РефератыИностранный языкPoPolygamy Essay Research Paper What exactly do

Polygamy Essay Research Paper What exactly do

Polygamy Essay, Research Paper


What exactly do you mean by “polygamy”?


“Polygamy”, as referred to on this site, is meant in its popular usage, where one husband has more than one wife at the same time. This is technically known as “polygyny”, but you would have to be really keen to know that. On this site “Polygamy” does not refer to “polyandry”, where one wife has more than one husband at once. That is a practice which has never been prevalent in human societies and which major world religions condemn. It is also a practice that the site administrator feels personally unable to support.


But surely polygamy is illegal!


Ah yes, well spotted! It is illegal, if you are the sort of pedantic person who insists on registering all their marriages in the standard legally-binding sort of way. However, if you’ve decided to be a polygamist and put Multiple Marriage into practice, then you’re hardly the sort of person to let social conventions about registering marriages get in the way. You can have a perfectly pleasant and happy marriage without the tedious requirement for bits of parchment. And you can have a better marriage than provided for by modern states, because signing up to their view of marriage means signing up to their view of divorce. Proper Polygamists don’t see such a big need for divorce. If you want to start a new marriage, that’s fine, but you shouldn’t have to wreck an existing marriage to do it.


In fact, to be absolutely accurate, it is bigamy which is often illegal. Bigamy is the criminal offence of registering a second marriage when a first marriage is still recognised. Polygamy can be practiced without breaking the law simply by registering no more than one of the marriages.


Where bigamy is illegal, polygamy can often be lawfully practiced.


But shouldn’t it be illegal?


Yes – registering multiple marriage in today’s society should be illegal, as long as people have the understanding that marriages are monogamous. If people break the law, then they deserve to be punished, for often they are deceiving the state, and also deceiving their wives. Brides should understand they are entering a polygamous state. But if they understand that, and if they don’t break the law by registering the marriage, then they can be polygamists with a clear conscience.


Practical Aspects of Polygamy


Here are a few words on the benefits polygamy has for women and the controls it places on men.


Benefits


Automatic childcare in a sexist society gives women more effective choice to have a career without devaluing the role of homemaker.


Being able to marry men who are already married means that women can marry men who have already proved themselves, therefore minimising their risk.


Being able to marry the men who attract most women means they don’t have to settle just for what’s left after other women have the best pickings.


Having the possibility that a husband can remarry without divorce extends practical security to a woman. She needn’t worry about losing her husband and income as she loses her looks, because if her husband is attracted by a younger woman, he doesn’t even have to think about leaving his wife.


Polygamy removes the pressure on a husband to commit adultery, and removes damaging deceit from a marriage.


Polygamy provides a method where a woman can have a female friend for life as well as a husband.


Polygamy therefore provides more people and a better chance of meeting diverse needs.


Polygamy provides a potential for at least three adult incomes, reducing state dependance and the fear of unemployment.


Controls


If a man wants to have another sexual partner in a polygamous system then he has to meet his responsibilities – pay for any children produced from all his relationships without priority being given to those from a ‘legal’ relationship.


Polygamy removes or reduces the seduction of innocent young women – If a man promises to marry her, he cannot use his existing marriage as an excuse for not fulfilling a promise.


Polygamy reduces the number of women who are available. Currently, with more women than men, this ‘cheapens’ women. With less women available their ‘value’ goes up. In other words, polygamy makes men have to try harder and do better with women if they are to win them in competition with other men.


Should a woman be allowed two husbands?


If not, why not?


This site teaches that polygamy is a morally acceptable lifestyle. But we use “polygamy” in its


popular sense of a man having a number of wives. We do not support group marriage,


promiscuity or “polyandry” – that practice where a woman has more than one husband.


There are a number of reasons why.


For Christians:-


The first and most basic reason is that God made it that way. The rest of the material on this site


shows that God allows men to have more than one wife – The Bible shows that a woman can only


have one husband living at once.


“So then if, while her husband is living she


marries another man, she shall be called


an adulteress, but if her husband has


died, she is free from that law, so that she


is not an adulteress, even though she


marries another man.”


Romans Chapter 7 v 3


This verse stops women from having more than one husband living at any one time. It does not


stop men from having more than one wife because firstly, it quite simply doesn’t say it, and


secondly, it is clearly not a general principle which applies regardless of sex. That can be seen in


the immediate context. The reason the Bible gives is that a woman is under the law of her husband


until he dies. While the Bible does talk of marriage partners having authority over each other’s


bodies, it never talks of a man being under the law of his wife. In fact, it numerous places the Bible


indicates that that would be intolerable, such as 1 Timothy 2 v 12 “I do not allow a woman to


teach or to usurp authority over the man”.


In fact, Romans 7 makes this clear. The passage is comparing the woman to the individual


believer, being dead to the law of Moses so that they can be married to Christ and be under his


law. Now it would be inappropriate to say that Christ was under the law of the believer. And in


the same way it is inappropriate to say that a husband is under the law of his wife. And because of


that it is clear that the restriction in Romans 7 of a woman to one husband cannot be transformed


into a restriction of a man to only one wife.


The second reason is related to the first through God’s system of leadership. 1 Cor 11 shows that


this is:-


God is the head of Christ


Christ is the head of man


Man is the head of woman.


This would be defined by our society as sexist. The Bible clearly treats men and women differently


- so does God – otherwise I would be able to have babies too!!


The order does not signify inequality. The Bible teaches that Christ is God just as much as the


Father. They are co-equal but have different roles.


Obviously, man is not equal to Christ – so the passage does allow for inequality.


But when we return to man and woman we can see that they are equal, perhaps in the same way


that the Father and Christ are equal.


But equality does not mean they are exactly the same or have the same rights and responsibilities.


Hence the man is the head of woman – he takes the lead. The Scriptures show that the man must


love his wives and obviously this will affect his decisions.


In case you think I am now talking about a different subject, here is the punchline – “no man can


serve two masters”.


Christian teaching is that you cannot follow different leaders – you will hate one and love another.


So it is in marriage. A woman cannot have two husbands because she cannot follow two leaders.


A man can have two wives because it is perfectly possible to lead more than one person.


This can be seen in the phrase in 1 Corinthians 7v2 which many monogamists quote out of context


- “Let every man have his own wife, and let every woman have her own husband.”


The words for “his own” and “her own” in this verse are different, and it is not simply a gender


difference. This is what we would expect if the way in which they are the other’s own differs


according to gender. If you check the word for “her own” and look up Romans 14, you will see it


is the same word used there of a servant and “his own master”.


This shows that, if Paul had believed in monogamy, he could have used the same word for both


sexes in 1 Corinthians 7. But he didn’t.


It also means that a woman has her own husband in the same way that a servant has his own


master. Just as a master can have more than one servant, so a husband can have more than one


wife, and in the same way as a servant can only have one master, so a wife can only have one


husband.


For Everyone:-


Anything beyond what the Bible teaches is speculation. You can read on and consider my


speculation if you wish, but it is still speculation. My acceptance of polygyny and rejection of


polyandry is based on my belief in the infallibility of the Bible – and I would encourage you to base


your beliefs on the Bible and not on my speculation.


So, here goes…


1.The first thing to note is that polyandry is very rare – to the extent of being a freak of nature


– the vast majority of societies which allow polygamy allow it for men and not for women. I


do not know of anywhere where the two systems run together – it has the potential to get


horrendously confusing if it does. It is likely to be more than just chance which makes this


the case.


2.A woman always knows whether a baby is her baby. A man doesn’t – unless he knows that


the woman was only sleeping with him. To preserve the bond between parents and


children, women cannot have more than one partner of the opposite sex. Men can. If a man


suspects he is paying for a child who is not his he may want to leave. If a man wants to


leave, in a polyandrous situation he can always deny responsibility for the children in the


relationship. This leaves the family at risk. Practically speaking we know that men tend


towards providing for the family – polyandry greatly increases the risk that the family will


break apart and everyone will be poorer.


3.There are more women of marriageable age in the world than there are men. This means


that many women who want to marry cannot, because of the sheer weight of numbers. For


more detail on this see the “Vital Statistics” part of this site. Polyandry makes this problem


worse. Polygamy can remove the problem all together.


4.According to leading economists, the problem should be thought if in terms of demand and


supply. When men are allowed more than one wife, there is suddenly an increase in


demand for women (as married men can be legitimate prospects as well as single men).


This means that their “price” (what a man is willing to do for them to get and keep them)


goes up. Similarly there is a decrease in demand for men (as women who may have


married them now have a far wider choice). This means that their “price” (what a woman is


willing to do for them to get and keep them) goes down. So – according to leading


economists, if a man is allowed more than one wife the situation for all women is improved


– they have more done for them, and don’t have to do as much, but if women were allowed


more than one husband their situation would be much worse – they would have to do a


great deal to get a man, and he would have to do even less than he does now. Put simply,


economics teaches that when men have more wives it is better for women, and that when


women have more husbands it is worse for women. This combines with the imbalance in


numbers of men and women to mean that polyandry and compulory monogamy are both


bad for women.


5.It has been suggested by some that women are naturally monogamous and that men are


naturally polygamous. From the viewpoint of natural selection, men have more to gain from


multiple partners because they can have more children and propogate their genes, but


women can at the most only be pregnant once every nine months, and the number of


partners they have does nothing to change this. Indeed, some biologists now adopt theories


on reproduction which take account of sperm competition – whereby seemingly excess


sperm lie in wait to prevent sperm from another partner fertilising an egg. There is no similar


response in the female. The natural order seems to uphold the idea of women having one


partner.


6.Many who do not accept Christianity would still accept the basic point that leadership


tends to be male. This means they can accept the basic logic of the Christian leadership


argument – that a family needs only one leader and that two leaders is not viable.


7.There is more to come – I just haven’t had chance to write it yet.


Vital Statistics about Polygamy


An email to this page alleged “in the western world, there are barely more women than


men; it is essentially 50/50″. Such a view is untrue and misleading. The reply is printed


below so that people may be able to appreciate the negative side of enforced monogamy.


You cannot have it both ways – it is either equal or there is a surplus. There is no way a surplus is


‘essentially’ 50/50. The truth is that the size of the excess varies from country to country. Left on


its own there is a statistically significant excess of women. The surplus is actually greater than a


first examination of statistics will show – as an excess of young boys is quickly turned into a


surplus of females due to differential mortality rates.


For your information, my examination of the official statistics for 1994 in the United Kingdom


shows that a population of 58.4 million people breaks down into 28.6 million males and 29.8


million females. In other words there were 1.2 million more females than males in the United


Kingdom at this time. That represents a male:female split of 49:51 (with the male ratio rounded


UP to 49).


If you just count those above marriageable age (which is sensible when you are talking about


marriage) there are 22.31 million males and 23.84 million females. That is a surplus of 1.53 million


females. The ratio is then 48.34 males to 51.66 females – closer to a 48:52 ratio.


This introduces competition when men are restricted to one wife. Any surplus combined w

ith


monogamy has a tendency to increase the size of the effective surplus. It goes like this…


If the numbers are 49:51 that means that there is a 2 per cent surplus. This means that 4.08 per


cent of the female population cannot marry if they want to. (According to the British figures it is


actually 6.41 per cent of women above the legal age of marriage). If they are determined it means


they have to find a married man and separate him from his wife. Otherwise, in their competition


with other single women they just have to offer a better deal – which may often simply mean sex


without marriage. Other women will just play the game differently – rather than marriage they will


find another way of obtaining support from men – prostitution.


This means that, in an allegedly monogamous society, men do not have to marry to get sex, or


even female companionship. They can have prostitutes from the excess of women. They can have


casual sex with the competing single women, and if they do get married they needn’t be faithful


because they still remain the target of that 4.08 per cent (or higher) of the female population who


are forced to be single.


Therefore, if a man does not need marriage for sex he is less inclined to get married – so the fact


of an insistance on monogamy works against itself. Men don’t need to get married – they can carry


on being single – and this means that less men are in fact available for marriage. This in turn means


that an even greater section of the female population cannot get married, and therefore faces the


choice between fornication, adultery or prostitution, and so the vicious circle continues.


And to these facts must be added a couple of other variable factors. Firstly, the surplus of women


increases as they get older. But, in general, women tend to marry men slightly older than


themselves – usually around 2-4 years older on average. Thus, even if their own age cohort has a


49:51 split, the market that they are in is likely to be a 48:52 split. In such an example, 8.33 per


cent of women cannot get married, without the extra complicating features. And when they try


their own age or younger men they are competing against younger, more attractive, more fertile,


women.


Secondly, the figures are complicated by the ‘impressions’ that the facts create. A significant


excess of women over the number of desirable men puts them into competition even before they


are of marriageable age. Once that has happened, the actual figures do not tell the whole story, as


the process has a dynamic of its own.


Further figures show a higher rate of both marriage and cohabitation by men. These show that :-


32 per cent of 22.31 million men are without partner (i.e. 7,139,200 approx)


39 per cent of 23.84 million women are without a partner ( i.e. 9,297,600 approx)


Giving a surplus of 2,158,400 women, or 9.05 per cent of the female population above


marriageable age and 23.2 per cent of women who are old enough to have a partner but


do not in fact have one.


The bare figures therefore show that while the general population follows a 49:51 ratio, this works


out at over 9 per cent of all adult women and almost a quarter of single adult women who cannot


marry in a monogamous society.


By the means outlined above a seemingly small excess of women can have a large effect on


society. The availability of polygamy works against this – and so it is unsurprising to note that


polygamous societies have historically had lower rates of fornication, adultery, prostitution and


abortion than our own.


Polygamy was a way of life until the Quran was revealed 1400 years ago.


When the earth was young and under-populated, polygamy was one way of


populating it and bringing in the human beings needed to carry out God’s


plan. By the time the Quran was revealed, the world had been sufficiently


populated, and the Quran put down the first limitations against polygamy.


Polygamy is permitted in the Quran, but under strictly observed


circumstances. Any abuse of this divine permission incurs severe retribution.


Thus, although polygamy is permitted by God, it behooves us to examine our


circumstances carefully before saying that a particular polygamous


relationship is permissible.


Our perfect example here is the prophet Muhammad. He was married to one


wife, Khadijah, until she died. He had all his children, except one, from


Khadijah. Thus, she and her children enjoyed the Prophet’s full attention for


as long as she was married to him; twenty-five years. For all practical


purposes, Muhammad had one wife – from the age of 25 to 50. During the


remaining 13 years of his life, he married the aged widows of his friends who


left many children. The children needed a complete home, with a fatherly


figure, and the Prophet provided that. Providing a fatherly figure for orphans


is the only specific circumstance in support of polygamy mentioned in the


Quran (4:3).


Other than marrying widowed mothers of orphans, there were three political


marriages in the Prophet’s life. His close friends Abu Bakr and Omar insisted


that he marry their daughters, Aisha and Hafsah, to establish traditional family


ties among them. The third marriage was to Maria the Egyptian; she was


given to him as a political gesture of friendship from the ruler of Egypt.


This perfect example tells us that a man must give his full attention and


loyalty in marriage to his wife and children in order to raise a happy and


wholesome family.


The Quran emphasizes the limitations against polygamy in very strong words:


“If you fear lest you may not be perfectly equitable in treating more than one


wife, then you shall be content with one.” (4:3)


“You cannot be equitable in a polygamous relationship, no matter how hard you


try.” (4:129)


The Quranic limitations against polygamy point out the possibility of abusing


God’s law. Therefore, unless we are absolutely sure that God’s law will not be


abused, we had better resist our lust and stay away from polygamy. If the


circumstances do not dictate polygamy, we had better give our full attention


to one wife and one set of children. The children’s psychological and social


well-being, especially in countries where polygamy is prohibited, almost


invariably dictate monogamy. A few basic criteria must be observed in


contemplating polygamy:


1. It must alleviate pain and suffering and not cause any pain or suffering.


2. If you have a young family, it is almost certain that polygamy is an abuse.


3. Polygamy to substitute a younger wife is an abuse of God’s law (4:19). Polygamy in Jewish History


The Bible, in tolerating polygamy, gives evidence that the practice had long been an accepted social


institution when these laws were written down. In the patriarchal age polygamy is regarded as an


unquestioned custom. While the Bible gives a reason for the action of Abraham in taking Hagar for


an additional wife and, in the case of Jacob, for having Rachel as a wife besides Leah, it only proves


that polygamy as well as concubinage, with which it was always associated, was among the mores


of the ancient Hebrew people (Gen. 16:1-4; 29:23-28). The same attitude is revealed in the episode


of Abimelech and Sarah (Gen. 20:1-l3).


Polygamy was such a well established part of the social system that Mosaic law is not even critical


of it. We find only certain regulations with respect to it; as, for example, if a man takes a second


wife the economic position of the first wife and of the children she bore must be secure; and, in the


case of inheritance, no child of a subsequent marriage is to be preferred over a child from the first


wife. Other regulations were that the high priest could have only one wife and that a king in Israel


should not have too many wives (Lev. 21:13; Deut. 17:17; Ex. 21:10). The last injunction, however,


was of no effect. David had seven wives before he began to reign in Jerusalem, and an


extraordinary number of wives and concubines has been attributed to Solomon (II Sam 3:2-5, 14;


5:13). In connection with David, the prophet Nathan did not denounce the king for adding Uriah’s


wife to those he already had but for the means he employed to secure her (II Sam. 12:7-15).


However, if polygamy was not forbidden it was not directly sanctioned. It was a heritage from the


past and it was left undisturbed. As the civilization of the people reached a higher form and,


especially under the teaching of the prophets, their moral and religious consciousness developed, the


polygamous system gradually declined. This is noticeable in Israel after the return from the Exile. In


the Second Commonwealth polygamy is far from general (cf. Tobit and Susanna). Yet it survived


far into the Christian era. In the New Testament Jesus neither condemns polygamous unions nor


advocates a change in the system. From this noninterference attitude Luther, as late as the 16th


cent., arrived at the conclusion that he could not forbid the taking of more than one wife.


According to the Talmud the right to a plurality of wives is conceded, but the number of legitimate


wives, as in the Koran, is limited to four. The taking of additional wives is held as sufficient ground


for divorce for a woman who had previously been the sole wife. Where a polygamous union exists,


provision must be made for adequate maintenance of each wife as well as a separate domicile.


Throughout the Talmudic age not one rabbi is known to have had more than one wife. Monogamy


was held to be the only ideal legal union; plurality of wives was a concession to time and condition.


At a later period Maimonides in his Mishneh Torah maintains, contrary to his personal opinion, that


polygamous unions from a strictly legal point of view are permissible. Eventually, however, they


were proscribed under the authority of Rabbi Gershom (about l000), although cases of polygamy


were found in Spain as late as the 14th cent. That such cases were not rare may be inferred from


the fact that in the Spanish communities the Kethubah, the document marking the betrothal, exacted


that the man was not to take a second wife. The Islamic influence on the Jews in Spain was more


or less pronounced until the expulsion at the end of the 15th cent.


In modern Europe polygamy disappeared from Jewish domestic life while among Christians it


remained a tolerated privilege of royalty until very late times. In the declaration against polygamy of


the Sanhedrin convoked by Napoleon in Paris, in 1805, there is no implication that modern Judaism


tolerated plural marriages. It was just an emphatic assertion that Jews had discarded the orientalism


of the past and were in full accord with the culture and civilization of Western Europe.


To Find True Love:


On the full moon, have ready a love incense (such as rose


or musk) and a pink candle. If possible, go outside and


look up at the moon, holding the candle in your power


hand. Hold the candle up towards the moon and tell the


Goddess what traits you would like in a lover, and most


importantly, that you do want a lover. Don’t use a specific


person’s name; THIS IS CONTROL AND ISN’T ETHICAL!


Back inside, create a little altar by spreading out a pink


and white cloth. Light your love incense. You might want


to play some soft or romantic music. Sit before the altar


and think of the traits you want in a lover. Don’t visualize


a specific person!


Take the pink candle and lightly scratch or carve “true


love” along one side of it. Set the pink candle in a sturdy,


fireproof holder, and light it.


Say:


Moon of love and shining grace


I would see my lover face to face.


Heart to heart I long to be


With the special someone meant for me.


Leave the candle in a safe place to burn out completely,


preferably on the altar.


SPELL FOR THE JOINING OF SOULS


This spell is definitely not ethical, but it is very effective. Remember that magic is a two-way street, and that


you will be equally bound. Sprinkle dried white roses with almond oil and burn them inside a magic circle as


you recite the spell. Add slips of paper with your names written on them if you have trouble getting the roses


to burn.


.


By all that lives on land and sea


by the incoming and the outgoing


by the odd numbers and the even


by the power of three times three


thy waking thoughts shall be of me


from now throughout eternity


no peace or increase shall you find


until your hand is joined in mine


I bind thee heart and soul and mind to me


I bind thee eyes and thoughts and loins to me


I bind thee to me forever


with cords of velvet longing


by the white rose and the rosemary


by the caverns and the groves


by the silence of the mountains


by the chasms and the standing stones


I bind thee forever to me


with cords of silken danger


Isis, Astarte, Ishtar


Aphrodite, Venus


I bind thee to me forever


so mote it be


.


SPELL FOR THE BINDING OF UNION


.


There are two kinds of union. One is temporary, for this lifetime or for part of this lifetime. The other kind


is the Eternal Marriage, which brings reunion across time, through reincarnation. The Eternal Marriage is


a soul mate thing that should not be undertaken lightly – making it with the wrong person can adversely


affect your karma. So can making it without reciprocation. Making it with more than one person can make


for a tumultuous love life in future incarnations. Be careful.


To work the spell, write both names on a piece of papyrus or good quality paper. Bind it with red thread and


burn it with herbs of Love or Venus as you recite the spell. Bury the ashes beneath a tree, or scatter them


near the pyramids in Egypt. It is an Arab proverb that ‘time laughs at history, but the pyramids laugh at


time’. This is an eternal spell, unless you alter it. It can also be used for hand

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