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ЁЯТН Polygamy: When God Tolerated What He Never Willed


 “Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and cleave to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.” -- Genesis 2:24 

When you read through the Old Testament, it can be confusing as we see:
Abraham had Sarah and Hagar.
Jacob had Leah and Rachel.
David and Solomon had many wives.

Yet Scripture also says from the very beginning that God made one man and one woman.
So what happened?
Did God change His mind?
Or did something else happen between Eden and the time of the kings?


ЁЯМ┐ God’s Original Plan Was Always One and One

In Genesis, marriage is described not as a contract or a social arrangement, but as a union.

“The two shall become one flesh.”

It’s not “many becoming one,” but two.
It was God’s design that love that mirrors His own faithfulness: total, exclusive, and permanent.

When Jesus was asked about divorce, He didn’t quote Moses but went further back to creation.

“From the beginning it was not so.” -- Matthew 19:8

He was reminding them: God never changed the plan; we did.


⚖️ So Why Did God Allow It?

Out of mercy and patience.

In the ancient world, polygamy was common.
Women often had no means of survival without a household.
Wars left many widows and unmarried women.
Cultural norms tolerated multiple wives for economic and social reasons.

And yet, even in that broken context, God stayed with His people.
He didn’t abandon them for their imperfect ways; He walked with them toward something better.

Just like He does with us.


ЁЯТФ Scripture Doesn’t Glorify It — It Shows the Pain

What’s striking is that the Bible never celebrates polygamy. Instead, it shows what it costs.

  • Abraham’s household was torn by jealousy between Sarah and Hagar (Genesis 16).

  • Jacob’s family became a web of rivalry between Leah and Rachel (Genesis 29–30).

  • David’s sons fought, rebelled, and brought tragedy to his house (2 Samuel 13–15).

  • Solomon’s heart “was turned away after other gods” because of his many wives (1 Kings 11:4).

These stories aren’t written to justify polygamy — they reveal its wounds.
Whenever love becomes divided, hearts do too.


✝️ Christ Restores the Original Beauty

By the time Christ came, God’s people had seen the fruit of divided love.
Through Jesus, marriage was restored to its original dignity — a covenant of faithful, sacrificial love.

“Each man should have his own wife and each woman her own husband.” --1 Corinthians 7:2

And St. Paul takes it even deeper:
Marriage becomes a symbol of the union between Christ and His Church — one Bride, one Groom, one unbreakable love.

“This mystery is a profound one, and I am saying that it refers to Christ and the Church.” -- Ephesians 5:32

What polygamy distorted, Christ purified.


ЁЯМд️ God’s Mercy in Our Messiness

It’s comforting to see that God didn’t abandon the patriarchs for their failings.
He still worked through Abraham, Jacob, and David not because of their polygamy, but despite it.

That’s how He deals with us too.
When we fall short of His plan, He doesn’t throw us away.
He patiently leads us back to holiness — step by step, grace by grace.

He meets us in our weakness, but never leaves us there.


ЁЯЩП Reflection

God’s patience in the Old Testament is the same patience He shows us now.
He doesn’t lower His standard but He raises us toward it.
Where in your life has God tolerated what He never willed and gently invited you to live His plan more fully?


Prayer

Lord,
You created love to be whole and faithful,
yet we often settle for less.
Thank You for being patient when our hearts are divided.
Teach us to love as You love —
with constancy, purity, and faithfulness.
Restore in us Your original design.

Amen.

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