Presidente said: Also, believers who have sinful areas in their lives and can repent, and the Lord can transform them. Just from a secular perspective, it isn't true either. Even unbelievers can improve their behavior over time through various means, counseling, conditioning, etc.
CAN is the keyword here. Believers
CAN repent and allow the Lord to transform them. However, that doesn't mean that they
WILL repent, change for the better, transform or reform. Just because a person
CAN do something doesn't mean that they
WILL do it.
Presidente said: The feminist DV philosophy can break up a lot of marriages.
Well, a skewed view of patriarchy, gender roles, male privilege and female responsibility has caused a lot wives to suffer bodily harm or be killed by husbands who were suppose to love and protect them.
Presidente said: This kind of philosophy about abuse can break up a lot of marriages and leave kids without parents.
Wives and mothers being murdered by husbands who were suppose to love and protect them can also leave kids without parent(s). The mother is gone because she's dead, and the father will likely be gone because he's in prison.
Presidente said: It's also unrealistic to think that if a man has some anger issues and did a few aggressive things to assumes it's going to escalate to some violence that causes real physical harm. That's the feminist DV center philosophy, but what is the evidence that this is true?
Reality begs to differ. What evidence do we have that this is realistic? The body count. Intimate partner violence data reveals this:
- According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, intimate partner violence includes victimization by current and former spouses or current and former dating partners.
- U.S. deaths 1980-2008 (from the Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics) Women account for two out of three murder victims killed by an intimate partner. The number of women killed by an intimate partner fell from 43% in 1980 to 38% in 1995, but rose to 45% in 2008. The number of men killed by an intimate partner fell from 10.4% in 1980 to 4.98% in 2008. Domestic (Intimate Partner) Violence Fast Facts - CNN.com
- Black women at greater risk of becoming victims of homicidal domestic violence
Given all the dead women killed by intimate partners - current and former husbands or current and former boyfriends, it certainly isn't "unrealistic to think that if a man has some anger issues and [has done] a few aggressive things to assume it's going to escalate to some violence that causes real physical harm."
Presidente said: Some of the DV center literature leads women to blame their husbands for all their marital problems, paint him as a monster who can't change. The counselors say leave your husband.
Skewed patriarchy rhetoric can serve as a buttress that SOME men (the ones who abuse) will use in order to blame women for all of their problems - marital and otherwise. A lot of the self-proclaimed patriarchs and authoritarians will say, "Assert your authority over her. Dominate her. Show her whose boss."
Presidente said: But now 'abuse' is expanded to include 'verbal abuse'.
I gather you don't believe in the existence of verbal abuse. However, the Bible sheds light on the subject.
- The tongue has the power of life and death, and those who love it will eat its fruit. Pr 18:21
- Ismael mocked Isaac (Ge 21:9). The word used for mock means scoff, irritating and deriding laughter. None of it was physical. However, although it was only VERBAL and non-physical, it was enough for Sarah to tell Abraham to send Hagar and Ismael away. God told Abraham to obey Sarah on that particular matter (Ge 21:12). Therefore, the verbal abuse (mocking) was a pretty big red flag and indicator of potential physical abuse.
- Scoundrels create trouble;their words are a destructive blaze. Pr 16:27
- A perverse man spreads strife, And a slanderer separates intimate friends. Pr 16:28
- The words of the reckless pierce like swords. Pr 12:18A
- The LORD hates a lying tongue. Pr 6:16-17.
- King David talked about being verbally abused:
My God, whom I praise, do not remain silent, 2for people who are wicked and deceitful have opened their mouths against me; they have spoken against me with lying tongues. 3With words of hatred they surround me; they attack me without cause. 4In return for my friendship they accuse me, but I am a man of prayer. 5They repay me evil for good, and hatred for my friendship (Psalm 109:2-5).
- Verbal is abuse is real. Sarah knew that, and David experienced it.
Presidente said: One thing I don't like about this thread is the attitude of 'forget about the Bible. Just go with this advice of mine?" Or "Forget what Jesus and the apostles said. Read this domestic violence website and get out."
I don't believe the posters on this thread are generally advocating that the OP forget about the Bible. In fact, Angela listed several wisdom verses that tell us how to respond and relate to an angry person. Post # 47.
- Don’t befriend angry people or associate with hot-tempered people, or you will learn to be like them and endanger your soul (Pro 22:24-25).
- A quick-tempered man acts foolishly (Pro 14:17A). Stay away from fools, for you will not find knowledge on their lips (Pro 14:7).
- A violent person entices their neighbor and leads them down a path that is not good (Pr 16:29).
- Drive out the mocker, and out goes strife; quarrels and insults are ended (Pr 22:10).
Those verses are just AS relevant as what Jesus and the apostles taught because "
ALL Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work." 2 Tim 3:16-17
Presidente said: Is submitting to a man who has anger issues a sure way to end up dead in the ditch? I don't think so. It could happen, but you could get hit by a bus while leaving the house to get away from your angry husband, too, when you could have stayed alive at home.
You might not think so, but here's what the Bible has to say on the subject:
- A violent person entices their neighbor and leads them down a path that is not good (Pr 16:29).
A violent, angry man will entice his wife and lead her down a path that is not good. How do I know? Because Pr 16:29 states that is what violent, angry leaders do. She may or may not end up dead in the ditch, but if she follows her violent, angry husband, she will end up on a path that is not good.
Submission, wifely or otherwise, is not a cure all, and the Bible doesn't say that it is.
Presidente said: I've hear that Augustine's mother was married to an unbeliever who had a reputation for his extreme temper. When she'd talk to other wives, they'd complain about their husbands beating them. But she was so submissive to her husband, he never beat her in spite of his temper. We are probably all glad we don't live in the brutal Roman world of that era. Peter wrote a few centuries before this when he told wives to submit to their husbands, so that if they do not obey the word, they might be won by the chaste conversation of their wives.
That's good for Augustine's mother, but that doesn't work for all women. That didn't work for
Karen Cox Smith who was murdered by her husband who was suppose to love and protect her.
Chris Coleman - Joyce Meyer's former bodyguard - killed his wife and two sons, so church discipline and wifely submission didn't heal that marriage either.
Mrs. Coleman believed in the whole "a wife should not depart from her husband," and that mentality helped contribute to her untimely death and the untimely death of the couple's 2 sons.
Coleman's appeal, while broadly arguing prosecutors didn't sufficiently prove their case, said the prosecution's theory that Coleman strangled wife Sheri Coleman "because he couldn't seek a divorce from her, for job reasons" wrongly relied on repetitive hearsay testimony that
his wife wouldn't have accepted a divorce. The appeal called that harm to Coleman "substantial," noting "the affair was one thing (but) it did not have to result in the end of the marriage" as prosecutors submitted.
Convicted killer of wife, 2 sons appeals
Presidente said: If a wife is going to leave her husband to 'send him a message', that can be an unclear thing for a man, too, especially if all he knows is that his wife is upset and left him. Doing this without some kind of counseling set up and without it being clear that it's not a step toward divorce or a license for either party to go find someone else is also a dangerous thing to do.
A license? Who needs a license? The OP already suspects that her husband might be cheating, although she doesn't have any concrete evidence. However, if her suspicions are correct, he's cheating within the marriage (adultery). In other words, he doesn't have to wait until separation or divorce to cheat. If he wants to cheat, he'll cheat. Plenty of married people cheat on their spouses.
Presidente said: Instead of putting the Bible on the back burner, putting the teachings of Christ on the back burner to do what you think you have to do to protect yourself, why not actually follow what it teaches on the issue? Go to Matthew 18. If your spouse is sinning against you, go get witnesses, then bring him before the church. I know it's true that a lot of churches totally ignore the many scriptures on church discipline and not keeping company with the professing brother in sin. But that's no excuse for not pursuing it. At least try to get the church involved. Walk in obedience to the Lord instead of assuming it won't work.
How do you know that she hasn't tried this? Church discipline can have little effect on an abuser. Sure the church can admonish him and pray for him, but they literally have no power to make him change. It's a free country, and they can't force him to change.
An abused wife,
Karen Cox Smith, sought help from her local church. Afterwards, the couple reconciled and lived together in DeSoto. The Smiths and their three children began attending Inspiring Body of Christ, a church in the Red Bird area. Ferdinand Smith - the abusive husband - joined the choir and served as an usher. His wife thought he had changed. But the change didn’t last. The victim's mother said she begged her daughter to leave, but the Smiths’ pastor, Rickie G. Rush, advised otherwise. Her husband, Ferdinand Glen Smith, 42, gunned her down as she left work. He killed her and confessed to the shooting. Pastor Rush would not comment on the murder of Karen Cox Smith and would not return repeated telephone inquries from the media.
Murder of abused wife devastates family, spurs change in Dallas | Dallas Morning News