This is exactly why I will never have qnything to do with organized religion again. No man has authority over my relationship with YHVH.one of the things he kept saying is that the pastor is the ultimate authority,
This is exactly why I will never have qnything to do with organized religion again. No man has authority over my relationship with YHVH.one of the things he kept saying is that the pastor is the ultimate authority,
I hear you. I just wish there were more churches that believe as we do.This is exactly why I will never have qnything to do with organized religion again. No man has authority over my relationship with YHVH.
Which is another good reason to pursue getting a waiver from a law that is not really so much a bad law, as it is an overreaching law.Technically, polygamy is not illegal based on spiritual principles. Bigamy is illegal based on state certification of marriage. The thing that makes it all confusing is the idea of common law marriage, which in some states, pushes a non legal relationship (not defined in legal civil procedures) into a illegal one based on time.
Which is another good reason to pursue getting a waiver from a law that is not really so much a bad law, as it is an overreaching law.
So you want to marry legally, in order to make sure that nobody in the church could argue that you are breaking the law, removing that objection from them? It wouldn't work, as it's just one of various objections, they'd just find another way to argue against it.I would like to explore whether this is possible in our day and age, here in America
.... his respomse to that, was that polygamy is illegal, which is not the case with the other three items that I brought up. So yeah, I would like to see if it is possible here in the United States, to legally do what is not so illegal in places like South Africa.
I would request one from your state's AG. I will meet with my attorney friend tomorrow night and se if he has any advice for you.Common law marriage and divorce by irreconcilable differences, are fruits of those who don't understand what exactly is a marriage. Where can I sign up for one of those waivers?
Well, I recognize that we can have a difference of opinion on this issue, and still have fellowship with one another, and yes, that is a typical cop-out argument from the anti-polys. Interestingly enoigh, Pastor Steven Anderson (Faithful Word), believes that polygamy should be legal, even though he believes that it is a sin. The flaw in the argument comes with the necessity to break the law, and while for some people, it is necessary to break man's laws in order to follow God's Law, that doesn't apply to all of us.So you want to marry legally, in order to make sure that nobody in the church could argue that you are breaking the law, removing that objection from them? It wouldn't work, as it's just one of various objections, they'd just find another way to argue against it.
Most Christians can understand that legality has nothing to do with morality. Just because the government makes gay marriage legal does not mean it is right with God, and vice versa. This is so clear that anybody who chooses to ignore that is doing so wilfully. They won't be actually persuaded even if you did get a legal marriage licence. They'd just immediately reject it as the government choosing to recognise your sin. It's just today's excuse to argue with you, it's not the fundamental reason they're arguing with you.
But as @Cap said, polygamy is legal. Secular people sleep with as many different people as they like, and don't break a single law. In most of the West, anything goes. Everything is legal, including a lot of sin. You're completely free to be a polygamist, and are not breaking the law.
At the same time, no Western government provides the facility to legally register two simultaneous marriages, except in some very unusual exceptions (e.g. New Zealand recognises both marriages of immigrants who come from a country where they married legally, while still completely forbidding any citizen from procuring a second marriage licence overseas). But they allow gay marriages to be registered. This just shows that legal registration is completely irrelevant. Forget it, and look solely at the laws around who you are allowed to live with and have sex with, ie the actual fundamentals,.
Some US states do have some technicalities with common law marriage and/or cohabitation laws, that are worth being aware of. But they don't affect the overall argument on whether polygamy is illegal or not, they're rather details to be aware of if you live in those specific states.
But you don't have to break man's laws to be a polygamist. It's legal. You keep stating it's illegal, but that is not true.The flaw in the argument comes with the necessity to break the law, and while for some people, it is necessary to break man's laws in order to follow God's Law, that doesn't apply to all of us.
Wow! I wish I could say “unbelievable!”, but I no longer feel that way. Sadly, it’s very believable. Personally, I find this more objectionable and unacceptable than the third demand of theirs. For me, I’d be gone. Peace out! But then again, you’ve already stuck it out much longer than I would have. Best of luck to you, brother. Sounds like only a matter of time until they ask you to leave.He told me that I must commit to never sending the pastor any more emails, when he says things that I disagree with
YupThat was merely round one, my brother. Just getting the range.
Don’t get me wrong, we are fully behind you, but ain’t nobody betting the rent on your chances. Keep your mind open to what you will do post-SBC. Maybe you will take a some fellow free-thinkers with you.
Yes. I understand what you are saying. I am arguing more from their perspective. They can't argue that because it is illegal, we have to shun people and dismiss them from leadership, when in fact it is not. I even pointed out to him your position that legal marriage is not necessarily valid marriage, but I don't want to get entangled in that discussion with those who use that as a fallback. I want him to attempt to produce other arguments, which he probably already knows that I can shoot down.@Daniel DeLuca: Please note that I am not arguing with you so much as making sure that your incorrect view on the legality of marriage is not left unopposed, for the benefit of other readers. You are free to believe what you want, even if it is wrong, however I don't want other readers to see this and get the impression that polygamists are breaking the law. This is very important, because if that were the case then this website would be supporting something illegal, and that has wider ramifications. So if you can explain why you believe polygamy is generally illegal, feel free to do so, and we can discuss that. But please don't continue to just assert that it is without explaining your reasoning, because it has the potential to be confusing to other readers. It is somewhat peripheral to this discussion anyway.
Lord! Help me to stick out like a sore thumb!"You will be assimilated". Resistance is futile. no thank you...
My wife doesn't like my post-SBC plan.Daniel DeLuca said: ↑
If all they are going to do, is remove me from a post I reluctantly accepted in the first place, I am going to act like it is a major blow, but at the same time, I am relieved that that is the extent to which they have gone.
Yup
They are just too predictable.
I wanted to be wrong, but if they are 501C3, the spirit of religion is probably firmly entrenched.
FREEDOMMMMM!!!!My wife doesn't like my post-SBC plan.
I understand where you're coming from also.Yes. I understand what you are saying. I am arguing more from their perspective. They can't argue that because it is illegal, we have to shun people and dismiss them from leadership, when in fact it is not. I even pointed out to him your position that legal marriage is not necessarily valid marriage, but I don't want to get entangled in that discussion with those who use that as a fallback. I want him to attempt to produce other arguments, which he probably already knows that I can shoot down.
Not to get too bogged down in how that conversation went, as I will post more about that later, but to answer your question, one of the things he kept saying is that the pastor is the ultimate authority, and for me to disagree with him, creates disunity. I pointed out that we disagree on Lordship salvation, Predestination, and even the age of the universe, but that is something that we can all agree to disagree on, and his respomse to that, was that polygamy is illegal, which is not the case with the other three items that I brought up. So yeah, I would like to see if it is possible here in the United States, to legally do what is not so illegal in places like South Africa.