Cited in Q&A to press the claim that Aisha's permission to play with dolls indicates she had not yet reached puberty.
Invoked in an audience question as a verse about divorce after consummated prepubescent marriage, which Nadir rejects as an encouragement of child marriage.
Reintroduced during audience Q&A as the basis for asking whether Aisha's doll-playing implies she had not yet reached puberty at consummation.
Quoted by John to argue that Aisha was still prepubescent at consummation because the report states her age and mentions that her dolls were with her.
Used in reply to argue that the Numbers 31 context concerns Midianite women blamed for leading Israel into sin, rather than serving as a defense of child marriage.
Raised as the main biblical counterexample against Christian moral criticism, with the passage presented as permitting the taking of virgin girls after warfare.