Matthew
19:3-9; I Corinthians 7:10-16
The church is not only the Body of Christ, but it is
also the Bride of Christ (Rev. 19:7-9). This twofold relationship was
foreshadowed in the Garden of Eden when Eve, taken from the body of Adam,
became his bride. Marriage then is a type of the relationship between Christ
and His Bride. It is an institution divinely ordained of God and should be
regarded as holy even as the church’s relationship to Christ is holy. Thus the
command is given en Eph. 5:25-27).
Divorce has rapidly increased until now
approximately one marriage out of five ends in divorce. Among the reasons for
this increase of divorces is a decrease in the influence of the Bible and Bible
standards of living, a decrease in sex morality, the feminist movement with its
emphasis on the independence of women, and the increase in the percentage of
people who come to adulthood and marriage without any discipline in the home,
without respect for authority.
When people are converted and set out to live
according to the standards of the Bible, divorces decrease. The Bible teaches
that marriage should never be broken except by death, that the only legitimate
reason for divorce is continued adultery, that is, fornication, and
that Christian people can readjust wrecked happiness, re-grow marital love. The
home where there is disagreement, quarreling, broken vows, abuse, and even
hatred, can be made into a happy home by the grace of God.
MARRIAGE IS A LIFETIME CONTRACT
In the teaching of Jesus on the question of marriage
and divorce, several plain facts stand out, facts that should not be forgotten
or overlooked.
1.
One comes to marriage leaving father and mother and all else. The husband is to
“cleave to his wife”.
2.
Of man and wife it is said, “The two shall be one flesh.” A man and
wife actually become one. A husband and wife literally become one in the bodies
of their children. In a normal and happy marriage, man and wife become a part
of each other in a spiritual sense so that breaking the marriage is like
rending the body apart. In their thoughts, customs, aims, enjoyment, hopes, and
interests a man and wife become one.
3.
God Himself seals every marriage, making it official and binding. People are
not always wise in their marriage choices. They do not always do right to
marry. Whether the marriage is good or bad, God Himself seals it and joins the
husband and wife together. God makes every marriage binding. So the Lord
says, “What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder.”
The Bible has two verses on divorce and remarriage,
Deuteronomy 24:1-4, Matthew 19:4-6. If
there is a conflicting verse between the Old and the New Testament, the New
Testament verse will take president. The New Testament is the moral rule that
the church should follow.
What the Bible says about divorce is clear, if two
Christians are married to each other. There is no such thing as divorce. In
fact, another verse in the Bible which is in the Old Testament says, “For I
hate divorce!” says the Lord, the God of Israel. “To divorce your wife is to
overwhelm her with cruelty,” says the Lord of Heaven’s Armies. “So guard your
heart; do not be unfaithful to your wife.” (Malachi 2:16)
Other Scriptures bear out the same teaching that
marriage is binding until death (I Cor. 7:39). After one’s mate dies, God gives
the privilege of marrying again. But all marriage is intended to be a lifetime
contract broken only by death.
Under the Mosaic Law, violation of the marriage
covenant was punishable by death (Lev. 20:10). Under the time of Grace, the
death sentence was suspended and the violator was given a chance to repent.
This was exemplified in Christ’s pardoning of the woman taken in adultery (Jn.
8:1-11).
DIVORCE PERMITTED UNDER THE LAW; BUT, UNDER GRACE,
FOR ONLY ONE CAUSE
When the Pharisees came to Jesus tempting Him, they
asked if a man could put away his wife for every cause (Matt. 19:3) Jesus
conceded that under the Mosaic Law this was permitted, but only because of the
hardness of their hearts. Because of this hardness of heart, God had said, “I
gave them statutes that were not good” (Ezek. 20:25). The divorce law was not
good, but God gave it to them as it was the best provision that could be made
under the circumstances. But from the beginning, God did not intend this. God
never sanctions divorce except for the cause of fornication.
Jesus disapproved of divorce. Since we have been
told that a person is bound by the law of the marriage partner until death, why
did Jesus make this exception? This statement may be understood in the light of
Deuteronomy 22:13-21. Here the law declares that if a man takes a woman for his
wife and he discovers that the tokens of her virginity be lacking, she is to be
condemned to death by stoning. The following verse (22) also added that
violation of the marriage vows was punishable by death.
By the commission of this sin, the violator of the
marriage vow forfeited life. Thus, if the penalty of the law were carried out,
the guilty partner of the marriage died. The significant point to note in this
connection is that death breaks the bond of marriage.
If people will accept the honest position that
marriage is to be dissolved only by death, they will be slower to marry. They
will also be slower to go into sin which might ruin the happiness of marriage.
But marriage is not to be broken for any reason but fornication.
The Scriptures indicate that no divorce is
recognized by the Lord unless one of the mates has been guilty of fornication.
A couple, divorced on unscriptural grounds, is still regarded as married in
God’s sight (Matt. 19:9). A married person in taking another wife or husband
commits adultery because he is already married. When a man takes a divorced
woman whose marriage was not broken by fornication, he is taking a married
woman. God still counts the marriage binding until it is broken by fornication.
No one should ever plan to get a divorce for drunkenness, nonsupport, cruelty,
desertion, incompatibility, or for any reason other than for persistent adultery,
called fornication.
FORNICATION BREAKS THE MARRIAGE AND ALLOWS DIVORCE
When Jesus said there should be no
divorce “except it be for fornication,” we have to fully understand
what the sin of fornication is. The word for fornication is the Greek
word “Porneia,” the term for whoredom. The word, in the Greek,
has the same root as does the word for whoremonger and the word
for a harlot. So what Jesus meant to say was that unless the wife played
the harlot, or unless the husband were a whoremonger, divorce should not be
sought nor granted.
A careful checking of the use of the
word “fornication” in the Scriptures shows that it is an inclusive
word. All adultery is fornication, but not all fornication is adultery.
Adultery, generally speaking, refers to an act in which at least one of the
persons is married. Fornication, on the other hand, may include illicit
relations of unmarried persons, adultery, incest, homosexuality, sodomy, or
other perversions.
In the Ten Commandments, “Thou shalt not commit
adultery” covers all sexual sins. The Ten Commandments not only forbids
immorality on the part of married people but also rebukes the same sin by
unmarried people. This is clearly seen in the reference in Jude 7, to the
judgment on Sodom for its perversions. Likewise, when the apostles wrote to the
gentiles “to abstain...from fornication” (Acts 15:20), it is clear
that they were not referring just to unmarried persons but to the whole
Church. In the Bible, the word adultery is used for a single act of
illegitimate intercourse, while the word fornication is used for a course of
whoredom or harlotry.
Lost in the debate over the exception clause is the
fact that, whatever “marital unfaithfulness” means, it is an allowance for
divorce, not a requirement for it. Even when adultery is committed, a
couple can, through God’s grace, learn to forgive and begin rebuilding their
marriage. God has forgiven us of so much more. Surely we can follow His example
and even forgive the sin of adultery (Ephesians 4:32). However, in many
instances, a spouse is unrepentant and continues in sexual immorality. That is
where Matthew 19:9 can possibly be applied.
Though God permits divorce for fornication, He
does not require it. Jesus never commanded, nor is there any statement in the
Bible, that marriage necessarily ought to be broken for any sin or any cause.
The Lord permits divorce for fornication, that is whoredom by one of the
mates, but He does not demand it.
WHY DOES VIOLATION OF THE MARRIAGE COVENANT CARRY SO
SEVERE A PENALTY?
These days when moral standards are so low, it is
possible that some may think that the penalty for the sin of fornication is too
severe. Actually, the penalty is in keeping with the seriousness of the sin.
1.
Violation of the marriage vow is a betrayal of the most sacred trust of human
life.
2.
It is a violation of Divine law.
3.
It destroys the sanctity of the marriage and the home.
4.
It is a sin against the body, the temple of the Holy Ghost.
5.
It involves the possibility of bringing into the world an illegitimate child.
6.
The violation of the marriage law usually results in ruining the happiness of
other innocent persons.
The Bible makes it abundantly clear that God hates
divorce (Malachi 2:16) and that reconciliation and forgiveness should mark a
believer’s life (Luke 11:4; Ephesians 4:32). However, God recognizes that
divorce will occur, even among His children. A divorced and/or remarried
believer should not feel any less loved by God, even if the divorce and/or
remarriage is not covered under the possible exception clause of Matthew
19:9.
The phrase “and marries another” (Matthew 19:9)
indicates that divorce and remarriage are allowed in an instance of the
exception clause, whatever it is interpreted to be. It is important to note
that only the innocent party is allowed to remarry. Although not stated in the
text, it would seem the allowance for remarriage after divorce is God’s mercy
for the one who was sinned against, not for the one who committed the sexual
immorality.
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