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How
Monogamy Came To Be
In the Hebrew Bible, there is a
clear distinction between a love relationship and a marriage arrangement.
Love relationships are depicted, over all, as the blinding-revealing
passion for someone who is the object of the individual’s attention. For
example, Yaakov’s passion for Rachel (B’reshith 29). King David’s
lustful desire for Batsheva (Sh’muel Bet 11-12). Samson’s love for
D’leelah, the dominatrix of the Hebrew Bible (Shofetim 16). Just to name
a few. A marriage arrangement requires that the one’s married to each
other fulfill the ethical and moral legal obligations that are binding
upon them under the laws prescribed within the community. Further, love
between the ones married to each other is not guaranteed. Divorce is
probable, and arrangements for that are legally prescribed in both the
Torah and the Talmud. Marital strife is likely to occur due to differences
in individual needs or unpredictable circumstances, and must be weathered
through by adherence to the marital obligations. Love can flourish between
the married partners, and this is the "ideal" if the individuals
work together through the struggles and keeping the obligations to nurture
its continued existence in the marriage.
In the Hebrew Bible, all aspects dealing with the legal institution of
marriage express polygamy. So, too, do all the narratives on the marriage
lives of people; with what may appear to be the rare exception of a few.
But, the Torah rarely, if ever, gives full disclosure on the personal
lives of its legendary people. It has selective memory, and midrash of
later generations have had to fill in areas not covered. If we were to
stretch scripture a little, and interpret that some marriages were
intentionally portrayed as monogamous, all this really shows us is two
possibilities. The first, is that some men were likely to take only one
wife; and/or two, that some should limit themselves to a lesser number.
All aspects dealing with what can be described as a monogamous
relationship within the Hebrew Bible deal with the love affair situation
of a biblical patriarch and a woman (not always a Hebrew matriarch). Kept
in its context, the Hebrew Bible presents the cultural marriage
arrangement of its time – polygamy. It even legally defines proper
marriage behavior for the husband who is married to more than one wife (D'varim
21.15-17). And, in typical Hebrew teaching style, the polygamist marriage
narratives teach us that relationships are a struggle between individual
needs. And, that the obligations – laws, commandments, rules – of
being legally married to each other requires that these struggles be
worked out within the marriage. Great lengths of creativity within the
marriages of biblical times were taken to accomplish this.
The "idea" that the Torah encourages monogamy by showing all the
struggles happening in the polygamist relationships is a later midrashic
interpretation of the Common Era Palestinian Jews*. [*See footnote below.]
The Jews of the intertestimal times (the 700 year period between the
writing of the Jewish scrolls, now known as the TaNaKH, and the writings
of the Greek New Testament by the Greco-Roman Christians of the Diaspora).
And, for only about a thousand years, has it been upheld through cultural
law as the ideal within most Jewish communities, and more specifically the
Ashkenazic community of Old Europe. The rabbis of the intertestimal period
took the TaNaKH scriptures out of their context and applied new meanings
to them to deal with the present problems occurring within the overran,
hellenistically influenced Yisrael. The old ways and the reasons for these
ways were no longer being followed enthusiastically, and new ways were
needed to keep the integrity of the Hebrew teachings.
Hence, the new law that appeared in the Damascus Document* scroll of
intertestimal times that limits marriage to one husband and one wife. The
Damascus scroll gives a new definition to what is considered the act of
fornication. It specifically states that fornication, a sexual sin, is the
taking of more than one wife in a man’s lifetime. The rationale for this
definition of fornication is based upon two quotes from legend narratives
of the Torah. B’reshith 1.27, "So G-d created humankind in his
image, in the image of G-d did he create it, male and female he created
them" and 7.9, "two and two (each) came to Noah, into the Ark,
male and female, as G-d had commanded Noah." Both scriptures were
taken out of their context and have nothing to do with the Moshaic laws
regarding marriage. And, one quote from D'varim 17.17 that speaks of the
King of Yisrael, that he is not to "multiply wives for himself."
(A translation of the Damascus Document is available in The Dead Sea
Scrolls, A New Translation.) [*See footnote below.]
This latter biblical injunction does not restrict the King to one wife
only, but instructs him not to create a harem for himself, so that his
attention remains on his duties as King. The King is also told in this
same passage of scripture not to "multiply horses for himself,"
"not to return the people to Egypt in order to multiply horses,"
and that "silver and gold he is not to multiply for himself to
excess." Neither of these injunctions say that the King is restricted
to owning only one horse and possessing one piece of silver or gold. The
D’varim passage cited as validation by the first intertestimal adherents
to monogamy is dealing with political-trade transactions of the King.
Later tradition has ascribed B’reshith 2.24 and Mishlei 31 as further
justification that the ancient Jews intended for us to form monogamous
marriages. Again, scripture is taken out of context to justify a
fundamentalist view. With the passage of Mishlei, it is expressing the
ideal wife and likens her to Shechinah, which is the feminine image of
G-d, the Hebrew G-ddess. It does not make the slightest suggestion
concerning the number of wives a man is to have. To say that the Bible
supports a bias towards (or against) something that it clearly does not is
simply wrong to do. And, this kind of interpreting leads to injustice.
There are four types of marital arrangements (only one that is civilly
legal in America): polyandry, polygamy, monogamy, and polyamory. Polyandry
is a marriage arrangement between a wife and two or more husbands.
Polygamy is a marriage arrangement between a husband and two or more
wives. Monogamy is a marriage arrangement between one husband and one
wife. Polyamory is a marriage arrangement between two or more husbands
and/or two or more wives. The Torah makes no distinction on which type of
legal marriage arrangement is more preferable than the others. Instead, it
only encourages that through marriage the struggles of relationship be
dealt with, and that the expression of love be realized. Just as it is
realized through the marital struggles between G-d and the People of
Yisrael. "Now you are to love YHWH your G-d with all your heart, with
all your being, with all your substance!" (D’varim 6.5). We do this
by faithfully fulfilling the obligations of this community marriage
relationship with G-d. So it must be in our human marriage relationships
the Torah teaches us.
Monogamy is not threatened by society allowing citizens the legal right to
choose other types of marriage arrangements, and to be held accountable
for these marriages. For those who idealize monogamy as the way to go, the
simple bottom-line fact-of-reality is that there is only one threat to the
success and survival of monogamous relationships. This real threat comes
from within the homes of the couples that choose a monogamous marriage
arrangement, and this threat is not keeping the vows made when getting
married and not working together to mutually meet each other's needs. The
threat of infidelity is not basing the marriage on clearly defined
obligations to begin with. Banning the legal right to form other types of
marriage arrangements will not change this. And, it will not prevent
people from forming polygamous, polyandrous, and polyamorous relationships
- regardless whether they are legally sanctioned by society or not.
The issue in the Hebrew Bible is about getting married, not about what
marriage form is "right." Its focus is on fulfilling the
obligations that come with marriage, whether there is love between the
married partners or not. When maintained in this manner, the relationship
is in kedusha, a state of holiness. And, this benefits the community, by
providing a strong family-oriented foundation to build from. How can a
marriage relationship – whether it be polyandry, polygamy, monogamy, or
polyamory – be less of a struggle and more of a love relationship? The
first step is to keep the marital obligations made between each other when
committing the act of marriage. Verbally remember and edify the words of
this marital agreement often - if possible, on a weekly basis. Sit down
together and talk it over.
The next step, which is actually the very first step and must always
remain the more important step throughout the marriage is understanding
that love is not an object, and thus the degree of love one has for
another cannot be controlled. But, we do have the power within us to
control how we will relate to to each other in our relationships. And, we
have the power to decide whether we will be fidelitous or not. In other
words, by defining together the obligations of the marriage, by living by
them throughout the marriage (being conscious of these obligations on a
daily basis) and, through this marriage relationship, by elevating the
emotional, sexual, and spiritual needs of our partners-in-marriage.
Complete honesty between each other, recognition of the need for
individual self-responsibility, and partner encouragement (not coercion)
is a must. Fulfill this and this marriage, whatever its type, is a
marriage maintained in kedusha/holiness, according to the teachings of the
Hebrew Bible.
Footnote: Just for historical authenticity to the statements made in these
* asterisked paragraphs above, the Damascus Document of the Intertestimal
period is a product of a specific extremist community sect of Judaism, and
is not reflective of Jewish lifestyle in that time period as a whole. In
fact the majority of Jewish communities would continue to engage in
polygamist marriage relationships well into the Common Era, and even
within the Ashkenazic communities this was so. Monogamy was accepted and
justified as the ideal by modern Jews only because of the Christian
presence around these Jewish communities, meaning Jews conformed to the
practices of their neighbors to avoid persecution over this issue. It is
through the extremist Jewish document of the Yachad sect that defines
monogamous marriages and the monogamous approach to marriages within the
Greco-Roman world of the time that Christianity would come to idealize
monogamy as the ideal marriage relationship style. Even the Irish, who
were the first culture to embrace Christianity outside of the Greco-Roman
world, continued to engage in rather promiscuous relationship styles -
styles that included group sexual relationships and marriages. It would
not be until the arrival of the "White" people into Europe and
their subsequent embracement of Christianity that monogamy would be
institutionalized as the only correct form of marriage. Some estimates
have it that monogamy finally took root about a good thousand years after
the Damascus Document had been written. And, still today, not all
societies are convinced that it really is the most moral form of forming
relationships.
About the Author
Joseph Farkasdi is a fictional
writer and social commentator. His online expressions range from the
sharing of deeply opinionated thoughts on life, love, and relationships to
the ever stirring wild and sometimes wet erotic fantasies that stretch
one's secret imaginations. His photographic works are as revealing and
shameless as his willingness to share all without inhibition. You can view
his web site by clicking on http://www.jfarkasdi.org/
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