silver and gold.
There is no scripture where God sanction polygamy in Old Testament .To the contrary God forbid it and He punished it , even to the Kings . It was a written statute.
In spite of LDS teaching there is no record of Abraham being a Polygamist
While Sarah lived, he never married any other woman.
Abraham had an illegitimate son by Hagar. But that was an adulterous sin
Sarah was barren. For a wife in ancient times to go childless was a disgrace.
It was Sarah, Abraham's own wife, who brought him her handmaid, asking him to produce a child for her by this servant woman.
The custom was when the servant had a child at her mistress knee it was counted as her child.
Hagar may have been attractive, and the temptation, under these circumstances, at Sarah's request might have been great. Abraham may not have been opposed to doing as his wife requested because of that .
He was human.
God refused to approve the adulterous act of Abraham. He rejected the illegitimate son Ishmael, from the birthright.
As it did in the Mormon homes this produced jealousy between the women. It resulted in trouble, controversy, suffering.
We continue to se the result of that sin today
Genesis 21:8-21 is the record of Hagar's departure from Sarah and Abraham. God ordered Abraham to send away the concubine Hagar and her son, and Abraham obeyed .
There is not one word to indicate that there was an ongoing relationship between Hagar and Abraham. We never read she was treated as a wife or that they continued a sexual relationship.
The only Child that God would recognize would be the one with His wife .
After the death of Sarah's death Abraham married Keturah. This, of course, was a perfectly legal marriage. There was no polygamy or divorce
Isaac was not a polygamist
There is no mention whatever of any wife for Isaac other than Rebekah. There is no mention of any concubines, or of any act of adultery.
Isaac's wife, Rebekah, like Sarah, was barren. But Isaac did not take things into his own hands and have children by her handmaids, or by concubines. Rebekah did not do what Sarah did , and bring a servant girl to her husband to produce a son by "proxy
Jacob , that is always seen as a polygamist actually only had one wife after he was converted.
Laban, deceived Jacob and gave him Leah instead of Rachel, Leah was done by fraud.
According to the marriage laws Jacob could have put her away as soon as he discovered the deception.
He would never have been truly married to Leah by the law
God would not have bound them as one flesh.
Jacob was not yet converted, He had not yet met the God of Abraham personally . He looked to his own understanding. He did not seek wisdom from God in this . He did what seemed right to him, in his own selfish interest. So Jacob lived in polygamy with two wives, and also had children by their two personal maids.
We read of Jacob's conversion in Genesis 32. He put idolatry out of his household . God appeared to him, changed his name to Israel and restated the promises made to Abraham . Then God took Rachel, his second wife leaving only his wife, Leah.
So, following his conversion, Jacob had but his one original wife. Jacob had repented. He lived no more in polygamy after his conversion.
It is true that it was a worldly custom in the patriarchal times and in the days of the Kings of Israel. A harem was one of the worlds symbols of royalty.
But God forbid polygamy for the kings of Israel.
Here is God's LAW respecting polygamy by Israel's kings:
Israel's first king, Saul had plural wives. But he disobeyed God and followed the custom of the kings of the worldly nations around Israel. It was sin not Gods design . It was not approved by God.
David had several wives. But after his tremendous sin of taking Bathsheba and having her husband murdered, David repented, in real heart-rending repentance. And he never repeated the sin.
II Samuel 12:9-12. "Now therefore,the sword shall never depart from thine house; because thou hast despised me and hast taken the wife of Uriah the Hittite to be thy wife."
God said the act showed David despised him not only the Law , but God himself (we read Davids understanding of that in the psalms.)
The sinful sexual pleasure of David had a cost
"Thus saith the Eternal, Behold, I will raise up evil against thee out of thine own house ..." His own house included his wives and children.
God said the sword will now come upon his house his family. God told David ".... and I will take thy wives before thine eyes and give them unto thy neighbor, and he shall lie with thy wives in the sight of this sun."
Notice this was done that very day .
"For thou didst it secretly: but I will do this thing before all Israel, and before the sun."
So a neighbor or neighbors defiled David's wives publicly, in the light of day God said "I will take thy wives before thine eyes and give them unto thy neighbor." That is what He did.
David repented it is recorded that he confessed to Nathan, I have sinned against the Eternal"
We then read "And Nathan said unto David, The Eternal also hath put away thy sin; thou shalt not die."
But David was not free from the fruit of his sin .
David had a heavy punishment ,God took all his wives, leaving Bathsheba only. David's first and only legitimate wife, Michal, was most likely dead at this point dead .
God also had cleared the way for Bathsheba to become the legal wife of David. Apparently this was done, that she might be the mother of Solomon, a forefather of Jesus Christ and author of some OT books
David had truly repented. He no longer committed polygamy .
He was "a man after God's own heart," because his heart was right. He did repent. No matter the sin of his youth , he repented
His heart was turned to God .
His son, Solomon, started out as a righteous King , but "when Solomon was old," he had seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines - it must have been a record harem.
The result of that sin was that his wives turned away his heart from God, and to their idols.
God's Word says: "Solomon did EVIL in the sight of the Eternal"
There was polygamy in ancient Israel. It was sin , it was not God planned and God condemned it , He never condoned or sanctioned it.
Those that practiced it reaped what they sowed.
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Jesus said, "Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female?" .Jesus went back to creation "And said, For this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they twain shall be one flesh?" Wife not wives , The two shall be one flesh.
Jesus thus put us straight on monogamous marriage.
God made only one wife for Adam not a harem! He started the human family, a family of one man and one wife!
God gave this absolute command regarding future kings of Israel , telling them they must not do as the pagan nations around them (whose kings had their harems): "Neither shall he multiply wives to himself Saul, Israel's first king, disobeyed Gods command .
God did not condone polygamy . He punished those who practised it! It was was sin in the OT and it was sin when Smith did it
Marriage is the biblical symbol of Gods relationship with the church .
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