Was King Solomon Nagged by His Wives?

By: As A Lily Among Thorns by Rudy U Martinka
 
ELMHURST, Ill. - Dec. 21, 2013 - PRLog -- King Solomon is renowned for his wisdom. Having purported to have had 700 wives and 300 concubines, he surely must have must have experienced being nagged. After all, he did state “nothing is new under the sun” and the proof that he experienced nagging is evidenced in his proverb.

This proverb I interpreted to show a personal characteristic of King Solomon by what he did when his wives nagged him. What caused a wife to nag Solomon and whether or not he may have deserved her prompting is another topic about Wisdom and Folly.

The following is a book excerpt in which I surmised the answer he gave Bilqis, the Queen of Sheba about what he did when his wives nagged him.

*Excerpt

“Naamah came to me a little while ago and told me you were going to order me to stop burning incense. What will your punishment be if I refuse? Tell me Solomon, if you ordered me to be cut in half, which half of me would you most desire?”

She sauntered both hips seductively before she asked in an enticing manner. “My left half, or my right half?”

Then she smiled and made a face as if another thought suddenly came upon her and stated. “I have a better idea. Why don’t you order Naamah’s nose be cut off so she can no longer complain about the smell of my incense.”

I started laughing. The Pharaoh’s daughter wit entertained me.

“Solomon, you will have to enlarge this palace if my incense displeases Naamah.” She stated in an instructive tone.

“Siamuna, try to explain why you burn incense. Maybe Naamah will understand it is a part of your beliefs and be more tolerant.”

I thought silently to myself, Naamah would not care about Siamuna’s Egyptian beliefs and customs. However, they may at least talk to each other and that might help reduce my hearing their nagging complaints between them. A man is better off being alone in a corner of a roof outside alone than having to listen to a nagging wife in a big house. It is better to live at the corner of a roof, than to share a house with a nagging wife. (Proverb 21:9)


( PS. Buildings in ancient times did not have basements. Rooftops were used often by the dwellers similar to how family rooms or dens are used today.)

*Source:

As a Lily among Thorns - A Story of King Solomon, the Queen of Sheba, and the Goddess of Wisdom by Rudy U Martinka

Now available as an e-Book (http://rudymartinka.wordpress.com/as-a-lily-among-thorns-...) at all sellers.   View beginning excerpts @


http://amazon.com/gp/search?field-author=rudy+martinka&index=books

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