Friday, September 25, 2020

Response to "Something to Ponder Before You Divorce."

        Once again, Lori is not the author of this blog; rather, it was written by Michael Davis, one of the men who lurks around her Facebook page. This is just a copy and paste of a comment he wrote on her page. It's a fairly short blog, but there is a lot to say. And, as always, even though they're not Lori's words directly, it certainly is fair to say she is endorsing the words and is in agreement with them. 

       One question I would ask a woman who’s thinking about divorcing a man simply because they’ve “grown apart” is, “In what way is your life going to be improved by divorce? This is presumably the man who knows you better than any other person on the planet, has accepted you as you are, has raised children with you, has provided for you, has been faithful to you, and has given you a home. So what situation do you think you’re going into that will be better than what you have now?”

Before I say anything negative, I want to point out that I am in agreement with the basic point of this blog, as long as we accept all of the assumptions uncritically. In other words, if the point is nothing more than that remaining married is the ideal, I have no problem with that. Certainly no one gets married planning to divorce. And as a Christian, I do believe marriage is a major promise and should be taken seriously. The Bible does allow for divorce in certain cases, such as infidelity, and I can't imagine a reasonable person condemning the choice to divorce in a case of abuse. But, according to the assumptions in the paragraph above, if it's simply the case that one spouse "fell out of love" with the other or grew bored, divorce would be a tragic end and I hope every effort would be made to avoid it. To be clear, I don't feel I have any right to tell anyone in that situation what they should do; that's between them, their spouse, and God. But, speaking very generally and basically, there's nothing wrong with supposing the ideal to be avoiding divorce. 

       The problem with what Michael Davis wrote is his bullying tone and his shallow assumptions, both of which will become much worse as we go along. Already, in the paragraph above, he is assuming the woman initiates the divorce, and that she did so because she was bored. Undoubtedly, these cases exist. In fact, I quickly googled "reasons for divorce" and found an article stating the top reason is "lack of commitment" (75%). But the important thing about a statistic is that it has no relevance to an individual case; it only makes a statement about an entire sample or population. You cannot take the statistic above and apply it to every individual case to discourage divorce universally. The article also included many other reasons that had fairly high percentages as well: domestic violence (23.5%), getting married too young (45.1%, and ironic considering Lori's advice to do exactly that), and infidelity or extramarital affairs (59.6%). Davis acts like all these reasons don't exist or are unimportant, and assumes the man is a complete angel in his paragraph above. If he were only addressing those situations, and discouraging divorcing due to boredom, that would be fine. But, as will be come more clear, he is painting a picture of the results of any divorce, no matter the reasons, and trying his best to frighten women out of it by convincing them that no matter how bad things are now, they'll be worse if they're divorced. (here's a link to the article of anyone is interested...it only used a sample size of 52, so I'm not sure we can assume those percentages hold universally, but certainly they are all real factors, and the conclusions are not unreasonable: https://www.insider.com/why-people-get-divorced-2019-1).

Let’s do away with the pretense and the divorce porn peddled by the feminists. Women who seek divorce because they’ve “grown apart” are presumably over 40. Well, I hope you have some job skills, because when you’ve taken that faithful man to the cleaners, you’re going to be trying to finance two households on the income that used to comfortably finance only one. Get ready to take a serious downgrade to your standard of living.

Davis gives no justification for targeting women over 40, except that it happens to be convenient for the next points he wants to make. And the assumptions only multiply from here. He assumes the woman does not have a job or any job skills, which is ironic considering the fact that according to Lori's teachings, there is no reason for the woman to have job skills. Lori criticizes women for planning for "what-ifs" if their husband were to pass away or leave them. So Davis is criticizing women for doing the very thing Lori teaches them to do! That's only half true, of course...it's not so much that he's criticizing women for not having job skills, but rather, telling them that because they have no job skills, they would be stupid to divorce their husbands. 

       This is nothing more than trying to scare people into remaining married because their "standard of living" will diminish. Is that a reason to remain married? To maintain your standard of living? I think a lot of women don't think it's worth it to endure an unfaithful or abusive spouse just so they can have a boat and nice clothing and jewelry. And there's another instance of irony...aren't Lori and her followers constantly pushing families to lower their standard of living as far as necessary to enable the wife to stay at home? So what kind of sense does it make to use the possibility of a more affluent lifestyle to entice women to remain married? 

   Also, your youth, fertility, and looks have diminished. The men your age who are single have probably been burned already by divorce and don’t have money, and if they’ve never married and DO have money, they’ve probably been playing the field this whole time and are only interested in dating much younger women. 

Speak for yourself, dude. My wife isn't yet 40, but based on how she's aged so far I have no doubt her looks will not have "diminished." But that's beside the point. I shouldn't even have to say that women have value beyond their youth, fertility, and looks. This is yet another weird point coming from a source that supposedly holds older women in such high regard. The rest of the paragraph just has more convenient assumptions and sure makes it seem like this is just another of those bitter MGTOW men. 

Let’s face the real issue. Your kids are out of the house and you’re bored. Or worse, you probably buried yourself in the role of “mother” so hard for so long that you can’t relate to your husband any more. You treated that man like an ATM in order to buy the right house and the right car so that you could impress the other women in the right neighborhood. He probably stayed with you for the sake of the children, and then he resigned himself that his prime was past and he was willing to “make it work.” But you’re motivated by some dream of greener pastures now that you’ve drained his wallet.

The more he goes on, the more confused I am about why Lori would ever post such a thing. Why did he put "mother" in quotes, as if to express contempt for the role? He actually could have made one good point there, that parents have to be careful not to neglect each other because the kids take up so much time and energy. But he ruined it by showing disdain towards mothers. 

       I cracked up when I read the part about treating a man like an ATM. First, Lori teaches that any wife should be happy if her husband provides an income and should not expect anything else from him. This is, quite literally, treating him like an ATM. And second, Davis himself is treating men like ATMs when the only reason he can offer for women to stay married is to maintain their standard of living! Davis is telling women to treat their husband like an ATM, and then yelling at them for doing so. In the end, I think he's just confused.  

       And bitter. "He probably stayed with you for the sake of the children." What is the point of such an acidic tone? Again, this is a hypothetical woman he is speaking to (unless he has a specific one in mind, which certainly could explain his clear resentment), so there's literally no reason to say such a thing unless he just wants to hurt people. 

       By the last paragraph, Davis abandons all restraint and leaves us with one last emotional outburst: 

Good luck. You’re probably going to wind up cashiering at Walmart and in a crappy apartment collecting cats until you get too old for that. Hopefully at that point, one of your kids will take you in. Your husband, on the other hand, will keep working and continue to put up with his situation just like he’s been doing for a few of decades now. Maybe, he’ll actually get some fishing or chess or poker in with some buddies. At least, it’ll be quiet after you’ve left.

I hardly have an idea of what to say to that. It's just....ugly. It's pure bullying, meant to terrify women about what might happen if they get a divorce, no matter the reason. Like I said before, if you have to scare someone into remaining married, there's probably some problems with the marriage that need to be addressed. I certainly don't want my wife staying with me just because she likes my income. In fact, rather than being a deterrent to divorce, this blog is more like an argument for why women should be educated and have job skills in case they do end up either divorced or widows!

       Again, if we're strictly talking about a divorce occurring just because one spouse got bored of the other, I am on the same page that this is not a good thing. But if that's the message Lori wants to communicate, any way of doing it has to be better than this. Talk about how it's natural after time (and especially kids) for it to become harder and harder to find time to work on your relationship with your spouse. Suggest going to counseling, or being deliberate about regular date nights. Point out that generally, you get out of a marriage what you put into it. Be encouraging about it, share some good advice, talk about how tragic it would be for your marriage to end (especially if you have kids). But this is just a bunch of fear-based, bullying vitriol. And in the last paragraph, Davis gets so worked up he drops the pretense and shows that he's not even talking encouraging women to say in a good marriage. Instead, he just tells them that their husbands will be happier without them. This is a very sick individual. Does Lori actually think any woman would read this and come away inspired not to get a divorce after all? 


Link to the original blog: https://thetransformedwife.com/something-to-ponder-before-you-divorce/

Thursday, September 17, 2020

Response to "What Exactly is Preaching?"

       If you've been paying any attention to The Transformed Wife page, you'll know there has been quite some drama over something Lori posted a few days ago. I won't reproduce the entire post here, but essentially Lori was commenting on an image saying Christianity is not about being perfect, but about being a sinner in need of God's grace. Lori said she disagreed with the post because Christians have been sanctified and God calls us saints now. I think both views are correct in a way and it simply depends on what we're trying to say. However, my purpose is not to analyze whether what she said is theologically correct. Many people had a major problem with her posting such a thing, because she so often claims she teaches nothing but so-called "biblical womanhood." Some were her followers, who are vehemently opposed to a woman teaching anything besides Ephesians 5 and Titus 2, whether it be from behind a pulpit or a keyboard. Others were not fans of hers but saw her post as hypocritical, since she frequently speaks out against women teaching and preaching. 

       It is in response to this mess that Lori wrote today's blog. Before we dive in, I must ask why Lori is so defensive about such things. She constantly tells women that they should be unoffendable and "ping offenses off of their shield of faith", whatever that means. And yet, she seems to be very triggered any time someone accuses her of being a hypocrite and preaching. For someone who insists women should turn the other cheek and suffer in silence, she sure isn't very silent about this. And I would think that if she truly believes she is doing the Lord's work and that her reward is not of this world, she would be less concerned with what others think of her, especially the "trolls", as she calls them. 

       As I've mentioned before, Lori never seems to clearly define what she means by "preaching." Her title suggests that perhaps we may finally get a clear answer. Without further ado, let's find out! 

Back in the days when only men preached behind pulpits, people knew what preaching was. Now that many women preach, people are confused with what it actually means. Many have accused me of preaching since I write biblical truths for a blog and social media. Do I preach? No! I teach biblical womanhood as God has commanded that older women do. Writing for a blog and on social media is NOT preaching.

I wonder what "days" Lori is reminiscing about. Though it doesn't contradict anything she is saying here, I did a little research and discovered the first woman ordained as a pastor was Mary Bosanquet Fletcher in the early 1800s. In fact, she was credited with convincing none other than John Wesley that women ought to be allowed to preach. I suspect Lori believes women preachers came about as a result of feminism, but clearly that is not so. But that's not all; there is archeological evidence that there were female clergy all the way back in the early church. Here are two interesting articles I found that elaborate: 

https://www.ncronline.org/news/spirituality/scripture-life/archaeology-and-female-authority-early-church

https://www.ncronline.org/news/theology/researcher-artifacts-show-early-church-women-served-clergy

      So Lori is off to a good start introducing her topic, but all she's done so far is tell us that many people are confused about what it really means to preach, and that writing online is not it. Let's see what else she has to say: 

If you carefully read through Acts, you will see that it was John the Baptist, Jesus, the disciples, and Paul who preached. Not one woman is told that she preached, not one. Preaching is different than teaching or writing and I am going to tell you how.

I've read through Acts many times, and I've never found in it a definition of preaching. The fact that it records John the Baptist, Jesus, the disciples, and Paul preaching does not support her point at all (actually, Acts does not include Jesus or John the Baptist preaching; that's the Gospels, but we'll let that slide). First, we must remember that the Bible does not endorse everything it records. That's why we can read all about examples of polygamy and yet don't come away thinking God approves of it. So the mere fact that all those who were said to preach are men doesn't mean they have to be, only that they were. 

       Second, Lori is starting with the idea that only men can be preachers, and then looking through the Bible to find support for that idea. That is not how we should study the Bible. If Lori were truly looking to the book of Acts to inform her on who could be preachers, she would notice Paul and all the disciples were Jewish as well. And yet, she doesn't teach that all preachers must be Jewish. Why not? Why single out their gender, but no other qualities that apply to them universally? Because she did not get her idea from the Bible, but opposed her idea ON the Bible. 

       Third, she appears to be suggesting that no one should be allowed to do anything unless the Bible records an example of someone doing it. In that case, I notice not one woman in the Bible wrote a blog, not one! 

Let’s look at this verse: “Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all long-suffering and doctrine” (2 Timothy 4:2). Does this verse mean that all of us are to preach the word? NO! This verse was written to Timothy who Paul was training to be a preacher.

That's interesting...one of the ways in which people defend women preachers is by arguing that the verses that appear to forbid it do not apply universally, but were written at a specific time, in a specific place, to a specific individual or church. I've written about this before, so I won't get into it here. I would simply like to point out that Lori hates it when people argue this way and insist that those verses apply universally. And yet, now, when it suits her, she turns around and dismisses an entire verse of the Bible by saying it was meant only for Timothy. If it was meant only for Timothy, what is it doing in the Bible? Surely Timothy is not the only one who should preach the Gospel (and if asked, Lori would agree)! But there is no indication in this verse that the others besides Timothy must be men. 

       Lori goes on to quote some old commentaries that spoke about the definition of "preaching." I won't reproduce them all here, but the main idea seems to be that to preach is "to proclaim loudly and boldly." That's it? That's the definition of "preach" that we've been waiting for? In that case, I suppose Donald Trump and Joe Biden are preaching at their rallies! Seriously, though, I guess Lori's argument is that if writes, she is not literally speaking out loud, so it's fine. But wait! I thought one of the reasons Lori gave for women being forbidden to preach is that they are more easily deceived than men, and so cannot be trusted to teach correctly? Is she saying, then, that women are more easily deceived when they speak out loud, but if they type their words, suddenly the tendency toward deception vanishes? It makes no sense and becomes nothing more than a contrived, empty rule to follow. It brings to mind the Pharisees refusing to do any work on the Sabbath, even rescuing their lamb from a pit. 

       And, for the record, one of my faithful readers pointed out recently that in Mark 16, the word for "preach" is kērussō; one of the possible definitions of this word is "publish." So perhaps what Lori does really is preaching! 

       Lori's final paragraph is so full of points I must respond to that I'm going to break it up piece by piece: 

The ministry of preaching was given to men.

No, it wasn't. There's not a single verse in the Bible saying this. As I said, finding a list of male preachers in a highly patriarchal society is hardly evidence that it must be that way for all time. Does she think God based His rules on 1st century Roman culture? The closest the Bible comes to saying this is when it says overseers must be the "husband of one wife." But this is entirely missing the point of that verse; Paul was speaking against polygamy, not women being overseers. We should not make too much of the gender pronoun, since there would have been no need to tell women they shouldn't have multiple husbands! Paul could easily have said "an overseer must be male", but he never did! 

  Preachers preach. Women are forbidden from preaching yet many do. 

There is no verse in the Bible forbidding women to preach. Those famous verses about women being silent in the churches were about maintaining order in the church, and one of the verse appears in the middle of a discussion about people randomly speaking in tongues. It was about order, not discrimination against a certain gender. What is so disorderly about a single woman speaking to the congregation? Besides, the Greek word Paul used to tell women to be silent did not mean literal silence: it was more like "to hold one's peace" and not speak out of turn. Clearly these verses are not forbidding all women for all time from preaching or holding the office of pastor, and yet there are some who so desperately try to make them say exactly that to try to conform to their man-made traditions. 

Women are to have meek and quiet spirits. Women up on stage preaching don’t have meek and quiet spirits.

Actually, all believers, both men and women, are to have meek and quiet spirits! For example, in Matthew 5, Jesus says "blessed are the meek", not "blessed are the meek women." And Timothy himself (a man) is instructed twice to be meek, in 1 Timothy 6:11 as well as 2 Timothy 2:25. Some versions use the word "gentleness" instead, but the King James Version uses the word "meek." There are also many places in the New Testament when all believers are commanded to be "quiet", because, as I said before, the word used for quiet doesn't mean literal silence, but rather holding one's tongue when appropriate. Once again, these apply to all believers, not just women. So the idea that being meek and quiet is only for women ignores the teaching of the Bible. And, since all believers are commanded to be meek and quiet, if these are disqualifies for being a preacher, I guess neither men nor women can be preachers! 

They are doing something that they are not called to do. They are to teach the young women biblical womanhood.

Here is yet another example of Lori drawing an obviously fallacious conclusion. Lori's idea of biblical womanhood is primarily based on Titus 2:3-5, in which older women are told to teach younger women to be reverent, love their husbands and children, be busy at home, kind, self-controlled, etc. But there is no indication that this is the only thing women are permitted to teach! Paul does not say "teach this and nothing else!" He simply says to teach this. Lori is adding in her own idea that the teaching of women must be restricted to these principles; there's no way around it. 

       Besides, in the verses preceding these, the older men are told to be worthy of respect, self-controlled, and sound in faith, love, and endurance. Are we to suppose these are qualities only men should pursue? Of course not! It is absurd to try to make each of these sections exclusive to each gender. Paul simply is saying "teach these kinds of things." 

God gave men the low, strong voice to proclaim loudly and publicly for a reason. Preaching is for men.

Lori ends here with this weird point. Not all men have low, strong voices, and I have no idea where Lori got the idea that some men have such voices for the sake of preaching. What about, you know, microphones? For that matter, what about women with low, strong voices? I know a few myself. Certainly Lori wouldn't allow them to be preachers on that basis. So why even bring up this point? If that's the strongest argument you have, you may need to rethink what you're trying to argue for. 

       The bottom line is that Lori has no problem flip-flopping on her burden or proof to force whatever conclusion she wishes. Unless the Bible has a verse that literally says "it is okay for a woman to stand behind a pulpit in a church building and preach to a congregation that includes men", she will not be convinced that women can preach. Yet, there is no verse in the Bible that explicitly says "it is NOT okay for a woman to stand behind a pulpit in a church building and preach to a congregation that includes men." This is classic cherry-picking. Lori, like all those who "find" in the Bible the idea that God disqualifies some from serving Him in certain says simply because of their gender, do not find that idea in the Bible at all. They find it within themselves and the cultures of past centuries, and impose it on the Bible. 


Link to the original blog: https://thetransformedwife.com/what-exactly-is-preaching/?unapproved=182088&moderation-hash=2644a78b06e15ea6a2bc38f85cbcec54#comment-182088

Friday, September 11, 2020

Response to "Warnings Against the Feminization of America."

        Here we go again...

People all over America will go to the polls soon and vote. I have heard women proclaim that people had to fight and die for women to have the right to vote as if this were a God-ordained right. This isn’t true. There was never any civil war over this issue nor is it a God-ordained right. Women “fought” (meaning they left their homes, raised their voices, and shouted for their “rights”) for the right to vote since they felt they knew better than men. They didn’t trust men to lead them in the right way. They wanted to be leaders and run things.

There's quite a lot in this paragraph. She's right, I'm not aware of anyone dying directly to give women the right to vote, and there was definitely no civil war. In a more indirect sense, however, there were many who died to give all of us the privilege of living in this great country, and one of the reasons America is so great is the right of self-government. She's correct that the right of women to vote is not a "God-ordained" right, but, notably, neither is the right for men to vote. And I'm sure Lori is patriotic enough (not being sarcastic, by the way) that she would very strongly defend men's voting rights. So what point is she trying to make by saying it's not a God-ordained right? Is she saying no one should have any rights except for those that are "God-ordained"? As I said, in that case, no one would have the right to vote. 

       As far as women wanting to vote because they "felt they knew better than men," this has nothing to do with men vs. women. Each woman is an individual just like each man is, and it is an American value that the individual have a say in his or her own governing. In a sense, we all feel we know better than anyone else how we ought to be governed, because in many cases we do. We broke away from England in order to preserve that right, and here is Lori insisting that women should go back to the way things were and allow someone else to decide how they should be governed. Which is it, Lori? Are we for American values, or not? 

      She writes for a while about a poster from the anti-suffrage movement, and then continues with her own commentary on what she considers to be the results of women gaining the right to vote: 

Ask yourself, have women stopped nagging and wanting their way since they achieved the right to vote? NO! In fact, I saw a poster recently that Iceland has complete gender equality but I am sure it hasn’t made women any happier and less complaining. Women are louder and more demanding (example: the Women’s March) than ever before even though they have more rights than ever. It’s a deep pit that is never satisfied.

Would Lori describe the men who led the American Revolution as "nagging" and "wanting their way"? How about "loud" and "demanding"? Hopefully not, and yet, if women protest against oppression, those are the words she chooses. It has nothing to do with the actual protest, or what is being protested. Lori is saying it is who is doing the protesting that makes it wrong. Men are allowed, even admired, for standing up for their rights, but women are expected to just sit down and take whatever is thrown at them. And her last sentence is completely irrelevant: at any moment in the history of our country, it has been true that women had more rights than ever before. But obviously this doesn't mean they should just stop and go away, happy with the bone they've been thrown. 

       I'll also note that Lori paints standing up for rights as if it's always selfish and about oneself, but this is simply untrue. Anytime we stand up for rights, we are also standing up for everyone else who ought to have those rights. This is why people often engage in protests for issues that don't even affect them directly. So to paint it this way is a straw man. 

       And then she mentions Iceland. I don't know enough about Iceland to comment on that, but I do notice she says "I am sure it hasn't made women any happier." She's making an unwarranted assumption based on her feelings...isn't that just the sort of thing that would cause Lori to criticize someone else for doing it? 

       She then makes an attempt to use the Bible to support her cultural, man-centered views: 

 Let’s look back at the beginning of time and see who God created to be the leaders. The first human begin He created was Adam, a man, and he was to be the leader. He named all of the animals. Then God created Eve to be Adam’s help meet to support Adam in his work, not to usurp it.

Then God chose men to be the leaders as priests, kings, prophets, patriarchs, apostles, elders, deacons, and husbands. It seems clear to me that God made men to be the leaders. Jesus could have easily chosen a female disciple but He did not.

I'll just address these briefly, because I want to get to the part where she talks about voting. Yes, the creation story shows Adam being created first, but no indication is given in the text that would mean that makes him the leader. In fact, throughout the Bible we see God turning the cultural idea of the rights of the first-born on its head; for example, God chose Jacob, not Esau, as the founder of the nation of Israel, and He chose David, the youngest of Jesse's sons, as king. So the fact that Adam was created first doesn't even come close to proving Lori's point. 

       The Hebrew word for "help-meet", ezer kenegdo, means something like "helper, corresponding to." Significantly, the word ezer is used most often in the Old Testament to refer to God helping the nation of Israel in a military sense, so obviously it doesn't imply subordination of any kind. Eve was to come alongside Adam as his equal, and they were to fill the earth and subdue it together. That command was given to both, not just Adam. Some, like Lori, try to twist the Bible to their own agenda and pretend it was Eve supporting Adam's work, but the Bible itself presents them as equals sharing in the same work. 

       Finally, we should not be surprised that most of the leaders, kings, etc., were men, since the world has been patriarchal for the vast majority of history. However, the Bible records many things it does not condone. Surely Lori doesn't think the Bible supports slavery or polygamy, but it records these in the same way. So Lori is being inconsistent in the evidence she'll accept that God supports something. Regarding Jesus' disciples, Jesus did have female disciples who helped support His ministry, they were simply part of the larger group of disciples that were not the 12 who were closest to Him. And the fact that the 12 were all men is not significant in the way Lori would like it to be, since it would have been scandalous at that time and place for Jesus to have close female followers. Remember, He was a rabbi. This says something about that culture, and that's all it says. If we make a big deal out of that, why not also insist that all leaders should be Jewish, since the 12 were all Jewish as well? Again, Lori is constantly inconsistent; she just pulls out whatever she needs to if it seems to support her point, without thinking through it very much. Suffice it to say none of this is remotely convincing that the Bible establishes men exclusively as leaders. 

       We now come to the part that made me decide to write a response to this one: 

What are my thoughts on women voting? I have been asked this frequently. I am not a fan at all. Women overwhelmingly vote Democrat. They vote for big government to take care of them which means higher taxes and more laws and regulations which means less freedoms. They vote for free health care and abortions. They vote for leftist policies which are highly destructive to the family and culture. Socialism hasn’t worked any where that it has been tried.

This is where we must ask: does Lori hate America, or does she just completely misunderstand what makes it great? We'll give her the benefit of the doubt and assume the latter. It is our freedoms and the right of self-government that set us apart! Yet, here is Lori, wishing that she could take away the right to vote from anyone who disagrees with her political views! It may come as a surprise to some of you that I actually lean fairly conservative in my political views. But I certainly don't think that gives me the right to take away anyone's right to vote, and I would never wish to do so. 

       Where does it end? Does Lori wish to remove the vote from colored people and minorities, who also tend to vote Democrat? This view, I'm sorry to say, is anti-American. And I would like to point out to Lori that if you give the government the ability to choose who is allowed to vote based on how they vote, there would be nothing preventing them from taking away the rights of Christians to vote. Would she be okay with that? 

       And yet, Lori herself votes!

Do I vote? Yes, I vote to support my husband’s vote and try to overturn a vote that is against all I believe in. I encourage conservative, Christian women to vote for life-affirming principles, smaller government, and more freedoms.

Some say she's a hypocrite for doing so. I suppose, though, that while she considers it the ideal that women wouldn't be allowed to vote, since they do, she probably figures it's better to continue voting to balance out all those who will vote differently from her. She does say that voting or not voting is not a sin, so at least she's not telling women that God commands them not to vote. On the other hand, if she truly believed in what she's saying, why not set an example and do what she believes is right? 

       In the end, I'm glad she votes, because there were strong, brave women who earned that right for her, and part of the greatness of America is that people like Lori can have a voice. Even if we don't like the message, we fight for the right of others to speak it. And that's why I'm so disturbed by her wish that those who vote differently from her not have the right to vote at all. I love America, and therefore I do not love what Lori is saying in this blog. 


Link to the original blog: https://thetransformedwife.com/warnings-against-the-feminization-of-america/?fbclid=IwAR2WjPM5EBXcvQ9SZL9hPL3W8qdCW2aQ2n3Qv4kGptcX0OKlERi5Zum9oWk

Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Response to "A Sexless Marriage is a Catastrophe for Men."

       Lori begins this weirdly titled blog with the following quote from the book "How to Be a Wife" by Suzanne Venker: 

 “Research shows men and women have affairs for different reasons. For men, it’s almost always a result of a sexless marriage. For women, it’s a result of emotional deprivation: the husband is too wrapped up in his job or his hobbies or whatever else to give his wife the time and attention she needs. That’s a great example of the research shows men and women have affairs for different reasons. Many wives are all too happy to go years without sex. For men, it’s a catastrophe.”

Forgive me if I'm a little skeptical about this "research." To be fair, I don't have the book, so I don't know for sure that there isn't a footnote with a reference to some sort of study. But we know how hastily Lori and those with similar views tend to accept and stand behind anything that appears to support their position. This particular claim demonstrates the same flaw we see in many claims like this: it is simply too broad, too simplistic. We all would like to fit the world into convenient boxes, and many especially seem obsessed with doing so when it comes to gender. But, like it or not, we are each individuals, and even when there are "tendencies" to one gender or another, that says nothing about the qualities of any individual. In short, each affair happens for a unique reason in a unique situation, and it is extraordinarily unhelpful to try to squeeze it in a neat little box. 

       That is, of course, not even to mention the all-too-predictable focus on the needs of men. But this certainly is nothing new. 

My husband mentors men.

Yes, and this causes me great concern. 

Many, if not most, of the men he mentors tells him that their wives don’t want to give them sex. It’s as if these wives have decided they don’t want it, so they don’t want to give it. They falsely believe that it’s not part of the marriage vow that they made to their husbands. They are tearing their homes down with their own hands.

Whoa, slow down! First, we need to stop using the phrase "give him sex." Sex is a mutual thing, intended for both to enjoy. It is not something the woman "gives" to the man, as if it's all about him. Of course, we know that among those who practically worship men and masculinity, the man's sex drive is quite a high priority. So this language is not surprising; but it needs to stop. 

       Second, Lori has no comprehension of the concept of nuance. She hears a generic statement that may or may not even be true, such as that most wives don't want to have sex with their husbands, and immediately decides she knows the problem and the solution. "It's as if these wives have decided they don't want it, so they don't want to give it." Wait a minute! We have no idea what might be going on in each of these nameless, faceless marriages. If one spouse is seriously opposed to having sex with the other, a good solution might be to go to a qualified counselor who can help them work through their issues. There almost certainly are a lot of factors involved, different ways in which each spouse has hurt the other or pushed them away. But in Lori's head, she's already solved the problem: the wives need to just stop it and sleep with their husbands more. Problem solved! This is a bandaid on a wound that needs stitches and antibiotics. Simply having more sex does not even identify, much less solve, the underlying problems. She can't just accuse the woman of "tearing down her home."  But, of course, Lori never seems very concerned about getting to the bottom of such things. She would rather sweep them under the rug and just pretend everything is fine. In her mind, this conflict-free, soul-less marriage is the ideal. 

The Apostle Paul commands those that burn to marry; for it is better to marry than to burn. He also commands us to not deprive our husbands for lack of self-control. Most godly men marry because they burn. They want sex. They want a wife who is available to them to meet this need.

This is profoundly sad. Lori has a terribly cynical view of men. I certainly didn't marry my wife because I was horny and wanted a female body lying around to meet that need. Imagine thinking that this describes godly men! A man who is so self-centered and unconcerned for anyone else is anything but "godly." There are many good men who value women, and their wives, as human beings with more to offer than their bodies. Tragically, it is just these types of men who are often criticized as not being "manly" enough by men who are hyper-obsessed with their own sex drives. And people like Lori actually are trying as hard as they can to convince young, vulnerable women that the latter type of man is the one they should be looking for! 

If you are married, you are to fulfill that need for your husband. If you don’t, you have some part in his seeking out porn or an affair if he does.I know women hate to hear this, but it’s true. God warns of this happening if we deprive our husbands! He commands us not to deprive our husbands because of this. Yes, if the husband begins to look at porn or have an affair, he will stand guilty for his sin but the wives will stand guilty for depriving their husbands.

No, no, no, no no no, and...no. Hasn't Lori ever read Matthew chapter 5?! Jesus was very clear that men who lust were responsible for their own sin and should "gouge their eyes out." He never blamed the women who were being stared at, never asked what they were wearing. The principle Jesus was trying to convey is clear: we are all individually responsible for our own actions. If a wife pushed her husband away for no reason and refused to have a relationship with him, she certainly is in the wrong; in that situation, he should do everything he can to try to get at the root of the problem, and likely should involve a counselor. But if he decides to have an affair, that is entirely on him. He is not responsible for her coldness, but he is 100% responsible for how he reacts to it. This is just another case of victim blaming. And I notice it is always in the man's favor. How would Lori react if a wife cheated on her husband because he wasn't fulfilling her needs emotionally? Would she say the husband is partly responsible? Of course not! I suspect instead she would write a bunch of tweets about how we are all fully accountable for our own actions! 

       Lori closes with this: 

Don’t deprive your husbands, women! Build your homes up and be a willing partner for your husband. This is a huge part of keeping your marriages strong.

And to this, I say: no, the solution is not simply to have more sex, or sex whenever he wants it. That will never solve any underlying issues. Instead, learn to love, respect, and honor each other, and treat each other as equals. If you do this, likely the sex will come far more naturally. Sex is a symptom of how things are going beneath the surface. It does no good to try to manipulate the symptom; but if we dealt with the problem, maybe there wouldn't be any need to nag us about having sex in the first place. 


Link to the original blog: https://thetransformedwife.com/a-sexless-marriage-is-a-catastrophe-for-men/

Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Response to "Feminism has Demeaned and Trivialized Women's Traditional Work."

       In her typical blunt fashion, Lori begins this blog with the following: 

 Many women falsely believe that if they serve their husbands, they are doormats. One woman wrote me recently and told me that she has never picked up after her husband because she didn’t want to be a “doormat.” She has equated serving her husband with being a doormat.

As usual, there is a lot of nuance (to which Lori is blind) that must be addressed. I agree, serving your spouse does not necessarily make you a doormat. Sometimes my wife picks up after me, and sometimes I pick up after her. Sometimes I wash her dirty dishes, sometimes she washes mine. The problem, of course, is when such service is one-sided, or when the willingness of one to clean up is taken advantage of by the other. I can't help but recall Lori's blog, "Dealing with a Messy Husband", in which she made the nonsensical claim that cleaning up is a "woman's job", as if somewhere God decreed in the Bible who should be doing the housework (hint: He didn't!). If a husband consistently leaves a mess and expects his wife to clean it up because he thinks that's what she's there for, then yes, "doormat" might be an accurate description. Spouses can serve each other, but neither should treat the other like a servant. There's a difference. 

       Lori follows this up with a comment on her Instagram page: 

“Women think they are being a ‘doormat’ for doing domestic tasks because for the last half a century, feminism has consistently demeaned and trivialized women’s traditional work to the point where many women won’t even consider it and even turn their noses up at it. I personally think that women need to reclaim this very important work of caring and nurturing and that if we did, over time the family unit could be restored, divorce and abortion would decline, and God would be restored as the center of the family.”

Needless to say, there is a major logical disconnect. But this type of reasoning is all too common among those who stubbornly cling to such wacky views on relationships. To say that it is not entirely a woman's job to cook and clean, for example, does not in any way put down cooking and cleaning! Both are very important. In fact, they are so important, both men and women should be able to do them! Such a strawman argument might as well be a flashing sign that says "I have no good support for what I'm saying!" 

Women, we were created to be their husband’s help meet! They were created to pick up after him and serve him; make his life easier.

Once again, we witness Lori's terrible biblical understanding. The Bible never comes close to suggesting that wives were created to pick up after their husband and "make his life easier." In Genesis 2, when God says He will make a "help meet" for the man, the Hebrew word was "ezer," which did not mean anything like "servant." The word was used most often in the Old Testament to refer to God Himself as He repeatedly came to the rescue of Israel. By calling the woman a help meet, the author of Genesis is conveying her equality to the man. She was to come alongside him as his partner so they could fulfill their mission in life together. The idea of hierarchy in this story is completely made up. 

 I have never once heard a man complain that he was a doormat because he had to go to work every day and work hard for his family, yet women often complain. 

Yes, if a husband lives the life Lori thinks every man deserves based on nothing but his gender, going to work and then clocking out and relaxing all evening without having to even pick up after himself, while his wife deals with all cooking, cleaning, and childcare (which is a 24 hour job), I don't think it's much of a mystery if he doesn't complain about that arrangement. 

 They seem to have more of a predisposition to complain and be unhappy. It’s probably why divorces are initiated by women up to 80 percent of the time. Women contemplate their “feelings” more than men and if they’re not happy in their marriage, they want to do something about it and it usually doesn’t involve changing themselves but their circumstances instead.

More of Lori's nonsense, unsupported, bitter claims. Perhaps Lori has a predisposition to be unhappy and complain, and therefore assumes all women must be just like her? She loves to quote her statistic about women initiating 80 percent of divorces, conveniently ignoring the fact that who initiated a divorce tells us nothing about why a divorce took place. Each situation is different, and we have no idea how many of those divorces are justified. Lori just assumes they're all because women are "unhappy." How convenient and lazy. And regarding women supposedly contemplating their feelings more than men, I suggest Lori spend more time reading the comments of her devoted fanboys; she will see far more feelings and emotion than she's prepared for! 

God tells us that the greatest of all is the servant of all. As we serve our husbands, we are serving Christ. When we pick up after them, we are picking up after Christ. Whatever we do, we are to do heartily as unto the Lord. The Apostle Paul wrote: “For though I be free from all men, yet have I made myself a servant unto all, that I might gain the more” (1 Corinthians 9:19).

Great! Did she notice Paul is a man? And yet, despite this fact, he had no delusions of the right to rule over others, but made himself a servant? Indeed, it is a wonderful thing for all of us to serve others. But Lori only believes this applies to women. I don't remember Jesus telling only His women disciples to serve others. And if Lori did admit that men must serve their wives as well, I suspect the "service" she would have in mind is barking orders and making decisions on their behalf as if they were children. 

       So, no, feminism has not demeaned and trivialized such things as cooking, cleaning, and keeping the home. If Lori would actually listen to people who disagree with her, she would find that many women who believe they deserve equality with men also love baking and other "feminine" activities. I believe it is more demeaning to these tasks to try to force women to do them exclusively. If that role is so wonderful and natural to women, they wouldn't have to be forced. These things are necessary for every household, and each family is free to determine for themselves how they split up tasks. Lori trivializes the desires of God by thinking what He is most concerned about is who does the dishes and laundry. 


Link to the original blog: https://thetransformedwife.com/feminism-has-demeaned-and-trivialized-womens-traditional-work/

Response to "Something to Ponder Before You Divorce."

         Once again, Lori is not the author of this blog; rather, it was written by Michael Davis, one of the men who lurks around her Faceb...