Examining LOOPHOLES for the Remarriage of Divorced Persons
In our day the marriage
covenant could almost be classified as an endangered species. A popular movie
several years ago was entitled “The Last Married Couple.” Each decade divorce
is easier to come by in many states. And we never know when we will find out
about some other couple who is getting a divorce. Most of us in our own
immediate families have someone involved in a divorce-remarriage situation.
Surely it is important that the church speaks clearly on what the Bible has to
say about divorce and remarriage. We must decide whether we stand on the New
Testament passages which deal with the subject, because there is much diversity
of thought.
Divorces
in Jesus’ day could be had very easily. The Pharisees came to Jesus and asked
what His opinion was of this question, and He answered them (Matt. 19:4-5) by
going back to Genesis and quoting from Gen. 2:24, “And said, For this cause
shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife, and they
twain shall be one flesh.” That is God’s ideal of marriage. That is the
original plan, and you will note that there is no room for the ending of
marriage.
Today
more and more marriages are ending in divorce. What has happened? Has God’s
ideal for marriage changed? The primary reason for the change, in my judgment,
is because the church has let down its standards concerning divorce and
remarriage. We have tried to make the Bible applicable to our day and that is always
a mistake. We must seek to make our day accord with the message of the Bible.
As we become involved in evangelism, we get into some very sticky situations.
We call for conferences and discussions and studies on the subject, trying to
see if there is a way to interpret the scriptures so that there are some “loopholes”
that would allow divorce and the remarriage of divorced persons (whose partners
are still living). Many in the church have pussy-footed around with this issue
and have said, “God can cure an alcoholic; God can cure a drug addict; God can
take away a prostitute’s desire–but oh my–if there has been a marital problem
that leads to separation, you can’t expect a young wife to go through life
without a husband.” And so the search for loopholes continues. We want to
examine some of the loopholes that have been presented in recent years in an
attempt to justify the remarriage of divorced persons.
1. The Exception Clause Found at Two
Places in the Book of Matthew.
Matt.
5:32 says, “Whosoever shall put away his wife, saving for the cause of
fornication, causeth her to commit adultery; and
whosoever shall marry her that is divorced committeth
adultery.” Matt. 19:9 repeats the same exception. The exception clause (“except
it be for fornication”) is usually understood to mean that divorce and
remarriage is okay if sexual unfaithfulness has happened on the part of one of
the married partners. But before we get too deeply into the meaning of the
words, it is important that we notice to whom Matthew is written. The gospel
according to Mark was written primarily to the Romans, and the exception clause
is omitted. The book of Luke was written to the Greeks, and the exception
clause is omitted. Matthew was written primarily to the Jews,
and the exception clause is included.
Undoubtedly
Matthew had the Jewish wedding custom in mind. When a young man wanted to marry
a girl, he traveled to the house of the prospective bride, negotiated a price
for the girl, established a covenant of betrothal, and then returned to his
father’s house for a period of about twelve months. The betrothed bride and
groom were called “husband” and “wife” even though there was still no physical
union. The marriage ceremony (and physical union) only occurred after the
twelve-month period of separation. And the exception clause found at two places
in Matthew refers not to marriage divorce, but to a betrothal divorce. If the
young man discovered that his prospective bride had been unfaithful during the
period of betrothal, he could return her to her father with a paper of
divorcement.
The
exception clause was not included in Mark and Luke, because Greek and Roman
marriage customs did not recognize the betrothal provision and so it was not
necessary for them to even mention the exception. Notice however, in the
exception clause, that the word is “fornication”–not “adultery.” Fornication
speaks of sexual relations between two unmarried people. There are times in the
scriptures when “fornication” is used to speak of all illicit relationships,
but notice that in this particular portion of scripture, the words “fornication”
and “adultery” are used in contrast with each other (in the same setting), and
when that happens in the Greek language, the two words cannot mean the same
thing. So we find that what Jesus is saying here is not that divorce and
remarriage are okay if sexual unfaithfulness has developed after marriage, but
what Jesus is clearly saying is that the engagement can be broken if sexual
unfaithfulness has happened during the betrothal period.
This
is the provision that Joseph was going to use when he discovered that Mary was
expecting a child (See Matthew 1:18-20). So we find that Jesus, in this first
(so-called) loophole, is not making room for divorce and remarriage after the
marriage has been consummated (if there has been sexual unfaithfulness), but
the exception is a provision for the breaking of an engagement (if sexual
immorality has occurred).
2. The Question of Whether Adultery
is a State or a Single Action.
The
Bible clearly says that whenever remarriage occurs, adultery results, and that
is pretty much accepted by almost every Bible reader. Adultery is identified in
every passage where the remarriage of divorced persons is mentioned. But the
important question is this: Does adultery take place in the act of becoming
remarried, or does it exist in the state of being remarried? If adultery is
just the act of remarriage, then a couple who is remarried can go to the Lord,
confess that sin, and be forgiven, and go on living together and not be guilty
of adultery until such a time when they split up again, and go to the Lord
again and confess that sin, and be free again until they split up again and go
and confess again. If adultery is merely a single act, then that is how the
process can work. The act can be forgiven like any other sin can be forgiven.
Notice
that in the Bible accounts, Matthew, Mark, and Luke all use the term “commits”
(“committeth”) adultery. The phrase is in the present
tense, which in Greek nearly always denotes a continuous action. Romans 7:2-3
clearly uses the continuous action tense when it says, “She shall be called an
adulteress.” Furthermore, we are told here why the remarriage of divorced
persons is adultery. It is adultery because the first marriage is still
binding. People talk in our day about “ending” marriages. You can’t do that. It
plainly says in Romans 7:2 that the wife is bound to her husband as long as he
lives. It is not divorce, but death, that ends marriages. The only thing
that divorce does to a marriage is to make adultery legal in the eyes of the
government. As long as a former mate is living, the original marriage union is
secure in God’s eyes, and that is a state of marriage.
When
one of the married partners separates from the other and joins himself to
someone else, that does not free him from the state of marriage that he is in,
but instead, it enters him into a state of adultery. First, the remarriage act,
and then the state of being remarried, constitutes adultery. Just like the act
of becoming married leads one into the state of matrimony, so the act of
becoming remarried is adultery that leads one then into the state of an
adulterous relationship.
This
is not the popular point of view, but it is the biblical view. If you are going
to be honest and read Romans 7:2-3 carefully, you cannot come up with any other
conclusion. I know that Paul is not speaking specifically here to the point of
divorce and remarriage, but what he is doing is using an illustration about our
relationship to the Law. Nevertheless, the truth about divorce and remarriage
is clear.
The
adulterous relationship resulting from a second marriage is an on-going
intimate relationship, and thus is not a one-time act of adultery but a
continuing state of adultery.
3. The Case of Remarriage that
Occurred Before the Couple Became Christians.
What
do we do with the situation where a young man or woman has married and divorced
and married again (maybe as often as three or four times), and then they come
to know the Lord as Saviour? The argument is that we
certainly cannot hold that against them, because they did it when they were
non-Christians; surely God forgives all that. But Mark 10:5-9 indicates that
marriage is a divine institution which was ordained by God from the beginning,
and it is not particularly a Christian institution. Mark 10:6-9 says, “But from
the beginning of the creation God made them male and female. For this cause
shall a man leave his father and mother, and cleave to his wife. And they twain
shall be one flesh…What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put
asunder.” Jesus says that marriage is binding in all cases, and it was that way
from the beginning, not just since the beginning of the Christian era.
One
term which helps clarify the all-inclusive nature of God’s marriage laws is the
word “whosoever.” The word “whosoever” is used seven times in
the New Testament references to marriage and divorce and adultery. It is
used frequently in the New Testament in reference to salvation, and whenever it
is used, it always means “all inclusive, anyone, everyone.” (Note the use of
the word in John 3:16). It does not matter if one is from Asia, Europe, the islands of the sea, or a small American
village–whosoever meets the conditions of salvation shall not perish. It is all
inclusive. And just so, when the Bible uses the word in connection with
marriage–and talks about “whosoever shall put away his wife and marry another, committeth adultery”–it is likewise all inclusive. That is
true whether the person is from a culture which has spoken against the
remarriage of divorced persons or is from a society where remarriage is not
frowned upon. The marriage vows are binding upon all, whether Christian or not.
Some
quote from 1 Corinthians 7:17, 20, 24 and say that the Bible tells a person to
remain in the same condition in which he was when he was first saved. This
becomes a loophole for justifying the remarriage of divorced persons who
remarried while they were still unsaved. But we need to look at the setting of
the 1 Corinthians 7 passage. Paul is talking about two
things–circumcision and servanthood. He says that if
God calls you and you are not circumcised, don’t bother getting circumcised.
And if, when you come to know the Lord, you are a servant (a slave), don’t bother trying to free yourself. Stay where you were
when you were called. Paul is not talking about sin and wrong living. He is not
saying, “If you are a murderer, just continue being a murderer.” He is not
saying, “If you are a liar, keep on lying.” He doesn’t say, “If you were a
fornicator, keep on in your immorality–that’s okay.” Proverbs 28:13 makes it
clear that God wants all of us to turn from sinful living.
John
the Baptist lost his head defending this principle. Mark 6:17-18 tells how John
the Baptist had said that it was not lawful for Herod to have his brother’s
wife. Herod was not a Jew. Herod was not a Christian. Herod was a typical
representative of the Mideast
culture. John was talking about God’s eternal law–the law which from the
beginning was one man and one woman in the marriage relationship. John said to
Herod, “It is not lawful for you to have her.”
Marriage
is binding on all–whether Christian or non-Christian. Hebrews 13:4 says so. It
is important to notice that neither Mark nor John recognized Herod’s second
marriage as valid. Mark (in 6:17) describes the woman as “his brother Philip’s wife.” That is whose wife she was, even
though Herod had married her (Mark 6:18). She wasn’t Herod’s wife. Herod was
living with her in adultery. She was Philip’s wife. God does not recognize the
second marriage because the first marriage is binding until death. That is an
eternal principle settled in the eternal counsels of God. Marriage is not just
a Christian institution; it is a broad, general institution, and therefore it
is binding whether you were married when you were 14 in the ghettos of New York
City or united in marriage at age 25 in a typical Brethren wedding ceremony.
From God’s point of view, all marriages are binding and can be broken only by
death.
4. The Argument that an Innocent
Party has Certain Freedoms
First
off, it is doubtful that there ever is “an innocent party” in a marriage
conflict. I don’t know of any case where there has been a marital separation in
which one of the parties was totally innocent. I agree that there are different
degrees of fault, but to say that someone is innocent is a pretty big
statement. There are exceptions to the general rule, and so we should look at
how the Bible would deal with the conflict if someone is indeed innocent.
What
about the person who has experienced marriage failure and seems totally
innocent of any wrongdoing which led to the divorce? Is it proper for that
person to remarry? The latter part of Matthew 19:9 records the words of Jesus: “...and
whoso marrieth her which is
put away doth commit adultery.” Jesus does not say why the woman was divorced.
Perhaps she didn’t cook right, or maybe she ran off with another man, or she
may have combed her hair in a way that displeased her husband. At any rate, one
who marries another who is divorced involves himself in an adulterous
relationship. God is saying that the marital relationship is so sacred that
there are no exceptions–even if one of the parties is innocent. 1 Corinthians
7:11 says that we need to keep the marriage intact because in marriage we are
involved in a covenant relationship, and we need to keep our part of the
covenant even if the other party breaks his or hers. Even if there is such a
thing as “an innocent party” in a marriage conflict, there is still no right to
remarry.
Some
quote from 1 Corinthians 7:15 and conclude that the Bible says in certain
situations people “are not under bondage.” These people would say that if you
are married to an unbeliever, and the unbeliever departs, you are free from the
bondage of marriage–as free as if you had never been married. But what Paul is
talking about in this passage is that we are not bound to follow after the
departing individual and serve him as a slave. If you are married to an
unbeliever and the unbeliever chooses to leave you, then you do not have to
feel that since you are a Christian wife, you have a marital obligation to
follow him around, knock on his door, and say, “I’m here. I want to cook your
supper; after all, that is my obligation and responsibility. I’m your wife.” He
slams the door, moves to another apartment, and gets an unlisted phone number,
and somehow you find out what the number is and call him up and say, “Where are
you living? I’ve got to come.” No, the Bible says you are free from that if the
unbelieving partner departs and doesn’t want to have anything to do with you,
let him go. You are not bound to keep following him, serving him, and hounding
him. Let him go. God has called us to peace.
To
interpret the passage any other way would contradict other verses in the same
chapter (1 Corinthians 7). Verse 11, for example, says, “Let her remain
unmarried.” There is something binding about the first marriage. The married
person is always to let the door open for reconciliation. Down in verse 39 of
the chapter, we read that the wife is bound as long as the husband lives,
regardless of how he treats her or what he does to her. Only death
terminates a marriage. Therefore the word “bondage” in verse 15 (of 1
Corinthians 7) dose not mean that one is free from the bond of marriage if
serious conflict arises.
There
is a Biblical way to experience God’s blessing when tangled marriage situations
are present. There needs to be a voluntary separation of the partners who are
wrongly married. True, the remarried divorcees sometimes seem happy together.
They have a family and home. Yet the real solution is to separate.
We
find that the children of Israel
were involved in sinful marital relationships, and Ezra 10:11 says that they
were instructed to “separate yourselves from...the
strange wives.” Ezra 10:44 says that in some of the families children were
involved. There were probably some young men and women in that camp who were
deeply in love with each other, yet all of us must be reminded that “the way of
transgressors is hard.” Sometimes there is no easy way out.
An
important principle related to some of the tough issues in life is found in 1
Peter 2:19-21. Verse 20 says, “If when ye do well and suffer for it, [and] ye
take it patiently, this is acceptable with God.” We are encouraged to suffer
for righteousness’ sake. It is never pleasant, of course, to encourage
suffering. Our flesh-nature shrinks from suffering, but nevertheless God’s plan
sometimes requires that, in this present world, we are going to suffer for
righteousness’ sake. I believe that is God’s perfect will. But God realized
that there are some people who will not be able to stand up to that. Thus in 1
Corinthians 7:10-11, the Lord gives a permissive will related
to marriage: “Let not the wife depart from her husband. But and if she depart,
let her remain unmarried, or be reconciled to her husband; and let not the
husband put away his wife.” God does allow married partners to separate if the
relationship between them becomes too strained. When separation occurs,
however, there are only two options–to remain unmarried or to become reconciled
to the married partner. Once again, there is no provision for divorce and
remarriage.
Also,
Jesus talked about a “eunuch solution” to marriage problems (Matthew 19:10-12).
Some are “born” eunuchs–born without the ability or desire to be involved
sexually with another person. Others are “made” eunuchs–desexed
by doctors so that they could be used in certain capacities for their master.
Also, there are some who “make themselves eunuchs” for the kingdom of heaven’s
sake. We often say that it is too much to ask a person to go through life
without enjoying the blessings of marriage. But Paul says in 1 Corinthians 7:8
that singleness is a good choice to make. He gives reasons in 1 Corinthians
7:32-34. God calls some people to remain eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven’s
sake. We should exalt this position as an option for our young people. God has
a real blessing in store for those who choose that direction. Isaiah 56:4-5
informs us that God holds a special place in His heart for those people who are
willing to forego some of the otherwise acceptable pleasures of this life for
the kingdom of heaven’s sake.
Surely, if God has
special blessings and grace for those who choose a life of singleness for the
kingdom of heaven’s sake, there will be sufficient grace for those who have had
unfortunate marriages and are determined to go through life without remarrying
(as long as their mate is living). Every faithful disciple of Christ needs to
do what he can to encourage and help victims of divorce who choose to obey God
in the matter of not taking the route of remarriage. &
By David Myer