LOVE, SEX, AND THE FRAGILE EGOS OF MEN
Art Marmorstein
Professor of History Northern
State University
A Greek philosopher once defined man as
a rational animal. If you
think about it at all, you will realize that this is a terrible definition.
Man may be a thinking animal, but much of what men do, maybe even
most of what they do, is neither logical nor rational. Euripides
was far
closer to truth when he described men as full of conflicting, irrational
desires, creatures that were very hard to understand, especially in regard
to their treatment of women.
What motivates men? What is it that
men want? In particular,
what is it they want from women? Sigmund Freud tried to sort out
men's desires by pointing to three divisions within the mind, the id, the
ego, and the superego, all of which may want different things. But
Freud seemed to believe that what really motivated men was the libido--
essentially, sexual desire. This is also what Darwin taught.
According
to Darwin, men, like other animals, are simply striving to survive and
to
reproduce. Thus what they want is as much sex as possible with as
many
women as possible.
But all this is a great mistake. What
men want, deep down, is not
unlimited promiscuous sex but something rather different. What men
really want is to win the love of a princess (or of a girl who deserves
to
be a princess), to fight against great obstacles, to deliver her from
dragons or a wicked witch of a stepmother or some other great danger,
to marry her, and to live happily ever after.
This is the universal fairy tale.
It is the same in every civilization
from Egypt to China, from England to India, from Africa to the
Americas. Nor is it the theme of fairy tales alone. Most great
comedies
(in particular Shakespearean comedies) center around the struggles of
hero and heroine to overcome the obstacles to their love, and almost
invariably the denouement is a wedding. This is one of the few really
satisfactory happy endings in literature--and in real life as well.
There is no question that this is still
what men want today. When
I tell the story of Osirus to my World Civilizations classes, I tell my
students that Osirus had the most wonderful thing any man could
possibly have, and then I ask them what that is. Invariably, the
answer
from the men in the class is "a good wife" (or sometimes, more
colloquially, "a hot wife.") There is never any other answer.
No one
ever says "two wives," or "a harem full of beautiful women," or "ten
thousand one night stands." The answer is always one good wife.
This,
then, is a man's almost universal dream.
But this gives rise to a question.
If what men really want is one
good wife, why do they behave as they do? Why are so many
promiscuous? Why do so many cheat on their wives? One reason
is that
for many men, maybe even most men, this dream, the dream of the love
of one good wife, gets shattered in one way or another, particularly in
our society today. And when this dream is shattered, something goes
devastatingly haywire with men. As an example, consider King David.
The story of David at first reads much like
a fairy tale. David is a
poor shepherd boy, youngest son of a large family. He does many brave
deeds and wins the love of a princess, Michal, daughter of King Saul.
The king, however, is jealous of David and sets him an impossible task.
You want to marry Michal? Fine. Bring me a hundred foreskins
of the
Philistines as a bride price. David welcomes the challenge and soon
produces the required foreskins. Saul grudgingly consents to the
marriage, and Michal and David live happily ever after.
Well, not quite. Saul, now even more
jealous, tries again and again
to kill David. Michal, risking her father's displeasure and her own
life,
contrives to help David escape. Then Saul does the cruelest thing
he
could possibly do to David. He takes David's princess bride and gives
her to someone else, Phalti the son of Laish.
This is a crushing blow to a man's ego.
When the woman he loves
ends up in bed with another man, something goes haywire in his mind,
and while on the whole David is a good man, he cannot escape the
consequences of this deep hurt.
Notice that one of the first things David
does while he is fleeing
from Saul is to find another wife. He chooses Abigail, a beautiful
and
clever woman, who should have been able to take Michal's place in
David's life. But David is clearly not content. He soon takes
another
wife, Ahinoam the Jezreelitess. Still not enough. II Samuel
3 lists four
more wives, Maacah, Haggith, Abital and Eglah.
Question: how many wives does it take to
satisfy a man who starts
out on the road of polygamy? Answer: always one more. Solomon,
who
ended up with 700 wives and 300 concubines, said that among those
thousand women he had not found the one that his soul sought.
Another question: what can be found in one
woman that cannot be
found in a thousand? Answer: what a man's soul truly seeks.
Solomon
would have found happiness had he been faithful to his Shunamite bride,
and David would have been happy had he been able to maintain his
relationship with Michal.
But are David's problems really the result
of losing Michal?
Absolutely. Notice David's conduct during the civil war that followed
Saul's death. David little by little had gained the upper hand in
this long
war, but Saul's son Ishbosheth, backed by the very able commander
Abner, was putting up a fierce and determined resistance to Davidian
rule. Finally, however, Abner had had enough of Ishbosheth and
decided to make overtures to David. David's reply to Abner's message
is fascinating, "Thou shalt not see my face, except thou first bring
Michal, Saul's daughter, when thou comest to see my face." To
Ishbosheth himself David is equally insistent, "Deliver me my wife Michal
which I espoused to me for a hundred foreskins of Philistines."
There is a civil war going on. David
has a chance to end it and to
consolidate his rule. But he won't even negotiate unless he gets
his wife
back first. Poor diplomacy, but very much in accord with what lies
deepest in a man's heart.
David does finally get his wife back, but
not to live happily ever
after. David's ego had been too badly wounded for the relationship
to
survive. This is clear in the next exchange the Bible records between
Michal and David.
David has brought up the Ark of the Covenant
to Jerusalem.
Michal has seen him dancing joyfully at the head of the procession and
for some reason finds David's display of emotion embarrassing. She
greets David with stinging words, "How glorious was the King of Israel
to day who uncovered himself to day in the eyes of the handmaids of his
servants, as one of the vain fellows shamefully uncovers himself."
In
other words, "David, you made a fool out of yourself."
David, not surprisingly, is angry, and insists
that his dancing was
for the Lord. The writer of II Samuel concludes this episode by telling
us that because of this "Michal had no child unto the day of her death."
Most infer from this that God punished her with childlessness as a result
of her rebuke to her husband. It seems to me more likely that it
is really
David who punished her by refusing ever to sleep with her again.
And
yes, men are so touchy, and their egos are that fragile.
But David was not finished with his cruelty
to Michal. On a later
occasion, it was necessary for David to choose for execution some of
Saul's descendants to settle a blood debt. David could have chosen
whomever he wanted, but five of the seven he chose were children Michal
had been raising for one of her relatives. Again, it's clear that
David is
going out of his way to hurt Michal. And yes, men are so vindictive,
and
their egos are that fragile.
And then there's the story everyone knows,
the story of David and
Bathsheba. David, no doubt still hurting as a result of the problems
with
Michal, sees Bathsheba bathing. He sends for her, gets her pregnant,
tries to deceive her husband into thinking the child is his own, and then,
failing in this, arranges the death of the husband. Through all this,
David doesn't even seem to realize he's doing anything wrong.
Nathan the prophet drives it home.
He appears before David with
a story. There were two men, one rich, one poor. The rich man
had
many flocks and herds, while the poor man had only one ewe lamb which
he loved as a daughter. A traveller arrived at the rich man's house,
and
since the rich man didn't want to kill any of his own animals to provide
for the guest, he took the poor man's lamb and slaughtered it.
As David heard the story, he became furious.
"The man who has
done this thing ought to die!" he shouted.
Nathan turned on him and simply said, "Thou
art the man."
Now David wakes up to the appalling thing
that he has done. Why
did he do it? It seems to me clear that the root cause is the bad
bruise
to his ego when he lost Michal.
But notice: this was none of Michal's doing.
Her father forced her
into marrying another. Imagine the hurt to David's ego-or to any
man's-
-if the woman he loves deliberately chooses another.
Imagine, for instance, a handsome prince,
the kindest, strongest,
richest, ablest of men, the most eligible of bachelors, the one all the
girls
want for their husband. He chooses for his wife a slave girl, paying
an
exorbitant price to buy her freedom. He clothes her in the finest
clothes,
gives her extravagant gifts, treats her as well as any man can treat a
woman. And she repays him by cheating on him every chance she gets,
at first secretly, then more and more openly. He forgives her again
and
again, but she responds to his forgiveness with more abuse, bringing her
lovers to his own bed. What should a man do with a woman like that?
I have bad news for you. You are that
woman. Or rather, we, all
of us, are that woman.
The Lord Jesus bought us out of slavery
at the exorbitant price, the
price of His own blood. He has given us the greatest gifts imaginable--
and we repay him by cheating on him right and left.
I think most of us understand the pain a
man goes through when
the woman he loves in unfaithful to him, but I don't think we understand
enough the pain we cause God by our unfaithfulness.
Can we really hurt the almighty God?
The scriptures tell us over
and over again that we do. One of the images most used for God is
of
that of a man whose wife has been unfaithful. Jeremiah and Hosea
are
dominated by this image, and the first commandment admonishes us that
God is a jealous God. We rationalize this away--God can't really
be
jealous, can he? Quite plainly, he is.
But how can we hurt the almighty God?
The answer to this lies in
the essential nature of God himself. We err if we think of God primarily
in terms of his power. God is powerful, but he is not power.
We err
also if we think of God primarily in terms of his knowledge. God
knows
all things, but he is not knowledge. The scripture tells us that
God is
love, and it is because God is love that we can hurt Him.
The Lord cares for us every bit as
much as a man who loves his
wife--and we hurt him when we respond to His steadfast love with
constant unfaithfulness. Keith Green expressed the problem well:
Everyone's laughing at Jesus. The
funniest thing that He's done is
to love this poor, stubborn, rebellious
world while its hate for Him
just goes on.
The whole history of the world is the sad
story of man's
unfaithfulness to God. But there is a happy ending to this story--the
happiest of happy endings. It ends, as it should, with a marriage,
the
wedding supper of the lamb. It will be the greatest of all weddings,
and
it is a wedding to which we are all invited, not merely as spectators,
but
as participants.
And the Spirit and the bride say come.
And let him that heareth
say come. And whosoever will, let
him take of the water of life
freely.
For those who respond to the invitation,
to those who will love,
honor and obey Christ, to those who will forsake all others and give their
full devotion to Him this is the greatest of all promises. It is
a promise
of forgiveness, restoration, and hope. It is a promise that we will
live
happily ever after. Above all, it is the promise that we will find
that
deep, faithful love that men (and women) truly want above all other
things.
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