I've also seen 'abuse' models that included quoting Bible verses and mentioning certain points of Biblical teaching on marriage as part of a pattern of abuse. I suspect these are models of domestic violence developed by feminists. And from what I've researched about it, they do not seem to be based on good social science either.
Here we go with the feminists again. smh A Christian counselor isn't going to say mentioning Bible verses is abuse. Did the feminists invent the law too?
I know some are and I have seen some of the literature. A realistic understanding of domestic violence takes into account the fact that some women are violent, too, and hit men.
We already covered that and said it was wrong. Why are you bringing it up again?
Men are taught not to hit back. After several encounters, if a man defends himself and she reports him, he can go off to jail.
Well like you said, perhaps he should pray about it. Maybe God will make her stop.
There are precincts where the cops are mandated to cuff someone and take them off and the man is the preferred for arrest. If the man is arrested, he can be labeled as an abuser. No matter what the story was, the woman could go on an Internet forum or maybe to a pastor and be told she has a right to leave him or divorce him, even if she were the violent offender in the home. I'm not saying this is most cases, but there are different dynamics in every home. I've read that lesbian couples are more prone to domestic violence than hetero couples or even homosexual male couples.
I don't know what lesbians do, nor do I care. Can you post facts to back up your claims about certain precincts?
Men hitting women is stigmatized in our culture. That's a good thing, generally.
That's a good thing generally?!
It may make it tough for cops in some situations, but generally it's a good thing. But women hitting men is not equally stigmatized. It should be, especially wives hitting their own husbands. We see women fighting men portrayed in a positive sense in 'girl power' scenes in movies these days. That may not be a good things for minimizing domestic violence either
Already said it was wrong several posts ago. The point is not who is doing it but that no one should stay in an abusive marriage. Why you're straying so far from the topic I do not know.
There is also the flawed reasoning that if a man abuses once, he is always an abuser, a psychopath like the Duluth model suggests. In some cases, the man may have been defending himself. One-off cases of substance abuse can also lead to violent behavior (which is not really a legal defense for anything unless we are talking about unwilful intoxication.)
So you're saying if your daughter came home to you with a red mark across her face you would send her back. You'd say " sweetie, this was just a one off thing, he probably won't do this again, so go on home and make his dinner". Pleassssse tell me you don't have a daughter!!
You should be careful how you use 'you' since I've never beat, choked, etc. my wife. I could start a sentence with, "If you molest a boy...", directed at you, but the third person would be more polite in that case.
First, do not threaten me and do not tell me what to do. This is a discussion forum and if you are too immature to discuss that's on you. The "you" in that sentence did not mean YOU in particular. A mature person would have asked what I meant instead of some sick nonsense about child molesting. What a sick thing to say. smh Shame on you!
No it is not. I did not justify the violent behavior. I pointed out that there are different types of violent people.
Oh, I totally get that you're a right fighter and are just arguing because you have some odd dislike for me even though we have spoken to each other possibly twice before this.
You are absolutely reading the wrong ideas into my comments. Your assumptions are in no way justified or reasonable based on what I have written. I do not assume you are a violent person when you post. Why would you assume that I were violent or advocating violence?
I didn't assume you were violent. But the fact that you seem to be arguing against everything I say, disagreeing and telling antidotes and odd stories about how emotional abuse isn't wrong and this one off business, I'm not seeing you coming out strong against these types of abuse.
The issue I am addressing is the lax attitude believers have toward obeying Jesus when it comes to issues of marriage and divorce. When we are talking about actual violence and preserving someone's life, that is another major ethical issue-- preserving their life. If you are talking about a man, or even a woman, who could potentially turn out to be a killer, that's one thing. But if you are talking about giving a husband or wife permission to leave if their spouse is a little to critical or says mean things when they are angry, this seems to me that it may be another worldly manifestation of a lax attitude toward obeying what the Bible teaches on marriage-- especially as broadly as you are doing in this thread.
Then you haven't read everything the OP said. The old saying is the proof is in the pudding. Her spouse was cheating on her. So there's nothing broad about my comments at all. He refused to talk with her, to try and fix their marriage. He wouldn't go for help. Why? Because he was having an affair. And here you are still saying she ought to stay in the marriage. You are trivializing abuse.
I also consider it rather presumptuous to speak on behalf of God if He has not spoken. Paul seemed to imply that bearing false witness of God is a bad thing in I Corinthians 15. I have asked your for scripture to back up your assertions about your broad justification for divorce. How can you reconcile that with Jesus' teachings in passages like Matthew 5, Matthew 19, or Paul's commandments of the Lord in I Corinthians 7?
No more presumptious than you are putting words in my mouth. My "justification" for divorce is abuse, emotional/ physical or a cheating spouse. That is not broad.
And practically, why would you advise divorce over such issues as opposed to spending a few weeks and mom and dad's house? In our modern society it would be extremely foolish to jump all the way to divorce if you wanted to eventually reconcile, especially since so many people think that if they get a divorce paper with the government whether or not their actions were in line with the teaching of the Bible, that God somehow thinks it is okay for them to remarry.
She never mentioned remarriage, that's between her and God. I advise divorce in emotional/physical abuse situations. I'm not a counselor, I gave my opinion here like you did and everyone else. The OP will do what she feels is best. No one bases a marriage on advice they got from a forum. She wanted feedback, she got it. Neither your POV or mine is going to make any difference to her life in the long run. She moved on. Hopefully she is doing well and is happy. I think we can leave the subject here.
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