Wife Hunting at the IBLP?

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presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
9,161
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#1
I have a friend who was raised in a conservative Fundamentalist household with lots of kids. He was around 40 and not married, and he was looking up Doug Philips daughters online, and following them. Doug Philips is a really right wing conservative who got into some trouble a while back.

Recently, I saw part of "Happy Shiny People." It was about the Duggars, Bill Gothard and the IBLP. The Duggars were an independent fundamental Baptist family with lots and lots of kids. When Jim Bob, the dad, ran for state senate, he came to the attention of the media and the family ended up with a couple of reality show type specials then a full-blown show with spin offs. After the fact came out that one of the kids had done some handsy molestation of certain sisters, the TV show eventually fell apart.

I didn't quite finish the documentary. It seemed to be a hit piece on the whole Bill Gothard, IBLP movement. They interviewed someone whose dad physically disciplined her mom and tried to present that as normal for Christian fundamentalists. I haven't been to an IBLP meeting. I don't think I've been to a Independent Baptist church except for funerals and maybe a few other family events. I had an uncle who was an independent Baptist pastor. I would imagine it would be rare for Independent Baptists to spank their wives. They do seem to be the fundamentalist group most likely to have some sort of overt racism in the church (I heard stories from a sister who went to one for a while, maybe 25 or 30 years ago), and some other quirky opinions. But i get the impression that they are like most regular Baptist groups except for the (odd) KJV onlyist opinion.... about most things. You may get some people with off the wall opinions on various topics in the independent Baptist movement, like Steve Anderson has, but I don't think that characterizes the whole movement from what I know of it. Of course, the IBLP and Independent Baptist aren't the same thing. That organization influenced other groups and independent Baptists are independent, not affiliated with IBLP.

The show tried to paint the whole organization by a few bad elements, as if the IBLP or being in Fundamentalist made people into child molesters or wife spankers.

The IBLP teaches this umbrella idea that we are all under God's authority, the wife is under the husband's authority, the children under the parents authority. Obedience to parents is highly emphasized. They teach people to have as many children as God will give, hoping to influence culture through numbers. They have a conservative creationist home school curriculum. The video showed the girls being given drawings of women dressed certain ways and the girls were supposed to identify immodest parts of the outfit that would catch a man's eye-- tight or exposing skin. Mrs. Duggard had a lot of 'pilgram collars' as the documentary described it.

To date, a man approaches the father and says he would like to court the daughter with the intention of marriage. I like asking the dad first, actually, as a dad... and Biblically it makes sense. But the last bit about intention of marriage seems a bit excessive. It is kind of good that a community of Christians sees how rotten and fornication prone US dating culture is and tries to do something different, even if it is a bit odd to outsiders. The Duggars allowed 'side hugs' at some stage of relationship-- maybe post engagement.

I am thinking for the single guys here, what do you think of wife-hunting among IBLP folks, maybe hanging out at the conferences, getting to know the dads, asking if you can court their daughters... or maybe asking her if asking her dad is okay with her first.

If a less conservative evangelical who wasn't into the vision of conquering the world by making a lot of babies, who didn't grow up around women wearing 'pilgrim collars', who grew up in a church where there was a bit of a tension between milieu of feminism and biblical teachings on wives submitting... is trying to find a wife in a more conservative group like this a good idea, or would there be too much cultural difference and baggage?

I am thinking of difficulties-- having a wife who wants to have a looooot of kids if you don't want to, in-laws who think you are liberal when you are really extremely conservative, having an oddly dressed wife. Maybe if you wanted a wife to work, she'd feel guilty if she didn't do at-home stuff like sew or make soap and candles, and you wouldn't want to make her sin against her conscience. That could be an issue with not producing the maximum number of babies also.

On the plus side, the woman has been trained to be modest, so you might not spend 10% of your life waiting for your wife to put on her make-up. You just have to watch her wear the pilgrim collar or whatever and not be stylish. If you don't care, that may work out okay. If she wants to have lots of kids, you can say, no, I'm the boss, I'm the husband, so I say lets have three kids. I heard something about ILBP teaching wives to always be sexually available to their husbands. That sounds great! They'd be trained against one marital problem at least. If her brothers, uncles, etc. were well-behaved, it seems likely that she would be a virgin, too, which is another plus. Virgins are hard to find. Of course, it should work both ways.

And of course if they grow up in an authoritarian type home culture and you are really gentle, kind, and laid back, and attentive to her desires maybe the woman would appreciate that, though it is possible the change could stress her out as she adjusts to the lack of rules. Going through the courtship process you might want to ascertain whether she really is into you or if she is just with you because her dad said yes to your request. This is a different subculture and the courtship practices seem to be very marriage focused, which could be an advantage if you really want to marry and not just date aimlessly for years.

Other similar places to find women would be purity balls and former Amish families from Evangelical churches that have former Amish, who live an Amish lifestyle. I don't think the Amish let you marry in if you don't convert. I hear some of them have a legalistic soteriology, and you'd have to give up electricity--- so former Amish evangelical. You might have to teach her how to use a refrigerator and a washing machine.

What do you men think of going to an ultra-conservative group like this to find a wife? I don't see it as having the same appeal for women, to go from a more free environment to one that is culturally potentially more restrictive.
 

MsMediator

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2022
1,083
725
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#2
I don't see a problem if a man wishes to go through this route to find a wife if he wants this type of wife. He is probably not going to find this type of woman (wearing pilgrim collars, etc) outside of these circles. However, his views would also have to align with these groups. He should also want a homemaker wife and a lot of kids, etc. A lot of people go through their own religious circle to find a spouse. The main issue with these types of groups is that they keep you a prisoner; it is easy to get excommunicated and ostracized if you don't follow step by step. If I were a man, I'd have to make sure the woman believed/has no problem with the group's views. I wouldn't marry someone who feels trapped in the group.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,253
9,305
113
#3
Going out and trying to find a wife, in any group, seems to be where most people run into trouble - when they deliberately set out to find one they seem to be willing to take whatever they can find.

That folly aside - this seems to be about like all the men who want to find a good Filipino wife. (Why is it Filipino from the Philippines? Shouldn't it be Philippino?) Same attraction for men who want to be certain they will always be in control, same kind of cultural downsides.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,253
9,305
113
#4
BTW: The title, "Wife Hunting at the IBLP?" makes it sound like a grocery store chain. I can picture a greeter shaking a visitor's hand, "Hello sir. Doing a little wife shopping today?"

"Yeah, I'm hoping to find something on sale."
 

JohnDB

Well-known member
Jan 16, 2021
6,191
2,508
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#5
Too much legalistic self righteousness.

Wife hunting itself is a whole other issue in itself.

My wife is my helper in meeting people and serving God. Together we form a ministry team. Seems like these people are so worried about somebody else stumbling that they have no walk themselves.

Besides, the whole dressing modestly Paul talks about is about wearing culturally appropriate clothing. Not being cutting edge fashion and overly expensively dressed....
Dress nicely...but not in formal gowns or tuxedos. Nor do you need to dress like a woman from Sudan in a burka.
There are beach churches where people are wearing bathing suits. Bikinis are the bathing suite of choice. Then there's Truck Stop churches where shorts or blue jeans and t-shirts are the best thing to wear...for everyone.

Blending in...not standing out because of clothing...that's practicing faith in HUMILITY....which we are called to do.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,253
9,305
113
#6
There are beach churches where people are wearing bathing suits. Bikinis are the bathing suite of choice. Then there's Truck Stop churches where shorts or blue jeans and t-shirts are the best thing to wear...for everyone.
Wearing a bikini to a beach church...

I'm gonna need more popcorn for this one!
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
9,161
1,788
113
#7
BTW: The title, "Wife Hunting at the IBLP?" makes it sound like a grocery store chain. I can picture a greeter shaking a visitor's hand, "Hello sir. Doing a little wife shopping today?"

"Yeah, I'm hoping to find something on sale."
I went in a store once and one of the employees asked if she could help me find anything. I said I was looking for my wife.

Then I thought a second and said I wanted to clarify that I was already married.

I used that line with a cashier. I go to check out, and she asks me, "What's your phone number?" I said "I'm already married."

She laughed and said she hadn't heard that one.

That was when I was in the makeup/skin care store with my daughters so she probably had few male customers.

That's a way one could collect phone numbers, work as a cashier, and ask selectively for phone numbers.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
9,161
1,788
113
#8
Going out and trying to find a wife, in any group, seems to be where most people run into trouble - when they deliberately set out to find one they seem to be willing to take whatever they can find.
The Bible says he who _finds _ a wife finds a good thing and obtains favor from the LORD.

When Israel went into captivity, God told them through Jeremiah to find wives for their sons and husband's for their daughters.

Abraham's servant went to find a bride for Isaac.

I don't see a problem with being intentional about these things. Why would going to find a wife mean the one doing the searching would not be very selective?



That folly aside - this seems to be about like all the men who want to find a good Filipino wife. (Why is it Filipino from the Philippines? Shouldn't it be Philippino?) Same attraction for men who want to be certain they will always be in control, same kind of cultural downsides.
Maybe the Filipinos will tolerate that crazy spelling system for the country name but not for themselves. Filipino culture is marriage and family oriented. Marrying a Filipino or Asian woman does not guarantee a man will be in charge. Asian women are still women. A man still has to set boundaries.

There may be some cultural influences working in favor of the marriage to marrying someone from a culture that is more promarriafe and less animals than your own but it is just one factor in the relationship dynamics. Maybe a woman from a more male-dominated society (than the US or Filipines) would be more submissive, easier to deal with, feel more free in a marriage to a westerner, but personality, etc. play a big part in home people interact.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,253
9,305
113
#9
The Bible says he who _finds _ a wife finds a good thing and obtains favor from the LORD.

When Israel went into captivity, God told them through Jeremiah to find wives for their sons and husband's for their daughters.

Abraham's servant went to find a bride for Isaac.

I don't see a problem with being intentional about these things. Why would going to find a wife mean the one doing the searching would not be very selective?




Maybe the Filipinos will tolerate that crazy spelling system for the country name but not for themselves. Filipino culture is marriage and family oriented. Marrying a Filipino or Asian woman does not guarantee a man will be in charge. Asian women are still women. A man still has to set boundaries.

There may be some cultural influences working in favor of the marriage to marrying someone from a culture that is more promarriafe and less animals than your own but it is just one factor in the relationship dynamics. Maybe a woman from a more male-dominated society (than the US or Filipines) would be more submissive, easier to deal with, feel more free in a marriage to a westerner, but personality, etc. play a big part in home people interact.
The same Bible also says it's better to live in the corner of an attic than to live in a wide house with a brawling woman. I'm going to stay here in my corner. Too many people I know who were too impatient to move to that wide house and regretted it the rest of their lives.

On a side note, I'm going to take a wild guess that you are using speech to text. Your typos look a lot like what speech to text does with my words. I have to fix mistakes a lot.
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,188
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#10
ok this explains all the strange posts you have been putting up in the singles forum

Most christians are NOT like IBLP and part of that cult. Your friend needs to be deprogramed and born again
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,188
113
#11
women can set boundaries too, its not just a man thing.

Women are humans too not animals to be owned.
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,188
113
#12
I went in a store once and one of the employees asked if she could help me find anything. I said I was looking for my wife.

Then I thought a second and said I wanted to clarify that I was already married.

I used that line with a cashier. I go to check out, and she asks me, "What's your phone number?" I said "I'm already married."

She laughed and said she hadn't heard that one.

That was when I was in the makeup/skin care store with my daughters so she probably had few male customers.

That's a way one could collect phone numbers, work as a cashier, and ask selectively for phone numbers.
You sound like a terrible flirt lol
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,253
9,305
113
#13
The Bible says he who _finds _ a wife finds a good thing and obtains favor from the LORD.

When Israel went into captivity, God told them through Jeremiah to find wives for their sons and husband's for their daughters.

Abraham's servant went to find a bride for Isaac.

I don't see a problem with being intentional about these things. Why would going to find a wife mean the one doing the searching would not be very selective?




Maybe the Filipinos will tolerate that crazy spelling system for the country name but not for themselves. Filipino culture is marriage and family oriented. Marrying a Filipino or Asian woman does not guarantee a man will be in charge. Asian women are still women. A man still has to set boundaries.

There may be some cultural influences working in favor of the marriage to marrying someone from a culture that is more promarriafe and less animals than your own but it is just one factor in the relationship dynamics. Maybe a woman from a more male-dominated society (than the US or Filipines) would be more submissive, easier to deal with, feel more free in a marriage to a westerner, but personality, etc. play a big part in home people interact.
Actually I think we're getting slightly off topic again. Sorry about that.

To bring it back on topic, and assuage my curiosity, let's ask the women. Hey girls, would you go to an iblp Church to find a good man to bring your life some order and control and purpose and direction and all that stuff?
 

cinder

Senior Member
Mar 26, 2014
4,425
2,416
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#14
Hey girls, would you go to an iblp Church to find a good man to bring your life some order and control and purpose and direction and all that stuff?
Order, self-control, purpose, direction? I thought I was supposed to look to God for those, not some flawed human.
 
J

jennymae

Guest
#15
Actually I think we're getting slightly off topic again. Sorry about that.

To bring it back on topic, and assuage my curiosity, let's ask the women. Hey girls, would you go to an iblp Church to find a good man to bring your life some order and control and purpose and direction and all that stuff?
No, I’ve done been married once and I ain’t fixin to do that again. My next purpose will be being a grandma.😁
 

MsMediator

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2022
1,083
725
113
#16
Actually I think we're getting slightly off topic again. Sorry about that.

To bring it back on topic, and assuage my curiosity, let's ask the women. Hey girls, would you go to an iblp Church to find a good man to bring your life some order and control and purpose and direction and all that stuff?
No, I would not go to that type of place to find a spouse. I want a Christian but someone who is more adventerous and easygoing not the stickler type.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
9,161
1,788
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#18
No, I would not go to that type of place to find a spouse. I want a Christian but someone who is more adventerous and easygoing not the stickler type.
Unless a woman is into Bill Gothard teaching, that isn't going to work.

A regular kind of conservative evangelical Christian man marrying a woman raised in a really strict environment and bringing her into a freer environment, but still benefiting from having a very family-oriented wife taught to be submissive, meet all his sexual needs, hand cook his bread, hand-sew his shirt, that makes sense. If he doesn't mind her dressing like a pilgrim, it could work out. She might feel guilty of she dresses more mainstream. Another issue is she might feel guilty if she doesn't have as many children as humanly possible. But if that isn't a problem for her personally, she might enjoy the less restrictive environment, assuming they love each other and otherwise get along. It's kind of an extreme training against many of the issues men face when marrying wives from mainstream culture.

Just think about what is out there for men: women with lots of tatts who show a lot of skin, women who drink, women who have slept around all over the place, raised in a culture where it is encouraged to be disrespectful to men but frowned upon to be disrespectful to women, raised in a culture where divorce and remarriage is a light thing. Some churches teach against some of these things, but in other churches there is an official doctrine but some topics get little attention out of fear of hurting the feelings of new converts... so just never disciple them in how to obey Christ on these matters?

I don't know that ILBP is a 'cult.' I haven't been in it. Some of the families in it might be hypercontrolling, but others are probably just really conservative. The Duggers didn't cut off contact with relatives and cousins who weren't into ILBP either, from what I gathered from the documentary, so I don't think it qualifies as a sociological cult, and I haven't heard of their Christology, etc. getting them labeled as a cult by Christians for theological reasons.

There are women who take God's word to heart who are in less conservative or less extreme movements. But the general culture in the US doesn't generally produce good wives. The culture works against it. (I'm sure women could legitimately post a similar list of complaints about what is out there for men on the dating/marriage market.) This is also the problem that leads some men to actively seek a wife abroad, from a more traditional culture.

I married an Asian woman while I was living and working in Asia. I didn't set out in life to marry a woman from a conservative Asian culture, but I guess I did anyway.

The documentary I saw was a hit piece, and it seemed like a lot of people raised in it went way out to the left and were too extreme themselves. Some of the stuff they were presenting with a tone of voice as if it was negative were good things.
 

MsMediator

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2022
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725
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#19
There are women who take God's word to heart who are in less conservative or less extreme movements. But the general culture in the US doesn't generally produce good wives. The culture works against it. (I'm sure women could legitimately post a similar list of complaints about what is out there for men on the dating/marriage market.) This is also the problem that leads some men to actively seek a wife abroad, from a more traditional culture.
I don't think western women have ever been as submissive as women from certain other cultures, even if you compare at any point in history. Values like individualism, freedom, etc. arguably originated from western culture. Like, pioneer women were likely more forward compared to Asian women. Also, nowadays women in other countries are not trained to be wives as they were previously, with more women seeking to enter the workforce, etc. A man who wants this type of woman (baking bread (instead of buying a loaf), making meals from scratch, sewing clothes (instead of buying/replacing), not expecting husband to contribute to household chores or changing nappies, etc.) essentially has to look at a sect/cult or a foreign country.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
9,161
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#20
I don't think western women have ever been as submissive as women from certain other cultures, even if you compare at any point in history. Values like individualism, freedom, etc. arguably originated from western culture. Like, pioneer women were likely more forward compared to Asian women. Also, nowadays women in other countries are not trained to be wives as they were previously, with more women seeking to enter the workforce, etc. A man who wants this type of woman (baking bread (instead of buying a loaf), making meals from scratch, sewing clothes (instead of buying/replacing), not expecting husband to contribute to household chores or changing nappies, etc.) essentially has to look at a sect/cult or a foreign country.
A cross-cultural psychology professor I spoke with thought that individualism originated in the west as people moved to cities, got more disconnected from their extended families and social networks. In a village, people would know each other. Cities are more impersonal.

My wife is Asian and she speakers her mind. She has mentioned a stereotype of Chinese women... since her country has about 5% ethnic Chinese probably mostly from families that have been there for centuries... having a fearsome tongue. I don't know how to interpret 'cerewet'-- maybe angry or complaining, something like that. I reminded her that she was a quarter Chinese and asked her if that's where she got it. :) She certainly speaks her mind. Her culture really emphasizes honoring parents and providing for them, and that is instilled in the children. I think they believe wives should be respectful to their husbands, but it isn't drilled in to the extent honoring parents is. Marital roles are probably more acted out and imitated like they are here than taught through instruction. Of course I have a limited frame of reference.

In some of the more northern Asian cultures, Korean and Japanese, in public the young women will speak with a very soft voice and act very demure, but they may not do so at home. I noticed that on Korean dramas, the controlling wife who runs the household is kind of trope. They can also have a family where the wife is in charge contrasted with one where the husband is in charge, or the wife is arrogant and a troublemaker, but when the husband finds out what she is up to, he gets her to fall in line and apologize to whoever she harmed. A Japanese friend of mine said there were husband-king and wife-queen households in Japan.

I remember when I was in South Korea, I went out to eat with some students, and one of them handed the chopsticks to cook on the hibachi grill to a female student and said 'something something yoja something something'. She smiled demurely and cooked. I knew 'yoja' meant woman, so I said, "Did you just say 'You are a woman, so you cook for us.'" and they said I must know Korean. I told them I just knew 'yoja' and guessed. The girl had smiled at the joke and cooked. I thought an American girl might scowl over that. Now, South Korea is heavily influenced by feminism and I would imagine women would be uptight about that.

My wife said if a young woman in her country didn't know how to cook she would feel embarrassed because a woman is supposed to know how to cook. But I don't know if that is the case now a couple of decades later after so many women are working in the office and eat out. The women who work in offices, from what they say, seemed very family oriented. I worked with a lot of women in the office, and they would bring food and cook, and they would talk about all the stuff they cooked at home to eat at night during Rahmadan. I think I met one woman who'd studied in the US who called herself a 'feminist' and another older woman who was having difficulty getting along with her husband after getting a masters in the US, and discovering her 'power' there. Lots of women work and there are government initiatives to deal with women's issues. But I didn't notice radical feminism as a dividing philosophy.