I've seen people reference concubines a few times around here, and I'm not quite sure what they mean by the term. I also don't know if it is relevant to our culture today.
I know the word is used a lot in the Bible, and here is my understanding of what it meant.
It seems to refer to marriage of a lower status than usual. For example a man usually paid a bride-price to the father of the young woman he wanted to marry. On the other hand, if a woman was widowed, divorced, or came from a background of prostitution, a man might want her for a wife but not be willing to pay the bride price for her.
Also (and probably more frequently) a woman who was a slave or servant could become a man's wife. Sometimes men would buy a slave in order to get a wife.
Some notable examples would include Hagar, Bilhah, and Zilpah. The woman was required to be monogamous to her man/master/husband, and the union was supposed to be life long.
The children born of these unions were considered legitimate, and may or may not inherit property along with their other brothers.
Am I missing anything? Does some of this apply in our culture?
I know the word is used a lot in the Bible, and here is my understanding of what it meant.
It seems to refer to marriage of a lower status than usual. For example a man usually paid a bride-price to the father of the young woman he wanted to marry. On the other hand, if a woman was widowed, divorced, or came from a background of prostitution, a man might want her for a wife but not be willing to pay the bride price for her.
Also (and probably more frequently) a woman who was a slave or servant could become a man's wife. Sometimes men would buy a slave in order to get a wife.
Some notable examples would include Hagar, Bilhah, and Zilpah. The woman was required to be monogamous to her man/master/husband, and the union was supposed to be life long.
The children born of these unions were considered legitimate, and may or may not inherit property along with their other brothers.
Am I missing anything? Does some of this apply in our culture?