Description: Description: Description: Description: Description: Description: Description: Divorce and Remarriage Repentance Revolution

 

Josiahs Scott

 

 

There is a forsaken Truth that most don’t dare to embrace. And those who do, find themselves going against the tide and facing opposition all around. Will you dare to believe what the Bible says about divorce and remarriage?

 

 

www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com

 

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Last updated: 11/16/2011 11/12/11

Table of Contents

Contents

Preface Information and Explanations. 7

1. Considerations, Contact, & Copyright 7

The Website for this Book – www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com.. 7

We are in “Beta Stage” – Please Help Us with Corrections and Feedback. 7

If You Are Poor, Please Contact Us With Questions. 7

Technical Copyright Information. 7

2. How To Use This Book. 8

Hebrew and Greek Basics. 8

Representing More Advanced Details From the Ancient Languages. 8

MT vs. LXX – Old Testament Source Texts. 9

Genesis 2 Example – What Do All Of These Details Have To Do With Marriage?. 9

Notes Concerning Genesis 2 and the New Testament 10

Important Appendix Resources – Where I Document a Lot of My Extra Research. 10

A Heart for True Salvation. 11

Chapter 1 – Demanding A Revolutionary Return to The Garden. 13

1. An Initiating Call… (An Introduction) 13

2. The Ancient Marriage Teaching. 14

A. The Original History of Degradation. 14

B. Jesus Restored the Reverence of One Flesh to His Church. 15

C. Scriptural References for ‘The History Of Degradation’ and ‘Restoration of One Flesh Reverence’ 16

D. Approaching Today – How Does Jesus’ One-Flesh-Reverencing Garden Revolution Look Now in Our Generation?. 18

3. It is Time to Re-Reverence The Creation of One Flesh. 19

Genesis 2 – The First Husband and Wife. 19

Mat 19 – Jesus on The First Husband and Wife. 20

“Bound” – For Life. 20

GOD is The One Who Binds – No Wonder It’s Permanent! 21

To Be Glued/ “Joined”. 21

Death Has Always Loosed a Spouse. 24

A Summary of Being “Glued”/ “Joined” and “Bound,” Together 26

The Lawful Outcome of One Flesh – “Marriage” is Cohabitation in The Bible. 26

4. Salvation Never Alters Your Marriage Covenant 34

The Marriage Covenant Applies to Everyone, Before and After Salvation. 34

Marriage Covenants Are Love-Debts that Continue After Salvation. 34

Salvation Has No Bearing on the Validity of Marriage Covenants. 38

2Co 5 – We Must Believe that “All Things Have Become New” – WITHOUT HYPOCRISY! 39

College Debts Teach Us about Marriage Debts. 40

1Co 7 – The Command to Remain With a Pagan Spouse Proves Salvation Does Not Change One Flesh. 41

Summaries of Salvation and Marriage – It is Absolutely Clear that these Standards Apply to Everyone! 41

Chapter 2 – Divorce, Adulterous Remarriage, and Real Repentance. 43

1. Some Basic Terminology. 43

The Biblical Words Behind “Divorce” in English. 43

Defining and Understanding Geographical “Separation”. 44

Remarriage After Divorce? – No Permissive Statement Given. 45

2. Deuteronomy 24 – A Brief Preview Summary of The Mosaic Law of Divorce And Remarriage. 45

A. A Brief Summary of Deu 24:1-4. 45

B. Basic Notes About Deu 24:1-4. 45

C. The Great Mystery Surrounding Deu 24:1-4. 45

3. Malachi 2 – God’s Surprising Opposition of Divorce and Astonishing Persistence in Affirming Original Marriage! 46

Malachi 2 Prep – A Necessary Technical Textual Explanation. 46

Malachi 2 – A Source Text Summary: God Opposes their Divorce and Reaffirms their First Marriage. 47

Meshing Malachi Together to Clearly Demonstrate its Implications on this Issue. 47

4. Matthew 5 – The Clear New Covenant Proclamation Against Adulterous Remarriage! 49

Matthew 5 – Divorce and Remarriage Is Adultery. 49

Matthew 5 – Immutable Truths that Jesus Taught About Adultery. 49

Matthew 5 – Some Basic, Undeniable Facts about What Jesus Said. 50

Matthew 5 – 4 Ways Men Become Guilty Concerning Adultery. 50

Matthew 5 – Some Ways Women Become Guilty Concerning Adultery. 51

Matthew 5 – It is Clear and Certain that these Standards Apply to Everyone. 52

Matthew 5 – The Seriousness of Adultery. 52

5. The Rest of Matthew and the Gospels Confirm this Strong Opposition Against Adulterous Remarriage. 54

Matthew 19 – Divorce and Remarriage is Adultery. 54

Mark 10 – Divorce and Remarriage Is Adultery. 55

Luke 16 – Divorce and Remarriage Is Adultery. 55

6. The Epistles Agree with Jesus and Make it Absolutely Clear that Divorce and Remarriage is Adultery, Without Exception! 55

Romans 7 – Only Death “Looses” (Ends) One Flesh, and Marrying Another Before this Makes a Woman An Adulteress. 55

First Corinthians 7 – Remain Unmarried: The Only Option After Divorce. 57

First Corinthians 7 – Only Death “Looses” (Ends) One Flesh. 57

7. A Summary of Some of the Main Divorce And Remarriage Passages, and “the Missing Exception Clause”. 57

8. The Basics About Repentance from Adulterous Remarriage. 58

Religious vs. Biblical Repentance. 58

What Is Real “Repentance”. 58

Deu 29 – You Can’t Make Yourself Forgiven Apart From True Repentance. 59

You Can’t Continue To Sin and Go To Heaven. 59

Maintaining a Remarriage After Divorce Is Continuing to Sin Because Jesus Called it “Adultery”. 60

We Have Got to Start Taking Repeated Acts of Adultery Seriously! 62

Jesus Called It Adultery and Ascended into Heaven! Anathema* to Anyone Who Tries to Change This! 63

Repentance Pragmatics. 64

How to Repent of Adultery. 64

God Positively Judges Adulterers. 65

Choose This Day Whose Testimony You Will Believe! 66

9. Distinguishing Sins. 67

All Sins are Not “Created Equal”. 67

Condemned Sins. 67

10. How to Face Ignorant Adultery. 68

Is Ignorant Adultery Still Adultery?. 68

Biblical Fact: Ignorant Sin Exists – If you Don’t Believe, Repent! 69

Ignorance Means Less Punishment, Not Immunity. 69

Punishing Ignorant Sin is in Accordance with the Divine Standard. 70

Gen 12, 20, 26, and Mal 2 – The Bible Specifically Teaches that God Punishes Ignorant Divorce and Ignorant Remarriage Adultery  71

Ultimately, God Spares Faithful People From Ignorant Sin – So Ignorance is No Excuse! 74

11. A Few Basic Principles That Demand Repentance from Adulterous Remarriage. 75

The Law of Non-contradiction – God Does Not Change His Mind. 75

Our Awareness of the Sinfulness of “Fornication” Testifies Against Us. 75

The Root and the Branches – Are We Talking Holiness or Unholiness Here?. 76

12. A Few Grammatical and Contextual Principles That Demand Repentance from Adulterous Remarriage. 78

The Present Tense and Continual Context of “Adultery” in Greek. 78

A Very Simplified Overview of Some Greek Grammar Considerations. 78

The Context of Continual Action is Even Clearer than the Grammar 79

13. Confronting and Condemning the Hypocritical Excuses to Not Repent of Adultery. 81

The False Accusation of Teaching “Unforgivable Divorce”. 81

I Warn Everyone Everywhere: This is What It Means and This is What it Looks Like to Remain in Adulterous Remarriage. 83

14. The Law of Moses vs. Remarriage Repentance? – First We Need to Go Over Some Basics. 84

God Related to the Israelites’ Flesh From a Distance. 84

First the Flesh, and Then Adaptations For Its Sin. 85

The Spiritual Solution is the True Solution. 86

Don’t Misapply the Old Covenant Against the Flesh of New People. 86

First, We have No Right to Judge the Law of Moses. 87

The Law is Not Sin. 88

Hebrews 8 Says The People Are the Problem, Not The Law! 89

What Does this Mosaic Marriage Law Show Us?. 91

15. The Divine and the Mosaic Aspects of the Law of Moses Both Proclaim Truth to Us About Remarriage! 91

God’s Special Friend Moses. 92

“Of Moses”. 92

Jesus is a Prophet Like Moses. 93

16. Deuteronomy 24 Did Not Allow Reconciliation After the Defilement of Remarriage. 95

Deu 24 - The Mosaic Law of Divorce And Remarriage. 95

Things to Notice Concerning Deu 24. 96

17. God’s Call to Return To The First Spouse. 97

Jesus’ Amendment of Deuteronomy 24 (Specifically Verses 1-2) 97

Jeremiah 3 – The Lord’s Amendment of Deuteronomy 24. 97

Return! – God’s Clear Proclamation Through Jeremiah! 98

A Notable Textual Variation – The “They Say” in the Current Hebrew of Jeremiah 3. 99

Jesus & Jeremiah 3 – Notice the Change! 100

Hos 2, Isa 50, & Jer 3 – The Prophecy of Return, Even After The Officialness of God’s Divorce Certificate! 100

Hosea’s Prophecy of Return and Amendment of Deuteronomy 24. 102

A Repeated Heart Expression. 105

Malachi 2’s Amendment of the Mosaic Divorce And Remarriage Permission. 106

18. 2Sa 3 – David’s Example: He Returned to the First 107

We Must Continually Submit to the Examples Given to us in the Bible. 107

David Did Something that We do not Agree with. 108

David and Jesus’ Example About Sacrifice and Offering. 108

David and Jesus’ Example About The Sabbath. 109

Jesus Repeatedly Approves of David’s Authoritative and Prophetic Examples. 109

2Sa 3 – David and The Lord’s Example About Divorce And Remarriage. 109

A Summary of Sacrifice, Sabbath, and Returning to the First After Remarriage. 110

19. The Mosaic Death Penalty Explains Deu 24:4 and Returning to the First 111

Deu 24:4 – “That the Land be Not Defiled…”. 111

Mosaic Death Penalty Legislated. 112

Mosaic Death Penalty Enforced. 114

Mosaic Death Penalty Amended. 114

The Law – The Highest Order of Social Justice. 117

How Does the Death Penalty Relate To Marriage?. 120

Conclusions About the Death Penalty and Returning to the First 120

20. A Summary of Returning to the First 121

21. The Seven Examples that Demand True and Complete Repentance From Unlawful Marriage! 123

Ezra and Nehemiah Broke Up Forbidden Marriages. 123

We Must Still Obey Ezra and Nehemiah Today In the New Covenant 125

John The Baptist – The First Martyr for God’s New Testament Teaching Against Adultery. 126

The Adventure that John the Baptist Calls Us To. 128

The Divine Proclamation of The Seven Examples! 129

Chapter 3 – “The Exception Clause”. 130

1. Introductory Facts About the Exception Clause. 130

What is “The Exception Clause”?. 130

What’s Behind the Modern Use of “The Exception Clause”? – Wicked People Always Want to Break God’s Yokes. 130

Common Myths About Adultery Freeing a Person to Remarry. 131

Adultery Cannot Be The One Exception Allowing Divorce. 132

Adultery Cannot Allow Remarriage. 133

BIG Dilemma: The Exception is Only in Matthew! 133

2. Does Porneia Show that the Exception Is for Adultery or Prostitution/ “Fornication”?. 134

The Very Basics of “Fornication” vs. “Adultery” in English. 135

Scenarios of Sexual Sin. 135

Porneia – One of the Main Exception Words We Need to Understand. 136

How Translations Represent and Misrepresent Porneia. 136

Defining Porneia – Charting the Linguistic Development of Porneia, and Every Single Occurrence and Variation Throughout the Entire Bible! 136

Defining Porneia – Several Important Summaries. 143

Defining Porneia – Clear Examples Where Porneia is Sometimes Used to Specifically Address Fornication. 145

Porneia vs. Adultery – Sometimes there is Contrast 148

The Question that Arises: How Can the Divorce Exception Be Before Marriage?. 149

3. Jewish Betrothal Explains the Fornication-Exception. 149

The Gospels Were Written to Specific Groups. 149

Matthew Was Uniquely Written to the Jews. 149

Both The Verbal and the Written Gospels Were Audience-Specified Proclamations. 151

The Separation of Jews and Gentiles May Trip Us Up On Understanding Marriage. 152

What is “Jewish Betrothal”?. 152

Basic Betrothal Concepts. 153

Some Basic Biblical Examples of Betrothal 153

Matthew 1 Requires a Qualification to Be Made in Chapters 5 & 19 – The Exception is in Matthew Three Times not Two. 154

Why Didn’t Joseph Have Mary Stoned? – This Actually Teaches Us A Lot About Jesus’ Exception! 155

4. A Word of Prostitution/ “Fornication”? – Logos in Matthew 5! 158

The Confirmation of Porneia in the Betrothal of Deuteronomy 22. 158

The Discovery of Logos in Matthew 5. 159

The Problem: Logou Porneias Seems Like a Phrase!?. 160

The Answer to Logos in Mat 5: The Greek Old Testament! 161

Judah and Tamar – A Word of Porneia in Gen 38?. 164

A Summary of Logos. 165

5. The Context of the Exception Clause Demands a Betrothal-Exception. 165

Reckless and Sloppy Claims Against Betrothal 165

The Most Basic Contextual Needs – Submission and Diligence. 166

Matthew 5 & 19; Mar 10 – Jesus Did Not Re-teach Moses – Jesus Taught that Deu 24 Tolerated Evil, NOT that ‘Moses Really Meant to Regulate Something Good’ 168

Stop Fragmenting Porneia; Submit to the Clear Command! 170

Deu 22 and Beyond – Facing the Fact of Divorce During Betrothal 171

The Common Fornication-Divorce that the Rabbis Constantly Dealt With. 173

The Two Divorces in the Law of Moses – The Solid Context For Betrothal! 174

6. Matthew 5 Shows that the Exception Does Not Allow Remarriage. 176

Matthew 5 and 19 Focus on Two Different Things Concerning Divorce and Adultery. 176

The Ridiculous Attempts to Apply The Exception to the Second Half of the Verse. 177

7. None of the Ancient Source Text Variations of Matthew 19:9 Permit Remarriage. 179

Variation #1: The Textus Receptus and Other Traditional Sources Allow Divorce, But Not Remarriage. 180

Variation #2: The Byzantine Majority Text And Some Alexandrian Texts Say “Not Upon Prostitution”. 181

Variation #3: A Minority of Alexandrian and Caesarean Texts Have Matthew 5’s Exception in Matthew 19. 182

Variation #4?: Mixed-up Versions that Allow Remarriage?. 182

Variation #1 and #2 – The Two Primary Exception-Options. 183

8. So What Should We Do With All Of These “Exception Variations”? – Summaries of Solid Proclamations from Matthew 5. 184

From Mat 5 to 19 – Repetition of the Exception Proves that Remarriage is Not An Option. 184

Matthew 5 Helps us With Matthew 19. 185

Matthew 5 – The Divorce and Remarriage Teaching in The Sermon on the Mount 185

9. Recognizing More Specifically Why None of the Variations of Matthew 19 Allow Remarriage. 186

Matthew 19 Translation Appeals Before We Go into More Details. 187

Matthew 5 vs. Matthew 19 – The Difference Between Exception Words in Variation #1. 188

The Early Church’s Understanding of the Greek of Mat 19. 189

General Problems with Matthew 19:9 in English Versions. 190

The Parenthetical Nature of The Matthew 19:9 Exception Clause. 191

“Only Upon Prostitution” Grammatically Accomplishes Something. 192

Some Natural Examples that Agree With the Parenthetical Nature of the Exception Clause, Even in English! 194

Examples Where Translators Know that Ei Mē, Specifies Rather than Making an Exception. 196

Origen Confirmed that “Only” Is A Reasonable Representation of Ei Mē for Matthew 19:9. 199

Charting the Greek of Mat 19 Helps Us More Exactly Understand This Verse. 199

A Summary of Why Matthew 19:9 Does Not Allow Remarriage. 201

10. The Spiritual Parallel Confirms Both Betrothal and No Remarriage. 201

God’s Engagement is a Betrothal! 201

Jer 2 – Divorce is Possible During Betrothal to God, But Not After The Marriage Feast 202

God is Not Looking for Others to Marry After Divorce. 205

The Jewish Surprise Marriage. 206

Temporary Divorce: The Only Option Allowed and Exemplified By God Himself. 206

Real Christians (Who Go to Heaven) Follow God’s Example. 207

11. The True Exception Has to be Consistent With The True Revolutionary. 207

Jesus Taught Something Revolutionary. 207

Will We be The Same Old Pharisees, or Revolutionary Disciples?. 208

Chapter 4 – First Corinthians Seven. 210

1. Summaries of First Corinthians Seven. 210

2. 1Co 7 – Paul vs. “The Pauline Exception”. 211

A. What is it? – Defining the “Pauline Exception”. 211

B. The Fact That Paul Uses Two Different Words Disproves It 212

C. The Context of First Corinthians 7 Disproves It Beyond Any Doubt 214

D. That Which Motivated, Predated that Which was Created. 214

E. Summaries and Conclusions About the “Pauline Exception”. 215

Chapter 5 – Applications of The Teaching. 217

1. Warning: Pastors are Propagating the church! 217

The Compromised church – Locked in Bondage to Death, Darkness, and Sin. 217

Some Serious Biblical Warnings About Pastors. 218

Don’t Lie About Divorce And Remarriage. 220

Some Questions to Ask Yourself As A church Person and or Leader 221

2. The REAL Problem: Prioritizing People Before God! 221

Pastors and church Leaders are No Different than School Kids Who Compromise Out of Peer Pressure. 222

The Root of The Apostasy. 222

church People Have the Same Problem that Other Unbelievers Have. 223

Either We Repent or We Fall 223

A Right Priority for Love – It is Time We Finally Loved God FIRST! 223

The Solution is Prioritizing Jesus… Who is The Truth. 224

3. Your Stance on This Issue is Not Morally Neutral 225

4. We Should Be Right Ourselves Before Opposing Other People’s Sins. 225

5. Experience – The Bible Actually Works When You Believe and Obey it 226

6. From the End of This Book to the End of this Age. 228

An Overview of Appendices. 228

Explanations. 229

Divorce And Remarriage Track. 229

A Translation and Analysis of the Primary Divorce and Remarriage Passages. 229

Exception Clause Research. 229

Extra Notes on Church History. 229

Marriage Statistics. 230

Works Cited. 230

Bibliography and Glossary. 230

Bible Studies Referenced In This Teaching. 230

 


Preface Information and Explanations

 

1. Considerations, Contact, & Copyright

General things to consider when you read this book

 

The Website for this Book – www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com

You are encouraged to visit the official website for this work, www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com, which is a sub-ministry of my main website, www.TrueConnection.org. Here you can view this entire book in its most up-to-date form as a webpage (HTML), download it as a PDF, follow the many “live” links throughout this work, find the short PDF “track” version of this teaching, and much more.

It should be noted that the most official and up-to-date version of this book, including the appendices and all other components on up to the main teaching itself should always be considered to be the versions that are online. Please check online for all corrections and updates. In many ways, especially initially, these things are printed simply as a convenience and as a help for many who would find it challenging to spend hours online reading them from a computer screen.

 

We are in “Beta Stage” – Please Help Us with Corrections and Feedback

When reading this work, please consider emailing me with feedback: Josiahs@TrueConnection.org. This book is still in “Beta stage,” and especially because of this, we need all of the help we can get with this “work in progress,” especially in preparation for future revisions and printings: Feedback goes a long way, and is deeply appreciated.

Because of the magnitude of this book and the infinite nature of truth, we expect to be updating this book frequently. If God permits, we expect to be making major revisions and significant updates a year or more after printing this book, and will need to print more correct and helpful copies very soon after the first “Beta Release.” Whatever you can do to help us find and make these critical changes is very needed and appreciated. If you give us another year of prayer and pursuit of truth, it is sure with God’s help that we will not only have many corrections, but also many more exciting and critical additions that we will be constrained to add to this book, making major updated printings in the near future nearly unavoidable, as long as God may let us live and work for His good proclamation.

    Beta Proposal: If you read through your printed copy of this beta printing and mark up a lot of corrections and parts that you think need clarification and mail it back to me, then (as long as I can afford it) I can plan to write you down to automatically receive the next printing as it may become available.

 

If You Are Poor, Please Contact Us With Questions

Contact us if you have more questions about divorce and remarriage in general, or this book project specifically. We are especially here to help if you are in troubled and complicated relationship situations, and want to do what is right and Biblical. Male and female helpers are usually available for prayer and counseling as needed: www.trueconnection.org/Main_Pages/Contact.html

 

If you are poor, humble, and in need of truth, we are here to help.

 

Technical Copyright Information

Copyright © Josiahs Scott, All rights reserved*
7/12, 7/28, 11/25, & 12/7/2002; 3/10, 11/14/2003 (versions: A-D); 4/23/2004 (A-E); 1/25 – 9/4/2006 (A-E), 1/29/08 (A-D), 3/6/2009-2010; 2/25/10-4/23/10 (A-O); (other dates); 7/13/10-9/21/10; 11/7/10; 11/26/10-12/25/10
(CAB & Mal2 were first finished); 12/26/10 – 2/14/2011; 2/15/2011 – 11/12/11

 

* This notice serves as a record of revisions that this book has undergone, as well as a method to avoid having anyone ever misuse it with bad motives. This means that this book is officially copyrighted to protect it from those with money in mind, and to preserve it for free redistribution, especially in the unlikely event that someone might think to make money off of it rather than maximizing its distribution. You are permitted and encouraged to copy and redistribute this work in its entirety, by means of standard copy machines or electronic documentation as long as you make no money off of it. If you wish to reproduce this work on larger scale, mass-production equipment, please contact me at Josiahs@trueconnection.org. You may also quote this document, by citing the reference as:  Divorce and Remarriage Repentance Revolution” By Josiahs Scott, www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com

 

2. How To Use This Book

The important, unique features that you will need to keep in mind when reading this book

 

Hebrew and Greek Basics

The big picture on how critical Hebrew and Greek details affect the contents of this book

Essentially, the Old Testament was first written in Hebrew (with a little Aramaic), and then we also have it officially translated into Greek, while The New Testament was mostly simply written in Greek (with the exception of at least Matthew and Hebrews) so at various times, we English speakers need help extracting Scripture out of imperfect representations of the Bible.

I am a student of the original languages so as to be as accurate and truly Biblical as possible. Whenever I correct or clarify a translation, I often do so by inserting corrections and or important facts within [brackets] and sometimes marking out inaccuracies. I also translate some passages myself especially when I cannot find a translation that accurately represents what the actual Greek or Hebrew says. I call this, “Jos.Trans.” which is short for “Josiahs’ Translation,” and this is covered in detail in the Bibliography.

    But beyond these basic translational needs, there are also more advanced details from the original languages that often need to be represented in technical abbreviations and symbols…

 

Representing More Advanced Details From the Ancient Languages

Methods I use for communicating and abbreviating the more technical needs of Hebrew and Greek in English

 

Note: Most of these things are explained in much more detail in the Bibliography (including many of the symbols I use here).

Within a number of the Bible passages quoted throughout this work, I have added numbers alongside many of the words to indicate a reference to the original languages. Each number that you can find is based off of the standard convention as established and assigned by Strong’s Hebrew and Greek Dictionaries (James Strong, S.T.D., LL.D., 1890; See “Strong’s” herein). Each number is a standard reference to a Hebrew or Greek word so that the English reader can quickly and easily secure a dictionary definition with virtually no knowledge of the original languages, simply by looking up each number. With this I have conformed to a contemporary adaptation of this convention by adding “G” or “H” (as done by e-Sword Bible software) next to the numbers to indicate whether I am referring to a Greek or Hebrew definition.

I also use the common conventions for some advanced abbreviations and terminology representing very technical details about Greek grammar (see RMAC and ALS herein). Please see the Bibliography at the end for more details to better understand these grammatical tools for Greek that I use in this work.

As you can see, I have gone to great lengths to hold myself accountable as much as possible to the reader by including such details that I present throughout this work, so that if you wish, you may look up and verify the statements that I make here, and see for yourself if they are factual.

>> Give examples of complicated [quotations] hereG4202 + Grammar/ RMAC

 

MT vs. LXX – Old Testament Source Texts

Whenever quoting from the Old Testament, I consistently try as much as possible to quote from whatever ancient version of each Old Testament book it is that is used and preferred by Jesus and the Apostles. Please don’t let this alarm you too much if this means that a number of Old Testament quotes in this book will be somewhat different from most printed Bibles available today, since most of what we use today is almost always based off of the current version of the Hebrew text of the Old Testament, which is called the “Masoretic Text” (see MT herein).  Since this version of the Hebrew was somewhat given to us and standardized through the Jews in the midst of their rejection of Christianity (and the Christians use of the ancient Jewish Greek Old Testament), let it seem reasonable to the readers that I would prefer to differ from the majority and defer to the wisdom of Jesus and His Apostles when needing to determine which ancient version of the Old Testament is most correct and appropriate to use in each quotation.

If in many places the New Testament demonstrates that we should quote from the Greek Old Testament (LXX) and not the current Hebrew (MT) because of the differences, then so be it, because this is one of the places that we could actually and accurately say in truth, “if it was good enough for Peter and Paul [and Jesus Himself] then it is good enough for me.”

To most effectively understand many of the abbreviations that I use and some of the advanced references that are made in this book, it is helpful to know some basic things like the fact that when talking about the various versions of the Old Testament, “MT” commonly stands for “Masoretic Text,” (the current Hebrew Old Testament) and “LXX” stands for the Greek Septuagint (the Greek Old Testament that the New Testament and early Church frequently used). To learn more about these things and many more important details, see the topics in the Bibliography entitled: “LXX” and “MT.”

 

Genesis 2 Example – What Do All Of These Details Have To Do With Marriage?

You might wonder why we have to go over all of these details about source texts and advanced facts about languages when this is supposed to be a book about marriage, divorce, and remarriage? Well, it turns out that the need for source text details can even be seen when looking at some basic, foundational statements Jesus makes about the nature of marriage when we consider an important Old Testament quote from two different source texts and compare it with the Words of Jesus and Paul when they quote from this passage. Which one of the source texts (MT or LXX) makes the most sense to use as our base text:

 

Chart: Genesis 2 – in the MT, LXX, and GNT

OTMT

What we usually use

Gen_2:24 …and…

they

shall be one flesh…

KJ2000

Translation

OTLXX

What the NT usually uses

Gen_2:24 …and…

The[y] two

[Greek:

οἱ δύο]

shall become one flesh…

[Greek: εἰς σάρκα μίαν]

CAB

Translation

NT

Mat_19:5 and

they two

[Greek:

οἱ δύο]

shall be one flesh…

[Greek: εἰς σάρκα μίαν]

KJ2000

Translation

NT

Eph_5:31 …and…

 

they two

[Greek:

οἱ δύο]

shall be one flesh…

[Greek: εἰς σάρκα μίαν]

KJ2000

Translation

Note: OT = Old Testament; NT = New Testament; MT = Majority Text (the Hebrew Old Testament we usually use today); LXX = The Greek Old Testament that the New Testament usually uses

 

Notes Concerning Genesis 2 and the New Testament

·       Did you notice that the Greek of Gen_2:24 (i.e. the LXX) is exactly the same as the Greek of Mat_19:5 and Eph_5:31?

·       Did you notice that the Old Testament LXX agrees more with Jesus and Paul’s quote than the Hebrew Old Testament (MT) that we usually use?

·       Did you notice that KJ2000 cannot even represent Gen_2:24 (from Hebrew) the same as it does Mat_19:5 and Eph_5:31 (from Greek), and you have to look somewhere else (i.e. the LXX) to find the specific reference to “the two” which Jesus and Paul are capitalizing on?

·        Have you ever noticed that in Mat_19:5 Jesus uses the LXX (Greek) to teach about marriage, and He even re-emphasizes the differences of the LXX yet again in the following verse by repeating the LXX word, “two”:

 

Mat_19:6 WEB  So that they are no more two, but one flesh…

 

With Jesus even repeating and emphasizing the differences that are not in our Bibles, it is clear that Jesus and Paul not only read the LXX version of Gen_2:24, but they also clearly based their very teaching about the nature of marriage on this Greek Old Testament text, and not the current version of the Hebrew that is behind our versions. As for this book, in seeking to compile the most authoritative resource possible on marriage, it only makes sense to use the same types of texts that Jesus and the Apostles trusted and passed down to us in their teachings, and viewed to be authoritative enough to base their teachings on, especially because some of these elements that they declare to us are not in our Bibles today.

All of this is only a very small example of all that has gone into the background of compiling this book. Many more examples can be seen as you read, and are frequently marked in gray with words like, “Technical Source text Note.”

 

Important Appendix Resources – Where I Document a Lot of My Extra Research

The Appendix Resources are the extra resources at the end of this book that have important helps and documentation for those who are willing and able to do further reading

I highly recommend readers to frequently refer to the extra resources at the end of this book, especially whenever there is information or terminology that a reader is not familiar with. It is almost impossible to tackle many of the challenging things in this book without going into the complicated details that lie behind many issues, and we usually end up unearthing many forgotten facts of advanced research. While I have labored many countless hours to present these things in the clearest way possible without sacrificing truth, there is a very likely chance that you will need to glance at these resources to fully understand some of the complicated things that are referred to and addressed throughout this defense of one flesh marriage.

This “Appendix” area of the book is also sometimes where I might include all of the thorough documentation for my research when it becomes too long, complicated and detailed to insert in the middle of this work.

Out of all the tools and resources that I have added to the end of this book in the appendix section, the Bibliography and Glossary is probably one of the most critical features which I have poured much labor into, and I anticipate it will be worth your while to avail yourself of all of the information and definitions in this resource. Many of the unusual words and terms that you can find in this book are defined back in the Bibliography and Glossary. If you find a word or some complicated terminology that you need to understand that is not in this appendix resource, then please email me so that I can have the option of adding it to future additions of this book.

The abbreviations that I use for the names of the books of the Bible, and the documentation for all of the Bible versions that I reference and many of the other Biblical tools that I use are all given in the Bibliography and Glossary.

 

For the printed version of this book, please see the table of contents at the beginning of this book for an overview of these extra resources at the end.

 

A Heart for True Salvation

For all clarity and confirmation: The notable need for the details of source texts and ancient languages is definitely not our greatest need! If we would simply be faithful with what we already have, it would be enough to call us to desperate brokenness and repentance. By far our greatest initial need is not for more novel information, but for some actual obedience to that which is more or less already been made accessible to us all when we clearly read in the Words of Jesus the demand for repentance from living in sin, and His call to forsake all to follow Him (Luk_14:25-35). It is time we saw some church people actually repent with sackcloth and ashes and great morning for sin, so that we may all have some faint hope of salvation from a merciful God who comes with real salvation in His wings!

I write this book with an excited but burdened heart, because I care for the True salvation of all people, including so many church people who say that they belong to Jesus, most of whom do not. If you are rich, and filled with the affirmation of your own life and have consolation from your own wealth of experiences and understandings but are willing to endure with this book despite your competence in these matters, then I would ask you to either repent quickly (Mat_3:6-12) or stop reading this book:

 

Mat_3:7 CAB But seeing many of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming to his baptism, he said to them, “Brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath?

 

In the same way, I am not here to entertain rich people but I have only written this book for poor and humble people who are serious about obeying Jesus and being hungry for truth, because only poor people can be saved (ex. Mat_5:3-13; Luk_6:20-26). I have not written in this book anything that pertains to benefiting people who are already filled and confident (as in 1Co_4:8-13), and unwilling to repent to conform to the Bible (like 2Co_7:6-11 displays). And ultimately, what is your heart or soul really worth* anyway, unless at some point we lay hold of a basic and desperate commitment to obey the Bible, no matter what? Nothing in this book or even in the Bible itself will truly benefit any of us until we cry with a desperate plea:

 

Rom_3:4 Jos.Trans.** ...let God be true, but every man a liar; as it is written, that you may be justified in your words, and overcome in your being judged.

See Also: “Prioritizing Jesus

 

[* “worthless people”: Jas_2:20 (ἄνθρωπε κενέ – empty/ vain/ “worthless” man); Jer_2:5; Rom_1:21; Gal_6:3; Zec_11:17 (i.e. H457/ G3152); (Also compare: Psa_94:8-11; 1Co_3:20; Jas_1:26)]

>> add: ‘Heart of little worth’ (Pro?)

[** “Jos.Trans.” stands for “Josiahs’ Translation” – which is directly and literally from the Greek (as seen in the Bibliography)]

 

May all that read this follow Him truly, by courageously taking a hold of the truth.


Chapter 1 Demanding A Revolutionary Return to The Garden

Considering The Garden, One Flesh, Marriage, the Apostasy from the Garden, and the Call to Embrace the Revolution From Jesus!

Chapter 1 – Proclaiming a Revolutionary Return to The Garden!

The Revolutionary Call to Return To The Garden!

The Revolutionary Command to Return To The Garden!

The Revolutionary Mandate to Return To The Garden!

The Revolutionary Decree to Return To The Garden!

The Revolutionary Call to Return To The Garden!

The Revolutionary Call to Return To The Garden!

 

Proclaiming

Demanding a Revolutionary Return To The Garden!

From the Garden to Fighting to Restore a Revolution!

The Apostasy from the Garden and The Revolution From Jesus

 

1. An Initiating Call… (An Introduction)

An Initiating Call to Revolution

/An Initiating appeal

 

There is a forsaken truth… will you dare to believe it?

 

Greetings to all who read and hear this message, and may favor, goodness and truth be given to you to obey the Scriptures when reading this book.

My name is Josiahs Scott, and I hope as you read throughout this book that I have written for you, that you will be willing to consider what the Bible says about divorce and remarriage no matter how hard it is to accept, knowing that it is worth whatever the cost to come into agreement and obedience to Jesus. If we are in a lifestyle that the Bible condemns, turning away from it is the only way we will escape from the wrath of God that is coming upon the earth for those who don’t believe Him enough to obey Him.

God obviously has a lot of Love for mankind, and desires all of us to inherit Heaven with Him, but unfortunately most never answer the call to obedient faith in Him because they consider the price to high. Tragically in this day and age, this compromise holds true both outside and inside what we call the modern church.  Going to church, or even being a leader in a church, in this day is no indicator as to whether or not a person has prepared their heart for Judgment by keeping Jesus’ commands.

 

What if your pastor doesn’t believe it? What if your parents reject it too? Are you still willing to believe the Bible no matter what the cost?

 

From numerous years of praying and experience in both standing up for, as well as teaching on this issue, I have found that it is not made unpopular because of its interpretive complexities.  But instead I have found that this teaching is almost always unwelcome by most people because their actual amount of dedication to Truth does not match their creed and profession of faith.  So many think and say that they are willing to die for their faith, but when it comes to sitting down and believing simple Bible verses, they suddenly back off. “What gives?”

 

Would you believe the Bible if it cost you your life? What if it cost you your reputation, your job, and your most cherished relationships in life? Would you still be ready to forsake all to follow Him?

 

The following Bible verses just might be the most controversial Bible verses in the whole world, because not even most of the visible (modern) church believes them anymore.  I know this may be hard, and it may hurt deeply for many who read this, but know only with a surgeon’s hands do I cut for your good, with a Love for God that is prioritized far above your comfort, and with full assurance that His truth is the only thing that is in our best interest and will make us free.

Here are only some of the main Bible verses about divorce and remarriage...

 

>> DivRem List – I need to: (1) make sure this is polished (2) make these all linked

Adultery Condemned

Exo_20:14/ Deu_5:18; Lev_20:10; Deu_22:22-24; Pro_2:16-19; Pro_6:23-33; Jer_5:7-9; Jer_29:21-23; Eze_23:43-47; Mal_3:5-6; Mat_5:27-32; Mat_19:9, Mat_19:16, Mat_19:18/ Mar_10:17, Mar_10:19/ Luk_18:18, Luk_18:20; 1Co_6:9-10; Gal_5:16-21; Heb_13:4; Rev_2:22-23… etc. Also see: Mat_15:19; Mar_7:21; Rom_13:9-10; Jas_2:11-12; 2Pe_2:14, 2Pe_2:17-22

 

Divorce and Remarriage is Adultery

Mat_5:27-32; Mat_19:3-10; Mar_10:2-12; Luk_16:16-18; Rom_7:2-3; 1Co_7:10-11, 1Co_7:39

 

Rom_7:3 CAB So then, while the husband is living, she will be called an adulteress if she becomes married to a different husband…

 

1Co_6:9-10 Jos.Trans. Do not be deceived: neither male prostitutes* [i.e. fornicators (those with the female prostitutes?)]… nor adulterers… will inherit the kingdom of God.

(and similarly in Eph_5:3-12)

>>R! - quote Eph whenever Greek insertions may be done

 

[* i.e. male fornicators (as in the preceding context: 1Co_5:1), and by extension, including men who are involved with the female prostitutes/ fornicators in the following context: 1Co_6:13, 1Co_6:15-20]

 

There are obviously countless details to all of this, but if you make the simple step of actually believing these verses, you’ve already come 90 percent of the way there, before you’ve even hardly started reading! 

There is an indescribable and infinite freedom and victory in simply believing the Bible.  If your heart is first right, full of faith and eagerness to obey, then the countless details and “theological expositions” will be a cinch (relatively speaking).  Hold on as you read, and I pray that God would revolutionize your willingness to go all the way with what He says.  I am delighted and I rejoice that you are reading this message, and I pray to God that it is some indication that you are willing to consider disregarding the seemingly high price tag, and embrace the revolutionary call to believe what the Bible says about divorce and remarriage.

 

2. The Ancient Marriage Teaching

 

A. The Original History of Degradation

At the beginning God the Father presented His very first daughter to His first human son, Adam. In doing this God established a grounds for the couple to come together rightly, which served as a pattern and example1 of what was required for two people in future generations to come together, and what was required from them unto each other2 before God after they had come together. God prepared man and woman to belong to each other, and worked in them His special work for this to happen, creating, proclaiming, and defining this work as “One Flesh3.”

As time passed and people multiplied4, God at the very same time instituted along the way that peoples and society should hold each other accountable to their commitments5 as they partnered through life together. In this way, a fundamental social accountability was established for the sanity and good order6 of the humans for their interacting with each other and living together in communities and homes.

The highest order of this social accountability was a recognition and protection of what God had formed in the garden when He at the first made Adam and Eve and brought them together in lawful unity. This recognition and protection of One Flesh came to be known as “marriage7,” and was socially recognized in ancient times with a marriage supper and celebration8, which we have come to call a wedding9.

The corporate verification of joining a man and woman together held a solid basis and foundation for humans to work and relate to each other as societies and peoples, and they could not afford for this to be damaged10, morally or socially. At first, they celebrated this One Flesh covenant with “marriages” or “weddings,”11 having the tradition of the original model before them, having been kept from what was then recent times12, and they were presently experiencing the good order13 that resulted from honoring this model14 for making and recognizing the great blessing of the covenant that God had given them.

But as sin-bound people tend to continually hurt and wrong each other, their faithlessness starts first against God. And as wicked people loved themselves and their sin more than God15, so also they came to recognize and validate their own “marriages”16 over and above what God had actually established17, so that the Truth of God’s work in One Flesh began to commonly be supplanted, replaced, ignored, and even violated by the ceremony of man before the eyes of society. Men began so quickly to recognize their own works above those Divine and enduring works of God Himself, so as to think that they did not need the Divine approval and validation whenever they felt to terminate their current relationships and perform other marriages to new partners contrary to the original model of Adam and Eve.

While at first, marriages were meant as social expressions18 of recognizing the work of God, these marriages came to replace and even ignore His very work in the name of these social expressions. Men loved their own preferences19, became more impressed with their own recognition of things, and enjoyed their own marriage feasts and social ideas more than the Originator that caused them to have opportunity to experience such blessings in the first place.

The idolatrous and the adulterous way go hand-in-hand continually throughout history20. Because whenever men wanted to divorce their wives and marry others as they pleased, and because of man’s independence in marriage ceremonies, as they forsook God they also felt free to defy the covenant that God had born witness to in the garden, which at the first would form One Flesh, the only type of “marriage” that God ever recognized, defended, and gloriously bore witness to in the beginning.

By the time of Moses and the Law He instituted, divorce and remarriage was a de facto social norm21, so that its vices had to be restricted and regulated22 in suffering such evil from the people. Truly, man cared not a thing for what God had spoken originally, but gloried in their own various and multiplied recombinations of “marriages,”23 whenever and to whomever they pleased, not considering that God stood faithfully by His Word in the garden, unpersuaded24 by the masses of peoples branching off on their own ideas, pagan beliefs, and wicked practices. People married and remarried as they found others and “swapped partners,” and cared not that God called this defiling violation of His One Flesh covenant, adultery.25

 

B. Jesus Restored the Reverence of One Flesh to His Church

This confusion of marriage and forgetfulness of the garden continued even into the regulation of its insanity under Moses26, but the corporate assemblies of peoples with darkened understandings and hardened hearts27, as a whole, did not get much of a shot at hoping for anything better, which would be according to God’s own heart28, until a revolutionary man stepped on the scene named Jesus. Both Jesus and His Apostles constantly warned and solemnly admonished29 the assembly30 of followers to take close heed to the doctrine31 and to its faithful and pure transmission32 into future generations, that none of the things which Jesus had Divinely restored, would ever be lost.

In Jesus, renewed mankind had now just found his way back to the glory of the Garden, and had found God there, still faithfully standing by the enduring standard of His Word on man and woman, so that it was as it was from the beginning, with God faithfully testifying about His own work of One Flesh, and a remnant society of people celebrating this work with lawful, God-honoring marriages33.

Now a special and radically different people called out34 for God’s own possession35 stood before Him in the World, trembling in reverent and holy fear, that no more of their marriages should ever be acceptable if they did not line up with the standard36 of the One Flesh Covenant which God now demanded37 that they keep, as it was from the beginning in the garden.

 

C. Scriptural References for ‘The History Of Degradation’ and ‘Restoration of One Flesh Reverence

With much thanks to persecuted writer S for their scribal collaboration in compiling this section

 

1.     a pattern and example: Gen_2:18; Mat_19:4; Mar_10:6-8

2.     what was required from them unto each other: Mal_2:14-16; Pro_5:18; Gen_2:18, Gen_2:22-23; 1Co_11:8, 1Co_11:9; 1Ti_2:12-14 (compare this general verse with 1Pe_3:1); Hos_3:3-5

3.     One Flesh: Gen_2:24; Mat_19:5-6; Mar_10:7-8; 1Co_6:16-17; Eph_5:28-31

4.     people multiplied: Gen_1:28; Gen_5:4; Gen_6:1

5.     accountable to… commitments: 2Ch_34:29-32; Exo_24:7; Deu_29:10-15; Deu_31:28; Jos_24:24-27; Neh_10:29 (etc.); 2Ch_15:12-13; They also applied this corporate accountability to marriage: Deu_22:15-21; Rth_4:9-11

6.     social accountability: see point 5; sanity and good order:
‘Sanity and good order’ are the intended effects of having social accountability.
    Before the flood
,
mankind had a really strong reference point and accountability to the original model of marriage with Adam and Eve still being around. At least for a time, we know that marriage was upheld, recognized, and honored and that ‘sanity and good order’ existed because God did not send the flood until marriages started being tampered with and perverted. As men began to multiply, and as wickedness increased, and as marriage was unlawfully touched, things fell to pieces and were ultimately destroyed by the furious judgment of God (Gen_6:1-7, Gen_6:11-13; Luk_17:27; also compare Deu_30:19).

>> Add: This social accountability for managing marriage can even be seen in pagans throughout the OT: Samson, Jacob & Diana > Dinah

>> Add something of this nature for comparison: Marriage had Social accountability – we can also see this perfected in the Jews: END OF RUTH

7.     marriage: Consider a few examples how ‘One Flesh’ was protected with a marriage ceremony: Gen_24:67; 2Ch_18:1 (LXX); Also see point 8

8.     socially recognized: Mat_24:38
a marriage supper and celebration [“marriages were meant as social expressions18”]: Gen_29:21-22; Jdg_14:1; Est_2:18; Mat_22:2-4; Son_3:11; Isa_61:10 c; Isa_62:5; Psa_45:8-15; Rev_19:7-9; Note: Jesus’ first miracle was at a marriage celebration (Joh_2:1-2). God makes a big deal about recognizing one flesh unions.

9.     wedding: an English term not really used in the Bible; Instead, the Biblical terms come from the concept of a “Marriage Feast” (see points 7 and 8) rather than having a separate word for a “wedding.”

10.   they could not afford for this to be damaged: Even pagans knew the importance of recognizing and protecting the union between a male and female: Gen_20:2-10; Gen_26:10-11 – Early in history we see the existence of some surprisingly solid marriage concepts that were generally common to mankind as a whole. If this was common knowledge even to pagans, what does that say about many today who call themselves “Christians” but deny the testimony of the permanency of the one flesh union? Here is a call to repent of walking in ignorance with a gravely debased mind, having our understanding darkened (Eph_4:17-18) beyond that of the heathens of Abraham’s day! And now that Jesus has come, we are not only charged to surpass the obvious immorality of paganism, but we are also told that unless our righteousness exceeds that of the Scribes and the Pharisees then we will by no means enter the kingdom of heaven (Mat_5:20).

11.   See point 9

12.   See point 6

13.   See point 6

14.   See point 1

15.   people loved themselves and their sin more than God: Jer_2:5; Gen_6:5; Jdg_2:19; Jer_7:24; Jer_16:12; Psa_81:11-12; Eze_20:24-25; Isa_30:1, Isa_30:9-12; Mat_15:3; Mar_7:9, Mar_7:13; Joh_3:19; Joh_7:7; Joh_8:44; Joh_12:43

16.   their own “marriages”: Luk_17:27; Gen_6:2; Mal_2:11; Jdg_3:6-7; 1Ki_11:8; Neh_13:23-29; Jdg_15:1-2; Mar_10:11-12; Mar_6:17-18; Luk_16:15-18

17.   See points 1, 2, and 3, and compare with Mat_19:4-9; Mat_5:31-32; Mar_10:2-12; Luk_16:16-18; Rom_7:1-3; 1Co_7:39; Heb_13:4; Jesus insisted that we return to this standard.

18.   marriages were meant as social expressions: see point 8

19.   men loved their own preferences: see points 15 and 16

20.   the idolatrous and the adulterous way go hand-in-hand continually throughout history: 1Co_10:6-8; Exo_32:4-8, Exo_32:17-25; Num_25:1-3; Jer_3:9; Eze_16:15-20, Eze_16:30-32, Eze_16:35-38; Eze_23:27, Eze_23:30, Eze_23:37, Eze_23:45-48; Ezr_10:2; Mal_2:11-15; Rev_2:14, Rev_2:20-22; and also compare the many passages like Lev_20:10-23 (and Lev_18:1-30) addressing sexual perversions, where these teachings flow right along with passages addressing various idolatries: Lev_20:1-7.

21.   We know that it was a de facto social norm because Moses had to do something about it in order to govern it (see point 22). If Moses had to do something about it in order to govern it, that means that it was already an existing practice before He addressed it.

22.   restricted and regulated (divorce and remarriage): Deu_24:1-4; Lev_21:7, Lev_21:14; Exo_21:10

23.   marriages”: Notice how God did not approve: Deu_24:1-4; Jer_3:1 (etc.), the remarriage was defiling therefore not accepted; Mal_2:13-14; Jesus says “but I say” indicating that He did not accept their recombinations of “marriages”: Mat_5:32; Mat_19:9; Mar_10:11-12; Luk_16:18; Rom_7:3; If you pay attention, this point is covered over and over again throughout the rest of this book.

24.   unpersuaded: God does not change in order to agree with prolonged sin and defiance of His declarations: Heb_1:12; Heb_13:8; Num_23:19; 1Sa_15:29; 2Ti_2:13; Luk_21:33; Job_40:8; Isa_14:27; not changed with prolonged sin Gen_20:7  b; Jos_7:11-13; Jer_6:8; Eze_23:18
Even if a practice is popular, God is unpersuaded: Luk_16:15; Rom_3:4
Also see: Chapter 2, Point 1, under, “Summary of A, B, and C”

25.   adultery: (A) See the rest of this book. (B) Also compare: Hos_4:1-2; Hos_7:3-4 with Mar_6:14 a, Mar_6:17-18; (C) God (through Moses) suffered for divorce to happen: Mat_19:7-8; Mar_10:4-5; (D) Here are a few of the many examples in the OT where God indicated that the betrothed woman and or fully married wife was being defiled by adding another relationship: Deu_24:4; Jer_3:1; Jer_2:2, Jer_2:5, Jer_2:7, Jer_2:11, Jer_2:13, Jer_2:19-21, Jer_2:23-24, Jer_2:32-33; Jer_3:7, Jer_3:12-14, Jer_3:22; Jer_4:1; Hos_5:3; Hos_6:10; Eze_23:17 >> look up defiled refs!

26.   See point 22

27.   darkened understandings and hardened hearts: Exo_32:9; Deu_31:27; Act_7:51; Psa_78:8; Neh_9:16; Jer_17:23; Zec_7:11-12; Isa_6:10; Mat_13:13-15; Deu_32:28-29; Eph_4:18; Isa_44:18-20; Rom_1:21, Rom_1:28

>> I need to combine this with the other references I use later… “Exo_32:9-10

28.   according to God’s own heart: Act_13:22; 1Ki_15:5; Heb_8:7-10; Heb_10:7-9
Compare: Chapter 2, Point 4, “David’s Example: He Returned to the First” to see how David showed the distinction of doing what was actually according to God’s own heart.

29.   Both Jesus and His Apostles constantly warned and admonished: See point 31

30.   The word for “assembly” in the Bible is typically poorly represented in English versions with the word “church.” But in Greek, the actual word is a combination of the words “ἐκ G1537 (ek), meaning “out” (as in Exit), and “καλέω” G2564 (kaleō), meaning “to call,” which when combined forms this important word, ἐκκλησία G1577 (ekklēsia), which means, a “called out” assembly. >> if I move this, I also need to consider number 34…

31.   Jesus and Apostles warned about doctrine:
The thief comes only to steal/ Hired shepherds: Joh_10:1, Joh_10:12-13, Joh_10:10; Act_20:28-31; 2Pe_2:1; Mat_7:15; Mat_24:11, Mat_24:24; 2Jn_1:7; Gal_1:8-9
Beware of the leaven and take heed: Luk_12:1; Mat_16:6; Mat_16:11-12; Mar_8:15; Rom_16:17; 1Co_5:5-7; Gal_5:9; 1Ti_4:16; 1Co_3:10-11
Men will not endure sound doctrine in the last times: 2Ti_4:3; 2Pe_2:2; 1Ti_4:1-2; 2Ti_3:13
Will the Son of man find faith on the earth? (Luk_18:8)

32.   Whenever the Bible talks about Divine traditions, in Greek this has to do with “transmissions” (παράδοσις - paradosis) of truth to future generations.
Keep the traditions: 2Th_2:15; 1Co_11:2; 2Ti_2:2; Jud_1:3; 2Th_3:6; Phi_3:17; Phi_4:9; Heb_13:7; 1Th_4:1; 3Jn_1:11
For those who are like typical Protestants and want to take cheap shots and compare this to the repulsive traditions of men (Mat_15:2, Mat_15:3, Mat_15:6; Mar_7:3-13; Gal_1:14; Col_2:8) it goes without saying that Divine traditions have nothing to do with this, since Divine traditions are commandments from God ordained throughout the Old and New Testaments. Did you notice that we gave many Scripture references for defining these “Divine traditions”? If then they are traditions instituted in the Scriptures, it goes without saying that these are the traditions (transmissions) of God, not men, and God continually commands us to keep these things all throughout the Bible. Any tradition set in order for God’s assembly by the Scriptures pertains to God, and any tradition that opposes the Scriptures is man’s tradition, and if you will have wisdom toward knowing truth, you will know that there is no in-between.

33.   lawful: See the rest of this book and compare the appendix resources entitled, “The Historical Church Teaching,” and “Extra Notes on Church History” for a number of samples of the profound early church quotes affirming this new, revolutionary attitude that they had about marriage.

        God-honoring marriages: (1) General Instructions for this in NT: 1Ti_3:2, 1Ti_3:9-15; 1Co_7:12-14; 1Co_7:3; Col_3:18-19; 1Pe_3:5-7; Eph_5:22-33; Heb_13:4; (2) Aquila & Pricilla had a ‘tag-team’ ministry: Act_18:2; Act_18:18; Act_18:26; Rom_16:3; 1Co_16:19; 2Ti_4:19; (3) Peter: Mat_8:14; Mar_1:30; 1Co_9:5; From these passages (and the affirming testimony of early church leaders) it is evident that Peter had a wife. For the apostle Peter to write instructions about a good relationship between a husband and wife, he himself had to be abiding by what he preached and not living hypocritically with his wife (1Pe_5:3);

34.   Heb_12:23; Mat_16:18; and see point 30

35.   God’s own possession: Tit_2:14; KJV has it, “peculiar people,” but it actually means “owned” people (λαὸν περιούσιον); Mal_3:17; 1Pe_2:9; Deu_26:18

36.   if they did not line up with the standard: Christians emphasized ‘one flesh’ afresh, and this is proven in the fact that Jesus established this reality at the foundation of His marriage teaching, and it occurs more frequently and emphatically in the NT than the OT that originated it; See points 1, 2, 3, and 17

    This reverent and stringent attitude about marriage is also a historical fact that is easy to read about and verify throughout church history (see the appendix entitled, “The Historical Church Teaching.”)

37.   See point 17

 

D. Approaching Today – How Does Jesus’ One-Flesh-Reverencing Garden Revolution Look Now in Our Generation?

After the times of the beginning of the New Covenant, many courageous leaders of the early church faithfully fought and maintained the Biblical teaching about marriage within the Church, so that as a result, from saint to heretic, essentially everyone in the church before the corruption of Nicaea (325 AD) taught that divorce and remarriage was adultery and must be forsaken to be a Christian. I have documented and summarized much of this in the appendix entitled, “The Historical Church Teaching.”

Although Jesus, His apostles, and the early Church held to this reverence of one flesh, something completely different, strange and sickening is in our face as we look at the scene all about us today. Although we often maintain some fading expressions of commitment in most traditional marriages by saying words like, “Till death do us part” and “For better or worse,” such profound words are a radically stringent expression of commitment which really sound strange and curious in our context today, since in many cases we still say them at weddings but have no real idea why, especially since we really mean until adultery, abandonment, sin, boredom, or other crimes or conveniences do us part.

Don’t we realize that such words express a mentality about marriage that far surpasses the ideals and expectations that surround us? And why would we set such a high expectation with our words if no one keeps it? And why is it we say words that are reminiscent of what Jesus taught while we live just as the days of old before Jesus was on earth? If our obligation in marriage is actually greater in this age than the righteous Law of Moses, then why are we no better in our practice today than those generations before Jesus even came on the earth?

These words of permanent, lifelong commitment that we often utter in marriages stand against us and our practices, in and outside of the church, as though they were faint echoes of a doctrine people once believed that we are now truly foreign to, but strangely repeating.

 

What happened?  Did we lose something again?

 

3. It is Time to Re-Reverence The Creation of One Flesh

There is an answer to all of this distress and insanity! There is a reason why things have gone crazy today, and there is a reason why people used to believe radically different during the days of Jesus and the Apostles.  Truth still exists, and the Words of Jesus are still burning off of the pages of the Bible, but there is a complacent and rebellious age of bitter apostasy that rages against all of the goodness that Jesus pioneered for our benefit.

Jesus taught all of His followers to profoundly reverence one flesh, and until we do the same, we will never escape the trap of hopelessness and bitter darkness of slavery to immorality and sin.  Are we going to hear the Word of the Lord in our generation and repent and finally start taking Jesus seriously? – For those who will be faithful to Jesus in this way, let us get a close and faithful look at the very basis Jesus gave us for reverencing one flesh, and let us arrange ourselves in submission underneath the Divine dictates about one flesh and marriage in great fear and trembling.

> If we are ever going to repent and return to obeying what Jesus left for us on earth, it will start by first submitting to what the Bible actually says about marriage. But we are even further gone than we would like to think since we no longer even know what exactly “marriage” is, nor are we even aware of the significance of why Jesus focused in on a couple becoming into “one flesh.”

 

May God help us as we seek to restore what Jesus taught us.

 

>> Combine the last section into this one? Or some other option like putting it after this section?

>> Maybe I need to move Greek to the previous section whenever it may be finished…

>> Give literal immediate Hebrew and Greek, but foreshadow by saying: these are the literal explanations of the words, but we are about to experience their essence in the Divine context of truth!

 

Genesis 2 – The First Husband and Wife

I have given this account from the CAB and have added important insertions in [Brackets] (see explanations afterward):

 

Gen_2:21-25 CAB  And God brought a trance upon Adam, and he slept, and He took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh [בשׂר] in its place.  22  And God formed the rib which he took from

Adam into a woman, and brought her to Adam.  23  And Adam said, This now is bone [ἐκ (ek; as in “exit”) – out] of my bones, and flesh [ובשׂר (uV[b]aSar)] [ἐκ (ek) – out] of my flesh [מבשׂריH1320 (mib’Sariy)]; she shall be called woman, because she was taken out [ἐκ (ek) – same exact word as before] of her husband [lit. man].  24  Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother and shall cleave [MT: ודבקH1692; LXX: προσκολληθησεται (proskollēthēsetai pros-kollē-thē-setai) – be (passively) joinedG4347 (H1692)] to his wife [woman], and the two [ not specified by MT, but affirmed by the LXX and Jesus] shall become [MT: והיוH1961; LXX: εἰς (eis) – into] one flesh [אחד׃H259 לבשׂרH1320 ].  25  (3:1) And the two were naked, both Adam and his wife, and were not ashamed


>> notice that animals are created side-by-side, but woman is created “out of” man,and this causes a special dynamic to happen. From the beginning, humans cannot simply sleep with whomever they please like the animal kingdom does, humans actually become one flesh, and all mankind is defined by this huge and profound difference that started all the way back here in the garden! From now on: man leaves woman and is passively stuck to his woman by God’s hand. Man cannot do whatever he want with this incredible phenomena, but God made a special point to distinguish human sexuality to a profoundness far beyond any other creature.

Man is to be greatly stricken with an infinite awe of something far beyond his understanding.

This “one flesh” is God’s work, and man is the recipient. We had better be zealous to honor this indiscernible and priceless distinction which God made when He made man and woman.

This is the defining core of our being as humans. All of our entire being resonates to paint the picture of this distinction in a way the preaches a loud message which no one can ever miss –  there is something Holy and unspeakably special about human sexuality, and if we dare pollute it, we of all people to dread the wrath of Him who conferred so much attention and value to this eternally important work.

>> notice that the process is: (1) the Father bring His daughter; (2) Man verbally receives her; (3) They are immediately one flesh (“this is now bone out of my bones…”); (4) They are (afterward) “together.”

(Note: I do not mean to be crude, but when men and women are together without cloths, we are sure that this involves intimacy!)

This is to be our standard for all marriage. Especially because of the affirming words of Jesus, we know that anyone who may marry according to this pattern is truly one flesh and lawfully married. Although cultures may vary, and practices may elaborate on the social side of celebrating and recognizing, yet still, these things in the garden are the indisputable, non-negotiable, foundational essentials for two people to belong to each other

>> notice that in the garden:

There is no divorce

There is no remarriage

It is actually quite impossible for there to be any of these things. Even after the garden, can you imagine Eve saying, “I just cannot live with this man any longer,” or Adam saying, “we have irreconcilable differences. I want to marry this other girl.” –  Even if such insanity did arise, we know that God would say something like, ‘No… You WILL stay together, and you WILL bear children, and you WILL build up the human race.’ –  Neither divorce nor remarriage were at all possible by any stretch of the imagination. But though we always think we have more rights than Adam and Eve, Jesus demands that we return to the absolute standard and requirement of the garden!

>> one day add my own translation here as I have done later for an excerpt of gen 2…

 

[Technical Source text Note: I have particularly used the Complete Apostles Bible (CAB) for Genesis, because it is based on the LXX, and this Greek source text is basically what the New Testament consistently uses for Genesis (for more, see the online version of our Bibliography under, “Finding the Old Testament”)]

[Details about the Corrections I Made to This Translation: I have made a few content and grammatical corrections to the version used here based on the original Greek source text (LXX), (while also comparing it to the Hebrew) so it will more specifically and accurately represent in English what is actually being said in Greek (as also compared with Hebrew). The specific Greek wording used in this passage from Genesis is the way Jesus quotes this text later in the Greek New Testament (GNT), (as seen in the next point); (For more on these details see our Bibliography, especially under LXX and MT).]

 

Mat 19 – Jesus on The First Husband and Wife

Mat_19:4-6 KJB And he answered and said unto them, “Have you not read… 5 ‘For this cause a man shall leave his father and mother and shall cleave [lit. be passively glued to] to his wife: and the two shall be [εἰς – into] one flesh?’ 6 Therefore they are no moreG3765 two, but one flesh. What therefore God has fastened [or yoked] together let not man separateG5563.

 

Also compare: Gen_2:21-22; Mar_10:6-9; Eph_5:30-32

 

“Bound” – For Life

>> ADD: it may help clearly drive this consideration home by comparing it with a related phrase in: Joh_8:11 - you may no longer sin, Mat_19: you are no longer two

>> one is a command given to the woman to not sin from now on, the other is a statement of fact that two people are one from now on. The command is instruction that can theoretically be disobeyed, the other is simply a fact of one flesh that cannot be “disobeyed” because it simply exists as a fact, and is not dependant on human obedience. While you may go out and disobey Jesus command that from this point on, we should no longer sin, you cannot “disobey” being one flesh because even if you go and sin, you are still factually one flesh

 

Rom_7:2 CAB  For the woman who is under a man has been boundG1210 by law to the living husband

 

The Greek Word for “Bound”:

…bind, be in bonds, knit, tie, wind…” (Strong’s Hebrew and Greek Dictionaries).

The Scriptures clearly and directly reveal that being “bound” “knit” “tied” and “wound” into the “bonds” of marriage yields a relationship that lasts for life (as we have just seen in Rom_7:2).

 

Mat_19:5 …they are no moreG3765 two…

 

>> insert more Greek here…

This is Strong’s definition for the one Greek word translated here as “no more”:

G3765 οὐκέτι ouketi ook-et’-ee Also (separately) οὐκ ἔτι ouk eti ook et’-ee From G3756 and G2089; not yet, no longer: - after that (not), (not) any more, henceforth (hereafter), not, no longer (more), not as yet (now), now no more (not), yet (not).

 

So what is the implication of this verse and the weight of the Greek word translated as “no more”? We can see this by inserting the definition of this word directly into the verse:

 

“They are no more [henceforth and hereafter no longer and not… any more] two” (Mat_19:6), after God makes them One Flesh.

 

This verse is describing a permanent “no more two” effect from God making two people into one. This was instituted by God and continues to be preformed and enforced by Him in “binding” a person unto a spouse which generates a “one flesh” relationship (Mat_19:5). This “binding” originated in the Garden of Eden, and Jesus tells us that this same reality happens unto this very day when two people get lawfully married.

So many people try to say that a permanent marriage is “god’s ideal,” “but,” they say, “that this does not always work out.” And while people go around pretending that God’s commands “don’t always work out” and they call permanent marriage “an ideal,” God does not call one flesh an “ideal” but a matter of fact whether we like it or not. Even if we do not live according to the reality that God testifies to, it still remains, and God’s testimony will always win on judgment day, and we will always loose whenever we oppose it.

We may indeed find many reasons to complain against Jesus’ Words today and resist what He taught us by saying things like, “Yes, jesus, I know they were one flesh a long time ago, but now they are loosed from that marriage by adultery and or divorce and they have married someone else now.” But this pagan and rebellious belief is opposed up front by Jesus with the very plain and simple Words,

 

“They are no more [henceforth and hereafter no longer and not… any more] two” (Mat_19:6), after God makes them One Flesh.

 

GOD is The One Who Binds – No Wonder It’s Permanent!

>Mal_2: - Get updates to this Mal Summary from the next (more full) occurrence!

> Mal_2:14’s Amendment of the Mosaic Divorce Permission

 

Malachi 2 Clearly Confirms this

Note: Malachi 2 is discussed in much greater length in the next chapter

 

Mal_2:14 b – “Because the Lord has borne witness between you and the wife of your youth…” (CAB)

Mal_2:14 c – And although they had divorced their wives, still God says…

Mal_2:14 d – “she is your companion, *and the wife of your covenant.” (WEB) [LXX: καὶ γυνὴ διαθήκης σου – lit. and woman of your covenant]

Mal_2:15 a – God takes full credit for making it this way

>> enhance

 

In Malachi 2 and Matthew 19 it is clear that the Bible teaches that God has always been the One who binds two people into one flesh “from the beginning.” God is the one that makes two people into one, and not man, and because of this, God is the only one that has a prerogative to tell us the rules, and He is the only one who can tell us when the “oneness” of one flesh is finished.

 

>> This might be a very appropriate place to add: “Only Death Ends the Covenant”

>> Afterward show that divorce does not end it, because remarriage is adultery

 

Mat_19:6 KJ2000  Therefore they are no more two, but one flesh. What therefore God has joined [συνέζευξεν – fastened/ yoked] together, let not man put asunder.

Also: Mar_10:9

 

In the context of Jewish culture and even the Greek language this means, ‘by making them one flesh, God has also caused them (as a lawful result) to also cohabit together (συνέζευξεν) in marriage’* – God takes credit for both of these things in this passage, therefore we should not deny any of this by the “separation” (geographical space) of divorce.

 

>>?

[* Note: We document and explain this extremely brief explanation in much greater detail in Chapter 3]

 

To Be Glued/ “Joined

>> should I put this before being “bound,” as shown in the summary below?

>>!! Go into the differences between the base and the intensified version

>> Can mean: stick; glue; cleave; cohere; adhere; to join

 

Gen_2:24 Jos.Trans. on account of this, a man will leave his father and his mother and be [passivly] glued unto [MT: דּבק (dâbaq); LXX: προσκολληθήσεται (proskollēthēsetai)* – or stuck unto] his woman [“wife”], and the two will become into one flesh.

 

Mat_19:5 Jos.Trans. and said, “On account of this, a man will leave father and mother and be [passivly] glued unto [προσκολληθήσεται (proskollēthēsetai)* – or stuck unto] his woman [“wife”] and the two will become into one flesh…

> Greek

Gen_2:24  ἕνεκεν τούτου καταλείψει ἄνθρωπος τὸν πατέρα αὐτοῦ καὶ τὴν μητέρα αὐτοῦ καὶ προσκολληθήσεται πρὸς τὴν γυναῖκα αὐτοῦ, καὶ ἔσονται οἱ δύο εἰς σάρκα μίαν.

Mat_19:5  καὶ εἶπεν, ἕνεκεν τούτου καταλείψει ἄνθρωπος τὸν πατέρα καὶ τὴν μητέρα      καὶ         κολληθήσεται            τῇ γυναικὶ αὐτοῦ, καὶ ἔσονται οἱ δύο εἰς σάρκα μίαν;

> We can see that marriage was established in the Garden of Eden, and Jesus quotes this event as the bases for His New Covenant teaching about marriage.

 

The word behind “be [passivly] glued unto” spans (Biblically) from Hebrew into Greek. In Hebrew, this word is defined this way by Strong’s:

 

H1692 דּבק dâbaq daw-bak’ cling or adhere… - abide, fast, cleave (fast together), follow close (hard, after), be joined (together), keep (fast), overtake, pursue hard, stick, take.

 

This “abiding,” “cleaving,” “joining,” and “sticking” communicated by the definition of the Hebrew word dâbaq is often accomplished in Greek with the word “προσκολλάω” (proskollaō), (especially when describing relationships). This Greek word is a compound made up of toward (pros) and glued or stuck (kollaō). Whenever you compound a directional word (such as toward) into another word (especially an action verb such as glued) this is generally referred to as an intensification. This means that when the Bible talks about being glued toward a woman, this is an intensified gluing, and by the context and the Greek grammar we see why it is so “intense”: the couple is (passively) being (intensely) glued together [προσκολληθήσεται (proskollēthēsetai)] into [εἰς (eis)] one flesh [σάρκα μίαν (sarka mian)] by God!

This Hebrew term was first fundamentally translated into Greek by the LXX, and then consistently quoted* and applied this way by Paul* and Jesus Himself* throughout the Greek New Testament.

 

[* Additional Hebrew and Greek Technical Notes: (1) Although dâbaq cannot always be represented as proskollaō throughout the LXX because the Hebrew term has a somewhat wider “semantic range” than the Greek term (and because of this the Hebrew term occurs more frequently than the Greek term), yet still, the majority of the times whenever proskollaō is used in the LXX, it is because it is representing dâbaq from Hebrew; (2) The primary form of this Greek term is “προσκολλάω” – lit. toward gluing (an intensive sticking), but a few times, (especially in a minority of Greek manuscripts of the New Testament) this intensive gluing or sticking is simply abbreviated as “κολλάω” – gluing, and this is the way that Westtcott and Hort represent it in Mat_19:5, yet everyone agrees that this term is “προσκολλάω” in Eph_5:31 (just like Gen_2:24 LXX) and most everyone (including Westtcott and Hort) agrees that the original form in Mar_10:7 is also like the LXX. – All of this shows that there is very strong support for concluding that both Jesus (especially in Mar_10:7) and Paul quoted this term exactly as it is in the LXX, and in any case it is certain that the New Testament is consistently referencing the LXX terminology of being glued or stuck to a woman; (for more, don’t forget to compare the Bibliography, especially what is documented under GNT and LXX)]

>> “kollaōG2853 - (Keep company); usually used regarding relationships: Luk_15:15; Act_5:13; Act_8:29; Act_9:26; Act_18:7; 1Co_6:16, 1Co_6:17

 

Deu_11:22-23 CAB And it shall come to pass that if you will indeed hearken to all these commandments which I charge you to observe this day, to love the Lord our God, and to walk in all His ways, and to cleave [lit. glue yourself] close [ LXX: προσκολλᾶσθαι – Middle Voice, i.e. and action done to yourself (V-PMN); MT: דּבק (dâbaq), (H1692)] to Him;  23  then the Lord shall cast out all these nations before you…

 

Jos_23:8-9 CAB But you [all] shall [passively be] cleave[d] [lit glued] to [ προσκολληθήσεσθε – (V-FPI-2P); MT: דּבק (dâbaq), (H1692)] the Lord our God, as you have done until this day.  9  And the Lord shall destroy them before you…

> And similarly in:

Deu_10:20 CAB  You shall fear the Lord your God, and serve Him, and shall cleaveH1692 / G2853 [πρὸς αὐτὸν κολληθήσῃ] to Him…

 

>> distinguish names in Hebrew and Greek:

Notice that though cleaving to God obviously takes priority, the same Hebrew word (dâbaq) is used in Genesis 2 for marriage, as it is throughout the Hebrew Old Testament for the covenanted relationship between the Lord and His people. This effectively communicates what kind of permanent unbreakable union a man has with his wife. Do you see that God gave us the phenomena of “sticking” in marriage as a parable to show how we ought to “stick” to God? Before there was ever a command recorded that we should “join” ourselves to God, we are told of the reality of “joining” that happens in marriage. So to what degree should we as a people seek to be stuck to God, and to what degree should we as individuals consider that we have been stuck to our spouses when we get married? These two things are described with one and the same word in Hebrew.

God twice uses this word to describe the inseparability of the scales of a dinosaur (which are historically called dragons). They knew this particular creature (from Hebrew texts) as “Leviathan.” The context of these verses affirms the definition we read previously, even using some of the exact same words from within the definition as synonyms. I have underlined words that affirm the definition of this word in this way:

 

Job_41:15-17, Job_41:23 WEB Strong scales are his pride, Shut up together with a close seal. 16 One is so near [LXX: κολλῶνται – passively glued (V-PPI-3P)] to another, That no air can come between them. 17 They are joined [MT: דּבק (dâbaq), (H1692); LXX (at least in some texts): προσκολληθήσεται – glued together (this is the primary form); (Note: this part has significant variations surrounding this word in the LXX] one to another; They stick together, so that they can’t be pulled apart [ἀποσπασθῶσιν]23 The flakes of his flesh are *joined together [*MT: דּבק (dâbaq), (H1692); LXX: κεκόλληνται – Perfect Tense, Passive Voice: they have been (passively) glued as a complete action in the past (V-RPI-3P)]. They are firm on him. They can’t be moved [ LXX is different here, but still indicates the same strength].

(This is also illustrated in: Job_41:26-29)

> for more details about the variations on this chapter, Compare CAB / CAB Project

 

Notice that in verse 17 (at least with some texts), the consistent word is used for gluing or joining in the Hebrew and Greek of Job [MT: דּבק (dâbaq), (H1692); LXX (at least in some texts): προσκολληθήσεται].

 

[Technical Source Text Note: I do not generally use the current LXX as the most original source text when quoting Job, because this is one of the few cases where direct New Testament quotations of the Old Testament do not match in the current LXX. This is why I have primarily based this quote on the current MT (as represented by WEB), and only when they at least partly agree here I reference the LXX as well in this case, because it helps demonstrate the nature of this Greek phrase and its relationship with the Hebrew terminology. (For more, see the online version of our Bibliography under, “Finding the Old Testament”)]

 

How profound is the strength of this word! Please see the significance that it can command! And I hope that you will be honest enough to admit that the Bible does nothing to lessen the potency and impact of this word as it is applied to marriage, especially as seen originally in Gen_2:23-24.

>> explain the intensified form!

    As far as the Greek New Testament goes, this intensified form of this word is only used 4 times, (Mat_19:5; Mar_10:7; Act_5:36; Eph_5:31) whereas it appears 52 times in the Hebrew Old Testament. In 3 of these New Testament references the word is applied to marriage. It is interesting that the one time that proskollaō is not applied to marriage, it still describes a joining (apparently in some kind of intense covenant) that was “till death did them part”:

 

Act_5:36 CAB  For before these days, Theudas rose up, claiming himself to be someone, to whom was joinedG4347 a number of men, about four hundred. He was slain, and all who obeyed him were scattered…

 

So from Hebrew initially, we see that “being joined” is a serious and potent thing. Though both Biblical languages retain this concept of permanency, in the case of the New Testament Greek, the context of the New Covenant teaching affirms this even more than the dictionary definition.

    But someone may say that in some of the previous examples, though it might be hard to undo the “sticking,” it would still be theoretically possible to do, since a person may change their mind, or break their covenant; One can renounce cleaving to God after having temporarily “stuck,” and one could have renounced cleaving to “Theudas” in Act_5:36 if they became disenfranchised with his rebellion. However, we should be sensitive to this very important distinguishing fact: Although people are commanded to “join” or “cleave” themselves to God, God tells us that He (not man) joins or “cleaves” two people together into one flesh. A person cannot ‘unjoin’ other people or even themselves, when the strong hand of God has joined them together with their lawful spouse!

The Jews could not separate the rebels who had joined themselves to “Theudas” in Act_5:36, apart from the death of Theudas, and much more so, a pastor, a court or a couple cannot lift the omnipotent hand of God so that lawful spouses can walk away from being joined by Him, apart from death. But rather, in English and even more in Greek, just as we have shown in Malachi previously, we can see that it is God who joins a lawful couple in marriage:

 

Mat_19:5 Jos.Trans. and said, “On account of this, a man will leave father and mother and will be joined to his woman [wife] and the two will both become into one flesh, [Gen_2:24]

 

The words, “will be joined” represent this one word in Greek, proskollaō, and this word is in what is called, “the Passive Voice” because in the Greek grammar the action is being done to the couple (for more, see V-FPI-3S in RMAC for this grammatical case). They are not “joining themselves” in Greek, they are “being joined.” Those who get lawfully married are (grammatically) “passive” in the process of joining, which leaves God as the sole operator of this spectacular phenomena.

    Sadly, we are so used to thinking of this verse in a completely wrong way because a number of translations have incorrectly represented this in English for many, many years:

 

Mat_19:5 KJV  …For this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they twain shall be one flesh?

 

This incorrectly makes it look like the husband is actively doing the cleaving to his wife. Notice that “shall cleave” is a future verb (action) which in the KJV appears to be attributed to the husband. But in the actual Bible (in Greek) God describes this future verb (action) in the passive voice, so that we can definitely say that “cleaving” or “joining” “comes upon the husband from a third party” – which in this case is God Himself:

 

Mat_19:5 Jos.Trans. and said, “On account of this, a man will leave father and mother and will be passively joined [προσκολληθησεται – passive voice] to his woman [wife]

 

God’s strong and mighty hands have joined them, and no man can undo His grip. Only God can join two people into one flesh, and only He can unjoin them in death by the dissolving of one or both of the bodies which was joined.

 

Sex Does not Make One Flesh

 

Exo_22:16-17 CAB  And if anyone deceive a virgin that is not betrothed, and lie with her, he shall surely endow her for a wife to himself.  17  And if her father positively refuses, and will not consent to give her to him for a wife, he shall pay compensation to her father according to the amount of the dowry of virgins.

 

1Co_6 – although by sex we can create for ourselves a perverted, morally reprobate “one body” bond that we are strictly commanded to “flee” from, it is obvious that this is not the same as the permanent, morally binding, God-performed “one flesh” bond that we are strictly commanded to never separate.

 

Although there are Clearly Parallels, Notice The Distinctions Between Being One Body (by sex) and “One Flesh” (By Covenant)

 

Death Has Always Loosed a Spouse

What Makes Remarriage Lawful? – Only Death Ends The Covenant

 

It is very clear throughout the Bible that death has always loosed a person so that they could lawfully marry a second spouse without defilement.

 

(1) The “Levirate Marriage” of The “Kinsman Redeemer”

Gen_38:6-8 CAB And Judah took a wife for Er his firstborn, whose name was Tamar.  7  And Er, the firstborn of Judah, was wicked before the Lord; and God killed him.  8  And Judah said to Onan, Go in to your brother’s wife, and marry her as her brother-in-law, and raise up seed to your brother.

 

We see that Er was lawfully married to Tamar, but Er died. Tamar was then able to lawfully marry Er’s brother, Onan, without sin.  It is clear from this that the ancients understood that death loosed a person to marry another.  This is reinforced in the Law of Moses:

 

Deu_25:5 CAB And if brothers should live together, and one of them should die, and should not have seed, the wife of the deceased shall not marry out of the family to a man not related: her husband’s brother shall go in to her, and shall take her to himself for a wife, and shall dwell with her.

 

In the same way, Luk_20:27-34 shows us that this could theoretically result in a woman having seven successive husbands without sin!

 

(2) Ruth and Naomi – Two Widows Contemplating Remarriage

In Rth_1:11-13 Naomi understood that she and her two widowed daughter-in-laws could theoretically get lawfully married to other men, but Naomi did not do this herself because she considered herself to be too old.  On the other hand, because Ruth was a young widow she married Boaz after her first husband died (Rth_1:4-5; Rth_3:9-11, Rth_3:18, Rth_4:1-13).

 

(3) 1Sa 25 – David and Abigail – No Matter How Challenging and Difficult it May Be, Only Death Looses

In first Samuel 25 we are given the account of David, Nabal, and Abigail. Abigail was a very wise woman who, ironically, was initially married to an exceedingly foolish and wicked husband named Nabal who opposed David in the midst of his hardships in the wilderness. But things drastically changed at the end of this chapter.

 

1Sa_25:38-42 CAB And it came to pass after about ten days, that the Lord struck Nabal, and he died.  39  And David heard it and said, Blessed be the Lord, who has judged the cause of my reproach at the hand of Nabal, and has delivered his servant from the power of evil; and the Lord has returned the mischief of Nabal upon his own head. And David sent and spoke concerning Abigail, to take her to himself for a wife.  40  So the servants of David came to Abigail to Carmel, and spoke to her, saying, David has sent us to you, to take you to himself for a wife.  41  And she arose, and bowed down with her face to the earth, and said, Behold, your servant is for a handmaid, to wash the feet of your servants.  42  And Abigail arose and mounted her donkey, and five maidens followed her. And she went after the servants of David, and became his wife.

 

1Sa 25 – Application – DEATH is the Only Way Out of a “Bad Marriage”

We see from this account that David did not speak one word about marrying Abigail until after it was clear that God had killed her first husband. No matter how bad Abigail’s marriage to Nabal was, David understood that only death would loose Abigail to be a lawful candidate for marriage to himself. And just as Abigail was faithful to her marriage to Nabal, so also (at a time when polygamy was allowed) David remained faithful to his difficult marriage to Michael until the day of her death (2Sa_6:16-23; 1Ch_15:29).

So what should we understand from this? No matter how bad of a marriage two people may have, it is God’s divine institution which we must reverence until He himself ends it. In one case we see that God was faithful to deliver Abigail out of her difficult marriage by killing Nabal. In the other case we see that even when David was not delivered from his difficult marriage, David still remained faithful to the one flesh covenant which God had bound him in. This is what it actually means to be a person of faith; this is what it means to be a real man or woman of God, who obeys God’s commandments even if it costs them all the comforts of this life.

And especially because we are commanded to love and pray even for our enemies in the New Covenant (Mat_5:43-48) it is clear that we cannot go about praying for the death of our spouse, but rather, we ought to pray for the heart of supernatural courage as David and Abigail had, who reverenced God’s covenant by faith under the most disheartening circumstances, because they made obedience to the righteous demands of God to be their sole consolation and refused to gratify the raging insanity of the whimsical demands of the flesh to have circumstantial peace and comfort in this short and temporary life. They believe the testimony of God above the agony of their very own souls, so God wrote down their righteous souls in His Holy Scripture as a standard for us to this day.

 

>> Add: God can get you out of a bad marriage... Through death. - I actually use this when counseling despairing spouses.

 

(4) Roman Seven

Rom_7:2-3 CAB For the woman who is under a man has been bound by law to the living husband. But if the husband should die, she is released from the law of the husband.  3  So then, while the husband is living, she will be called an adulteress if she becomes married to a different husband; but if her husband should die, she is free from the law, so that she is not an adulteress, having become married to a different husband.

 

(5) First Corinthians Seven

1Co_7:8-9, 1Co_7:27-28 – Encourages celibacy for widows (during the current distress) but permits marriage

 

1Co_7:39-40 WEB  A wife is bound by law for as long as her husband lives; but if the husband is dead, she is free [ἐλευθέρα – lit. a loosed type of person (the word “free” is somewhat figurative)] to be married to whoever she desires, only in the Lord.  40  But she is happier if she stays as she is, in my judgment, and I think that I also have God’s Spirit.

 

(6) First Timothy

1Ti_5:14 CAB Therefore I desire that the younger widows to marry, to bear children, to manage the house, to give no opportunity to the adversary because of reproach.

 

A Summary of Being “Glued”/ “Joined” and “Bound,” Together

We see that the Bible says that being joined and bound in marriage by God produces a permanent, God-performed, one flesh bond for life. Some have attempted to interpret the Bible as to contradict its self by saying that marriage bonds could be broken by a divorce. But we can clearly see from Scripture that being bound in the marriage covenant cannot be undone by anything but death, and this is without exception (Rom_7:2; 1Co_7:39)!

No wonder it’s permanent! God is the one that makes the two one! And it says, “... he shall open, and there shall be none to shut; and he shall shut, and there shall be none to open,” (Isa_22:22 CAB). This is repeated in Job_12:14, and in Rev_3:7. (Also see Job_9:12; Job_11:10). Scripture also clearly says that you cannot change what God says. See Deu_4:2; Deu_12:32; Rev_22:18-19; Joh_13:16. So whatever He says and or does concerning marriage sticks despite all the efforts of man.

Galatians 3:15 says, “Brothers, I speak like men. Though it is only a man’s covenant, yet when it has been confirmed, no one makes it void, or adds to it.” (Gal_3:15 WEB). If this is the case with a human covenant, which is merely witnessed by men, (and afterward enforced by God) then how much more absolutely unbreakable is a covenant that is both established and enforced by God Himself? And this we can clearly see to be the case even with the Scriptures concerning marriage quoted so far.

>> Add somewhere that Jesus proves this clearly by answering their appeal: they wanted to say humans could divorce, but Jesus appeals to God’s work to tell them that they actually could not divorce, because a higher authority made them one. They would have no more right to defy this authority of God’s work under Jesus.

 

>> make sure that I have Put the proper uses of Baal

>>H!! – got to complete this section

>> read/ get more from the section below??

>> Got to compile more references for this!!!

 

The Lawful Outcome of One Flesh – “Marriage” is Cohabitation in The Bible

Let us find out why it is so difficult to define what we are talking about at times when we say “marriage”

>> address how 1Co 7:39 can seem to link marriage with being bound

 

Summaries of Linguistic Variations

Please pay close attention and give these definitions very careful consideration:

 

·       A “Wedding” – in English: a “wedding” is typically associated as the event at which a man and a woman are joined as husband and wife in marriage, but the distinct term “wedding” does not have an equivalent in the Bible. (Whenever you may see the word “wedding” in an English Bible version, typically it is actually taking the place of the primary Greek word for a marriage, as in a “marriage feast” or “marriage celebration”).

·       Marriage” – in English: “Marriage” is typically considered the resulting relationship of two people who have been joined together as husband and wife, (but the Bible never speaks in these terms about “Marriage”).

·       Marriage” – in Hebrew & Greek: “Marriage” is not the resulting relationship of two people who have been joined together, but rather it is particularly the socially established cohabiting of a man and woman. (Ideally, two people have already been lawfully and morally joined before this takes place, but this is certainly not true in many cases).

·       Being Glued/ Joined” – in Hebrew & Greek: Being joined is passively received by a couple from God and takes place either before or during a marriage feast celebration as a distinct element from the marriage itself, when two people first make a one flesh covenant, (which might sometimes be long before a marriage celebration). – Notice that English speakers do not usually make this distinction between being glued or joined and getting married, but the Bible does. [Reminder Note: Being “glued”/ “joined” and being “bound,” together in a one flesh covenant was covered before addressing marriage here]

 

An Explanation of Linguistic Variations

Unfortunately there is often a lot of confusion in modern cultures when people start talking about “marriage,” especially when it is in reference to the Bible. An argument could definitely be made that neither “marriage” nor any other word is sufficient for the words in the original languages because they often have such drastically different connotations in particular passages, but because of lack of other words while still seeking to be as specific and correct as possible I am using the word “marriage” while not sticking with the English connotations of this word; I am exclusively going along with the Biblical connotations which are from Hebrew and Greek.

Please be aware: When comparing what I teach about “marriage” with what a few other people have said seeking to defend “marriage,” they might very well seem to have said things contrary to what I write here while in fact the difference may not actually add up to anything contradictory at all, since in many cases English writers are simply talking about “marriage” in an English sense (two people being joined together as husband and wife) while I am talking about “marriage” in a more Hebrew and Greek sense (two people coming together in cohabitation to live as husband and wife) and I am specifically communicating it this way for the sake of being as exact and consistent as I can as we go throughout the Bible with these Biblical concepts that have all been generically mixed up as “marriage” in the English language.

A primary example of this linguistic complication would be the saying, “marriage is permanent till death.” While this is true in an English sense of the word, yet in a Biblical, Hebrew and Greek sense, you have to say “one flesh is permanent…” rather than using the word “marriage,” because marriage (two people coming together to live as husband and wife) in the Bible is not actually the permanent part of what we often call marriage in English – So please try hard not to misunderstand me at any point: please stretch with me from the vagueness of our English concepts so you can also understand a Biblical world view about marriage in the Hebrew and Greek sense.

Although “marriage” is probably frequently the closest word in English for the Words used throughout the Bible, yet there are some foundational differences that we need to come to terms with before understanding numerous critical passages about marriage. One of the most basic concepts we often need to grasp is that numerous words behind “marriage” throughout the Bible at their basis are synonymous with simple cohabitation, and although by the time a marriage happens people have hopefully already passed into one flesh by a lawful covenant at some point, yet marriage itself does not, in itself, equate with or necessarily include the more profound concept of being one substance with a spouse.

>> follow this with explanations for husband and wife (man and woman)

 

Hebrew Expressions for “Marriage”

Note: While the following references may or may not represent the best source text for each given scenario, the following representative examples are taken from the MT simply to give a summary of Hebrew terminology.

>> Jewish question

>> Do a google search on the Hebrew words for marriage

>> I can’t wait to learn Hebrew and improve this section

 

·       “לקח” (lâqach), (H3947) – To “take” (women), (Gen_19:14; Num_12:1; Deu_25:5; 1Ch_2:21; Rth_4:13)

·       חתן” (châthan), (H2859)To “give” (women), (Gen_34:9; Deu_7:3)

·       “נסה”/ “נשׂא” (nâśâ’ / nâsâh), (H5375) – To lift up/ carry (women), (2Ch_13:21)

·       ישׁב” (yâshab), (H3427)To sit (women) down (i.e. to live as wives in their houses), (Neh_13:23, Neh_13:27) [This is represented literally and consistently in the Greek LXX (as seen in the next sub point)]

·        [others: “יבם” (yâbam), (H2992) – pertaining to the duties of a levirate marriage (Gen_38:8); H5772עונה” (‛ônâh) – Exo_21:10; see also: Lev_22:12]

 

All of these very strange sounding expressions often get represented as “marriage” in English (either directly or indirectly).

In Psa_78:63 (MT, not LXX) ‘Marriage’ is indicated by a praise song (H1984 – where we eventually get the church word, “hallelujah” from

 

Greek Expressions For “Marriage”

>> add yoke reference

·        γάμος” (G1060; ALS p. 106) – the primary Greek word (especially in the New Testament) for marriage, which is frequently equated with cohabitation.
[An intensified variation of this is marrying upon: Jos_23:12; 2Ch_18:1; Ezr_9:14; Mat_22:24 (also see v. Mat_22:25, Mat_22:30); also see “εκγαμισκονται” (Luk_20:35; as well as 1Co_7:38)]

·       γυναικὸς συνῳκισμένης” – a cohabited woman (see the following examples)

·        ἡ γυνὴ ὑπ᾿ ἀνδρὸς” – the woman under a man (i.e. under his authority and protection), (Num_5:29, and also v. Num_5:20; Pro_6:24, Pro_6:29; Rom_7:2 (compare Rom_7:1-4)
>> add this to Hebrew too

·        δέδωκα τῷ ἀνθρώπῳ τούτῳ γυναῖκα” – to “give” women (i.e. as wives), (Deu_22:16)

·         λάβῃ γυναῖκα” – to “take” a woman (i.e. home as wives), (Deu_22:13; Deu_24:5)
[Also, “λήμψεται αὐτὴν ἑαυτῷ γυναῖκα” – taken her to himself (as) a woman (Deu_25:5)]

·       οἳ ἐκάθισαν γυναῖκας” – They sat women down (i.e. to live as wives in their houses), (Neh_13:23, Neh_13:27 [LXX: 2Esdras 23:23, 27]) [Note: “sitting down” is sometimes used as a figure of speech in the Bible for living somewhere. (this is typically represented simply as marriage in English)]

 

>> * Notice that many of these Greek expressions for marriage are very similar to the Hebrew expressions given previously

 

A Few Hebrew and Greek Terms for the Whole Process In General

In addition to the specific terms for entering into a covenant, and those specific terms for entering into marriage-cohabitation, we may also consider a few terms that are often used to describe the entire process in general

 

Becoming Women to Men

·       Hebrew: “נשׁים”/ “אשּׁה” (‘ishshâh/ nâshîym), (H802) – to ‘become women’ (i.e. wives) unto men

·       Greek: “γένωνται γυναῖκες/ ἔστωσαν γυναῖκες” – becoming/ being women (i.e. to men)

References: Num_36:3, Num_36:6, Num_36:10-12, Jos_23:12 (MT); 1Ki_11:19

 

Lord/ Master

·       “בּעל” (ba‛al), (H1167) – To be a “master” (fig. be owner) of a woman (Exo_21:3; Deu_22:22; Deu_24:1; Pro_30:23; Isa_54:1; Isa_62:4, Isa_62:5; Jer_3:14 (LXX = “κατακυριεύσω” – lord down on; fig. rule over, [compare: Gen_18:12 (κύριός); 1Pe_3:6 (κύριον); Rom_7:1 (κυριεύει)]); Mal_2:11 (MT = “Married,” but not in LXX)

 

Becoming A Man’s

·       γενομένη γένηται ἀνδρὶ” – Generically, becomes a man’s (Num_30:6; Deu_24:2; Rth_1:12-13; Eze_44:25; Rom_7:1-4)

 

As an original bases, these terms seem to somewhat initially speak of establishing a one flesh covenant, but by application they are often carried over into cohabitation to describe the entire process as a whole as well.

 

>> Rom_7:4 KJV

>> Acquisition/ Betrothal Words

Rth 4:10; 2Co_11:1 etc.

 

Tragically, All of these Terms Are Simply Represented as “Marriage” in English Versions

Whether they are from Hebrew or Greek, or they are general terms or specific terms, or they are referring to one flesh or cohabitation, all of these very strange sounding expressions often get generically thrown together and irresponsibly represented as “marriage” with no distinction in English. It can be very haphazard and dangerous to erase such a defining distinction in such a vital teaching as “one flesh” and its relationship with “marriage!”

Do you get the impression that there is a huge cultural gap that Bible versions have been trying to bridge*? But in seeking to “bridge” they have actually “blurred” instead; English readers typically have virtually no idea what kind of concepts they have completely missed in the Bible about “one flesh” and “marriage.” The Bible says a whole lot of defining truth by using particular terms like this, and virtually no one in English has access to fully consider these important implications, since perceiving their distinctiveness is usually inaccessible to them.

Let it suffice to say for now as a summary that one of the main things English readers often have no clue about is the fact that the Bible does not consider these concepts of “marriage” (from Hebrew and Greek) as terms to indicate two people being joined per say, but these terms are about being together and experiencing the life of cohabitation as man and woman. – The “joining” part (where two people become “one flesh”) is truly important, but that is a distinct, preceding concept reserved particularly for the actual “covenant,” and is not directly attached so much to “marriage” as done in our modern cultures. This extremely important truth is all throughout the Scriptures, and we cannot really escape it if we are going to carefully and thoroughly cover the details surrounding divorce and remarriage.

 

[* The anthropological term “transculturation” is sometimes used in modern Bible translation theory to describe changing the proclamation of the Bible in order to make it fit with different people groups. Nearly all Bible versions do this to one degree or the other (including the KJV) but because ‘you cannot actually separate language from culture,’ paraphrases at their very foundation are almost entirely based on “transculturation” (for more, see the section on “Bible Paraphrases” in the Bibliography)]

 

A Few Example Passages Where Marriage is Equated with Cohabitation

Gen_20:1-3 And Abraham said concerning [περὶ] Sarah his wife, She is my sister, for he feared to say [ὅτι – that], She is my wife, lest at any time the men of the city should kill him for her sake [“for her sake” – δι᾿] [ not in MT here, but MT & LXX include this saying in Gen_12:11-13; Gen_26:7]. So [δὲ] Abimelech king of Gerar sent and took [ἔλαβεν] Sarah [i.e. Abimelech began a marriage by “taking” (ἔλαβεν) Sara into his house].  3  And *God came to [εἰσῆλθεν ὁ θεὸς πρὸς – the God came into (and) toward] Abimelech by night in his sleep [ὕπνῳ], and said, Behold, you’ll die [MT: “you are a dead man” (WEB); (compare v. 7)] for [περὶ] the woman whom you have taken [ἔλαβες], for she has lived with a husband [ συνῳκηκυῖα ἀνδρί V-RAP-NSF – lit. cohabited with a man, i.e. she has already been lawfully “taken” into another man’s cohabitation; MT: “for she is a man’sH1167 [lit. master’s] wifeH1166 [lit. mastered (woman)]” (KJV [with insertions]) – for both LXX & MT this is fig. married]

 

Note: it goes without saying that this remarriage (that is, this re-cohabitation) was immoral on the bases that she had already lived in another man’s house (that is, she had already married another man). This automatically invalidated her from entering into a lawful and moral covenant with Abimelech, even though he had performed a socially acceptable “cohabitation” or “marriage” with her. It was not enough for them to cohabit; He actually needed a lawful covenant which God would recognize, as a prerequisite and basis for this practice to be considered lawful and moral.

 

[Also note: this passage is covered much more thoroughly in chapter 2 under, “Gen 20 and Mal 2 – The Bible Specifically Teaches that God Punishes Ignorant Remarriage Adultery”]

 

Gen_24:67 CAB  And Isaac went into the house [οἶκον] of his mother, and took [ἔλαβεν] Rebecca…

 

>>R! – Greek & Heb

Deu_21:10-13 CAB  And if when you… 11  …should see… a woman beautiful in countenance, and should desire her, and take her to yourself for a wife*,  12  and should bring her within your house13  …and she shall abide in your house[then some specific instructions are given] …and afterwards you shall go in to her and dwell with her, and she shall be your wife.

 

[* God really understands men, doesn’t He?]

 

Deu_22:13 CAB And if anyone should take [λάβῃ] a wife, and dwell with [συνοικήσῃ (sunoikēsē) – lit. is together (sun) housed (oikēsē), or cohabits (with)] her, and hate her…

 

Deu_22:22 CAB And if a man be found lying with a woman married to [συνῳκισμένης – lit. who has been together housed or who has cohabited (with)] a man, you shall kill them both…

 

Deu_24:1 CAB   And if anyone should take a wife, and should dwell with [συνοικήσῃ (sunoikēsē) – lit. is together housed, or cohabits (with)] her, then it shall come to pass if she should not have found favor before

him…that he shall write for her [καὶ γράψει αὐτῇ – and he writes for her] a certificate of divorce, and give it into her hands, and he shall send[s] her away out of his house [οἰκίας – same root within the previous word (together housed)].

 

Deu_24:3 CAB and the last husband should hate her, and write for her a certificate of divorce, and should give it into her hands, and send her away out of his house [οἰκίας]

11/16/2011

It is clear from these examples that the initiation of marriage is considered the exact same thing as the initiation of cohabitation.

 

1Pe_3:7 KJV  Likewise, ye husbands, dwell with them [συνοικοῦντες – cohabit (same Greek word as before)] according to knowledge…

 

Isn’t that interesting? Even Peter considers marriage a matter of cohabitation.

 

First Corinthians Seven Definitely Equates Marriage with Cohabitation

This becomes extremely evident and clear when we are careful to represent and consider the specific and exact details in this passage. Because this is a very involved chapter I am only including the part that addresses this question about “cohabitation” aspect here.

 

>>! formatting not working

>> Note: This entire passage [chapter] is covered much more thoroughly in Chapter 4

v. 1Co_7:9 – “Marriage” [used twice: γαμησάτωσαν/ γαμῆσαι] is preferred over (& contrasted with) “burning”; (correlating with the marriage vs. prostitution/ fornication in v. 1Co_7:2)

v. 1Co_7:10 – The ‘no separation’ command (‘do not separate your women from you’) is applied to married people (v. 1Co_7:9, not to ‘betrothal scenarios’ [compare v. 1Co_7:6-8]) and is clearly referencing the specific teaching of Jesus (Mat_19:5-6; Mar_10:7-9)

v. 1Co_7:11 – Passively receiving Separation from marriage (v. 1Co_7:9-10) means being ‘without marriage,’ [i.e. cohabitation (as mentioned in the next verse)] yet still being obligated to that spouse [i.e. by one flesh], as being commanded not to marry another; [note: just because you are “without marriage” (i.e. cohabitation) does not mean you are without “one flesh” and are allowed to marry another!]

>> being married means being together in cohabitation; being unmarried means being away from each other

>>?:

v. 1Co_7:12-16 – Continue cohabitation [συν-…οἰκεῖν μετ᾿ – lit. together-…habit with, i.e. fig. marriage (as directly said in v. 1Co_7:11)] with an unbelieving spouse if possible [note: The experience of “marriage” is directly linked with cohabitation here in v. 1Co_7:11-16]

v. 1Co_7:14 – You can be one flesh with an unbeliever, and even clean their pagan flesh by faith*! (So this is certainly a lawful marriage) [* i.e. like David did for Michael]

v. 1Co_7:15 – If the unbeliever leaves, then be content to live in peace (i.e. the “singleness” in v. 1Co_7:11) [i.e. one flesh still exists! – you are not permitted to marry another]

(only unbelievers actively separate from a lawful marriage)

v. 1Co_7:16 – But if you can remain with an unbeliever then you might save them

 

Basing Our Understanding out of the Original Languages Really Helps

I generally did not have any idea that there was such a definite and consistent distinction between marriage and one flesh until I started reading the Bible in Greek. Before being corrected by the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures, I thought that marriage in the Bible was essentially the ‘mystical’ reality of two people being made one flesh, but afterward I realized that this was not at all the way the Bible was describing its word for “marriage.” Instead, I finally noticed that this cohabitation-marriage theme is very strong and consistent throughout the entire Bible, especially when you actually become aware of the original words being used.

Although I certainly agree that there is sometimes an advantageous practicality to terms like, “being married in God’s eyes,” especially for the average English speaker, yet I am simply wanting to encourage us to be sensitive to the fact that the Scriptures never use the “marriage” word like this. When the Scriptures speak about this mystical reality, it usually uses the term “one flesh,” or a number of other phrases, and this can be disconcerting to an uninformed English reader trying to distinctly understand what God has said about the life-long oneness of lawful spouses (for example, Mar_6:17-18; 1Co_7:11).

--------------- see: ex. cl. Re.

Because there are so many people saying so many things using the same words to refer to different concepts, and much of this ends up having no real Biblical bases to begin with, there is a need to revisit our definitions and clarify these things before moving on. For the purposes of this book, whenever we say “marriage,” we are not talking about modern English definitions, but we have chosen to intentionally stick to the Biblical terms to avoid confusion from using inconsistent terminologies when referring to Scriptural passages and teachings. When we say “marriage” in this book, we mean the more basic concepts and words used in the Bible to speak of the experience of cohabitation, and not necessarily the more embellished connotations in use today. When we say “marriage covenant” we mean the preceding covenant that allows marriage (cohabitation) to be lawful.

I know that this can seem to bring up even more questions than it answers at first, but I have been compelled to go in this direction for the sake of the rest of the passages we need to look at, and when all is said and done we can have a more accurate and thorough understanding of one flesh and the marriage-cohabitation that is supposed to follow.

 

But for clarity in the meantime, before we go through the rest of this book, let set out some important clarifications:

·       Although marriage is cohabitation in the Bible, this does not mean that all cohabitation (or marriage) is lawful before God (for example: if people live together without being in covenant, they have an unlawful, non-covenant cohabitation, or, “marriage” of sorts)

·       In the Bible, everyone knew that a father had to give his daughter away to a man before they could ever lawfully cohabit (or even be together)

·       In Biblical days, father’s and brothers took it as their vital honor and responsibility to protect the purity of their daughters (compare Gen_34:7, Gen_34:31; 2Sa_13:20-22, 2Sa_13:28-29, 2Sa_13:32-33; Son_8:8-10)

·       In ancient cultures when women were not commonly prostituted before the eyes of all society, it was extremely shameful and dangerous for a woman’s future livelihood to cohabit with a man before being in at least a socially recognized relationship with him. If society concluded that she had committed fornication, she could very easily never get married for the rest of her life (compare, for example, 2Sa_13:20-22), and might have little to no way of finding a livelihood (Rth_1:9; Rth_3:1-18).

·       Because cohabitation was generally rare outside of a marriage celebration, marriage and cohabitation could easily be more or less synonymous in the Bible.

·       Unless indicated otherwise, it is generally understood throughout the Bible that before cohabitation could take place, socially, a woman had to first enter into a covenant with a man so that he could first own her before they could lawfully cohabit.

·       Therefore, one flesh is not marriage in the Bible, but one flesh is the result of a prerequisite covenant that is established first before lawful marriage (cohabitation) can take place.

·       This covenant was sometimes established a few minutes before the cohabitation-marriage (Gen_24:64-67), but even more frequently, among the Jews, cohabitation was often done a whole year or more later (Mat_1:18-19). But whether it was a minute or a year, it is this covenant that precedes lawful, moral marriage, and was a standard practice among the ancient societies in the Bible for managing the purity of their people.

·       If it is done according to God’s rules, establishing a covenant before marriage (cohabitation) makes a man and a woman go into one flesh so that they can now morally and lawfully live together and belong to each other for the rest of their lives.

·       If people are lawless and do not reverence the boundaries which God set on marriage, then they will think to enter into a covenant with whomever they please, yet if they seek to be with someone who is not free to marry, then their shameful attempt at making a lawful covenant will fail, and they will live in an immoral cohabitation (marriage) which is just as immoral, and even worse, than if they did not make a covenant to begin with

 

Isa 28:17-18 CAB …and you that trust vainly in falsehood…  18  …it [will] also take away your covenant of death, and your trust in Hades shall by no means stand

 

Why Understanding Marriage as Cohabitation is Important

Missing the point that marriage means cohabitation in the Bible can cause great confusion! If we mistake marriage as being equivalent with one flesh then we have some enormous, irresolvable problems, but if we understand a more Biblical concept of marriage being cohabitation then the following passages make a lot more sense.

One passage of notable significance on this issue is first Corinthians seven:

 

1Co_7:10-11 CAB  Now to those who have married I command, yet not I, but the Lord [commanded in Mat_19:6]: A wife is not to be separated from her husband--  11  and even if she does separate [ἐὰν δὲ καὶ χωρισθῇ – separation has happened to her – the Greek is in the “Passive Voice”], let her remain unmarried or be reconciled to her husband—and a husband is not to divorce his wife.

 

We see that the woman is not allowed to marry another even though she is called “unmarried” after divorce. This is because the moral binding is not dependant on currently experiencing “marriage” (cohabitation) but on the enduring and immovable reality of one flesh. The question is not whether or not she is currently “married” (cohabited), but whether or not she is still bound into one flesh with her first spouse. The geography and the social paperwork are not the question here, but the substance and unity of her flesh is. It is clear from this passage that she is both unmarried, and not permitted to marry another, because after divorce, a woman cannot go into re-cohabitation (remarriage) with another man and also accomplish another lawful covenant, even if it is socially established by another marriage feast or wedding, but even if they attempt to establish another covenant the marriage is still called adultery by the mouth of Jesus and the Apostles He sent us.

 

Luk_16:18 CAB Everyone who divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery; and everyone who marries a woman who is divorced from her husband commits adultery.

 

It is clear that ‘marrying another’ does not indicate a valid and lawful one flesh covenant. On the contrary: by calling remarriage adultery it is clear that the first covenant is still intact, and the second one is invalidated and gives them an immoral and unlawful cohabitation which is called adultery against the first, enduring covenant. If we thought that marriage was one flesh, then it is really an awfully confusing statement to say marrying another is adultery. But it is clear from Jesus’ Words that you do not become one flesh with another in this case, but instead He says you marry another, and this immoral re-cohabitation is called adultery.

Although this remarriage is recognized as an acceptable cohabitation by society, it is not recognized before God, which (along with other sins) is one of the main reasons why Jesus says previous to this:

 

Luk_16:15 CAB And He said to them, “You are those who justify yourselves before men, but God knows your hearts. Because that which is exalted among men is an abomination before God.

 

We see that marrying another is not becoming one flesh with another person, but it simply refers to cohabiting with another person in a way that is socially acceptable and lawful in society’s eyes. God on the other hand is standing faithfully by the one flesh He formed in the garden, and treats any other social agreement as nothing but abominable sin. Because marriage in and of itself has nothing inherently to do with one flesh, therefore Jesus calls re-cohabitation (remarriage) with another person “adultery.”

In making a direct reference to John the Baptist (Luk_16:16-17), Jesus linked these statements against immoral marriage with what John had publically opposed Herod for, especially by using the Greek word “βιάζεται” – violence, (as also used in Mat_11:12-13 (βιάζεταιβιασταὶ)) Jesus alluded to how John had ultimately heroically sealed this testimony with his own blood (Luk_9:7-9):

 

Mar_6:17-18 CAB For Herod himself had sent and laid hold of [ἐκράτησε – i.e. grabbed mightily] John, and bound him in prison for the sake of Herodias, his brother Philip’s wife [τὴν γυναῖκα Φιλίππου – lit. the woman of Philip]; because he had married her.  18  For John would say to Herod, “It is not lawful for you to have your brother’s wife [τὴν γυναῖκα τοῦ ἀδελφοῦ σου – lit. the woman, the one of your brother, or the woman of that of your brother].”

 

Notes about Mar 6

·       If divorce had freed Herodias from being Philip’s lawful wife, and Herod’s divorces had freed him, then Herodias and Herod may have gotten lawfully married.

·       The fact that it was not lawful for Herod to marry Herodias proves very clearly that divorce had not freed her from being one flesh with Herod’s brother Philip.

·       John does not say, ‘it is bad what you did,’ but he says, ‘it is bad what you are doing.’ – “It is not lawful* (in English and Greek) is a present-tense statement.

·       Jesus very clearly links this to the New Covenant teaching against divorce and remarriage, not the Old Covenant teaching against incest (Luk_16:15-18).

·       Just like Luke 16, Mark 6 shows that Herod marrying Herodias had nothing to do with a lawful one flesh covenant, but again, John shows that it was simply an adulterous, socially recognized re-cohabitation, or “marriage.” – This has nothing to do with the one flesh which Jesus defended from the garden!

 

[* the Greek is, “οὐκ ἔξεστί” – this is an action verb in the Present Tense, Active Voice, and Indicative Mood]

 

>> get trans anal./ exception cl. Passages here

>> incorporate any quotes from next section?

 

>>H!

4. So What Conditions Actually Make One Flesh? What Makes Marriage Truly Lawful?

What circumstances actually make a one flesh covenant work right?

Such a basic question, but one that most people usually have very little understanding to give a Biblical answer

 

If we will submit to Jesus then we must take the Garden as our ultimate standard.

 

The Very Basic Elements Need to be Right First

- They are the right Species

Homosexuality and Bestiality is not an Option

- They do not Belong to Someone else

- This would be called “adultery” if someone tried to marry an already married wife.

 

The Father and Any Brothers Give Away Their Daughter

The giving of the bride has always been a practice since the very beginning of all human relationships. This practice was continued by the Jews, and is partly practiced by some societies.

 

Gen_2:22 – God brought Eve to Adam

 

Exo 22:16-17 CAB  And if anyone deceive a virgin that is not betrothed, and lie with her, he shall surely endow her for a wife to himself.  17  And if her father positively refuses, and will not consent to give her to him for a wife, he shall pay compensation to her father according to the amount of the dowry of virgins.

 

Gen 34 – Shechem vs. Dinah & Her Male Authorities

Gen_34:1-31

 

Rare Examples Where Men Did Not Give Away Their Women

 

Examples where they killed parents and brothers before giving away their daughters:

 

Deu_21:10-13 – a beautiful woman found among the captives

Jdg_21:10-12 – parents of Jabesh Gilead killed, and 400 young virgins taken and given

 

Now, it should go without saying that if you kill a woman’s male authority, he is no longer able to hold jurisdiction over her. (Roman’s 7 shows that this even applies to a wife under her husband, so much more with father and brothers)

 

The one example where the men were still living and did not initially give their women away was an extremely unusual and desperate circumstance:

 

Jdg_21:18-23 – The one time fathers and brothers did not give away their daughters, it was still considered a requirement for the men to “have mercy” on this situation and those who abducted them, and allow their women to be lawfully taken by the men from Benjamin. This is the only way that they could work it out in this special circumstance so that the women were not “stolen property.”

 

So if you ever feel like God is calling you to go “abduct a wife,” please still make sure to go back and ask the father and brothers for mercy like the children of Israel did before you consider this a done deal. Before consummating anything with anyone, the men need to give (or at least “allow”) you to have their women, so that you will not be taking “stolen property” in your house and fornicating with a woman who does not belong to you.

 

At Least The Man Verbally Agrees

Although it seems best for all clarity that the woman also agree, sometimes her silence is taken as agreement, which might be partly due to this picture in the garden. Jesus established the New Covenant in the manner of Jews by having His people drink a cup – again a verbal agreement is not necessarily happening here with His bride, but she indicates her acceptance by drinking.

 

>> some may say, ‘but we confess to be saved!’ – but we are not individually ‘married to Jesus,’ but corporately. Individually we confess to become sons and daughters of God, but corporately we reinforce our covenant with Jesus by silently drinking the cup of communion.

>> The verbal agreement of Rebecca seems to be an afterthought

>> All of this being said, it is probably good to have a verbal agreement from a woman, but in some cases it was indicated without much of a word.

 

Accountability to society is obviously right to do, since this is what the law of Moses legislated and this is how all those in the Bible have managed their relationships. But although it is the right thing to do, society cannot and does not make one flesh, nor can a church, a government, or any other human effort. A father owns his daughter, and once he agrees with an unmarried man to give his unmarried daughter to away to him as a wife, they are made one flesh when this is established.

 

---------------

 

But notice that Covenant is based on “Validity,” not on if it is God’s perfect will or other “compatibility” factors.

 

Validity” happens before God when a never-married man (or a widower) takes lawful ownership of a never-married woman (or a widow).

If she is a never-married woman, in a primary sense this means an agreement to transfer a woman from her father to a never-married man (or widower). If she is widowed, then she is under no immediate supervision or authority until she may choose to be (having already been transferred out from under her father).

(2) Cohabitation = Marriage in the Bible

(3) Covenant + Cohabitation (Marriage) = the only kind of Lawful Cohabitation (Marriage) that God has established

(4) Cohabitation (Marriage) can be ended by divorce or death

(5) Covenant can only be ended by death.

 

Because of this…

Covenant + Cohabitation with someone outside of Covenant always = Adultery according to Jesus, for as long as Covenant lasts (that is, for the life of their first Covenant spouse)

 

(6) Covenant + Cohabitation (1st)Cohabitation (1st) + Another Cohabitation (2nd – Marriage to someone else) = Adultery according to Jesus

 

Footnotes

(2) * When I say, “Covenant,” I mean the marriage covenant that is available for us to enter under the New Covenant that Jesus re-established. This always equates to one man and one woman being made into one flesh for life.

**If a woman has ever been married, she is no longer under her father, so all transfers of women from under their fathers are made up of never-married women.

 

 

---------------This goes in the previous sections:

God made humans different than animals by making them into One Flesh

Animals are portraits of the Angels, humans are portraits of God. (because of this it is ok to kill animals)

Animals can lawfully have multiple partners, but humans can only have one

 

One Flesh is a Covenant, Not a Contract

Contracts are the corporate commitments and rules governing those commitments to do something. Marriage is an agreement to be related.

 

We get to make up the rules for a contract; God already made the rules for the one flesh covenant and we cannot change them.

 

It goes without saying that marriage does have certain requirements that go along with it, and we are commanded to keep these things. But if we do not keep them it can in no way change the fact that we are in a binding covenant relationship with a spouse.

 

One Flesh is A Covenant, Not A “Vow”

How bizarre of us to make a lot of talk in our age about “wedding vows” establishing marriage when marriage has nothing to do with vows?

Have you ever wondered or been confused like I have, why we talk about the sacredness of wedding vows when Jesus said they were actually from the devil?

God clearly commands us to never make such promises, and it is a result of extreme perversion that we keep wanting to reestablish what Jesus so clearly made forbidden for His followers.

>> In fact, the concept of “consummating” marriage vows is very unbiblical: first because the marriage covenant was typically established long before the wedding, and second in that vows have nothing to do with making marriage; they established covenants.

 

The Trouble with Defining “Marriage”

Please note that for this entire book I have chosen to take an unpopular path: Every time I say “marriage” I am always referring to the words in the original languages.

 

Marriage

 

 

Covenant and -as confirmed by latter passages - the agreement of the father to give away and transfer possession me his daughter. as said earlier, social accountability is good and right because God ordained and commanded that we should be accountable to each other, but as far as what makes marriage this cannot make or break a lawful marriage covenant.

 

though there are many other things we can and should do in addition to these things, yet still, in the end it is only a lawful covenant that actually makes one flesh marriage, and this essentially happens by the giving of the father and the recieving of a spouse.  this makes a man and woman covenant which is witnessed and sealed by God into one flesh.

 

Technically, Cohabitation is “Marriage” in the Bible

Certainly this is not what we usually mean because our moral and cultural concepts are so foreign to the righteous standards of the Bible. But because of seeking to stick to Scriptural forms, I am trying to speak about marriage in this sense throughout this book. Please don’t get confused about this! When most people talk about marriage they are actually talking about the marriage covenant, not the experiential phenomena of marriage (cohabitation). The Bible speaks this way, and for the purposes of this book, I am speaking this way too. But if someone says “marriage is permanent” and they mean the covenant is permanent, for all practicality I still agree with them (since I recognize they are referring to English terminology). But when discussing the Bible, we need to keep in mind that marriage is an experiential phenomena which can only be lawful to partake in when there is first a covenant that allows it. This is why we said toward the beginning, “God prepared man and woman to belong to each other…”

 

Passages the prove that “marriage” (in the Bible) is cohabitation

Deu 22:13

 

Cohabitation and Lawful Marriage

We are not allowed to cohabit with the members of the opposite sex that are eligible for marriage, because in the Biblical world view, marriage is cohabitation with an eligible mate.

What the Old Testament shows us about basic righteousness is that Lawful marriage is when a person first makes a covenant with an eligible person before cohabiting. This has always been the ancient way of doing what is right, and it is only the destruction of society that accepts a couple’s cohabitation without agreeing to belong to each other.

But even this is not all there is to it…

What Jesus shows us is that Lawful marriage cannot happen again unto another person after the first covenant is made, unless one of the lawful spouses dies.

 

Note: we do not have to know this is going on for it to be valid; We may use different words and expressions and neve understand the significance, but this is what actually happens according to God’s declarations.

 

So let me be extremely Clear:

(1) (Lawful) Covenant* = When a man obtains possession of a woman (as his woman or “wife”) and God agrees with the validity of this act by making them into One Flesh.

 

A man may fail to meet his responsibilities and a woman may not regard the authoritative nature of the man, but this is still the posture of man and woman by nature before God, and we should recognize it too if we want to be His friends.

 

---------------

 

Summary

But we know the remarriage does not end the first covenant

sin does not end the first covenant

salvation does not change your marriage state

 

 

Sin Does Not Change Our Marital State

>> 1Co_7

>> Hosea

>> Jer_3

 

Conflict Does not Change Our Parental Nor Our Marital Relationships

>> family is one flesh as well

If our relationship with our earthly father ever goes sour, we all know that we should continue to honor him in order to fear, reverence and obey our heavenly Father, because our earthly father’s sins cannot undo our requirement to honor him. Our earthly father’s sins will not remove him from representing that parable of our heavenly father, even if the image of “fatherhood” is greatly obscured on earth through flesh and sin. So also marriage never ceases to own the place of illustrating God’s relationship to His bride. Even if the image is greatly obscured by sin, the parable of lawful marriage will never cease to speak of Jesusand His assembly of people, even if the spouses themselves do a poor and even inaccurate job of telling the story. Let us continually honor our fathers as much as possible, and let us never cease honoring lawful marriage (Heb_13:4) no matter how unfaithful other people may be in the equation. You will be judged for your part in honoring the parable, not theirs.

 

 

Covenant Makes One flesh Cohabitation Makes Marriage

>>!

a lawful covenant produces one flesh, and cohabitation produces "marriage" (whether or not it is lawful) - if one flesh comes first (i.e. by a lawful covenant) then cohabitation produces a lawful marriage, but if one flesh is not accomplished first, then it is clear you have an immoral marriage.

 

4. Salvation Never Alters Your Marriage Covenant

>> Put Summary somewhere: Salvation changes whether or not you are a sinner, it does not alter whether or not You are still married to your first spouse. If it does not change whether or not you are still married to your first spouse it is abundantly clear that it does not change whether or not your current affair is adultery.

>> whether or not what you are doing

>> Add somehow/ somewhere: Sin Does Not Change Your marital Status

>> if it stopped being adultery before all things became new, then you are assuming that sin stopped the marriage and this cannot be sustained by the example of any other sin

> If sin broke it, then we are back to square one and this has nothing to do with salvation anyway, but sin, and if we think that sin broke the marriage covenant then it is wicked to bring up ‘all things are new’ because salvation is not sin. If sin broke the covenant then ‘all things are new’ has absolutely nothing to do with whether or not it is adultery, because everyone who sins or is sinned against would then be free to marry another

>> Do any of the divorce passages say that sin dissolves the covenant? Do they not all testify that adding remarriage on top of the sin of divorce is adultery? Even where remarriage happens, a woman is still said to commit adultery if she remarries

 

The Marriage Covenant Applies to Everyone, Before and After Salvation

>> I think I should move some of these summaries to the end of this point

The Bible consistently recognizes marriages in all kinds of different circumstances, by all kinds of people, whether young or old, Jew or foreigner, monotheist or pagan, sinner or saint: >>  slave or free/ forced marriage (-slave example –war captive –the book of judges) >> 1co7  - unbelieving spouse

 

Gen_4:16-17 – Cain

Gen_4:19 – Lamech (Cain’s great-great-great grandson)

Gen_12:18-19 – Abraham and Pharaoh

Gen_20:17-18 – Abimelech, a pagan Philistine (see all of Gen_20:1-18 for the whole story)

Gen_39:4-13 – Joseph vs. Potiphar’s wife

1Ki_16:30 – Ahab was godless, but…

1Ki_16:31; 1Ki_21:5, 1Ki_21:7, 1Ki_21:25 – Ahab had a wife

Dan_6:24 – Daniel’s accusers

Mat_14:1-4 – Philip the Tetrarch’s remarried wife (who is still called Philip’s wife after she was remarried to Herod)

Mat_27:19 – Pilate

Luk_17:27 – “The days of Noah” – God noticed that they married

1Co_7:10-16 – Believing spouses commanded to stay married to unbelieving spouses (also compare verse 1Co_7:39)

 

[This list of verses was initially a summary of these things as discussed in “Till Death do us Part?” by Mr. Joseph Webb, and then refined over many years for use in this book]

 

By far my favorite highlight from this list is when Joseph resisted adultery and said, “you are his wife… how could I sin against God?” (Gen_39:9). We see that at the very basis of Joseph’s righteous flight from immoral adultery is a recognition of the validity of Potiphar’s covenant marriage to his wife.

All of these verses show that God recognized and cared about marriage covenants made by everyone from saints to pagans. It is very clear from this that unsaved people can marry and it still counts before God, even if they get truly saved one day down the road. Because of this Paul commanded converted spouses to remain with their unbelieving spouses in hopes of saving them, even though the marriage was made before conversion (1Co_7:10-16).

Whether we have been married, divorced, or even remarried, God saw, recognized, and sealed our first (valid) marriage, even if it was before or after we decided to become a christian. If God knew how to recognize Philip’s marriage to Herodias, then He knows how to recognize our marriages too. If God knew how to testify against Herodias’ remarriage to Herod, then He also knows how to warn us today against our adulterous remarriages, whether or not we think we are “saved.”

>> Add the consideration of all of the “adultery” passages – Since it goes without saying that no “morality” or “immorality” exists apart from the defining righteousness of God, the very concept of adultery existing testifies that God recognizes an immoral violation of a marriage that He witnesses.

 

Marriage Covenants Are Love-Debts that Continue After Salvation

>> Salvation does not release us from our human obligations to love other people, but it actually binds us ever so much more infinitely to this obligation so that we are truly commanded to love people beyond what all other humans are even capable of! We are commanded not only to love our family, but also even our enemy! Now, even if those from our family become our enemies, even still we are commanded to love them and forgive them from our hearts. This is not a standard that allows us conceive of a release from our binding obligation and debt to love our spouses, but a Gospel the preaches that no matter how much our spouses may sin against us, we are commanded to love them and appeal to them for reconciliation as much as it is lawfully available for us.

So many people are so willing to minimize their obligations to their spouses when it has entered into their heart to divorce and remarry, but contrary to this, the Scriptures have obligated people to their lawful marriage by calling it a “debt.” Not only is it called a “debt,” but it is described as a covenant that is so binding that not even conversion will alter its terms.

But some may complain and say that it is inappropriate to describe marriage as a “debt.” However, aren’t we encouraged to consider “love” a debt that should never be considered fully repaid?

 

The Bible Definitely Tells Us to Be Indebted to Love Each Other

Rom_13:8 CAB Owe nothing [μηδεν] to no one [μηδενι], except [ειμη] to love one another

 

This “love debt” especially applies to family:

 

1Ti_5:4 CAB  But if a certain widow has children or grandchildren*, let them first learn to show piety to their own household and to make repayment to their parents**; for this is acceptable before God.

 

[* ἔκγονος – i.e. descendants; lit. “someone” (ος) “generated” (γον) “out” (ἔκ) of her]

[** προγόνοις – the exact same word in English is: “progenitors” – those who were before you (προ/ pro), and ended up “generating” (γόνοις) you, including your grandparents; i.e. your forefathers/ ancestors]

 

>>! Add ‘provide for his own’ here!

And when it comes to the most important family relation, of marriage, we can be certain that this love is a “debt” that God will require us to pay:

 

Eph_5:25, Eph_5:28 CAB Husbands, love your own wives, just as Christ [ ὁ χριστὸσ – the anointed one] also loved the church and gave Himself for her…  28  So husbands ought to love their own wives… (also Col_3:19)

 

Tit_2:4 CAB …that they may urge the young women to be lovers of their husbands…

 

In fact, love is a continual debt in marriage that should always be considered binding as long as a spouse is alive:

 

Rom_7:2 CAB For the woman who is under a man has been bound by law to the living husband. But if the husband should die, she is released from the law of the husband.

 

In this verse “bound” is the Greek word “δέω” (de) which is where we get our word “debt.”

 

Do you think for one moment that you can divorce your spouse, and God is going to look down on you from heaven and not notice that you are not paying the debt He has bound you to? Now are you going to add remarriage on top of that, and claim to be obligated to a new spouse, and then assume that by covering your tracks God will forget the original debt? We should already know that this is not true.

Whether our debts are generic, relational, or even monetary, God wants us to address our indebtedness to one another, and resolve all things while always paying the continual “love debt,” whether that is to parents, siblings, or even to those with which we have marital obligations. But using “salvation” as a way out of these debts is simply an attempt aimed at avoiding our obligations. We should take warning at how this is condemned by the following Scriptures:

 

From Zacchaeus’ Example to John the Baptist’s Preaching – We Must Address Our Indebtedness!

About monetary debt and obligations before salvation the Bible gives us the following story:

 

Luk_19:2, Luk_19:5-6, Luk_19:8-9 CAB And behold, there was a man named Zacchaeus, and he was a chief tax collector, and this man was rich....  5  … Jesus …said to him, “…I must stay in your house.”  6  So he …received Him, rejoicing…  8  Then Zacchaeus stood and said to the Lord, “Look, Lord, I give half of my possessions to the poor; and if I have extorted anything from anyone, I restore fourfold.”  9  And Jesus said to him, “Today salvation has come to this house…

 

More than twenty times “tax collectors” are mentioned in the Bible, and only one of these references does not specifically link them with sin:

Mat_5:46-47; Mat_9:9-12; (Mat_10:3); Mat_11:19; Mat_18:17; Mat_21:31-32; Mar_2:14-17; Luk_3:12-13; Luk_5:27-32; Luk_7:29-34; Luk_15:1; Luk_18:10-14; Luk_19:1-10.

 

For this reason John the Baptist commanded the repentant tax collectors, “Collect nothing more than the amount which has been commanded to you,” (Luk_3:13 b CAB). Due to the unjust political structure afforded to tax collectors during New Testament times, Zacchaeus had been given many chances over many years to extort a lot of money from a lot of people who were heavily taxed at that time (notice: Luk_19:2). But like practically all other tax collectors, Zacchaeus did not legally owe these people anything on paper as a result of doing this, but morally before God he owed many of them a lot for what he stole before salvation. In the same way, a person may be legally divorced on paper and no longer legally obligated to their first spouse, but before God they are held to a much greater debt that is of greater value than all the money Zacchaeus ever stole. Love does more than the Law in making us indebted to each other, and the marriage debt is enforced by a much mightier fist than all the legislation that the government could ever make. And if you willfully continue to neglect to pay the marriage debt to selflessly love, cherish, and provide for your spouse, how will you escape the wrath of God?

Zacchaeus’ earthly debts did not disappear when he was saved, but instead, Jesus announced that he was saved because he repented and paid his debts. Although he was in the midst of the process of being (vertically) forgiven of every debt that he ever acquired before God, Zacchaeus showed that he was still (horizontally) responsible unto the people whom he had stolen from by repaying them, instead of simply “saying a little prayer” as we so often do, as though they should all simply disappear!

How much more serious are marriage covenants than money! Money commitments are serious, but marriage is the most serious horizontal commitment one can make in this life. If Zacchaeus showed us that monetary debts remain after salvation, we can be certain that marriage commitments remain all the more!

Although we know that both would definitely end at death, how much more will original marriage debts endure more than monetary debts, enduring through salvation, remarriage and everything else? If salvation could erase marriage covenants made before salvation, then how much easier could it erase the financial debt that a person may owe which was stolen and often spent long before they were saved? And do not neglect to notice that it was only when Zacchaeus had given to the poor and addressed his monetary debts (“in the flesh”) which were acquired before salvation, that Jesus said, “Today salvation has come to this house…” (Luk_19:9 CAB). Although it is certain that we must never even think to ‘pay God back’ for our moral crimes we have committed before His face throughout our lives (ex. Rom_4:1-8), yet, we had better zealously address our indebtedness to one another if we wish to have any reasonable hope of ‘salvation coming to our house’ as it did with Zacchaeus.

And just as John the Baptist commanded the repentant tax collectors, “Collect nothing more than the amount which has been commanded to you,” (Luk_3:13 b CAB) so all the more zealously he charged Herod, the remarried King, “…It is not lawful for you to have her.” (Mat_14:4 CAB; Also Mar_6:18; Luk_16:15-18). This is because the Scriptures say:

>>R

 

1Co_7:4 CAB The wife does not have authority G1850, G3756 over her own body, but the husband does. And likewise the husband does not have authority over his own body, but the wife does.

 

Therefore, if one divorces and remarries, they steal their body from their lawful spouse and give it to another to whom it does not belong! We must make restitution as much as possible if we hope to be saved like Zacchaeus was.

This much that we have addressed here can be clearly seen, but the problem is that we are unwilling to repent and make restitution in this area, because we are stubbornly committed to the slavery of the flesh and it sins, and will by no means obey God when it means sacrificing our own selfish happiness to actually love other people in truth, as God commanded.

 

Jesus Commands us to Face Our Indebtedness

Instead of being like Zacchaeus, we make up excuses to maintain our stolen property by saying it became “repossessed” after salvation.  Somehow, we think we no longer belong to our spouses (despite what God did in making us belong to them) and because “all things are new” we are free from any obligations because of religious affiliation. What sick and filthy perversion! Where is anything like this ever taught in the Scriptures? Oh, how we have become like the Pharisees!

 

Mat_15:4-9 WEB  For God commanded [λεγων (ειπεν in A-texts) – saying], ‘Honor your father and your mother,’ and, ‘He who speaks evil of father or mother, let him be put to death [θανάτῳ τελευτάτω – Lit. withdeathlet himfinishlife].’   5  But you say, ‘Whoever may tell his father or his mother, “Whatever help you might otherwise have gotten from me is a gift devoted to God [ δῶρον – lit. a gift; fig., cultural, contextual application: to God (i.e. releasing me from being obligated/ indebted to you)],”   6  he shall not [οὐ μὴ – i.e. not at all] honor**  his father or mother.’ You have made the commandment of God void [ἠκυρώσατε] because of your tradition [παράδοσιν].   7  You hypocrites! Well did Isaiah prophesy of you, saying,   8  ‘These people draw near to me with their mouth, And honor** me with their lips; But their heart is far from me.   9  And in vain do they worship [σέβονταί] me, Teaching as doctrine [διδάσκοντες διδασκαλίας – teaching as teachings] *rules made by [ἐντάλματα – commandments of] men.’”

 

[** “Honor” – we should take note that “honor” often means “financial support,” as in numerous passages such as 1Ti_5:3-18; esp. compare: 1Ti_5:17-18. This is contrasted sharply with simply “honoring” with one’s lips in v. 8, which (culturally) most Jews should have been able to recognize as a true “hypocrisy” when pointed out like this]

> es format: 1Ti_5:3-18; 1Ti_5:17-18

 

Do you see the following from Mat 15?

·       Children owed their parents “honor”

·       God ordained and commanded it

·       The Pharisees excused sons and daughters from this God-ordained debt to their parents by religious commitments

·       In the name of “God” they made void the very debt that God had ordained

·       We do the same thing when we say that salvation somehow frees us from our original marriage commitments

·       It is not the “freedom of the New Covenant” that makes us “free” from the debts that God says we owe to our spouses, but the hypocrisy and lawlessness of the Pharisees

 

Applying Mat 15: Repent of the Lawless Hypocrisy of the Pharisees! – Obey God’s Commands to Pay People what You Truly Owe Them Before God

Mat_16:11-12 CAB How is it you do not perceive that I did not speak to you about bread, but to beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees?”  12  Then they understood that He did not say to beware of the leaven of bread, but of the doctrine [teaching] of the Pharisees and Sadducees.

 

Luk_12:1 CAB  …Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy.

 

Notice that He did not say that the leaven of the Pharisees was “legalism” or “being too literal” or “strict,” but rather He said it was “hypocrisy.” And this hypocrisy is used today within the church to release people from their God-ordained debts to their marriages in the name of “God” (Mat_15:4-6).

I hope you can see that we are doing essentially the exact same thing in the area of marriage that the Pharisees were doing in their day with children’s obligations to parents. God is not opposed to His own work and purpose. His redeeming work of salvation in a person’s life will never undo His uniting work of making two people one (and indebted to one another) in a valid marriage covenant! Remember He said,

 

Luk_11:17 CAB …Every kingdom divided against itself is made desolate, and a house divided against a house falls.

 

God will not forget the commitments that He personally sealed when a person is made one with their lawful spouse, because He will not contradict His own work. God takes covenants seriously. He will remember the debts that He ordained to be kept as holy marriage covenants.  Because He sealed this covenant, He will also condemn everything that defies and profanes this covenant, including remarriage.

 

Salvation Has No Bearing on the Validity of Marriage Covenants

Although a lot changed when I repented of my sins to follow and obey Jesus, when I was saved from sin I did not all of the sudden turn around and find myself lawfully married to a spouse!  This may sound like a funny statement, but let me go on…  If someone was lawfully married and was then saved, this would not make their marriage unlawful. Salvation neither binds an unmarried person in marriage nor does it “unbind” a married person from their current, lawful spouse. Why is this?  Because though we should know that salvation is infinitely powerful to save sinners from sin, salvation never changes the status of anyone’s marriage covenant before God.

Why am I making such a big deal out of such an obvious point?  Because despite these obvious realities many church-goers still say that if one was not “saved” when they remarried, and they got “saved” while remarried, then their second marriage is no longer adultery, because now they are a “christian,” and “all things are new,” (a mockery of 2Co_5:17).  Do you see that we are suggesting that salvation changes one’s marital status if we say that remarriage is no longer adultery against the first marriage after “salvation”?

While people go on saying, “I’m forgiven of my divorce and remarriage,” playing religious games in order to avoid obeying the Scriptures and convincing ourselves out of our modern gospel that our marriage state has changed by “getting saved” will not “forgive” us from our responsibility and obligation to our first marriage covenant, nor will it exempt us from the repentance that God calls us to in forsaking relationships that He calls adulterous and sinful.

If remarriage is somehow considered adulterous by God, it is clearly because God considers another marriage valid.  That valid marriage, which shows a remarriage to be adulterous, cannot cease to exist because one is saved.  Salvation will not and cannot delete that (first) valid marriage, because, salvation does not change one’s marital status.

A valid marriage covenant is not like sins that are “forgiven at the cross of Calvary,” since such covenants are not sin (1Co_7:28, 1Co_7:36-39; 1Ti_4:3Dan_11:37; Heb_13:4)!  Because being one flesh with your lawful spouse is actually good and is not sin, lawful “marriage” covenants cannot be “forgiven”! Salvation reinforces doing what is good; it does not relieve us from responsibility to the good, one flesh thing which God made!

So we see then, if a remarriage is adulterous, it will continue to be defined this way by God as long as the first, good, lawful marriage covenant continues to exist, and saying a “salvation prayer” will not forgive you of being obligated to what is good, or somehow make the first marriage “disappear.” 

 

2Co 5 – We Must Believe that “All Things Have Become New” – WITHOUT HYPOCRISY!

I hope these things are clear to us by now, but for the sake of all understanding and clarity, let’s address 2 Corinthians 5:17, especially because it is in the name of this Scripture that many church people try to justify their inconsistent assumptions about marriage and salvation:

 

2Co_5:17 CAB …the old things passed away; behold, all things have become new.

 

This is a very powerful Bible verse that I quote in prayer on a regular basis. But if we practice what I call “Fragmented Presumptuous Theology” then we may be able to ignore the clear teachings in the rest of the Bible, including the immediate context of 2 Corinthians 5:17 itself, to pretend this verse into saying that God “makes all marriage relationships” “new.” Against all sanity and zeal for righteousness, we are intently hearing a filthy prostitute preach to us that we have randomly stop being lawfully bound to people we don’t want to be married to, and any adulterous remarriages that we want to stay in are all of the sudden changed so that they are no longer sin for us.  I beg you to hear: this irrational mindlessness is a damnable crime which you will certainly not escape the hot wrath of God for falling into!

My prayer for your benefit is that you will agree that a closer look at this passage shows us that it is being much more specific and focused than most church goers have often given it credit for.

 

Basic Points We All Already Know About 2Co 5

·       If a person with wrinkles becomes a follower of Jesus, we all know that their wrinkles do not automatically disappear at conversion, nor does their hair change color! And why is that? I thought ‘all things became new’! Note: I do not mock this Scripture, but rather, the crude foolishness that we seek to change it into! (compare Mat_5:39; 2Co_11:19-21)

·       We know this does not mean that a person is made physically young again, especially because this has already been discussed and specified in the Scriptures (Joh_3:1-10)

·       It goes without saying that this verse is talking about forgiving sins and making humans into new creations inside spiritually, not changing their physical nature so that they are young again, or are no longer physically related to their parents or spouses.

·       While ‘making all things new’ does change the debt we owe God (vertically, in the Spirit), it does not change the relationship debt we owe our spouses (horizontally, in the flesh)

·       Claiming ‘all things have become new’ in order to allow people to remain in an adulterous remarriage would have to presuppose that salvation stops a person from being married to their first spouse and makes them married to the person they committed adultery with. Now doesn’t that sound ridiculous?

·       Making ‘all things new’ obviously does not change a person’s marital status and let them off the hook so that they are no longer obliged to their spouses and can continue to commit adultery with other people’s spouses! – that is the exact opposite of Biblical Christianity that demands repentance, and the new birth of righteousness that sets us free from sin (for example, Rom_6:1-23, Rom_7:1-25, and Rom_8:1-17)!

 

Let us not ignore the meaning of this verse by forgetting the verse that precedes it:

>>R

2Co_5:16-17 CAB  …from now on, we regard [οἴδαμεν – percieve] no one according to the flesh. Even though we have known Christ [χριστόν – anointed one] according to the flesh, yet now we know Him thus no longer.  17  Therefore [ωστε – because of this (i.e. what we just said)], if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old things passed away; behold, all things have become new.

 

Please Notice These Points When Considering 2Co 5

·       Verse 16 specifically excludes “flesh” from being included with the substance of what is being addressed by the passage.

·       The scope of “all things” that “have become new” in verse 17 is narrowed by the “flesh-exclusion” mentioned in verse 16.

·       all things” specifically excludes “flesh.”

·       Marriage is a covenant based on “flesh” (i.e. “the two will become [into] one fleshGen_2:24, CAB).

·       all things…becoming new” specifically excludes the realm of marriage (that is, “flesh”).

·       Marriage, divorce, and remarriage are on the plane of flesh that does not “become new” after salvation.

 

If we die to this life to follow Jesus, God forgives us from our sins and “makes all things new” by an incredible, supernatural, mysterious rebirth of God’s Spirit (Joh_3:1-10) but He does not wipe out our fleshly responsibilities and obligations in the process. By making us new and setting us free from sin, He does not allow us to get away with disregarding justice by neglecting to meet our responsibilities to others, but Jesus actually enables us to do what we could never fulfill in our sinful flesh in being devoted to loving other people, and in every way fulfilling and even surpassing our responsibilities to care for and provide for each other. This definitely includes marriage in the same way as it includes our responsibilities to honor our parents and take care of our children, and lawful marriage is even more of an enduring obligation than all of these things!

We should repent of making excuses to avoid our lawful responsibilities before God, and we should instead begin to “perceive no one according to flesh” (2Co_5:16 Jos.Trans.). Then we can be spiritually minded and be released from living in sin when we declare that “all things have become new” (2Co_5:17 CAB), and never make the gross mistake of thinking we can be released from our lawful marriage covenants (which are accomplished in our flesh by God) by some filthy, treacherous, and unbiblical view of ‘salvation,’ that makes us no longer responsible to our fellow man and lawful spouse!

 

College Debts Teach Us about Marriage Debts

We know of many college students in Florida in my home city who loaded up massive amounts of debt while going through college. Some of these students responded to Jesus, and renounced their former evil ways of living in luxury and indulgence and now want to follow Jesus and walk in truth from here on out. What do you suppose I should council them to do about all of their student loans and credit card debt? Should they call up their creditors and say (as others have suggested), “I have great news! I don’t owe you anything anymore because ‘all things are new’ now that I’m saved!” Certainly we all know that this would be wrong, and refusing to pay debts can sometimes get a person into serious trouble! Wouldn’t it instead be right of me to remind them of things like Zacchaeus’ example (as we already went over), and how he paid back debts to follow Jesus? We see then that obligations that we have gained in our flesh do not automatically “go away” even if we are legitimately made alive in the Spirit.

The Bible says that covenants cannot be broken, as established toward the end of chapter 1, (where we pointed out Gal_3:15). This is because a person’s debts (and the covenants they made to pay them) are based on their “physical side” and not on their spirit, and it is certain that our physical side (our flesh) does not become new at salvation.  Marriage covenants are almost entirely based on flesh [Ex.“…the two will become [into] one flesh” (Gen_2:24)] and practically do not require the “personal spiritual involvement” on the behalf of a couple to establish such a covenant.

So whether or not you are saved does not have a bearing on whether or not your marriage is valid.

 

1Co 7 – The Command to Remain With a Pagan Spouse Proves Salvation Does Not Change One Flesh

Those believers who were already married to unsaved spouses when they believed, were commanded to remain married to those unbelieving spouses (1Co_7:12-16). If these unions were not validly binding marriage covenants established and sealed by God due to the other spouse’s lack of salvation, then they would not have been commanded to remain married.  If the marriage to an unsaved spouse was not valid due to their lack of salvation, then 1 Corinthians 7:12-16 would be a command to remain in fornication! If the verse that says “all things have become new” meant that a previous marriage had been undone, then they would have committed fornication by staying together!

So original marriage unions are not undone by salvation, and it should be easy for all of us to say that this would be a ridiculous (and clearly unbiblical) thing to believe. But I also hope we will stick with the obvious when it comes to divorce and remarriage:  If we are consistent then we will say: a previously adulterous remarriage would still be adultery (if continued) even if one did get truly saved. They must then face up to the reality of their legitimate marriage covenant and forsake the adulterous one, or else walk away from Jesus. 

 

Summaries of Salvation and Marriage – It is Absolutely Clear that these Standards Apply to Everyone!

In the end, it is really simple: Although I have sought to make these explanations helpful to you, in the end the question about adulterous remarriage and getting saved is extremely simple and basic, and I am consistently amazed at how much we have to wrestle through just to get people to believe the clear and simple thing that Jesus said:

 

Luk_16:18 CAB  Everyone [“everyone” as in, well, “everyone” – Christian, Jew, or pagan…] who divorces his wife and marries another commits adulteryG3429 [is committing adultery (μοιχευει – Present Tense: is committing adultery)]; and everyone who marries a woman who is divorced from her husband commits adulteryG3429 [is committing adultery (μοιχευει – Present Tense: is committing adultery)].

 

If we believe this verse, we will know that it is universally applicable with or without salvation.  If we believe Jesus, we will believe that the adultery of remarriage applies to “Everyone.” If you don’t believe this yet, then you are not a Biblical Christian yet, and you need to repent and start believing and obeying Jesus.

Becoming a ‘christian’ and ‘having your sins forgiven’ does not entitle you to keep stolen property! Because of this, anyone who claims christianity and pretends that it gives them a license to keep doing what Jesus calls adultery is a blatant liar in need of repentance. This goes without saying, and there is no more time in this desperate hour when souls need truth to spend our lives playing such religious games! Here the Words of Jesus now, and, perhaps for the first time, take Him seriously when He says divorce and remarriage is adultery!

It goes without saying that those who pretend to “get saved” will find just about any and every excuse in the world to keep doing the same sins that they want to do, including adulterous remarriage. We don’t need any more ‘pretend salvations’ like this.  It is definitely high time people stop pretending to ‘get saved’ and finding reasons to stay in their sin, and finally got saved from their sin to the point that they actually started leaving it! And if our generation keeps on ‘getting saved,’ and also keeps on living in sin, then what did they get saved from anyway?

 

Mat_1:21 CAB …and you shall call His name JESUS, for He shall save His people from their sins.”

(Also see Act_3:26)


Chapter 2 Divorce, Adulterous Remarriage, and Real Repentance

 

 

We need Jesus’ salvation!  We need the Gospel which He preached. But who will give it to this age, and where will we find an escape from such wrath that is due to a rebellious and proud people who do not care that their standard practice throughout modern churchianity is filled to overflowing with filthy immorality… and yet no one cares and hurts over this?!  I charge you as a reader who is hearing truth: separate yourself from the filthiness; testify against the blatant sin; rebuke the perverted rebellion, and call all people which God may make available to you to run quickly into the obedience of Jesus!

And how will we know how to repent?  The Scriptures have declared these things to us.  If your heart will be righteous, then consider and hear the Words of God and the message that has been proclaimed by Jesus and those He sent to us, as God has continued to warn us against adulteress remarriage by the voices of those who have heard His voice.

 

1. Some Basic Terminology

 

The Biblical Words Behind “Divorce” in English

>> Big point: it is abundantly clear that in the NC divorce certificates do not mean anything.

The primary word for “divorce” in the New Testament is “ἀπολύω” (apoluō) – literally, to lose away. When applied outside of the context of marriage it means to socially dismiss people, and when applied within the context of marriage it means to socially dismiss a wife out of a man’s house. Such dismissals were official and formal ways of socially releasing or losing away people from the obligation to remain with the one who was dismissing. With crowds this loosening was given so all the people officially and corporately recognized that they were no longer obliged to stay and listen to a speaker (for example). This was back when people actually had the dignity to stay and listen to a speaker for hours, and recognized the perverseness and disrespect of simply “leaving early.” – they needed to be loosed away before leaving, because they actually cared about propriety at that time! But with a wife, losing away said that she no longer had the obligation or right in society to remain in a man’s house.

 

[Note: We very much look forward to completing and greatly expanding this point whenever God may help us. There is so much more we are eager to cover, and there is much more to come in future updates if God may help us in this way.]

 

>> The procedure

Loosing away directly correlates with standing away.

This was done with or without her consent, and with or without a real accusation at all, depending on the harshness of the hard hearted husband.

>>! Being sent away/ Standing away

>> divorce means to socially “dismiss”;

Luo can be used in many ways depending on the other words that it is used and compounded with, including:

Being loosed away from dirt – this is always represented as “Washing” in English; a person being “loosed away” from life, that is, death; a person being socially loosed so that they are no longer obliged to remain was someone.  In fact, luo is even used for persons solving (i.e. loosing or “untieing”) a difficult problem or proverb.

So we see that in Greek a person can loose dirt, life, difficult questions, social obligation (or “permission”), and even moral responcibility.

In fact, a person may be loosed from many things in the Greek language. When you use luo, the real question at this point is “what is in a reference to?”

Some

>> I need to verify this statement in exact terms with first Corinthians seven:

When luo is combined with the word “from,” it always refers to a social loosening in reference to marriage.

 

When luo is used this way it does not refer to the marriage bond, but to a social dismissal.  Otherwise you would have Jesus divorcing the crowds of people, and I have news for you, Jesus was not married to any of them, nor did He “break the marriage bond” when He (SOCIALLY) losed them away to go to their homes.

The crowds displayed a social respect to stay and hear this teacher out, and out of the appreciation for this social reasonableness a speaker was expected to loose the crowds away so that they would no longer be socially obligated to stay and continue to hear a speaker.

This is very strong evidence that “divorce” truly refers to a social loosening and not a moral one, and Jesus confirmed this very thing when He said that remarriage was still adultery even though the social loosening away had already been accomplished.

 

>> I definitely need to be inserting the Greek here and explaining the roots and implications for all of these words that the Bible uses and how we miss things in our terminology and understanding

>> The Bible shows that divorce is due to hatred: Deu_24; Gen_29:31; Jdg_15:1, Jdg_15:2; Eph_5:28, Eph_5:29 (and compare: Deu_22:13)

>> McFall: “Divorce is mentioned elsewhere in Lev. 21:7, 14; 22:13; Num 30:9; Dt 22:19, 29; 24:1-4; Isa 50:1;

Jer 3:1-8; Ezek 44:22; Mal 2:14, 16”

 

Divorce is For Hatred

Deu_22:13

Deu_22:16

 

 

Divorce – Game Plan

Stand away

Loose away

Heb: cut

Separate

the hard-hearted Israelites were for divorce and divorce certificates

the Pharisees were for divorce and divorce certificates

 

Mat_5:32 KJB But I say unto you, That whoever divorcesG630 his wife, except for a saying of prostitutionG4202 [i.e. fornication], causes her to commit adultery…

 

Mat_19:9 KJB And I say to you, any oneG3739, G302 shall divorceG630 his wife, onlyG1508 for prostitutionG4202 [i.e. fornication]

> it is clear from the words of Moses, the words of the Pharisees, and the Words of Jesus that dismissing a wife did not happen without the writing. In fact, this is so clear that it is reinforced in the Talmud in no uncertain terms (see: betrothal under “Talmud - Mas. Kiddushin 3b”)

> The solution for adultery had already been given and the Jews knew that: ‘master we found this woman… the law says kill her’

> So many people stubbornly say: Jesus allowed divorce as Moses did, when Moses did for harness what was not tolerated in the New Covenant? We need to repent of being irrational and unsound, and admit with Jesus: it was for the lost and it cannot be that way anymore! The contrast is clear for all to read except those who have been overtaken in unsoundness and insubordination.

> Lightfoot did not like this good saying: “That there was no place for divorce where matrimony was broke off by capital punishment” (on Mat 19:8)

> Lightfoot: a wrong person says: “This bill may seem to be called a bill of divorce [as much as,  departing away],  not in respect of the wife put away,  as of the husband departing away form his wife.” And this is “diametrically contrary to the canonical doctrine of the Jews:  for thus they write,  ‘It is written in the bill,  Behold,  thou art put away;  Behold,  thou art thrust away,  etc.  But if he writes,  I am not thy husband,  or,  I am not thy spouse,  etc.;  it is not a just bill:  for it is said,  He shall put her away,  not,  He shall put himself away.’” | “A wife might not be put away,  unless a bill of divorce were given.  “Therefore it is called (saith Baal Turim) A bill of cutting off;  because there is nothing else that cuts her off from the husband. For although a wife were obtained three ways”  [of which see the Talmud],  “yet there was no other way of dismissing her,  besides a bill of divorce” (Lightfoot on Mat_5:31)

 

Opposing Heretical Claims Against Apoluo

As one who has read through the entire Greek New Testament and the major marriage passages in the Greek Septuagint (LXX) Old Testament, I can certify that this teaching that says ‘apoluo does not really address divorce’ (including a divorce certificate) has got to be one of the most shoddy, sloppy, irresponsible, irrational games I have ever seen church people try to play. They are not arguing from Greek, but from the foolish heresies of apostate christianity which were developed in English. This teaching is not an academic insight, but a moral scandal.

 

As we can see from the passages we have covered and are about to cover, it is certain by the mouth of Jesus that the civil action of divorce is effective for socially dismissing [ἀπολύσῃ] a wife from her husband, but has absolutely nothing to do with the morally binding obligations of one flesh. You may be truly released from society’s obligations by official paperwork that boasts great claims of “freedom” so that you may do as you please with other partners, but in the realm of morality Jesus has made a total mockery of our proud pretensions of divorce by publicly calling remarriage out as adultery.

 

Defining and Understanding Geographical “Separation”

It is very helpful to be aware of the Greek word behind “separation” throughout the marriage passages:

>> (1) loose away (2) stand away (3) have geographical separation as a result

>> Bring out: same root as Mat_7:23

>> get parts from yoked analysis:

>> although it is clear and certain that this means geographical separation, some versions so wrongly pervert it into ‘tearing apart’ what god has yoked together to imply something opposite from the actual words being used

 

“Χωρίζω” (chōrizō), (G5563) means to put space between two objects or people. This “space” is inherently geographical, because “space” is at the very bedrock of the foundation of the word itself. “Χωρίζω” (chōrizō), (G5563) is derived from the word “Χώρα” (chōra), (G5561) which is the common word for a geographical expanse, or range of land, such as a “field” or country (or area). This geographical expanse in turn comes from the word “χάσμα” (chasma), (G5490), which is where we get our word “chasm” from. This gaping “chasm” is the “great gulf fixed” in Luk_16:26 (KJV) between the burning part of hell and “Abraham’s bosom.”

 

Spatial Separation Summary: (1) (Geographical) “Separation[“χωρίζω” (chōrizō), (G5563)] comes from, (2) A geographical expanse/ “Country” (area/ “space”), which basically comes from, (3) A “chasm” [“χάσμα” (chasma), (G5490)] – Needless to say, the connotations of great spaces of separation are very present in these terms.

 

As it deals with the primary word for separation [“Χωρίζω” (chōrizō)], this geographical separation can certainly be used for figurative expressions in “separating” concepts, yet its geography is especially expressed when you are talking about “separating” two people. All of this is at least one reason why Mr. Strong includes in his definition of “separation,” “…to place room between… part… to go away… depart, put asunder, separate,” (Strong’s, G5563). Being sensitive to this geographical essence (especially as it is applied to people) can be very critical for understanding a number of important passages.

 

1Co_7:10 CAB  Now to those who have married I command, yet not I, but the Lord: A wife [woman] is not to be separated [passively] [χωρισθῆναι (G5563)] from her husband—

 

If we are informed about the Greek word behind this term, then we can more specifically understand what Paul is actually saying for a husband not to do.

 

He says, “yet not I, but the Lord” – In other words: ‘I’m commanding you, but I’m not the one who originated this command: Jesus is… ’ – It is clear that Paul is reiterating the following commands that Jesus had already given against such geographical separation…

 

Mat_19:5-6 KJ2000  …a man…shall cleave to his wife: and they two shall be one flesh…  6  Therefore they are no more two, but one flesh. What therefore God has joined [συνέζευξεν – fastened/ yoked] together, let not man put asunderG5563 [“χωριζέτω” (chōrizetō), (G5563) – “…let man not place room between” – same Greek word as used in 1Co_7:10].

(also see Mar_10:9)

 

And what do these Scriptures show us about geographical separation? If we are sensitive to the Greek we can particularly see that a command not to ‘separate’ is a command not to do things that result in geographical space between the one flesh, after God has yoked them together in marriage. This command not to ‘put space between’ the one flesh relationship, is a command that most specifically includes a divorce (compare v. Mat_19:3 and v. Mat_19:9). Though divorce or separation may be defying what God has accomplished it does not actually stop God’s work of one flesh, but the worst that separation can do to it is to “place room between” it, and this is reinforced by the fact that remarriage is called adultery after being geographically separated by a divorce.

If it is adultery to remarry, we can see clearly that the one flesh relationship has remained perfectly intact despite the separation and divorce, and it continues standing to testify against remarriage. So God teaches us here, “Don’t place room geographically with space between those whom God has made into one relationally in substance.”

 

Remarriage After Divorce? – No Permissive Statement Given

There is no permissive statement whatsoever in the whole New Testament about remarriage after divorce. (Though there are a few that liberals slander as giving permission to divorce and remarry, which we cover later in this work, there are no actual Bible verses that really do this). The only permissive statements in the New Testament allowing remarriage is when a person may marry another after death, not divorce.

>> Merge any general notations from “Jesus’ Complete Teaching” – later in ch 3

 

2. Deuteronomy 24 – A Brief Preview Summary of The Mosaic Law of Divorce And Remarriage

>>!? perhaps one day I might remove this preview and move Malichi 2 (i.e. the next pt) under the amendments of Deu_24

> Starting with Some of the Main Passages about Divorce and Remarriage

Because we cover this passage a little later in much greater detail under the point entitled, “Deuteronomy 24 Told the People Not to Return After Repentance from Remarriage,” we are simply giving a very brief summary here:

 

A. A Brief Summary of Deu 24:1-4

v. Deu_24:1 – Moses puts forth a typical case where a man might divorce his wife for whatever reason

v. Deu_24:2 – She will typically remarry

v. Deu_24:3 – The second husband might also divorce her, or else die

v. Deu_24:4 – The command in such a context is that the first husband cannot take her back after she is defiled

 

B. Basic Notes About Deu 24:1-4

Notice these basic things about Deu_24:1-4 when reading the following passages

 

·       This law (passively) permits (or accommodates) divorce and remarriage

·       In verses 1-3 Moses puts forth a typical scenario in order to enact a particular, limiting command in verse 4

·       As we can see in a moment, Jesus attributes this law as an accommodation for the hardness of heart of evil people (Mat_19; Mar_10)

·       All of the passages that follow (in the Old and New Testaments) hinge in the context of this divorce permission given in the Law of Moses

 

C. The Great Mystery Surrounding Deu 24:1-4

I would urge the reader to consider the great mystery surrounding this passage. If Moses had settled the matter of divorce and remarriage here, then surely the rest of the Scriptures would be content to set themselves within the boundaries of what had already been established. But for some great and eternal mystery of spiritual wisdom, every time God revisits the issues described in this passage He is always grieved and burning for something higher and greater which was not yet able to be established in the days of Moses. As you read the following passages please be softhearted (unlike those who originally received this law) and search out the Word of God to see why this accommodation was made, and why God is constantly yearning for something more to be said here, all throughout history until the glorious day Jesus stepped on the scene to finally proclaim and establish all righteousness.

not favor [χάριν] his wife after finding some “shameful matter” [ἄσχημον πρᾶγμα (LXX)] and divorce her by putting a divorce certificate [βιβλίον ἀποστασίου (LXX)] in her hand and sending her out of his house

 

3. Malachi 2 – God’s Surprising Opposition of Divorce and Astonishing Persistence in Affirming Original Marriage!

 

Malachi 2 Prep – A Necessary Technical Textual Explanation

Before reading the main summary from Malachi on divorce and remarriage I need to make some very important explanations:

 

Malachi teaches a lot about divorce and remarriage. But before we can draw conclusions from this we actually have to address a very difficult challenge which most English versions never even mention: The book of Malachi has many textual variations depending on what source text you use, and it is sometimes extremely difficult to determine which ones are right. To solve this painful difficulty (especially for the purposes of this book) this is what I have done:

 

(1) Thoroughly compiled all three major source texts (LXX, MT & DSS), especially for Malachi two* and,

(2) Included in this book a very brief and concise summary of this textual analysis where all three texts agree for the basis of what is being taught here about divorce and remarriage. If God permits, we are about to look at this critical Malachi textual summary in a moment.

 

Lest anyone say I based my conclusions about marriage off of a “faulty source text” or translation of Malachi, I am instead concluding upon what virtually every ancient source text available for Malachi agrees in transmitting to us about what God says about the one flesh covenant through this prophet. To do this, I have not only compared multiple translations of these source texts to address what most people are reading in English, but I have also looked into the original languages to confirm as many details with the greatest accuracy as reasonably possible for the following textual summary of Malachi (not to mention the much more thorough textual compilation which it is based on).

For this summary I have labored over numerous years and countless hours in research into ancient source texts to give you a summary of the safest possible conclusions that I can determine for the original, key thoughts of the passage from Malachi that we are considering here. You are more than free to: (1) also do all of this research yourself to determine the best readings for this passage from Malachi 2, especially since I have already compiled a lot of the necessary information for doing this* (and I have given the background information for understanding all of this in my Bibliography**) or else, (2) you can also consider my source text summary here.

 

Further Reading

A much more thorough explanation for this ‘Malachi Project’ can be found at:

www.TrueConnection.org/goto/mal

 

** To understand my methodology in greater detail for determining these technical source text questions, please see the online version of our Bibliography under, “Finding the Old Testament.”

>Mal_2:

 

Malachi 2 – A Source Text Summary: God Opposes their Divorce and Reaffirms their First Marriage

God is resolutely angry at ignorant and wicked men for divorcing their wives, and says that He still bears witness to their original covenant despite their divorce

 

Here is a summary of what I would say are the best readings and most certain summaries from all of the source texts of this passage from Malachi 2, verse by verse, and point by point:

As I laid out in the online version of my Bibliog. concerning these particular source texts we can have a general confirmation whenever a Hebrew text agrees with the Greek.

Based on this principal (which is thoroughly documented in the online version of my Bibliog) these are my conclusions about the most likely summary of Malachi.

 

v. 13

Mal_2:13 a – God is angry with them despite the fact that they “covered [LXX: lit. would cover] with tears the altar of the Lord, and with weeping and groaning” (CAB)

Mal_2:13 b – God resolutely refuses to honor or receive their desperate prayers, sacrifices and pleas for help, but instead…

v. 14

Mal_2:14 a – When they ask Why?” [LXX: Ἕνεκεν τίνος – lit. on account of what?] He solemnly declares…

Mal_2:14 b – “Because the Lord has borne witness between you and the wife of your youth…” (CAB)

Mal_2:14 c – And although they had divorced their wives, still God says…

Mal_2:14 d – “she is your companion, *and the wife of your covenant.” (WEB) [LXX: καὶ γυνὴ διαθήκης σου – lit. and woman of your covenant]

v. 15

Mal_2:15 a – God takes full credit for making it this way

Mal_2:15 b – This has something to do with retaining some “remnant” of (righteous) “spirit” as a result of God making it this way

Mal_2:15 c – Because of this, they are to guard their own spirits and not divorce ‘the wife of their youth’ (their first wife)

>>! Add!: wife of youth means the first one directly from virginity: morn like a virgin for husband of youth

>> add LXX vs. MT Specifications for “B” (above)

 

v. 16

Mal_2:16 a – God opposes their divorce [MT shows God “hating” it in Mal_2:15, while the LXX basically shows this in Mal_2:13 (though this “hatred” is not stated as such in the DSS); both the LXX and DSS show the men as being guilty of hatred by divorcing the wife of their youth by saying, “but if it is so that you hate and send (her) out and away…” (Jos.Trans., LXX)]

Mal_2:16 b – God says this is because a profound wickedness [MT/DSS: violence; LXX: irreverence] “covers” something [DSS: God’s garment; MT/LXX: the man’s garment; (or some LXX manuscripts: the man’s deeper thoughts and passions)] when they do this

Mal_2:16 c – So God says again to guard their own spirits and not divorce

>> add bracketed lit. version of divorce

 

v. 17

Mal_2:17  – God is angry with them over their words for saying, “Every one that does evil is good in the sight of* the LORD, and he delights in them**; or, Where is the God of judgment?” (KJ2000)

[* LXX: ἐνώπιον – lit. in the countenance (of); fig. in front of, or “before” (NETS)]

[** LXX: εὐδόκησεν – lit. has tested and approved (fig. thought/ judged), (δόκη) them well/ good (εὐ)]

 

Verse Analysis

The numbers below correlate with the verse numbers seen previously in Malachi 2

 

(11) Corruptions Before/ Arround Ezra’s Time

This indicates a displeasure with the corruptions that preceeded the reforms of Ezrah and Nehimiah.

 

Also verse 15 indicates that they had married others and they thought that the remarriage would work well. This is expliced by the Hebrew by saying that they “married” these daughters from a forign nation

 

(13) ‘God Hating’ is in the LXX as Well

Note: we see that even in the LXX God hates it when we divorce and then pretend to come to Him for mercy.

 

(14) Present or Past tense?

 

The present tense is implied by the contrasting use of “καὶ,” and by the ‘present tense’ accusation that God is bringing against these men. It is clear that God is “presently” holding this fact over their head of her being the woman of their covenant.

But despite this, this passage is misrepresented to say something that is not even in the Greek:

 

Misrepresentation

Mal_2:14 CAB Yet [NETS: “and”] you said, For what reason [Ἕνεκεν τίνος]? Because [ὅτι] the Lord has borne [διεμαρτύρατο – NETS: “was a”] witness between [ἀνὰ μέσον] you and the wife of your youth, whom you have [this is correct tense] forsaken [ἐγκατέλιπες – NETS: “abandon”], and yet [? Italicized in BR; NETS: “though”] she was [this is not in the Greek at all! It is an error carried over from Brenton into CAB here] your partner, and the wife of your covenant.

 

The Greek is contrary to this

Mal_2:14  καὶ εἴπατε Ἕνεκεν τίνος; ὅτι κύριος διεμαρτύρατο ἀνὰ μέσον σοῦ καὶ ἀνὰ μέσον γυναικὸς νεότητός σου, ἣν ἐγκατέλιπες, καὶ αὐτὴ κοινωνός σου καὶ γυνὴ διαθήκης σου. 

 

Correct translation:

...and she, [is] your companion, and woman of your covenant. [διαθήκης σου: see Mal_3:1]

 

There is nothing at all past tense in her being a companion or woman of covenant as Brenton misrepresents it here. The NETS corrects this mistranslation as well, similar to the way I have here, by representing it in the present tense: “…though she is your companion and the wife of your covenant” (Mal_2:14 NETS)

 

(15) Descendants

In the current LXX, the word “the” (before “seed”) implies that they were all looking for descendants (because that’s “the” thing to do), and were confused that God actually cared about the original woman that they had married.

The point is reversed when the LXX and MT/DSS are compared. Because the point is reversed between these texts, we know someone got this part wrong when copying their version of Malachi in ancient times.

 

(15-16) Monogamy

At least if you take this one textual variation, it makes the passage seem to foreshadow Monogamy, as though it were a prophecy of a future change… This would certainly explain the move to monogamy among some groups of more serious, hard-core, and stringent Judaism before the times of the NT, as, for example, the Qumran Community did as recorded in the “Damascus Document.”

(compare this thought with Hosea’s foreshadowing of monogamy)

 

Meshing Malachi Together to Clearly Demonstrate its Implications on this Issue

The following important summaries are sure conclusions of definite truth from God through Malachi about marriage that we can definitely see, no matter what source text we use, especially as we mesh Malachi with a few other passages to further confirm and draw all of these things together:

 

1.     the Lord has borne witness (Mal_2:14 CAB; Gen_2:22, Gen_2:24-25; Mat_19:4-6) of a person’s first, (lawful) marriage covenant (Mal_2:14 b; Mat_5:28, Mat_5:32; Mat_19:9-10; Mar_10:11-12; Luk_16:18) without regard of a church or pastor (Gen_2:21-24; Mat_19:4-6; Mar_10:6-9; Eph_5:30-32), (which is contrary to what Augustine falsely taught as seen in the appendix entitled, “The Historical Church Teaching” under “Augustine”). This is because God’s establishment of the permanency of the one flesh marriage covenant was in the Garden of Eden (Gen_2:21-25), and it has been this way “from the beginning” (Mat_19:8).

2.     And this wife that they were married to was ‘the wife of their youth’ (Mal_2:14, their first wife) because of the initial marriage covenant (Mal_2:14).

3.     As the witness of this covenant (Mal_2:14).

4.     God is the one who did this (Mal_2:15) so that…

5.     Even after the divorce (Mal_2:14, Mal_2:16)

6.     And remarriage* (Mal_2:11 MT), these men of Israel were still married to their first wife (“she is your…wife of your covenant,” Mal_2:14 NETS).

 

Note: We can be sure that the children of Israel generally took advantage of the Mosaic divorce and remarriage “permission” given in Deu_24:1-2, not only because it should seem obvious by now that they did, but also because the Bible specifically shows us that they did in a number of passages (1Sa_25:44; Mat_19:3, Mat_19:7-8; Mar_10:2-5; and compare Jdg_14:20), Notice also that Moses and Jesus both presumed that the woman was going to remarry after a divorce, so (according to Moses and Jesus) it is likely that the majority of these woman in Malachi 2 had remarried after their husbands divorced them. For the men this fact is specifically referenced in Mal_2:11 (MT). Despite the remarriage of the majority of the women after their divorce, God was not concerned about the second or third spouses of the men or the women in this passage, but only ‘the wife of their youth.’ This is because every new marriage that the first wife obtained was clearly defiling and adulterous (“…after that [second marriage] she is defiled…” Deu_24:4 CAB) and God remembered her first marriage and showed that her subsequent remarriages were not established by Him. God was only proclaiming Himself to be the witness of the divorced wife of their youth in Malachi (Mal_2:14 a) no matter what she had done in remarriage in the mean time.

 

7.     Their ignorance of the severity of the covenant that they made (Mal_2:14) had no effect at all to nullify its punishment when violated (Mal_2:13, Mal_2:15-16). Despite the fact that they “covered [LXX: lit. would cover] with tears the altar of the Lord, and with weeping and groaning” (Mal_2:13 CAB) God still did not listen to them (Mal_2:13) because of their divorce (Mal_2:14, Mal_2:16). They found no accepted repentance or forgiveness because in their hardness of heart (Zec_7:12; Mat_19:8;  Mar_10:5) and stubborn rebellion (Exo_32:9-10; Exo_33:2-5; Deu_9:4-8, Deu_9:13, Deu_9:24; Deu_31:26-27; Deu_32:20; 2Ch_30:8; Psa_78:8; Isa_48:4; Act_7:51-53) they were away from their first wives (Mal_2:11, Mal_2:14-16) leaving them to the defilement and adultery of remarriage (as shown previously).

 

>>! Make sure to re-integrate: Hard heart

>> add the emphasis on “covenant” here

 

Some may wonder why I go to such lengths to make this “Malachi Mesh” so clear and specific referencing every smallest point of every verse.  But if you wonder why, it may be because you have not experienced how few people believe these verses.  Pastors, church leaders, and many other seemingly reasonable people almost always read these verses and walk away saying, “It’s ok to divorce and remarry,” or, “God forgives us, even when we stay in such a remarriage relationship,” or, “God recognizes second marriages after divorce and would not want you to break them up to return to the first spouse.”

I also write this to draw out understanding so that you will not miss the HUGE implications of what Malachi is used to teach us here. I hope you walk away from reading Malachi having both understood, and embraced what is said, because if you do, you have surpassed 98% of the church who simply ignore it, and become ignorant. If you truly believe Malachi Chapter two (especially Mal_2:11-16), you have obligated yourself to a Divine revolution, having believed God’s truth that most all men reject, in and outside the church.

 

>> notice the link of “hating” being the assumed source of divorcing in Mal 2 as well as this illusion back to Deu 24. Do you think that “Hating” is something that describes a hard heart pretty accurately?

 

Malachi ‘Prepares The Way’ for John and Jesus

After spending the last half of chapter two condemning these men of Israel for their divorce, Malachi Does not stop there in his profound prophetic role. If we can avoid being distracted by the (uninspired) chapter break, we can notice that after speaking against the divorce and the corruptions of mixing with pagan women, Malachi immediately springs into talking about two coming messengers…

 

>>R!

Mal_3:1-6 CAB Behold, I send forth My messenger, and he shall survey the way before Me: and the Lord, whom you seek, shall suddenly come into His temple, even the Messenger of the covenant, whom you take pleasure in: behold, He is coming, says the Lord Almighty.  2  And who will abide the day of His coming? Or who will withstand at His appearing? For He is coming in as the fire of a furnace and as the herb of fullers.  3  He shall sit to melt and purify as it were silver, and as it were gold: and He shall purify the sons of Levi, and refine them as gold and silver, and they shall offer to the Lord an offering in righteousness.  4  And the sacrifice of Judah and Jerusalem shall be pleasing to the Lord, according to the former days, and according to the former years.  5  And I will draw near to you in judgment; and I will be a swift witness against the witches, and against the adulteresses, and against them that swear falsely by My name, and against them that keep back the hireling’s wages, and them that oppress the widow, and afflict orphans, and that wrest the judgment of the stranger, and do not fear Me, says the Lord Almighty.  6  For I am the Lord your God, and I change not;

 

It should be clear to all that this is a prophecy about John the Baptist and Jesus. The New Testament says it is at least three times.

 

But while we all basically know that this speaks of John the Baptist and Jesus, most people do not consider all of the ways these things were fulfilled in the Scriptures:

 

witches, and against the adulteresses

In the Old Testament and in the book of Revelation, Jezebel did witch craft and in Revelation she is also said to commit adultery.

In what way did Jesus and John the Baptist confront a “Jezebel” figure? If you have read the Bible enough, you might already know that Herodotus was a “Jezebel” figure who incited her king ‘husband’ to murder John (who was a type of Elijah) just like Jezebel did to the wicked King Ahab to kill the original Elijah.

 

This Jezebel or Herodious figure is a repeat of a wicked queen who each tried to murder Elijah or John in their respective day.

 

Both times “Elijah” condemned “Jezebel” and the theme of adultery and witchcraft fit her wicked character.

 

From all of this we can see that John and Jesus were swift witnesses against adultery, just like Malachi had said! And did you notice that this prophecy against adultery was right after Malachi spoke against divorce and insisted on a one flesh covenant that was still in effect after this treachery?

 

Mal_2 – Divorce is condemned; The first woman is said to be his partner

Mal_3 – Adultery will be condemned by John (Elijah) and Jesus

 

Luk_16 – John Commended; divorce and remarriage condemned

 

The theme in Malachi

Divorce condemned > The Messengers are coming > adultery condemned

 

The theme in Luk_16

The Messenger (John) commended > divorce and remarriage condemned

 

But it was not traditional adultery which they spoke against:

Was Jesus a “swift witness against” the woman taken in adultery? The words of Jesus are actually, “neither do I condemn you. Go and sin no more”

So in what way were John the Baptist and Jesus swift witnesses?

The only adultery that both John the Baptist and Jesus took a notable stand against was divorce and remarriage.

 

---------------

, and against them that swear falsely by My name, and against them that keep back the hireling’s wages, and them that oppress the widow, and afflict orphans, and that wrest the judgment of the stranger, and do not fear Me

 

4. Matthew 5 – The Clear New Covenant Proclamation Against Adulterous Remarriage!

>> Did I cover that even when one or both parties agree to end the marriage, it is still binding

Translational Facts About Mat 5

1. mat 5 confront: whoever marries her who is so divorced... there is absolutly nothing in the Greek to support this forgery. it is plain and obvious that Jesus is declaring this for everyone, and such perverts are seeking to molest the text to say it only applies to the guilty one.

2. Address heresy of NIV and word study

 

Matthew 5 – Divorce and Remarriage Is Adultery

>> Adultery is the crime of married people. By saying “adultery” and not “prostitution” it is clear that Jesus now considers her still lawfully bound to her first husband

>> There is nothing explicitly “marital” about prostitution, but once she is remarried, there is an explicit reference to her continued obligation to her first spouse by calling the remarriage “adultery”

Mat_5:27-32 KJB You have heard that it was said to those of old, “You shall not commit adultery.” 28 But I say to you that whoever looks at a woman to lust toward her has already committed adultery with her in his heart. 29 If your right eye causes you to sin, pluck it out and through it from you; for it is more profitable for you that one of your members perish, than for your whole body to be cast into hellG1067 [γέενναν (geennan) – the second (eternal) hell (i.e. Rev_2:11; Rev_20:6, Rev_20:14; Rev_21:8)]. 30 And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and through it from you; for it is more profitable for you that one of your members perish, than for your whole body to be cast into hellG1067. [γέενναν (geennan)] 31 It has been said that ‘Anyone divorcing his wife, must give her a divorce certificate’ 32 But I say to you, that whoever divorces his wife, except for a report of prostitution [i.e. fornication], causes her to commit adultery: and if anyone marries her that is divorced he commits adultery.

 

Technical source text note: Although virtually every major source text has it, a small number of unreliable (sloppy) sources like Codex Bezae omit the last part of Mat_5:32 (and if anyone marries her that is divorced he commits adultery)

 

>> (and “with ita,b,d,k Origenmss”), while all the others (including Bizantian and Alexandrian) have it

 

Matthew 5 – Immutable Truths that Jesus Taught About Adultery

A Summary of what we just saw

 

(A) All Adultery Sends You to Hell, Unless You “Cut Off” The Adultery

·       Adultery begins at the initiation of lust, not at the initiation of the physical act, (Mat_5:27-28)

·       All forms of adultery, even at the “lust stage,” will condemn one to hell unless a person rids their heart and life of it at whatever the cost.

·       Jesus said the only way to escape eternal hell [γέενναν (geennan)] is to cut off the adultery (Mat_5:27-30) and when this is applied to marriage in Hebrew* (which Matthew was originally written in*), this usually means to divorce*.

>> Remove or do something with “&” symbles?: - Why are these here? I need to check the references…

Mat_5:27-32; Mat_19:16 & Mat_19:18/ Mar_10:17 & Mar_10:19/ Luk_18:18 & Luk_18:20; Also see: Exo_20:14/ Deu_5:18; Lev_20:10; Deu_22:22; Pro_2:16-19; Pro_6:23-33; Jer_5:7-9; Jer_29:21-23; Eze_23:43-47; Mal_3:5-6; Mat_15:19; Mar_7:21; Rom_13:9-10; 1Co_6:9-10; Gal_5:16-21; Heb_13:4; Jas_2:11-12; 2Pe_2:14-19 (etc.); Rev_2:22-23

·       In divorce and remarriage, what is “adultery”? Whatever it is, we can be sure that we have to “cut it off” (even if that means divorcing** a second spouse) if we hope to be saved from the damnation of immorality (Mat_5:29-30) as Jesus said.

 

[* We cover the Jewishness and original Hebrew of Matthew in Chapter 3 of this book]

[** One important Hebrew term for ‘divorce’ is “כּריתוּת” (kerîythûth), (see H3748 & H3772), which basically amounts to a document of “cutting,” as seen in passages such as Deu_24:1-3; Isa_50:1; Jer_3:8 – ‘cutting off hands’ to end adultery could also potentially include ‘cutting off (divorcing) adulterous spouses’ by extension when considering the Jewish language and context]

 

(B) Divorce and Remarriage is Adultery

Having fully established that adultery sends one to eternal hell [γέενναν (geennan)] at every stage (Mat_5:27-28), Jesus at once announces that divorce and remarriage is adultery, (Mat_5:32).

 

Matthew 5 – Some Basic, Undeniable Facts about What Jesus Said

·       Although we still commonly teach that remarriage is only adultery for the guilty party, Jesus taught that someone is not guilty because of divorce, but they become guilty when they remarry after divorce. – This is a big difference! (Please chew on this and make sure you know the difference!)

·       church People say that the guilty person commits another sin of adultery if they remarry, but Jesus clearly said that if an innocent person is divorced they become immoral when they remarry.

·       It is clear that Jesus taught that whenever people issue a divorce that allows remarriage, this remarriage is actually committing adultery before God.

·       Before Jesus came along everyone has always known that being with someone else is adultery, but it is Jesus’ Words that say that this even includes those who have been “acceptably divorced.”

·       We like to think that, although remarriage may be adultery in some cases, if you get a valid divorce then it is not adultery if you remarry, but Jesus very plainly says that even when you get a divorce that “allows remarriage,” remarriage is still adultery. – that is the point of His whole teaching!

·       The theoretical success in ‘lawfully divorcing and marrying another’ in societies eyes is still adultery in God’s eyes: notice that the man has considered the marriage dissolved and over by divorcing her, and the woman has the concept that the marriage bond was loosed because she married another. It is in this scenario with this notion, where both the husband and wife have given up on the marriage and consider it to be effectually ended by divorce that Jesus comes along and says she commits adultery by marrying another. When everyone considers the marriage don and over with, and even the spouses mutually consider themselves to be lawfully remarried to others, Jesus demands that they are still one flesh with each other and are committing adultery with their second partners.

·       Whether it is against one spouses consent, with mutual consent, or with legal consent, no amount of agreement on earth can change the verdict in heaven.

·       No matter how many people declare that it is ok to break God’s rules, adultery remains adultery until we stop the adulterous relationship

> “Jesus taught on the Mount that the divorce, that permitted remarriage, causes adultery…” (the Nature of Marriage, Page 116)

 

>> Add:

divorcing according to the law of Moses was a socially lawful divorce - notice that even when you obtaint a socially lawful divorce, remarriage is still adultery - the word “whoever” includes those who divorce for bad reasons, as well as those who seem to divorce for good reasons - this is the whole point of “whoever.” It shows that in every case, no matter what the variables are, whoever marries the divorced commits adultery.

 

Matthew 5 – 4 Ways Men Become Guilty Concerning Adultery

This passage warns us against at least 4 ways that a man may become guilty of committing or causing adultery:

 

1.     By simply committing it (Mat_5:27) – they already knew this from the Law of Moses (Exo_20:14; Lev_20:10; Deu_5:18, Deu_22:22-24; and also consider Pro_6:32), not to mention the fact that humans as a whole have known this in general from the times of Adam and Eve (as briefly documented in “The Ancient Marriage Teaching” at the beginning of this work)

2.     Looking to lust after a woman (Mat_5:28)

3.     Divorcing a woman for anything other than prostitution [or fornication] (Mat_5:32 a, because it is assumed that she will remarry in Mat_5:32 b)

4.     Marrying a woman who has been divorced (Mat_5:32 b)

 

Jesus clearly warns us that we will go to eternal hell [γέενναν (geennan)] if we do not repent of committing these adulteries (Mat_5:29-30). If we consider all that is said here, it is clear that such guilt includes causing others to fall into such sins by extension (i.e. causing others to commit adultery by divorcing them), and this dreadful guilt a person may have from causing others to sin is powerfully confirmed in Mat_18:6-9. In confirming passages like this, it is clear that the one who causes others to sin is much more guilty than those who are ‘tricked into it.’

While this passage tells how a man may be found innocent or guilty before God concerning adultery, it does not specifically address how a woman may be found innocent and avoid guilt in these cases. Whether the need is to know how a woman may avoid causing men to lust (Mat_5:27-29) or how a woman may escape the adultery of remarriage herself (Mat_5:31-32), while these needs are covered in many other passages, neither of these needs are specifically addressed in this particular passage because the writers of Scripture are much more riveted on context than we are used to, including Jesus. In this case the context is the potential guilt of a man, not a woman, and we must adjust our values to theirs, especially when reading their sayings, if we will clearly, properly and reasonably understand what they are saying.

 

Matthew 5 – Some Ways Women Become Guilty Concerning Adultery

Notice the absolute and difficult implications of what Jesus says in verse Mat_5:32:

 

·       Women were culturally constrained to marry again after a divorce. It was extremely difficult for a woman to make it on her own in Biblical times (compare Rth_1:9; Rth_3:1-18). This is why a husband would be the cause of the almost definite adultery of remarriage following his decision to divorce her. The fact that Jesus anticipated divorced women to generally become adulterous by remarriage is clearly shown by the Old Covenant passage He is referencing (Deu_24:1-4) as well as the second half of Mat_5:32, which says, “…and if anyone marries her that is divorced…”

·       If a man divorces his wife, he is the cause of her resulting adultery when she remarries, unless of course she was already guilty of prostitution/ “fornication.” The man would not be the cause in such a “prostitution” exception. A woman would have already been immoral in such a case as this; he would not have caused her to be immoral if she were already that way before He got a chance to divorce her.

·       Notice that in every scenario that Jesus gives here, the woman is divorced and she commits adultery when she remarries. The exception is not a case where she is innocent of the adultery of remarriage, but an exception where the man is not guilty, since it is the only case where he is not also guilty for her immorality when she remarries.

·       Since it is already clear that Jesus’ repeated focus in this passage is the potential guilt of the man (as seen in the “4 ways” summarized previously) it would be unreasonable to change this point in our theology about this passage by imposing an additional scenario upon Jesus’ teaching where the woman is held innocent after she is divorced, because this is never addressed by Mat_5:31-32, and this is consistent with the passage from Deuteronomy which Jesus is quoting, since Deu_24:1-4 does not address a case where the woman is not “defiled” by marrying another man. There is not one statement in all of these verses where Jesus describes a divorced woman remaining innocent when all is said and done (an “innocent divorced woman” scenario is not specifically covered until 1Co_7:10-11 – where the woman remains single).

·       It is important to notice that the initially innocent chaste wife, (which is primarily what Jesus is talking about in these verses) commits adultery upon remarriage even if her husband was the one more guilty and wicked in the process. Even if the husband married again and committed adultery against her (as seen in the case of Mar_10:11, which is quoted later), Jesus still says without any exception, “…and if anyone marries her that is divorced he commits adultery.”

·       Please be certain to understand this: Whether it is Deu_24:1-4’s “defilement” or Mat_5:31-32’s “adultery” warning, the only way a woman could ever be considered innocent before God would be to stay far away from this “marrying another” posture that both passages describe after divorce. If a woman wished to avoid the guilt and defilement that these passages describe, then her only option would be to completely avoid and flee from the various scenarios they address. But if we introduce an imagined scenario into our theology where a woman could remain in one or more of these remarriage scenarios and still go to heaven as a christian, then in the end we will have Jesus testifying against us as His enemy because He never said any such thing, and it is certain that we are wicked if we seek to undermine and change His eternal and immovable Words and Laws that He gave to us in order to accommodate and justify what He called “adultery.”

 

Matthew 5 – It is Clear and Certain that these Standards Apply to Everyone

 

(A) “Everyone” in Mat 5

Whether “lust-adultery,” or “remarriage-adultery,” these standards are applied to everyone (Mat_5:28, Mat_5:32; Also compare Mat_19:9; Mar_10:11-12; Luk_16:18)

 

(B) “The Crowds” in Mat 5

Mat_7:28-29 CAB And…when Jesus finished these words, the crowds were astonished at His teaching, 29 for He taught them as one having authority, and not like the scribes.

 

Notice that these teachings against adultery were not just for Jesus’ disciples nor just the Pharisees, but they are unmistakably addressed to “everyone” with “whosoevers” making up “the crowds” of “Galilee, Decapolis, Jerusalem, Judea and from beyond the Jordan,” (Mat_4:25; and also see v. Mat_4:14-17). These crowds are mentioned repeatedly throughout the Sermon on the Mount (Mat_4:25Mat_5:1; Mat_7:28-29). In Isa_9:1-2 and Mat_4:14-17, these crowds are said to have included the nations, which implies a somewhat random mix of various people and not just a particular group of people who could handle this teaching. This is important because some have tried to deny the obvious and weighty implications of this by irrationally saying that Jesus’ standards on marriage were only given to His disciples or somehow don’t apply to everyone for some other reason, but here we see clearly that at the very basis of Jesus’ teaching, divorce and remarriage is adultery no matter where you come from or what type of person you are.

    Although Matthew particularly presents the details of his narrative specifically to the Jews, yet the Sermon on the Mount in its initial essence gave standards that are clearly taught and applied to “everyone.”

 

Matthew 5 – The Seriousness of Adultery

As we have seen, Jesus shows the seriousness of visual, heart-adultery in this way in Matthew 5:

 

Mat_5:27-30 KJB You have heard that it was said to those of old, “You shall not commit adultery.” 28 But I say to you that whoever looks at a woman to lust toward her has already committed adultery with her in his heart. 29 If your right eye causes you to sin, pluck it out and through it from you; for it is more profitable for you that one of your members perish, than for your whole body to be cast into hellG1067 [γέενναν (geennan) – the second (eternal) hell (i.e. Rev_2:11; Rev_20:6, Rev_20:14; Rev_21:8)]. 30 And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and through it from you; for it is more profitable for you that one of your members perish, than for your whole body to be cast into hellG1067. [γέενναν (geennan)]

 

If this is the case with visual adultery wouldn’t you consider the physical act to be at least as bad? Indeed, visual adultery gains its potency here from the previously established prohibition of the physical act! And yes, no one can properly commit the physical act without adding it as a sin on top of a previous mental act. And if it is so that physical, and even visual adultery are sinful enough that they send people to Hell, (as this verse reaffirms) unless they cut off that which causes them to be adulterers… if adultery is this condemned, then why do we think that we can avoid Hell-fire and get away with “just saying a little prayer” of so-called repentance without actually cutting off the sin and its cause? Truly such unreasoning “logic” is of the devil because he wants us to burn with him on that great day of condemnation (Mat_25:41; Rev_20:10-15)!

 

Pro_5:4-5 CAB but afterwards you will find her more bitter than gall, and sharper than a two-edged sword 5 For the feet of folly lead those who deal with her down to the grave with death [μετὰ θανάτου εἰς τὸν ᾅδην – lit. with death into the hell], and her steps are not established.

 

But we tell church goers that “afterward” when we say we are sorry and call ourselves “christians,” we will then find adulterous remarriage sweet and blessed by God! Never mind that Jesus called it adultery; and never mind Proverbs 5 through 7! We are the fools that scorn the wisdom of God in Proverbs, and the persecutors of everyone who seeks to turn us aside from our corporate immorality!

 

Pro_6:26-29 CAB [she]hunts for the precious souls [ψυχὰς] of men. 27 Shall anyone bind fire in his bosom, and not burn his garments?  28  Or will anyone walk on coals of fire, and not burn his feet?  29  So is he that goes in to a married woman*; he shall not be held guiltless, neither anyone that touches her.

 

Important Greek Note: Although the MT uses slightly different words, saying, “his neighbor’s wife” (WEB), In the LXX, this is: “γυναῖκα ὕπανδρον” (gunaika G1135 hupandron ~ G5220) – a woman under a man; This is the same terminology that is later used in Rom_7:2 in Greek to give warnings against adulterous remarriage: “ὕπανδρος G5220 γυνὴ G1135” (hupandros gunē) – They have slightly different grammars, but it is basically the same exact Greek terminology used in both passages.

 

Pro_6:32-33 CAB  …the adulterer through lack of understanding procures destruction to his soul.  33  He endures both pain and disgrace, and his reproach [ονειδος] shall never be wiped off.

KJV versions

Pro_5:5 KJB Her feet go down to death; her steps take hold of hell...

Pro_6:26 KJB ...and the adulteress will hunt for the precious life...

Pro_6:32-33 KJB whoever commits adultery with a woman lacks understanding: he that does it destroys his own soul.  33  He shall get a wound and dishonor; and his reproach shall not be wiped away.

 

By using the word “adultery” it is obvious that Jesus, in establishing the New Covenant, was making illusions to the previously established teachings throughout the Old Covenant against adultery, including these passages from Proverbs (see Pro_6:32) to describe divorce and remarriage. If Jesus desired to define divorce and remarriage as some other kind of immorality He certainly could have used any number of different words to communicate this. But instead he used the word “adultery,” which is clearly a back reference to all of the Old Testament passages which condemned this immoral crime against lawful marriage.

If Jesus wanted to indicate that this immorality broke the marriage bond (as most Protestants claim), He could have chosen to communicate it this way. But by calling it “adultery,” He very clearly shows that the first marriages still intact despite the immorality, and links divorce and remarriage back to all of the other passages in the Old Testament which condemn this practice. Jesus casts scorn on the divorce which He now explicitly forbids by correcting and redefining the social acceptance of remarriage as being, in fact, adultery.

It is not reasonable to make out like Jesus is joking in this passage. When He calls it adultery, we should take these dreadful warnings against adultery very seriously! And if Jesus turns around and calls divorce and remarriage adultery, this should urgently grip our hearts with great zeal and godly fear so that we may immediately seek to get out and as far away as possible from what the Old Testament says about such a dangerous, immoral, and sexually defiling relationship! If we do not urgently flee from being with another person’s spouse, then it is clear from the Words of Jesus that great wrath from a just God and horrible damnation loom over our heads, ready to fall as a guillotine…

 

5. The Rest of Matthew and the Gospels Confirm this Strong Opposition Against Adulterous Remarriage

>> Include that Jesus’ reference to adultery is certainly alluding to the “defilement” mentioned in Deu 24

 

Matthew 19 – Divorce and Remarriage is Adultery

Note: We cover Mat_19:1-10 in much greater detail in Chapter 3

 

Mat_19:9 KJB And I say to you, any oneG3739, G302 shall divorceG630 his wife, onlyG1508 for prostitutionG4202 [i.e. fornication]. And if he shall marry another, he is committing adultery:G3429 and whoever marries her who is divorcedG630 is committing adultery G3429.

 

Things to Notice From Matthew 19

·       The initially innocent, chaste wife commits adultery upon remarriage though her husband marries again. This is consistent with Matthew 5 (as seen previously).

·       Just like Matthew 5, immediately following this teaching in Matthew 19, Jesus again reinforced the severity of committing adultery by clearly marking it as an issue of salvation. The rich young ruler asked Jesus…

 

Mat_19:16-18 CAB …what good thing shall I do that I may have eternal life?”  17  So He said to him, “…if you want to enter into life, keep the commandments.”  18 [such as] …’You shall not commit adultery,’…

(Also in Mar_10:17-19; Luk_18:20)

 

We see that in both cases (Matthew 5 and 19) the warnings against adulterous remarriage are coupled close by with reinforcing passages that remind the reader that adultery sends a person to hell.

>>! Check out all of these source texts

 

A Technical Note About Greek Texts

This last clause in Mat_19:9 that says, “whoever marries her who is divorced is committing adultery,” is preserved for us today by means of the Byzantine Majority Text (and naturally, the Textus Receptus and (generally) the Caesarean Text), Codex Vaticanus, the Latin Vulgate, and even the ancient Peshito Syriac New Testament, but not Codex Sinaiticus, Codex Bezae and Codex Leicestrensis [MS 69 – a Caesarean Text]. When even the Alexandrian text type Codex Vaticanus agrees with the majority of all texts of the New Testament in including this statement as being original, it probably is. (see “GNT” in the Bibliography for more). In addition to all of this, there are numerous quotes from the early church that repeatedly indicate that this saying is indeed in Matthew.

But whatever a person may say about source texts, this exact same phrase is preserved by virtually every authoritative version of the Greek New Testament (i.e. not counting Codex Bezae) in Mat_5:32 (as we just saw) and is repeated with similar expressions in Mar_10:11-12 and Luk_16:18 no matter what source text you use. Ultimately, one way or the other, the authenticity and truthfulness of the phrase is universally established no matter how you consider it, by the fact that virtually every reliable Greek witness agrees in Matthew 5, and this is confirmed again in Mark and Luke.

 

[Note: For now we are not addressing the fact that most English versions misrepresent this verse as though it allows remarriage. Especially since we cover these details at great length in Chapter 3, let it suffice to say for now that there is simply no support at all for the actual Greek words used by the majority of all English versions to say the exception allows remarriage: λέγω δὲ ὑμῖν ὅτι ὃς ἂν ἀπολύσῃ τὴν γυναῖκα αὐτοῦ μὴ ἐπὶ πορνείᾳ καὶ γαμήσῃ ἄλλην, μοιχᾶται· καὶ ὁ ἀπολελυμένην γαμήσας μοιχᾶται]

 

, and we should not have reason to waiver even in Mat_19:9 since the vast majority also confirm it there as well

 

Omitted Considerations

I don’t know how to properly reword these yet…

 

 

Mark 10 – Divorce and Remarriage Is Adultery

Mar_10:2-12 CAB  And some Pharisees approached and asked Him, “Is it lawful for a husband to put away his wife?” testing Him.  3  But answering He said to them, “What did Moses command you?”  4  They said, “Moses permitted a man to write a certificate of divorce, and to put her away.”  5  And Jesus answered and said to them, “In view of your hardheartedness he wrote this commandment for you.  6  But from the beginning of the creation, God ‘made them male and female.’  7  ‘For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife,  8  ‘and the two shall become one flesh’; so then they are no longer two, but one flesh.  9  Therefore what God has united together, let not man separate.”  10  In the house His disciples also asked Him again concerning the same matter.  11  So He said to them, “Whoever should put away his wife and marry another commits adultery G3429 against her.  12  And if a wife should put away her husband and be married to another, she commits adultery G3429.”

 

Notice that there is no exception here. And why is that?

 

Luke 16 – Divorce and Remarriage Is Adultery

Luk_16:18 CAB Everyone who divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery; and everyone who marries a woman who is divorced from her husband commits adultery.

 

Again, no exception! Why is that?

So many pastors are content to write this passage off by saying that Matthew’s exception should be “implicitly understood” in this statement, but there is not a thing at all “implicit” which would allow an exception to remarry in the Words, “Everyone who divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery.” The same things can also be said about Mark ten, First Corinthians seven, and Romans seven when it says things like, “while the husband is living, she will be called an adulteress if she becomes married to a different husband” (Rom_7:3). These are clearly absolute statements that realistically leave no room for an exception. All of the other passages clearly do not ‘teach an implicit exception’ to remarry as we falsely accuse Matthew of teaching, but on the contrary, all of the other passages completely contradict our unstable understanding of Matthew’s exception!

 

6. The Epistles Agree with Jesus and Make it Absolutely Clear that Divorce and Remarriage is Adultery, Without Exception!

A Brief Summary of how Paul Taught Against Adulterous

 

Romans 7 – Only Death “Looses” (Ends) One Flesh, and Marrying Another Before this Makes a Woman An Adulteress

>> It has always Been this way: get other refs

Rom_7:1-4 CAB  Or do you not know, brothers (for I speak to those knowing the law), that the law rules over a man as long as he lives?  2  For the woman who is under a man has been bound by law to the living husband. But if the husband should die, she is released from the law of the husband.  3  So then, while the husband is living, she will be called an adulteress if she becomes married to a different husband; but if her husband should die, she is free from the law, so that she is not an adulteress, having become married to a different husband.  4  Therefore, my brothers, you also were put to death to the law through the body of Christ, that you may be married to another—to Him who was raised from the dead, so that we might bear fruit to God.

 

There is still no exception. Are you noticing a very curious pattern here yet?

 

Does an Adulteress Commit A Onetime Act, or Repeated Acts of Adultery?

The Bible talks in some places about isolated, one-time acts of “committing adultery,” (example: 2Sa_11:1-4, 2Sa_11:26-27; 2Sa_12:13) but Romans seven does not address a one-time act of the past but a state of being. It does not simply say that a remarried woman “committed adultery” when she remarried, but that “she shall be called an adulteress.” This is who she is because of the sin she is presently committing, not merely a sin she has committed in the past. As others have also pointed out: If you say that such a woman (with or without claims of faith in Jesus) is not an adulteress or that she is even a Christian, then you are a liar (Rom_3:4) because the Bible has very clearly called her an adulteress here. It also clearly states how long her designation as an adulteress lasts – “as long as he lives” (Rom_7:1 CAB)

 

The Nature of this Romans Seven “Law” – It was Planted in the Garden of Eden, and Reaffirmed in the New Covenant

What we read here in Romans 7:2-3, is “the law of marriage” as given in the Garden of Eden, (Gen_2:21-25), which is between two people, and it is compared with the Law of Moses, which is between God and many people. In teaching about the New Covenant, Paul uses the law of marriage as a basis for what he teaches, and this directs us back to Jesus teaching on marriage, as He was reestablishing the Marriage Law as it was “from the beginning” (Mat_19:8/ Mar_10:5-9; Gen_2:21-25). 

    This concept of “Law” in the Old and New Covenant specifically included the first 5 books of the Bible (Genesis through Deuteronomy) and sometimes even included the Psalms or even the Prophets (Compare: Joh_15:25 with Psa_35:19; Psa_69:4; Psa_109:3; and 1Co_14:21 with Isa_28:11). If we will look for a marriage “Law” as described here by Rom_7:2-3, we will only find it in Gen_2:21-25, which satisfies Paul’s reference to “Law” (Rom_7:1-2). I write all of this because some people have rashly thought that this was a reference to the Mosaic Law (specifically, Exodus through Deuteronomy), and is so not a “New Testament” command. But we can see that Romans chapter seven is rather at the heart of New Testament theology, especially because it points back to the same principal that Jesus did (Mat_19:8/ Mar_10:5-9; Gen_2:21-25) as it seeks to reestablish the marriage Law as it was, “from the beginning” (and this is exactly how the early Church received this epistle*).

 

Don’t Confuse The Parable With The Point – The Law of Marriage is Different than the Law of Moses!

Let’s make this very basic and clear:

 

·       The Law of Moses (Exodus through Deuteronomy) clearly does not reestablish the marriage law, but accommodates its violation.

·       Jesus and the Apostles reestablished the marriage Law, and this can clearly and consistently be seen here in Romans seven.

·       Romans 7 does not reflect the Mosaic Law that accommodates hard hearts that break the law of marriage, but Romans 7 clearly supports the Law of marriage, which correlates with the teachings of Jesus and the rest of the Apostles, (unlike Moses’ Law).

·       Romans 7 does not teach that the law of marriage “died along with the Law of Moses,” but that because the law of marriage endures, it is a fitting parable to show that we must die in order to be joined with Jesus and the New Covenant. So don’t confuse the parable with the point here: If the marriage law was not still binding until death, then it would not have worked to illustrate that we have to die to performing the flesh-based righteousness of the Law of Moses (Heb_9:1-28, esp. v. Heb_9:10) in order to be joined into the Spiritual righteousness and commands of Jesus. If you say that a spouse does not have to die in order to lawfully remarry (without adultery) then according to this parable, you are directly implying that you do not have to die to sin and the flesh and their posture under the law of Moses (1Ti_1:8-11) in order to be joined to Jesus, while Romans 7 clearly teaches that you necessarily do have to die in both cases (in the parable of marriage, and in the spiritual posture under the law of Moses) to be joined to another.

·       Because the permanency of the marriage covenant was such a fundamental, embedded and absolute Law in the minds of original Christianity*, Paul was able to use it as a parable to prove that we have to die to ourselves and our sinful posture under the Law of Moses to be joined to Jesus.

 

[* Please note that these are verifiable Scriptural and historical facts I am referencing, and I have documented and or summarized much of this in the appendix resources entitled, “The Historical Church Teaching,” and “Extra Notes on Church History”]

 

First Corinthians 7 – Remain Unmarried: The Only Option After Divorce

>> Note: This entire passage [chapter] is covered much more thoroughly in Chapter 4

1Co_7:10-11 CAB  Now to those who have married I command, yet not I, but the Lord [commanded in Mat_19:6]: A wife is not to be separated from her husband--  11  and even if she does separate [separation happens to her – The Greek is in the “Passive Voice”], let her remain unmarried or be reconciled to her husband—and a husband is not to divorce his wife.

 

No exception yet.

 

First Corinthians 7 – Only Death “Looses” (Ends) One Flesh

>> Note: This entire passage [chapter] is covered much more thoroughly in Chapter 4

1Co_7:39 CAB A wife has been bound by law as long as her husband lives; but if her husband also dies, she is free [ἐλευθέρα – i.e. she is a loosed person] to be married to whom she desires, only in the Lord.

 

7. A Summary of Some of the Main Divorce And Remarriage Passages, and “the Missing Exception Clause”

Why is the exception clause missing in all of the other New Testament passages outside of Matthew? After now having also considered the two cases in First Corinthians seven, this makes at least 5 times in the New Testament outside of Matthew where the exception clause is strangely missing in this hard-core teaching against divorce and remarriage! The rest of the New Testament definitely makes the standards look like they have no exception at all, but if that were the case, what could Jesus possibly be referring to in Matthew? Could it help by looking at the Greek and the Scriptural and historical background?

In any case, I hope you will be honest to admit that even on a surface level, after considering all these passages it looks like at least basically remarriage while your first spouse is still alive is adultery, and while we may need some help looking closer at the details to understand the specific implications of the exception for divorce in Matthew, yet the majority message strongly rings loud and clear even in English throughout all of these seven New Testament passages: divorce and remarriage is adultery!

 

8. The Basics About Repentance from Adulterous Remarriage

>> add flee scriptures (to repent of adulterous remarriage); how to repent: Flee lust (this certainly includes adultery); Cease cohabitation (don’t go near the door of her house)

>> The headings for this entire section probably need to be thoroughly examined and refined

>> I probably also need to combine many of these since they are repetitive, and some may possibly add too much to the TOC

>> It would be good to have the computer quickly read through this entire section in one sitting one day

>> add:    Many complain and often say how a new marriage has born children and it would be like trying to “unscramble eggs” to tell them to separate because “the damage is already been done.” This human reasoning would seem naturally appealing to our “moral” appetite, being based out of human sympathy, but if we care to know what the Truth is, then we must strongly establish in our hearts that it does not matter what we feel or think is right.

 

Religious vs. Biblical Repentance

Now that we have established from the Bible that divorce and remarriage is in fact, adultery, a person will often ask, “If a remarried person repents, then aren’t they forgiven and no longer an adulterer?” I would answer this with another question: What does it really (Biblically) mean to repent of an adulterous remarriage?

>> Apply Standard Numbering style

 

(1) If you mean the same thing that most modern church goers mean when they talk about “repenting,” then your answer is “no,” because God has promised never to forgive that type of “repentance.” God is not a liar, and He will not declare someone forgiven of sin if they continue in it:

 

Exo_20:7; Exo_23:7 b; Exo_34:7/ Num_14:18; Pro_28:13; Pro_17:15; Pro_24:24-26; Isa_1:11-15, Isa_1:19-20; Eze_18:4 c, Eze_18:13, Eze_18:20, Eze_18:30; Mal_2:13-14

 

(2) If you mean “Repentance” as in what the Bible actually teaches, then your answer is “yes,” because God has said that He is abundantly merciful to forgive those who depart from sin:

 

Pro_28:13; 1Ki_8:35-36/ 2Ch_6:26-27; Psa_37:27; Isa_1:16-19; Eze_18:5, Eze_18:9, Eze_18:21-23, Eze_18:27-28, Eze_18:30-32; Hos_14:1-3; Amo_5:15; Rom_6:12-13; Eph_4:28; 1Pe_3:11

 

(3) If you don’t realize that there is a vast difference between the two things that are both being called “repentance,” then you more than all people need to read what is being written here!

 

What Is Real “Repentance”

Most church people wrongly teach that if someone divorces and remarries and then later they say a little prayer and “repent” of it, then God will forgive them and their second marriage can and should continue on. This is consistent with the typical modern christian idea that “repentance” simply means to say “I’m sorry” regardless of whether or not a person keeps on doing the bad things they have done. This “repentance” is a religious creation, not a Biblical Truth. – This belief neglects the fact that Biblical “repentance” means to stop doing what you are doing, turn around, and go the other direction.

If someone Truly “repents of smoking,” then they don’t continue to smoke, repenting of lying means that a person stops lying, and if someone “repents of adultery,” then they don’t continue committing adultery. If a person came up and punched you in the stomach and then said that they repented of it only to continue doing it every five seconds, then they have not repented of a thing, (and I’m sure you would agree). Again, what if I said that I repented of stealing $100 from you, only to keep the money and not pay you back? You would emphatically say that I had not truly repented. And I ask: what is more valuable? Taking $100 of another person’s money, or taking another person’s own wife? And how is it that we have all become so perverted beyond all reason and conscientiousness that we do not even think it is continuing to sin when we have a man continue to sleep with another man’s wife? We so desperately need real repentance if we will have any hope of salvation!

But all of this unreal absurdity is due to religious repentance, which is consistently a cheap and easy process of quickly saying you are sorry, with no real conditions or consequences involved, but Biblical repentance always demands that you actually acknowledge truth, and flee from the unbearable and eternal wrath of God’s judgment by actually forsaking sin (ex. Heb_6:18). Because of these very basic realities and the clear declarations of the Scriptures, we can know for sure that if those who are remarried after a divorce don’t truly repent by ending their adulterous relationship, then both are destined for condemnation as a sure promise from God.

Please notice that nowhere in the Bible does it ask you to treat adultery as some special type of irreconcilable sin, but it does tell us to treat sin like sin (including adulterous remarriage). This simply means that whether it is the sin of lying or the sin of remarriage-adultery, both lifestyles are promised to condemn one to hell, (Ex. 1Co_6:9-10; Rev_21:8) until and unless one Truly repents of such a life style so as to live in it no longer.

John the Baptist said that people should, “produce fruits worthy of repentance” (Luk_3:8-140 CAB) by turning away from what they were doing wrong. And when he confronted this issue of divorce and remarriage, he said to the king who was in a divorce and remarriage relationship, “It is not lawful for you to have her!” (Mat_14:4 CAB; and see Mar_6:18 and compare Luk_16:16-18). We see that we don’t just need to repent “about” our sins, but we need to actually repent from them! But this idea has almost been lost completely in most churches having been drowned by false doctrines that boast, “Nobody is perfect!” and “All you have to do is say you’re sorry.” But “repentance” without an altering of actions away from sin is the very thing that will condemn the visible so-called church of today to hell forever, unless she learns to Truly repent:

 

>>R

Luk_13:1-5 WEB Now there were some present at the same time who told him about the Galileans, whose blood Pilate had mixed with their sacrifices. 2 Jesus answered them, “Do you think that these Galileans were worse sinners than all the other Galileans, because they suffered such things? 3 I tell you, no, but, unless you repent, you will all perish in the same way. 4 Or those eighteen, on whom the tower in Siloam fell, and killed them; do you think that they were worse offenders than all the men who dwell in Jerusalem? 5 I tell you, no, but, unless you repent, you will all perish in the same way.”

>> Add Greek?

>> Add Nineveh Here

>> Other Powerful Examples

>> Hebrew?

>> Add context of 1Jn_1:9!

 

Deu 29 – You Can’t Make Yourself Forgiven Apart From True Repentance

Many who continue living in sin have read this and do just like it says in Deuteronomy:

 

>>R

Deu_29:19-21 CAB And it shall be if one shall hear the words of this curse, and shall flatter himself in his heart, saying, Let good happen to me, *for>> I will walk in the error of my heart, [Refusing to repent and obey the Bible] <<lest the sinner destroy the guiltless with him:>>  20  God shall by no means be willing to pardon him, but then the wrath of the Lord and His jealousy shall flame out against that man; and all the curses of this covenant shall attach themselves to him, which are written in this book, and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven.  21  And the Lord shall separate that man for evil…

 

>> Maybe I need to collate variations??

>> This does not even have verse numbers:

Deu_29:19-21 WEB and it happen, when he hears the words of this curse, that he bless himself in his heart, saying, I shall have peace, <<though>> I walk in the stubbornness of my heart, [Refusing to repent and obey the Bible]The Lord will not pardon him, but then the anger of The Lord and his jealousy will smoke against that man, and all the curse that is written in this book shall lie on him, and The Lord will blot out his name from under the sky. The Lord will set him apart to evil…

 

Differences:

>> “for” in CAB vs. though in WEB.

>> The ending of vs 19 is different between the WEB and the CAB, even also the KJV

 

Let us see to it that we do not ‘bless ourselves’ and refuse to repent and be like the one described in these verses. We don’t make up the rules here, God does. If you continue in an adulterous second marriage then you can’t ‘bless yourself’ and suddenly make that relationship OK. You have to Truly repent like God has always demanded that people do whenever they are found to be living in sin.

> should I re-title it as: From Jesus to First John… – yet, I might add Romans and some other basic passages here

>> add: Rom_6: ??

 

You Can’t Continue To Sin and Go To Heaven

If you continue to sin, then you have no True repentance or salvation

 

Jesus Says

Luk_6:43 For a good tree does not produce bad fruit, nor does a bad tree produce good fruit.

Mat_3:10 And now also the ax is laid at the root of the trees, so that every tree that does not produce good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire.

Luk_6:46 Why do you call me, ‘lord, lord,’ and don’t do the things which I say?

Joh_14:15 If you love Me, keep my commands... 23 ...If anyone loves Me, he will obey my words... 24 He who does not love me will not obey my words.

 

The Bible Also Says

1Jn_2:4 He who says, “I have come to know him,” but does not keep His commands is a liar, and the Truth is not in him.

1Jn_3:6-10 Whoever remains in Him does not continue to sin. Whoever continues to sin has not seen Him, or known Him. 7 Little children, don’t let anyone deceive you: he that does what is right is righteous, just as He is righteous. 8 He that continues to sin is of the devil; because the devil has been sinning from the beginning. For this reason the Son of God was revealed, that He might destroy the works of the devil. 9 Whoever is born of God does not continue to sin; for His seed remains in him: and he cannot go on sinning, because he is born of God. 10 In this the children of God and the children of the devil are revealed: whoever does not practice righteousness is not of God…

 

Maintaining a Remarriage After Divorce Is Continuing to Sin Because Jesus Called it “Adultery”

>>!! Proof Read!

>> This needs a lot of clarification and revision

>> Move things out and around here…

>> Redo the title or make the charts small

>> As a conclusion I need to add: 2Pe_2:14 – eyes full of adultery and cannot stop sinning

>> I need to quickly get to the point here… like:

A Very Simple “Gun Analogy”

One of the most basic and fundamental things to consider is that we already know it is continuing sin. It is only cheap, loose and lawless christianity that gives us any wiggle room to say that it somehow becomes non-adulterous after Jesus declared it that. All we need to do is consider what we already know and our own acknowledgements testify against us: if someone points a gun at us, if we have any sensibility about us, we automatically surrender, often shooting our hands in the air. A thief does not need to instruct us on the serious nature of his intentions, but a simple pointing of the gun is all that is needed to communicate the weight of his intent. In the same way, in critical cases of confronting a criminal, a police officer does not need to sit down and have a talk with people to explain what he wants, but the basic and simple pointing of a gun displays the urgency of the hour. Also, if God demands that we do justice to the moral needs of our bodies, all He needs to do is tell us we will go to hell if we do not change. He never told murderers exactly “how” they need to handle their life style, but a simple indication of hell fire does the job. The gun is pointed, the criminal stops in his tracks, sticks his hands in the air, and waits to be instructed on what to do next, with great fear, knowing that his life is on the line. What should we do if Jesus calls remarriage adultery? If we will stop playing games with our souls, we already know the answer.

 

What is the actual Question here?

Is the adultery of remarriage permanent for as long as the remarriage continues?

Often in this issue people get confused from the beginning about what is actually being discussed. Because it is not good to forfeit understanding in this way, let us seek to establish some ground work and make the real question clear here so that confusion does not happen: The following progressive chart assumes that the person in question is essentially obeying Jesus in every other way possible, and that the only matter of sin and morality in question is divorce and remarriage

 

Chart: Moral Choices and Consequences


Stage

Moral Choices and or Events

The Question

Result/ Consequence

1

Divorce from first marriage                                        

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

2

Single after divorce         

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

3

Actively interested in marrying a second person

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

4

Engaged to second marriage partner                             

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

5

Wedding Ceremony (Official “Remarriage”)   

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

6

1st Night of intimacy       

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

7

2nd Night of intimacy       

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

8

3rd Night of intimacy       

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

9

Etc.                                  

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

10

Divorce second marriage partner                             

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

11a

Return to first marriage partner                             

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

11b

Or first marriage partner dies while in 2nd marriage

Adultery?  

Heaven or Hell?

Note 1: If you earnestly desire the answers to the questions in this chart then search throughout this book, because there are solid answers that God has given us within the Scriptures.

Note 2: For simplicity, this chart intentionally does not take into account the fact that a large percentage of divorce and remarriage relationships and interests begin before the first marriage is rejected.

>> Add links to the words in this chart

>> I still need to answer the actual question now

>> The question is not “what if you become a christian”  the questions is “is it still adultery”

 

So the main question about repenting of adultery is: At what point is divorce and remarriage adultery, and how long does it continue to be adultery if it was wrong to remarry in the first place? If it was wrong to enter into a marriage what would it take to be cleared of this sin?

Anyone with the slightest reasonableness to them will have to admit that Jesus was at least including the first act of intimacy in an adulterous remarriage (“Stage 6” shown previously).  Intimacy is explicitly reserved for marriage, and the essence of violating that strict reservation is called “adultery” when it is a sin against a valid marriage partner. Nothing else is more specific, and of the fullest essence in describing this sinful act of adultery, other than sexual intimacy outside of a valid, existing marriage.

 

And why is this remarriage intimacy bad?

Mat_5:32 ...whoever MARRIES her who is divorced commits ADULTERY [also see Mat_19:9; Mar_10:11-12; Luk_16:18]

 

We see that Jesus specifies that the marriage to “her who is divorced” results in committing adultery. We can also see that a sexual intimacy outside of lawful marriage speaks most directly to this “adultery” which Jesus mentions.  Because of this, we should agree with Jesus and urgently declare that the continued intimacy within divorce and remarriage continues to be defiling and immoral, because no one can commit adultery with someone they are lawfully married to (see Heb_13:4 and also 1Co_7:2-5) unless, truly, there is fault found in the entire bases of the marriage to begin with, and it is not actually lawful.  If there is fault found with the marriage to begin with, then none of the acts of intimacy that follow can ever be truly counted moral. We know Jesus has found fault with the marriage to begin with if He calls it adultery.

 

Things to Notice from Mat 5

·       The adultery that Jesus references speaks directly of a marriage that God has rejected on the basis of a previous valid marriage covenant

·       By this it has been shown that the divorce did not actually (morally) free the spouse to lawfully marry another

·       It should go without saying that all acts of intimacy that follow this invalid marriage are immoral

·       The ceremony that pretended to justify this adulterous intimacy and call it “good” in the sight of God (the remarriage), was in fact bad, and was declared a adultery by Jesus

 

>> I need to re-arrange and re-cluster related parallel statements together here…

So Should we Advise people to Continue Such Relationships?

If we will first at least admit the first act is bad, and not good (which should be clear to everyone by the word, “adultery”) we know this because Jesus has first disregarded and totally set aside the remarriage and the social agreement as a whole which said that this relationship was “right.” Jesus has indeed declared the remarriage, including the remarriage wedding ceremony, bad, sinful and immoral.  If the marriage covenants themselves do not stand, then neither will any justification of continuing the relationship.

If Jesus has declared the first act of intimacy along with the remarriage covenant as a whole wrong, then so is the second, third, and fourth act, and every other act of intimacy that follows. Jesus speaks of the sexual intimacy of this union as “adultery” due to the invalidation of the remarriage agreement, and so should we, no matter how long it endures or how frequently it is repeated. When Jesus comes back, He will judge us by the Word He spoke before He ascended, not with the religious fiction that has been promoted in the mean time (Joh_12:48).

 

We Have Got to Start Taking Repeated Acts of Adultery Seriously!

>>!! How Much of this has already just been said above???

>> Do I need this section?

After the realization that a remarriage is perpetual adultery, will we say that it continues to be until she says a little prayer saying “I’m sorry” without insisting that she fulfill the Scripture tenderly and mercifully given to the adulteress: “...go, and sin no more” (Joh_8:11)?

Is this “repentance” without turning from sin the repentance Jesus requires? Isn’t this the false repentance we’ve already discussed which is modern, westernized and religious, and not Biblical?

>> I don’t think I need these examples here…

 << not needed repetition Is this the example that Jesus gave with the woman taken in adultery?>>  Is this the example that John the Baptist took with Herod and his adulterous remarriage, not to mention the charges given through Ezra and Nehemiah? Remember that they out of godliness and the righteous purifying of the Nation of Israel, went so far as to torture those who held forbidden marriages (Neh_13:23-27)!

 

>> Need to combine almost all of this with what is said previously: 

>> There is also unnecessary repetition in these paragraphs themselves

 

If it is clear to you now, that at least the first act of sexual intimacy in marriage after divorce is sin, then what are we to say about the second, the third and so on? Does it proceed to evolve into a valid moral marriage? What other sin is there that you can think of that becomes “good” after repeated use? Does lying, cheating, stealing, murdering, or any other sin become good after prolonged usage? Do other sins get “Grand-Fathered-In”? As some people ask, “At what point does it stop being adultery?” And can you think of any other sin that you can “repent of” without stopping it? Is there any sin in the whole Bible that can be compared with the standard protestant assumption about the adultery of remarriage, where you can keep stolen property and still claim that you have repented and are on your way to heaven?

These are inconsistent assumptions that have been taken for granted too long!  It’s time someone called the bluff on this, and called the church to repentance!

After a third or fourth night with a prostitute, does the relationship become “sanctified?” Will we now council fallen church members that they should seek to spend the rest of their life with the women that they fall into immoral relationships with? May be this is the advice of those who think that adultery stops being adultery after some subjective number of adulteries.

But we know for certain that this is not the practice we ought to teach people to follow, because Jesus said those ending Words to the woman caught in adultery:

 

“...go, and sin no more” (Joh_8:11; and compare Joh_5:14)

 

Please notice here, that if “Adultery,” or even, “Sexual immorality” had broken the marriage bond then wouldn’t Jesus have said that the woman should stay with the “newly establish” relationship with the man she had just committed adultery with?

If the first act was sin, and the second would not have been, then why would Jesus direct her away from this relationship by saying “...go, and sin no more”?  It is clear from these Words that Jesus considered that it would equally immoral if this woman engaged in future sexual contact with the adultery she had just been caught in. By saying “sin no more” that means that doing the same action repeatedly would be repeated sin. If the second act were not equally evil in the eyes of God, then Jesus could have said, “From now on go and stay with your new relationship that was founded by committing adultery with them.” But isn’t this the logic of those who tell those in adulterous remarriages to “Stay in this relationship, and try to make this one work”? Again we say: If Jesus said the first act were adultery, then it is already clear that Jesus wants all who follow Him to go and sin no more.

 

The application should be clear now: If Jesus says that divorce and remarriage is adultery then why do we tell the woman in such a relationship to stay in it when Jesus tells the woman caught in adultery “...go, and sin no more”? If Jesus said “sin no more” why do we instead tell people if they do the same act again and again it will not actually be sin?? This has got to be the most opposite and contradictory thing that we could ever tell anyone who was in an adulterous remarriage! Do you see how ridiculous we have become? Even though Jesus disregarded the remarriage by calling it adultery, we stubbornly refuse to comply with His Words and we instead go about hyping up the “new marriage agreement” as though it were a valid agreement that we should stick to. It is pure insanity to claim to love Jesus and then go around behind Him and contradict all the sobering and serious Words He left us with to warn us against the eternal wrath of God in the lake of fire for living in adultery (Mat_5:27-32)!

Jesus has shown us by absolutely clear example that adulterers must “...go, and sin no more,” and he unmistakably included divorce and remarriage in this by calling it adultery. If you disagree with Jesus calling it adultery and demanding the couple to stop being together then you are a liar and need to repent and become a real Christian who follows and reverently obeys Jesus instead of arguing against His Laws. We have no more time to play games like you’re a Christian if you hate and rebel against His Words.

Didn’t Jesus at least call the first act adultery?

 

Jesus Called It Adultery and Ascended into Heaven! Anathema* to Anyone Who Tries to Change This!

>> I need to add/ contrast trying to change what Jesus said with faithfully passing along the traditions… wherever the first occurrence of ‘ascending into heaven’ is

>> I think I should make this a more basic point, and add, “the traditions of the Apostles”

>> The great ambition and goal of original, faithful Christianity was to preserve the Divine transmissions. Anything other than this is the same, age-old rebellion of satan in the garden trying to stop this pure and simple transmission of truth worked out and delivered to us by Jesus through those he sent

If the last thing that we heard from Jesus is that it was adultery, who are we to decide it is no longer adultery after Jesus spoke, settled the matter, and ascended into heaven? But if it is the marriage or the extension of it by continuing the relationship, it is already clear both of them are equally immoral and wrong, and lead straight to hell (Pro_5:4-5).

How will we escape if we say that divorce and remarriage relationships can be moral relationships when the marriage itself is opposed by Jesus and called “adultery”?  If the marriage is called adultery, it is because the relationship that happens in this context is dreadfully immoral. If we call divorce and remarriage anything other than what Jesus calls it, then we are in terrifying danger!

That which Jesus left us with is what we are required to live by, or else be thrown into hell. If Jesus called it adultery and left it that way, anyone who comes along and calls it something else is a rebel and a lawless perverter of the faithful and reliable Words of Jesus.

 

[* Note: the Greek word Anathema means lit. to arrange up; fig. to (completely) give (a person) up or “devote” something (to God), esp. for utter burning and destruction. – this is the way the Old Testament (LXX) used this word, and this concept is briefly imported into the New Testament in a few key passages where a Church is to utterly reject and “excommunicate” a heretic by handing them over to Satan. For more on this see the Bible study entitled, “Judging The Church” on www.TrueConnection.org]

 

Repentance Pragmatics

>> add more on flee

>> esp. Joseph

>> don’t even pass by the door of her house

>> you don’t have a right to live in the same house with another man’s wife and provide for her physical or emotional needs...

Whether it was through divorce and remarriage or some other immoral situation, if you were with my wife and asked me what you should do, I would demand that you immediately get away from her and no longer touch or speak to her. And because the Scriptures say that we ought ‘to love our neighbor as ourselves’ it is only right that we act justly toward other people spouses, and it is a foundational requirement before God that we flee from lust for our lives, just as the Scriptures have commanded and charged us (ex. 2Ti_2:22).

We all have things in our lives that we know are simply not optional: falling off a cliff, lighting ourselves on fire, starving to death, and other similar things which are life-threatening. So many people make excuses as though they cannot find a way out to repent from adulterous remarriage, but although I hurt for these people deeply, yet I know that the real problem is usually not how to properly go about repenting, but it is in the foundational need to acknowledge truth, and consider adultery a life or death situation.

Jesus said that adultery would send your entire body to hell (Mat_5:27-32).  It is better to cut off your hand and plucked out your eye, than to continue to allow anything in your life that is adultery!  Jesus confirmed to you that it was this serious.  If you take Him seriously then you know that your soul is dangling over hell and the threat of your entire destruction is at hand if you do not do whatever it takes to get out of adulteress remarriage. The central complication is not knowing “pragmatics” of how to go about these things, but knowing that you must do whatever it takes to flee from having your soul damned and cursed by Jesus. As I said to one person in this situation, “Once you believe that it is that serious, you will jump out of that house!” and “If you ever come to that point, then call me up quickly.”

 

How to Repent of Adultery

So many people seem to struggle with “how” to repent of adulterous remarriage, but these same people do not seem to struggle with determining what to do in parallel cases of other sins. If we struggle with “how” to repent of adulterous remarriage, we have first got to make sure that this is not simply an issue of not taking Jesus seriously. If it is sin as Jesus said it was, then we generally already know what to do with sin and we should not pretend that divorce and remarriage adultery is somehow different from what we should do in other such serious cases.

 

Chart: We Already Know How to Repent Adultery, If We Are Honest

An over-simplified Chart to show How Simple Repentance is

 

Sin

Repentance

Forgiveness

Murder

Stop Murdering →

·       Beg God for cleansing!

·       Seek out forgiveness and reconciliation from people who were hurt by the sin

·       Believe Jesus!

·       Be Free from Sin!

·       “Go and sin no more”

Stealing

Stop stealing and return what you stole →

Homosexuality

Stop & Get out of homosexual relationship →

Conventional Adultery

Stop & Get out of adulterous relationship →

Remarriage Adultery

[what belongs here?]

 

Critical Questions

We have got to stop, get honest, and ask ourselves the basic and critical questions:

(We previously covered some of this when considering Matthew 5 and visual adultery compared with remarriage adultery)

 

(1) How many times is visual adultery, adultery? (Mat_5:27-30)

Answer: as many times as you look lustfully

 

(2) How many times is adulterous remarriage, adultery? (Mat_5:31-32)

Answer: as many times as you engage in remarriage

 

(3) What do we have to do to repent of visual adultery? (Mat_5:27-30; compare: Mat_18:7-9)

Answer: Stop looking, seek cleansing (or else pluck out your eye(s)!)

 

(4) What do we have to do to repent of adulterous remarriage? (Mat_5:31-32)

Answer: …[what belongs here?]

 

To a greater degree than almost anything done before in history with any other sin, the modern church has almost unanimously agreed to stop calling people to repent of adulterous remarriage.

 

May we hear the Word of the Lord in our day and in our generation, and repent.

Repentance from Visual Adultery Helps us understand Repentance from Remarriage Adultery

 

God Positively Judges Adulterers

The Bible does not say that God forgets that the sin of adultery is adultery, but that He judges the adulterer:

 

Heb_13:4 CAB Marriage is honorable among all, and the bed undefiled; but fornicators and adulterers God will judge.

 

Remarriage, while the first spouse is alive, is not honorable because Jesus calls it adultery, (Mat_5:32; Mat_19:9; Mar_10:11-12; Luk_16:18… Also see “The Law of Marriage and divorce,” later – when? Is it even titled that anymore?). If you are ever going to repent of adulterous remarriage, you have got to come to terms with the fact that it cannot be forgiven and forgotten if you continue in it. God does not forget sins that you keep doing right in front of His face! When Jesus called divorce and remarriage adultery He distinguished it from lawful marriage which is called “honorable.” He promised you here that He will judge people who continue being adulterers by remaining in adultery. You have got to take Him seriously that He will damn everyone who remains in adulterous remarriage!

 

Choose This Day Whose Testimony You Will Believe!

>> Go over false peace: so many say, “I have talked with my pastor and prayed about it, and I have a peace about it now” – and what is that demon worship worth?? They say “peace peace, when there is no peace”

>> you conscious does not matter (see next point) that is irrelevant when it comes to determining truth

>> When my sister was very young she said, “Watch! I am going to make myself disappear!” She then proceeded to close her eyes thinking that that would make me not see her as well.

We have seen in Malachi (Mal_2:14) that the Lord is the witness of the original marriage covenant (that is, ‘the wife of their youth’), but we should also realize that because of this, He has said that He is also the witness against all who commit adultery and violate such covenants!

>>R

Jer_29:23 CAB  because of the iniquity which they wrought in Israel, and because they committed adultery [ἐμοιχῶντο – Imperfect Tense (on-going action): this is actually: were committing adultery (see RMAC: V-IMI-3P)] with the wives of their fellow citizens, and spoke a word* in My name, which I did not command them… and I am witness, says the Lord.

 

[* MT says, “lying words” (KJV), but the NT strongly approves of the LXX version of Jeremiah]

 

MT Version:

Jer_29:23 MKJV …they have committed evil in Israel, and have committed adultery with their neighbors’ wives, and have spoken *lying words in My name, which I have not commanded them; for I am He who knows and a witness, says Jehovah.

 

I come across people over and over again who remain in their remarriage but say that they have “repented” of adultery and think that ‘the devil can no longer bring this up against them,’ but the problem is that they have God as their witness testifying against them that they are adulterers, and this is because He is also the witness of the first marriage covenant (as we have seen in Malachi). And because they refuse to come into forgiveness on God’s terms of repentance and forsaking sin, God will witness against their adultery and witness for the marriage He sealed! People who are claiming “forgiveness” from adultery without leaving adulterous remarriages are as those in Jeremiah 29:

 

Jer_29:23 CAB  …they… committed adultery… and spoke a word in My name, which I did not command them…

 

Jer_29:23 MKJV They have… committed adultery… and have spoken lying words in My name, which I have not commanded them…

 

God never said that He would forgive anyone who continues in sin, no matter what religious ceremonies that they may observe. But contrary to this, today’s pastors give promises of forgiveness from God without any regard for Biblical repentance, to which God says, “I did not command them [this].”

    If we are ever going to understand what the Bible commands us to do about repenting of divorce and remarriage, then we need to first understand that there are at least two primary views about this sin that we can choose from

 

Chart: Church Person vs. Jesus on Remarriage & Intimacy

Who do you agree with?

Remarriage

Sexual Intimacy

Destination

Average

church Person

Because this is a valid marriage...

Therefore, this is good, clean and moral.

So...    

Heaven

Jesus

Because this is NOT a valid marriage...

Therefore, this is immoral (“adultery”).

So...    

Hell

 

9. Distinguishing Sins

 

All Sins are Not “Created Equal”

There is a really bad, wide spread roomer that says, “All sin is equal in God’s eyes,” (based out of distorting Jas_2:10-11). Is this conclusion really Biblical? Not at all! The Bible repeatedly and clearly teaches that the greater the sin, the greater the potential condemnation if not forgiven through godly repentance:

 

Deu_21:22; Deu_22:25, Deu_22:28-29; Deu_25:2; Eze_16:52; Mat_7:3-5; Mat_10:14-15; Mat_11:21-24; Mat_12:31-32, Mat_12:41; Mat_23:23-24; Mar_6:11; Luk_7:41; Luk_10:10-16; Luk_11:32; Luk_12:10; Luk_12:47-48; Joh_19:11; Heb_10:26; Jas_3:1; 2Pe_2:20-22; 1Jn_5:16-18

 

Jesus showed that not all sins were equal by comparing some to “gnats” and others to “camels,” (Mat_23:23-24) and also some to “specks” and others to “beams,” (Mat_7:3-5). In this same light, we must observe that some sins are pointed out with more urgency than others, as sins that definitely condemn us to hell. Among the most damnable sins mentioned in the Bible is adultery, as we will continue to see…

 

Condemned Sins

>> This is repeated below under sinning ignorantly! Should I move it?

Remember that adultery, just like fornication, homosexuality, lying, stealing, getting drunk and everything like this, is specifically listed as sin that will condemn people to eternal Hell if they live in it and do not truly repent by leaving the sin, (1Co_6:9-11; Gal_5:18-21; Eph_5:3-7; 1Ti_1:9-10; Rev_21:8).

 

1Co_6:9-11 CAB Or do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither fornicatorsnor adulterers10 …will inherit the kingdom of God. 11 And such were some of you!…

 

>> I need to add Eph, as done before

>> I quoted this with lots of insertions previously; maybe I should say something here?

 

>>R

Eph_5:3-12  CAB  But fornication [πορνεία] and all uncleanness or covetousness, let it not even be named among you, as is fitting for saints [ἁγίοις – holy ones (notice what Paul calls real Christians here!)];  4  neither wickedness [αἰσχρότης – shame], nor foolish talk [μωρολογία – lit. fool-words-ness] or coarse jesting [εὐτραπελία – lit. well-turned-ness; i.e. the witty skill of turning the words to make people laugh (in a crude context)], which are not proper, but rather thanksgiving [εὐχαριστία – lit. good favor (esp. to God)].  5  For this you know, that no fornicator [πόρνος], or unclean person, nor covetous person, who is an idolater, has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ [ τοῦ χριστοῦ – the anointed one] and God.  6  Let no one deceive you with empty [or vain/ “worthless”] words [ κενοῖς λόγοις], *for because of [διὰ…γὰρ – because through] these things the wrath of God comes upon the sons of disobedience [ἀπειθείας].  7  Therefore do not be [γίνεσθε – become] participants with them [ συμμέτοχοι].  8  For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light--  9  for the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness, righteousness, and truth,  10  proving [δοκιμάζοντες] what is well-pleasing [εὐάρεστον] to the Lord.  11  And have no partnership [συγκοινωνεῖτε – sharing/ reciprocation together] with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather expose them [ἐλέγχετε – i.e. speak words (λέγ) to establish the guilt of those who sin].  12  For it is shameful [αἰσχρόν – same basic word as v. 4] even to speak [λέγειν – same root as v. 11] of those things being done by them in secret.

 

Note: It is interesting how this immorality and “uncleanness” is contrasted with lawful marriage in the last part of this same chapter: Eph_5:22-33. And in which category (Eph_5:3-12 or Eph_5:22-33) did Jesus and Paul put divorce and remarriage in when they called it adultery?

 

(For more on “Condemned Sins,” see the Bible study entitled, “Sin Lists” on www.TrueConnection.org)

 

>>! I must quote Colossians here to prove this! Col 3:5 (etc.)

Did you notice the descriptive word “were” in first Corinthians six and Ephesians five? This means that they were not still these things when Paul wrote this letter to them (that is, he says “now you are light in the Lord”). It notes that the specific list of lifestyle-sins was indicative of the past and no longer intersected their lives. It means that they had repented of such things and did not live in them any longer. If one of them committed fornication every weekend with a prostitute, then such a one had stopped doing this to live for Jesus. And if one was remarried after being divorced, they stopped their adulterous relationship, to establish a good relationship with God. Otherwise they would continue being fornicators or adulterers, according to Scripture, as long as their first spouse lived, (Rom_7:2-3) and real Christianity has never taught that you could continue to be in any such sins and go to heaven, and this passage does not say that they “are” guilty of these things, but that they used to be guilty of them in the past.

If it was so that any of those at the Church of Corinth were slipping from their repentance back into these life-styles (like the example in the previous chapter: 1Co_5:1-13), Paul soberly warns them to put such people out of the Church, and we are assured that anyone who continues in sin will by no means go to heaven, in the words, “the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God.”

I hope that you can plainly see that in 1Co_6:9-11 (as we just saw) that the Bible shows that both fornication and adultery are punished by eternal Hell. It is note-worthy that this warning came right after Paul told them not to associate with anyone who continued in sin and claimed to be a Christian, as he was specifically addressing an immoral “marriage,” (1Co_5:1-13, 1Co_5:9-131Co_6:1-10).

If by any means we are still at the point where we think that people can live in these sins and still go to heaven we of all people need to repent right now, and stop playing filthy and ridiculous religious games with the Bible and take God serious when He marks out sins that He says will definitely condemn people to hell. Jesus made sure we knew that divorce and remarriage fit on this list when He called it “adultery” and no amount of religious garbage will be able to extinguish this sober warning.

 

10. How to Face Ignorant Adultery

>> revise this intro

>> repenting of ignoring ignorant Adultery; repenting of ignorance and ignoring it

 

A Basic Fact that All real Christians Know: Truth is NOT about trying to find what seems to make sense and be fair for everyone, but about finding out what is actually true from the mouth of God and submitting ourselves accordingly. If you have any rational hope of inheriting the Kingdom of Heaven, then you will know that the question of whether or not a person is committing adultery is never determined by what will give us a nice sounding answer that make sense to everyone, but about seeking and finding what God has actually declared to be adultery. Once we find that standard, it is our reasonable responsibility to do whatever God may help us do to escape ourselves and help others escape this wrath and guilt.

    Because of these very basic facts that all real Christians know, the main question here is: Does God ever say that immorality is not immoral as long as a person does not know it is immoral? If that was true, can you explain to me how that would work if I went to a typical high school or college and told everyone that they were not actually committing fornication yet because they probably do not know it is wrong? I hope you perceive that only overt heretics would say such things! But let’s ask this same question in a different way…

 

Is Ignorant Adultery Still Adultery?

Strangely, as much as this title seems to answer itself, I have found that most church people do not know the answer to this question

 

Unfortunately, even in this day and age of so much available “knowledge” it is easy for people to go their whole lives, commit sin in ignorance, and die in it. This issue of divorce and remarriage is no exception, but is often even more unknown than other sinful life styles because of the great efforts of liberal thinkers to stomp it out with their teachings. But even if we do finally come to a point where we agree with Jesus that adulterous remarriage is adultery, we still seem to trip over the most basic and foundational questions:

 

If you die in sin without knowing it, is it still sin?

>> how could any messenger God ever sends preach ‘repent or perish’ if truly, the ignorantly sinning people were not already perishing before they knew it??

>> avenger of ALL… we have forewarned and testified

 

But instead of denying and running away from Biblical truth as so many do, let us first establish a Biblical mindset and then fully embrace all that the Bible says about this sinful life style of adulterous remarriage:

 

Biblical Fact: Ignorant Sin Exists – If you Don’t Believe, Repent!

It is certain that there is a such thing as sinning in ignorance according to the Bible:

 

Gen_12:10-20; Gen_20:2-18; Gen_26:6-11; Lev_4:1-3, Lev_4:13-15, Lev_4:22-23, Lev_4:27-28; Lev_5:15-19; Num_15:22-29; Psa_19:12; Isa_5:13-15; Isa_9:16; Hos_4:6; Mat_18:5-9/ Mar_9:42-48/ Luk_17:1-2; Act_14:16; Act_17:29-30; Heb_9:7, Heb_9:11; Heb_7:24-25; Heb_10:26-31. Also compare Gen_8:22; Psa_51:5; Psa_58:3 with Isa_7:15-16.

>> put Greek for Heb_9:7?

 

>>R

Lev_5:15-19 CAB The soul which shall be really unconscious [MT says, “commits a trespass” (WEB)], and shall sin unwillingly [MT: “sins through ignorance” (MKJV)] in any of the holy things of the Lord, shall even bring to the Lord for his transgression [ MT: “his trespass offering” (WEB)], a ram of the flock without blemish, valued according to shekels of silver according to the shekel of the sanctuary, for his transgression [?] in which he transgressed [ MT: “a trespass offering” (WEB)]. 16  And he shall make compensation for that in which he has sinned in the holy things; and he shall add the fifth part to it, and give it to the priest; and the priest shall make atonement for him with the ram of transgression [MT: “ram of the trespass offering” (WEB)], and… [it] shall be forgiven him.  17  And the soul which shall sin, and do one thing against [?] any of the commandments of the Lord, which it is not right to do [MT: which He “has commanded not to be done”], and has not known it, and shall have transgressed, and shall have contracted guilt, [MT: “though he didn’t know it, yet he is guilty, and shall bear his iniquity” (WEB)] 18  he shall even bring a ram without blemish from the flock, valued at a price of silver [MT: “according to your estimation” (WEB)] for his transgression [MT: “for a trespass offering” (WEB)] to the priest; and the priest shall make atonement for his trespass of ignorance wherein he ignorantly trespassed [ MT: “him concerning the thing in which he sinned…” (WEB)], and he knew it not; and it shall be forgiven him.  19  For he has surely been guilty of transgression [MT: “It is a trespass offering. He is certainly guilty” (WEB)] before the Lord.

 

[Technical source text note: Although it seems generally safest to use the LXX in this case (which is represented by CAB here) I have also included MT readings (as represented by WEB and MKJV); (For more, see the online version of our Bibliography under, “Finding the Old Testament”)]

 

I find it amazing how many church people (who should know better) blindly deny what this passage clearly teaches! In fact, in my experience I have met far more overtly worldly people who already know that you could sin without knowing it than church people, because church people seem to always believe the religious myth that God cannot hold you guilty if you do not know it is wrong!

 

Ignorance Means Less Punishment, Not Immunity

The Bible teaches that sins done in ignorance receive a lesser punishment than those done by people who know better, but they still get punished:

 

>>R

Luk_12:47-48 CAB  And that servant who knew his master’s [κυρίου – lit. lord’s] will, and did not get ready or do according to his will, shall be beaten with many blows.  48  But he who did not know, yet did things worthy of blows, shall be beaten with few. For everyone to whom much is given, from him much will be demanded; and to whom much has been entrusted, of him they will ask much more.

>>! Tarterous… I think the refs I have are for ‘lowest hell’

>> Add greek/ Hebrew

And just as there are different levels of Hell now, (compare Deu_32:22; Psa_86:13; Eze_31:16) there will be greater and lesser levels of damnation for eternity:

 

Mat_11:24 CAB  But I say to you that it will be more tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of judgment than for you.”

Also see: Mat_11:20-24; Luk_10:10-16

 

We can safely see from this that though ignorant sin is still sin, it is counted as a lesser sin than the same actions done with knowledge of its sinfulness. We see that people who sin knowingly will bear the hottest wrath of damnation, while those who didn’t know will receive the lesser punishment. This principal has been accurately summarized this way by some: The greater the revelation, the greater the responsibility and potential Judgment. The lesser the revelation, the lesser the responsibility and Judgment. And the reverse is also True concerning rewards, (Mat_13:11-12; Mat_25:14-30/ Luk_19:12-27; Mar_4:23-25), and for this reason Jesus said,

 

Luk_8:18 WEB Be careful therefore how you hear. For whoever has, to him will be given; and whoever doesn’t have, from him will be taken away even that which he thinks he has.

And He says,

 

Mar_4:24 CABmore will be added to you who hear.

 

So also, the greater the revelation, the greater the potential reward. But as for punishment and ignorant sin, what we see from all of this, is that though ignorance calls for a lighter punishment, sin done in ignorance still calls for punishment in the Bible (i.e. Luk_12:47-48).

 

Punishing Ignorant Sin is in Accordance with the Divine Standard

As we have seen previously and can see in a moment, it is a consistent attribute that God has revealed to us about Himself, that He punishes ignorant sin.  And I note all of this here to give a partial but sufficient understanding of the justice of God relative to sins done in ignorance compared to those done with knowledge.

Some seem to think that God would never punish a person for errors done without knowing it, but they who say this oppose God’s Eternal Word which unmistakably says He does! Those who do this will pass away but God’s Word, The Eternal Standard, will endure through judgment, and will come upon the people who thought to protest it by implying that God had no right to punish those who sinned ignorantly.

In most cases of ignorance however, the saying may be true which says, “You are ‘ignorant’ because you ‘ignore-it.’” (See these verses for the punishment of such people: Pro_1:7, Pro_1:20-33; Pro_2:1-5, Pro_2:9-11, Pro_2:22; Pro_5:11-14; Zec_7:11-14; Joh_3:19).

If you will be honest with yourself, others, and the Scriptures, then you will know that the nature of God’s justice demands the punishment of sins committed with or without knowledge, even though this is not in accordance with initial, default, natural, human morals.

 

There is an absolute statement that transcends ignorance, or any other excuse we may conjure up to give, and is appropriate here:

 

1Co_6:9-10 CABDo not be deceived. Neither fornicatorsG4205 [πόρνοι (pórnoi) – a male prostitute/ fig. fornicator (specifically, with a female prostitute as in 1Co_6:15-18)], nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexualsG733 [ἀρσενοκοῖται (arsenokoítai) – the “giver” of the crime], nor sodomitesG3120 [μαλακοὶ (malakói) – lit. a masculine form of “soft”; fig. the “receiver” of the crime],  10  nor covetous, nor thieves, nor drunkards, nor abusive people, nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God.

 

If you choose to think that any fornicator, adulterer, homosexual or anyone else that lives in sins like this will somehow go to heaven because they were ignorant of their sin, then you missed this ScriptureDo not be deceived” was the command, and it was there for an absolute unmistakable command that you should have obeyed a long time ago! If you disobey this command and choose to let your own heart slouch into believing that these people will somehow go to heaven anyway even though it is clear that God said they would not, then your “damnation is just” (Rom_3:8) for hating the Scriptures, spurning their authority over your life, and violating this clear and straightforward command to “not be deceived.”

 

Gen 12, 20, 26, and Mal 2 – The Bible Specifically Teaches that God Punishes Ignorant Divorce and Ignorant Remarriage Adultery

Ignorant Remarriage Adultery and the Ignorant Violation of God’s One Flesh Covenant is no Exception When it comes to Sinning Ignorantly

 

Whether with or without knowledge of it, the Bible allows no exception about certain sins that will condemn you to hell if you continue doing them, and this specifically includes adultery, (1Co_6:9-11; Gal_5:18-21; Eph_5:3-7; 1Ti_1:9-10; Rev_21:8).

The examples of punishing ignorant adultery in Scripture are extremely clear. There is no excuse for denying the fact of ignorant adultery after considering the following examples:

 

>>R!!! – at least 3 passages

Gen_12:11-20 CAB  And it came to pass when Abram approached Egypt, that he said to Sarai his wife, I know that you are a beautiful woman.  12  It shall come to pass then, that when the Egyptians shall see you, that they shall say, This is his wife, and they shall kill me, but they shall keep you alive.  13  Say, therefore, I am his sister, that it may be well with me on account of you, and my soul shall live because of you.  14  And it came to pass when Abram entered into Egypt — the Egyptians having seen his wife that she was very beautiful — 15  that the princes of Pharaoh saw her, and praised her to Pharaoh, and brought her into Pharaoh's house.  16  And they treated Abram well on her account, and he had sheep, calves, donkeys, male and female servants, mules, and camels.  17  And God afflicted Pharaoh and his house with great and severe afflictions, because of Sarai, Abram's wife.  18  And Pharaoh, having called Abram, said, What is this you have done to me, that you did not tell me that she was your wife?  19  Why then did you say, She is my sister? And I took her for a wife to myself; and now, behold, your wife is before you, take her and go quickly away.  20  And Pharaoh commanded his men concerning Abram, to join in sending him forward, and his wife, and all that he had.

 

Did you notice that Pharaoh suffered punishment for ignorant sin? But the story does not fully end here…

 

Gen_20:2-18 CAB  And Abraham said concerning [περὶ] Sarah his wife, She is my sister, for he feared to say [ὅτι – that], She is my wife, lest at any time the men of the city should kill him for her sake [“for her sake” – δι᾿] [ not in MT here, but MT & LXX include this saying in Gen_12:11-13; Gen_26:7]. So [δὲ] Abimelech king of Gerar sent and took [ἔλαβεν] Sarah [i.e. Abimelech began a marriage by “taking” (ἔλαβεν) Sara into his house].  3  And *God came to [εἰσῆλθεν ὁ θεὸς πρὸς – the God came into (and) toward] Abimelech by night in his sleep [ὕπνῳ], and said, Behold, you’ll die [MT: “you are a dead man” (WEB); (compare v. 7)] for [περὶ] the woman whom you have taken [ἔλαβες], for she has lived with a husband [ συνῳκηκυῖα ἀνδρί V-RAP-NSF – lit. cohabited with a man, i.e. she has already been lawfully “taken” into another man’s cohabitation; MT: “for she is a man’sH1167 [lit. master’s] wifeH1166 [lit. mastered (woman)]” (KJV [with insertions]) – for both LXX & MT this is fig. married]  4  But Abimelech had not touched* her [* ἥψατο – same Greek as Pro_6:29; 1Co_7:1 (& same as v. 6 here); MT simply says, “come near” (WEB), but agrees with LXX in v. 6], and he said, Lord, will You destroy an ignorantly sinning and [ ἀγνοοῦν – ignorantly “sinning” is implied by context (& said in v. 9), but not actually said here; neither ignorance nor sin is in MT here, but both are implied in what follows, including the “sin” in v. 6, 9, & also 16)] just nation [ἔθνος]?  5  Did he not say to me [ μοι εἶπεν], She is my sister, and she, even [καὶ – and] she herself said [καὶ αὐτή μοι εἶπεν], He is my brother? With [ἐν – in] a *pure [καθαρᾷ – clean; MT: “integrity of my” (WEB)] heart and in the *righteousness [MT: “innocence” (WEB)] of my hands have I done this.  6  And God said to him in [καθ᾿] his sleep [ὕπνον], Yes, I [Κἀγὼ, from  καὶ + ἐγώand I; (see ALS p. 293)] knew that you did this with a pure [καθαρᾷ; MT: “in the integrity of your” (WEB)] heart, and I spared you, so that you should not sin [ἁμαρτεῖν – (compare v. Gen_20:4, Gen_20:9, Gen_20:16)] against [εἰς – lit. into/ to] Me, therefore [ ἕνεκεν τούτου – fig. on account of this (what is more literal here?)] I did not let you touch [ἅψασθαι (same as v. 4)] her.  7  But now return [ἀπόδος – lit. give away; fig. give over (to); by usage: repay/ give again] the man his wife; for [ὅτι] he is a prophet, and he shall pray for [περὶ] you, and you shall live [ζήσῃ]; but* if* you restore her not* [* εἰ δὲ μὴ], know that you and all yours shall die [compare v. 3].  8  And Abimelech rose early in the morning [πρωὶ], and called [ἐκάλεσεν] all his servants [παῖδας – lit. boys; fig. male servants], and he spoke [ἐλάλησεν] all these words [ῥήματα – i.e. spoken words] in [εἰς – into] their ears [ὦτα], and all the men [ἄνθρωποι] feared exceedingly.  9  And Abimelech called [ἐκάλεσεν] Abraham and said [εἶπεν] to him, What is this that you have done to us? *Have we [μή τι – this is actually a negative, rhetorical question (i.e. we have not done this have we?); MT says, “How have I” (WEB)] sinned [ἡμάρτομεν (compare v. 4, 6 and also 16)] against [εἰς – lit. into/ to] you, that you have brought [ἐπήγαγες] upon [ἐπ᾿] me and upon [ἐπὶ] my kingdom a great sin [ἁμαρτίαν μεγάλην]? You have done [ ἔργον – you have worked] to me a deed [πεποίηκάς μοι], which [ὃ – the one/ “that”] no one ought to do.  10  And Abimelech said to Abraham, What have you seen in me [ ἐνιδὼν V-AAP-NSN lit. perceived in (compare ALS p. 194) → ἐνοράω – “to envisage” (ALS p. 195)] that you have done this?  11  And Abraham said [εἶπεν], Why [because (MT & LXX)] I said [ Εἶπα γάρ], Surely [ἄραG686 (not G685) – i.e. evidently/ fig. based on what I saw, “consequently,” I must conclude and understand that (same as Mat_7:20; Rom_7:21; Rom_8:1; 1Co_5:10; 1Co_7:14; 1Co_15:14; Gal_3:7)] there is not the worship of God [ θεοσέβεια – God-reverence] in this place, and they will slay me *because of [ἕνεκεν] my wife.  12  For truly she is my sister by my father [ ἐκ πατρός – out (of) father], but not by my mother [ ἐκ μητρός – out (of) mother], *and she became my wife [ἐγενήθη δέ μοι εἰς γυναῖκα – but she became [or was begotten] into my woman/  “wife”; “into” (εἰς) is the same Greek expression used in Gen_2:24; Mat_19:5; Mar_10:8; 1Co_6:16 (compare v. 1Co_6:17); Eph_5:31].  13  And it came to pass [ ἐγένετο] when God brought me forth [ ἐξήγαγέν με – lead me out] out [ἐκ] of [* MT: “caused me to wander from” (WEB)] the house of my father, that I said to her, This righteousness [ Ταύτην τὴν δικαιοσύνην – this (is) the righteousness (or justice); MT: “kindness” (WEB)] you shall perform to [ἐπ᾿ – upon] me [show to me (WEB)], in [εἰς – into] every place into which we may enter [εἰσέλθωμεν], say of me [ εἰπὸν ἐμὲ ὅτι – say (of) me, that,], He is my brother.  14  And Abimelech took a thousand pieces of silver, and [ not in the MT here, but included in v. 16] sheep, and calves [MT: “oxen” (WEB)], and servants [παῖδας – lit. boys], and maid servants [παιδίσκας – lit. girls], and gave [ἔδωκεν] them to Abraham, and he returned [ἀπέδωκεν] Sarah his wife to him.  15  And Abimelech said to Abraham [ not in MT], Behold [Ἰδοὺ], my land is before you, dwell [κατοίκει – lit. house down] wherever it may please you.  16  And to [τῇ δὲ] Sarah he said, Behold [Ἰδοὺ], I have given [δέδωκα] your brother a thousand pieces of silver [this is in the LXX & MT], *those shall be to you for the price of your countenance [ταῦτα ἔσται σοι εἰς τιμὴν τοῦ προσώπου σου – lit. these will be (unto) you into (εἰς) the value (or honor; fig. price), (of) the toward-vision (fig. countenance), (of) you; – i.e. I am paying your “brother” a huge fine for having looked at the beauty of your face [perhaps, without a veil?] when I took you into “the King’s harem” (Gen_20:2-3);], and to all the women [ πάσαις] with you [MT Hebrew is hard to represent in English: “Behold, it is for you a covering of the eyes to all that are with you. In front of all you are vindicated” (WEB); many people disagree on how to represent this: KJV (like Darby, Bishops, Geneva Bible, VW, and some others) says, “thus she was reproved”; YLT: “by all this she is reasoned with”], and speak the truth [ἀλήθευσον] in all things [ not in MT].  17  And [δὲ] Abraham prayed [προσηύξατο] to [πρὸς] God, and God healed [ἰάσατο] Abimelech, and his wife, and his women servants [παιδίσκας – lit. girls], and they bore children [ ἔτεκον].  18  Because [ὅτι] the Lord had closed up [ συγκλείων συνέκλεισεν – in closing up, had closed up (an intensification) – i.e. ‘had completely closed up’] all the wombs [ ἔξωθεν πᾶσαν μήτραν – (the) outside (of) every womb] of the house of Abimelech, because of [ ἕνεκεν] Sarah, Abraham’s wife.

> linked under “Example Passages Where Marriage is Equated with Cohabitation

 

>> Add:

DivRem

Abimelech had a dreaful reverence of axedentally comitting adultery that today's warped and lawless religious culture has no idea of.

4/17/11

 

>> Should I use this shorter version?

Gen_20:2-18 CAB  And Abraham said concerning Sarah his wife, She is my sister, for he feared to say, She is my wife, lest at any time the men of the city should kill him for her sake. So Abimelech king of Gerar sent and took Sarah.  3  And God came to Abimelech by night in his sleep, and said, Behold, you’ll die <<for the woman whom you have taken, for she has lived with a husband.>>  4  But Abimelech had not touched her, and he said, Lord, will You destroy an ignorantly sinning and just nation?  5  Did he not say to me, She is my sister, and she, even she herself said, He is my brother? With a pure heart and in the righteousness of my hands have I done this.  6  And God said to him in his sleep, Yes, I knew that you did this with a pure heart, and I spared you, so that you should not sin against Me, therefore I did not let you touch her.  7  But now return the man his wife; for he is a prophet, and he shall pray for you, and you shall live; but if you restore her not, know that you and all yours shall die… 17  And Abraham prayed to God, and God healed Abimelech, and his wife, and his women servants, and they bore children.  18  Because the Lord had closed up all the wombs of the house of Abimelech, because of Sarah, Abraham’s wife.

 

Gen_20:2-18 WEB Abraham said about Sarah his wife, “She is my sister.” Abimelech king of Gerar sent, and took Sarah. 3 But God came to Abimelech in a dream of the night, and said to him, “Behold, you are a dead man, because of the woman whom you have taken. For she is a man’s wife.” 4 Now Abimelech had not come near her. He said, “Lord, will you kill even a righteous nation? 5 Didn’t he tell me, ‘She is my sister?’ She, even she herself said, ‘He is my brother.’ In the integrity of my heart and the innocence of my hands have I done this.” 6 God said to him in the dream, “Yes, I know that in the integrity of your heart you have done this, and I also withheld you from sinning against me. Therefore I didn’t allow you to touch her. 7 Now therefore, restore the man’s wife. For he is a prophet, and he will pray for you, and you will live. If you don’t restore her, know for sure that you will die, you, and all who are yours.”… 17 Abraham prayed to God. God healed Abimelech, and his wife, and his maid-servants, and they bore children. 18 For Yahweh had closed up tight all the wombs of the house of Abimelech, because of Sarah, Abraham’s wife.

 

Differences:

>> Highlight in vs 2 only in the CAB it is not in the WEB
>> I noticed these were different. Is the CAB more correct in using she has lived with a husband  (could people mistake it because it just sounds like it could be someones husband other than her very own. Versus saying that she is already belonging to someone like WEB.) I still think the CAB works better for the entire passage though. I was just wondering about this in particular.

>> vs. 4 “ignorantly sinning” only seen in the CAB

>> vs. 5 Is “integrity” and a “pure heart” synonymous here? Also the CAB says the “righteousness” of my hands whereas the other version says  the “innocence” of my hands.

>> I went through vs. 14 to compare the rest of the reading that was not quoted directly and the CAB says that Abimelech have Abraham a thousand pieces of silver whereas the WEB does not say that, nor does the KJV

 

Also see: Gen_12:10-20; Gen_26:6-11

 

·       We see that despite the king’s ignorance (Gen_20:2, Gen_20:5; and compare Gen_12:18), and integrity (Gen_20:6) God said that he was “a dead man” (Gen_20:3, Gen_20:7 b) for even going the direction of adultery (Gen_20:2; and compare with Mat_5:27-30; Gen_12:15).

·       Though God spared Abimelech because of the ignorance of his error, (Gen_20:6 b, Gen_20:17; compare Gen_12:19) and did not completely hold his sin against him, (Gen_20:6 c) God still punished the king to a lesser degree by closing his wives wombs (Gen_20:18; and compare Gen_12:17 – quoted in a moment). (In this, Scripture reaffirms that ignorant sin is punished less than willful sin – but it is still punished).

·       Though uniquely and mercifully spared from the sin, the sentence for this ignorant sin was clearly death (Gen_20:3, Gen_20:7 b). And later Abraham’s son Isaac did the exact same thing, to the exact same king Abimelech:

 

This very same thing had happened previously when the Pharaoh sinned in almost the exact same way, by taking Sarah into his house (i.e. marrying her) in ignorance:  

 

>>! Make a review and summary of ignorant sin quotes

 

Gen_26:1 CAB  And there was a famine in the land, besides the former famine, which was in the time of Abraham; and Isaac went to Abimelech the king of the Philistines to Gerar.

 

Gen_26:6-11 CAB  And Isaac dwelt in Gerar.  7  And the men of the place questioned him concerning Rebecca his wife, and he said, She is my sister (for he feared to say, She is my wife, lest at any time the men of the place should kill him because of Rebecca, because she was beautiful).  8  And he remained there a long time, and Abimelech the king of Gerar leaned to look through the window, and saw Isaac sporting with Rebecca his wife.  9  And Abimelech called Isaac, and said to him, Is she then your wife? Why have you said, She is my sister? And Isaac said to him, I did so, for I said, Lest at any time I should die on her account.  10  And Abimelech said to him, Why have you done this to us? One of my kindred might soon have lain with your wife, and you would have brought a sin of ignorance [ MT: “guilt” (WEB)] upon us.  11  And Abimelech charged all his people, saying, Every man that touches this man and his wife shall be liable to death.

 

·       Abimelech very clearly recognized that ignorant adultery still makes people guilty! How sad that this pagan king knew more about guilt and righteousness than so many in church today that don’t even believe in ignorant sin! Abimelech apparently knew this previously, but he had surely learned this all-the-more-so after his (previous) threatening encounter with God. It is a shame that Abimelech, an evidently otherwise ungodly king, (Gen_20:15; Gen_21:34) learned that ignorant adultery brought guilt, but most who claim to believe Jesus, (a much fuller revelation of God) still don’t understand this concept. It’s sad that this pagan king understood more about marriage than the average church-goer and Pastor today!

·       May God likewise have mercy on others who unknowingly commit adultery by marrying other people’s wives, (Rom_7:1-4) especially when it is pretended not to be sin via a legal divorce. May He stop relationships before the participants are required to burn forever for their sin.  May He also work on your heart to be willing to be that warning mouth-piece to those perishing all around you, even those going to church every Sunday!

 

Do You Remember the Shocking Statements Made through Malachi?

During a time when it was known to be legal according to God’s law to divorce and remarry, there was a shocking statement of Judgment that God still gave through Malachi to those who had done so as we have read previously. Though they were ignorant of a higher standard concerning divorce and remarriage, God still held them to it:

>> If God said he was a dead man, and we tell him he will not die, then we are not christians but partners of the snake in the garden who has always subverted God’s rules by contradicting God’s pronouncements

>> notice that we rebel from this passage and insist that divorce and remarriage is different, because we say ‘the marriage has first been dissolved,’ but that is the exact opposite of what Jesus teaches at the very bases of saying divorce and remarriage is adultery. If you still say a divorce certificate is a different situation than this account then repent of wicked rebellion, and stop defying Jesus who clearly taught that the paperwork made no difference in the adultery of remarriage.

 

>Mal_2:

Reminders from Malachi Chapter 2

v. 13

Mal_2:13 a – God is angry with them despite the fact that they “covered [LXX: lit. would cover] with tears the altar of the Lord, and with weeping and groaning” (CAB)

Mal_2:13 b – God resolutely refuses to honor or receive their desperate prayers, sacrifices and pleas for help, but instead…

v. 14

Mal_2:14 a – When they ask Why?” [LXX: Ἕνεκεν τίνος – lit. on account of what?] He solemnly declares…

Mal_2:14 b – “Because the Lord has borne witness between you and the wife of your youth…” (CAB)

Mal_2:14 c – And although they had divorced their wives, still God says…

Mal_2:14 d – “she is your companion, *and the wife of your covenant.” (WEB) [LXX: καὶ γυνὴ διαθήκης σου – lit. and woman of your covenant]

v. 15

Mal_2:15 a – God takes full credit for making it this way

 

Things that Malachi 2 Teaches us About Ignorant Sin

·       The Law had allowed divorce and remarriage through Moses (Deu_24:1-4) so that they had no conscious reason why they couldn’t take advantage of it.

·       Despite the permission given in the Law, God still punished them for divorcing their wives (Mal_2:11, Mal_2:13) even though many of their wives would have certainly married others (Deu_24:2).

·       The word, “Why” that they asked God in Mal_2:14 directly indicates that they did not know why they were being punished.

·       As we have already said: “Their ignorance of the severity of the covenant that they made (Mal_2:14) had no effect at all to nullify its punishment when violated (Mal_2:13, Mal_2:15-16). Despite the fact that they “covered [LXX: lit. would cover] with tears the altar of the Lord, and with weeping and groaning” (Mal_2:13 CAB) God still did not listen to them (Mal_2:13) because of their divorce (Mal_2:14, Mal_2:16)

 

Ultimately, God Spares Faithful People From Ignorant Sin – So Ignorance is No Excuse!

Applications about Ignorant Adultery

 

>> Add: Cornelius

>> add relative innocents of Abimelech – at least partly innocent… and learned his lesson not to take women without making sure they had not already been married! If we do not learn this lesson too then we will perish for ignoring his example and reaping the wages of ignorant sin.

>> proof this: It is high time we stop being theoretical and religious about morality. If sins were not sin if committed in ignorance then why have Christians throughout all ages been commanded to go proclaim that men everywhere repent? If they are not guilty of sin without knowing it, then why do we ever suggest that they need salvation if in their own perception they are already perfectly fine morally before God? If sin were not already sin, then no person could ever tell another person that anything was inherently wrong, and no one would be living in sin as long as they did not know any different.

 

In times past he let people go their own way, but now commands everyone to repent

 

If committing adultery in ignorance will still be harshly punished, (because this is the nature of all ignorant sins) then how much worse will it be for those who do it knowingly? If those in the world will be condemned for their immorality, won’t those in the church suffer worse damnation when they knowingly commit the worst sexual sin of adultery?

Ultimately, ignorance is never an excuse for sin, because if you had “cried-out-for,” (Pro_2:3) sought, (Pro_2:4; Mat_7:8) and prayed for understanding in righteousness, (Jas_1:5) then we have the promise from God that He would have answered, not leaving you ignorant, but would have gladly given you what you had asked, (Psa_81:10; Pro_2:1-5, Pro_2:9-11, Pro_2:20; Mat_7:7-12/ Luk_11:5-13; Joh_14:13-15; Joh_15:7; Joh_1:16; Jas_1:5-6; also see: 1Ki_3:6-15/ 2Ch_1:7-12):

 

Mat_7:8 CAB  For everyone that asks receives, and he that seeks finds, and to him that knocks, it shall be opened.

 

So we see that if we would truly ask God, He has promised to give us the necessary knowledge to be clear of ignorant sin, and because of this, no one is really innocent whenever they continue in sin. This applies to all sins done in ignorance, even ignorant adultery. Let us repent of our rash and unbiblical philosophies of saying that God won’t punish ignorant sin. Let us instead be zealous to ask God for truth and knowledge, lest we also fall in our ignorance and find ourselves crushed under just and unbearable guilt and condemnation for living in sin, and let us proclaim the truth far and wide so others don’t likewise perish in ignorance.

 

11. A Few Basic Principles That Demand Repentance from Adulterous Remarriage

 

The Law of Non-contradiction – God Does Not Change His Mind

It is amazing to me the number of church people, especially pastors, who defend inconsistent assumptions about adulterous marriages. Many seem to think that after a remarriage (which God says is adulterous) that God will somehow forget that He had declared it adulterous, and would then proceed to contradict Himself and decide that the second marriage, was in fact, valid and should be maintained, honored, and kept as binding.

It is one thing (that is bad enough) if we will be inconsistent and double-minded, but will we also presume it upon God to be so? We ought not to do this! If Jesus said that it is adultery He meant what He said and He does not change! Remember that it says, “…I am the Lord your God, and I change not… (Mal_3:6 CAB),”* and “Jesus Christ [χριστὸσ – anointed one] is the same yesterday, today, and forever.” (Heb_13:8 CAB); and also, “…shall He say and not perform? Shall He speak and not keep [it]” (Num_23:19 CAB); But incredibly, we find it within ourselves to presume that Jesus will not follow through with His Words when He calls divorce and remarriage adultery!

If Jesus said that it was adultery when a couple remarried, then He will not change His mind later after they have been married, or have had children, and then say “OK. Now that you’re already remarried it’s no longer sin.” God will not do this with a remarriage any more than He will do it with a homosexual or thief. “So then…God…now…commands all men everywhere to repent,” (Act_17:30 CAB).

* I used to have this above:

and also “God is not a man that He should lie, neither the son of man that He should repent. Has He said, and shall He not do it? Or has He spoken, and shall He not make it good, (Num_23:19 MKJV)?”

\/ but did not work with \/

Num_23:19 CAB  God is not as a man that He should waver, nor as a son of man that He should be threatened; shall He say and not perform? Shall He speak and not keep His word?

 

Our Awareness of the Sinfulness of “Fornication” Testifies Against Us

How would you react if I, claiming to be an ambassador for Christ, went and slept with someone that I was not married to every night? If you have any sense of righteousness, you would be appalled! But what if I argued, “It was only fornication the first time, or first couple of times we were together, but now it’s ok in God’s sight. God wouldn’t want me to break up my commitment with this prostitute. She says that she’s now pregnant!” I hope this argument sounds ridiculous to you, but this is the very thing that we do when we say that adulterous marriages somehow completely metamorphosize from adultery in to valid moral marriages.

It does not matter how many times or with what intensity you “get saved” or claim to “repent,” that prostitute on the street that you slept with will not suddenly become your wife, and neither will an adulterous remarriage!

This teaching is hard for us to see and accept. We ask ourselves, “Does a second marriage really remain adultery? What if they are sorry that they initiated it, but feel obliged to continue with their marriage because of their commitments?” But we wish to classify the second marriage as though it fit into a different category than if I went out every night and committed fornication, because there is nothing solid in our minds to hold a remarriage relationship to the label of “adultery,” as Jesus called it, but if we had reasonably held the Bible as something solid in our minds, the true Words of Jesus would have been solid enough for us to act upon:

 

·       We usually have a wedding certificate (a piece of paper) showing couples to be married

·       We do not have a counter-certificate calling remarriages “Adultery,” except that we do have the Bible which does this

·       We generally consider that a man is not legitimately married with his girlfriend if he cohabits with her, but we think that a remarried couple is legitimately married when the only difference which sways our decision is a piece of paper from the government

·       The Bible calls both of these situations different forms of sexual immorality, but we agree with the government over the Bible when it comes to remarriage

·       We prove that we believe the governments paperwork above the handy work of God, because we are more convinced that wedding certificates make legitimate marriages than what the Bible says, and we let these pieces of paper outrank God when He declares them to be adulterous

 

If we still call adulterous remarriage a lawful relationship before God, then our failure is not simply in ‘interpreting the bible properly,’ but it is in not actually taking the Words of God seriously when He calls remarriage adultery.

 

The Root and the Branches – Are We Talking Holiness or Unholiness Here?

Let us believe that the principal shown in this Scripture is True:

 

Rom_11:16 KJV For if the firstfruit be holy, the lump [the rest of the fruit] is also… and if the root be holy, so are the branches.

 

And so also the reverse of this is even Truer: If the root is unholy, so are the branches. If a marriage is in fact, adultery, then “so are the branches” that come from that marriage. The root in this case is an adulterous remarriage, and the “branches” are all that come from that relationship. All of it is Holy or defiled based on the “root of the matter.” The root that is adulterous, will by no means become a valid moral marriage as long as the first spouse is alive.

 

Gen_1:11-12 CAB  And God said, Let the earth bring forth the herb of grass bearing seed according to its kind and according to its likeness, and the fruit tree bearing fruit whose seed is in it, according to its kind on the earth, and it was so.  12  And the earth brought forth the herb of grass-bearing seed according to its kind and according to its likeness, and the fruit tree bearing fruit whose seed is in it, according to its kind on the earth; and God saw that it was good.

 

God reinforces this again in verse Gen_1:29 and says similar things about the animals in verses Gen_1:24-25. We see that whether it is herbs or fruit trees, each plant produces fruit “according to its kind” and this capacity of reproducing according to its own nature is because each plant’s “seed is in it.” It contains in its own nature the ability to reproduce its own nature. Interestingly enough, as we have previously read, God says this principal also extends to Spiritual things:

 

Rom_11:16 KJV For if the firstfruit be holy, the lump [the rest of the fruit] is also holy: and if the root be holy, so are the branches.

 

Note: We know that this case is a spiritual application because the whole chapter is about the salvation of people, especially in the verses surrounding this statement - Rom_11:14-31

 

>>R – I have this previously in a different version (should I translate all of these?)

And we have also already read previously that, “…a good tree does not produce rotten fruit, nor does a rotten tree produce good fruit,” (Luk_6:43 CAB).

    Seeing that these things also apply spiritually, we know whether it is a plant, a man, or the spirituality of a person, one can only reproduce within their own nature and kind. And just as a holy root makes holy branches, even more so, unholy roots make unholy branches that are defiled:

 

Hag_2:11-14 CAB  11  (2:12) Thus says the Lord Almighty; Inquire now of the priest concerning the law, saying,  12  (2:13) If a man should take holy meat in the fold of his garment, and the fold of his garment should touch bread, or stew, or wine, or oil, or any food, shall it be holy? And the priests answered and said, No.  13  (2:14) And Haggai said, If a defiled person who is unclean by reason of a dead body, touch any of these, shall it be defiled? And the priests answered and said, It shall be defiled.  14  (2:15) And Haggai answered and said, So is this people, and so is this nation before Me, says the Lord; and so are all the works of their hands… [rest of this is different from MT:] <<and whosoever shall approach them, shall be defiled because of their early burdens: they shall be pained because of their toils; and you have hated him that reproved in the gates.>>

Hag_2:14 KJV Then answered Haggai, and said, So is this people, and so is this nation before me, saith the LORD; and so is every work of their hands; and that which they offer there is unclean.

 

[Technical note: the extra references in this passage (ex. “(2:12)”) simply indicate that this passage is found in a different location in the LXX, while the content is basically the same]

 

But many harden their heart through unbelief when reading Hag_2:11-14 and say that this principal “passed away with the Old Testament.” However we should remember this very same principal is also clearly taught in the New Testament by the saying,

 

1Co_5:6/ Gal_5:9 A little leaven leavens the whole lump

>> Jos.Trans. ?

 

Also see: Mat_16:6-12

 

What does all of this mean? It means that many things are more readily made unholy by one defiling thing than one unholy thing is made holy by a thousand holy things. One defiling thing infectiously spreads defilement throughout a whole group of people more than many people could ever purify one defiled thing. But even more so, holiness is what is special, and pollution is what is common to all. – This is a very basic Scriptural concept that we usually miss in English from typically not fully representing words like “κοινόω” (koinoō), G2840, (as seen in, for example, Rev_21:27). If any man will clean himself by faith in the truth of Jesus in order to approach God, he will become a friend of God. But if any man treats the honor of God lightly, he will easily pollute himself with “a little” laxity (i.e. 1Co_5:6/ Gal_5:9) and become hateful before God (Tit_3:3).

God has declared the bases and foundational root of a second marriage after divorce to be adultery: …he who marries her when she is divorced commits adultery, (Mat_19:9 WEB).” Please be honest and agree with the Scriptures that teach that there is no way that any of the “branches” which proceed and are generated out of this unholy relationship will be anything other than that of its very own filthy nature of adultery. This is what the Scriptures have consistently taught from the “Genesis” of creating plants to the spiritual proclamation of holiness most fulfilled throughout the New Testament. If God takes holiness so seriously that He will withdraw Himself away from a man who engages in the unholiness of wicked worldliness*, how much more will He reject a person who continues to live with another person’s spouse!?

 

Heb_12:14-17 KJV  Follow [διώκετε] peace with all men, and holiness, without [χωρὶς] which no man shall see the Lord:  15  Looking diligently [ ἐπισκοποῦντες – i.e. especially pertaining to the overseers/ “pastors,” (compare G1984)] lest any man fail of the grace [χάριτος – favor] of God; lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you, and thereby [διὰ] many be defiled;  16  Lest there be any fornicator [πόρνος], or profane person [βέβηλος – i.e. someone who is filthy and abominable to God], as Esau  17  For ye know how that afterward, when he would have inherited the blessing, he was rejected…

 

(Did you notice how God tied all of the things we just talked about together into this one passage?)

 

[* For more on this see the Bible study entitled, “The Woes of Worldliness” on www.TrueConnection.org]

 

12. A Few Grammatical and Contextual Principles That Demand Repentance from Adulterous Remarriage

>>QuickReadingReview<<

 

The Present Tense and Continual Context of “Adultery” in Greek

>>!

>> need to make a section in book: the Greek and the grammar of all the main divorce passages… or

>> Do a grammatical break down of the main Divorce Passages

>> A Gramatical Analysis of the Adultery Declarations

(is this true: “we are about to go over Rom 7/ luke 16 in a moment”)

In a number of places in the Bible about marriage, there are some grammatical details in the original Greek that confirm to us that a continued remarriage continues to be adultery.

>> Correct heresy in Words Study over G3429:

>> The middle voice clearly includes an action done against the first marriage when Jesus specifies “against her” and “against him” This is obvious despite the fact that heretics like the revisers of Words study, who ignore and betray what Jesus specifies in Mark to say that Matthew “should be translated ‘has adultery committed against him’” – This is shallow and foolish. If we come up with a presumptuous theory by fragmenting passages and letting our minds get carried away as a runaway train, we should at least have the integrity to double check our assumptions in Matthew with what is clearly stated in Mark before running to the press and recklessly spreading it to the uninformed masses. Bright little silly ideas imposed upon a hijacked fragment of Scripture are heresy when we rebel against Jesus rebuke of our error in other passages that prove us wrong. Despite all reason and clarity, the Word Study heretics say, “This woman is not really an adulteress” (G3429) – These are words strangely reminiscent of a snake I once heard about who said, “Did God really say…” and again, “you will not die”

 

Luk_16:18 CAB  Everyone who divorces his wife and marries another commits adulteryG3431 [μοιχευει – Present Tense, Active Voice, Indicative Mood: is committing adultery]; and everyone who marries a woman who is divorced from her husband commits adulteryG3431 [μοιχευει – is committing adultery (same as previous)].

>> Look up other passages!

>> Check these out for continual tense: (and similarly so in Mat_5:32; Mat_19:9; Mar_10:11-12)

>> Make basic list with RMAC Grammar tags…

>> Make “Ascended” foot note moved to the first occurrence of this?? (there are a lot)

 

In this passage, the word “adultery” in Greek [μοιχευει (moicheuei)] is in the Present Tense. This tense does not always speak about continual action (i.e. technically speaking: it can possibly mean a “punctiliar” act when presented in the “Indicative Mood”), but continual action is the primary sense of the tense, and this is the way that the Present Tense is applied repeatedly within the Greek of the passages on marriage.

We should not have to particularly know that the word “adultery” is in the Present Tense before we would be willing to believe that the adultery is continual, because as we said earlier, we have no right to change what Jesus called it after He declared it adultery and ascended into Heaven*. But it is a confirming detail here to find this reality compounded: not only did Jesus call it adultery and ascend unto the Father*, but He left us this charge in the Present Tense with a clearly reaffirming context of continual action lest anyone come behind Him and think they had the right to change His declaration after He seemed to be gone* from their presence.

 

[* Compare, for example: Psa_68:18/ Eph_4:8-10; Joh_14:2-4; Joh_14:12; Joh_14:18; Joh_14:27-28; Joh_16:5-10; Luk_24:51-53; Heb_4:14; (also see Joh_16:16-22; 1Pe_1:8)]

 

A Very Simplified Overview of Some Greek Grammar Considerations

One word can bear a lot of grammatical weight in Greek, and each word’s grammatical qualities can express many things such as:

 

>> Need to put the T/V/M/N/P into this list:

·       When an action is, or was, or will be done

·       Who or what is doing the action

·       Who or what it is being done to

·       How manny people or things are doing the action

·       How real the action is (theoretical, wished, stated as fact, or commanded, etc.)

·       What kind of action or event it is (such as “durative” – an ongoing event, or “punctiliar,” – a one-time event)

 

These qualities and many more can be determined by the Greek Grammar (especially when dealing with action verbs), and are seen by considering things like the “Tense,” “Voice,” “Mood,” “Number,” and “Person.” With these factors constantly being applied throughout the Bible, Greek is a lot more specific than English and many other languages. The Present Tense is one of these specific Greek Grammar qualities, and it primarily represents the repeated or habitual continual action of present time. The Present Tense is primarily not something you “did” once (that is, punctiliar action) or even something you “were doing” (repeatedly), but the Present Tense is primarily what you are doing (presently and repeatedly), as in the word “adultery,” in the saying, “Everyone who divorces his wife, and marries another, is committing adultery.”

Using the Present Tense is like saying, “I am working on getting my college degree.” We could also use the Present Tense to say things like, “whoever litters is doing humanity a disservice.” We see that even in English the present tense can be used to speak of a student continually working on getting a degree, but it can also speak of a one-time act of littering. Although it can be used for both repeated action and a one-time action, it is abundantly clear from the context which one is intended: it is clear that the ‘littering person’ is described as littering once in this case, but it is also clear that the student is repeatedly working on an on-going bases because we all know from the context that this situation describes going to school on a continual basis. It is clear that until you graduate, you do not stop “working on getting a degree” and it is equally clear from Jesus’ Words that you do not stop “committing adultery” until you stop being in the adulterous marriage, because being in a relationship in the Present tense is not a one-time action of the past.

>> Looking adultery is stated as a one-time act, but adulterous remarriage is stated in the continual tense because remarriage is a state of being with repeated actions of adulterous intimacy

 

The Context of Continual Action is Even Clearer than the Grammar

>> how many times have I wrote this about Romans 7 ??

Some try to argue against addressing the grammatical aspect of these things by claiming that the Present Tense does not imply continuous action when talking about remarriage, since the Present Tense can possibly mean a “punctiliar” (one-time) action in the “Indicative Mood” (as in the example, “whoever litters is doing humanity a disservice”), but this ignores the abundantly clear context of continually being in a remarriage: The clear descriptions of continual action can even be seen in English by the context of being in a remarriage relationship, and this specifies the use of the Present Tense in Greek. Beyond these basic examples, we also have the epistles which mark this as continual sin in even clearer ways that cannot be grammatically confused in any way:

 

Rom_7:2-3 CAB For the woman who is under a man has been bound by law to the living husband. But if the husband should die, she is released from the law of the husband.  3  So then, while the husband is living, she will be called an adulteress if she becomes married to a different husband; but if her husband should die, she is free from the law, so that she is not an adulteress, having become married to a different husband.

 

With Romans seven also describing a continual action of adultery in remarriage, it is certain that this is the same continual action that Jesus indicates with the Present Tense in passages like Luke 16. Because of this, however many theoretical excuses our modern theologians may come up with to ignore the Present Tense in Luke 16, and even reverse it by insisting that it is a onetime act, all of these doubts and excuses are blown away by the Apostle Paul’s take on Jesus’ Words when he describes the adultery as so continual, that it defines her as actually being an adulteress.

When Paul uses a noun (what type of person the woman is) rather than simply discussing action verbs, there is no possibility of only doing a “punctiliar” one-time action, because we are not talking about action verbs, but nouns and this defines the very nature of what she is. Communicating the nature of what someone is (by using a noun) definitely addresses repeated action, and we already know this by simple examples: (1) A mailman (a noun) delivers mail (action verbs) on a regular and repeated basis. (2) A home owner (a noun) continues owning a home for as long as he owns a home (a continual action verb), and (3) we know that an adulteress (a noun) continues committing adultery (action verbs) as long as she keeps sexually interacting with men outside of her lawful marriage – If we say that these examples do not keep doing these things then we are playing games because we all know that repeating these actions on a regular bases makes these titles applicable to people, and the only real way to stop being defined by these titles is to stop doing these repeated actions that define us in these ways! If Paul clearly said she was an adulteress after being remarried, then we know that she is continually having filthy and adulterous sexual interactions with men outside of her lawful marriage, and it will keep being this way until she breaks off all sexual interaction with all other men besides her lawful husband.

We know that (following John the Baptist’s example) Jesus proclaimed these marriage teachings as a pillar for establishing the New Covenant (Mat_5:31-32), and whether it was first by hearing the message from others, comparing what was written in some of the Gospels, some particular Divine revelation, or a combination of some or all of these things, Paul heard these teachings that Jesus gave and understood from them that remarriage adultery was a repeated action within remarriage, and this is exactly what Paul teaches in Romans 7 as if it were also already understood by the Church at Rome to be this way. From the way that Paul talks to the Church at Rome, it looks like they had certainly read passages from the Gospels or else heard the preaching of the Apostles themselves, and also understood that remarriage adultery was continual, because Paul said, “…I speak to those knowing the law” (Rom_7:1 CAB), and “…For the woman who is under a man has been bound by law…” (Rom_7:1-2 CAB).

We may indeed now here of theologians these days having the nerve to contradict the significance of what Jesus communicated in these things, but it is only a moment before we can turn around and see Paul shaming their interpretation by saying that the sin is continual, no matter what they may do to theorize it away.

The fact that most modern theologians say that it is not continual is irrelevant in light of the fact that Paul says it is.  It goes without saying for Christians that Paul was wiser by God’s Spirit than all of these philosophers and their speculative guesses combined, and ultimately, no real Christian can take their word over the words of Paul, because we know that Paul’s words were not simply his own words, but that they are for us unto this day, the Words of God.  Paul is in the Bible. They are not. It does not make any sense for us to believe them above what the Apostle Paul said.  

So from this passage in Romans 7 it is clear that Paul understood Jesus’ use of the Present Tense as continual action. I thank God for Paul’s reiteration of Jesus’ Words, because it greatly helps us with this question wherever there may be any doubts!

You do not need an education in grammar to see the continual implications of Romans seven. It clearly says, “...she shall be called an adulteress...”  This is not speaking of a one-time action of the past, but it is describing a life style of “durative,” on-going sin that affects what she is called (“an adulteress”) and it clearly says how long this lasts (“as long as he lives”). This is clearly continuous. Do you see that from the grammatical implications in Greek (as in Luke 16) to the very clear application of this truth (as in Romans 7), the Bible continually describes the action of adultery to be continual within remarriage?

Especially because of passages like Romans 7, church people are without excuse if they choose to believe that the adultery of remaining in a remarriage somehow “stops” before the first spouse stops living. The technical implications of Greek grammar are strongly reinforced by the clear and plain context of Scripture, and this is so particularly clear in some passages that it is even reflected in English.

>> Add!: This becomes very clear when we compare the statement about lust adultery:

 

We see that visual adultery is continuous because Jesus then goes on to talk about gouging eyes out

 

Even though Mat 5:28’s “adultery” is in the past tense, from the context it is obvious that visual adultery continues to be sin in a person’s life until they stop lusting. We know that staring at a person long enough does not make a man married to them (no matter how much he may wish for it). It does not cross fade over into being a moral marriage relationship. We also know that if a woman slips out of her house to be with another man, it is adultery every time she may do this defiling abomination. But what we don’t seem to know is that Jesus said divorce and remarriage was adultery: Every time a person is divorced and remarried they commit adultery, and every time they repeated this action, it is still adultery. It does not change any more than a man who keeps looking at a woman – adulterous remarriage does not become lawful after repeated use just like lust does not. A woman will never become the lawful possession of a man by continuing to sin with her.

 

A remarriage does not change adultery

But some will say that a remarriage is different because there are vows made. But I cannot give away what does not belong to me:

 

honor God in your body…which is God’s

>> TSK!!

 

Notice the agreements to commit adultery recorded in Scripture:

The master of the house is away

 

There are agreements to commit traditional adultery just as there are agreements to commit remarriage adultery. Both of these involve agreements, and neither of these agreements is lawful to make because we do not have the right to give our bodies away to another person when God has made us belong to a first spouse.

 

“whoever looks...adultery” – How many times is it adultery when someone looks to lust? How many times is it adultery when someone sleeps with another person’s wife? Jesus said the exact same thing hold true for remarriage when He said:

 

“whoever divorces and remarries... commits adultery”

 

>> I need to reference a section on dispensationalism in the Bibliography

 

13. Confronting and Condemning the Hypocritical Excuses to Not Repent of Adultery

 

The False Accusation of Teaching “Unforgivable Divorce”

For a long time an unreasonable myth has been widely circulated among the modern church that accuses people who stand against adulterous remarriage of teaching that divorce is an “unforgivable sin.” When the modern church falsely accuses those who oppose adulterous remarriage of calling divorce an unforgivable sin, this is what I call, “The False Accusation of Teaching ‘Unforgivable Divorce.’”

As one who reasons with plain words and rational considerations, I am crying out and appealing for some sanity, justice, and reasonableness here! It seems that wherever there are people who teach against adulterous remarriage nearly every time they turn around they are being falsely accused of teaching something that has nothing to do with what they are saying. This wide-spread myth that “people are teaching unforgivable divorce” has no basis in reality and it is high time that the church repented of this irrational speculation and cheap slander.

 

Some Basic Facts and Considerations About The False Accusation

·       More or less everyone in churches today knows that both divorce and adultery can be forgiven

·       There are essentially no major groups or teachings out there trying to defend marriage by saying divorce is an unforgivable sin

·       For the most part there is no one out there actually believing that “divorce and or remarriage is an unforgivable sin.” There are however people out there falsely accusing other people of saying that “divorce and or remarriage is an unforgivable sin” – And this is what I call, “The False Accusation of Teaching ‘Unforgivable Divorce’”

·       The overwhelming majority of all church goers goes beyond “extending forgiveness for divorce” and also defends remaining in a remarriage. They not only believe that adultery is forgivable, but they also want to promote people remaining in remarriage

·       A significant portion of this “overwhelming majority” propagates “The False Accusation of Teaching ‘Unforgivable Divorce,’” either (A) out of confusion, and or (B) to scare people away from standing against divorce and remarriage, and or (C) to slander those who already stand against adulterous remarriage

·       It is high time someone set the record straight:

·       The widespread myth that says that, “There are people teaching that divorce and or remarriage is an unforgivable sin” is a hoax!

 

When it comes to this teaching about divorce and remarriage, the issue is not:

 

Whether or not divorce and or adultery can be forgiven

 

But the only real issue is:

 

Whether or not remaining in a remarriage is remaining in adultery

 

From that point the Bible is extremely clear:

 

Gal_5:19-21 CAB  Now the works of the flesh are manifest [φανερα (phanera) – made visible by light], which are: adultery  21  …which I tell you beforehand, just as I also told you in time past, that those who practice such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.

 

The False Accusation – in Action

It seems like there are so many people I deal with in churches who promote confusion in this area by acting like they are defending the church from a doctrine that says “divorce is an unforgivable sin,” and most of the time they try to do this by keeping everything focused on “divorce,” rather than addressing adulterous remarriage. They hype up the obvious fact that a divorce is a one-time act in the past that God is willing to forgive, and after focusing on divorce, they then turn around and make those standing against remaining in adulterous remarriage as though they are attacking divorced people and not forgiving them for their one-time act of divorce. If someone is actually opposing continuing in adulterous remarriage why would you accuse him of saying that “a one-time act of divorce in a person’s past is an unforgivable sin”? When people sin against rationality in this way, this is called a “straw-man argument,” and this is an unlawful practice for those who are saved unto a sound mind that loves truth.

Focusing on divorce as though it were the core issue here is a senseless and unreasoning distraction because NO ONE is arguing that a one-time act of divorce in a person’s past is a continual sin in their present life-style. And if NO ONE is actually preaching against (repentant) divorced people in the first place, then why do people keep repeating “The False Accusation of Teaching ‘Unforgivable Divorce,’” when the issue of adulterous remarriage comes up?  It is only out of unsoundness and deception that these things are continuously brought up and repeated, to raise the defenses of the weak-minded against believing what the Bible says about adulterous remarriage.  It is only a decoy and distraction to deceive and lure the shallow minds of the masses of people away from the real issue, lest they consider it and choose to believe what is right and be saved out of the wickedness of this sinful age.

 

Classroom Analogy – The Foolish Distraction of the False Accusation

If we will have understanding, these things are a lot like a classroom:

 

A teacher labors diligently to benefit their class and focuses the atmosphere of the classroom as much as they can to transmit an important concept so that the students will learn and do well on the coming exam. But this is wickedly and disrespectfully opposed by the “class clown” who raises his hand, not to ask an important question pertaining to the lesson, but only to present a distracting comment to get the class off task and relieve himself from learning things with some foolishness and laughter that is bound up in his heart.

The main difference here with this teaching about marriage is that there is so much more at stake if we are deceptively distracted away from learning the truth about God’s call for us to repent of adulterous remarriage in the modern church! If God said divorce and remarriage is adultery, then it is sinful and wicked for us to make like the class clown and only focus on “divorce” as though God were being unreasonable and unwilling to forgive a one-time act.

We should beware of the coming exam on Judgment Day, because if we were distracted by the unsound voice and as a result we promote remaining in adulterous remarriage by saying, “god will forgive divorce” then we have failed to heed the Word of the Lord in the Scriptures about divorce and remarriage, and there is no reason that we should expect to pass the coming exam if we have wickedly promoted adultery because of our lack of learning truth.

 

Hos_4:6 WEB  My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge. Because you have rejected knowledge, I will also reject you…

 

There are moral consequences to being irrational and unsound in this issue, and there is eternal danger if we go along with “The False Accusation of Teaching ‘Unforgivable Divorce.’”

 

Not the Unforgivable Sin, but the Unrepentant Sin

We ought not to insult God by accusing Him of lacking mercy in His marriage teaching as though it spoke of divorce as an unforgivable sin, when in fact, it is we ourselves that are unrepentant sinners who are unwilling to leave our sin to be reconciled to Him. The conflict here is not about God holding an unforgivable sin against us, but it is about us holding on to unrepentant sin against Him. God has always waited patiently for us, faithfully willing to make reconciliation with us, and it is we who are unwilling to come and make things right with Him because we are unwilling to come to terms with our life styles of sin and break our league with His enemies.

 

I Warn Everyone Everywhere: This is What It Means and This is What it Looks Like to Remain in Adulterous Remarriage

If we are offended at God’s marriage teaching we ought not to accuse Him of not forgiving divorced people. But we should instead consider that whenever there is an adulterous remarriage, it is not simply that God has seen a person commit a one-time act of sin, but that the Holy and perfect eyes of the infinite God are looking down in anger upon the constant sins committed against His face1. And while we are busied about trying to dismiss the idea of an “unforgivable sin” of divorce, God’s perfect and holy eyes behold the adulterous remarriage, where day after day profane kisses2 are exchanged and filthy embraces are celebrated, and night after night a man sleeps with another man’s wife or a woman sleeps with another woman’s husband. A man keeps stolen property3 in his own house that belongs to his neighbor and commits filthy defilement4 upon her and cheapens her unto complete destruction in abominations and dirty immoralities without end.

We live in a day where it is common and legal for a man to steal his neighbor’s wife and make her his own full time adulteress, and yet this is acceptable in modern society? Yes, and the adultery does not cease, nor does the sin relent from before them, because the unlawful lusts of their hearts continue, repeatedly being committed over and over, and Him who is perfect sits in heaven, and does not forget their crimes, but their sins stack up to the sky5.

God takes sexual sins as the most personally insulting crimes against Him6, because our sexuality directly represents the image of our relationship to Himself7. And if we have so greatly violated this image with adultery, we should fear the impending application of the justice of God, because who knows the Day and the time when He may immediately pour out His full wrath and consume all those who sin against Him in an instant. But though we should take sober and corrective warning while we still have a chance, knowing that this vengeance is a terrible thing to fall into, in the mean time, for the time being, His heart is kept back from this Justice time and time again by His incomprehensible and everlasting mercy.

But we, as beggarly, weak, and despicable humans ought not to try His patience by continuing in such sin8, because there is a Day of Wrath coming where His mercy is no longer accessible for those who have not been saved from their sins, and if our day of death comes in the mean time it is certain that we have nothing to look forward to except the fear and dread of the fiery Judgment to come, where fierce wrath will be poured out:

 

2Th_1:7-9 CAB …at the revelation of the Lord Jesus from heaven with His mighty angels,  8  in flaming fire, inflicting vengeance on those who do not know God, and on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.  9  These shall pay a penalty—eternal destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of His might,

 

In that day no one will be able to make any excuses at all for continuing in and promoting adulterous remarriage. All of the theoretical reasons why we thought that we could change the Gospel that Jesus left with us, and continue in steeling and keeping other people’s spouses, all of these excuses will melt away when we see Himself in person and the flames of fiery Judgment in His eyes9. No excuse will suffice when we perish from before Him for telling others in His absence that it was ok to not obey the commands and laws He left for us when He was here with us in person on earth! We will not do well with Him at his return if we have been rebellious against Him in His absence, and if we have defiled marriage throughout our time while on earth, then it is certain that we will be rejected from the marriage feast in the clouds of the sky when He comes in glory to marry His glorious bride and pour out unbearable and terrifying wrath upon His enemies below10.

 

14. The Law of Moses vs. Remarriage Repentance? – First We Need to Go Over Some Basics

What Does The Law of Moses Show us About Repentance from Remarriage? – First We Need to Go Over Some Basics About the Law…

 

After seeing God’s New Covenant Law for marriage and the revolutionary call for repentance from adulterous remarriage, we now need to back track a bit here and more thoroughly understand the Law of Moses in general and its updates into the New Covenant before moving on to more challenging truth about God’s extreme call to exalt one flesh marriage.

About Before We Can See How it Relates to Marriage

 

>> might be fully met in us, who walk in spirit and not flesh

>> must note somewhere: no destroy, but fulfill… we see for a certainty that none of Jesus’ amendments ever destroy righteousness but always surpass the physical code by a higher standard of real righteousness

>> But do not miss this ever-critical consideration with how to embrace the law of Moses: If you leave it the same, you have sinned and seek to return to Mount Sinai; If you destroy it, you violate Jesus’ clear rule against destroying the Law, but if you actually fulfill it, then you are finally one of the few people who is a real christian

>> Jas if you fulfill the royal law…

 

God Related to the Israelites’ Flesh From a Distance

We see that God, in His unsearchable wisdom approached a lost, evil-hearted, and internally unclean nation and sought to relate to them. Since there was nothing in common spiritually for God to relate to National Israel directly, He enacted laws that would address and govern their flesh unto a physical cleanliness so that He might at least enter into a covenant with them based on their flesh from a distance.

 

The Distance from God’s Presence on the Mountain

Can you hear the “distance” in God’s voice in this passage?

 

Exo_19:11-13 CAB And let them be ready for the third day, for on the third day the Lord will descend upon Mount Sinai before all the people.  12  And you shall separate the people round about, saying, Take heed to yourselves that you go not up into the mountain, nor touch any part of it: whoever touches the mountain shall surely die.  13  A hand shall not touch it, for everyone that touches shall be stoned with stones or shot through with a dart, whether beast or man, it shall not live… (also Exo_19:23)

 

These rules were not so for God’s friend Moses (Exo_19:3; Exo_19:10; Exo_19:14; Exo_19:21; Exo_19:24-25), and this “distance” under the Old Covenant is also contrasted with the life now given to all of those under the New Covenant in Heb_12:18-29.

 

The Distance from God’s Presence in the Tabernacle

We see this same “distance” for those fleshly recipients of the Old Covenant in describing the Holiest part of the tabernacle, since it separated God from the people with a thick veil:

 

Heb_9:8 CAB the Holy Spirit signifying this, that the way into the Holiest of All was not yet revealed while the first tabernacle was still standing,

 

Again this is contrasted with what Jesus accomplished for His followers with the Words:

 

Heb_10:19-22 CAB Therefore, brothers, having boldness to enter the Holiest by the blood of Jesus,  20  by a new and living way which He inaugurated for us, through the veil, that is, His flesh,  21  and having a High Priest over the house of God,  22  let us approach with a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies having been washed with clean water.

 

So we see that there is a striking contrast when God entered into the flesh-based covenant under Moses when compared with the closeness that was brought in by the spiritual working of the New Covenant under Jesus. If we seek to reestablish the distance of a flesh-based covenant, then it is clear and obvious that we do not like God at all (no matter how sincere or zealous we make ourselves out to be) since we clearly despise the closeness that Jesus accomplished to bring us to God in the spirit. If we seek to set aside what Jesus accomplished to return to opposing God in our flesh, then we have a sure damnation marked out for us, especially if we try to cast other people away from God in this manner:

 

Gal_5:2-4 CAB Indeed I, Paul, say to you that if you become circumcised [i.e. take on the initiating mark of the Mosaic Law in your flesh], Christ [χριστὸσ – anointed one] will profit you nothing.  3  And I testify again to every man who becomes circumcised that he is a debtor to keep the whole law.  4  You have become estranged from Christ, you who are justified by law; you have fallen from grace.

(also Gal_5:12)

 

First the Flesh, and Then Adaptations For Its Sin

And Why is all of this such a Problem?

>> I think this belongs under a more generic area [‘the basics of the Law’]

>> where should this section go, and should it be combined with something said previously or afterward?

>> As we have said, for the time of Moses’ Law, beyond the limitations of the physical (fleshly) aspect of the covenant, God even made adaptations to bear with their stubbornness and sin (Deu_24:1-4) so that His Holy law was filled with such adaptations which testified against their stubbornness for calling for such regulations. But even with these adaptations, they still would not keep God’s Law!

 

The rules of the flesh-based relationship themselves that God set up to relate to the unsaved Israelites are not the problem, (since these fleshly, physical pictures still speak as parables to us unto this day) but the problem is more so in the fact that, having a covenant based on flesh, by its very nature already embraces the fact that the recipients of such a covenant are indeed lost, and because of this the laws are necessarily adapted to relate to those lost, sinful, hearts who would continually disobey him, and this is a very big problem indeed for the pitiful people who must receive a law, however Divine it is, which will never clean their hearts or demand or enable them to change unto real, internal righteousness.

 

Heb_10:1 CAB For the law having a shadow of the good things to come, and not the image itself of the things, can never with the same sacrifices, which they offer continually every year, make those approaching perfect.

 

Heb_7:19 CAB For the law made nothing perfect; but there is the bringing in of a better hope…*

 

[* Technical Translational note: this verse can be very challenging to represent in English, and I am currently working on a translation for it]

 

The Spiritual Solution is the True Solution

All of this conflict over God’s righteous standards and a people who refuse to do what is right is finally solved in the marvelous making of a New Covenant where people, die to the flesh, get a new heart, with the Law inscribed on tablets of heart by God’s Spirit (2Co_3:3; Ezk 18, 33), and actually love and obey God in spirit and in truth.

Once the flesh-based covenant produced the Messiah and ‘gave Him Israelite flesh,’ the initial aim of this covenant was fulfilled in the body of Jesus, the Savior of Israel, and then also of World. As the majority of the book of Galatians says, this is because the promise that would overtake and fulfill this flesh-based covenant says:

 

Gen_22:18 CAB And in your seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed, because you have obeyed My voice.

 

Gal_3:16 CAB Now to Abraham and his Seed were the promises spoken. He does not say, “And to seeds,” as of many, but as of one, “And to your Seed,” who is Christ.

 

And now that the promises have come in Jesus, it will continue in this way as a Spiritual Covenant, especially until the time that this spiritual covenant climaxes when even concerning the physical nation He says:

 

Rom_11:26 CAB And so all Israel shall be saved, as it is written: “The Deliverer shall come out of Zion, and He shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob;

 

[For more on this, see the Bible study entitled, “Love Israel” on www.TrueConnection.org]

 

Because of this great fulfillment in Jesus, there is no more agreement available for God to relate to sinful hard-hearted people by means of fleshly cleanliness and adaptations to accommodate sinful hearts, but now there is one proclaimed everywhere that sinful people must actually repent from the heart, become clean in the spirit, and no longer spurn relating to a holy God. This is because Jesus said:

 

Joh_4:23 CAB But the hour is coming, and now is, when the true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and truth; for the Father is seeking such to worship Him.

 

Don’t Misapply the Old Covenant Against the Flesh of New People

So, if we take this first, flesh-based agreement out again, as is, and try to apply it in the same way to people under a new, spiritual relationship where God’s people now actually love God, God is understandably insulted and offended at this (as seen in books like Galatians, Ephesians, Colossians, Hebrews, and others). But if we take out this covenant and testify against those still in the hard hearted disobedience against God’s rules, then this is fully appropriate and reasonable:

 

>>R: Get/ Revise from within Sin lists

1Ti_1:8-10 CAB But we know that the law is good if one uses it lawfully,  9  knowing this: that the law is not laid down for the righteous, but for the lawless and insubordinate, for the ungodly and for sinners, for unholy and profane, for killers of fathers and killers of mothers, for murderers,  10  for fornicators, for sodomites, for kidnappers, for liars, for perjurers, and if there is any other thing that is opposed to sound doctrine,

Old:

Contrarily, the Law of Moses was rather designed for hell-bound, hard-hearted,* unsaved people:

[*For “hard-hearted” recall Mat_19:8; and Mar_10:5]

 

We can clearly see that the Law is “good” if it is used in the right way (as applied to unsaved and wicked people), and that the Law is ‘lacking’ if applied in the wrong way to saved people. If you have found that your life style fits these descriptions of sin, then truly, the Law of Moses is for you. This also shows that you are lost and without Jesus, and in as much as you stand in these sins, you stand under Moses’ Law and in need of the salvation of Jesus to bring you into truth.

As it is, the Law of Moses lacks the ability to govern saved people (in that, it was never even really designed for this in the first place) and because of this, for all those who hope to now be justified by faith in Jesus God has “found fault” with the applications of such laws when applied out of the context of hard-hearted and lost people living in sin.

And the only way that God’s Old Covenant Law for lost people can now be given to those saved people under the New Covenant, is by greater Laws that are fulfilled and practiced in truth, since they are no longer flesh-based. If we want to follow Jesus, we must look to the new and fulfilled Law of Christ, which always surpasses from the heart that which Moses simply required from their flesh. When explicitly fulfilling these laws in the Sermon on the Mount (Mat_5:17-20, etc.) Jesus specifically updated the law of divorce and remarriage (Mat_5:27-32). If we do not follow Jesus in this update, then we of all people are most guilty and bitterly condemned (Heb_10:28-31).

 

So then, here is what we have in Moses’ Law…

(1) From the beginning…the two will become into one flesh (Genesis)

(2) But since you are hard-hearted, we are suffering your divorces for now (Exodus-Deuteronomy)

 

Tell me: What is the fulfillment of this for saved people?

 

Is it:

(1) From the beginning…the two will become into one flesh (Genesis)

(2) But since we are still hard-hearted, we are going to divorce from the heart from now on (and where would this be in the New Testament?)

 

or is it rather:

(1) From the beginning…the two will become into one flesh (Genesis)

(2) And now that we have a changed heart by being saved from sin we can now obey God and no longer divorce our wives (as described all throughout the New Testament)

 

>>? – I may need to put this somewhere else…

Questions that Still Inevitably Arise

Even though we have gone to great lengths to clearly say these things about the Law, when we talk about these things, the following questions still seem to pop up:

 

 

We hope to tackle these questions even further in the next points…

 

First, We have No Right to Judge the Law of Moses

We have seen that Deuteronomy 24 was given through Moses as opposed to the essence of the New Covenant which was given through Jesus. But it is not as though because Moses wrote the Mosaic divorce Laws, that they are sinful, unspiritual (Rom_7:14), or unscriptural. So many have misunderstood and mis-taught such things as though there were something bad or sub-divine about the teaching in Deuteronomy 24. This is wrong. We do not need to blaspheme Moses here to establish Jesus! If they seem to be saying contradictory things to us, it is because we have ignorantly pitted them against each other in our minds because of our shortsightedness. As the Scriptures say about themselves:

 

Heb_5:11-12 CAB …we have much to say, and it is hard to explain, since you have become sluggish in hearing.  12  For indeed, although you ought to be teachers by this time, again you have need for someone to teach you what are the elements of the beginning of the oracles of God; and you have come to need milk and not solid food.

 

We ought to be humble, rational and honest, and repent of our blindness rather than projecting our faults onto those who ought to be our heroes, as though they had a conflict with each other and needed our brilliant and insightful minds to come along and help them straighten things out. When are we ever going to learn to be sound in the faith and cease from blaspheming? Our analytical skills, presumptuous intellectual confidence, and boastful “theological training” have only brought us more damnation the more we open our mouth. This is our pitiful state as long as we think we have the right to sit as judges over the law:

 

Jas_4:10-11 CAB  Be humbled before the Lord, and He will exalt you.  11  …And if you judge the law, you are not a doer of the law but a judge.

 

Rather than rashly blaspheming the patriarchs, we ought to wait and seek God for understanding before asserting any conclusions. >> Move to an earlier point?: I would exhort that we can begin gaining understanding in this area by observing that just as certain commands are now specifically associated with Jesus (1Co_7:10), or even Paul (1Co_7:12) so also were many commands specifically associated with Moses, including Deuteronomy 24:1-4. If any of us are christians in any sense of the word, we already know that these commands were actual commands from God and not just the personal opinions of those whom God sent us:

 

1Th_2:13 CAB  Because of this we also give thanks to God unceasingly, so that when you received the word of God which you heard from us, you received not the word of men, but just as it truly is, the word of God, which also is at work in you who believe.

 

1Th_4:2 CAB you know what commandments we gave you through the Lord Jesus.

 

2Th_3:4 CAB  And we trust in the Lord concerning you, that the things which we command to you, you are both doing, and will do them.

(also 2Th_3:6)

 

If we have any awareness of what it means to be a Christian and believe the Bible, then we know that these things are commandments from God through these men that He sent us. It is the same way with the Law of Moses. The only difference between Moses and Paul in this case is not their (imagined) “interpersonal disagreement,” on a few doctrinal points, but rather, the nature and extent of each of their audience specifications to which they were particularly assigned.

    Moses wrote for lost people and Paul wrote for real Christians. We should not expect that their rules should be the same, given the difference in the nature of those they wrote to.

 

The Law is Not Sin

In seeking to firmly establish a fresh, and new, New Testament truth, we ought to all the more zealously affirm that the update given to us for this covenant in no way degrades the Holy and Divine Law of Moses, as though we were to say that the Law was sin:

 

Rom_7:7 WEB  What shall we say then? Is the law sin? May it never be! [“μὴ γένοιτο” (mḗ genoito) – i.e. fig. may it never be even thought of that way] However, I wouldn’t have known sin, except through the law. For I wouldn’t have known coveting [or “lust” (επιθυμιαν)], unless the law had said, “You shall not covet.”

 

And he says again (from personal experience, having been raised a Jew):

 

Rom_7:10-12 CAB And the commandment, which was to bring life, I found to bring death.  11  For sin, taking opportunity by the commandment, deceived me, and by it, killed me.  12  Therefore the law indeed is holy, and the commandment holy and righteous and good.

>> CAB was inconsistent so I did not use it here

>> Maybe I should do a translation here to make it “lust,” and make it consistent

 

So we see that it is sin in people that is bad, not Moses or the Law he gave. And we also, if we have obedient faith, we know that the entire Law of Moses is as much Scripture as any other portion found in the Bible, because we must firmly assert and proclaim:

 

2Ti_3:16 CAB  All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness,

 

So we must not say that the Law is sin, or that it is uninspired because it was done through Moses and now it is not continued in the same manner under the New Covenant. Certainly “All Scripture” initially includes the Old Testament as a basis before even establishing the New Testament, and this most directly affirms the Law of Moses, including Deuteronomy 24. In fact, the Law of Moses is at the very bedrock of what it means to be Scripture, and it, as the first five books of the Bible, defines the rest of the Bible, as Scripture for us!

But when wicked people attempt to apply the fleshly righteousness of this Law (which was given to a fleshly and evil-hearted nation), and its accommodations for sin to a (New) covenant that necessarily saves people from the flesh, sin and the wages of Hell, this is when God has now “found fault” with their (mis) application of this old covenant relationship, being out of context and unsuitable for the new use:

 

Hebrews 8 Says The People Are the Problem, Not The Law!

God says that He “found fault” with the sinful people, not with Moses or with the very Law itself

 

Technical note: I have added RMAC grammar tags in the following passage along with the Greek in key instances to help the informed reader follow the details (see RMAC in the Bibliography for more)

 

Speaking of Jesus it says:

 

Heb_8:6-13 WEB  But now he has obtained a more excellent ministry [λειτουργιαςG3009], by so much as he is also the mediator of a better [κρείττονός (kreittonos) – stronger/ mightier] covenant, which has been enacted [νενομοθέτηται (nenomothetētai) – “Law” (nomo) + “arrange” (“thet” from “títhēmi” (G5087)) – placed as law/ legislated (as in v. 10)] on better [κρείττοσιν (kreittosín) – stronger/ mightier] promises [επαγγελιαιςG1860].  7  For if that first...* had been faultless [αμεμπτοςG273], then no place would have been sought for a second.  8  For finding fault with them [αυτοιςP-DPM (autois) – that is, “them” (plural), as in the people, not “it” (singular) as in the covenant God spoke], he said, “Behold, the days come,” says the Lord, “That I will make a new covenant [διαθηκηνN-ASF] with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah;  9  Not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers [πατρασινN-DPM αυτωνP-GPM – Slightly different grammar, but still plural, and still the exact same word], In the day that I took them [αυτουςP-APM – plural] by the hand to lead them out of the land of Egypt; For they [αυτοιP-NPM – plural] didn’t continue in my covenant, And I disregarded them [αυτωνP-GPM – plural],” says the Lord.  10  “For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel. After those days,” says the Lord; “I will put [διδοὺς – lit. be giving] my laws into their mind, I will also write [ἐπιγράψω – write upon] them on [ἐπὶ – upon] their heart. I will be to them a God, And they will be to me a people.  11  They will not teach every man his fellow citizen, Every man his brother, saying, ‘Know [γνῶθι (ginōthi)] the Lord,’ For all will know [εἰδήσουσί (eidēsusi) – perceive/ look at (which implicitly results in knowledge); (totally different word than before)] me, From the least of them to the greatest of them.  12  For I will be merciful to their unrighteousness [αδικιαιςN-DPF  αυτωνP-GPM – Plural]. I will remember their sins and lawless deeds no more.”  13  In that he says, “A new covenant,” he has made the first old. But that which is becoming old and grows aged is near to vanishing away.

 

[Verse 7: * Many English versions add the word, “covenant” to this as well, but this is not in any Greek manuscript.]

 

We see that in God “finding fault,” it is not that God “found fault” with His own Words or even Moses in establishing the Old Covenant, but this “fault” was based on the disobedience of the rebellious recipients (i.e. “them” in v. Heb_8:8) of the Mosaic Covenant:

 

(1) Moses is Commended

God is so far from accusing Moses of doing wrong in making the Law, that, on the contrary, in this same book he says:

 

Heb_3:2 CAB …as Moses also was faithful in all His house.

 

Heb_3:5 CAB And Moses indeed was faithful in all His house as a servant, for a testimony…

 

(2) God is the Author

We also see that God takes full credit for the first covenant given through Moses by the words:

 

Heb_8:9 a CAB not according to the covenant which I made with their fathers

 

And

 

Heb_8:9 b CAB …Because they did not persevere in My covenant

 

(3) It was the Mosaic Covenant

We see that this is speaking of the Mosaic Covenant because He says:

 

Heb_8:9 b CAB …in the day when I took their hand to lead them out of the land of Egypt…

 

(4) The People were the Problem

We see that the problem in the covenant agreement was not from the “legislative” end of it (God through Moses) but the “fault” is clearly within the aspect of those who disobeyed it:

 

Heb_8:8-9 c CAB For finding fault with them he said 9Because they did not persevere in My covenant, and I disregarded them, says the LORD.

>> this is an LXX quote

 

It is as though God is saying, “I am finding a serious problem in this (bilateral) covenant relationship we agreed to be in, because you are not relating to me at all in your disobedience! Therefore I am going to set up a renewed covenant relationship that actually requires you to love me and have my laws written on your heart.” – This is what He says in Hosea and many other places:

 

Hos_2:17-20 CAB And I will take away the names of Baalam out of her mouth, and their names shall be remembered no more at all.  18  And I will make for them in that day a covenant with the wild beasts of the field, and with the birds of the sky… 19  And I will betroth you to Myself forever; yea, I will betroth you to Myself in righteousness, and in judgment, and in mercy, and in tender compassions;  20  and I will betroth you to Myself in faithfulness: and you shall know the Lord.

>>R somehow, in all of these (preceding and following) paragraphs I have ended up repeating myself over and over again.

 

So we see from these passages that God found fault with “them” (that is the children of Israel) and not Himself or Moses, and as a result of the fault He found in “them” He determined and proclaimed through the mouth of His prophets to make a New Covenant that would actually make them free from their sin to serve Him in truth.

 

The point: If we say that there is anything “lacking” in Deuteronomy 24 which cannot continue in the same way under the New Covenant (as Hebrews teaches in general, and Jesus teaches specifically) then it is because it reflects the aspect of the disobedient people it governed, not some blasphemous “deficiency of God” or “deficiency of Moses” imagination, since it is already certain that God Himself gave the children of Israel this perfect Scripture.

As Jesus points out (Mat_19:4-6): Moses had already transmitted to Israel in the book of Genesis the fact that God made the two become into One flesh (Gen_2:18; Gen_2:20-25) and this shows us that Moses was a “One Flesh” advocate too, but then after this we see the record that Moses wrote Deu_24:1-4 according to their hard hearts, but contrary to what God, Moses, and Jesus all wanted. No one has sinned in all of this except the people who sinned to the point that this accommodation was necessary. And although all of this is clear enough, it is yet clearer that Jesus commanded that it would no longer be this way for God’s people who would follow Him now in truth.

We should see from all of this that the Scriptures are altogether perfect in recording for us how God accommodated the sin in people’s hearts, and they are also altogether faithful and clear in explaining to us why we cannot do this anymore in this age under this covenant.

 

What Does this Mosaic Marriage Law Show Us?

We have seen that the Law given to Israel, is not ultimately “good” just because it partly tells us what God wants, but it is more so “good” in the sense that it also gives us a testimony about the types of laws God does not want, by recording for us the sins that God accommodated for the sinful people who received the Law of Moses along with its accommodations for sin.

 

And we have already quoted this Scripture:

 

Rom_7:7 WEB  What shall we say then? Is the law sin? May it never be! [“μὴ γένοιτο” (mḗ genoito) – i.e. may it never be even thought of that way] However, I wouldn’t have known sin, except through the law. For I wouldn’t have known coveting [or “lust” (επιθυμιαν)], unless the law had said, “You shall not covet.”

 

From this and many other Scriptures in this section, we have seen that Moses’ Law testifies against people in its prohibitions of some sins (such as the Ten Commandments), and in its reluctant accommodations for others. In both cases the Law consistently shows us what sin is. And especially because Jesus plainly declared that the Mosaic Divorce Laws were accommodations for sin, it is by this very fact that the Law lets us know what sin is: It is as some have noted; that one cannot take up the guidelines of Deuteronomy 24:1-4, without also admitting that they are those hard-hearted (unsaved) people that it was designed for. One cannot appropriate this law for the hard-hearted without also admitting one’s own hard-heartedness. And because we have seen that real Christians have laid a hold of a mightier hope in Jesus, it says a lot for those (many) teachers who want to insistently maintain Moses’ divorce laws for church people today! – They “are convicted by the law as transgressors,” (Jas_2:9-12 CAB) as we have already quoted, and they are compelled to take up again the law of transgressors.

 

The Myth of the “Letter of the Law”

 

What is The Difference Between What still Applies and What has been Changed?

so how do we tell the difference between flesh-based and internal righteousness? After all there are still commands in the Old Testament that clearly still apply!

- Actually the question (and the title here) is misleading since it is a trick question!

- there is not one of them that has not been fulfilled and surpassed by the working of God in Jesus. Even with ‘love your neighbor as yourself,’ James assumes you are seeking to fulfill it.

But the main test is, does it deny the indulgence of the flesh?

 

15. The Divine and the Mosaic Aspects of the Law of Moses Both Proclaim Truth to Us About Remarriage!

We have seen that Jesus said that Moses made particular accommodations for the hard hearts of the Israelites who were divorcing their wives, and the climax and culmination of this accommodation was the command that a woman could not return to her first spouse if she had been remarried after the divorce. Now let us also consider the essence and nature behind this accommodation, and why such an accommodation would have taken place to begin with. – In all of this, let’s really get down to how Moses’ Law relates to Marriage and the New Covenant!

 

God’s Special Friend Moses

Moses was God’s special friend (see Num_12:1-16, especially verses Num_12:6-9, and Exo_33:11). Especially from the beginning of God’s “burning-bush” relationship with Moses, God repeatedly made Himself “vulnerable” to the petitions and persuasions of Moses. If you question my wording, then please, just read and believe these passages and compare them to what I am referring to here:

 

Gen_32:29 and Jdg_13:17-18 with Exo_3:13-14; and also see: Exo_4:1-3, Exo_4:10-15; Exo_32:9-14; Exo_33:1-3, Exo_33:11-23; Num_11:11-17; Num_12:6-9; Num_16:20-24, Num_16:28-33, Num_16:44-46; Deu_9:13-14, Deu_9:18-20

 

Exo_33:1-3 CAB  And the Lord said to Moses…  2  …I will send at the same time My angel before your face…  3  I will not go up with you, because you are a stiff-necked people, lest I consume you by the way.

>About non-quoted text:

> The “Girgashite” is not mentioned by the KJV. In vs 2

 

Exo_33:1-3 KJB And the LORD said to Moses 2 “…I will send an angel before you… I will not go up in the midst of you; for you are a stiff-necked people: lest I consume you in the way.”

 

Exo_33:12-15 CAB  And Moses said to the Lord, See, You say to me, Lead on this people… 13  If then I have found favor in Your sight, reveal Yourself to me, that I may evidently see You; that I may find favor in Your sight, and that I may know that this great nation is Your people.  14  And He said, I Myself will go before [MT: “My presence will go with” (WEB)] you, and give you rest.  15  Then he said to Him, If You go not up with us Yourself, do not bring me up from here.

 

Exo_33:12-15 WEB  Moses said to Yahweh, “Behold, you tell me, ‘Bring up this people:’ and you haven’t let me know whom you will send with me. Yet you have said, ‘I know you by name, and you have also found favor in my sight.’  13  Now therefore, if I have found favor in your sight, please show me now your ways, that I may know you, so that I may find favor in your sight: and consider that this nation is your people.”  14  He said, “My presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.”  15  He said to him, “If your presence doesn’t go with me, don’t carry us up from here.

> See CAB Project for much more

 

So we see that God made special addendums, exceptions and even reversals to His own pronouncements for Moses’ sake when legislating the Old Covenant for the children of Israel. These are extreme statements, but I can’t honestly avoid them because they are right there in the Bible.  By reading these things, you would have to admit that this is a special behavior that specifically applied to Moses.

In light of these Scriptures and these considerations showing the special and amazing relationship Moses had, one can only wonder in amazement over all of the things that were going on behind the doors of the tent when Moses went in to talk with God and decide what the laws and decrees would be for the children of Israel. Can you imagine being an Israelite in that situation at that time and saying to your family, friends and neighbors something like, “I wonder when Moses is going to come out of the tent” and “I wonder what God and Moses have decided for us today” (see Exo_33:8-11)?

I am dumfounded over the fact that Moses knew God. I am overwhelmed that God would let a human play a part in deciding Divine commands for a people. But it is in this amazing reality that we receive the Old Testament and its laws passed down to us today.

 

The Point: Because Moses had a special relationship with God, it was within Moses’ prerogative to make special and even Divine accommodations for the sake of the hard hearts which could not keep a higher standard of righteousness beyond what the flesh could accept and observe.

 

For some people who ask for a name God says He can’t give it:

But not for Moses:

What is your name…?

Because:

“I speak to Moses face to face”

 

“Of Moses

Parts of the Law are specifically and particularly ascribed to the Lord Himself, (such as Exo_20:1 etc., Exo_40:1 etc., Lev_1:1 etc., Num_1:1 etc., Deu_1:3; Deu_2:1, and many other places).  These are straightforward orations that God declared to Moses to write down.  But out of God’s creative and sovereign genius, He also loves to ordain and use people in His legislation process.  This is where we get certain parts of the Law of Moses from.

 

This is where we get the majority of the New Testament epistles from, and

(as done with the epistles of the New Testament), but

It is God Divinely inspiring a person whom He has commissioned to write down the words of God without there being a direct vision at the very moment of writing.

Moses did not simply write epistles like the Apostles did to complete the teaching that was necessary for their covenant, but rather,

 

Because of God’s special behavior toward Moses, not only were certain parts of the Law expounded and explained as Divine instruction for the children of Israel but quite often there are very basic and fundamental aspects of the entire Old Covenant that God issued for Israel simply through what Moses wrote down under Divine inspiration, just like Jesus Himself laid down the New Testament. This makes The Old Covenant a very actively “Mosaic” covenant, especially when God was not giving straightforward orations. In addition to the audible declarations that God gave to Moses, Moses’ divinely inspired writings often founded the very basis of the Old Covenant like Jesus’ Words did for the New.

Moses was directly or indirectly responsible for many of the commands given in the Law, having functioned as the executive partner with God Himself over the Nation of Israel. Even by ascribing the title “The Law of Moses” to the Old Testament Law, the Bible directly attributes a strong mosaic overtone, by calling it “of Moses.” This is almost just as we might name a book by its author, except God’s name (as a “co-author”) is well known and understood in this case.

 

The Point: We should consider the Mosaic significance of Deuteronomy 24, because Jesus specifically tells us that it is out of this aspect that an accommodation was made allowing divorce and remarriage, and forbidding reconciliation.

 

Mat_19:8 KJV  Moses because of the hardness of your hearts suffered you to put away your wives…

 

Jesus is a Prophet Like Moses

>> Moses delivered the physical children of God, Jesus diliv Sp

In addition to these Mosaic implications we have mentioned concerning the Old Covenant, the New Testament also repeatedly compares Moses’ prophetic executive role with Jesus’ place in establishing the New Covenant:

 

Joh_1:17 CAB For the law was given through Moses, but grace and truth came to be through Jesus Christ.

 

Do you see the comparison and contrast between the Old Covenant through Moses, and the New Covenant through Jesus? Both of these figures served as co-executor for one of the two major covenants given by God the Father, for specific time periods, with different purposes, and both partnered with God Himself in unparalleled cooperative efforts. And why should we be surprised to find Jesus particularly paralleled with Moses in establishing Covenants when there is an even more basic and fundamental theme throughout the Bible that consistently compares and parallels Jesus and His calling with Moses?

 

Birth

In both cases, kings decreed the mass killing of babies which would have killed both Moses and Jesus soon after they were born, but both were saved from death to fulfill prophecy and grow up to become leaders and deliverers to save God’s people: Exo_1:15-16, Exo_1:22; Exo_2:1-10; Act_7:19-21; Heb_11:23; Mat_1:21; Mat_2:1-18; Rev_12:4-5

 

Prophet

A Prophet Like Moses: Deu_18:15, Deu_18:18-19; Act_3:22-23; Act_7:37

 

Priest

Priest must be a Levite: 2Ch_11:14; 2Ch_13:9; 1Ki_12:30-31; Heb_7:5

Moses was a Levite: Exo_4:14

Moses associated with priests: Deu_27:9;

But Jesus is Priest according to Melchizedek: Psa_110:4; Heb_5:1-11; Heb_6:20; Heb_7:1-28; Heb_8:1-6

Priest alone offers sacrifice (and Incense):

Exo_30:8; Num_16:40; 1Sa_2:28; 1Ch_6:49; 1Ch_23:13; 2Ch_26:16-18; Luk_1:9;

Moses offered: Exo_40:18, Exo_40:25, Exo_40:27, Exo_40:31-32;

Jesus offers: Heb_8:1-6; Heb_9:11-15; (also see Rom_12:1; Php_2:17; 2Ti_4:6);

Moses built tabernacle: Exo_35:5-35Exo_36:1-38 – Exo_37:1-29 – Exo_38:1-31 – Exo_39:1-43 Exo_40:1-38 (compare Heb_8:2)

Jesus builds the Temple: Zec_6:11-14; (compare 2Sa_7:12-13; 1Ch_17:12-13; 1Ch_22:10; 1Ch_28:10and note the reapplication with Jesus in this double prophecy); Mat_16:18; Eph_2:20-22; Heb_3:3-4; 1Pe_2:4-5; (and compare 1Co_3:9)

 

King

‘Kingly Moses’: Deu_33:4-5;

Jesus as King: Mat_27:11; Joh_18:37

King/Priest prophecy: Zec_6:11-14

 

Also see: Heb_3:1-6

 

Joshua/ Jesus

In addition to all of these parallels with Moses and God’s Son Jesus, Moses’ main disciple was also named Jesus (long before the Son of God came to earth). Although we usually represent Moses’ main disciple as “Joshua” in English, it is still the same name as Jesus in both of the original languages:

 

Hebrew (OT): יהושׁוּע yehôshûa‛ (or yēshū‛a for short), (H3091)

Greek (OT & NT): ἰησοῦς - iēsoús (G2424)

English: Both “Joshua” and or “Jesus

 

God Said to Moses:

Deu_18:18 CAB I will raise up to them a Prophet from among their brethren, like you; and I will put My words in His mouth, and He shall speak to them as I shall command Him.

 

Moses Said to the People:

Deu_18:15 CAB The Lord your God shall raise up to you a Prophet from among your brethren, like me; Him shall you hear,

The New Testament shows that this prophecy is speaking about Jesus Christ: Act_3:22-23; Act_7:37

 

Note: Although it goes without saying that Jesus is God the Son, the profound mystery here is not just that Jesus is God, but that He was also so true of an actual man that He had a particular calling from God the Father that was paralleled with the man Moses. This is the point where the mystery is so profound that it is baffling.

 

So, just as Jesus is called “The Second Adam” in His redemptive work for mankind (Rom_5:14; 1Co_15:21-22, 1Co_15:44-49), so also He is described as “The Second Moses” (Deu_18:15; Act_3:22-26; Act_7:37; if you will) in His executive work for establishing the New Covenant. While Moses was the first of this type of Prophet for establishing the Old Covenant, Jesus was ‘like him’ in establishing the New Covenant.

 

The Point: As we consider that there have been two major executors for the two major covenants that God made with humans, we should particularly consider this in mind when we discuss Deuteronomy 24, because when we come to this specific aspect of the Law we know we are largely dealing with a special covenant-executor name Moses, whose executive actions were only paralleled and surpassed by Jesus Himself.

As Moses tailored the commands under his jurisdiction for unsaved hard hearted people, so Jesus has now become the executor of a New Covenant for saved people. It is fitting and reasonable for lost people to be under the accommodations which Moses made for them, just as it is only right that saved people should come under the commands of Jesus for the New Covenant. If we actually become real Christians, then it is required that we come under the life of Jesus’ commands to be saved from the evil hearts which Moses was accommodating.

If you are lost today, then it is only natural that you will tend to gravitate toward Moses’ various accommodations because they fit your heart, just as they seemed to be right, fitting and agreeable to the Pharisees, but if you have actually been saved from living in sin and having a hard heart, then you will zealously flee from the incriminating accommodations so as not to be defined by them in the same way that the children of Israel were. It is now required at the announcing and proclamation of the New Covenant that we quickly flee to be justified by a covenant for saved people, and to shun being comfortable within the accommodations for the lost.

 

16. Deuteronomy 24 Did Not Allow Reconciliation After the Defilement of Remarriage

>> It is absolutely clear that the remarriage was defiling, not reconciliation. Reconciliation was not the problem, but reconciliation was the victim of the problem. It was not that they could not return because the return was defiling, but because of her defilement she could not return.

>> Stoning did take place for adultery: Heb_2:2 – Therefore, it is clear that “some uncleanness”/ “shameful matter” was not proven adultery

Important note: Please be sure to refer back to “The Main Passages about Divorce and Remarriage” to reread this passage in its entirety, and recall all of the basic things which we already clearly documented and noted about the fundamental nature of this passage.

 

We have already summarized this passage previously, under “The Main Passages about Divorce and Remarriage,” but now we are thoroughly covering it here before documenting some critical notes about this passage and then seeing how it is dynamically incorporated and updated throughout the rest of the Bible

 

Deu 24 - The Mosaic Law of Divorce And Remarriage

In Deuteronomy 24 we can see a very significant accommodation made which allows divorce and remarriage, and even forbids reconciliation if this happens

Note: As usual, I have corrected a number of details from the original Greek (LXX) behind this translation.

 

>>R! – integrate MT & DSS notes (below)

Deu_24:1-4 CAB  And if anyone should take a wife, and should dwell with [συνοικήσῃ – lit. cohabit; fig. marry] her, then [καὶ – and] it shall come to pass if she should not have found favor [χάριν] before him, because he has found some unbecoming thing [ ἄσχημον πρᾶγμα – lit. shameful matter] in her, that he shall write [Actual Greek: “καὶ” (kai) - “and,” “γράψει” (grapsei) Indicative Mood – “he writes”; Not in Greek at all: “thatshall” (as though it were in the Imperative Mood)] for her a certificate of divorce [βιβλίον ἀποστασίου – lit. a book/writing of standing away], and give[s] it into her hands, and he shall [not in Greek] send[s]Indicative Mood her away [ἐξαποστελεῖ] out [ἐκ (same as ἐξ within the previous word)] of his house.  2  And if she should go away and be married to another man [ γένηται ἀνδρὶ ἑτέρῳ – lit. become another man’s (same Greek as Rom 7)];  3  and the last husband should hate her, and write for her a certificate of divorce [same as v. 1], and should give it into her hands, and send her away [same as v. 1] out of his house [οἰκίας – compare v. 1 (i.e. “dwell with her”)], and [or] the last husband should die [ἀποθάνῃ – lit. die away], who took her to himself for a wife;  4  the former [πρότερος – first] husband who sent her away [ἐξαποστείλαςsame as v. 1] shall not be able to return [ἐπαναστρέψας – lit. turn again upon/ return upon] and take her to himself for a wife, after she has been defiled [μετὰ τὸ μιανθῆναι αὐτήν – lit. after the defilement of her (i.e. after her remarriage)]; because it [ὅτι – lit. that] is an abomination before the Lord your God, and you shall not defile [μιανεῖτε] the land which the Lord your God gives you to inherit [ἐν κλήρῳ].

 

> See also: Return | “That the Land be Not Defiled…” | “Deuteronomy 24 Says You Can’t Return…”

 

Deu_24:1-4 WEB-based When a man takes a wife, and marries her, then it shall be, if she doesn’t find favor in his eyes, because he has found some unseemly thing in her, and he writes her a divorce certificate, and give it in her hand, and send her out of his house, 2 When she is departed out of his house, she may go and be another man’s wife. 3 If the latter husband hate her, and write her a bill of divorce, and give it in her hand, and send her out of his house; or if the latter husband die, who took her to be his wife; 4 her former husband, who sent her away, may not take her again to be his wife, after that she is defiled; for that is abomination before the Lord: and you shall not cause the land to sin, which the Lord your God gives you for an inheritance.

 

Differences:

>> “When she…” the CAB does not include, or repeat this.

>> “Dwell with” vs. “marries.” I know that you have explained to us that to marry and to co-habit is the same thing, but will other people pick that up?

>> vs 3 might can sound confusing because it mashes things together. It sounds like it could be two different men, one which put her away from him, and she gets remarried to another man which eventually ends up dying so she cannot return to the first husband unless the land be defiled.

 

Technical Source Text Notes for Deu_24

v. 2 – At least one DSS document (4QDeuta) agrees with the LXX in not having the specification, “When she is departed out of his house…” (Deu_24:2 WEB). However, another DSS document (4QDeutk2) includes this specification along with the MT.

v. 3 – 4QDeutk2 adds, “to be his wife” (DSS Bible)

>> ADD somewhere: There are other places in the Law that give rules that touch divorce and remarriage (as seen in the Scripture refs for the first section of this book), but they are never quoted like Deu 24 is. Since Deu 24 is the defining passage that the NT deals with, this will also be the defining passage we will deal with in this book for Moses’ law on divorce and remarriage

 

Greek Notes

again this translation is very wrong and not in the Greek at all

these incorrect additional words turn this into a command, when it is not even a suggestion. This scenario (verses 1-3) is, simply stated as fact; It is NOT in the Imperative Mood (given as a command) as implied by so many faulty translations.

There is no imperative statement given until v. 4 (he “shall not be able to return and take her to himself”)

(4) “after” “μετὰ” (meta) has connotations of “change,” as in, Metamorphosis (a change in shape, or “morphe”); This has implications that she has permanently changed after being defiled; She has changed (meta) into being permanently defiled.

 

>> Was David involved in two things that would potentially cause the land to be defiled?? Or >> ?? Jeremiah says that causing the land to sin, is when a spouse goes to another man, not when the first husband takes her back?? >> Not that the actual Greek fits With Jeremiah’s clarification more:

 

 

The entire nonsense of “a certificate of innocents” is a fictional model made up just so we can think more positively of divorce certificates, when Jesus denounced such abominations. “a certificate of innocents” heresy ignores the fact the certificate is never commanded by Moses, but passively suffered, and Jesus made this clear.  The “a certificate of innocents” heresy turns Moses from passively suffering the evil from the Israelites (as Jesus described him) into legislating divorce certificates! Jesus clearly equated divorce (sending away) and the giving of certificates as a whole, as a hard-hearted practice made as an accommodation for the people by Moses.

 

Maybe put this under: DAR is Adultery

We see that it would not be defiling for a woman to have many men if it were by means of death (Tamar/ Sadducee example/ Rom 7) – But the very fact that there is some kind of “invisible” (moral) tie back to the first husband makes it into permanently defiling adultery.

Many may complain about impracticalities, but we are commanded by this and many other Sceiptures to receive it by fath that there is actually some kind of tie that happens in lawful marriage that is not simply erased by divorce and or remarriage. If we believe the Scriptures we have to come to terms with the fact that they are saying that a dead spouse allows clean remarriage, but an alive one makes you defiled if remarried. So, are we going to be Christians here and cooperate with the Scriptures and choose to believe and accept them by faith as a governing and defining authority over our lives and conciouses as to what is constituted immorality?

It is a real blessing if we can “feel” the moral reality of the difference between death and remarriage as opposed to divorce and remarriage, but even if we cannot “feel” the difference between the two, if we are going to be christians at all, we have to at least humbly and submissively receive these facts by faith anyway.

 

>>These passage show the Permanency of the Marriage covenant, Despite Separation and Divorce

 

Things to Notice Concerning Deu 24

·       The entire essence of the Mosaic divorce and remarriage law is summed up in 4 verses: Deu_24:1-4

·       We should notice that all of the Biblical references that follow this passage in the Bible hinge on these 4 verses when referring to the Mosaic Law of divorce and remarriage

·       In Jer_3:1-2 God very clearly specified that “after she has been defiled” is a reference to the defilement of remarriage.

 

Suffering Divorce and Divorce Certificates, Not Legislating Them!

·       Many readers, (including most notoriously, the majority of the Pharisees) have usually understood this passage to be actively telling men that they should give divorce certificates whenever they divorced their wives, as though God personally gave these things as requirements of His perfect justice to the people. This folly is indicated by Jesus and even seen in some teachings of the Jews: “R. Solomon expresses the sense of that place thus:  ‘It is commanded to put away one’s wife,  if she obtain not favour in the eyes of her husband’…“R. Akibah said,  If any man sees a woman handsomer than his own wife,  he may put her away;  because it is said,  ‘If she find not favour in his eyes.’ ’” (Lightfoot on Mat_5:31).

     >> Get original quotes?

·       But Jesus very directly confronts and corrects this teaching and tells us that Moses was not actively legislating divorce and or divorce certificates, but passively “suffering” this wicked practice of hard-hearted divorce as a whole that was already happening on a regular basis (Mat_19:7-8). It is obvious in the Bible that <<put quote here and put refs back at that place?>> divorce was already a de facto social norm which Moses mentions repeatedly in passing, as though everyone already knew about this vile practice long before the writing of Deuteronomy 24: Lev_21:14; Lev_22:13; Num_30:9

·       The Pharisees (at some point*) described the permission to divorce as an active legislation from God through Moses, but Jesus said that this was simply an accommodation for their hard hearts (* compare Mat_19:7-8; Mar_10:3-4)

·       If we share the idea that was originally given to us through the Pharisees and we disagree with Jesus’ correction, then this is a terrifying posture to be in

·       (As seen later) God specifically and repeatedly attributes this law to Moses’ accommodation of their wickedness, not to God’s proactive preference for what was right

·       Again, if we agree with the Pharisees initial statement and not Jesus teaching, then we need to first back up and decide whether or not we want to be Christians, instead of playing liberal games along with the hypocrites

 

The reasons for hardhearted divorce had already been summarized in a very simple way:

 

Deu_21:14 CAB  And it shall be if you do not delight in her, you shall send her out free…

 

Moses was governing hard hearts that were incapable of keeping a standard that required purified hearts and salvation from sin. There is no way you are going to tell lost people that they all have to honor one flesh and keep the pattern of permanent, life-long marriage as taught in the garden, so there must be this accommodation for the fact that they are going to divorce their wives no matter what you tell them. They are lost and hate righteousness. You cannot give them laws that require them to love and fear God in their relationships with each other, especially in marriage. But in disregarding the Love of God, to one degree or the other, the Pharisees tended to somewhat think of the divorce permission as God’s idea of justice, but Jesus said that it was only an accommodation for their hard hearts, and such hearts and the accommodations for them would no longer be acceptable for the New Covenant.

 

>> notice the link of “hating” being the assumed source of divorcing as in Mal 2. Do you think that “Hating” is something that describes a hard heart pretty accurately?

 

>> LastLeftOff<<

 

17. God’s Call to Return To The First Spouse

After truly repenting away from adulterous remarriage, should one return to the first spouse seeking reconciliation? How could this be possible if it was forbidden in Deu_24? – are these questions directly addressed in the Bible?

 

Jesus’ Amendment of Deuteronomy 24 (Specifically Verses 1-2)

The most simple way to initially answer the question over possibly returning to the first spouse is to simply read and actually believe what Jesus already clearly and directly told us about Moses’ teaching.

 

It is important to notice that the specific issue that Jesus dealt with in all of the divorce passages in the Gospels, was the Mosaic Law of Divorce and Remarriage (Deu_24:1-4). In Matthew Chapter five and nineteen Jesus specifically makes verses 1-2 of Deuteronomy 24 inapplicable for the New Covenant standard of marriage:

 

Mat_5:31-32 KJB It has been said, [referring to Deu_24:1-2] ‘Whoever puts away his wife, let him give her a divorce certificate’ 32 But I say to you, That whoever divorces his wife, except for a report of prostitution [ie. fornication], causes her to commit adultery: and whoever marries her that is divorced commits adultery.

 

Mat_19:8-9 CAB He said to them, “Moses, because of the hardness of your hearts, permitted [or “suffered”] you to divorce your wives, but from the beginning it has not been thus.  9  And I say to you…

 

Jesus made the reason behind giving Deuteronomy 24 absolutely clear: Hardness of heart! If Deuteronomy 24 was written for hard hearts as Jesus said, doesn’t that mean that it was not written for those with soft hearts? Because of this it is clear that this law does not pertain to governing those whose hearts have been made soft by the life accomplished by Jesus.

>> The climax and actual “command” of this Deuteronomy passage is verse 4

>> It is in view of this Hardness that Moses permitted them to divorce their wives, and (as documented in the next points) it is because of this same hardness that they were also forbidden to reconcile after a remarriage.

 

Jesus amended Moses’ marriage laws, and made it clear that the expectations in Deuteronomy 24 would not represent the practice of the New Covenant, since they instead represented a concession for unsaved hardness of heart under Moses that Jesus’ followers were now forbidden to have. In Jesus, we have both Moses’ accommodation for divorce and the hardness that causes it, put away from us.

For those of us who actually believe the Scriptures we just reviewed, with such a direct and clear update of this law it is clear enough for us to see that returning to the first spouse has been opened unto us, but there are still more Scriptures for us to embrace that clearly confirm this.

 

Jeremiah 3 – The Lord’s Amendment of Deuteronomy 24

We have seen an amazing amendment in Matthew five and nineteen, but interestingly enough this same pattern can be seen in Jeremiah chapter three directly amending all four verses of the Mosaic divorce concession:

>> it looks like we need to integrate ch 2 here, and foreshadow betrothal

 

>>R!

Jer_3:1-2, Jer_3:7, Jer_3:12, Jer_3:14, Jer_3:20, Jer_3:22 (CAB)

v. Jer_3:1-2  If [Ἐὰν] a man put away [ ξαποστελῃ – sends out and away (lit. out+from+positioned carefully – ALS p. 501)] his wife, and she depart [πλθ] from [ἀπ᾿] him, and become another man’s, shall she return to him anymore? Shall not that woman be utterly defiled? [referring to Deu_24:2-4] But you have played the harlot [ ἐξεπόρνευσας – lit. (intensely) done out prostitution; same root (porneia) as Mat_5:32 and Mat_19:9] with many shepherds, and have returned to Me, says the Lord.  2  Lift up your eyes and look straight ahead, and see where you have not been utterly defiled. You have sat for them by the wayside as a deserted crow, and have defiled the land with your fornications [lit. prostitutions] and your wickedness… [as in Deu_24:4; Lev_19:29; Deu_23:17-18]

v. Jer_3:6-9  And the Lord said to me …Have you seen what things the house of Israel has done to Me? They have gone on [ πορεθησαν] every high mountain, and under every shady tree, and have committed fornication [πρνευσαν] there.  7  And I said after she had committed all these acts of fornication [πορνεῦσαι – lit. prostitution] , Turn again to Me. Yet she returned not...  8  And I saw that (for all the sins of which she was convicted, wherein the house of Israel committed adultery, and I put her away, and gave into her hands a certificate of divorce) yet faithless Judah feared not, but went and also committed fornication herself.  9  And her fornication was nothing accounted of; and she committed adultery with wood and stone.

v. Jer_3:12  Go and read these words toward the north, and you shall say, Return to Me, O house of Israel, says the Lord; and I will not set My face against you: for I am merciful, says the Lord, and I will not be angry with you forever…

v. Jer_3:14  Turn, you children that have revolted, says the Lord; for I will rule over you [MT: “I am married to you” just as Deu_24]. And I will take you, one of a city, and two of a family, and I will bring you in to Zion [that is, Jerusalem] 

v. Jer_3:20  But as a wife acts treacherously against her husband, so has the house of Israel dealt treacherously against Me, says the Lord…

v. Jer_3:22  Turn, you children that are given to turning, and I will heal your bruises...

 

[Technical Source Text Note: The DSS, NT and LXX on Jeremiah: Tragically, DSS Jeremiah does not have chapter 3, because it is at the beginning of the scrolls, and was more subject to deterioration than the rest of the text, and because of this, the first few chapters were lost as a result; But despite this, it looks like we mostly have the most authoritative (and complete) version of Jeremiah in the LXX, because from what we do have from the DSS, there are at least 2 documents (out of the 6 Hebrew versions of Jeremiah discovered) which mostly support the Greek text we have in the LXX and this is strongly approved by the NT from Greek. (For more, see the online version of our Bibliography under, “Finding the Old Testament”)]

 

>> add: Act_7:42;  God turned,  and gave them up to worship the host of heaven

 

Differences with MT

>> DW: shall not that land be greatly polluted? Vs Shall not that woman be utterly defiled?

>> Also “shepards” vs. “lovers”

 

Return! – God’s Clear Proclamation Through Jeremiah!

At the end of this passage we find that Israel had departed from God. In verse 20, dealing “Treacherously” is a term that means that she departed from Him as it is basically used in the following passages (in the Masoretic Text): Mal_2:11, Mal_2:14-16. Chronologically, the scene is set because “a wife left her husband,” and in the end of verse one, God calls her idolatry “prostitution” [i.e. fornication during betrothal] and equates this defilement as the same type of thing that a wife marrying a second husband does in Deuteronomy. It is very important to notice here, that when God sees spiritual prostitution (idolatry) He without hesitation immediately remembers the remarriage in Deuteronomy 24:  “And if she should go away and be married to another man.” (Deu_24:2 CAB).

At the beginning of verse one in Jeremiah, this is very clearly a reference to Deu_24:2-4, the Mosaic law of divorce and remarriage. It is very clear from everything that follows that God does not intend for Israel, His bride, to do according to what was demanded by Deuteronomy 24 after a wife was remarried. Instead, though Deuteronomy 24 had said “don’t return,” God now says repeatedly and emphatically, “Return!”:

 

This is a repeated and emphasized theme throughout the Bible, especially in Jeremiah:

 

Jer_2:24; Jer_3:1, Jer_3:7, Jer_3:12-14, Jer_3:22; Jer_4:1; Jer_5:3; Jer_8:4-6; Jer_9:5 (LXX); (Jer_12:15); Jer_15:19; Jer_23:14; (Jer_23:22); Jer_24:7; (Jer_30:18); Jer_30:21 (LXX); Jer_31:18; Jer_31:21;

 

Other examples throughout Scripture: Deu_4:29-31; Hos_2:7; Hos_3:5; Hos_5:4 (especially LXX); Hos_6:1; Hos_12:6 (especially LXX); Hos_14:1-4; Hos_14:7 (especially LXX); Joe_2:12; Isa_31:6; Isa_44:22; Isa_55:6-9; Eze_33:11; Zec_1:3; Luk_15:16-24

 

I have personally met numerous pastors who have had the nerve to disagree with Jeremiah chapter three, and insist that a woman going out and committing prostitution is not the same as the remarriage that Moses describes in Deuteronomy chapter 24. But when church people get this obstinate, this is where we have to back up again and ask the basic questions all over again: we need to first make the foundational decision whether we think that the Scriptures have the sovereign authority and jurisdiction over our lives to define morality for us to submit under, or if we think we’re more spiritual and have better insight than the Scriptures. If God teaches that the random, treacherous, defiling prostitution in Jeremiah three is equivalent to the remarriage after divorce described in Deuteronomy 24, (Jer_3:1-2) and then we turn around and say that this is an “unfair comparison,” then it is clear that we are not Christians, because we are those who do not believe in the Scriptures.

Non-Christian “christians” often say that this is not a fair comparison with divorce and remarriage because in Israel’s case they never truly belonged to the idols in as much as Jews legitimately belong to God and are supposed to worship the one true God, but this is exactly the point: the “marriage picture” is being used to describe the illegitimacy of being with a second husband. Because it is immoral in the physical realm, this is exactly why God uses it as a picture to describe the perversion of idolatry in the spiritual realm. If divorce and remarriage was not inherently defiling and immoral, then God would not keep repeatedly using it as a picture for paganism (as He also does again in places like Hosea). You cannot say, “this paganism you’re now practicing is just as filthy and abominable as the remarriage was in Deuteronomy 24,” unless you first really hated the remarriage going on in Deuteronomy 24.

In addition to all of this, it is really important for us to consider that Jesus teaches that the woman in Deuteronomy 24 was initially innocent when she received a divorce from her hard hearted husband (i.e. Jesus said the man was the one who was guilty of hard heartedness when the divorce happened, not the woman, and the woman only becomes guilty when she marries another), while the defiled woman in Jeremiah three is a woman who sins up front by treacherously departing from her husband to be with other men. In both of these cases, whether initially innocent or guilty, God says she is defiled when she remarries. This is extremely important because it is the exact same thing that Jesus says in the repeated saying, ‘whoever marries her who is divorced commits adultery.’ Whether it is the Old Testament or the very Words of Jesus Himself, God shows us without any question that it is not the details surrounding the divorce which determines the moral nature of the remarriage, but despite the context of guilt (Jer 3) or the context of innocence (Deu 24) in being divorced, it is the remarriage itself which inherently constitutes the immoral defilement of adultery for the divorced spouse who marries another.

 

>>! Add:

Ez. 20:40-44 “For in mine holy mountain, in the mountain of the height of Israel, saith the Lord GOD, there shall all the house of Israel, all of them in the land, serve me: there will I accept them, and there will I require your offerings, and the firstfruits of your oblations, with all your holy things. 41 I will accept you with your sweet savour, when I bring you out from the people, and gather you out of the countries wherein ye have been scattered; and I will be sanctified in you before the heathen. 42 And ye shall know that I am the LORD, when I shall bring you into the land of Israel, into the country for the which I lifted up mine hand to give it to your fathers. 43 And there shall ye remember your ways, and all your doings, wherein ye have been defiled; and ye shall lothe yourselves in your own sight for all your evils that ye have committed. 44 And ye shall know that I am the LORD, when I have wrought with you for my name’s sake, not according to your wicked ways, nor according to your corrupt doings, O ye house of Israel, saith the Lord GOD.”

 

Even the Jews Recognized this about their own Scriptures!:

“R. Levi said. Penitence is great. It reaches the throne of His glory, as it is written [Hosea xiv. 2]: “Return, O Israel, even unto the Lord thy God.” R. Johanan said: Penitence is great, so that it supersedes a negative commandment in the Torah. As it is written [Jerem. iii. 3]: “One could say, Behold, if a man send away his wife, and she go from him, and become another man’s, can he return unto her again? Would not that land be greatly polluted? and thou hast played the harlot with many companions, and wilt yet return to me, saith the Lord.” (So penitence is greater than the commandment not to take back one’s wife, married to another.)”

03-Yomah-15

 

The Great Mystery of Pre-wedded Divorce in Jeremiah

>>!

Israel’s faithlessness is called “adultery,” and her sin is fully compared with wedded marriage, but yet the immorality and resulting divorce certificate is clearly stated within betrothal before wedded marriage. This is the great mystery of betrothal, because it is so much the same as wedded marriage in that they are already one flesh, but yet it is distinct from marriage because they have not yet been yoked together in cohabitation. It is in this very real one flesh during betrothal which, which is just as binding as fully wedded marriage, which God divorces Israel. If we want to compare God’s divorce with our own divorces, we need to first seriously consider this mystery of betrothal and ask ourselves if we are truly acting the same way as God did when He divorced during betrothal. – the great irony and mystery is that even though God divorced Israel during betrothal with a righteous and soft heart, this is compared with Israel’s heard hearted divorce (Mat_19:8) in Deuteronomy 24 to the point that God says that His righteous divorce during betrothal completely amends the restriction of against reconciliation to the first spouse that was laid upon those who divorced with a hard heart. – that was quite a bit to consider all at once. You may want to pause, review these verse references, and deeply consider these things and make sure you really understand all of this!

    Even though God divorced differently than the hard hearted nation, His righteous divorce amends the rules against reconciliation for those who would follow Him in this way. God declared a bold and mystifying call which was very different from what Deuteronomy 24 had placed in order: “RETURN!” God’s perfect and righteous actions within divorce provided a way for reconciliation among men which was previously unavailable under Moses. – Does this theme sound familiar to you yet? Without sinning in the slightest degree, God associated Himself with divorce (a practice which is usually sinful) in order that He, by perfect righteousness within this, might redeem those who were previously held under the curse of their own unrighteousness by hard hearted divorces!

 

A Notable Textual Variation – The “They Say” in the Current Hebrew of Jeremiah 3

The passage we previously quoted from Jeremiah is translated from the Greek Old Testament, (the “Greek Septuagint” or “LXX”). If we look at a Hebrew-based translation, it reads like this:

 

Jer_3:1 KJV  They say, If a man put away his wife, and she go from him, and become another man’s, shall he return unto her again? shall not that land be greatly polluted? but thou hast played the harlot with many lovers; yet return again to me, saith the LORD.

 

>> Double check: “and mostly follows the Hebrew”

The words “They say” are not in the Greek Old Testament (LXX) or the Syriac version, but they are in the current standard Hebrew text of the Old Testament, the “Masoretic Text” (MT), and naturally the Latin Vulgate as well (since it is from 405 AD, and mostly follows the Hebrew). But as a summary of all of this, out of the many ancient copies of the Old Testament that we have, some of the oldest ones do not have the words “They say,” such as the Greek Septuagint (the Greek Old Testament, LXX). Because of this, it looks like the words in the current Hebrew text, the Masoretic Text, are an additional enunciation of what was already originally there by usage and implication.

 

The Significance of this Variation in Jeremiah 3

Some have used the absence of these words in some texts to make unfounded assumptions about Jeremiah three in opposition to the things previously discussed. But an honest rational consideration shows us no matter what copy of the Old Testament you use, this reference in the beginning of Jeremiah three is clearly referring to Deuteronomy 24 which God contrasts with the actual cry of His own heart.  This contrast can clearly be seen no matter what ancient source text you use. With or without the words “They say” God is still contrasting what He is saying with what “they” (or what Moses) said (just as He does in Mat_5:31-32). We can see that there is still a contrast with the Deuteronomy quote, with or without the words “They say.”

 

Jesus & Jeremiah 3 – Notice the Change!

We see here that, even before Jesus preached on marriage, the Lord had already amended the latter part of Deu 24, (specifically verses 2-4)! In light of these two amendments, it is clear that God repeatedly attributed the entire divorce text of Deuteronomy 24, as specifically coming through Moses for unsaved people who lives were already committed to sin, and not for those who follow Jesus! In both of the cases of change (Matt 5, 19 and Jer 3) God employs the exact same methodology:

 

1. He says it is Moses who gave the command, and, 2. That He now declares otherwise!

 

Jer 3: “shall she return…?” (v. 1) [yet] “…Return to me…” (v. 12)

Mat 5: “…it has been said… But I say to you…” (v. 31-32)

Mar 10: Moses… wrote you this commandment…” (v. 4-5)/ Mat 19: But I say to you…” (v. 9)

 

Hos 2, Isa 50, & Jer 3 – The Prophecy of Return, Even After The Officialness of God’s Divorce Certificate!

Please carefully and deeply consider the following events and how God acted, and how this proves that, no matter how official and final the divorce, returning to the first is still truly righteous!

 

Hos_2:2 CAB …I will remove her fornication out of My presence, and her adultery from between her breasts…

 

[Note: This passage is discussed further in the next point]

 

>> get version which has greek

Jer_3:8 CAB   And I saw that (for all the sins of which she was convicted, wherein the house of Israel committed adultery, and I put her away, and gave into her hands a certificate of divorce)…

 

>>R! – add Hebrew

Isa_50:1 CAB  Thus says the Lord, Of what kind [ ποον] is your mother’s bill of divorcement [ τβιβλον τοῦ ἀποστασου], by which I put her away [ ᾧ ἐξαπστειλα ατν]? Or to which debtor [πχρε] have I sold [ππρακα] you? Behold, you are sold [πρθητε] for your sins, and for your iniquities [νομαις – lawlessness-es] have I put your mother away [ξαπστειλα].

>> explain Greek: “Of what kind”

>> passive voice: The were sold by God for their sins

 

And again later God says…

 

Isa_59:2 CAB   But rather [λλ], your iniquities [μαρτματα – sins] separate between [διιστσιννμσον] you and God…

Isa_50:1 BRENTON translation:

Thus saith the Lord, Of what kind is your mother’s bill of divorcement, by which I put her away? or to which debtor have I sold you? Behold, ye are sold for your sins, and for your iniquities have I put your mother away.

Isa_59:2 MKJV But your iniquities have come between you and your God…

 

Important Notes about Isa 50 and Jer 3 vs. The Filthy and Mindless Apostasy of Today’s Pastor’s and Theologians

·       From the beginning the devil has continually contradicted what God says and questioned the truthfulness of His Words.

·       In these passages we just read, it is clear that God does not deny or question the fact that He truly did give a divorce certificate, but insists that He truly did, and yet He still calls her back after her remarriage.

·       Numerous heretics in churches today make God out to be lying in these passages, and insist that He instead did not in fact give Israel a divorce certificate (even though He clearly said He did).

·       Both Isa_50:1 as well as Jer_3:8 (as we just quoted) clearly declare that God Gave Israel a divorce certificate, and even ‘put it in her hand,’ but countless wicked pastors and apostate church goers obstinately insist that God did not actually give her a divorce certificate because He took her back.

·       Many heretics deny God’s divorce certificate which He said He gave, because Israel’s return clearly suggests that such heretics no longer have a refuge in Deu 24 to justify remaining in the hardness of divorce and remarriage.

·       If God says that He did give Israel a (lawful, official) divorce certificate and you say He did not, then you are clearly a liar and have nothing to do with Jesus and Biblical Christianity. Rebellion will send you to hell, and disagreeing with God’s Words will torment your soul forever, no matter how professional you seem to be in your (apostate) christianity.

 

And what do church leaders say about this today? – In one of my earlier English study bibles, I remember being shocked, dumbfounded, disgusted, and appalled to find and read the following words concerning Isaiah 50:

 

50:1   Though the Lord had put away Israel, as a husband might put away a wife, it was for only a short period of exile (see 54:5–7; 62:4) and not permanently. Permanent exile would have required a certificate of divorce (see Deut. 24:1–4) If the Lord had issued one, He could not have taken Israel back (see Deut. 24:1–4; Jer. 3:1, 8).”

 

[Commentary on Isaiah 50:1, p. 1193, From The Nelson Study Bible, copyright © 1997 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission.]

[Note: Ironically, it is almost equally baffling that they contradict this in their note on Jer 3:8 (p. 1228)]

The Nelson Study Bible: New King James Version –  1997 – By Earl D. Radmacher, Ronald Barclay Allen, H. Wayne House - T. Nelson Publishers (1997) - Hardback - 2417 pages - ISBN 0840714475

 

Please pause and carefully consider these words we have just quoted from The Nelson Study Bible. Did you notice that they are directly suggesting that God did not give Israel a divorce certificate? Please do not be mindless and shallow concerning this important consideration – both Isaiah and Jeremiah said that God did give a divorce certificate, but The Nelson Study Bible (when commentating on Isaiah 50:1) indicate that He did not. – It should trouble you deeply to know that this quote is representative of many church leaders and theologians today.

 

So for all clarity, let’s review:

 

(1) What does God say?

 

Isa_50:1 CAB  Thus says the Lord…your mother’s bill of divorcement by which I put her away… for your iniquities [νομαις – lawlessness-es] have I put your mother away [ξαπστειλα].

 

Jer_3:8 CAB   And I saw that (for all the sins of which she was convicted, wherein the house of Israel committed adultery, and I put her away, and gave into her hands a certificate of divorce)…

 

It is clear that it is in this light –an official divorce certificate– which God calls His people back to Himself, in contrast to what Deuteronomy 24 said.

 

(2) What does The Nelson Study Bible say?

 

“Permanent exile would have required a certificate of divorceIf the Lord had issued one, He could not have taken Israel back” (underlines added)

Source: same as before

 

This quote from The Nelson Study Bible is a straightforward denial of plain facts. God says He did in fact give Israel a divorce certificate, but numerous theologians choose to believe and say that He didn’t. This is one very simplistic and clear example of what modern christianity constantly does with all of its theology, and how it does things like promoting the idea that divorce and remarriage is not adultery like the New Testament clearly teaches it is. God says one thing and they choose to say the opposite, and this is how nearly all heresy works today in the modern church. Such church leaders have nothing to do with believing and obeying the monotheistic faith of Abraham and Jesus, but in the establishment of pagan religions that know nothing of submitting under the authoritative proclamation of the Scriptures. – is that the god or gods you are willing to serve?

In Matthew 19 and Mark 10 Jesus clearly agrees with Isaiah 50 and Jeremiah 3 where God contrasts the truest righteousness which He practices and demands with the wickedness and hardness permitted under the Law of Moses, but today’s wicked church leaders defy Jesus and contradict Isaiah and Jeremiah, acting like God was in fact rather under Deuteronomy 24 right along with the sinful nation it was written for!

This is not an academic or linguistic difficulty or mystery which we are dealing with from the Scriptures, but this is a heart full of lawlessness in foolhardiness that doesn’t care about anything God says. It comes right from the cesspool of rebellious christianity!

This is a bitter, bitter fool-hearty apostasy! It is overt and in broad daylight that today’s pastors and theologians are claiming to be Christians and directly lying against Holy Scripture! This is a mindless and perverted game they are playing with people’s souls, and you will be one who reverences Satan if you follow them! Anathema to the heretics! It is time this fool-hearty rebellion is confronted! There is no excuse for mindlessly disagreeing with God and putting it in print as a christian commentary of the Bible!

Instead of submitting under the authority of God’s clear declaration to amend Deuteronomy 24 and to call his lawful wife back to Himself, today’s church people want to defend sin and ignore God’s testimony against the flesh and their wicked and unsubmissive hearts which continually lust to defend divorce and remarriage at any and every cost, even if they have to call God a liar to do it!

Those who approve of divorce and remarriage have nothing to do with God who demands actual repentance from sin, and those who forbid a remarried spouse to return to their first spouse on the basis of Deuteronomy 24 care nothing about the authority of Him who now calls us to a higher standard, and even lived out this reconciliation by the same truth which He now calls us to follow by faith.

Bring Out:

>> He divorced Israel and He called her back – not just calling back the ‘southern tribes’ as some excuses say

 

>> explain and draw this out:

 

Hosea’s Prophecy of Return and Amendment of Deuteronomy 24

At the heart of this prophecy about the culmination of the New Covenant and the ultimate salvation of Israel* is a profound and inescapable picture of returning to the first spouse! Just as it is said in Jeremiah, after Israel had been utterly defiled in idolatry Hosea also depicts her salvation as ‘returning to her first husband.’

 

[* for more on “the ultimate salvation of Israel” see the Bible study entitled “Love Israel” on www.TrueConnection.org]

 

Hosea – The Initial Sad State of Things

 

Hos_2:2 CAB Plead with your mother, plead: for she is not My wife, and I am not her husband: and I will remove her fornication out of My presence, and her adultery from between her breasts:

Note: Especially since she is betrothed to God and not yet cohabited, she can be said to commit prostitution and adultery at the same time

 

Although she is not actively “His” because of her idolatry, God still says she commits “adultery” against Him! It is clear from this that it does not matter what you call a spouse, even if they are no longer called “your husband” or “your wife,” if they have been lawfully joined to you at some point in the past, you still commit adultery if you are with another person in their life time!

 

Hos_6:7 CAB But they [Judah and Israel/ “Ephraim” (Hos_5:8-15)] are as a man transgressing a covenant.

 

Even though this made God socially ‘not her husband,’ yet still God says she is committing adultery against Him, and breaking a ‘one flesh’ covenant, as though she is still lawfully His.

 

Hos_3:1 CAB And the Lord said to me, Go yet, and love a woman that loves evil things [ MT says, “beloved of her friend, yet” (KJV)], an adulteress, even as the Lord loves the children of Israel, and they have respect to strange gods, and love cakes of dried grapes.

 

Hos_4:1-2 CAB Hear the word of the Lord, you children of Israel: for the Lord has a controversy [κρίσις – i.e. a legal charge calling for justice/ righteousness] with the inhabitants of the land, because there is no truth, nor mercy, nor knowledge of God in the land.  2  Cursing, and lying, and murder, and theft, and adultery bound in the land…

 

This equally describes the same sad state of things today in the modern church. If things go as they have gone, no one will ever see anything wrong with the immorality that is rampant in nearly every church house, but did you notice that if “truth” and the “knowledge of God” ever comes “in the land” (Hos_4:1) then “lying” will be confronted, and we, like Hosea, will cry along with God over the “adultery [that is] bound in the land,” (Hos_4:2).

The mention of a legal “controversy” means that they had settled in their immoral posture and did not consider it to be wrong and unjust. I beg you as a reader, take God’s side of the “controversy” that the “adultery” (Hos_4:1) is not just! I beg you as a reader, “Hear the word of the Lord” (Hos_4:1) as Hosea says, even unto us today:

 

Hos_7:4 CAB They are all adulterers, as an oven glowing with flame for hot baking, on account of the kneading of the dough, until it is leavened.

 

2Pe_2:13-14 CAB …reveling in their deceptions while they feast with you,  14  having eyes full of adultery and unable to cease from sin…

 

Rev_2:22-23 CAB Behold, I am casting her into a sickbed, and those who commit adultery with her into great tribulation, if they do not repent of her works.  23  I will kill her children by death, and all the churches shall know that I am He who searches minds and hearts. And I will give to each one of you according to your works.

 

Luk_16:15, Luk_16:18 CAB And He said to them, “You are those who justify yourselves before men, but God knows your hearts. Because that which is exalted among men is an abomination before God… 18  Everyone who divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery; and everyone who marries a woman who is divorced from her husband commits adultery.

 

Hosea – God’s Promised Redemption

>>R – & add comparison with MT

Hos_2:7 CAB …and she shall say, I will go, and return to my former husband; for it was better with me before than it is now.

 

Hos_2:16-20 CAB And it shall come to pass in that day, says the Lord, that she shall call Me, My husband* [lit. my man (fig. husband)], and shall no longer call me Baalam* [i.e. “master” (fig. husband)].  17  And I will take away the names of Baalam* [i.e. “masters” (fig. for her (other) husbands) – the title now being used for idolatry] out of her mouth, and their names [i.e. those treacherously called Baalam] shall be remembered no more at all.  18  And I will make for them in that day a covenant with the wild beasts of the field, and with the birds of the sky… 19  And I will betroth you to Myself forever; yea, I will betroth you to Myself in righteousness, and in judgment, and in mercy, and in tender compassions;  20  and I will betroth you to Myself in faithfulness: and you shall know the Lord.

 

Hos_2:23 CAB And I will…love her that was not loved, and will say to that which was not My people, You are My people; and they shall say, You are the Lord my God.

(compare also v. Hos_2:21-23 with the rest of Hos_1 & 2)

 

Hos_3:5 CAB And afterward shall the children of Israel return, and shall seek the Lord their God, and David their king; and shall be amazed at the Lord and at His goodness in the latter days.

 

Note: At this point David has long been dead, and the New Testament (along with traditional Judaism) understands this title as a reference to the Messiah (the anointed one) who is “the son of David” and rightful heir to the throne for all of Israel. – this is ultimately a promise of their reconciliation with Jesus, their rightful husband and God, and it is He who renews their betrothal!

 

Hos_6:1 CAB In their affliction they will seek Me early, saying, Let us go, and return to the Lord our God…

 

Oh, that we too would hear the word of the Lord, agree with God’s legal charge against us, repent of adultery, and return to God!

 

Linguistic Clarifier – “Baalam”

When speaking Hebrew, “Baalam” is a form of “ba‛ălîy,” which is one of the ways to say “husband” and had been originally properly ascribed to God by the children of Israel. But later “Baalam” came to be used more specifically and frequently as a term for worshiping particular pagan gods, just like the other nations had used it, which now even the Israelites were worshiping in this way. Now Israel was so messed up that they were transposing God’s position as their proper husband with a name that had now come to be commonly used for idolatry (“Baalam”), and God no longer wanted to be associated and confused with this mixed up filthiness so He insisted on a more basic expression: ‘just call me your man from now on so you will not be able to even say that name you used for idolatry anymore.’ [(1) “Master”/ “Baalam” = “בּעלי” (ba‛ălîy), (H1180) in Hebrew, and “βααλιμ” (baalim) in Greek; (2) “Man”/ “Husband” = “אישׁ” (‘îysh), (H376) in Hebrew, and (we might say, more specifically) “Ὁ ἀνήρ μου” (ho anēr mou) in Greek].

 

Note: We went over some of these terms in Chapter one under, The Lawful Result of One Flesh – Marriage is Cohabitation in The Bible

 

Hosea Says the Same Thing as Jeremiah

Notice that just like it is said in Jeremiah, in Hosea God again links remarriage with Israel’s idolatress remarriage unto “Baalam” (that is, the god she was calling her “master”/ husband). The saying, “I will go, and return to my former husband” (Hos_2:7 CAB) is a definite opposition against the other “husbands” she had ‘remarried,’ and it is God Himself who caused her to have such yearnings, since He completely fulfills this saying in the establishing of a New Covenant with her, in her ultimate and final redemption when she would know God.

It is because she (“Gomer”/ “Israel”) went out and committed idolatry by committing herself to demons, and considering herself ‘married’ to them, that God has to reestablish His lawful betrothal with her (see Hos_2:19-20). Remember that Jeremiah had already linked being with another man in prostitution as morally the same thing as the remarriage in Deuteronomy 24 (Jer_3:1-2). Hosea also does this by describing her prostitution and the fact that she considers her (unlawful) “lovers” to be her “husbands.”

But again, we would like to insist that this is different than divorce and remarriage, because we think that we can be ‘saved’ while remaining in an adulterous remarriage, but we are being mindless if we even suggest such a thing in light of Hosea, because when the woman leaves her other men and returns to God, this is her salvation! There is no way a relationship of adultery can ever be sanctified, because no matter what you do to idolatry, relating to demons will always be evil! Adulterous remarriage cannot become clean anymore than the spiritual parallel of idolatry can become moral. Neither idolatry nor adultery can ever become a good thing, because both are the same thing in their own particular realms. We must leave these sins to live.

While we are tripping over our own confusion and thinking that this must not be a perfect parable of marriage in Hosea because we think a person does not have to leave their adulterous marriage in order to be reconciled to God, God stands faithfully testifying loud and clear: remaining in remarriage is the picture of remaining in idolatry. In both cases we need to repent and return to our lawful creator in order to be saved! If you do not leave the adulterous remarriage and seek the possible reconciliation of any lawful spouses, then you will remain in the bed of adultery and continue as lost as idolatress Israel was!

 

A Repeated Heart Expression

If God is indeed the same yesterday today and forever (Heb_13:8) then it is perfectly consistent of Him to repeatedly express His heart in this way, even if He temporarily allows sin until the time that all things are complete for the New Covenant.  As distinct from God’s heart and desire, The Law was never designed for those going to Heaven.  Nevertheless, God continually shows us His heart in the Old Testament to give us a different fulfilled way that actually leads us to life in the midst of “carnal commandments” (Heb_7:16).  This causes those with faith under the Old Covenant to anticipate the greatness found in the New Covenant (see Gal_3:23-25).

David’s example continually expresses this to us (as seen shortly). And why not? David is said to be a man according to God’s own heart, (1Sa_16:3, 1Sa_16:7, 1Sa_16:13-14; 1Sa_13:14; Act_13:22). In this kind of expression from God through the prophet, God shows us that despite divorces, the first wife remains married to the first husband, even though this was not previously enforced by the carnal commandments of the Law of Moses that were adapted for the hard nature (as Irenaeus said around 180 AD) of the stubborn Israelites to which it was given.

>Mal_2:

 

Malachi 2’s Amendment of the Mosaic Divorce And Remarriage Permission

In Malachi we already saw God expressing His heart after they divorced…

 

In Malachi, “Why” was God angry with them, and for what reason was He refusing to accept their sacrifices??

 

Mal_2:14 b – “Because the Lord has borne witness between you and the wife of your youth…” (CAB)

Mal_2:14 c – And although they had divorced their wives, still God says…

Mal_2:14 d – “she is your companion, *and the wife of your covenant.” (WEB) [LXX: καὶ γυνὴ διαθήκης σου – lit. and woman of your covenant]

Mal_2:15 c – Because of this, they are to guard their own spirits and not divorce ‘the wife of their youth’ (their first wife)

 

And Despite what Moses permitted:

 

Mal_2:16 a – God opposes their divorce

 

And…

 

> this one is not linked because of abbreviated wording

Mal_2:16 c – Says again to guard their own spirits and not divorce

 

Please tell me honestly: Does Deuteronomy 24 command us not to divorce ‘the wife of our youth’? Doesn’t Deuteronomy 24 clearly allow her to go and become another man’s wife? If all of this is so, and as Deuteronomy 24 says, she cannot return after this permission is carried out, why then does Malachi say so boldly:

 

Mal_2:14 d – “she is your companion, *and the wife of your covenant.” (WEB) [LXX: καὶ γυνὴ διαθήκης σου – lit. and woman of your covenant]

Even with the very woman who has gone and become another man’s wife under the permission of Deuteronomy 24, God says to the husband that divorced her, ‘she is YOUR wife.’ God repeatedly shows us His concern for the first wife and the first marriage covenant, despite whatever remarriages had taken place. God turns His eyes compassionately toward the divorced wife implying that she ought not to be separate from her husband, even after the husband had cast her off. God was indignant and unrelenting with the husband (Mal_2:13-14) though the husband was within the permission of Moses. This is a very different idea than that which is tolerated by Moses’ permissiveness in Deu_24:1-4. In all of this, do you see that even Malachi had a hand through God in amending the Mosaic Divorce Permission?

Though Moses permitted divorce and remarriage through their hardness, Malachi condemned it openly by God, showing that a greater righteousness was required from their heart than Moses had restricted upon their flesh.  They had somewhat conformed to the fleshly commands and restrictions of Moses, but they had altogether offended the righteous heart of God in their treatment of their helpless divorced wives.

Malachi shows us that the righteousness which God requires is not fully met under the Law of Moses (as said in Rom_8:3-4). And because this is specifically in the context of marriage, he foretells prophetically, and shows us clearly, that a higher level of obedience and Love, and even reconciliation, is called for in marriage when God Himself comes down to bring us His New Covenant.

We know for sure from Malachi that Jesus would come and address marriage to fulfill God’s heart on the matter. God shows us through Malachi that it would not be permissive in tolerating hard hearts as the Law of Moses was, but the fact that God cherishes the first wife and would not accept their prayers attempting to repent in Malachi 2 implies, and even foreshadows, a call to reconciliation for the upcoming New Covenant:

 

Mal_2:14-16 - The message from God that prioritizes the permanency of the first wife

Mal_3:1-2 - The coming of the messengers (Jesus and John the Baptist <<Insert NT references>>)

Mal_3:5 - The harsh message against adultery

>>! Christine questioned if it was clear as to why I repeat the things below… is my point clear or dragged out? Can I do something in the midst to tie it all together?

>>>> would it be better just to reference these things, or should I quote them as they are here?: iii.         David and The Lord’s Example About Divorce And Remarriage

 

 

18. 2Sa 3 – David’s Example: He Returned to the First

In addition to the many examples mentioned previously, we also have David’s example of returning to his first wife after she had been remarried: 2Sa_3:14-16 (quoted later).

 

We Must Continually Submit to the Examples Given to us in the Bible

>> I need to combine efforts with ‘we have no right to judge the law of moses’

Unlike the absurd modern culture that we live in today, in New Testament times they consistently understood that the stories in the Old Testament were given to us to teach us truth that we should imitate.

>> have I added all of these yet?

Written admonition/ learning

All scripture profitable for doctrine

Imitate examples

 

Heb_6:12 CAB …but become imitators of those who through faith and patience inherit the promises.

 

But instead, today we always want to take it upon ourselves that we have some kind of right to cross-examine God’s Words rather than submitting to them, including the stories and examples of righteous people who did things that we do not agree with. This is why, for example, many preachers today think they sometimes have a right to challenge the character and actions of people like Lot or Moses (see Gen_19:4-8; Exo_2:11-15), while the New Testament clearly calls them “righteous,” (see 2Pe_2:7-9; Heb_11:24-27; and compare Jdg_19:22). Now why is it that we are so foolish today that we think that we have a place to correct the Old and the New Covenant and say that Lot was somehow not righteous? But we should have reverently and fearfully submitted to their example so that we would not find ourselves opposing God!

    And instead of submitting to the Scriptures we puff ourselves up in the seats of judges:

 

Jas_4:10-11 CAB  Be humbled before the Lord, and He will exalt you.  11  …And if you judge the law, you are not a doer of the law but a judge.

 

So let us take warning with a rational and basic, reasonable response of submission, with fear to the examples laid out for us in the Scriptures.

If you, without any experience, walked off the street into a church and opened up the Bible and read the stories of all the Patriarchs, then it would be common sense that these stories and examples were teaching you righteousness that you were expected to imitate and live by. And for us today, if we have any experience reading the Bible we have no excuse; someone shouldn’t even have to tell us that the righteous people in the Bible were righteous. For example, even the Pharisees all knew that David was righteous when Jesus cited him as a proof of what was true, while we today simply look at the actions that don’t make sense to us and conclude that such people must have been making mistakes at these points. But Jesus could not have appealed to the actions of David as a righteous standard to confront the false doctrine of the Pharisees if it had not already been commonly established amongst everyone that David’s actions were indeed righteous, and a higher standard than the current theological consensus. Even evil people in Jesus’ day knew that if the Bible gives us examples we should receive them as faithful witnesses unless the Bible clearly states that this is when they messed up (and this is clearly proven in the Scriptures within the following paragraphs).

It is a sad day when the Pharisees of old had more integrity to honor the patriarchs of truth than our greatest theologians strutting about today!

If we will be real (Biblical) Christians then we will perk up whenever we are given a story in the Bible that seems to confound our sense of what is right. We must fight ourselves and resist the foolish rebellion that is bound up in our heart, so that we can desperately search for the truth that is being hinted to us without impatiently violating its authority upon our lives when our understanding is delayed.

 

David Did Something that We do not Agree with

David did an intriguing thing and left us a profound example by breaking up his first wife’s second marriage and returning her to himself contrary to the prohibition Moses had given in Deuteronomy chapter 24 on the basis of defilement.  But this can almost certainly not be understood without first coming to terms with a much more profound and pervading principle throughout the Old and New Testaments relating to Christ, David, and the Law of Moses.

>> Add: David

Some complain and blasphemously say that we don’t know that David’s example was right. But these rebellious thoughts only happen in a society that thinks it is not subject to the authority of the narratives of Scripture, and that is not Christian, that’s pagan. But even if we seek for an explicit justification of David’s actions, that is exactly what God gives us in Jer_3.

 

David and Jesus’ Example About Sacrifice and Offering

David repeatedly shows God’s heart to be different from the Law of Moses throughout many of the examples that he left us in his life stories and writings in the Psalms. David even does this in his repentance from adultery and murder by saying:

 

Psa_51:16-17 CAB  For if You desired sacrifice, I would have given it; You will not take pleasure in whole burnt offerings.  17  Sacrifice to God is a broken spirit; a broken and humbled heart God will not despise.

 

Psa_51:16-17 NKJV For You do not desire sacrifice, or else I would give it; You do not delight in burnt offering. 17 The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit, A broken and a contrite heart—These, O God, You will not despise.

 

And previously David says so mysteriously and prophetically:

 

Psa_40:6-10 CAB Sacrifice and offering You did not desire; but a body You have prepared for me [i.e. God really and ultimately designated the cross for forgiveness]; whole burnt offering and sacrifice for sin You did not require.  7  Then I said, Behold, I have come; in the volume of the book it is written of me,  8  I desired to do Your will, O my God, and Your law in the midst of my heart [this is not the nature of the flesh-based law of Moses!].  9  I have preached righteousness in the great congregation; lo! I will not refrain my lips; O Lord, You know my righteousness [David seems to be sharing some great and wonderful secret with God!].  10  I have not hid Your truth within my heart, and I have declared Your salvation [David even directly refers to the salvation that would come by Jesus]; I have not hid Your mercy and Your truth from the great congregation.

 

Notice all of the differences that the MT have that Hebrews disagrees with:

Psa_40:6-10 WEB  Sacrifice and offering you didn’t desire. You have opened my ears: Burnt offering and sin offering you have not required.  7  Then I said, “Behold, I have come. It is written about me in the book in the scroll.  8  I delight to do your will, my God. Yes, your law is within my heart.”  9  I have proclaimed glad news of righteousness in the great assembly. Behold, I will not seal my lips, Yahweh, you know.  10  I have not hidden your righteousness within my heart. I have declared your faithfulness and your salvation. I have not concealed your loving kindness and your truth from the great assembly.

 

And Jesus had this exact same attitude which is used as a key to understanding and defining the New Covenant:

 

Heb_10:5-9 CAB  Therefore, when He [Christ] entered into the world, He said: “Sacrifice and offering You did not desire, but a body You have prepared for Me.  6  In burnt offerings and sacrifices for sin You had no pleasure.  7  Then I said, ‘Behold, I have come—In the volume of the book it is written of Me—To do Your will, O God.’ “  8  Earlier saying, “Sacrifice and offering, burnt offerings, and sacrifices for sin You did not desire, nor had pleasure in them” (which are offered according to the law),  9  then He has said, “Behold, I have come to do Your will, O God.” He takes away the first in order that He may establish the second.

>>LXX: This is an LXX quoted passage!! Source text Note: if you look in your standard printed Bible, you will notice that Psa_40 does not match with what Hebrews is quoting; Because of this and many other examples, I have chosen to actually use the OT that the NT uses.

 

Wait a minute… That was David writing in the Psalms, but when Hebrews quotes it, it calls these Jesus’ Words! How would you like it if you were writing in a prayer journal or writing a song and the Bible turned around and called it what Jesus Himself said when He came into the world and clothed Himself in human flesh?!

    So we see in some great profound way, that both David and Jesus had the same unified attitude about sacrifice and offering that was different and greater than the Mosaic Law concerning this practice!

 

David and Jesus’ Example About The Sabbath

Jesus used David’s “law breaking,” (eating the Temple’s “show bread,” 1Sa_21:3-6) as justification for His “law breaking,” (picking and eating kernels of corn/wheat [στάχυς - stachus] on the Sabbath, Mat_12:1-8). Jesus said that the bread that David ate, “…was not lawful for him to eat, nor for those who were with him, except only for the priests,” (Mat_12:4 CAB), And He used this to justify picking food on the Sabbath. And again in another place it says that Jesus, “…had broken the Sabbath…” (Joh_5:18 KJV).

 

>> I may Add more here one day (see above and compare this):

Joh_5:18 CAB  Because of this the Jews were seeking all the more to kill Him, because not only was He breaking the Sabbath, but also He called God His own Father, making Himself equal with God.

Shortened version:

“…was…breaking the Sabbath…” (Joh_5:18 CAB).

> This is my rendition of this vs. It has three ellipses to make the “had” effect work.

 

Jesus used David’s spiritual example above the Law of Moses to show what was Truly righteous for the New Covenant!

 

Jesus Repeatedly Approves of David’s Authoritative and Prophetic Examples

So we see in these selected examples, how David and Jesus especially reflect God’s heart, which is not found in the Mosaic Law, and is at times like these cases, seemingly contrary to it. There are many of these cases were David and Jesus both reveal a hidden way of God that was not previously known by the Law. Compare these many references:

 

Exo_21:14, Exo_21:23-25; Lev_24:17-21; Num_35:30-34; Deu_19:10-13; Deu_22:22; Jdg_1:6-7; 1Sa_15:33 with 2Sa_11:3-4, 2Sa_11:14-17, 2Sa_11:21 c, 2Sa_11:24; 2Sa_12:13; Psa_51:14; Mat_5:38-39; Joh_8:3-4, Joh_8:10-11

 

Also see the pervading theme of relating Jesus to David, (especially with the phrase “the Son of David”):

 

Isa_9:7; Isa_11:1-4; Jer_23:5; Eze_34:23-24; Amo_9:11; Mat_1:1-17; Mat_9:27; Mat_12:22-23; Mat_15:22; Mat_20:30-31; Mat_21:9, Mat_21:15; Mat_22:42-46; Mar_10:47-48; Mar_12:35-37; Luk_1:69; Luk_18:37-39; Joh_7:41-42; Act_13:22-23

 

So we have seen that Jesus endorsed David’s example about Sacrifice and Offering and his example about The Sabbath, and we can be sure that this consistent David-Jesus principal certainly extends to the issue of divorce and remarriage as well.

 

2Sa 3 – David and The Lord’s Example About Divorce And Remarriage

>> Emphasize Jer 3 more?

·       Saul gave Michal to David as his first wife for “100 Philistine foreskins,” (1Sa_18:20-27; MT says “200”).

·       David was separated from her, and she remarried another man named Phaltiel, having been given to him by her father, (1Sa_25:44).

 

Later David came to power and called his first wife back to himself:

 

2Sa_3:14-16 CAB  And David sent [ξαπστειλεν] messengers [γγλους] to [πρς] Ishbosheth [μεμφιβοσθε*] the son of Saul, saying [λγων], Restore [πδος – give over (to)] me my wife Michal, whom I took for a hundred foreskins of the Philistines.  15  And Ishbosheth [μεμφιβοσθε*] sent [πστειλεν], and took her from her husband [λαβεν ατν παρτοῦ ἀνδρς ατς], from [παρ] Paltiel the son of Laish.  16  And her husband [ὁ ἀνρ ατς] went [πορεετο] with her [μετ᾿ ατς] weeping behind her as far as Bahurim. And Abner said to [πρς] him, Go, return [πορεύου ἀνάστρεφε], [i.e. to your home]; and he returned.

 

[*Technical Source Text Note: Unlike the MT, the DSS agrees with the LXX using the name “μεμφιβοσθε,” (as opposed to Ιεβοσθε) although many people consider this a mistake in the DSS Hebrew, which is repeated in the LXX Greek given the context: (1) 2Sa_2:8, etc.; (2) 2Sa_4:1-2 (compare the DSS & LXX vs. the MT), (Dead Sea Scrolls Bible, p. 238-240) – one way or the other, all of this indicates that the LXX has been diligent to represent a Hebrew text which is often similar to the DSS but different than the MT. It is clear that so many of the differences between the MT and LXX are not due to the LXX translators themselves, but the fundamental use of an alternative Hebrew text]

 

2Sa_3:14-16 KJV And David sent messengers to Saul’s son, saying, Deliver me my wife Michal, which I espoused to me for a hundred foreskins of the Philistines. And Ishbosheth sent, and took her from her husband, even from Phaltiel the son of Laish. And her husband went with her along weeping behind her to Bahurim. Then said Abner unto him, Go, return [to your home]. And he returned.

 

·       David stayed married to Michal for the rest of her life, (2Sa_6:16-23).

·       In Jeremiah 3:1-22 (quoted previously) the Lord specifically applied the Mosaic divorce laws to a wife leaving her husband to be with others. This specifically parallels David and Michal’s situation: Michal left David and was with another man, but then David acted contrary to the prescription of the Law of Moses by returning to his first wife, just like God did with Israel!

·       Unlike the way he treated Michal, David would not return to his secondary wives (his ten concubines) after his son had sexually defiled them during David’s second flight from Israel, (2Sa_16:22; 2Sa_20:3). His first wife had gone further in her deviation and defilement from her faithfulness to David than the ten, but David showed greater determination to return to the one who had been more defiled by being remarried, than he did with the ten, because Michal was his first wife.

 

What Can We See From This?

·       We can see from this that God places a profound priority on the first wife.

·       We can see that God does not place a priority on secondary wives.

·       We can see that when polygamy was allowed, secondary wives could at times be put away, even when there was only temporary (and perhaps involuntary) defilement (>> cross reference/ see also: Abraham sending wives away).

·       We can see that it was not acceptable in God’s mind nor in David’s heart to remain separated from the first wife, even if the defilement was great and the faithlessness extensive.

 

A Summary of Sacrifice, Sabbath, and Returning to the First After Remarriage

We can see a consistent undeniable paralleling pattern between Jesus and David on the issues of Sacrifice and Offering, The Sabbath, and other foreshadowings of New Covenant teaching and principals. How can we suddenly, without warning, break this consistently reoccurring pattern in our minds when it comes to the issue of breaking up divorce and remarriage? How can we do this when Jesus consistently taught that David’s example should take priority over the Law of Moses in establishing the New Covenant?

It turns out that not only does God consistently approve of David’s example of breaking up divorce and remarriage and returning his wife to himself, her first spouse, but God actually considers David’s actions so perfect of an example that, from Jeremiah to Hosea, God constantly uses David’s example as a picture of his insistence of returning Israel to Himself:

 

Hos_6:7 CAB But they [Judah and Israel/ “Ephraim” (Hos_5:8-15)] are as a man transgressing a covenant.

 

Hos_7:4 CAB They are all adulterers…

 

Hos_3:5 CAB And afterward shall the children of Israel return, and shall seek the Lord their God, and David their king; and shall be amazed at the Lord and at His goodness in the latter days.

 

Hos_2:7 CAB …and she shall say, I will go, and return to my former husband…

 

How is it that this man David was so amazing that he went about through life with the affirmation of doing works never before described in the Law of Moses, and God Himself constantly turned around and approved of these actions as perfect pictures of Himself performing redemption for Israel, and ultimately, all mankind?

 

Act_2:29-30 CAB …David… 30  …being a prophet…

 

Act_13:21-23 CAB …and God… 22  …raised up for them David as king, to whom He also said bearing witness, ‘I have found David the son of Jesse, to be a man in accordance with My own heart, who will do all My will.’  23  God, from the seed of this man, according to the promise, has brought to Israel salvation,

 

And in what way is Israel saved?

 

Hos_2:7 CAB …and she shall say, I will go, and return to my former husband…

 

>> add!: and from these passages you can imagine God asking the questions before all of heavens courts, “who will perform my will???” – “I am burning to redeem Israel…..WHO WILL DO MY WILL??” then David was found!

 

Old:

No, we can’t logically break from this Davidic principal. The reason that we do this anyway is because we do not crave the Truth but a deviant interpretation of the Bible that suits our comfortable ungodly lifestyles and philosophies. We want an interpretation that does not require us to repent and change, so we’ll change the Bible, yes, even Jesus’ Words if we have to for the sake of our own sin.

 

>> Add transition: We see this is the clear posture concerning Deu 24, but even with this clarity people often get tripped up with the saying “that the land be not defiled.” – Although we have already answered that question with the passages we have just looked at, it can be helpful to know that there are some things that particularly confirm one flesh marriage in this question as well…

 

19. The Mosaic Death Penalty Explains Deu 24:4 and Returning to the First

Although it might not seem like it at first, if we parallel the moral requirements concerning the Mosaic death penalty with the moral requirements Moses gave restricting returning to the first marriage, we can see some important facts about how God has updated both of these things in the New Covenant

 

Deu 24:4 – “That the Land be Not Defiled…”

>>! Christine:  …repetitive / unnecessary / and confusing?…

One of the biggest stumbling blocks to many people (pastors and church goers alike) concerning returning to the first spouse, is the strong language of the Mosaic Law prohibiting this return. After all, it does say,

 

Deu_24:4 CAB the former [πρότερος – first] husband who sent her away [ἐξαποστείλας – same as v. 1] shall not be able to return [ἐπαναστρέψας – lit. turn again upon/ return upon] and take her to himself for a wife, after she has been defiled [μετὰ τὸ μιανθῆναι αὐτήν – lit. after the defilement of her (i.e. after her remarriage)]; because it [ὅτι – lit. that] is an abomination before the Lord your God, and you shall not defile [μιανεῖτε] the land which the Lord your God gives you to inherit [ἐν κλήρῳ].

 

> Note: Emphasis added! [“abomination” & “You shall not defile”]

> See: Deu_24

 

>> Do I need this here? Remove or re-title or redo in some way?:

 

A Reminder that These Laws Have Been Updated

We have effectively seen that the Mosaic divorce and remarriage laws were completely amended, verse by verse, by the Law of Christ. Nevertheless, let us now also specifically focus on the end of verse 4 of Deuteronomy 24, which specifically prohibits returning to the first, and let us be reassured of its disqualification in New Testament theology from another profound Scriptural Truth.

 

A Reminder Concerning Hardness from Being under the Law

But before we go much further, please remember and consider that if we are still taken aback by this strong language despite all the Biblical examples given, it is if nothing else, because we have ignored the clear message throughout the Bible that we are not to be under the Mosaic Law, (example: Rom_6:14). Yes, if we do aspire to take up the Law, Paul says, “Christ [χριστὸσ – anointed one] will profit you nothing!” (Gal_5:2 CAB). If we are still trying to be under the Law of Moses, it cannot be apart from the hardness of heart that brought about the Law in the first place. And it is not as though any of this says at all that we have to throughout the Old Testament in order to understand these things: We do not have to wonder and stagger here as though the New Testament did not already specifically answer how this law is fulfilled and applied in the New Testament. On the contrary, to actually keep this law it is required that one does this in light of Jesus fulfillment of it in truth rather than returning to it in the oldness of its use for unsaved people. Any attempt to ignore the update Jesus gave to this is a return to flesh-based righteousness, and this is a dreaded crime we must seek to be clear from!

>> Move somewhere previous to this…this focuses on divorce instead of the issue at hand:

Some people actually think that it is still permissible to make concessions for divorce due to hardness of heart, and that as though they were under the New Covenant. Let us be courageously clear: The Bible makes no small point that a life of “hardness of Heart” has to do with one who is going to hell (Pro_28:14; Joh_12:40). Therefore, if we will rather be under the Law of Christ, (1Co_9:21; Gal_6:2) then we will not make concessions this way. Once the foundations of this law and its entire essence has been explicitly fulfilled and updated, anyone who seeks to permit divorce or forbid the faith of reconciliation is an opponent to what God created in authenticating the New Covenant. But for the sake of those still struggling and for the sake of being thorough in establishing every pillar of truth which God has provided for us, we will even do more to make these things as clear and solid with much confirmation from the Scriptures.

 

The Rest of Scripture Explains Deu_24:4’s “Defilement”

To faithfully and accurately understand Deu_24:4’s abbreviated reference to “defilement,” we need to get a comprehensive, big-picture understanding of the Biblical cases of defilement that speak to this scenario. We need to realize that this strong “defilement” language is not isolated to Deuteronomy 24, but is a repeated theme throughout the Scriptures, especially in the Law of Moses. If we will be sensitive to the other times that these things are discussed and let the rest of the Bible teach us, then we can understand the nature of this principal against defilement that is briefly referenced in this case. The concept of an “abomination” “causing the land to be defiled” and or “sin” is repeated in these verses:

 

Compare Exo_21:14, Exo_21:23-25; Lev_24:17-21; Num_35:30-34; Deu_19:10-13; Deu_22:22; Jdg_1:6-7; 1Sa_15:33 with 2Sa_11:3-4, 2Sa_11:14-17, 2Sa_11:21 c, 2Sa_11:24; 2Sa_12:13; Psa_51:14; Mat_5:38-39; Joh_8:3-4, Joh_8:10-11

 

While addressing a parallel “defilement” of the land (as Deu_24:4 describes), these and many other verses also show that the Mosaic death penalty was amended for the New Covenant. Throughout the next number of points we quote some of these passages to show the full implications that the Scriptures teach by doing this:

 

Mosaic Death Penalty Legislated

>>R

 

Exo 21 – Mosaic Death Penalty – Eye For Eye

Exo_21:14-25 CAB  And if anyone lie in wait for his neighbor to slay him by craft, and he go for refuge, you shall take him from My altar to put him to death[compare: 1Ki_1:50-51; 1Ki_2:28-34; 2Ki_11:12-16]  23 But if it be perfectly formed, [MT: “And if any injury occurs” (WEB)] he shall give life for life,  24  eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot,  25  burning for burning, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.

 

The “eye for eye” command is repeated again in Lev_24:17-21

 

Num 35 – Mosaic Death Penalty: No Ransom; No Exceptions! Or You Defile the Land

Num_35:30-34 CAB  Whoever kills a man, you shall slay the murderer on the testimony of witnesses; and one witness shall not testify against a soul that he should die.  31  And you shall not accept ransoms for life from a murderer who is worthy of death, for he shall be surely put to death.  32  You shall not accept a ransom to excuse his fleeing to the city of refuge, so that he should again dwell in the land, until the death of the high priest.  33  So shall you not pollute with murder the land in which you dwell; for this blood pollutes the land, and the land shall not be purged from the blood shed upon it, but by the blood of him that shed it.  34  And you shall not defile the land on which you dwell, on which I dwell in the midst of you; for I am the Lord dwelling in the midst of the children of Israel.

 

Things to Notice from Num 35

·       The land is defiled by murder

·       The only way it can be clean again is by killing the murderer

·       Because of this you cannot take a ransom to keep the guilty alive

·       Instead you are not allowed to promote the pollution of the land by murder, but must instead “purge [the land] from the blood shed upon it” by killing the murderer

·       This is to be done without respect of persons (that is, it is enforced equally no matter who is guilty)

 

(Also see: Deu_19:10-13; This law also agrees with the principals given after the flood: Gen_9:4-6)

 

Mosaic Death Penalty – Stone Adulterers

>> refer to other refs condemning adultery

 

Deu_22:22 CAB  And if a man be found lying with a woman married to a man, you shall kill them both, the man that lay with the woman, and the woman; so shall you remove the wicked one out of Israel.

(There are many times that murder and adultery are linked to the death penalty. See Jam_2:10-11)

 

Notice The Strong Implications of This Death Penalty

First, please note that the Mosaic Death penalty is specifically given in every book of Moses’ Law: Exo_21:14-25; Lev_24:17-21; Num_35:30-34; Deu_19:10-13; Deu_22:22. So we know that this is a serious Law. Repetition denotes emphasis. A (good) parent’s instruction is far more serious when they repeat it. Second, please don’t miss that for both murder, and adultery, the only answer under the Mosaic Law was death.

 

Lev_20:10 CAB  Whatever man shall commit adultery with the wife of a man, or whoever shall commit adultery with the wife of his neighbor, let them die the death, the adulterer and the adulteress.

 

Lev_24:17-22 CAB  And whosoever shall strike a man and he die, let him die the death… 19  And whosoever shall inflict a blemish on his neighbor, as he has done to him, so shall it be done to himself in return;  20  bruise for bruise, eye for eye, tooth for tooth: as anyone may inflict a blemish on a man, so shall it be rendered to him.  21  Whosoever shall strike a man, and he shall die, let him die the death.  22  There shall be one judgment for the stranger and the native, for I am the Lord your God.

 

Deu_19:13 CAB  Your eye shall not spare him; so shall you purge innocent blood from Israel, and it shall be well with you.

 

The KJV clarifies this by representing as,

 

Deu_19:13 KJV  …put away the guilt of innocent blood from Israel…

 

Deu_22:22 CAB  And if a man be found lying with a woman married to a man, you shall kill them both, the man that lay with the woman, and the woman; so shall you remove the wicked one out of Israel.

 

Mosaic Death Penalty Enforced

1Sa_15:33 CAB  And Samuel said to Agag, As your sword has bereaved women of their children, so shall your mother be made childless among women. And Samuel hacked Agag to pieces before the Lord in Gilgal.

 

Samuel was not just some prophet with a long white beard. This was a prophet capable of violence! You don’t mess with Samuel if he gets a chance to enforce the justice of the Law of Moses. In addition to this example, there are many other examples throughout the Old Testament of enforcing this Law, including the following passages:

 

Joab’s bloodshed: 2Sa_3:23-30; 2Sa_20:8-13;

How Joab was repaid: 1Ki_2:5-6, 1Ki_2:28-34

Other examples: Num_15:30-36; 2Sa_4:5-12; 2Sa_21:5-9;

But so many have tried to suggest that such an enforcement of the Mosaic death penalty was not possible during New Testament times when the Jews were under Roman occupation, since this was illegal for them (Joh_18:29-31). But don’t forget that the Jews of Jesus and Paul’s day also tried to enforce this death penalty many times in the New Testament, even though it was officially illegal:

 

Joh_8:3-5, Joh_8:7, Joh_8:58-59; Joh_10:31-33; Joh_11:8; Act_7:58-60; Act_14:5, Act_14:19. And also compare: Luk_20:6; Act_5:26.

 

Mosaic Death Penalty Amended

 

David, Bathsheba, and Uriah

2Sa_11:3-4 CAB  And David sent and inquired about the woman. And one said, Is not this Bathsheba the daughter of Eliab, the wife of Uriah the Hittite?  4  And David sent messengers, and took her, and went in to her, and he lay with her…

 

2Sa_11:14-17 CAB  And the morning came, and David wrote a letter to Joab, and sent it by the hand of Uriah.  15  And he wrote in the letter, saying, Station Uriah in front of the most severe part of the fight, and retreat from behind him, that he may be wounded and die.  16  And it came to pass while Joab was watching against the city, that he set Uriah in a place where he knew that valiant men were.  17  And the men of the city went out, and fought with Joab. And some of the people of the servants of David fell, and Uriah the Hittite died also.

 

2Sa_11:23-24 CAB  And the messenger said to David… your servant Uriah the Hittite is dead…

 

Then after David was confronted…

2Sa_12:13 CAB  And David said to Nathan, I have sinned against the Lord. And Nathan said to David, The Lord has put away your sin; you shall not die.

After reading all of these passages, we have got to just stop here and be amazed… What did God just say? “The Lord has put away your sin; you shall not die.” Some kind of non-standard, supernatural forgiveness just took place totally outside what the law had made provision for, so that even God would not have David die!

 

Notice that David committed both adultery and murder in his sin, but was not put to death, but instead out the mouth of God it was declared to David by Nathan:

“you shall not die,” (2Sa_12:13 CAB). – Why is this and how can these things ever possibly be??

 

Jesus Declares it Amended

Mat_5:38-39 WEB “You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’ 39 But I tell you, don’t resist him who is evil; but whoever strikes you on your right cheek, turn to him the other also.

 

Don’t miss that Jesus is pointing to the Mosaic Death penalty: Exo_21:14-25; Lev_24:17-21; Num_35:30-34; Deu_19:10-13; Deu_22:22.

 

Jesus Explains why it is Different for the New Covenant

Mat_5:21-22 WEB “You have heard that it was said to the ancient ones, ‘You shall not murder;’ and ‘Whoever shall murder shall be in danger of the judgment.’ 22 But I tell you, that everyone who is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment...

 

Mat_5:27-28 WEB “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery;’ 28 but I tell you that everyone who gazes at a woman to lust after her has committed adultery with her already in his heart.

 

Do you see that now Jesus is putting us all on the same plane with each other? Both those who have committed sin in their heart, as well as those who have committed sin in their flesh are counted guilty before God, particularly under the New Covenant which is based on the heart and not the flesh.

    In addition to this, don’t forget how Paul said this very thing:

 

Act_13:39 WEB  …by him everyone who believes is justified from all things, from which you could not be justified by the law of Moses.

 

And don’t forget that Paul himself was also in many ways a man forgiven of the guilt of murder (Act_7:58; Act_8:1-4; Act_9:1-2; Act_22:4, Act_22:20; 1Co_15:8-10; Gal_1:13-14; Php_3:6). And if we all now have access to this blessed forgiveness, this puts us all on the same plane together. This is the basic good announcement that Paul commanded all preachers to preach, and to even use Paul’s testimony (of being freely forgiven of capital sins) as a pattern for this (1Ti_1:3, 1Ti_1:11-16, 1Ti_1:18).

Because of this, everyone who believes in Jesus cannot justly demand the life of another, having realized that he himself is a forgiven murderer, because “all have sinned,” (Rom_3:23 CAB). And not only this, but under the New Covenant it says that there is “no difference:

 

Rom_3:22-24 KJ2000 …for there is no difference [or distinction (WEB/ CAB)]:  23  For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God;  24  Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ [χριστῷ  – anointed one] Jesus:

 

And James also repeats what we have been saying:

 

Jam_2:10-11 WEB …whoever shall keep the whole law, and yet stumble in one point, he has become guilty of all. 11 For he who said, “Do not commit adultery,” said also, “Do not commit murder.” Now if you do not commit adultery, but murder, you have become a transgressor of the law.

 

Fulfilling a just death penalty under the New Covenant means that heart-criminals cannot enforce it (and that means all of us who are hoping to be saved by Jesus in truth).

 

Jesus Enforces it as Amended

Joh_8:3-11 CAB Then the scribes and Pharisees brought to Him a woman who had been caught in adultery, and having stood her in the midst,  4  they said to Him, “Teacher, we found this woman committing adultery, in the very act.  5  Now Moses, in our law, commanded to cast stones at such. Therefore what do You say?”  6  But this they said, testing Him, that they might have an accusation against Him. But Jesus, stooping down, began to write on the ground with His finger, not taking notice.  7  And while they were continuing questioning Him, rising up, He said unto them, “He who is without sin among you, let him be the first to cast a stone at her.”  8  And again He stooped down and wrote on the ground.  9  And those who heard it [some source texts have here: “and being convicted under the conscious” (Jos.Trans.), (not including the “M6” text)] began to go out one by one, beginning with the oldest even to the last. And Jesus was left alone, and the woman being in the midst.  10  And standing up and seeing no one but the woman, Jesus said to her, “Woman, where are those accusers of yours? Has no one condemned you?”  11  She said, “No one, Lord.” And Jesus said to her, “Neither do I condemn you; go, and from now on sin no more.”

 

[Technical Textual Note: Despite some “scholarly” controversies over this account of “The Woman Taken In Adultery,” the legitimacy and authenticity of this passage is documented in the appendix resource entitled, “Extra Notes on Church History”]

 

Joh_8:3-11 WEB The scribes and the Pharisees brought a woman taken in adultery. Having set her in the midst, 4 they told him, “Teacher, we found this woman in adultery, in the very act. 5 Now in our law, Moses commanded us to stone such. What then do you say about her?” 6 They said this testing him, that they might have something to accuse him of. But Jesus stooped down, and wrote on the ground with his finger. 7 But when they continued asking him, he looked up and said to them, “He who is without sin among you, let him throw the first stone at her.” 8 Again he stooped down, and with his finger wrote on the ground. 9 They, when they heard it, being convicted by their conscience, went out one by one, beginning from the oldest, even to the last. Jesus was left alone with the woman where she was, in the middle. 10 Jesus, standing up, saw her and said, “Woman, where are your accusers? Did no one condemn you?” 11 She said, “No one, Lord.” Jesus said, Neither do I condemn you. Go your way. From now on, sin no more.”

 

·       On every aspect and detail, and on every level, according to the Law of Moses, this woman deserved to die

·       The Law specifically said that she must be “found” in the act to enforce the death penalty: “And if a man be found lying with a woman … you shall kill them both...” (Deu_22:22 CAB).

·       This passage shows her legal and just and verified guilt twice, in the words, “…a woman who had been caught in adultery…” (Joh_8:3 CAB) and in the words of the Pharisees as they insisted upon her authorized guilt, “Teacher, we found this woman committing adultery…” (Joh_8:4)

·       Later in this chapter, we have another situation where Jesus says, “It is also written in your law that the testimony of two men is valid.” (Joh_8:17 CAB). Because “we” means more than one man, this means that Jesus was obliged to accept the testimony of these men against the adulterous woman (“we found this woman…”) as a valid claim (which He in fact did in the words, “go… sin no more” - Joh_8:11)

[This principal of “two or three witnesses” is documented in much greater detail in Chapter 3, under the chart entitled, “Mosaic Guidelines for Dealing with Accusations of Infidelity”]

·       With or without the source text variation, “and being convicted under the conscious” (Jos.Trans.) it is clear that the woman’s accusers recognized their guilt enough to walk away with nothing more to say

·       It is amazing that even though Jesus worked mercy for the woman which was contrary to the Law that they had from God through Moses, they were still “convicted by the law as transgressors,” (Jas_2:9 CAB; and compare this with Joh_8:8-9).

·       The words, “Neither do I condemn you” mean, “Neither do I enforce this just Mosaic death penalty upon you, which you deserve and have been fully convicted of according to God’s righteous standard,” (see Rom_1:32) But “sin no more” meaning “Respond according to the mercy shown you and be saved from sin, because this was its purpose.”

 

We have seen from the story of the woman caught in adultery that Jesus clearly enforced the Mosaic Death penalty as being (socially) remitted, but this is definitely not the only example we have in Scripture:

 

Luk_9:53-56 WEB and sent messengers before his face. They went, and entered into a village of the Samaritans, so as to prepare for him.  53  They didn’t receive him, because he was traveling with his face set towards Jerusalem [i.e. they could see that He was traveling to go be with Jews, but they were Samaritans (with well-established racial conflicts)].  54  When his disciples, James and John, saw this, they said, “Lord, do you want us to command fire to come down from the sky, and destroy them, just as Elijah did?”  55  But he turned and rebuked them, “You don’t know of what kind of spirit you are.

 

Don’t shrug this passage off lightly! They deserved to have fire consume them for rejecting Jesus, but this was not Jesus’ agenda. Jesus did not come to enforce the justice of the death penalty, but to save people from being crushed under it!

 

Joh_3:17 WEB  For God didn’t send his Son into the world to judge [κρίνῃ – or condemn/ bring justice to bear upon] the world, but that the world should be saved through him.

 

The Law – The Highest Order of Social Justice

The Law of Moses should truly be called the highest order of social justice for us, because it was a social government approved and ultimately given by God.

 

Gal_3:21 WEB  Is the law then against the promises of God? Certainly not! For if there had been a law given which could make alive, most assuredly righteousness would have been of the law.

(Also see: Rom_9:31; 1Ti_1:9)

 

The amending of the just (Mosaic) death penalty has been accomplished under the reality of the Kingdom of God, because under this,

 

Jam_2:13 WEB  ...judgmentG2920 is without mercy to him who has shown no mercy. Mercy triumphs over judgmentG2920

 

[That is “κρισις” (krísis) in Greek: The judgment that brings justice].

 

>> should I repeat this previously to make the correlation through the gospels?

> I have kept WEB for all of these Jas refs

 

True Heart Justice Means Temporary Social Justice is Delayed

Now that the heart counts, fulfilling personal justice means delaying social justice by mercy, and placing it into God’s hands until Judgment Day. And this was the case with the woman taken in adultery. And Jesus is pointing at us as well as the Pharisees if we hold people accountable to social justice. In this we should be asking ourselves, “When has anyone ever so sinned against me, but that God has not forgiven me 100 times as much and more for the crimes that I have committed against Him?” So also in this passage James points to us, showing us that we should have mercy.

But concerning Justice, we must first acknowledge that the Mosaic Death penalty was indeed just, and that it is the realization of the truest justice for the sins that it addresses:

 

>>R

Rom_1:32 CAB …known the righteous judgment* of God, that those practicing such things are worthy of death

 

[* δικαίωμα – hard to represent in English, but it certainly pertains to “justice”/ “righteousness” which God has determined]

 

>> Check if this is CAB (it is unspecified):

And the Law says it like this: “…life for life, 24 Eye for eye… (Exo_21:23-24)” [because] “… you shall not defile the land (Num_35:33)” and it says that there shall be no respect of persons (even if they are a king or peasant): Lev_19:15; Deu_1:17; Deu_16:19; 2Ch_19:7; Pro_24:23; Pro_28:21. And this very death penalty also demands adulterers to be stoned, as well as fornicators, and homosexuals, and the like.

Even now, if we will have a righteous heart we will know and feel that this death penalty Law is indeed just. Yes, it is just that such a death penalty be enforced upon the sons of men holding them accountable for their sin, and that it be done to all men alike making no distinction. But please see this all-important fact: God does not give any one what they deserve who are justified by Him!

 

Rom_4:6-8 CAB  just as David also speaks of the blessing of the man to whom God accounts righteousness apart from works:  7  “Blessed are they whose lawless deeds have been forgiven, and whose sins were covered over;  8  Blessed is the man to whom the LORD shall by no means impute sin.”

 

God did not give king David justice according to what he deserved to receive for committing adultery and murdering a righteous man! But quite the contrary, God said, “you will not die,” (2Sa_12:13). And when God prophesied this unto David, this was directly contrary to the just Law of Moses, and was said previously to cause the land to sin! The same is true for Paul who was a participant in murderer (Act_7:55-60Act_8:1; Act_9:1; Act_26:10), as well as the woman taken in adultery, (Joh_8:3-4, Joh_8:10-11). And the same is true for any of us who are justified by Jesus (Rom_3:22-23; 1Co_6:9-11; Jas_2:10-13).

It is not at all that God has removed justice by establishing a new covenant. In fact, the New Covenant comes with greater justice and potential for condemnation than the first covenant, (Heb_10:28-31). This is because now God’s available covenanted relationship with men specifically includes not only the sins done in the flesh, (Rom_8:3; 2Co_5:10) but also the sins of the heart and mind (Mat_5:21-22, Mat_5:27-30; Rom_7:23, Rom_7:25; Jas_4:8)

In doing this, God has raised a higher standard of righteousness embedding it in this covenant that He now offers mankind, by requiring righteousness all the way down to the heart through supernatural intervention, and no longer simply demanding separation from uncleanness in the flesh. But (as opposed to the Old Covenant) God has not only made it a just thing for us not to be condemned to hell who repent and believe Him, but He has necessarily accomplished this infusion of obedience by giving us grace, so that we don’t have to live in sin any longer and continue earning death: Compare Joh_5:14; Joh_8:11; Rom_6:6, Rom_6:12; Rom_7:5; Rom_8:3, Rom_8:13; Col_2:11; 1Pe_2:24; 1Pe_3:18

To those whom Jesus said, “neither do I condemn you,” He also said, “go and sin no more,” (Joh_8:11), and in the same way He said previously to a man who was healed, “Sin no more, lest something worse may happen to you,” (Joh_5:14 CAB).

Though they justly deserved it, Jesus did not call for their immediate physical condemnation in this life (the death penalty), because of the way that this covenant of mercy operates, but won’t He indeed judge and condemn them to death in both their physical person as well as their very soul at the Judgment, who continue in their sin until their death? Certainly He will! This is why He warned them concerning the next life, after answering their physical need by saying, “Sin no more!” (Joh_3:35; Joh_5:22, Joh_5:27).

    However, while saying all of this, please don’t misunderstand me; I am not against the death penalty at all, (though I myself would never enforce it in this life). If you read this and think that I am somehow protesting the government’s ordained responsibility to enforce death penalty, then you have misunderstood both me and the Scriptures. On the contrary, God has clearly said:

 

Rom_13:2-5 CAB  Consequently the one resisting the authority has opposed the ordinance of God, and those opposing shall receive judgment to themselves.  3  For rulers are not a fear to good works, but to evil… 4  For he is God’s servant to you for good. But if you do evil, fear; for he does not bear the sword in vain; for he is God’s servant, an avenger for wrath to the one practicing evil.  5  Therefore it is necessary to be subject, not only on account of wrath, but also for conscience’ sake.

 

By the way: This is what separates real Christians from lawless pacifists, in that, those who submit under the authority of the Scriptures recognize both realities that (1) the government has been ordained as a recognized institution by God to even kill people as may be necessary for maintaining and enforcing social justice, and at the same time, (2) Those who hope to be saved from sin by the infusion of the righteousness of God cannot coexist as part of this earthly, governmental ordinance and follow Jesus at the same time, since Jesus willingly received social injustice for the sake of establishing a Kingdom that is not of this earth. – If you actually follow Jesus, you cannot enforce social justice while He Himself willingly received social injustice (Mat 26:51-52; Rev_13:10)!

    From all of these things it is extremely clear that you cannot be both under a “social justice” agreement with God as well as a covenant that makes you spared from the justice you deserve from God. You have to decide whether you want to enforce social justice now in this age and face moral justice later with God at the judgment, or else enter into a covenant that saves you from your heart-injustices and go and show others this exact same mercy!

    So God has made it clear that He has, in fact, given the government the sword to begin with, and ordained them unto this. And He also says of him that, “he is Gods minister.” But to those soldiers who seek repentance of their own (moral) sins, and hope to find obedience to His Kingdom, God says,

 

Luk_3:14 KJV …do violence to no man…

 

Or more literally:

 

Luk_3:14 Jos.Trans. …do not shake* no one through*

 

[* διασείσητε (diaseísēte) – lit. shake (seísēte) through (dia) meaning to “rough up”; fig. intimidate or “do violence” (KJV); (see G1286)]

 

This is because it is quite impossible to fulfill these verses, and kill someone:

 

Rom_13:9-10 CAB  if there is any other commandment, in this word it is summed up, namely, “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”  10  Love does no harm to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfillment of the law.

 

Phi_2:15 CAB  …that you may become blameless and harmless, children of God without fault …among whom you shine as light bearers in the world…

 

Mat_5:38-45 CAB  “You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’  39  But I say to you not to resist an evil person. But whoever shall slap you on your right

cheek, turn to him the other also…  43  “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor, and you shall hate your enemy.’  44  But I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who mistreat you and persecute you,  45  so that you may prove to be sons of your Father in heaven; because He makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and He sends rain on the just and on the unjust.

 

Those who advocate the death penalty now should also come to grips with the fact that justice also demands the death of adulterers just as much as it does of murderers! For us to say that we insist on promoting the death penalty without promoting enforcing it upon fornicators, adulterers, homosexuals, and the like as well is hypocritical, because concerning all who do such things, God has clearly said that they are deserving of death (Rom_1:32).

I have seen people zealously rage for justice to come upon a well-known murderer, but I don’t see those same people offended because the law enforcement will not put them to death for their past fornications, heart adulteries, and murderous hatreds! How hypocritical! This is the very reason Jesus said, “He who is without sin among you, let him be the first to cast a stone at her,” (Joh_8:7 CAB) but we have already cast the first stone in our hearts by condemning them, and have so insisted upon our own death.

 

Mat_7:2 CAB …with what measure you measure, it will be measured back to you.

 

This is a fearful and dreadful thing to fall upon your soul in the Day of Judgment!

 

Jam_2:8-13 WEB However, if you fulfill the royal law, according to the Scripture, “You shall love your neighbor as yourself,” you do well. 9 But if you show partiality, you commit sin, being convicted by the law as transgressors. 10 For whoever shall keep the whole law, and yet stumble in one point, he has become guilty of all. 11 For he who said, “Do not commit adultery,” said also, “Do not commit murder.” Now if you do not commit adultery, but murder, you have become a transgressor of the law. 12 So speak, and so do, as men who are to be judged by a law of freedom. 13 For judgment is without mercy to him who has shown no mercy. Mercy triumphs over judgment.

 

And don’t we find ourselves as David when he sinned?

2Sa_12:5-7 CAB  And David was greatly moved with anger against the man; and David said to Nathan, As the Lord lives, the man that did this thing shall surely die.  6  …because he has not spared.  7  And Nathan said to David, You are the man that has done this!...

Full version

2Sa_12:5-7 CAB  And David was greatly moved with anger against the man; and David said to Nathan, As the Lord lives, the man that did this thing shall surely die.  6  And he shall restore the lamb seven-fold, because he has not spared.  7  And Nathan said to David, You are the man that has done this! Thus says the Lord God of Israel: I anointed you to be king over Israel, and I rescued you out the hand of Saul;

 

MT version

2Sa_12:5-7 MKJV And David’s anger was greatly kindled against the man. And he said to Nathan, As the Lord lives, the man who has done this shall surely die. 6 …because he had no pity. 7 And Nathan said to David, You are the man!…

 

For this reason the New Covenant recognizes the adultery of the heart, and this is why Jesus says “He who is without sin… let him be the first to cast a stone…” (Joh_8:7 CAB). It is not just unto physical adultery that He says this, but rather, ‘He who has not done the same sin in their heart, be the first to enforce the death penalty upon this sinner who has done it in the flesh’ (Compare Mat_5:27-30).

 

How Does the Death Penalty Relate To Marriage?

The important thing to get from all of this is that just as not killing a murderer causes the land to be defiled under the Law of Moses, so also returning to the first spouse is forbidden on the bases of causing the land to be defiled, but Jesus amended both of these things! Those who question the safety of returning to the first because it may “cause the land to be defiled” should also question the safety of not insisting upon their own death for the murderers that they have committed in their heart by hating someone, (Mat_5:21-22).

 

1Jo_3:15 CAB  Everyone who hates his brother is a murderer, and you know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in him.

 

In God’s eyes, such a person who has at any point been a “heart-murder” that is not put to death (including you and me) would be just as much a “defiler of the land” if Deuteronomy_24:4 held true for returning to the first spouse.

>>add: “That the Land be Not Defiled…”? somewhere around here…..

 

Conclusions About the Death Penalty and Returning to the First

So why have we spent so much time talking about the death penalty, when this is a work about divorce and remarriage? Mainly because Deuteronomy 24:4’s warning against defilement is exactly the same as the Laws emphatic warnings against defiling the land by neglecting capital punishment and letting a murderer go free without executing him. And don’t we all know that the New Testament itself is so largely formed by forgiven and redeemed murderers who were not put to death because of the mercy worked out by Jesus? Yes, and now under Jesus we are all held accountable as murders because of our past crimes in our heart! If Deuteronomy 24:4’s warning against defilement and forbidding law against returning to the first spouse is over us in the same way it was for them, then so is our need to all be put to death and held to our capital crimes against God. Not one of us would survive and escape the death penalty in this life, nor the eternal hell in the next, now that Jesus has exposed us to the righteousness of the heart!

If Deuteronomy 24:4 is used as is, without the true light of the Gospel brought about in Jesus, as though Deu_24:4 was applicable to this covenant just as it was under the old, and we reject the update that has now been written for us, we make Deuteronomy stand in the way of accepting the life and truth which God clearly teaches us in the Scriptures concerning divorce and remarriage, and returning unto a first spouse. If we are afraid of “causing the land to sin” and forgo obedience to the New Covenant for this reason, woe to us! Because it says,

 

Gal_5:3-4 CAB  …he is a debtor to keep the whole law.  4  You have become estranged from Christ, you who are justified by law; you have fallen from grace.

 

We are to be of a NEW Covenant of reconciliation (Mat_5:24; Rom_5:10; 1Co_7:11; 2Co_5:18-20; Eph_2:16; Col_1:20-21) and we miss this if we tie ourselves by sinful flesh under the oldness of an old law in our flesh that is contrary to this service of reconciliation! Please hear what God has clearly said about His heart on this point of divorce and remarriage, and “discern the times” as Jesus commanded us (Mat_16:2-3; and especially see: Luk_12:54-59) that you may obey the voice of God for this (New) covenant:

 

Deu_18:15 CAB  The Lord your God shall raise up to you a Prophet from among your brethren, like me; Him shall you hear.

 

>> I need to rearrange \/ /\  some content here on how I close this preceding section in light of the final one below…

20. A Summary of Returning to the First

>> I need to add some headers here…

Many are concerned about returning to one’s first spouse after a remarriage in light of Deu_24:3-4, but have ignored some very important things that the Scriptures have already told us about this passage…

 

(1) Believe the Amendments of the New Covenant!

We can first see that this whole section of Deuteronomy was amended by God for the New Covenant, (Among others: Jer_3:1-22, Mat_5:31-32; Mat_19:8-9).

 

(2) The First Wife is Prioritized; Reconciliation is Proclaimed

We can see that God’s heart is for the first wife in Jer_3:1-22 and Mal_2:13-16, even if she were remarried, and that He’s dissatisfied for her to remain remarried to another man (as we have seen in the verses we quoted previously) just like David was for his first wife to remain remarried (in these verses: 1Sa_18:202Sa_6:23).

>>: Diedre:

He’s dissatisfied for her to remain remarried to another man just like David was for his first wife to remain remarried (1Sa_18:20 -  (Is this the verse that you are looking for here? and also is this the correct sign that you want to use “-“?) 2Sa_6:23).+

 

(3) David Proved This with His Actions, And God Approved of This By His Prophets

We can see that David, a man specifically credited by Jesus to have an example with greater priority than the Law of Moses, returned to his first wife, just as the Lord would have done for his adulterating people the Israelites, though the Law had not permitted any of these things! We see that David, a man according to God’s own heart (1Sa_16:3-7, 1Sa_16:12-14; 1Sa_13:14; Act_13:22) and by God’s own heart (Jer_3:1-22; Joh_8:3-4, Joh_8:10-11) was involved in things that the Mosaic Law said would perpetuate ‘the land being defiled’:

 

2Sa_3:14-16 – Returning a first wife to himself after she was remarried,

 

2Sa_12:13 – Not being put to death as the Law emphatically insisted (for murder and adultery)

 

Remember that the Law said that justice was to be enforced without any “respect of persons”: Lev_19:15; Deu_1:17; Deu_16:19; 2Ch_19:7; Pro_24:23; Pro_28:21. Showing NO “respect of persons” includes a king!

But we know that David’s life-example surpassed the Law in authoritativeness, not because he was a king, but because he was a man according to God’s own heart. He lived in and foreshadowed a New Covenant that man at that time knew nothing about! And this shows us that there is a higher standard than the Law, which forbade a spouse to return to the first after a remarriage. The higher standard which Jesus brought compels us unto reconciliation, even of original marriage partners who have since been remarried.

 

It is Time to Repent of Hypocrisy and Embrace Reconciliation

>> Of all the ironies in the world…

It turns out that though man thinks remarriage is fine, Jesus calls it adultery,

And when man thinks returning to the first is wrong, God calls this reconciliation!

 

Why is it we typically want to have a false and hypocritical standard of mercy enough to say people can be cleansed by God even if they remain in a remarriage which the New Testament harshly condemns, while we cannot find the mercy and New Covenant faith in our hearts to believe that God can cleans a spouse, who has even repented of adulterous remarriage by faith so that they may return to their first spouse, even though the Bible clearly shows this?

It is time to repent of our hypocrisy and filthy claims of love and mercy which we use to flatter people into remaining in the sinful life styles which God has condemned, and it is time to instead believe God and show the type of mercy He has taught us to walk in and believe Him for that actually saves people unto the purifying faith of Jesus to call people to repent of adulterous remarriages, and it is time to lay hold of the saving hope of reconciliation brought to us by Jesus under the New Covenant. It is high time we stopped boasting in the false love that is so conveniently adapted to the selfish lusts of comforting the flesh, and start caring about the love that actually saves people from sin and redeems them from the adultery Jesus condemned. It is high time we started caring about the love that actually loves God above the indulgence of the flesh, and takes up a cross to follow and obey Jesus, and loves people the way God told us to Love them, because this is the only love that carries with it a legitimate hope of salvation and glory in God’s Kingdom!

 

2Co_5:18-20 CAB  And all things are [out] of [ἐκ] God, who reconciled us to Himself through Jesus Christ [χριστοῦ – anointed one], and who gave to us the ministry of this reconciliation,  19  that is [ὡςτι], that God was in Christ [χριστῷ  – anointed one] reconciling the world to Himself, not [verbally] reckoning [λογιζόμενος – i.e. with words (λογ-)] their transgressions to them, and *committing to us [*θέμενος ἐν ἡμῖν –  arranging/“putting” in us] the word [τὸν λόγον (same root as before)] of this reconciliation.  20  Now then, we serve as ambassadors [πρεσβεύομεν – (made up of) elders] for [υπὲρ] Christ [χριστοῦ  – anointed one], as though God were appealing [παρακαλοῦντος – lit. (speaking out) callings next to (you); fig. (making) exhortations] through us: we implore you *on Christ’s behalf [*ὑπὲρ χριστοῦ – lit. over anointed one], be reconciled to God.

 

Let us embrace this new spiritual reconciliation which is now available with God through Jesus, and in the same way let us promote this moral parable of physical reconciliation which is now available for spouses. If Deuteronomy 24 said that a woman was permanently defiled after remarriage, is the reconciliation of first spouses proclaimed in the New Covenant a defiling reconciliation?

    To the spiritual side of returning to the first spouse after ‘marriage’ to idols, God says,

 

2Co_5:18 CAB  And all things are [out] of [ἐκ] God, who reconciled us to Himself through Jesus Christ [χριστοῦ – anointed one], and who gave to us the ministry of this reconciliation

 

And to the physical, moral side of returning to the first spouse after adulterous marriage, He says,

 

Act_13:39 WEB  by [ἐν – in] him everyone who believes is justified from all things, from which you could not be justified by the law of Moses.

>> Be sure that you do not disbelieve and despise this service of reconciliation, because there is a warning attached to it (see following verses)

 

And it is because of this proclamation that it is written in the unbreakable Scriptures of truth, that God says,

Jer_3:1-2, Jer_3:7, Jer_3:12, Jer_3:14, Jer_3:22 (CAB)

v. Jer_3:1-2 If a man put away his wife, and she depart from him, and become another man’s, shall she return to him anymore? Shall not that woman be utterly defiled? [referring to Deu_24:2-4]  2  …you have…been utterly defiled. You havedefiled the land with your fornications [lit. prostitutions] and your wickedness… [as in Deu_24:4; Lev_19:29; Deu_23:17-18]

v. Jer_3:7  And I said…Turn again to Me…

v. Jer_3:12  Return to Me, O house of Israel, says the Lord

v. Jer_3:14  Turn, you children that have revolted, says the Lord…

v. Jer_3:22  Turn, you children that are given to turning, and I will heal your bruises...

> this has not been linked with the previous summary because of adding ellipsis’ (…)

 

2Sa_3:14 CAB  …David sent messengers… saying, Restore me my wife

 

Hos_2:7 CAB …and she shall say, I will go, and return to my former husband…

 

>> Incorporate this important text:

 

The Difference Between Returning to the First and the Heresy of Born-again Adulterous Remarriage

The flesh, which has once been defiled for a season can be cleaned by faith so that a repentant adulterer may return to their first spouse. But the flesh that is constantly defiled by the immorality of adulterous remarriage cannot be morally forgiven because the sin is continually practed and is never ceased!

 

>> This Also:

It was Moses who (reluctantly) let lost people divorce and remarry, and if they did, they were never allowed to return to the first. It is Jesus who said we could not divorce and remarry, and it is Him who “…gave to us the ministry of this reconciliation,” (2Co_5:18 CAB), and it is the Law of Jesus which is able to purify a spouse after being otherwise permanently defiled by divorce and remarriage:

 

Act_13:38-41 CAB Therefore let it be known to you, brothers, that through this Man forgiveness of sins is proclaimed to you,  39  and from all things from which you could not (by the Law of Moses) be justified, by Him everyone that believes is justified.  40  Watch therefore, lest there come upon you that which was spoken of in the prophets:  41  “Behold, you despisers, and marvel and perish! For I will work a work in your days which you will by no means believe, though one were to declare it to you.’ “

 

>> I think I really need to move this to the next section…

Do you see that the message of Jesus demands that we believe in the working of a greater work of purification and forgiveness which was not available under the Law of Moses? Do you see that this includes “all things” which would include purifying a woman from the defilement of remarriage? Do you see that the permanent defilement of remarriage was the only thing stopping spouses from reconciling under the Old Covenant?

    Let us make sure we also take heed and actually believe the message of Jesus and this work which God has now performed in these days, lest we be found “despisers” that will “marvel and perish.” Let us not despise “the ministry of this reconciliation,” (2Co_5:18 CAB) but rather, let us proclaim it from the house tops!

>> Email summary [2/1/11] – integrate this one day?

The shortest answer to your question that I can summarize is that: I accept Jesus testimony of David’s example as perfect and reliable. I do believe in Jesus, and therefore, I also have to believe in the amazing things He said about David. So because I am a Biblical Christian, I have to accept the righteous example of David which Jesus approved of as absolutely true [i.e. Divinely inspired].

 

21. The Seven Examples that Demand True and Complete Repentance From Unlawful Marriage!

>> the false claim :  there are no cases in the Bible where they broke up dar

>> we should have believed Jesus to begin with, but if we need examples of this actually being done, then God has been kind enough to give this to us as well so that we are without excuse.  

>> people that demand a specific verse for breaking up a remarriage are playing the hypocrite

>> You do not have a right to demand from Jesus more than what He already made plain: He said it was adultery and you had better jump to believe it. He does not have to prove to you that He is serious because He is not on trial here, YOU ARE!

>> If He calls it adultery that is all that is needed. If you believe him then you will flee for your life, and if you believe Him you will do all you can to urge people to repent of adultery so they will not perish under the hot wrath of stealing someone that does not belong to you.

>> so many people find so many “contextual” reasons why not one of these examples applies to their immoral relationship, but contextual arguments never excused anyone from not obeying the Scriptures. There is not one example in all the Bible where someone was allowed to continue in an immoral relationship, but every single marriage that was continuous sin was broken up in the Scriptures. It is clear that Jesus call divorce and remarriage immoral when he called it adultery, and because Rom 7 specifies that it is adultery as long as the first spouse is alive, therefore it is obvious that they should be broken up.

>> refine/ enumerate

 

We have heard of the example of David and many other men of God so far throughout this book, but now it is time for an intense climax! God has already told us what to do about divorce and remarriage by example, and seeing that men of God spilled their blood for this teaching, we ought to take fervent heed that we also be found in such faith and greatness in God’s Kingdom like the prophetic examples he left with us to imitate.

 

>> The reality of what was proclaimed hits home when people actually go out and apply it in their generation.

Hold on as we watch men proclaim truth in their generation and call people to repent

>>

 

Ezra and Nehemiah Broke Up Forbidden Marriages

When there were marriages with foreign women among the children of Israel during the time of Ezra and Nehemiah that were contrary to God’s law, these marriages were forcibly broken up to be obedient to God, And some of these marriages had begotten children!

 

Ezr_10:3 CAB Now then let us make a covenant with our God, to put away [κβαλεν – throw out] all the wives [γυνακας – women], and their offspring [τγενμεναξ ατν]as you advise [βολῃ – “want” (NETS)][ not in MT]and let it be done according to the law

 

Ezr_10:10-11 CAB  And Ezrah the priest arose, and said to them, You have broken covenant [συνθετκατε], and have taken [καθσατε – lit. sat down (i.e. in your houses as…)] strange wives [γυνακαςλλοτρας], *to add to [*τοπροσθεναιπ] the trespass [πλημμλειαν] of Israel.  11  Now therefore give praise to the Lord God of our fathers, and do that which is pleasing [ρεστν] in His sight [νπιον ατο], and separate [>> διαστλητε] yourselves from [π] the peoples of the land, and from [π] the strange wives [τν γυναικν τνλλοτρων].

 

[Greek Note: the word “from” (π) is the root concept and vocabulary for ‘divorce’ (ἀπολῦσαι) and ‘divorce certificate’ (βιβλίον ἀποστασίου) for most all of the major New Testament marriage passages (except 1Co_7) – >> Refer back to CH 1 to remember all of these details – In Greek, ending cohabitation and separating “from” (π) strange women includes the core concept of renouncing the marriage which had previously been considered socially acceptable]

 

Ezr_10:16 CAB  And the children of the captivity did thus…

 

Ezr_10:18-19 CAB  And there were found some of [π] the sons of the priests who had taken strange wives [γυνακαςλλοτρας]  19  And they *pledged themselves [*δωκαν χερα ατν – gave their hand] to put away [ξενγκαι – a form of ἐκφέρω – to bear/ “carry” out, i.e. to throw out of their houses (as stated in v. Ezr_10:3)] their wives [γυνακας ατν], and offered a ram of the flock for [περὶ – around/ “concerning”] a trespass offering because of their trespass.

 

Ezr_10:44 CAB All these had taken [λβοσαν] strange wives [γυνακαςλλοτρας – lit. other/ “foreign” women], and [MT adds, “some of them” (WEB)] had begotten sons of them [γννησανξ ατν υος].

 

For what it is worth, an alternative Greek copy of this same account makes this somewhat more specific by saying:

 

1Es_9:36 Brenton  All these had taken [συνῴκισαν – cohabited (with)] strange wives [γυναῖκας ἀλλογενεῖς – lit. women of another genealogy/ race], and they *put them away [* ἀπέλυσαν – essentially the same word as Mat 5; 19; Mar 10; Luk 16; etc.] with [σὺν] their children.

 

[1Es = “1st Esdras” (or Esdras A in the LXX), which is a duplicate Greek translation and compilation of material from 2nd Chronicles (or 2nd Supplements) and Ezra and Nehemiah (or 2nd Esdras), and other sources.]

 

And this crime done in Judah was just as it is also said of Israel:

 

Hos_5:6-7 CAB They shall go with sheep and calves diligently to seek the Lord; but they shall not find Him, for He has withdrawn Himself from them.  7  For they have forsaken the Lord; for strange children have been born to them: now shall the cankerworm devour them and their heritage.

 

This theme of divorcing or “throwing out” forbidden women is repeated over and over again throughout Ezra and Nehemiah:

 

(Ezr_9:1-3, Ezr_9:6, Ezr_9:12)*; Ezr_10:3-5, Ezr_10:10-19, Ezr_10:44; (Neh_9:2; Neh_13:1-9; Neh_10:30); Neh_13:23-30;

 

[* The (parentheses) in these references indicate where foreign men and sons were also put out of Israel]

[LXX Note: The book of “Ezra” is “2Esdras” Ch 1-10 in the LXX, and “Nehemiah” is “2Esdras,” Chapter 11 and onward, (NETS p. 414)]

 

For some reason, although over and over again God clearly and emphatically showed us that we have to leave forbidden marriages that He condemns in order to live, we still think we can go about without repenting like they repented in the Bible and we still think we are forgiven! Without any real Biblical basis, we have now established a perverted gospel that promises “salvation” without repentance, and is this the point of the New Covenant?

It is clear then, that there is a great fundamental gulf dividing Biblical Christianity and modern christianity, since they actually left unlawful marriages all throughout the Scriptures to get right with God, but we think we can continue in such marriages today and still go to heaven, even when Jesus declared our unlawful marriages to be the most monstrous crime of adultery!

Those who repented in the Bible said, “Now then let us make a covenant with our God” (Ezr_10:3 CAB) and it is obvious that we are not in any type of covenant with their God in any sense, because we refuse “to put away all the [forbidden] wives, and their offspring.” Modern christianity is serving a different god, which they boast, ‘would never require such things from his children.’

 

Joh_8:44 CAB You are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father you desire to do…

 

And many will harden their heart against the example of Ezra and Nehemiah and complain by saying this is inapplicable to us today because it is in the Old Testament. But as we have already shown, such arguments ignore the fact that the Scriptures have said,

 

1Co_10:6 KJV …these things were our examples…

 

And

 

2Ti_3:16-17 CAB All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness,  17  that the man of God may be proficient, having been thoroughly equipped for every good work.

 

So then, in what way have the stories of Ezra and Nehemiah been given to us as profitable examples in inspired Scripture for establishing doctrine and doing good work?

 

>> The Words of Ezra (and Neh?) end on putting away forbidden wives

 

---------------------------------------------

This passage as a whole:

Ezr_10:3-44 CAB Now then let us make a covenant with our God, to put away all the wives, and their offspring, <<as you advise:>>  4  arise, and alarm them with the commands of our God; and let it be done according to the law. [MT: “according to the counsel of my lord, and of those who tremble at the commandment of our God; and let it be done according to the law” (WEB)] Rise up, for the matter is upon you; and we are with you. Be strong and do.  5  Then Ezra arose, and caused the rulers, the priests, the Levites, and all Israel, to swear that they would do according to this word. And they swore.  6  And Ezra rose up from before the house of God, and went to the treasury of Johanan the son of Eliashib. And when he came there, he ate no bread, and drank no water, for he mourned over the unfaithfulness of those of the captivity.  7  And they made a proclamation throughout Judah and Jerusalem to all the children of the captivity, that they should assemble at Jerusalem, saying,  8  Everyone who shall not arrive within three days, as is the counsel of the rulers and the elders, all his substance shall be forfeited, and he shall be separated from the congregation of the captivity.  9  So all the men of Judah and Benjamin assembled at Jerusalem within the three days. This was the ninth month. On the twentieth day of the month all the people sat down in the street of the house of the Lord, because of their alarm concerning the word, and because of the storm.  10  And Ezrah the priest arose, and said to them, You have broken covenant, and have taken strange wives, to add to the trespass of Israel.  11  Now therefore give praise to the Lord  of our fathers, and do that which is pleasing in His sight, and separate yourselves from the peoples of the land, and from the strange wives.  12  Then all the congregation answered and said, This your word is powerful upon us to do .  13  But the people are numerous, and the season is stormy, and there is no power to stand without, and the work is more than enough for one day or for two; for we have greatly sinned in this matter.  14  Let now our rulers stand, and for all those in our cities who have taken strange wives, let them come at appointed times, and with them elders from every city, and judges, to turn away the fierce wrath of our God from us concerning this matter.  15  Only Jonathan the son of Asahel, and Jahaziah the son of Tikvah were with me concerning this; and Meshullam and Shabbethai the Levite helped them…  25Jeziah, Malchiah, Mejamin, Eleazar, Asabia, and Benaiah…  40  …Zebina, Jaddai , Joel…  44  All these had taken strange wives, and had begotten sons of them.

Differences in this passage as a whole

>> The end of vs. 3 in the CAB stops short. The WEB says as our lord counciled while the CAB says as you have advised and it does not continue on.

>>vs. 4 also in the CAB is different, with additional things. I highlighted the parts that I think are different.

>> vs. 5 in the WEB it says that the makes it says the got the “chief priests” and the Levites and Israel, where as the CAB distinguishes they got the rulers, the priests, and then the Levites and then all of Israel.

>>vs. 6 “unfaithfulness” in the CAB vs. “trespass” in the WEB, I don’t know if this makes much of a difference here.

vs. 7 >> used by the CAB other versions do not have it.

vs. 9 >> “storm” in CAB “rain” in WEB

vs. 10 >> WEB does not place emphasis on the breaking of the covenant like the CAB does

vs.11 >> “give praise” in the CAB, and “make confession” in the CAB

vs. 12 >> the CAB and the WEB here seems to be saying two different things with the exception of the congregation addressing Ezra, unless the wording of CAB “powerful upon us” is throwing me off like it is hard upon us, but powerful could mean I guess of a strong influence

vs. 14 >> the WEB says “Let now our princes be appointed for all the assembly”

vs. 15 >> This part sounds different to me between the WEB and the CAB, different in the sense that it does not sound like they are saying the same thing

vs. 16 >> WEB says that they “sat”concerning them returning back to their tents

vs. 25 >> Differences in the names between the WEB and the CAB

vs. 37 >> the WEB includes this person “Jaasu” whereas the CAB does not include him

vs. 38 >> “Bani” which is in WEB in not mentioned in CAB. Also it does not phrase it saying that these people are his children in the WEB

vs. 43 >> The Hebrew says “Iddo”

---------------------------------------------

 

We Must Still Obey Ezra and Nehemiah Today In the New Covenant

Forbidden Wives in the New Covenant are Different Now, But They Still Exist

 

The Difference Between Forbidden Spouses

·       We do have an update to God’s laws on forbidden wives in the New Covenant, so we should be diligent to pay attention!

·       Whatever covenant we find ourselves in, it is a consistent principal to put away forbidden spouses.

·       OT – We should take note that during the time of the Law of Moses (including Ezra and Nehemiah’s time) forbidden wives included pagans and those inciting rebellion against God’s Law

·       OT Under the Old Covenant they primarily managed evil-hearted people, and especially because of this they even in some cases killed pagan women among them who swayed the unfaithful nation away from truth (Num_25:1-18). How can hard hearted people maintain polytheistic women, and yet still maintain even an external faithfulness to monotheistically recognize the one true God? – it is evident from the Scriptures that this is primarily why pagan women were either killed or divorced under the Old Covenant.

·       Now We Cannot divorce unbelievers – Though it is still wrong to enter into marriage with unbelievers, yet now, it would be still worse to divorce them under this covenant because Paul, by the Spirit of God, has commanded us not to do this (1Co_7:12-17, 1Co_7:40).

·       No Divorce – Now real Christians are called by faith to ‘bear all things’ (1Co_13:7), and because of this we neither kill nor divorce any of our pagan spouses, but remain faithful to them as much as they permit (1Co_7:11-24) hoping for their salvation (1Co_7:16; 1Pe_3:1; Luk_9:56; Luk_15:10).

·       No Divorce – When it comes to marriages that are not “forbidden,” Christians are not ever allowed to initiate a divorce.

·       No Divorce – There is only one “exception clause” allowing divorce from a lawful spouse in the New Covenant, and that does not include if a spouse is an unbeliever.

·       Remarriage – Under the New Covenant, forbidden wives are primarily those who have already been lawfully married to other people.

·       Summary of Differences – But though there is a shift from internally lost Jews being commanded to put away forbidden wives to maintain monotheism in the nation of Israel, to now calling people to put away any forbidden wives to break away from socially normalized immorality to enter into a heart-purifying covenant with Jesus, there are still forbidden marriages, and if we don’t forsake them, it is clear that we have no inheritance in Jesus’ Kingdom

 

>> But we should take note that though this theoretically could have broken up some first marriages, yet interestingly Malachi points to these as remarriage, not first marriages.

>> The Difference in Forbidden Wives in the Old and New Covenants

 

Luk_14:26-27 WEB If anyone comes to me, and doesn’t hate his own father, mother, wife, children, brothers, and sisters, yes, and his own life [ψυχὴν – soul] also, he can’t be my disciple. 27 Whoever doesn’t bear his own cross, and come after me, can’t be my disciple.

 

Mat_10:37 CAB He who loves father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me. And he who loves son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of Me.

 

Luk_18:29-30 CAB  So He said to them, “Assuredly [ἀμὴν] I say to you, there is no one who has left house or parents or brothers or wife or children, for the sake of the kingdom of God,  30  who shall not receive many times more in this present time, and in the age to come eternal life.”

 

The Similarity Between Forbidden Spouses

>>! In Hebrew and Greek: ‘Other women’ is the same way you say ‘someone else’s woman,’ which is why Strong’s says it can mean adultery (H5237)

Because of these Scriptures, it is abundantly clear that whether it is Ezra and Nehemiah’s day of forbidden wives or our day of forbidden wives, it is clear from these things that whoever does not forsake them has nothing to do with the Biblical Christianity Jesus established and legislated for those who would forsake all to enter His kingdom. But if we stagger at the apparent “difference” between Ezra and Nehemiah’s break up of forbidden wives and our forbidden wives today, we should consider at least three very important realities:

 

(1) In some great mystery, even though there forbidden wives were somewhat different than ours, yet Malachi still linked their situation with divorces which God refused to recognize (Malachi 2) and remarrying people they were not permitted to.

 

(2) Even though the men themselves did not commit adultery per say (because polygamy was allowed at that time), yet it is clear that the women they divorced were always defiled when they remarried (Deu_24:4; Jer_2:7, Jer_2:23; Jer_3:1-2), and this “defilement” is what Jesus calls “adultery” in the New Covenant (Mat_5:31-32).

>>! refer back to intro section where I gave many more refs for defilement

 

(3) Malachi, also went on to speak against adultery in chapter 3, and foretold of two future messengers in the New Covenant, who would also end up calling people to leave forbidden wives when divorce and remarriage would one day be adultery in the same way for both men and women (Mar_10:10-12)…

 

Genesis 20!

 

I am not officially counting this as one of the seven since they did not get remarried, but it still teaches the same thing as the seven, even though a ‘full remarriage’ was not broken up

 

Most people think that Abimelech might have been guilty because Abraham had not divorced Sarah. But consider very seriously what we are taught when Jesus says that divorce and remarriage is adultery: while we are hanging around doubting about Abraham not giving a divorce certificate to Sarah, Jesus comes along and teaches ujs that even if he had given such a certificate it would still be adultery. And notice what the solution is in Gen 20 - You have to give Sarah back to her real husband! Yet to this people will protest and say, ‘but that’s only because he had not divorced and consummated a remarriage. After that happen then you cannot demand that they break it up to return to the first husband”

But again, notice what Jesus teaches us when He says divorce and remarriage is adultery. That clearly means that even if Abraham had given Sarah a divorce certificate and Pharaoh had remarried her, even in this case Jesus still calls it adultery, just like when Abraham did not divorce her, and the king had not touched her.

So while we mope about thinking that Abraham’s situation was different and we all know that Pharaoh almost committed adultery, Jesus stand clearly against us proclaiming that even when divorce and remarriage happen, this is still adultery, just as it was about to be for this Pharaoh against Abraham and his wife.

While we are sitting around saying that divorce and remarriage is different than Abraham and Sarah’s situation, Jesus has extremely clearly said they are the same by calling divorce and remarriage adultery. And what is the solution given to Pharaoh? - Restore the man his wife!

 

John The Baptist – The First Martyr for God’s New Testament Teaching Against Adultery

>> I need to make sure that the main emphasis is the simplicity of this matter: The fact that Herodias was still married to her brother is proof that divorce does not actually stop someone from being one flesh. If divorce ended one flesh then Philip could have successfully divorced Herodias and she would no longer be related by marriage to his brother, and could have married her without the rebuke of John. If we limit this to incest as most do, then we need to repent because after John made this heroic stand, Jesus turned to this and said that this applied to “whosoever” NOT just cases of incest. If Jesus said that John’s actions against remarriage applied to remarriage, and we decide to say that it only applied to incest, then we are not christians and need to repent and make a basic decision that we are going to believe Jesus and the Bible.

>> Jesus said that John the Baptist was preaching the NT not about incest.

 

We could continue here as we have done in previous places, directly and plainly addressing the countless technical doctrinal aspects of this issue, showing many clear passages declaring remarriage after divorce to be an adulterous relationship condemned by God, and most church leaders would still deny this reality. But if you have any heart at all for Jesus, how could you deny the example of the heroic martyrdom of a man consumed with Jesus* who gave up his life to preach against the sinful lifestyle of an adulterous remarriage? And how could you ignore the amazing testimony of approval given to this same martyr and His sacrificial stance by Jesus Himself? Have you no courage in your bones that may resonate with the faith of this man who spilled his blood for this truth?

 

[* Mat_3:11-17; Mar_1:2-3, Mar_1:7-8; (Luk_1:17), Luk_1:76-77; Luk_3:15-17; Joh_1:15, Joh_1:23, Joh_1:26-37; Joh_3:23-36; Joh_5:33-35; Act_13:24-25; Act_19:4]

 

How could you stop up your ears and ignore the example of this man whose name was John the Baptist, who, up to that point was the greatest man born of women other than Jesus, and how could you believe anything other than the heroic cause he died for, and seeing this testimony, how could you live for a gospel that proclaimed anything other than a total, hard-core stance against the adultery of remarriage after divorce (Mat_11:11-15)?

If you hate Jesus to begin with then none of these appeals will find a common yearning in your heart, but if you have fallen in Love with the real Jesus from heaven and are still wavering on this point of truth I am urging you to embrace this life, because if you really love Jesus, then in this truth your love is perfected, and you know this all the more because God’s Spirit testifies loud and clear in accordance with the example given to us by John the Baptist, and everyone who is stricken with a love for truth is eagerly compelled toward this light (see Mat_11:11-12 quoted later).

 

Mar_6:17-18 CAB  For Herod himself had sent and laid hold of John, and bound him in prison for the sake of Herodias, his brother Philip’s wife; because he had married her.  18  For John would say to Herod, “It is not lawful for you to have your brother’s wife.”

 

Mat_14:10 CAB  And having sent, he beheaded John in the prison.

 

Mat_17:12-13 CAB  But I say to you that Elijah has come already, and they did not recognize him, but did to him whatever they desired. Thus also the Son of Man is about to suffer by them.”  13  Then the disciples understood that He spoke to them of John the Baptist.

 

John’s resulting death is recorded in: Mat_14:1-13; Mat_17:12-13; Mar_6:14-32; Mar_9:12-13; Luk_9:7-10; (Also see Mat_21:35-36; Mat_22:6)

 

Mat_11:11-12 CAB  “Assuredly I say to you, among those born of women there has not risen one greater than John the Baptist; but he that is least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he.  12  And from the days of John the Baptist until now the kingdom of heaven suffers violence, and violent men seize it.

 

Here the Bible demonstrates that despite the legal remarriage of Herodias, God testified through John that she was still under her one flesh covenant to Philip [as in “πανδρος” (hupandros) as used in Rom_7:2]! But some have thought that John’s preaching against the remarriage was because of an Old Testament command (See Lev_20:21). We cannot say this honestly, first, because the Bible explicitly tells us that when John preached, he preached the Kingdom of God (Luk_16:16), leaving us unable to truthfully dismiss his actions as though they were irrelevant to our own situations by attributing them to a command in the Old Testament that almost never applies to our immoral marriages that we deal with today. Secondly, Jesus approval of John’s actions did not make them out as though they were simply defending the Mosaic Law (as any other good Jew might), but on the contrary, Jesus was certain to link John’s revolutionary actions to the particular teaching of the New Covenant concerning divorce and remarriage which basically no one else was preaching!

 

>>R

Luk_16:14-18 CAB  Now the Pharisees, who were lovers of money, were hearing all these things, and they were mocking Him. 15 And He said to them, “You are those who justify yourselves before men, but God knows your hearts. Because that which is exalted among men is an abomination before God.  16  The law and the prophets were until John. <<Since>>[source text variation!] that time the kingdom of God has been preached, and everyone enters forcibly into it.  17  And it is easier for heaven and earth to pass away than for one tittle [i.e. smallest (horn-like) Hebrew character] of the law to fail.  18  Everyone who divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery G3431; and everyone who marries a woman who is divorced from her husband commits adultery G3431.

>> This is quoted later (just as it is here, and as: Luk_16:18 (previously & later)) – so I would need to update it there too

 

If Jesus linked John’s preaching against remarriage with the particularly New Covenant proclamation, then we would be unreasonable to link it backward to a teaching already given by the Old Covenant. This would be a pitiful mistake to make, especially after Jesus did so much to profoundly link it with the demands of the New Covenant. And this linking of John to the New Testament teaching of divorce and remarriage is consistent with what was prophesied in Malachi (Mal_2:11, Mal_2:13-17Mal_3:1-3. It is wrong and even inconsistent to say that John is harping on a previously establish Old Testament law that everyone already knew (as is forbidden in places like Heb_6:1-2), when he is repeatedly linked to pioneering truth and bringing in the first, fresh words of New Covenant teaching.

 

The Adventure that John the Baptist Calls Us To

Will we sit back and play church as usual, or will we take the heroic call of John’s life and give our lives away for the truth of the Gospel, like He did, and go out with a flame?

 

Joh_5:33, Joh_5:35 CAB …John… has testified to the truth… 35 He was the burning and shining lamp…

 

And again Jesus says to His disciples:

 

Mat_5:16 CAB …let your light shine [“οὕτω”: in this way] before men, so that they may see your good works, and they may glorify your Father who is in heaven.

 

And do we often wonder why our lives are so boring and uneventful? I’m pleading with you: Embrace the revolution!

I have found that church people who live in sin are typically complacent toward such greatness and will often not lift a finger to actually please God in this way.

What kind of a Legacy, and inscription on your tomb-stone, and what kind of Eulogy are you willing to leave whenever you may die? What kind of a message do you want to proclaim when you pass out of this life? After meeting and talking with countless pastors in America, I have found that most all of the preachers that I have personally met would prefer a cozy and jolly legacy that looked more like Santa clause than Moses! And quite typically they are even proud of this shame and completely despise the Biblical greatness they have rejected.

If you are not lusting after the greatness of people in the Bible like John the Baptist, then you need to repent and become a real Christian. It is amazing that Jesus linked the “bright and shinning” life of truth that we should go after with a man named John who stood up for the Biblical teaching against divorce and remarriage, even unto death!

>> Jesus linked John’s Testimony to divorce and remarriage

 

The Divine Proclamation of The Seven Examples!

The Summaries of this great matter

 

When you talk about repenting of adulterous remarriage, so many people say, “but there are no examples of breaking up remarriages in the Bible” – and I say, “Excuse me?” Let it stand for all time: there are seven examples in the Scriptures of people who were used to demand breaking up unlawful marriages

 

(1) David – He actually, literally broke up a remarriage by force, and returned his remarried spouse to himself for the rest of their lives!

(2) Jeremiah – God reaffirmed David’s actions in the Spirit by prophesying in the same way for His divorced and remarried bride to return to Himself!

(3) Malachi – Addressed the divorce and remarriage of His day and spoke of two coming messengers who would take a fervent stand against adultery, and in the mean time prepared a remnant people for the repentance from these unlawful relationships that would be brought about and carried out through two people around his time who were used to rebuild Jerusalem…

(4) Ezra – Called the who land to repentance which resulted in breaking up unlawful marriages

(5) Nehemiah – a man who also responded in zeal along with Ezra to break up forbidden marriages at multiple times, reinforcing the Words given through Malachi against the treachery of these men

(6) John the Baptist – pioneered the proclamation of the New Covenant preparing the way for Jesus, and literally spilled his blood being unjustly murdered in his astounding stand against adulterous remarriage!

(7) Jesus – in Luk_16 approved of the martyrdom of John the Baptist, directly linking it with the New Covenant teaching against adulterous remarriage, following the same pattern spoken through Malachi by linking the “messengers of the covenant” (Jesus and John) with their prophesied condemnation of divorce (Malachi 2), and testimony against the adultery of remarriage (Malachi 3)

 

Let no more nonsense be propagated! From the faithful and profound foreshadowing examples of the righteous and prophetic David, to the demands announced and proclaimed by Jesus, the Scriptures tell us at least seven times by example that we must repent and break up the adultery of unlawful marriages. While so many debate theologies these seven examples demand obedience in our day, because you cannot contradict what these men actually did.

The Scriptures have perfectly instructed us. Seven times they demand from us obedience by example. It is time to repent of adulterous remarriage.

 

Another summary:

After interacting with so many church people, I was completely dumbfounded that this was the majority of the divorce and remarriage issue when dealing with people: You cannot live in sin and go to heaven. It is because people have first bee...n so confused under churchy propaganda so that they cannot believe this very simple and straight-forward reality that they completely trip when you talk to them about repenting of adulterous remarriage. We have got to stop sleeping with the prostitute spiritually, then it, of course, makes complete sense to not commit adultery physically.


Chapter 3 “The Exception Clause”

>> add important Talmud quotes, (esp. ones like, the nations do not understand Betrothal)

>> Add break down section of Gen_34:1-31 To define prostitution/ “fornication”

 

1. Introductory Facts About the Exception Clause

> Foundation | Background | Backdrop | Basis

 

What is “The Exception Clause”?

In a few powerful Words, Jesus all at once completely condemned the wickedness of the hard-hearted Jews who divorced their wives and sent them out of their houses on the basis of the permission in Deu_24:1-4. (See Mat_19:3-8; Mar_10:3-9). On top of this Jesus condemned them further by announcing that remarriage was actually adultery, which now left the Pharisees as hard hearted adulterers under Jesus’ law! (Compare Mat_19:9; Mar_10:10-12; Mat_5:31-32; Luk_16:14-18).

When people talk about the “exception clause” today they are usually referring to Mat_19:9, because they like to think that it allows an exception to both divorce and remarry without such sin. If you press people for more, you can usually get them to admit that the exception is actually first taught by Jesus in Mat_5:31-32, but they rarely like to use this passage as the bases for what they believe because they don’t really have that many convincing ideas on how to make it look like the exception is permitting remarriage as well as divorce in that passage. But why would the same teaching in two different places within the same book leave the readers with two very different conclusions? And with all of the other passages* that teach on marriage and divorce, why is it that the exception clause is not even mentioned once anywhere else in the entire New Testament beyond Matthew?

My great aspiration is that by the end of this chapter you will be able to see that the exception clause is not at all the great “loophole” to Jesus’ teaching to allow divorce and remarriage as most people have made it out to be.

 

[* Most of these marriage passages are covered in depth in chapter 2, and are also referenced throughout this chapter]

 

The great problem with these common abuses is that they not only contradict history, but also the Scriptures themselves, including the very passage that

Did you know that…

 

I urge those reading this to consider what God has already said in answer to this exception clause which I have sought to compile into this chapter.

 

Who is sufficient to tackle all of these things?

Yet, I have laid out some truth in this next chapter to confront the.

But at the very basis of these exceptions lies a particular Jewishness we have ignored, and a vast context and background we have neglected to consider and apply, and countless Scriptures we have contradicted in order to maintain our very modern understanding of the exception clause.

 

What’s Behind the Modern Use of “The Exception Clause”? – Wicked People Always Want to Break God’s Yokes

We have seen through many verses so far that the major and clear emphasis throughout the Bible on marriage is that it is a life-long permanent unbreakable union sealed by God.  The Bible does much to communicate with certainty that only death ends this covenant.

Despite this, man’s heart still looks for excuses and ways out. Unfortunately, the wicked heart of man will always seek to dismiss himself from the responsibility of the stringent demands and “restrictions” of righteousness. This unfaithfulness is described by the Psalmist who speaks of the wicked, starting first by quoting his plot:

 

Psa_2:3-5 CAB  saying, Let us break through Their bonds, and cast away Their yoke [or fastener] from us.  4  He that dwells in the heavens shall laugh them to scorn, and the Lord shall mock them.  5  Then shall He speak to them in His anger, and trouble them in His fury.

Psa_2:3-5 WEB  “Let’s break their bonds apart, And cast away their cords from us.”  4  He who sits in the heavens will laugh. The Lord will have them in derision.  5  Then he will speak to them in his anger, And terrify them in his wrath

 

Note: Here in the LXX, this is the same root word which Jesus uses to describe marriage, when He calls it a ‘yoke’ or ‘fastener,’ (i.e. “…what God has fastened/ yoked together…” Mat_19:6).

> and our age wants to through it off of us as a burden!

 

The stakes are high. May we escape this judgment. May we never be found as those who seek to “break bonds” (including marriage “yokes”) that God has made binding. But because of his wicked nature, man’s rebellion will consistently seek to deny every “bond” and “yoke” of righteousness, including that of marriage

> contrasted with the fact that: God has especially sealed this one flesh by His own power and declared it “unbreakable.” 

We can see this wickedness greatly manifested quite often in the realm of what many often call “The Exception Clause.” In many cases, this becomes the first step people take in attempting to “break” the “bond” of marriage in this way.  It is the most popular misrepresentation that people have used to teach that marriage could be dissolved apart from death, if their spouse commits adultery. Although the Scriptures never actually say this, people usually teach this in reference to two passages in Matthew:

 

Mat_5:32 KJB …whoever divorces his wife, except for a report of prostitution [i.e. fornication] , causes her to commit adultery…

 

Mat_19:9 KJB …And I say to you, anyone divorces his wife, only for prostitution [i.e. fornication]

 

But although this “exception” is made for limited reasons and specifically explained by passages in Matthew, and others elsewhere, it never attempts to indicate that the one flesh bond is “broken” as the majority of Protestants would like to have it say. But before we say much in the way of direct explanation, we need to thoroughly consider some very big picture problems and wide-spread misunderstandings…

    We can see the faultiness of these presumptions from the points made shortly, and the first step toward this that I experienced was coming to terms with what I call the “Red Flag” in modern Christianities exception clause. We can start to see this if we look at an overview of what some call “The Law of Marriage” in Scripture:

 

Common Myths About Adultery Freeing a Person to Remarry

Did you know the saying “god helps those who help themselves” is not in the Bible? This saying actually came to us originally through an ancient pagan (polytheistic) story called, “Hercules and the Wagoneer,” and was a proverb about the Greek gods helping those who help themselves, and was eventually rephrased, reintroduced and re-popularized through Benjamin Franklin (Poor Richard’s Almanac in 1757, Wiki says: 1736) so it could then intrude among professing (but uninformed) monotheists. This pagan saying is not only not in the Bible at all, but it is actually very much contrary to everything the Bible teaches (ex. Rom_5:6-8; Eph_2:1-10; Isa_25:4; Also carefully compare and consider: Isa_45:2; Exo_14:13; 1Sa_12:16; Luk_24:49/ Act_1:4, Act_1:8; Lam_3:26; Mat_10:19-20/ Luk_12:11-12; 1Ch_14:14-15; Gen_49:18; Jer_3:23; 2Sa_6:1 and 1Ch_13). How about “God works in mysterious ways” and “Cleanliness is next to godliness,”? – It turns out that many of our charming (but sometimes unbiblical) sayings are not in the Bible at all.

http://www.blueletterbible.org/faq/sayings.cfm

http://www.fbcvilonia.com/sermons/lies/helps.htm

So often, humans eagerly repeat faulty information, even when it has no real bases at all. Most of us all know that there was a time when people, even church leaders, commonly promoted the idea that the earth was flat. In the same way nearly everywhere I have gone, especially among church people, it is commonly repeated that a person is allowed to both divorce and marry another if their spouse cheats on them: (1) There are some places in the Bible that tolerated divorce and remarriage, but it was never because a spouse was divorced for adultery (because this was to be punished by death); (2) Again, even in the one case where divorce is righteously given in the New Covenant, remarriage is not allowed. – It may come as a surprise to many who read this and hear this for the first time, but there is nowhere in all of Scripture where it says that a person can divorce and remarry if their spouse is unfaithful. While there are places in the Old Testament where a person is commanded to have their wife killed if she committed adultery (Lev_20:10; Deu_22:22-24) there are no actual places in Scripture, Old or New Testament, that sanction divorce and remarriage for adultery. “Execution and remarriage” was once a possibility under God in some cases of adultery, and divorce without remarriage is now a possibility (in the one case of prostitution) but divorce and remarriage (although we know it has happened in spite of the Scriptures) has never been a moral solution offered by any Scripture for how people ought to deal with adultery.

Many clever myths have some basis for being believed and repeated, just as the earth seemed to be flat to many people’s observation. So also many of our cheap ‘bible versions’ are at the forefront of trying to reinforce common myths by often adding extra words to reinforce the common insanity held by church goers, although these things have no real basis in the Hebrew or Greek Bible (as we can see in a moment). But while misperceptions about the nature of the earth are very unfortunate, when it comes to myths about marriage the stakes are much higher, and the (moral) consequences much more destructive when people fall due to misperception and misinformation.

Just as Benjamin Franklin was used to take a wicked pagan belief and repackage it so that he ended up enabling professing monotheists to fulfill pagan philosophical lusts by cloaking it as a monotheistic (and eventually “christian”) saying, so also people who are supposed to be representing the Bible to us today have taken wicked pagan lusts contrary to everything Jesus actually taught, and passed them off as having somehow originated in the Bible. But if you help yourself to another spouse after the first one was unfaithful, beware, because you have just established yourself in the realm of paganism! This is because in the realm of reverencing and worshiping demons, truly “the gods help them that help themselves” as Aesop (620-564 BC) is said to report to us, but as for Jesus and the Bible, God has never promoted such things for us.

    I know that saying all of this, raises lots of questions, but please hold on and be diligent in the following sections and chapters as we take a look at all of the Scriptures that answer these questions.

>> McFall: “But Yahweh says of them, “they are adulteresses” (23:45). The

punishment for adultery is death, so Yahweh, consistent with His own Torah law, commands, “Bring

up against them an assembly, . . . and they have cast at them the stone of the assembly, and cut them

down with their swords. Their sons and their daughters they do slay and their houses with fire they

do burn, . . . and the sins of your idols you [both][ do bear.” This last sentence shows that the ‘sins’

are apostasy and unfaithfulness in keeping Yahweh’s Torah, and the terms of His Covenant as laid

out in the Book of Deuteronomy.” For these two ‘wives’ of Yahweh, there was to be no divorce for

adultery, only death.”

 

Note: with these next two points we are not primarily focused on “proving” anything yet, but are mostly introducing some very basic considerations that should be taken into account while reading throughout the rest of this book. \/

>>H

 

Adultery Cannot Be The One Exception Allowing Divorce

Please carefully consider the problems and contradictions that arise if you say adultery is the exception for divorce in Matthew 5

 

·       “Heaven” proves that adultery cannot be the exception – After Jesus takes His Bride (the assembly of real disciples) home with Him, there is no divorce. The parable has to be consistent in order to be a worthy parable: if God may temporarily divorce His bride before marriage (which He in fact does do in the Old Testament) and there is no divorce after the divine marriage, then it absolutely has to be the same way for moral marriage among humans today [Note: this is covered in much more detail toward the end of this chapter]

·       If you don’t forgive people (including spouses) from the heart, even ‘seventy times seven,’ neither will God forgive you

·        The women married to lost men were never permitted to divorce their mostly immoral pagan husbands in first Corinthians seven. [Note: this is set to be more thoroughly covered in Chapter 4 if God permits]

·       In just about every case where a couple wants to divorce, eventually someone has done or will do something adulterous. If the “one exception” were adultery, then it would no longer be an exception, but the standard practice. (This kind of explains why so many people are getting divorced and remarried in the church today doesn’t it?). Adultery as the “exception” to divorce will inevitably make the few who “do not get divorced” the real exception to the rule when all is said and done, and our modern cultures are already well advanced along these lines.

·       Jesus repeatedly uses the word adultery throughout the surrounding context of the exception clause. As some have said: if adultery were the exception which Jesus desired to establish, there is absolutely no reason why He should suddenly switch words at this critical point, however, if Jesus desired to distinguish the exception from adultery then this would be perfectly reasonable grounds for Jesus to switch words when it came time for the exception – Adultery in Greek is “μοιχάω” (moichaō), (G3429) and is used in Mat_5:27 (1 time), v. Mat_5:28 (1 time), v. Mat_5:32 (2 times). – This makes four times which Jesus uses the word “adultery” [“μοιχάω” (moichaō)] in Matthew five, and it is only when He gets to the exception that he switches the word to “πορνείᾳ” (porneia), (G4202). – saying adultery is the exception leaves no reasonable explanation for this strategic and particular application of these words

 

> Mat 19:9 (2)

 

>> it is absolutely clear that Jesus’ primary aim is to oppose and condemn divorce and remarriage. Whatever the exception is it has to be restricted if we are going to be honest with the consistent character of Jesus.

 

As a righteous prophet, Hosea did not divorce his wife for adultery, but forgave her, and repeatedly called her back to himself. Jesus said that those in His New Covenant would be like the prophets (___).

Why do we think that ‘men of God in the Bible’ had to bear with their adulterous spouses, but god wants us to be happy, and this means we can divorce our spouses? Why do we think God is obligated to forgive us for our unfaithfulness but we don’t have to forgive our spouses for theirs?

 

You Cannot Make Jesus out to contradict His Own Rule

Jesus said you cannot separate what God has yoked. This was an absolute statement. You cannot suppose that Jesus changed His position when pressured further by the Pharisees. We should all know that Jesus would never do that and concede to the pressure of the hypocrites.

 

Jesus was accustomed to make extreme and radical statements. We know that this is why Jesus brought about a revolution of truth. Jesus did not back off and tone down His message when the Pharisees challenged Him.

 

Note: we discuss this further toward the end of this chapter

 

Adultery Cannot Allow Remarriage

We can say with even more certainty that it is impossible that adultery should allow remarriage

 

If you say that adultery allows remarriage…

·       You make adultery and or remarriage (committed by the first guilty spouse) permit the second, initially innocent spouse to repeat the very same crime (remarriage) which Jesus condemned in the first place

·       You presume to say that one person’s sin makes it non-sinful for the other person to turn around and do the exact same thing!

·       You forget a most basic element of ‘childhood morality’ – “Two wrongs do not make a right”

·       You are not preaching anything better than “An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth,” – but even with this law Jesus amended the standards for the New Covenant (Mat_5:38-48), and in fact, you are promoting something much worse than this!

·       As some say: If adultery frees the innocent spouse, an innocent spouse can become “unmarried” from their spouse and be living in fornication with them without even knowing it, all while remaining faithful to their God-joined spouse, (whom we now say is not their spouse, if indeed adultery ends one flesh)

·       You make at least one person in every divorce allowed to remarry because, after divorce, nearly everyone gets remarried. – This means that at least half of all remarriage would not be adultery like Jesus said it was, and if Jesus was a liar, then we have no hope at all for any truth to begin with!

·       You ignore the clarifying, universal statement which Jesus gave after both exception statements (Mat 5 and 19): ‘whoever marries her who is divorced commits adultery’ – It is very clear that Jesus still condemns remarriage as adultery, whether or not a woman is innocent or guilty.

 

Remarriage cannot be allowed because of adultery because that would mean that doing the very crime which God hates (adultery) would free the other spouse to do that very same act (by remarriage) which He sets out to forbid in the first place!

 

We are not living under an eye for an eye covenant

If it sounds fair to the flesh then it is obvious you have found a way to rebel against the strict commands of Jesus, since His disciples saw it as being so intolerable of a standard that they thought it better never to marry

 

Jesus did not tell the Pharisees that they could divorce the woman taken in adultery

>> Need to add “adultery” and or “remarriage” here… or something

>> Adultery cannot be a repeated sin if it ended one flesh

>> Adultery is adultery because a marriage solidly refuses to give way to the sin, but stand in testimony against it.

>> you could become unmarried without knowing it

 

BIG Dilemma: The Exception is Only in Matthew!

Not only is the exception not “adultery” as most assume it is, but it is a big deal to notice that it is only in the Gospel of Matthew:

 

Chart: The 7 Primary, New Covenant Passages on the Marriage Law

1

Mat_5:27-32

← Exceptive statements only in Matthew

2

Mat_19:3-10

5

Rom_7:2-3

3

Mar_10:2-12

6

1Co_7:10-11

4

Luk_16:16-18

7

1Co_7:39

 

To Mark’s predominantly Gentile audience, to Luke’s prestigious Theophilus (who received a thorough and accurate account), to the Corinthians, and even to the Romans there was not even a hint of an exception given (especially in the Greek) when presenting the Law of marriage, divorce and remarriage!

Why are they not given one? If anyone should be informed of such a defining and altering exception, shouldn’t it be someone as eager and well attested as the ‘Most Excellent Theophilus’ (Luk_1:1) is evidenced to be?  Doesn’t Luke say that he wrote it to Theophilus according to [καθεξῆς] the thoroughness of, “…having traced the course [παρηκολουθηκότι G3877 V-RAP-DSM] of all things *accurately from the first” (Luk_1:3 WEB)?

 

[* ἀκριβῶς (akribōs) G199 – i.e. thoroughly, to the “uttermost point” (this is where we get our word “accurate” from)]

 

If the exception is what we usually make it out to be, we should consider all of the problems that this raises… and we can start with the fact that it is not practical that such an important and defining detail would have been neglected to every other audience besides Matthew’s, especially when someone as exact and thorough as Luke is writing (not to mention the thoroughness of Paul’s letter on this to the Corinthians)!

The fact that the majority of all the Bible verses on “The Law of Marriage” seem to make it absolute, while Matthew is used by preachers to teach that it is not, is the conflict that I call the “Red Flag” of divorce and remarriage when it comes to the exception clause.  If five passages clearly make absolute statements and Matthew is used by people to make them “not absolute,” we ought to question our usage of Matthew and look carefully into what we have done that may have distorted it out of being consistent with the absoluteness of the outnumbering clearer verses. We should not overthrow the clear and absolute consensus of many Scriptures to establish and hold to what ends up being a shaky understanding of one passage.

Obviously, the Bible is not contradictory, but what we have made of it in English is highly problematic.  Seeing these things, I would hope for us that there would be something of a “Red Flag” to us saying, “Something’s missing in our understanding of Matthew and this teaching” – seeing that what we think is a wide exception was actually deemed non-critical to mention in the other references as we have just seen. If this teaching can stand and be proclaimed with or without this exception, then it is obvious that it is not a defining element of it, and if the exception, is in fact, not a huge exception that defines this entire teaching, then we have certainly done something very wrong in our interpretation of it!

If Matthew’s exception was “highly altering” as we use it in the church, then it should have also been included in all of the passages. But if it is completely compliant with the absoluteness of the other passages, then we can easily understand that it addressed something particular to Matthew’s audience that did not alter the teaching given in the other accounts.

Doesn’t it seem far more likely that the message is uniform, rather than suggesting that there were very different things taught to different audiences by interpreting Matthew the way we do? Do we assume (as some heretics do) that all of the other passages were wrong, and it took the corrective writing of Matthew to straighten things out? – If we are anything “Christian” at all, we know this is impossible.

Because of all of this, I hope you can see that this exception begs for explanation in light of what most people have taught about marriage today, much in the name of Matthew’s exception.

 

So why is the exception only in Matthew and not in the other five references?

2. Does Porneia Show that the Exception Is for Adultery or Prostitution/ “Fornication”?

In Jewish culture, divorce regularly happened before and after certain couples got married (Mat_1:18-19). In this section we need to explore which of these cases are intended in Jesus’ exception.

> Questions and Clarifications I still need to Add

>> Biggest Porneia Summary!

- More often then not, it speaks of an unmarried immorality, but it is by no means limited to this! It very frequently refers to many other immoralities besides fornication. The main consideration here is not that it always means fornication, but that it can refer to fornication, and in most cases that is what it is addressing.

- Betrothal is the only time which adultery and porneia can be applied while still being unwedded.

- When speaking of Greek: prostitution always speaks of immorality between two or more people not married to each other, and this is usually committed by people who are not married at all.

- Before becoming one flesh you can only commit porneia, but after being bound unto a spouse you can commit porneia and adultery. Sometimes it is stated this way, where porneia is used interchangeably with adultery, and at other times they are contrasted in order to indicate what only an unmarried person can do, and what only a married person can do. Both of these things frequently happen throughout the Scriptures, (especially in the LXX) and it is completely up to the context and usage to determine if a possible interchangability (between prostitution and adultery) is being used, or if a point of contrast is being made between fornication before marriage and adultery after marriage.

Most all people say that porneia always includes every kind of sexual immorality and a small minority of people say it always only includes fornication, but the point of honesty that we all need to come to is to admit that both of these things happen and both are potentially possible uses of porneia. The real big question here is not what does porneia always mean, but, in which sense does Jesus use porneia in Matthew?? If we can answer this basic question, then it can greatly help us begin to understand the exception clause in Matthew.

The question we need to ask ourselves is not simply, “what does the dictionary say?” but how those potential definitions are being used in a given case in the Scriptures. This is not a lexical (dictionary) question, but a question of particular application.

>> Although you cannot commit adultery until you are bound to a spouse, after you are bound to a spouse you can commit adultery and

>> Add: In betrothal, porneia is said to be a sin against her father, therefore it cannot pertain to adultery against her husband in this case.

>> The main command Jesus gave was not to put space between. But why do we assume that Jesus altered His absolute statement when a betrothal exception would have Jesus in perfect agreement with His absolute statement? Real Christians know that there is never a need to alter the extreme Words that Jesus frequently spoke. And I am encouraging us to consider that though many have thought that Jesus recoiled and changed His extreme statements about marriage, we do not have to think this way. The perception where we think Jesus necessarily did this is an unnecessary conclusion.

>> (unless of course we want to be lawless antichrist pagans). Jesus’ Words are always reliable and true. We need not incite rebellion in people’s lawless hearts by snake-ishly saying that ‘God did not mean that.’

If we can come to a point to where we actually like Jesus and are real Christians who acknowledge the Words of Jesus, then we can proceed.

I am writing to people who have the basic dignity, truthfulness, integrity and love for truth who don’t go around playing pagan games over the Scriptures acting like we don’t have to take the Bible seriously. If you say that we can take God’s Words figuratively as hyperboles when He has not told us to, then I along with God am rejecting your soul until you may come to a time of repentance; if this happens we can move on.

---------------

>> I want to make this as absolutely and abundantly clear as possible: A betrothal exception does not hinge on the meaning of porneia as so many people have misunderstood.

>> We really need to get “unstuck” off of this word when it comes to actually proving what the exception means

>> The fact that porneia usually speaks of unmarried situations does not completely prove betrothal and the fact that it is sometimes applied to adulterous situations or other cases does not disprove a betrothal exception either.

>> The question of whether or not betrothal is the exception needs to be answered…

>> Add Greek here, up front

>>Add: one flesh can happen before a wedding! - Adam – I now pronounce you - one spirit with

 

The Very Basics of “Fornication” vs. “Adultery” in English

When talking about the exception clause it sometimes becomes necessary to pause and first establish some basic English vocabulary so we can know what we are talking about in our own language before moving on into Greek and the thorough details behind the exception clause in Matthew. If we just start with looking at English, I find that so many people don’t know, or are not sure what the difference is between fornication and adultery in their own language.

 

Note: I am only giving a very basic, and simplified explanation here. For a much more thorough explanation for the English terminology summarized here, see the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research

 

(1) Fornication is basically “voluntary sexual intercourse engaged in by an unmarried person”

 

[American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 4th edition, “fornication,” http://www.yourdictionary.com/fornication (accessed January 12, 2011).]

 

Of course, beyond this basic, short definition there are many variations, extensions, and even misunderstandings to this (some of which we are about to cover in a bit), but this definition is the basic underlying definition for a number of languages, including American English (which is generally the definition I am using for the purposes of this book).  Unfortunately, so many well-meaning people have confused “fornication” with so many other things, including “adultery.”

 

(2) Adultery is basically “voluntary sexual intercourse between a married person and someone other than his or her lawful spouse.”

 

[Random House Unabridged Dictionary, “adultery,” http://dictionary.infoplease.com/adultery (accessed January 12, 2011).]

 

So, for a very basic, simple, big-picture English understanding, fornication is sex before marriage, and adultery is sex outside of an existing marriage. Even when reading English words in relatively accurate English Bible translations we should be able to recognize that both fornication before entering marriage and adultery after entering marriage are sexual sins that God condemns with fervent opposition and warnings of eternal fire.

>> explain somewhere: Fornication happens to most often occur as prostitution in the Biblical context, because women very few other outlets (or even motivations) for sex before marriage

 

Scenarios of Sexual Sin

 

Scenario 1

Unmarried Person (commits fornication) + Unmarried Person (commits fornication)

In this case neither person commits “adultery,” because neither person is married. Both people commit fornication.

 

Scenario 2

Married Person (commits adultery) + Married Person (commits adultery)

In this case neither person commits “fornication,” because both of these people are married to different people. Both people commit adultery.

 

Scenario 3

Unmarried Person (commits fornication) + Married Person (commits adultery)

·       Although the unmarried person’s personal crime may be considered one of “fornication” we see that the unmarried person may join in adultery with a married person;

·       In the same way, a married person may participate in an unmarried person’s “fornication,” yet the married person’s personal crime is specifically called “adultery (compare Pro_6:26 with Pro_6:32);

·       As a “combined crime” this scenario is sometimes called, “single adultery” (see Mat_5:27-30 and compare Lev_20:10) because although one person may indeed be “single,” yet the married person brings “adultery” into the scenario, and this adulterous aspect can overtake the “unmarried” aspect and end up summarizing the whole crime as “adultery”;

·       Because of this, fornication may sometimes include adultery by extension, and adultery may include cases where there is fornication, yet fornication generally speaks of an “unmarried” aspect of a crime, while adultery speaks of an aspect where someone is sinning against their marriage.

 

Porneia – One of the Main Exception Words We Need to Understand

When Jesus says, ‘except for a word [or] report of prostitution [πορνείας (porneias)]’ (Mat_5:32) there is much debate over what exactly is meant. Does this refer to adultery (as most understand it today) or does it refer more specifically to fornication, or some other variation of sexual sin? Although there are many other important things that we need to consider, to begin digging into these things we need to start by understanding the Greek word porneia. But we must not be as most people who take a careless and superficial approach to these needs instead of actually giving an answer, because if we are not different than others who claim to define porneia then we will just be pushing another worthless and filthy opinion like everyone else! Since it is clear that damnation awaits the irrational, we have to courageously dig deeper than that and insist on the saving integrity that is attracted to an answer that is thorough, accurate, and complete so we can understand these things with honesty and integrity and actually honor God with a blameless proclamation.

 

How Translations Represent and Misrepresent Porneia

Almost all older, original and or literal translations of the exception clause have consistently said “fornication” or “whoredom” [i.e. prostitution]. For Example: the Latin Vulgate (“fornicationem” 405 A.D.), The Bishops Bible (1568), The Geneva Bible (“whoredome” – 1599), KJV (1611-1769), that of John Nelson Darby (1884), The Revised Version (1885), YLT (whoredom – 1898), ASV (1901), the Spanish Reina-Valera Bible (SRV; “fornicación” – 1909), John Wycliffe New Testament (Vulgate), John Wesley New Testament (“except for whoredom”), LITV (2000 Literal Translation), MKJV (1998) and many more!

See: http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/fornicationem

 

>>! Verify: Note: “fornicationem” in Latten as well as some other languages was used to speak of sex before marriage as well as prostitution in general

 

We see that at least as early as 405 A.D. the exception has been represented as fornication (“fornicationem”) by the Latin Vulgate and has consistently been represented as either “fornication or “whoredom[i.e. prostitution] by straightforward Bible translations on into English for many, many years. For the most part, ever since the exception exited the Greek language, the exception has continued to be represented this way until people started drastically changing their minds about what they wanted the Bible to say about marriage and divorce.

 

    For the most part, the new, rewritten and or paraphrased, versions have in mass unison agreed to follow the looseness and sloppiness from our age by replacing Jesus’ Words with marketable contemporary paraphrases of what they want Jesus to have meant. Instead of representing the actual words that Jesus said, virtually every newer, mainline bible version has replaced His Words with something extremely vague and broad like “sexual immorality” or “marital unfaithfulness,” and a reader virtually cannot find a new, mainline bible version today that has enough integrity to tell the reader what Jesus actually said: “πορνείᾳ” (porneia) – “Prostitution”/ “Fornication.

 

ERASMUS’S LATIN (1527) Dico autem uobis, quod quicunque repudiauerit uxorem suam,

nisi ob stuprum69, & aliam duxerit, is committit adulterium. Et qui repudiatam duxerit: is adulterium

committit.

 

Examples of Versions that have now replaced the main exception word: NASB/ NASV* (1960-1995), NAB (first published 1970), NIV (1973-2010), NKJV (1979-1982), CEV (1991, 1995), The ‘god’s word** paraphrase (1995), the so-called NLT** (1996, 2004), ESV (2001), HCSB (1999-2003), and countless others… ISV (2001);

 

[* Note 1: NASB says, “immorality,” but a footnote says, “Lit fornication.” | ** Note 2: Many newer versions now claim to be translations, but are actually only unreliable paraphrases]

 

In nearly every case, today’s sloppy bible versions recklessly misrepresent the Bible to us as a whole and the exception clause is no exception: they have felt at liberty to completely change what Jesus actually gave us as an exception for divorce.

 

Note: For further reading on the crisis of bible versions as a whole, please see the Bibliography (especially the section entitled Paraphrases).

 

(We previously addressed the fact that the (Catholic) NAB deceptively mistranslated this word as, “unless the marriage is unlawful”)

 

>> Add: to see further investigations on how translations got this far off, see the appendix resource entitled, A Translation and Analysis of the Primary Divorce and Remarriage Passages.”

 

>> - add chart

 

Defining Porneia Charting the Linguistic Development of Porneia, and Every Single Occurrence and Variation Throughout the Entire Bible!

Every Occurrence of Porneia And All Its Variants

 

>> Important CHART NEEDS:

(1) revise micro-refs in porneia charts

(2) make the order of the charts correlate to their actual genealogy (not alphabetically/ according to the Strong number)

(3) incorporate Apocrypha refs throughout porn-chart

 

---------------

GENERAL NEEDS

“πόρνος” (pornos) and “πόρνη” (pórn)

– a male and a female person who

 

>> Add Hebrew before this…

> I need to define this word:

>>! There is so much more I could do here….. Put thorough porneia def here (incl chart in ex cl research…)

>> Just make this one for prostitution/ “fornication” and another one for adultery:

>> Understanding & Defining prostitution/ “fornication” from Greek

>> Understanding & Defining Adultery From Greek

>> also add Hebrew!

>> Greek > Latin (same connotations of prostitution/ “fornication”) > English

>> Add: lots of basic analysis of porneia here…

>> Add chart

>> I think I need to give the brief section right in here about all the places porneia is clearly used for fornication (Heb 13/ gal)

 

>> Redo/ add somehow:    Porneia can potentially involve fornication, adultery, homosexuality, and or any sexual immorality, when used very generically (depending on its context), since a professional fornicator, a “πόρνη” (pornē), a prostitute, will basically commit sin with whomever comes her way.  Also, a married or “betrothed” woman may “play the prostitute” (See Jer_3:8 and compare Gen_34:31; Gen_38:24; Deu_22:21). She technically and strictly commits “adultery” while “playing” (as we say) the prostitute, or professional fornicator. Behind this English terminology is often, forms of porneia like “εκπορνευσαι” (ekporneusai) in Greek.

 

>> Do I need this?: Porneia does not necessarily in and of itself mean something strict and well-defined, but when it is distinguished and contrasted with other such sexual sins it does. We call this “contradistinction.” If left alone, the word may very well address something more broad. 

 

Because there has been so much foolish debate and sloppy speculation as to the specific meaning of porneia throughout countless writings and discussions about the exception clause in English and other languages, I determined to compile the most complete documentation and comprehensive analysis that I have ever seen done to thoroughly answer this great need in a way which cannot honestly be contradicted. When it comes to defining porneia, you do not have to simply take my word for it; with the following charts I am happy to present a complete solution to fully demonstrate the development of porneia as well as cover every single possible use of this word in the entire Bible, including the Greek Old Testament LXX! – From this compilation of thorough research, as explained throughout the next few points, we can have an extremely thorough, accurate, and truly Biblical solution and definition for understanding porneia.

    As much as possible, by the kindness and help of God, I am ambitious to confront this long-debated question and give the most truthful and undeniable answer that has ever been given in English.

 

Chart Notes – Key Things to Remember While Reading all of the Following Charts

·       The following charts are largely a “lineage of words” (or “etymology”). Although most etymologies are often brief and limited, I have designed this “lineage of words” to basically integrate a larger number of related key words than usual. In this case we are including more key words so that we can actually cover every aspect of the development of the primary prostitution-word that Jesus uses. In this way we can see how numerous words relate to each other and we can make a more thorough comparison of them. We are going through all of this to better comprehend the general progression of terminologies as they eventually develop into the primary word used in the exception clause.

·       When representing each word from Greek into English (instead of resorting to the shameful scandals of paraphrasing) I have prioritized the exact, literal, and direct representations of each of these words throughout the following charts, since it goes without saying that representing things honestly will obviously prioritize truth over opinion. I have done this to first establish a practical and transparent bases for understanding each of these words, that is exact and reliable, and then afterward I have sought to draw out all of the contextual and figurative implications (as much as the capacity of this analysis seemed to allow).

·       Also note (as usual) I have diligently sought to write the most concise definitions possible, as much as I have been helped to do this so far. If you have any reliable corrections or clarifications please let me know (especially since I am constantly laboring that every detail may have reliability and integrity).

·       Please be aware that the first three charts are essentially for comparison and background purposes only; the forth chart that follows this directly pertains to porneia.

·       Scriptural references are taken directly from the GNT and LXX. The Greek New Testament (GNT) references include a compilation of New Testament textual variations, and the Old Testament LXX references include a comparison with the Hebrew MT. The Old Testament references also include the “Apocryphal” books (from Greek), because it is clear that these books also directly affected the language and theology of the GNT.

 

Note 1: What about Hebrew vs. Greek? – The Hebrew equivalent counterpart for porneia is “זנה” (zânâh). Zânâh (from Hebrew) is virtually always consistent with porneia (from Greek) in translation. The various forms of zânâh and porneia follow each other by consistently correlating together throughout the Hebrew and Greek Old Testaments, so that when you look in the Hebrew it says zânâh and when you look in the Greek it says porneia.

    Since Jesus gave the exception in Greek (much like it appears in the Greek LXX) we are seeking to define the primary exception word in Greek. Since Greek is the ultimate target language for the exception, and the Greek virtually always matches the Hebrew in translation, we are mostly focusing on and covering Greek for now (with a few references to Hebrew whenever it may be pertinent).

    As long as you might be careful to not lose your bearings and get disoriented, you would basically arrive at the exact same conclusions, with the same primary base of Scriptural references, no matter which language you focused on (as partly documented in the “Exception Clause Research” appendix). The Greek will basically give us all the same references that the Hebrew will, along with a significant number of additional references due to source text variations as well as a wider base of text to search through. – It is only English and other languages like it that really mess up the consistency when considering such concepts and words in cases like this. So, because the Greek is sufficient for understanding the exception, we only need to cover Greek to document porneia throughout the Old and New Testaments (i.e. the GNT and LXX) and in this way we can stay consistent with the target language in which Jesus gave the exception.

    Although translational consistency is not really an issue when documenting porneia, the main places where we have to make a distinction between Hebrew and Greek is when there are source text variations. Whenever a direct reference to prostitution is in the current Greek LXX but not the current Hebrew MT I have marked each of these occurrences with “LXX,” which is the normal and accepted convention for such cases. The exception to this is the Greek “Apocryphal” books, which generally do not have Hebrew counter parts to them (except for a few portions found in the Dead Sea Scrolls and a few other locations).

>> There is not one place in the Hebrew MT where zânâh is not translated as porneia?

Note 2: I have labored for countless hours over numerous years to gather and compile every form of porneia possible in the entire Bible throughout various Greek copies of the Old and New Testaments, and I deeply appreciate it if you happen to find any references that I may have missed.

Note 3: The following resources have been used and consulted to compile the definitions for this point:

(1) The Entire GNT and much of the LXX – The Bible does a good job of defining words; (2) Strong’s; (3) Word Study*; (4) The “Analytical Lexicon to the Septuagint” (ALS)*; (5) Google Translate [http://translate.google.com] – i.e. for a Modern Greek comparison; (6) A few other resources, some of which are listed in the exception clause research; (7) Wiki Lexicon and Concordance of the Greek New Testament [http://lexicon.katabiblon.com/]

 

(For numbers 1-3, see the Bibliography).

 

[* Although all of these resources can be very informative tools, it should go without saying that some resources were used with particular caution.]

[All resources (1-6) were used out of many years of experience and much research]

 

> Helper B’s Intro:

Final Preparations Before Reading The Following Charts

In seeking to explore and understand the linguistic background of porneia as well as every single occurrence and variation of this term throughout the entire Bible, the following series of charts begin by drawing out the fundamental building blocks of this word.  With the fourth and last chart, we move on to give a brief summary and analysis of porneia itself by giving every reference for porneia in the Greek Bible (LXX and GNT). This is done in order to document every possible application of porneia and take note whenever a reference particularly contributes to understanding this term. As a result of this, we can establish a foundation with the facts condensed in these charts that can help us toward attaining a sound and thorough, Biblical awareness of porneia which is further developed as we continue throughout this chapter.

 

Chart: (1) Some Basic Greek Directional Words With “π” (pi) in Them

Greek

Pronunciation

Strong’s

Number

Meaning & more

παρά

pará

G3844

next to (fig. near)

πρός

prós

G4314

toward (or to)

επι

epí

G1909

upon (or on)

ἀπό

apo

G575

away and or from

ὑπό

hupo

G5259

under (or beneath)

 

What can we see from this chart? – Although there are many more Greek directional words we could consider, have you noticed that in this small sample compilation of very basic and common directional words, I have intentionally included words that all have one letter in common? I have given these examples to demonstrate how frequently the letter “π” (pi)* is used in directional words. As these basic directional words develop into more complex terms, do you suppose that this might eventually contribute to defining the Greek word porneia?

 

[* Note: the letter “π” (pi) in Greek is similar to the letter “P” in English. (When speaking in Greek, it is not actually pronounced “pie,” as many English speakers mispronounce it)]

 

Chart: (2) Per-Words – From Words that Mean Directionally Crossing Borders, to Words that Mean Selling in Another Location

<<not porneia yet>>

<<prefix/ suffix

G4007 περ (per)

Greek

Pronunciation

Strong’s

Number

Meaning & more

ὑπέρ

see below

huper

G5228

ALS p. 551

A primary preposition:

A very basic and common relational/ positional word (a preposition) literally meaning, over or above; In one form or the other, this word occurs hundreds and hundreds of times in the LXX and GNT. (Note: huper itself comes from an even more basic root word: peráō).

πείρω

peir

No Strong’s

Number

Not in ALS/ LXX?

Verb?:

“to ‘pierce’”* through

(* Strong’s on G4008; also see G1289 (G4687); G3984; G3987; G4044;

Word Study on G4198)

περάω

peráō

No Strong’s

Number

From G4008

(See G4097)

Not in ALS/ LXX?

WS: an action verb (like G4203?)

To pass beyond or through/ go further; This is a very basic and “primary word” which is used as a bases for many other Greek words; (See G4097; Word Study on G4205)

πέραν

or πέρα

péran

G4008

From peirō;

ALS p. 433

An adverb/ “modifier”: [W.S.- and preposition]

Beyond – primarily: a qualification of extended location, as in, “beyond the Jordan” (Mat_4:15);

fig. in addition to

see G562; WS on G4226

περάτης

or περάτου

see below

perátēs

No Strong’s

Number;

ALS p. 433

A noun (person):

A gone-beyond (fig. crossed-over) person (esp. across the Euphrates River); only in
Gen
_14:13 LXX (περάτῃ – masc.);
fig. “wanderer, migrant” (ALS p. 433)
[This is a Greek equivalent to the word, “Hebrew”: H5680 (& compare H5677; H5676; H5674; Greek transliterations: G1445; G1443)]

πέρνημι

or περνάω

(as in Modern Greek)

pernēmi pernáō

No Strong’s

Number

From peráō;

Not in ALS/ LXX?

WS- An action verb: ?

To sell/ spend/ pass?

That is, you have typically traveled “beyond” the borders of your home city to another location to buy and sell; (This word is not directly used in the GNT nor LXX [they seem to use G4097 (from G4008) instead] but pernáō is a basis for G4204 and G4205)

[ὑπέρ (huper) (G5228): 389 times; υπερ & G5228: 626 times; υπε & G5228: 800; “‘over’…of place, above, beyond, across…” (Strong’s)]

[περάτης – MT, not LXX: Exo_1:16; Exo_1:19; 1Sa_13:3; 1Sa_13:7; 1Sa_14:21; 1Sa_29:3; Jon_1:9; LXX, not MT: Exo_1:22; Num_24:24; 1Sa_17:8;]

>> add one day?: péra (WS on G4008); péras (G4009) – end, extremity;

 

Although this chart (chart 2) has covered how per-words can go from meaning “crossing boundaries” to “selling things,” very similar principles can be seen with pro and por-words in the next chart (chart 3).

 

Chart: (3) Pro and Por-Words – From Words that Mean Going Somewhere, to Words that Mean Making Things “Go” into Your Possession

<<not porneia yet>>

G4197-4200; G4206-G4211

All from the same derivative of G3984

Although this is a p-word, it seems like all of the por-words are related to this.

Greek

Pronunciation

Strong’s

Number

Meaning & more

πρό

pro

G4253

ALS p. 460

A primary preposition:

Fore/ before/ in front of/ prior to

(in relation to location or time)

πρόσ

(as seen previously)

prós

G4314

ALS p. 464

A preposition:

Toward (or to) a place/ time/ purpose/ goal – with numerous fig. meanings (as seen in ALS p. 464)

Ex. “for the purpose of

πόρος

póros

No Strong’s

Number

from peírō or peráō;

Not in ALS/ LXX?

“a passing or passage”/ “a way

(Word Study on G4198 and Strong’s on G4200; also see G1711–G1713; G2141; Word Study: G639; G2585)

Google: trader/ presumed

πόρρω

see below

pórrō

G4206

Compare G4207-G4208

ALS p. 457

An adverb/ “modifier”:

At/ from a distance/ far away/ far forward/ far ahead/

WS: search for G4206

Google: far/ is still/ long way/ falls far

πορεύομαι

poreuomai

G4198

From póros;

ALS p. 456

An Action-Verb:

To proceed/ go/ walk/ march through/ travel

Google/ (ALS): march

Many fig. = ALS p. 456

πορεία

or πορείας

poreia

G4197

From G4198

(somewhat related to póros)

ALS p. 456

A noun: the concept or event of

A  journey/ a way/ path / route/ course of travel

i.e. the route or the journey itself

(compare: G1711–G1713)

Google: Course/ Trend/ Forward/ State/ Progress

πορίζω

see below

poridzō

No Strong’s

Number;

ALS p. 457

An action verb: think: Mat_28:19 – G907

Lit. To affect (idzō) something and make it go into your possession”; To get/ obtain (something); to acquire; fig. to make profit (ALS p. 457)

Google: obtains/ agents have

πορισμός

or πορισμοῦ

porismos

G4200

ALS p. 457

A noun: the concept or practice of

Acquisition;

fig. “means of livelihood, gaining, gain(ALS p. 457)

Note: this word often seems to have negative connotations in Modern Greek as well as in 1Ti_6:5-6 (which is partly understandable given its association with G4204 and G4205, as seen in the next chart)

Google: wrongful acquisition

[πορίζω- “to get, gain, acquire” (WS on πορίζω, as seen in G4200)]

πόρρω – http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0057:entry=PRO%2FSW

πόρρωθεν (pórrōthen), (G4207) – http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0057:entry=PRO%2FSWQEN

An adverb/ “modifier”: Far off; Google: -

 

What can we see from these charts? – We see that pro and por-words [chart 3] can progress from simply describing “going somewhere” to meaning “acquisition,” much like per-words [chart 2] can go from meaning “crossing boundaries” to “selling things”. Although none of these words documented in the last three charts directly speak to sexual sin, understanding this background of words is essential for thoroughly understanding all of the implications of traveling and eventually making money that are behind the word porneia, since this lineage of words eventually begets this very important term.

 

[Note: A large amount of extra research with many more examples of related “distance” words in Greek (as well as some Hebrew) can be found in the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research”]

 

Chart: (4) Porn-Words – The Words that Pertain to Selling People – Every Occurrence of Every Form of Porneia in the Entire Bible!

<<Notice (by comparing the previous charts) that when you keep the “πόρ” (por) and add the Greek letter “ν” (nu) to this lineage of words, then we go from talking about selling things to selling people (prostitution)>> <<rth: I like this brief introduction before the chart>>

<< Probably adding titles to each column may help to with overall table like in table 1>>

Greek

Pronunciation

Strong’s

Number

Meaning & more

πόρνος

or πόρνου

pornos

G4205

From pernēmi

A masculine noun (person):

A male who is involved in the sale of the body (sexually) for profit (as a means of living) – either as a male prostitute himself, or (by application) any man who is with women who do this sort of thing; a whoremonger/ fornicator

Google: porn/ porno/ fornicator/ lecher/ *$#@!

Lecher... A man given to lewdness; one addicted, in an exorbitant degree, to the indulgence of the animal appetite, and an illicit commerce with females. (Webster)

10 verses: 1Co_5:9-11 (Compare: 1Co_5:1 (porneia – G4202); 1Co_5:8 (“wickedness” G4189); 1Co_5:13 (G4190)); 1Co_6:9 (clearly fornication); Eph_5:5 (compare Eph_5:3 (G4202)); 1Ti_1:10 (does not encompass homosexuality); Heb_12:16 (see next chap...); Heb_13:4 (fornication – a man having sex before marriage vs. a man doing it within marriage); Rev_21:8; Rev_22:15; (compare Pro_23:21 LXX)

πόρνη

or πόρνης

pórn

G4204

“Feminine of G4205”

(Strong’s)

A feminine noun (person):

A female who sells herself (sexually) for profit (as a means of living) – a female prostitute/ whore, or (by application) any female who fornicates

48 Verses: Gen_34:31 (fornication – Shechem vs. Dinah & Family); Gen_38:15, Gen_38:21-22 (fornication – Judah & Tamar; 'pregnant out of wedlock' = sex before marriage: Gen_38:24; [shameful: Gen_38:23]); Lev_21:7, Lev_21:14 (fornication – The Priest's Marriage Restrictions); Deu_23:2 (a prostitute's child [LXX]; sometimes = v. Deu_23:3) Deu_23:17-18 (female (πόρνη) and male (πορνεύων) prostitution/ fornication forbidden [i.e. (unmarried) "daughters"]; compared to "the price of a dog"); Jos_2:1; Jos_6:17, Jos_6:23, Jos_6:25 (fornication – Rahab the harlot/ professional fornicator); Jdg_11:1 (Jephthah...the son of a harlot); Jdg_16:1 (fornication – Sampson); 1Ki_3:16 (fornication – Solomon judging 2 unmarried prostitutes [i.e. not 'cohabiting' (married) with a man 1Ki_3:17]); 1Ki_12:24 only in some LXX copies (called “γγ”); 1Ki_21:19 (LXX, not MT [LXX = 1Ki_20:19]); 1Ki_22:38 (LXX & MT: known fornicators washed in the same place); Pro_5:3 (fornication – an unwedded prostitute); Pro_6:26 (adultery [Pro_6:24 (LXX); Pro_6:29; Pro_6:32; Pro_6:34; Lev_20:10] – i.e. a married woman who dresses like a prostitute: Pro_7:10); Pro_29:3 (wasteful); Isa_1:21 (lodging); Isa_23:15-16 (singing); Isa_57:3 (adulterers and the prostitute [LXX]; see: Isa_57:3-9 esp. Isa_57:9 [πορνείαν – LXX]); Jer_3:3 (fornication during betrothal [τελειώσεώς]: Jer_2:2; as a virgin [παρθένος]: Jer_2:32-33); Jer_5:7 ("they committed adultery, and *lodged in harlots' houses [* ἐν οἴκοις πορνῶν κατέλυον]" (CAB)); Eze_16:30-31 (compare related Greek in Eze_16:24 LXX; Eze_16:15-17; Eze_16:20; Eze_16:22; Eze_16:24-26; Eze_16:28; Eze_16:30-42; Eze_16:45-48; Eze_16:51-59); Eze_16:35; Eze_23:43 ("commit adultery...And...also *gone a-whoring after the manner of a harlot [* καὶ ἔργα πόρνης καὶ αὐτὴ ἐξεπόρνευσεν]" (CAB)), Eze_23:44 (compared to [not equated with] adultery); Hos_4:14 (also see v. Hos_4:13, fornication – contrasted with adultery; unwedded immorality vs. wedded immorality); Joe_3:3 [sometimes Joe_4:3], [LXX: "given... boys to harlots" (CAB)]; Nah_3:4 ["sells the nations by...fornication, and... sorceries" (CAB)]; Mat_21:31; Mat_21:32; Luk_15:30; 1Co_6:15-16 [fornication – previously contrasted with adultery: 1Co_6:9]; Heb_11:31; Jas_2:25; Rev_17:1, Rev_17:5, Rev_17:15, Rev_17:16; Rev_19:2 [compare these last references with 2Ki_9:22; Rev_2:20-23 (τὴν γυναῖκα ᾿Ιεζάβελ) – the/ that woman Jezebel (Byzantine texts additionally have: "σου," making it 'your wife Jezebel')];

πορνεία

or πορνείας

porneía

G4202

from G4203

The main feminine noun: The concept/ act of/ crime of…

A female selling herself (sexually) for profit (as a means of living); prostitution/ whoredom, or (by application) fornication;

fig. sex outside of marriage

Google: prostitution

62 Verses: Gen_38:24 (fornication – Judah & Tamar); Num_14:33 (spiritual); 2Ki_9:22 ("the harlotries [prostitutions] of your mother Jezebel" (CAB); compare: 2Ki_9:30; Pro_7:5-10 (etc.); Jer_4:30; Eze_23:40-45); Isa_47:10 ("Ἐγώ εἰμι"; LXX: that of your prostitution (Jos.Trans.) τῆς πονηρίας σου...ἡ πορνεία σου; "shame"); Isa_57:9 (LXX: "increased...them that are far from you" (CAB)); Jer_2:20 (fornication – Jer_2:2 – during their: MT: betrothal ["כלולתיך" (H3623)]; or LXX: "perfection" [τελειώσεώς (G5050)], fig. "growing up" (NETS), or rather, fig. 'consecration' (as it is used in most other LXX places); Jer_2:32-33 – as a virgin [παρθένος] who fornicated); Jer_3:2 (defiled land); Jer_3:9 (betrothal fornication & adultery: "...the prostitution of her...she committed adultery" (CAB); compare: Jas_4:4); Jer_13:27 (betrothal adultery & fornication); Eze_16:15 (trusting in beauty); Eze_16:22, Eze_16:25 (sex with multiple men/ "defiled your beauty" (CAB)); Eze_16:33-34, Eze_16:36, Eze_16:41 (last 3 refs: irony of reverse-payment! – How paid prostitution turns into plain old fornication); Eze_23:7-8 (fornication – ended virginity [διεπαρθένευσαν] by porneia [esp. LXX]), Eze_23:11-22 (corruption, shame & defilement; particularly: v. Eze_23:11, Eze_23:14, Eze_23:17-19), Eze_23:27, Eze_23:29 (shame), Eze_23:35 (wrath as "payment" for prostitution; compare Rev_14:8); Eze_43:7, Eze_43:9 (spiritual); Hos_1:2 (woman of prostitution); Hos_2:2 [sometimes Hos_2:4] (prostitution & adultery); Hos_2:4 [sometimes Hos_2:6] (children of...); Hos_4:11 (also see v. Hos_4:10 – linked with wine); Hos_4:12; Hos_5:4 (last 2 refs: spirit of prostitution); Hos_6:10 (defiled); Mic_1:7 (payment for prostitution); Nah_3:4 (well loved...sorcery...sells nations); Mat_5:32 (divorce exception: λόγου πορνείας – a word/ report of fornication; Greek correlates with: Deu_22:13-21); Mat_15:19-20 (sin list – porneia distinguished form adultery); Mat_19:9 (divorce exception – previously limited to 'not putting space between' a wedded couple: Mat_19:4-6; Mar_10:6-9; confirmed by Paul: 1Co_7:10-16, 1Co_7:39); Mar_7:21-23 (sin list – same as Mat_15:19-20); Joh_8:41 ("We were not born of prostitution"); Act_15:20, Act_15:29; Act_21:25 (last 3 refs: basic instructions for non-Jews); Rom_1:29 (not in A-texts); 1Co_5:1 (unusual prostitution/ "fornication" – with father's wife); 1Co_6:13 (the body was not made for porneia!); 1Co_6:18 (the immediate solution: Flee! (as in 2Ti_2:22) – because it sins "into" [εἰς] the body); 1Co_7:2 (the (usual) long-term solution: mutually monogamous marriage – this is a definite reference to avoiding sex before marriage (fornication)); 2Co_12:21 (we have got to repent of porneia!); Gal_5:19-21 (sin list: disqualifies from Heaven); Eph_5:3-13 (absolutely forbidden along with 'uncleanness' & it disqualifies from Heaven); Col_3:5-10 (sin list: disqualifies from Heaven); 1Th_4:3-8 (esp. v. 1Th_4:3, 1Th_4:5-6 – includes lust; abstain from it, or else suffer God's vengeance!; it is stealing; includes 'breaking boundaries' (see 1Ti_5:1-2)); Rev_2:21; Rev_9:21 (last 2 refs: refusal to repent); Rev_14:8 (repaid with wrath, as in Eze_23:35 [esp. LXX]); Rev_17:2 (wine of prostitution); Rev_17:4 (cup full of abominations...filth...); Rev_18:3 (wine/ wrath); Rev_19:2 (judgment for corruption);

πορνεύω

porneúō

 

G4203

From G4205

An Action Verb:

The act of someone selling themselves (sexually) for profit (as a means of living) To commit prostitution, or (by application) to fornicate;

fig. to have sex outside of marriage

Google: to prostitute/ fornicate

25 Verses: Deu_23:18 (Greek = v. Deu_23:17 or Deu_23:19); [Jdg_2:15 – because "ἐξεπορεύοντο" – "they went" (CAB) is phonetically (and etymologically) related to porneia in Greek, some LXX texts have this as "ἐξεπορεύοντο" and others as "επορνευον" (G4203) "they would prostitute themselves" (NETS) – this mistake can more readily happen in Greek because of the similarity in words (compare MT), but prostitution [LXX: ἐξεπόρνευσαν] is in every text of Jdg_2:17]; 1Ch_5:25; Psa_73:27 [LXX = Psa_72:27]; Psa_106:39 [LXX = Psa_105:39]; Jer_3:6-8 (and see v. Jer_3:9; – fornication & adultery during betrothal [as described earlier]); Eze_6:9; Eze_16:15 (beauty), Eze_16:34 (reverse payment); Eze_23:19 (multiplied fornication...recalls Egypt [LXX has Chaldeans also]); Hos_3:3 (adultery – WAIT & be monogamous... no more prostitution! (after being wedded)); Hos_4:10 (also see v. Hos_4:11 – linked with wine); Hos_4:14 (fornication vs. adultery – clear contrast); Hos_4:18 ("πορνεύοντες ἐξεπόρνευσαν" – double-intensification of prostitution; also: "loved dishonor" [LXX specifies: Canaanites]); Hos_9:1 (payment for prostitution); Amo_7:17 (prostitution after widowhood [compare: Gen_38:6-11, Gen_38:24]); 1Co_6:18 (previously contrasted with adultery: 1Co_6:9); 1Co_10:8 (Num_25:1-9; Psa_106:28-29); Rev_2:14, Rev_2:20; Rev_17:2; Rev_18:3, Rev_18:9;

ἐκπορνεύω

ekporneúō

G1608

From G4203;

ALS p. 173

An Action Verb:

An intensification of someone selling themself (sexually) – to commit (intense) prostitution: Out (ek) + prostitution (porneúō) = lit. to (act) out prostitution, or (by application), to fornicate without restraint; fig. “to be utterly unchaste” (Strong’s).

Google: prostitute

38 verses: Gen_38:24 (fornication – Judah & Tamar); Exo_34:15-16; Lev_17:7 (last 2 refs: spiritual); Lev_19:29 (fornication – do not prostitute your (unmarried) daughter); Lev_20:5-6 (spiritual; but also compare v. Lev_20:10 etc.); Lev_21:9 (fornicating priest’s daughter); Num_15:39 (compare v. Num_15:40 – idolatry/ images [>> compare with them ‘looking on the walls’]); Num_25:1 (last 2 refs: spiritual); Deu_22:21 (fornication during betrothal – this is the main "betrothal chapter"); Deu_31:16-17 (& see v. Deu_31:18); Jdg_8:27, Jdg_8:33; 2Ch_21:11, 2Ch_21:13; Jer_3:1 (fornication – as a virgin [παρθένος]: Jer_2:32-33; and compare: Jer_2:2 [see MT vs. LXX]); Eze_6:9; Eze_16:16-17, Eze_16:20, Eze_16:26, Eze_16:28, Eze_16:30, Eze_16:33 (reverse payment); Eze_20:30; Eze_23:3 (fornication – from virginity to sex before marriage), Eze_23:5, Eze_23:30, Eze_23:43 ("commit adultery...And... *also gone a-whoring after the manner of a harlot [* καὶ ἔργα πόρνης καὶ αὐτὴ ἐξεπόρνευσεν look it up: – lit. and working prostitute-ness and her out fornicating]" (CAB); Hos_1:2 (woman & children of prostitution); Hos_2:5 [sometimes Hos_2:7] (prostituting, adulterous mother – compare Hos_2:1-4 [sometimes Hos_2:3-6]); Hos_4:12 (spirit of prostitution); Hos_4:13 (also see Hos_4:10-18; fornication – contrasted with adultery; unwedded immorality vs. wedded immorality); Hos_4:18 ("πορνεύοντες ἐξεπόρνευσαν" – intensification of prostitution; also: "loved dishonor" [LXX specifies: Canaanites]); Hos_5:3 (Israel defiled); Jud_1:7 (Sodom and Gomorrah – intense prostitution [ἐκπορνεύσασαι] and "other flesh" [σαρκὸς ἑτέρας] – fig. immorality with flesh that does not even pertain to them);

πορνικός

or πορνική

or πορνικόν

pornikos

No Strong’s

Number;

ALS p. 457

A description/ adjective:

The quality/ attribute of (or pertaining to) selling oneself sexually – whorish, or (by application) fornicating-ish:

Pro_7:10 – having a prostituting-ish appearance; lit. having a perceivable-ness like one selling themselves (sexually) for profit; Eze_16:24 (LXX) – a prostituting-ish house

fig. sex-outside-of-marriage-ish

(πορνικον – pornikon)

Google: whorish/ meretricious

“Meretricious

MERETRI'CIOUS, a. [L. meretricius, from meretrix, a prostitute.]

1. Pertaining to prostitutes; such as in practiced by harlots; as meretricious arts.

2. Alluring by false show; worn for disguise; having a gaudy but deceitful appearance; false; as meretricious dress or ornaments.” Webst

πορνείον

or πορνείου

porneion

No Strong’s

Number;

ALS p. 457

A noun:

A place (a house) of selling someone (sexually) for profit; a “brothel, house of harlotry” (ALS p. 457); a house devoted to prostitution; i.e. a place where men fornicate;

Eze_16:31, Eze_16:39 (LXX)

Google: brothel/ whorehouse/ crib/ bagnio

πορνοκόπος

or πορνοκόπου

[see below]

pornocopos

No Strong’s

Number;

 

Made from: G4203 + G2873;

 

ALS p. 457

A description/ adjective:

The quality/ attribute of a man who “chops” (fig. grinds or labors) himself (into or after) a woman selling herself for profit; The character of a man who (repeatedly) fornicates with prostitutes; – a “harlot-chopping” type of man; lit. Male-chopping-(after)-female-selling-her-self-ish-ness; Pro_23:21 (LXX)

Google: -

Deutero-

canonical

Examples

A search for “πορν‑” words [& “πόρν‑”]

[see below]

every

porn-word

11 Verses: Tob_4:12 (πορνείας); Tob_8:7 (πορνείαν); Wis_14:12 (πορνείας); [Sir_9:3 (ἑταιριζομένῃ)] Sir_9:6 (πόρναις); Sir_19:2 (κολλώμενος πόρναις – this is the same as 1Co_6:16 : "ὁ κολλώμενος τῇ πόρνῃ" and 1Co_6:18 : φεύγετε τὴν πορνείαν...); Sir_23:17 (ἄνθρωπος πόρνος ἐν σώματι σαρκὸς αὐτοῦ – very mysterious Greek [1Co_6:16-17]); Sir_23:22-23 (adultery – ἐν πορνείᾳ ἐμοιχεύθη); Sir_26:9 (adultery or fornication – πορνεία γυναικὸς – a prostitution (type of) woman; either a wife: Sir_26:7 or a daughter: Sir_26:10); Sir_41:17 (αἰσχύνεσθε ἀπὸ πατρὸς καὶ μητρὸς περὶ πορνείας – "Be ashamed of whoredom..." (KJV)); Sir_46:11 (ἐξεπόρνευσεν – i.e. spiritually carried "out" (ἐξ) fornication); Epistle of Jeremiah 1:9 or 10 or 11see note, (τεγους* πορναις); {Also see the So-Called “Psalms of Solomon” 2:11 and or 2:13} Google:

[Deuterocanonical- Epistle of Jeremiah 1:9 or 10 or 11 – depending on which source you use: NETS = 1:10; e-Sword = Bar_6:10 (Greek)/ Bar_6:11 (Brenton), (see: Bar_6:8-10), (U.B.: 73 1:9);] <<rth: hidden text?>> <<JS: this one is visible>>

Καταπορν / καταπορνευω (compare ALS 113) – I have not found this in e-Sword or in Unbound Bible or ALS, but it is throughout Google Books – 11/12/11

[πορνοκόπος – to commit prostitution (πορνο-) + labor/ pains ('cut') (κοποςG2873) = fig. like a man working (with) a woman prostituting herself

> compare See also: male prostitute (G4205); “cut” words: G2875; G2870;

> Compare: http://translation.sensagent.com/%CE%BA%CE%BF%CF%80%CE%BF%CF%82/el-en/]

[Deutero-  compare: “αστεγους” (Isa_58:7); στέγη G4721 – roof; Further related phrases: Pro_10:8; Pro_26:28; Isa_58:7; Act_20:9; 1Co_9:12; 1Th_3:1]

[Deutero- Also Compare: “Deuterocanonical Books On Porneia” – in ex. cl. Re]

 

We see that we have gone all the way from Greek directional words, to travel words, to words that pertain to making money, and we have ultimately ended up at the prostitution words that speak to selling people. This is truly a humongous amount of information just a document one word (and we’re not even done yet)!

    But when you consider how critical it is to understand the exception clause, and how thoroughly people have been misinformed, and how sloppy and irresponsible people had been when teaching about porneia, and how many marriages have been ruined because of the lack of integrity of pastors and Bible teachers on this word, perhaps the reader can understand why it is so important to make every effort to correct the nonsense that has been taught about porneia.

    Please keep in mind that all of the important facts documented in these charts form the bases for a lot of what is said later throughout this chapter, and you should do well to repeatedly refer back to this point whenever we refer to the facts that have been established here.

    I am very eager to give you a real answer for this word, and now that we’ve laid the foundation and documented the facts that have usually been ignored and denied, may God help us is we demonstrate the rest of what is necessary to understand porneia and the exception clause throughout the rest of this chapter.

 

Defining Porneia – Several Important Summaries

>>! – I need big help on this section

 

(1) A Brief, Direct and Literal Chart-Summary Definition of Porneia

A summary of all of the information we have just seen in the preceding charts:

 

(A) Per to Pern – “περάω” (peráō) – to pass beyond, becomes “περναω” (pernáō) – to sell Chart 2;

(B) Pern + Porπέρνημι” (pernēmi)*to sell Chart 2 combines with “πορισμός” (porismos) – acquisition / fig. “means of livelihood, gaining, gain” (ALS p. 457), (G4200) Chart 3, and the result of this is...

(C) Pern + Por = Porn – this combination of pern Chart 2 with por Chart 3 becomes porn Chart 4, which generates all of the forms of, “πορνεία” (porneía) – And all of this basically shows that porneia itself essentially comes from a combination of traveling, selling, and making a profit, which initially (and literally) came to mean the sale of the body (sexually) for profit as a means of living, which is what we simply call, prostitution or harlotry in English.

 

[* Note: An alternative form of “πέρνημι” (pernēmi) is “περναω” (pernáō), (as seen in Modern Greek)]

 

We can definitely see this theme of porneia as “prostitution” by simply considering a few examples where porneia is directly linked with “payment” for immorality:

>> and its Hebrew equivilent

Gen_38:14-24; Deu_23:17-18, Eze_16:30-36, etc.; Hos_2:4-5, Hos_2:12 (Jer_44:17-19); Hos_3:2 (in the LXX this is the same word as Hos_2:12); (Hos_2:14-15*); Hos_9:1; Joe_3:3; Mic_1:7; Luk_15:30, etc.; (Rev_18:3-23)

 

* (Gen_34:3) [trick a virgin Deu_22...]

 

(2) A Step-By-Step, Amplified Definition of Porneia

 

(A) P– This part of the word pertains to any of the slight “directional” aspects (or connotations) of porneia.

(B) Por– From this stem we can see that a person has not stayed within their default or native homeland, house, or location, but instead, this is the part of porneia that partly says that this person is going somewhere, possibly even to sell something.

and implies that you are ‘going somewhere’ rather than, for example, staying within the home, and we may say figuratively, it pertains to doing something 'outside of marriage'

(C) Porn– At this point a person has not only “left the house,” but now they have stepped into selling their body and making merchandise of something that ought to never be sold, or else they are engaging in the sale of another person’s body. From this “porn-” stem comes all of the forms of porneia:

(D) Porneia – Once you reach porneia, this last bit of the word (eia) sums up the whole matter as a practice and a concept.

 

This is an extremely enlarged explanation where I am seeking to be as practical as possible without exaggerating. Please keep in mind that this is definitely an "amplification," but I am adding it to greatly draw out every little detail for a complete understanding.

 

(3) Defining Porneia – Etymologically, Concordantly, and Contextually

Before I can give this three-part definition summary, I need to explain the words that I just used in the title:

 

(A) Etymological Representation – Presenting words in the most literal and direct way possible by prioritizing the actual parts that make up each word (its root words) which typically results in multiple words in English to represent every part of a multifaceted word in Greek. Despite the shameful and fraudulent claims made by modern bible “translators,”* etymological representation is obviously the most thorough and accurate way to actually understand a word from another language (and this method was demonstrated in the charts we looked at). It should also be obvious that this does not ignore the other aspects of understanding words…

(B) Concordant Representation – Finding the one word in English that most closely and literally correlates with each word in Greek.

(C) Contextual Representation – The various things that a word is used to address when it is applied in communication.

 

[* Most all modern “translators,” are under the shameful addiction of periphrastic apostasy as shown under “bible Paraphrases” in the Bibliography]

 

If we apply these three levels of representation to porneia then we can say that it at least has these three aspects to consider:

 

(A) Etymologically – Selling a person (sexually) for profit (as a means of living).

(B) Concordantly – Prostitution.

(C) Contextually – Sex outside of marriage in general, and often, sex before marriage (fornication) in particular.

 

It is because of this contextual element that porneia is usually represented as other words besides prostitution in most English versions.

 

(4) Understanding Strong’s and Seeking Integrity – Why Does G4202 Seem to Definitely Include “Adultery” and “Incest”?

 

G4202 πορνεια por-ni’-ah From G4203;

harlotry (including adultery and incest); figuratively idolatry: - fornication.” (Strong’s)

 

As documented in more detail in the Bibliography, James Strong (1822–1894) provided rules as to how to read his dictionary definitions. Concerning parentheses he said,

 

( ) (parenthesis), in the renderings from the A. V. [i.e. the KJV, or, “Authorized Version”], denotes a word or syllable sometimes given in connection with the principal word to which it is annexed.

 

(Taken from the bottom of page 6 in Strong’s Greek dictionary)

 

So with the case of porneia, we see that “adultery and incest” (being given inside of parentheses) do not actually represent “the principal word” (as so many wrongly presume) but are words that are “given in connection with the principal word” and are “annexed” to porneia by association, not direct meaning. Mr. Strong affirms what any honest and thorough student of Greek can easily confirm by reading the Old and New Testament Greek Scriptures: Porneia literally and directly means “harlotry” (that is, prostitution) and may be applied “figuratively [as] idolatry” and similarly, it is also often used to address “fornication,” (which is why the KJV and other more literal versions frequently represent it this way) and especially because of the wide scope that prostitution involves, it can also address scenarios where there is “adultery and” (in a small number of Scriptural cases)incest” by extension (as some think 1Co_5:1 refers to, where it is actually categorized as an ‘unusualporneia).

But because porneia most literally (“etymologically”) means, “to pass beyond (or travel) and sell oneself for profit” (sexually), therefore prostitution (or harlotry) is the most direct English word we have for porneia. When it comes to actually translating this word, if we simply represent it in English by using the same wording that is used in the Greek then it goes without saying that this is the most authoritative and accurate way to represent it in English, because this lets the Bible simply speak for itself by stating in English exactly what it says in the original Greek. As we see porneia accurately represented and used throughout the Divinely inspired Scriptures, the context will be more than sufficient to illustrate its implications. Let us let the Bible say what it will about this word and the Divine concept of defining the sin of prostitution and then let us submit accordingly. – But even if we do this, this does not mean that we ignore the specific things that porneia is used to address…

is literally, then everything else in the Bible can take care of the implications. –   I have found that consistently representing porneia exactly as it is literally, prostitution, is the most accurate way to answer every passage in the Greek Old and New Testaments. If we do our best to represent the Words just as God said them as directly as we can into English, then the context and the usage of each Word throughout the Scriptures takes care of everything else. It is our own periphrastic apostasy of rewording what God actually said that muddies and blurs the meaning of Scripture, and makes God’s commandments inaccessible having made His declarations tainted with human opinions and obscured from its precision as a sword.

 

(5) Understanding the Contextual Implications of Porneia

Although it is very clear that porneia directly means prostitution, it is equally clear that it eventually addressed immorality as a whole, and often addressed fornication in particular. Beyond prostitution, porneia also describes (by extension) the shameful, cheap, and filthy practice of (immoral) sexual activity outside of marriage, or quite often, before marriage. Although the porn-stem directly pertains to selling the body, when we start talking about its application we can say that this is a strong point where figuratively (and very practically) this speaks of the utter cheapening of sexuality by that which is shameful and immoral. – Making merchandise of the body very quickly calls to mind the general atrocity of degrading and cheapening its entire essence by activating sexuality outside of marriage. Because porn-words are so contextually dependent, whenever you find them in the Scriptures you have to pause and reverently and thoughtfully consider in what way this immorality has taken place.

 

But before we address the particular “fornication” aspect of porneia, let’s take some more looks at it by dissecting every part of the word.

prostitution and or acting like a prostitute (if that is not what you do for a living); Frequently used to address fornication or adultery, depending on the context. When used along with “adultery” sometimes it is used to address fornication specifically.

 

(6) How Does “Prostitution” Often Address “Fornication”?

In as much as porneia has definite connotations of “sex that is not inside of marriage,” it can certainly also be used to suggest “sex that is before marriage.” Not only does it have this potential, it is very frequently used to specifically address fornication in this way.

 

Note these basic things about the “Fornication” aspect of Porneia

·       Although the direct and literal meaning is “prostitution,” most historical Greek Lexicons (ancient language dictionaries) agree in emphasizing “fornication” as a central application of this word.

·       The context and usage of this word show this much more than the dictionary definition.

·       In addition to some other generic uses, The Greek Old Testament (LXX) very clearly uses this word to address sex before marriage in numerous cases (and we are about to discuss many of these passages in greater detail shortly).

·       There is no other word in Greek for addressing fornication than porneia and its related words.

·       We should take a sober note that when sex before marriage is addressed in the Scriptures, porneia is consistently used to describe this sin.

·       Because of this, some study notes will say to the side, “Lit fornication” in reference to this word (see NASB as discussed later).

 

Defining Porneia – Clear Examples Where Porneia is Sometimes Used to Specifically Address Fornication

>>!

Add:

Sir_41:17

JEROBOAM’s WIFE or son’s wife

Amos 7:17  Therefore thus saith Jehovah: Thy wife shall be a harlot (ZANAH)in the city, and thy sons and thy daughters shall fall by the sword, and thy land shall be divided by line; and thou thyself shalt die in a land that is unclean, and Israel shall surely be led away captive out of his land. (Jeroboam’s wife or son’s wife shall be widowed and a harlot.)

Rahab  “the Harlot”

>> deal with: Rev 2:20-23 somewhere

We have seen the Greek; we have seen what the translations have done; now let’s prove what the Bible actually says when it uses Porneia!

>> Make sure Matthew’s lists, including Mat_15:19, are put with Mat_19:9

>> Heb_13:4

>> 1Co_7:1-2  – it is very clear in this immediate context as well as the preceding context of 1Co_6, that sex before marriage is addressed.

in this case, porneia refers to unmarried men with immoral women, particularly with the female priests and their idolatress worship of pagan deities, and their grossly immoral ‘fertility rights’. Although porneia is said somewhat generically, it definitely cannot refer to married men committing ‘adultery’ against their wives, because marriage is seen as the direct solution to avoiding the rampant prostitution (immorality) in Corinth (compare v. 8). Porneia very clearly points to sex before marriage in 1Co_7:1-2.

    Notice also that touching a woman in a sexually modifying way before marriage is called prostitution! This is “touching” is exactly the same word as used in Gen_20 where it is dealing with what was almost physical adultery. If God punished pharaoh for what he did without even touching her, how much more will God pour out wrath on those who engage in physical romantic indulgence with people they are not married too! This is exactly what Thessalonians refers to when it warns against porneia.

>> Perhaps one of the most important and pertinent example of porneia addressing fornication is that right in Matthew. We cannot neglect to notice that in between the two occurrences of the exception clause, porneia and adultery are clearly contrasted as unlawful sex before and after marriage.

>> The reason we are focusing on Greek is that this is the Word Jesus’ uses and the early church repeats. We could just as well use the Hebrew since the exact same thing is represented from Hebrew to Greek throughout the entire Hebrew and Greek Old Testament. It is this consistent correlation in Greek which is carried over into the New Testament, and this is the context which the exception is primarily discussed in.

 

Please don’t miss this important and defining note: Although the majority of modern church leadership wrongly seeks to insist that porneia always means any and every kind of sexual immorality, the purpose of giving these corrective examples has nothing to do with “proving that porneia always only means fornication,” but instead, the main purpose for this point is simply to show that “porneia can possibly, sometimes specifically address fornication” whenever the conditions of the context may point toward this. The majority of lawless church leaders say that porneia always means every sexual immorality, and they often accuse many who are trying to be more conservative of saying that it always means fornication, but neither of these things are true. Porneia does not always address every sexual immorality nor does it always address fornication, yet we can see in this section that porneia can at least sometimes specifically address fornication and not include adultery. Although we can certainly see this in the following examples, please keep in mind as you read that these facts are denied by the modern propaganda insistently promoted throughout the vast majority of all churches today. What we can clearly see from these examples in the Bible is that porneia is not always used as a “free-for-all,” “generic” “all-encompassing” sin that describes “every kind of sexual immorality” as so many modern theorists rigidly insist, but porneia actually exhibits the capacity to get curiously specific at times, and we are about to see some of these examples.

>> Deu_22:20-21 (εκπορνευσαι); Hos_1:2 vs. Hos_3:1

>> Does this need to go before or after the translations section?

>> When Add Chart: Note: Many of the abbreviated conclusions presented in this chart are covered afterward

>>! Make sure verses like Heb 13:4 - is capitalized on: a very clear contrast between the two

>> Heb_13:4 (& others) – It is very clear that God is saying he will judge two kinds of sins here: fornication and adultery!

 

Gen 34 – Shechem vs. Dinah & Family

Gen_34:1-31 – This clearly uses “πόρνῃ” (pornēn – a female prostitute) to speak of sex before marriage (fornication):

 

(1) v. Gen_34:3 – She had been a virgin [“τὴν παρθένον...τῆς παρθένου”]

(2) v. Gen_34:2 – She was raped [“καὶ ἐταπείνωσεν αὐτήν”] (as confirmed in: Gen_34:2-7, Gen_34:13, Gen_34:27)

(3) v. Gen_34:31 – When Dinah went from being a virgin to being forced to have sex before marriage, it was described by using a form of porneia. Someone who is raped before marriage is made to partake of what only a prostitute [πόρνῃ] (professional “fornicator”) does in Biblical days.

 

[Hebrew: “הכזונה” (haC’zovnah); Greek: πόρνῃ (pornē). Note: as in nearly every case like this, the Hebrew is perfectly consistent with the Greek. These two words are constantly paralleled from both languages. We could focus on either language and see the exact same patterns, but for the purposes here we will focus on Greek since this is the final form of the exception]

 

Gen 38 – Judah and Tamar

Gen_38:21-22 – Clearly speaking of fornication: Gen_38:24 – Tamar was not married, and when they saw her pregnant they assumed she committed porneia. The LXX uses multiple forms of porneia to describe this in the story. (This passage speaks of being a “prostitute” while also equating it with the practice of prostitution in general: εκπεπορνευκενG1608; πορνειαςG4202)

 

Lev 21 – A Priest’s Marriage Restrictions

>> add pierce word from Hebrew!!! Lev_19:29; Lev_21:9 Num_25:1! 1Ch_5:1 (find Genesis ref for this);

Lev_21:4 – man can be this too

(also: Gen_49:4)

 

Speaking of the Priest...

Lev_21:4, Lev_21:6-9 CAB  ...he shall not defile [μιανθήσεται] himself suddenly among his people to profane [βεβήλωσιν] himself...  6  They shall be holy to their God, and they shall not profane [βεβηλώσουσιν] the name of their God; for they offer the sacrifices of the Lord as the gifts of their God, and they shall be holy.  7  They shall not take a woman who is a harlot [πόρνην] and profaned [καὶ βεβηλωμένην], or [καὶ] a woman put away from [ἐκβεβλημένηνG1544 (lexical: ἐκβάλλω) ἀπὸ – lit. thrown out from; fig. “rejected by” (NETS)] her husband [ἀνδρὸς αὐτῆς]; for he is holy to the Lord his God.  8  And you shall hallow him; he offers the gifts of the Lord your God: he shall be holy, for I the Lord that sanctify them am holy.  9  And if the daughter of a priest should be profaned [βεβηλωθῇ] to go a whoring [ τοῦ ἐκπορνεῦσαι], she profanes [βεβηλοῖ] the name of her father [Deu_22:20-21]: she shall be burned with fire [ἐπὶ πυρὸς κατακαυθήσεται – Gen_38:24; Jos_7:15, Jos_7:25].

 

Notice What God Says About Priests in Lev 21

v. Lev_21:7 – God forbids the Priests to marry a pornēn – this directly indicates a woman who has been having sex before the priest may have thought to marry her; this is clearly using a form of porneia to address what you call premarital sex, or, fornication.

 

v. Lev_21:9 – God forbids the priests to let one of their daughters be a pornēn – notice that if she is still living with her father, it is clear she has not yet married (i.e. she is not cohabiting with a husband if she is still living with her father) – it is in this unmarried context where she is forbidden to be a pornēn (a fornicator), just as a woman is described in an unmarried state when the priest is forbidden to marry a pornēn

 

Notice that Lev 21…

(1) Talks about Forbidding a priest to marry a prostitute

(2) Talks about forbidding his daughter to be one

(3) Never talks about the priest’s wife committing adultery by becoming or acting like a prostitute after marriage – that might be theoretically possible too, but such possible “adultery” is not even mentioned in this case because the context is dealing with sex before marriage, and it is clearly using pornēn in this way.

 

The Rest of Lev 21 Compared with Eze 44

Lev_21:13-15 CAB He shall take for a wife a virgin [παρθένον] of his own tribe.  14  But a widow [Eze_44:22 – later specified to not include a priest’s widow], or one that is put away, [ἐκβεβλημένην – lit. thrown out] or profaned [βεβηλωμένην], or a harlot [καὶ πόρνην], these he shall not take; but [ἀλλ᾿ – stronger contrast] he shall take for a wife [the] a virgin [ἢ παρθένον] of [ἐκ] his own people [τοῦ γένους αὐτοῦ].  15  And he shall not profane his seed [σπέρμα (sperma)] among [ἐν (en)] his people: I am the Lord that sanctifies him.

 

Eze_44:22-23 CAB Neither shall they take to themselves a widow *for a wife [* εἰς γυναῖκα – lit. into a woman/ wife (for himself)], or one that is put away [ἐκβεβλημένην], but [the] a virgin [ἢ παρθένον] of [ἐκ] the seed of Israel. But if there should happen to be a priest’s widow, they shall take her [καὶ χήρα ἐὰν γένηται ἐξ ἱερέως, λήμψονται].  23  And they shall teach My people to distinguish between holy and profane, and they shall make known to them the difference between unclean and clean.

 

Notice these things From Ezekiel 44

·       Death potentially frees a woman to remarry a Priest, but divorce does not

·       A Priest’s widows can be clean, but divorced people cannot be cleansed in remarriage

·       Notice that in the New Covenant, we are to all be “priests” with such high standards

>> kings and priests/ priest hood of the believer

- (does this also clarify 1Ti_3? One-woman man?)

 

Some Summaries of Priestly Requirements

·       Being a pornēn is contrasted with being a virgin: Lev_21:13-15; (Notice: if a virgin becomes a pornēn, this is necessarily speaking of sex before marriage)

·       Said to profane: Lev_21:6-7, Lev_21:9, Lev_21:13-15

·       Said to profane the name of her father: Lev_21:9 (i.e. clearly sex before marriage while still living with her father, just as it is said to do in Deu_22:20-21)

·       Being a pornēn compared with a potential marriage after divorce: Lev_21:7; (also see Eze_44:22-23; and compare Jeremiah 3)

 

Deu 22 – Accusations Against The Virginity Of A Betrothed Girl

Deu_22:13-21

 

It goes without saying that this passage speaks of sex before marriage during betrothal, and it uses porneia to address this.

 

Note: Deu 22 is covered more thoroughly later

 

Sin Lists – Adultery Clearly Used As a Different Sin Than Porneia (or Fornication)

Gal_5:19, Gal_5:21 CAB  Now the works of the flesh are manifest [φανερα (phanera) – made visible by light], which are: adultery [μοιχεία G3430 (moicheia) – which is the noun form of the verb: “μοιχάω G3429 (moichaō) ], fornication [πορνεία G4202 (porneia)], immorality [ἀκαθαρσία – lit. uncleanness], lewdness [ἀσέλγεια – lit. a type of “discontentment” meaning lustfulness]21those who *practice such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.

 

[* i.e. those who continue to convert these nouns he just mentioned into verbal actions in their own life won’t make it into the Kingdom of God]

 

In a list like this, it is impossible to conclude that porneia is supposed to include adultery, because Paul just listed adultery as a separate item on the list of condemnable sins. In cases like this, it is clear that porneia can be use more distinctly for fornication, especially whenever a contrast may be made.

 

>> Quote Mat_15 at some point:

Also see: Mat_15:19; Mar_7:21;

 

Conclusions

We have just seen from these examples that the modern claims about the supposedly “universal broadness” of porneia are inflated. Porneia is not always used to address any and every kind of sexual immorality in every case, as so many pastors now insist. From all of these examples we can definitely see that the great efforts of the majority of modern propaganda to universally blur porneia into generic vagueness is wrong. We ought not to accept the loose and sloppy rewritten definitions for this word just because our modern cultures tend toward training us to be shallow and gullible, and addicted to the forgery of paraphrasing*. The original Greek words in the Bible truly have powerful meaning to them, and their scope actually lets them be surprisingly specific at times. Seeing that porneia can indeed sometimes specifically address fornication, is it possible that Jesus could be using it this way in Matthew 5 and 19?

 

[* For more on “paraphrasing” see “bible Paraphrases” in the Bibliography]

 

>> add/ reference “adultery” verses here too

 

Porneia vs. Adultery – Sometimes there is Contrast

>>! Need to draw this to a point…

There is a curious tendency throughout the New Testament to contrast porneia with adultery much more frequently than the Greek LXX Old Testament had done. This is a tendency we have to consider when it comes to the exception clause, because Jesus uses both adultery and porneia in His exception statements, and we should ask ourselves if this same contrast is intended in Jesus’ Words as is frequently found in the epistles and other New Testament writings. It is clear that at least sometimes when porneia is used with adultery it is because the author or speaker wishes to contrast the two sins as occurring before and after marriage. We have got to ask ourselves if it is possible that this is also happening when it comes to the exception in Matthew:

 

The exception for divorce – is for porneia

 

Marrying another – is called adultery

 

Is there contrast in these two scenarios? Aren’t these two terms intended as two different sexual sins since they are distinguished in this way for two different scenarios? Is the porneia exception intended to address sexual sin done before marriage, while the “adultery” of remarriage is immorality after marriage?

 

> We should take note that by the time of the New Testament there had generally been about 200 years of linguistic development since the Greek LXX Old Testament had been written, and this may contribute to the

> It turns out there is actually great amounts of evidence that Matthew is in fact addressing sex before marriage when he uses porneia! – I would say that the next number of points document this considerably.

 

The Question that Arises: How Can the Divorce Exception Be Before Marriage?

We see that porneia can sometimes address cases of fornication. Do you think Jesus was using porneia this way? If the exception actually has to do with sex before marriage, the natural question that arises from this is: How does it make sense to divorce someone for sex before marriage? Some people might think that they have missed something here. At this point many people ask, “Why would Jesus give such a strange exception for ‘divorcing before marriage’ if this is indeed the case?”

 

3. Jewish Betrothal Explains the Fornication-Exception

>> Explain why Genesis still teaches betrothal for Jews even though there wasn’t a year of separation in Genesis:

Genesis is talking about the same thing as Jesus is when describing a man establishing a betrothal, yet in the Garden of Eden Adam didn’t have to wait a year to prepare a house since he already had a paradise to live in. Most Jews however did wait a year before taking the woman home to the new house.

>> Add here: should I add the thought: “exception is only in Matthew” here??

>> Maybe also say: did you notice that the exception is only in Matthw??

Mat_5

Mat_19

Mar_10 – No exception

Luk_16:18 – No exception

1Co_7:

>> or should I just have the chart here??

>> We understand only one type of divorce in the Scriptures, but the Jews understood two types of divorce.

>> Due 22 is the missing divorce passage that we have not noticed

---------------

>>H >> Christine:  how is repetition/ kingdom of God Jewish?

>> Have I made it clear how these things are Jewish?

>> persecuted writer S: Why is Mark especially Greek/Gentile minded when Peter, who was given the gospel to the circumcision, directed Mark in the writing of it?

>> Because Peter latter discipled gentiles (think first Cornelius, then Rome)

>> How can I… or should I… try to represent this in my book??

 

The Gospels Were Written to Specific Groups

The writers of the Gospels each wrote to specific people and people groups. (Compare Luk_1:3-4).

Out of these, Mark and Luke are especially Gentile minded, while John is different because he addresses a much later generation of established disciples.

and does not address divorce and remarriage issues directly.

 

Matthew Was Uniquely Written to the Jews

While Matthew was particularly written to the Jews, the other Gospels are not so Jewish

>> starts with a genealogy, Luk waits till the third chapter!

 

(1) Matthew repeats things

·       Examples of repetition in Matthew: Mat_5:31-32; Mat_19:8-9; Mat_17:20; Mat_21:21

·       It is part of Jewish literature, and Divine culture to repeat things (Gen_1:1-31 - Gen_2:1-3; Gen_2:4-25), so because Matthew’s original (Jewish) audience was already more adjusted to this and expects this for emphasis, Matthew does more repetition than the other Gospels.

·       In the other Gospels there is not nearly as much repetition

 

(2) “The Kingdom of the Heavens” vs. “The Kingdom of GOD”

·       There are 32 occurrences of this term in the Bible, and all of them are found in Matthew

·       The term, “the Kingdom of the God” is only used 4 times in Matthew

·       The term “The Kingdom of the Heavens[“ἡ βασιλεία τῶν οὐρανῶν”] is used only in Matthew because the Jews were greatly anticipating “The Kingdom of the Heavens” and had significantly emphasized this before Jesus came preaching about it.  To this (Jewish) nation then, it is of particular importance to include the specific details which Jesus mentioned about “The Heavens” when speaking of the coming Kingdom.

·       In other Gospel accounts of the same events, it usually reads, “the Kingdom of the God,” [“ἡ βασιλεία τοῦ Θεοῦ”] (for example, compare Mat_13:33 with Luk_13:18-19).

 

> partly to capitalize to the Jews that Jesus kingdom is not an earthly one as they had expected, but a heavenly one. It is also considerable that

(3) Jewish Terms are Not Explained

Matthew frequently uses Jewish terms without any explanation:

 

Ceremonial washings – Mat_15:2

“The Holy City” – Mat_4:5; Mat_27:53

“The city of the great King” – Mat_5:35

Jewish rulers mentioned – Mat_2:1, Mat_2:22; Mat_14:1

 

Matthew clearly presupposes that his audience is already thoroughly familiarized with these involved Jewish concepts. Throughout the other Gospels, unique Jewish practices are often explained, for example, Jewish customs, (such as Mar_7:3-4) and Aramaic sayings, (such as Joh_20:16). (Also see: Joh_1:41; Joh_4:25 [Luk_4:41]).

    Matthew even records where Jesus uses extremely Jewish, rabbinic terminology that is constantly used throughout the Talmud (ex. Mat_15:10 uses a very specific, Talmudic Jewish expression while Mar_7:14 uses a more generic expression).

 

(4) The Evidence Left Behind is Abundant

>> see NKJV intro to add references

“The ecclesiastical writers Papias, St. Irenćus, Origen, Eusebius, and St. Jerome… agree in declaring that St. Matthew wrote his Gospel for the Jews. …[Matthew] shows that he is familiar with Jewish geography, history, culture, and classes of people and thoughts. …phrases like: ‘Son of David,’ ‘the holy city,’ and ‘city of the great king.’”*

 

All of these things show Matthew’s Jewishness, and in addition to all these Jewish ideas and more, Matthew, “also makes 53 Old Testament Quotations, and over 70 O.T. references to prophecies.”* and these are also considerably Jewish things to do.

 

* Source: www.newadvent.org/cathen/10057a.htm

Confirmed 7/21/11

 

(5) Matthew was Originally Written in Hebrew

From many voices written down in church history, we can know for sure that Matthew was originally written in Hebrew, and this is confirmed from the most authoritative voices right down to the other end of the theological and chronological spectrum in Origen’s day:

 

(A) Matthew in Hebrew – According to Papias, the Apostle John’s Disciple

“This is what is related by Papias… with regard to Matthew he has made the following statements]: Matthew put together the oracles [of the Lord] in the Hebrew language, and each one interpreted them* as best he could.”

 

Note: “interpreted” is a reference to (as we now say it) “translating” the Gospel of Matthew from Hebrew into Greek

 

(From Eusebius, Hist. Eccl., iii. 39; See Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol 1, “Fragments of Papias” Ch VI.; in e-Sword at 1.06.02)

 

We can see that the report of a “Hebrew original of Matthew’s Gospel” is confirmed by such authoritative voices as Papias, the Apostle John’s disciple (as quoted by Eusebius) and these things have even more authenticity confirmed into these statements by Irenaeus:

 

(B) Matthew in Hebrew – According to Irenaeus, the disciple of John’s Disciples

“Matthew also issued a written Gospel among the Hebrews in their own dialect, while Peter and Paul were preaching at Rome, and laying the foundations of the Church. After their departure [i.e. their Martyrdom], Mark, the disciple and interpreter of Peter, did also hand down to us in writing what had been preached by Peter. Luke also, the companion of Paul, recorded in a book the Gospel preached by him. Afterwards, John, the disciple of the Lord, who also had leaned upon His breast, did himself publish a Gospel during his residence at Ephesus in Asia.”

 

(Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book III, Ch 1, point 1; See Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol 1; in e-Sword at, 1.06.02)

 

(C) Matthew in Hebrew & the Other Gospels For the Nations – According to Origen

“Concerning the four Gospels which alone are uncontroverted in the Church of God under heaven, I have learned by tradition that the Gospel according to Matthew, who was at one time a publican and afterwards an Apostle of Jesus Christ, was written first; and that he composed it in the Hebrew tongue and published it for the converts from Judaism. The second written was that according to Mark, who wrote it according to the instruction of Peter, who, in his General Epistle, acknowledged him as a son, saying, ‘The church that is in Babylon, elect together with you, saluteth you; and so doth Mark my son.’ [Compare 1Pe_5:13] And third, was that according to Luke, the Gospel commended by2 Paul, which he composed for the converts from the Gentiles. Last of all, that according to John.413

 

[“This fragment is found in Eusebius, H. E., vi. 25,” and is said to be “From the First Book of the Commentary on Matthew”; See Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol 9, “Commentaries of Origen,” “Origen’s Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew.”; in e-Sword at, 9.13.17; This quote is thought to have been originally written ~245-248 AD]

 

(D) Matthew in Hebrew – According to Jerome

“Matthew also called Levi, apostle and aforetimes publican, composed a gospel of Christ at first published in Judea in Hebrew for the sake of those of the circumcision who believed, but this was afterwards translated into Greek though by what author is uncertain. The Hebrew itself has been preserved until the present day in the library at Caesarea which Pamphilus so diligently gathered. I have also had the opportunity of having the volume described to me by the Nazarenes of Beroea, a city of Syria, who use it. In this it is to be noted that wherever the Evangelist, whether on his own account or in the person of our Lord the Savior quotes the testimony of the Old Testament he does not follow the authority of the translators of the Septuagint but the Hebrew. Wherefore these two forms exist “Out of Egypt have I called my son,” and “for he shall be called a Nazarene.”

Jerome, Lives of Illustrious Men, Ch.3

 

1) The Nazarenes use the Gospel of the Hebrews.

 

Jerome, on Isa., Preface to Book 18 “For when the apostles thought him to be a spirit or, in the words of the Gospel of the Hebrews which the Nazarenes read, ‘a bodiless demon’ he said to them...”

(Quote from translation by J.K. Elliott quoted in The New Testament and Early Christian Writings, Bart Erhman, Oxford University Press, 1998, 138)

 

2) The Gospel which the Nazarenes and Ebionites use which he had translated into Greek is called by many the original Gospel of Matthew.

 

 

Jerome, On Matt. 12:13 (398 AD)

“In the Gospel which the Nazarenes and Ebionites use (which I have lately translated into Greek from the Hebrew, and which is called by many (or most) people the original of Matthew), this man who had the withered hand is described as a mason, who prays for help in such words as this: ‘I was a mason seeking a livelihood with my hands. I pray thee, Jesus, to restore me mine health, that I may not beg meanly for my food.’”

(Quote from The Apocryphal New Testament, Montague Rhode James, (Oxford: Clarendon Press 1924), 1-8.

 

3) The Gospel used by the Nazarenes is called the “Gospel according to the Hebrews” or the “Gospel of the Apostles” or as most term it, the “Gospel According to Matthew.” It is in the library of Caesarea (which Jerome mentioned in Illustrious Men).

 

Jerome Dialogue Against Pelagius, 3.2 (415 AD)

“In the Gospel according to the Hebrews which is indeed in the Chaldaean and Syriac speech but is written in Hebrew letters, which the Nazarenes use to this day, called ‘according to the apostles’, or, as most term it, ‘according to Matthew’, which also is to be seen in the library of Caesarea, the story tells: ‘Behold, the mother of the Lord and his brethren said unto him, ‘John Baptist baptizeth unto the remission of sins; let us go and be baptized of him.’ But he said unto them, ‘Wherein (what) have I sinned, that I should go and be baptized of him? unless peradventure this very thing that I have said is a sin of ignorance.’”

(Quote from The Apocryphal New Testament, Montague Rhode James, (Oxford: Clarendon Press 1924), 1-8)

 

Jerome, Preface to the Four Gospels (383 A.D.)

“I am now speaking of the New Testament. This was undoubtedly composed in Greek, with the exception of the work of Matthew the Apostle, who was the first to commit to writing the Gospel of Christ, and who published his work in Judaea in Hebrew characters. We must confess that as we have it [New Testament] in our language it is marked by discrepancies, and now that the stream is distributed into different channels we must go back to the fountainhead [the Greek manuscripts]…I therefore promise in this short Preface to the four Gospels only, which are to be taken in the following order, Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, as they have been revised by a comparison of the Greek manuscripts. Only early ones have been used.”

 

(6) There are No Real Grounds to Dispute the Jewishness of Matthew

No one really disputes these conclusions about the Jewishness of Matthew, and the fact that it was written in Hebrew is common knowledge for those who have reasonably done their homework, especially because this is unanimously confirmed among the early church leaders.

Even the subtle heretic Origen, who was prone in his writings to question and doubt well-established facts and precious truths of the Scriptures, knew Matthew was originally written in Hebrew. If Origen went about questioning the books of the Bible that we know are true, but didn’t question the Hebrew of Matthew, this indicates that Origen did not consider this fact debatable during his time. If we compound this observation with the numerous testimonies from all the other early church leaders, there really isn’t any reason to question the Jewishness of Matthew.

 

Both The Verbal and the Written Gospels Were Audience-Specified Proclamations

As a point of comparison to what we have already said, Gal_2:7-8 makes a type of Jew-Gentile distinction between the “Gospel for the nations” [or “Gentiles”] and “the Gospel for the Jews” in a parallel way:

 

Gal_2:7-8 CAB  but on the contrary, when they saw that I had been entrusted with the gospel for the uncircumcised [non-Jews], just as Peter with the gospel for the circumcised [Jews],  8  (for He who worked with Peter in the apostleship to the circumcised [Jews], worked also with me in that for the Gentiles),

 

In the same way as these verbal proclamations of the Gospel through Peter and Paul were ethnically particular, so also the “Gospels” (that were written down for us) were also audience-specified presentations of the “Everlasting Gospel” (compare Rev_14:6), which is written forever in the Heavens (compare Psa_119:89). Out of the eternity of this infinite mystery, the Gospels were written down for us, presenting the necessary facts of this Good Message (“Gospel”) as each people group was uniquely and respectively in need of knowledge for salvation.

Matthew was written specifically presenting this eternal truth particularly to the Jews to meet what they needed for their salvation (1Jn_5:13). Because of this, we know for sure that some of the things which we have from Jesus were not ever written in the four Gospels (as seen in Act_20:35; and compare some of the unique details of Heb_5:8), especially since none of the Gospels claim to have written down all of the amazing things that happened, but only that which was deemed appropriate in each particular case by God through His servants unto each people group He commissioned them to write to (Joh_21:25; Joh_14:26; compare: Mar_10:10; Act_2:40; Act_15:32, Act_20:2, Act_20:9, Act_20:11; Act_28:23). We ought to understand it this way if we are going to truly understand the Gospels, and with Matthew, this can become a critical dynamic when it comes to Gentiles needing to understand some of the Jewish aspects of Jesus’ teaching on marriage.

 

The Separation of Jews and Gentiles May Trip Us Up On Understanding Marriage

Jews and Gentiles generally lived separately, (Ex. Mat_10:5, Act_10:28; Act_21:27-29; Act_22:21; also Joh_4:9). If Gentiles were somewhat excluded from some of the everyday understandings of the Jews, then the teachings of the Gospel of Matthew may very well have been hard for them to understand at many points, in the same way as it is often hard for uninformed readers today to understand.

Because Matthew was written to the Jews and not the Gentiles, then we who are Gentile-minded might have trouble understanding their customs mentioned throughout the book. We should be sensitive to the fact that we need “cultural bridges” to help us understand Matthew, even more-so than the other Gospels.

So many have recklessly supposed that Jesus was teaching in a Gentile mindset when they read about the exception clause in Matthew, whereas, if a non-Jewish reader wishes to read Jesus’ Words this way, they should have read them in Mark or Luke since these Gospels were designed and intended for that audience. But now we see Jesus making a Jewish statement about an exception which has been condensed* and tailored for the Jews. It is not found in any other place than the Gospel for the Jews. We ought to be sure we understand it this way before we go out and boast about the “loophole” we found in Jesus’ teaching.

 

[* Note: The fact that the written exception clause has been condensed from what was at first proclaimed verbally goes without saying, as we have already established with all of the references at the end of the point entitled, “Both The Verbal and the Written Gospels Were Audience-Specified Proclamations” – this is the nature of what it means to make a condensed narrative.]

 

What is “Jewish Betrothal”?

>>H

>> Insert all Greek & Hebrew Jewish definitions (see Talmud Notes)

>> some people make foolish and ignorant statements about things being ‘not yet one flesh’ but this is very sloppy and irresponsible

>> Talmud proves this

In the same way that other cultural mysteries tend to trip us up, Jewish customs on marriage don’t immediately make sense to us. One of the primary examples of this is their practice of usually getting legally and morally “bound” into a covenant that makes them man and woman, husband and wife, long before the marriage supper. In English this is usually called “Jewish betrothal” in order to keep non-Jews from confusing it with their own customs of “engagement.”

With Jews, instead of simply getting an “engagement” they were completely “betrothed” and bound by covenant so that they would have to get a legal divorce if a man decided to socially and legally back out of his agreement before actually cohabiting with her. This isn’t giving a ring with the intention of becoming husband and wife “one day,” this is a man paying a “bride price” and putting the matter in official writing with sufficient witnesses to establish the covenant relationship at the moment they fully agree to this.

When Jews decided to get married, they did not mess around with hopeful engagement commitments like we often do; they sat down, got serious, made the covenant right then, and then the man went away to prepare for the marriage supper which would typically take place about a year later. This left the bride with a year of preparation and waiting to see if she would be faithful and ready for the exciting day whenever he may (at any moment) make the surprise entrance into her city to ‘receive her unto himself’, scoop her up into a chair elevated by the groomsmen (Son_3:6-7, Son_3:11), and bring her away to the seven-day* marriage celebration.

 

Some Basics about Betrothal vs. Engagement

·       Jewish Betrothal is by nature distinct from what most people call engagement

·       Engagement is the intention for two people to become spouses one day; betrothal establishes two people as spouses immediately

·       Engagement looks forward to making a “one flesh” covenant in order to morally cohabit; betrothal is the “one flesh” covenant, made long before cohabitation

·       Engagements are what Gentiles (non-Jews) do; betrothal is what ancient Jews did

·       Gentiles only consider divorce after a marriage is celebrated; Jews had to consider the possibility of divorce before, during*, and after a marriage celebration.

·       Because the man has comparatively very little opportunity in an actually moral culture** of “getting to know” his woman before cohabiting with her, the main reason for possibly divorcing a woman during betrothal would be if she committed prostitution [fornication] before the marriage supper. This is referenced numerous times in Scripture and ancient Jewish writings.

 

[* Ancient weddings were typically seven days long; see the context of the following references: Gen_29:27; Jdg_14:10 (esp. MT), Jdg_14:12, Jdg_14:16-18; Joh_2:1 (Καὶ τῇ ἡμέρᾳ τῇ τρίτῃ γάμος ἐγένετο);

 If there was an issue detected with the woman’s purity (i.e. Deu_22:13-29), the man was expected to take her to the Rabbis the very next day after consummation (the second day of the wedding feast) to obtain a divorce certificate]

[** To understand what a “truly moral culture” is, see the “No Dating Battle List” on www.TrueConnection.org]

 

Basic Betrothal Concepts

>> Add Jewish/ Hebrew/ Talmudic Words:

·       A female virgin passes from having virginity in her father’s house (Deu_22:14-21) to being called a young woman (Deu_22:19) by the culmination of this betrothal process in coming together with her man in cohabitation (Deu_22:13-14, Deu_22:16).

·       If she passes from her virginity by sexual activity before the betrothal process is culminated, then this is referred to as “prostitution” (Deu_22:21)

·       “Prostitution” before cohabitation is a crime of a woman not waiting for her man, and this wickedness is punishable by death if proven; (we call this “fornication” in English).

 

Cautions When Considering Betrothal

I would like to emphasize an honest and sobering caution here because so many people have been very irresponsible and sloppy when teaching on this subject of “betrothal.” If you understand some very basic and well-established facts they can keep you from being sloppy and irrational when considering betrothal:

 

>> we ought not to break off and discuss our own selfish, non-Jewish, non-Biblical ideas about betrothal, we ought to submit to the facts before us and the authority of the Scriptures and comprehend that Biblical and historical betrothal means making two people into one flesh.

 

Whether or not Jesus made a reference to betrothal in His marriage teaching has absolutely nothing to do with the false notion that says it depends on if “porneia does” or “doesn’t always mean fornication.” This is called a “false dilemma” because it creates a flawed perception that two unrelated things depend on each other

 

> This is called a “straw-man argument,” that is designed to discredit a betrothal-exception.

> Diverting

 

>> betrothal (kedushen) means acquisition or being set apart (for a specific man). Jews usually establish a woman belonging to a man before they lived together

> 

One of the main things we typically miss when it comes to marriage in Matthew is the Ancient Jewish practice of “betrothal.”

 

Some Basic Biblical Examples of Betrothal

>> Lots two daughters!

>> who has betrothed a wife and not taken her (~Deu_20 ish)

 

If we are wondering if Betrothal is actually taught in the Bible, we can start by simply looking at the very beginning of the New Testament:

 

>>R

Mat 1 – Joseph and Mary

Mat_1:18-19 CAB Now the birth of Jesus Christ [χριστοῦ  – anointed one] was like this: After His mother Mary had been betrothed to Joseph, before they came together, she was found pregnant by the Holy Spirit.  19  Then Joseph her husband, being righteous and not wanting to make her a public example, purposed to put her away secretly.

>> This verse gets repeated in a bit… (as “Mat_1:19”)

 

But after being instructed by the angel, Joseph, “…took [παρέλαβε]… his wife, [Mary,]” (Mat_1:24 b CAB) and married her.

 

Did you notice that Joseph was called “her husband” before He had even entered into cohabitation with Mary? Did you notice that Joseph was considering going through a legal divorce processbefore they came together”? Did you notice that this betrothal incident is only recorded in Matthew and not in any of the other Gospels? Did you notice that Matthew did not clarify this statement to accommodate an uninformed gentile reader? We see then, that when reading Matthew we have to maintain a sensitivity and particularly “Jewish” awareness to both notice and understand what exactly just happened in this story of Joseph and Mary. When betrothal is referenced in Matthew, Matthew (like many other Jewish writings) presupposes that the reader is already familiar with these Jewish concepts and needs no explanation to understand this betrothal scenario that is being described.

    Also please be very careful to take note that it is extremely clear that divorce is definitely allowed during betrothal for Jews. – I need to be sure and emphasize this out here because numerous people get confused when trying to understand the Law of Moses when it comes to divorce during betrothal. If God allows divorce during betrothal, then it is very clear that God takes betrothal much more seriously than we take our engagement! It also means that this divorce is a very real issue that may be addressed when Jesus gives the one reason where a man can righteously divorce. So don’t forget this: divorce is clearly allowed for prostitution during betrothal, and it is “righteous” (Mat_1:19), whereas the divorce after betrothal is call ‘unrighteous’ by Jesus (Deu_24:1-4; (Mat_5:31-32); Mat_19:3-8; Mar_10:2-9)

 

If you can see this here with joseph and Mary, then we can also realize some very astonishing things…

 

The Greek Means Betrothal

The word for “espoused” (μνηστευθεισηςG3423) in Matthew is the same word used for betrothal in the Greek Old Testament (including Deu_22:23, Deu_22:25, Deu_22:27-28 [μεμνηστευμενη G3423], etc.).

 

Deu 22 – Accusations Against The Virginity Of A Betrothed Girl

Deu_22:13-21

>> (I just used this in the previous points)

 

A Virgin who mourns for her “Husband”?

Joe_1:8 CAB Lament to Me more than a virgin girded with sackcloth for the husband of her youth.

 

(Also see Deu_22:23-24 for more)

 

MT

Joe_1:8 WEB Mourn like a virgin dressed in sackcloth for the husband of her youth!

 

Note: a “virgin” is never really considered to have a “husband” in our modern cultures, but this was the way that God described this “Jewish” scene through the prophet Joel. If you understand Jewish betrothal, this passage makes perfect sense. Without understanding these things, you are left as a confused Gentile.

 

These are only a few examples of the many references to betrothal throughout the Scriptures. Many more examples are yet to come.

>> Incorporate everything from ‘marriage reflects Jesus & the church’

 

Matthew 1 Requires a Qualification to Be Made in Chapters 5 & 19 – The Exception is in Matthew Three Times not Two

We have shown how Jesus condemned those who took advantage of the divorce permission in Deu_24:1-4, and we have said that the two main passages in Matthew that are usually called “the exception clause” are Mat_5:32 and Mat_19:9, but did you know that even considering both of these cases still does not account for all that Matthew says about the possibility of divorcing righteously without a hard heart? Though the exception is not in the other Gospels, it is in Matthew for a good reason, but one of the reasons we misunderstand these references is because, while often focusing on Matthew five and nineteen, we don’t usually notice Matthew’s first foundational application of a righteous divorce in Matthew one.

In dealing with this issue, it is very helpful for us to see that the only book that mentions “the exception” among the divorce and remarriage teachings of the New Testament, gives the perfect example of this “exception” in the very first reference to it, in the righteous example of Joseph and Mary. As we saw in this passage previously, it says, “…Joseph her husband, being righteous and not wanting to make her a public example, purposed to put her away secretly,” (Mat_1:19 CAB). Joseph out of righteousness had it in mind to divorce Mary for some kind of ‘a report’ of prostitution before marriage (see v. Mat_1:18, and compare Joh_8:41) as defined in Deu_22:14-21.

The Jews knew what a saying, or report, of prostitution (or fornication) was, and because of this it is appropriate for it to be present in Matthew, “the Gospel unto the Jews” (as we showed earlier with passages like Gal_2:7). In representing Jesus teachings and specifying the wording with the audience in mind, as we have already seen that all of the four Gospel writers knowingly did, Matthew would have left an “untied string” in his account if he had mentioned what righteous Joseph did when thinking of divorcing Mary during betrothal, and then followed this account by recording Jesus as saying that “all divorce was unrighteous.”

Without particularly resolving to include what Jesus said about divorcing for a report of prostitution before marriage (fornication), Matthew would have left Joseph looking unrighteous for not obeying the laws of God that would be proclaimed fully in the New Testament, as though Joseph did not have them already written on his heart from loving God (see 2Co_3:2-3). But instead we are told that Joseph was righteous, and his actions are given to us as an example of righteousness that we should follow in it.

Matthew is the only Gospel that records Joseph thinking of divorcing Mary, and Matthew is the only Gospel that gives an exception to divorce in Jesus’ marriage teaching. Do you see a consistent pattern here yet? We see then that the actions of righteous Joseph in Matthew one require some kind of a comparable exception to be stated in Matthew five and nineteen when Jesus teaches about divorce. Out of Divine inspiration, Matthew drew from the facts that were available before him and composed a narrative that teaches us about marriage in a Jewish context, and in this way, three times the Gospel of Matthew teaches us from the story of Joseph to the teachings of Jesus, that there is only ONE righteous reason for divorce.

 

Why Didn’t Joseph Have Mary Stoned? – This Actually Teaches Us A Lot About Jesus’ Exception!

For a long time I wondered why Joseph did not have Mary put to death for being pregnant before being wedded. After all, they were under the Old Covenant at that time, and the Law said that women who committed prostitution during a betrothal should be stoned.

>> Get Greek for “find”:

I would say that the answer is a lot more clear and easy to understand than I had noticed at first: I think you can say pretty certainly that no one was in a posture to stone Mary because she did not fit the descriptions of the stoning requirements exactly as described in Deu_22:14-27: “And if a man be found lying with a woman…you shall kill them both...” (Deu_22:22 CAB). This is why the Pharisees were very specific when accusing the woman taken in adultery by saying, “…Teacher, we found this woman committing adultery, in the very act,” (Joh_8:4 CAB). Unlike this woman, Mary was clearly not found in the act (especially because there was no “act” of immorality in Mary’s case to “find” her in!).

>> Note: Deu_22:22 is repeated about 4 times in this book

Righteous Joseph would not have wanted to have Mary publicly stoned because without “two or three witnesses” that could have violated the principal behind the commandment that teaches Jews not to falsely bring up an evil name about a faithful bride (compare Deu_22:13-19). Although there was evidently a very bad report that was given to Joseph which prompted him to have it in mind to divorce her (compare Joh_8:41), yet, in Mary’s case, she was not found in an act of prostitution, and because of this there was the possibility that she had been raped, and the Law says not to put someone to death in this case Deu_22:25-28. Even if a woman is suspected but not found in the sin of immorality, this would still leave such a woman “innocent until proven guilty,” because for stoning to take place guilt must be proven by catching the transgressor in the very act:

 

Deu_17:6 CAB   He shall die on the testimony [MT: “At the mouth” (WEB)] of two or three witnesses; a man who is put to death shall not be put to death for one witness  [MT: “at the mouth of one witness” (WEB)].

 

Also: Deu_19:15; Num_35:30; Mat_18:16; Joh_8:17; 2Co_13:1; 1Ti_5:19; Heb_10:28

 

>> This repeated about 4 times in this book

Deu_22:22 CAB  And if a man be found lying with a woman married to a man, you shall kill them both…

 

Joh_8:3-4 CAB   Then the scribes and Pharisees brought to Him a woman who had been caught in adultery, and having stood her in the midst,  4  they said to Him, “Teacher, we found this woman committing adultery, in the very act.

 

Deu_22:25-27 CAB But if a man find in the field a young woman that is betrothed, and he should force her and lie with her, you shall slay the man that lay with her only.  26  And the young woman has not committed a sin worthy of death; as if a man should rise up against his neighbor, and slay him, so is this thing;  27  because he found her in the field; the betrothed young woman cried, and there was none to help her.

 

Cases of Immorality Were…

·       Punished by death by the mouth of two or three sources of confirming evidence (i.e. “two or three witnesses”).

·       I have summarized this as: the witness of two is true – in the law (as in Joh_8:17 [esp. in Greek: δύο ἀνθρώπων ἡ μαρτυρία ἀληθής ἐστιν – “the witness [or testimony] of two men is true (Jos.Trans.)]).

·       If there is only one source of evidence, then the death penalty cannot be enforced.

·       If a woman is not caught in the act, the “unproven case” applies

 

And doesn’t Mary fit this description of being “in the field” since there was the possibility of concluding that Marry had been raped, especially in light of her good character, which was certainly known in such a small town like the one they lived in, just as it was said of Ruth in Rth_3:10-11? Wasn’t Mary and her family in a small enough social context for “everyone to know everyone”?

 

Rth_3:10-11 CAB …Blessed are you of the Lord God, my daughter, for you have made your latter kindness greater than the former, in that you followed not after young men, whether any be poor or rich.  11 …for all the tribe* of my people knows that you are a virtuous woman.

 

[* LXX: φυλὴ – fig. relatives; MT: “city” (WEB); (not preserved in the DSS)]

 

Mat_13:55-56 CAB  Is this not the carpenter’s son? Is not His mother called Mary? And His brothers James, Joses, Simon, and Jude?  56  And His sisters, are they not all with us?…

(Also see: Mar_6:3)

 

We see in Jesus’ home town, they not only knew Marry, but also the names of Jesus’ brothers. These small towns were more common then, and this seems to be the most reasonable light to see Mary’s situation in: Everyone probably knew she was known to be righteous, but apparently no one could explain the scandal of her pregnancy.

 

Maybe you can imagine the scene in Luke chapter 1, and the distress and confusion apparently people felt:

v. Luk_1:5-23 – Strange things happened with Zacharias in the temple

v. Luk_1:24-25 – His wife Elizabeth goes into hiding

v. Luk_1:26-38 – Mary is visited by an angel

v. Luk_1:39-56 Mary goes away for three months* (v. Luk_1:36, Luk_1:55-56) into the mountainous hill country (v. Luk_1:39) to visit Elizabeth (v. Luk_1:40)

v. Luk_1:55 – Mary returns home three months* later, and she is “found” pregnant (Mat_1:18; just as Tamar was ‘found pregnant’ three months* after conception: Gen_38:24)

 

[* Note: The repeated theme of waiting three months to see if a woman is pregnant is repeated in a number of other places outside the Bible, including the Targum of Pseudo-Jonathan [or, as some call it, Targum Yerushalmi/ “Jerusalem Targum”] of Deu_21:13 (which is generally considered periphrastic)]

 

Mary very well could have been declared and considered innocent by the provision of the Law of Moses since she was away from home and was traveling into the mountainous hill country (Luk_1:39) which is comparable to the woman who is raped in a field, as described previously in the Law of Moses (Deu_22:25-27). In addition to this, we should consider passages like Pro_27:25 and Deu_11:11, where “mountains” and “fields” are closely associated together to generally describe being outside of a city, which is basically the context in which a woman was considered “innocent until proven guilty” if she was “found” pregnant. Because of these factors, they may have easily concluded that she was “raped in the field,” especially since she generally would have had to travel through fields outside of the cities to get into the hill country (Gen_14:10), and not to mention the probability of spacious meadows within the hill country while trying to get to the specific city.

>> Merge efforts of Gen_34:2-7  here, and fornication chart

Although Mary very well had the potential to have been considered a victim of rape (Gen_34:2-7 – as confirmed in Hebrew, “וישׁכב אתה ויענה׃” (MT), and Greek: “ἐταπείνωσεν αὐτήν” (LXX) and reaffirmed in: Gen_34:2-7, Gen_34:13, Gen_34:27), yet, what virtuous woman of any righteous character and zeal to clear her own name and that of her family from a charge of sin (Pro_22:1; Ecc_7:1; 2Co_7:11; Lev_21:9; Deu_22:21) would not quickly cry to her father and or brothers that she was raped as soon as she could (Gen_34:5-7; 2Sa_13:20-21; Gen_34:2-7), if indeed she was the innocent victim of a horrible crime? Instead, after three months, Mary returns home pregnant and seems to go about with no shame or guilt that she is pregnant before her wedding! Instead of crying over the apparent tragedy of the loss of her virginity (2Sa_13:19-22), she continues steadfast in her demeanor, as though she has some kind of faith that she has done what is right and suffers no harm! Maybe you can see how this could be a complicated issue for all those involved, especially Joseph. [The word “ἐνθυμηθέντος” (enthumethentos), (G1760) in Mat_1:20 implies that Joseph’s deeper passions and emotions were affected as he was ‘considering’ these things.]

Betrothed people in the Bible actually practiced sexual purity before marriage (sexual morality) by not “mixing” romantically before a marriage feast. In most cases they did not communicate, unless it was with or through the bride’s family. Because of this, Joseph obviously did not hear the report of Mary’s pregnancy from Mary herself, otherwise his idea to divorce her could not have been called “righteous,” as it is described in Mat_1:19.  But knowing at least something of her righteous character, Joseph could have initially suspected some kind of rape, but then, the implications of the testimony of her relatives would not have added up.

One could imagine that Joseph was probably thinking things like: I know Mary has had a righteous character, and I would think that she was probably raped, but the reports from her father and relatives seem to indicate that she was guilty of participating and cooperating with whatever situation got her pregnant (compare Luk_1:38)! – According to the Law, conceding or participating in the tragedy of rape, converts the case into the guilt of fornication for the woman (compare Deu_22:23-27), but in Mary’s case, though the guilt seemed apparent, it could not be proven…

Not long after Mary returns home, people think that she has committed prostitution (or fornication) before marriage (compare Joh_8:41) and this report gets back to Joseph (Mat_1:18-20). She does not qualify for stoning, but still, at the same time she sure does look guilty of fornication. This scene of apparent (reported) prostitution during betrothal is the perfect description played out for what follows in the book of Matthew concerning the exception clause.

>> the result is that Josephs deeper passions were affected, and he had set his emotions on divorcing her, which is all indicated by the word “ἐνθυμηθέντος  /\  \/

Joseph did what he did in righteousness, foreshadowing the righteous decree that would one day come from the lips of his own adopted Son, when out of perfect and infinite righteousness, the Son of God would fully make known to the sons of men that perfect decree and standard of righteousness concerning marriage and divorce. Joseph unknowingly but faithfully played the part given to him by God in setting the scene in Matthew one, for what Jesus would teach in Matthew five and nineteen.

So just as Abraham foreshadowed sacrificing his son, but stopped short of it when the angel stepped in and announced God’s provision of a sacrifice, so also Joseph foreshadowed the perfect righteousness of intending to divorce Mary for the only cause where it is ever righteous to divorce a wife, but also stopped short of it when the angel stepped in and announced Mary’s innocence and Joseph’s commission to take her home. Abraham’s intended sacrifice of his only son would one day be fleshed out in the actual sacrifice of Jesus’ death, just as the righteousness of Joseph’s intended divorce would later be fleshed out in Jesus’ teaching on marriage and divorce.

In accordance with his righteousness, the very moment that Joseph heard from God that Mary was not guilty of prostitution before marriage, (Mat_1:20) we see a sudden change of plans in Joseph, so that he was now more than willing to take Mary home with him (Mat_1:20-25; Luk_2:4-5) and help her in any way he could in the birth of her Divine pregnancy (see Luk_2:6-7). Joseph was no longer hindered or ashamed at all to have Mary with him as his wife (see Mat_1:24-25).

Joseph did not have the hard heart of divorcing wedded wives as God had tolerated through Moses (Deu_24:1-4; Mat_19:7-8 etc.) but instead Joseph had the soft and righteous heart of God (Mat_1:19) that would only divorce a woman if it was before a wedding when it did not put space between spouses that God had fastened together (Mat_19:6).

Though Joseph is now physically dead, without having one word he spoke explicitly recorded in Scripture, yet, the record of what He did lives on, speaking unto us and teaching us unto this day, and not only this, but also teaching all nations everywhere where the Gospel of Matthew is read in the Bible, that the only just and righteous reason for divorcing a wife, is if she commits prostitution before the wedding (as in Mat_5:31-32; Mat_19:9).

>>I need to add:

Tobit

Also consider the Greek behind a Book that most Protestants do not read

Although most do not accept it as Scripture, linguistically we can at least see the concept of the weight of Betrothal in Tobit: Tob_6:13 (γάμον in LXX, but Betrothal 3 times in DSS); Tob_7:11 (641-642)

 

Even though it was for a very short time, the betrothing was called “binding” and it took place before the consummation.

 

The Talmud Exception Clause – The Historical Jewish “Exception Clauses” Recorded in the Talmud Explicitly Speak of Betrothal

 

A Sample Exception

Jews Like to make countless exceptions that women had to fulfill to secure a marriage as valid:

 

“[If he says, you may marry anyone] except [that you may not] be betrothed to a minor…”

(Babylonian Talmud: Tractate Gittin, Folio 85a, Gemara, 1st Paragraph)

 

The Talmud Exception Clause – A Jewish Exception for Fornication During Betrothal!

“[If he said, you may marry] excepting you commit fornication…”

(Babylonian Talmud: Tractate Gittin, Folio 85a, Gemara, 4th Paragraph)

http://www.halakhah.com/gittin/gittin_85.html

 

While the Rabbis in the Talmud gave exception clauses that allowed divorce and remarriage, Jesus gave an exception that clearly did not. But in both cases, the exception clauses required women to be faithful before a marriage during betrothal. This is the cultural context. This is the type of language Jesus addressed. It is very reasonable to understand that Jesus was speaking of the same exception clauses that were already around in His day when he used such similar language when speaking about the exact same passage from Deuteronomy 24. While using the same type of exception language they did, He at the same time knocked down remarriage and established a higher form of righteousness which they had no capability to foresee.

    Since the Jews around Jesus were speaking about exceptions that prohibited women from marriage, it would make sense that Jesus would be referring to the same questions and situations when He spoke using this same type of terminology. And if someone claims that I am reaching beyond the Scriptures for my authority here, please be reasonable and don’t forget that we clearly have a “Talmud-type” of exception clause being acted out right before our eyes in Matthew one with Joseph and Mary, where Joseph applies these types of exception clauses to apparently unproven fornication during betrothal. But it is incredibly intriguing to find that the exceptions that were around when Joseph was deciding what to do with Mary sounded a whole lot like the exception language His adopted Son would give many years later when speaking about divorce and remarriage! Do you think that the ‘exception clause’ during betrothal that Joseph was considering was the same thing Jesus spoke to when He said “except for… porneia”?

 

in both cases their exception clauses called for divorce to stop the marriage from happening if the woman was unfaithful in while waiting.

--

The exception against fornication clearly existed before Jesus taught on marriage, and it explicitly refered to betrothal, What did not exsist was the declaration that dar was adultery. Jesus approved of the brtrothal-exception while condemning the remarriage permission among the Jews.

--

>make sure this is refering to during betrothal & not just entering into a second marriage??

 

while some of the Jews (in the Tamud) basically said things like:

After we divorce a woman she can remarry, unless she commits prostitution / fornication during her second betrothal

Jesus corrected this with the same language and basically said:

You men cannot even divorce, unless she commits prostitution during your (first) betrothal. And if you or she marries another, it is adultery.

 

Joseph and Mary Illustration of the Talmudic Situation

This Really Help Put all These things Together

If we look at a situation like Joseph and Mary’s situation, someone could apply what is said by some of the Jewish men discussed in the Talmud and basically say to marry, “if he marries you and then he divorces you, you can marry another (Deu 24), unless you commit prostitution during you second betrothal,” and then Jesus basically says to Joseph, “No, that’s not true Joseph. You will be guilty of making her commit adultery if you do that, unless if you divorce her for a report of prostitution (Deu 22) now during your betrothal.”

 

---------------

>> Ethical Code vs. Ethical Context

Don’t Mistake the ethical code for the ethical context – these are very different. While Jesus completely contradicts the ethical code of the Talmud, He does so within the same ethical context which they lived.

Jesus corrected what they thought was proper to practice (their ethical code) yet He said it within the same context of the issues they were facing and discussing (their same ethical context).

because the Talmud exception clause allows massive divorce and remarriage, it is clear that Jesus was not reaffirming the same ethical code, but what can be said is that Jesus was speaking within the same ethical context, and actually uses their type of speaking to enforce a much greater standard.

--

For a fuller discussion of this exception within its original context, as well as any important updates or clarifications we may find, see the exception clause research appendix

--

On one hand they are very different in that the Jewish exception clause allows divorce and remarriage (according to the allowance of the Law of Moses), but on the other hand are they not intriguingly similar if both of them are talking about divorcing during betrothal?

--

Although their exception clauses were in the context of allowing divorce and remarriage, Jesus spoke in very similar language when He gave an exception clause while He condemned divorce and remarriage. In both cases they still dealt with “faithfulness” before marriages and were discussing Deuteronomy 24’s permission to divorce. They said you could get divorced and remarried as long as you did not commit fornication before any of the marriages, while Jesus taught that you could not get divorced and remarried, while agreeing with their exception that stops a person from getting married in the first place.

 

>> Should I say: If you would like to understand these things further, I have documented and analyzed this in more detail in “excp. Research”

 

To our great surprise, it turns out that an ancient Jewish document also has a form of the exception clause that directly specifies what Jesus was addressing when He spoke about divorce and remarriage

 

 

 

> Entire Passage

[If he said, you may marry] excepting you commit fornication, what is the law? Do we lay stress on the fact that he left no reservation in the sphere of marriage, or on the fact that he did leave a reservation in the sphere of intercourse? — He replied: We have [the answer] in our Mishnah: [ANY MAN BUT] MY FATHER AND YOUR FATHER. Now to what [does the exception apply]? Shall I say to marriage? But are his father and her father capable of marrying her? It must be then to fornication, and when he excepts his father and her father this is no reservation,16  which shows that when he excepts anyone else, it is counted as a reservation? — [He rejoined:] perhaps the exception refers after all to marriage, since he may transgress the law and marry her.

http://www.halakhah.com/gittin/gittin_85.html

 

Finding the Hebrew

 

Babylonian Talmud in Hebrew:

http://www.mechon-mamre.org/b/l/l0.htm

 

3rd section: women “נשים” (Nashim)

Tractate Gittin: “גיטין  [my try: “[ן]ני[ת]טטיג” (I got it mostly right!)]

http://www.mechon-mamre.org/b/l/l3601.htm

 

Folio 85a, Gemara, 1st & 4th Paragraph

http://kodesh.snunit.k12.il/b/l/l3609_085a.htm

\/ into English:

http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=iw&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fkodesh.snunit.k12.il%2Fb%2Fl%2Fl3609_085a.htm

 

Gittin: “גיטין  Folio 85a, Gemara, 1st & 4th Paragraph

 

Gittin: Folio 85a, Gemara, 1st & 4th Paragraph

 

 

 

---------------

I am trying to find the Hebrew for two Talmud passages: Folio 85a, Gemara, 1st & 4th Paragraph:http://www.mechon-mamre.org/b/l/l3601.htm (I cannot read the Hebrew enough to find this yet)

---------------

 

---------------

Things you need to know before reading this quote

Time period:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirke_De-Rabbi_Eliezer

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eliezer_ben_Hyrcanus

 

 

Numbers Surrounding this Quote

The following numbers are based on words used (in one form or the other) throughout Folios 7985 of the Babylonian Talmud: Tractate Gittin, (including their footnotes and clarifications):

 

 

We can see from the numerous uses of “except” that various “exceptions” are a primary concept in this part of the Talmud, and that these exceptions are largely included the context of Betrothal.

 

Differences – Ways that Jesus and this Talmud Quote Differ

 

Similarities – Ways that Jesus and the Talmud Are the Same

 

We see that a Jewish context describes this fornication exception as happening before marriage - We should strongly suspect that Jesus is addressing this same exact context

 

This Is Taught Again In Another Tract Called “Sotah”

R. Hamnuna said: [A childless widow] waiting for her brother-in-law’s [decision whether he would marry her] who acted immorally is forbidden to her levir{i.e. “her brother-in-law”}” and the Rabbis all affirmed, “This is quite right if you say that she is prohibited [to her brother-in-law]…” and again, “R. Akiba…said: No betrothal can take effect… {i.e. they cannot carry on with a marriage because of this} and he regards her act as equal to an incestuous union”

 

(Babylonian Talmud: Tractate Sotah, Folio 18b, GEMARA, 1st paragraph)

 

http://www.halakhah.com/sotah/sotah_18.html

 

Note: we see here that a virgin awaiting marriage and a widow awaiting marriage are put on the same plane, and this is done in Scripture (_), and while we are noting this, we should also note that the NT never puts a divorced woman on the same plain as a virgin or widow, since she is committing adultery if she remarries.

 

Summary

 

 

 The Talmud does speak as Jesus speaks when He says “except” and it is definitely referring to Betrothal. Maybe I should say, Jesus speaks as a true Jew when He makes the “exception” (which they said in a clearly “betrothal” context) only He was so true of a Jew that He also abolished adulterous remarriage in the process.

 

there is a difference in proven vs. unproven betrothal-prostitution – therefore divorce could take place within the parameters of the Law of Moses.

 

 

***********

Old

***********

The Talmud Exception Clause Strongly Indicates from a Jewish context that Jesus was referring to betrothal in His exception clause

 

Betrothal Binds

Whether you believe that Jesus is referring to betrothal in His divorce-exception or not, we still have to come to a point to where we first finally face the seriousness of betrothal, and its completely binding nature. Betrothal binds, because for Jews betrothal is the marriage covenant that makes the next step of a marriage celebration (or cohabitation) lawful (which typically happened a year later). These things are historical and Scriptural facts that we all must come to terms with before foolishly making any more short-sighted and ignorant comments on the nature of Betrothal and equating it with engagement as many people have carelessly done when addressing marriage.

 

The Jewish Talmud Teaches that Betrothal Binds

When speaking in the exhaustive tract which is all about Betrothal (called Kiddushin) the Talmud gives ways in which a man may initiate Betrothal and lawfully acquire a woman as his wife (before coming together in cohabitation):

 

“Our Rabbis taught: [if one declares,] ‘Behold, thou art my wife,’ ‘Behold, thou art my arusah,’ ‘Behold, thou art acquired to me,’ she is betrothed; ‘Behold, thou art mine,’ ‘Behold, thou art under my authority,’ ‘Thou art tied unto me,’ she is betrothed… The scholars propounded: [What if one declares,] ‘Thou art singled out for me,’6 ‘Thou art designated unto me,’7 ‘Thou art my help,’8 ‘Thou art meet for me,’9 ‘Thou art gathered in to me,’ ‘Thou art my rib,’10 ‘Thou art closed in to me,’…”

(Kiddushin 6a)

 

The commentary on such scenarios says previously,

 

“Thus, man having lost his rib, he seeks to recover it” [that is, in establishing betrothal]

(Footnote 24, Kiddushin 2b)

 

Notice what Talmud Says!

Notice the Following Considerations about What the Jewish Talmud Says about Betrothal

 

This is only one small sample of definite historical confirmation that shows without any doubt Jews considered betrothal to make a person one flesh long before a marriage celebration and living together. But before the hard-heartedness of anyone forgetfully pretends that I am relying on history here and not the Bible, doesn’t not the Bible teach this in numerous passages?

 

The Bible Confirms that Betrothal Makes Two into One Flesh

----

----

 

Conclusions

Some have foolishly said that Jesus could not be talking about betrothal because He was talking about wedded marriage, but that is the point of using the word “betrothal” instead of simply saying “engaged”… That is why we have a separate word for betrothal is because it is not like engagement which is not intended to “bind” nor does it propose to make two people Husband and wife, but betrothal does both of these things and we see not only from history, but also from the Bible itself that betrothal successfully accomplished making two people into one flesh, and this is the context and back drop which Jesus addresses in His marriage teaching before giving the exception clause.

 

4. A Word of Prostitution/ “Fornication”?Logos in Matthew 5!

With much thanks to persecuted writers A, B, D, and S, and a number of other persecuted believers with them for sharing my excitement in recounting the adventures God has given me to reveal truth, and for laboring with me and helping me write out this section in a clear way.

>> see: an (unproven) word is different than a deed http://www.logosapostolic.org/bible_study/RP2095-Divorce-Fornication-porneia.htm

>> Draw out unproven fornication! – connect the previous section

>> notice that Jesus does not talk about the bitter water test, but about divorcing her for an unproven word of prostitution

>> This strongly implies that it is not adultery Jesus is dealing with, since this was still practiced in Jesus’ day

> Think about the woman taken in adultery

> is a word of prostitution/ “fornication”  an “unproven report” since it is not simply described as “two or three witnesses”?

> Doesn’t the “word” of prostitution/ “fornication” turn into the “proof” of fornication after the father cannot find the proof of his daughter’s virginity?

> See Joh_8:1 / Deu_22:17

> “a word” is SINGULAR!!!!!!!!! 2/7/11

>> Joh 8:4-6; Joh 8:10 – they were giving words of adultery – they were not taking her to the priest (they did not just have a word), they were taking her to be stoned (they have multiple “words” or testimonies)!

>> Specify Logos! – Change it from just speaking of reporting it to her male authorities to also including the social authorities

>> Should I remove any implications of exclusivity to “fornication” – Is it that it implies more “unproven” situations than specifically to fornication per say, or is there a way it points specifically because of Deu_22?

 

The Confirmation of Porneia in the Betrothal of Deuteronomy 22

In 2005, a friend visited my house and we talked about what the Bible says about marriage. He knew that I stood up for the permanency of one flesh, and that this included what I taught about betrothal and fornication. He also knew that others opposed me for defending the permanency of the marriage covenant, but he himself was inquisitive and open to the possibility that what I taught might be true. Then we got to discussing the potential of porneia to sometimes particularly address cases of fornication in some passages.

Especially because he was in Bible school, my friend was aware of the profound impact that the Greek Septuagint had on formulating the vocabulary for the New Testament. Since Jesus frequently spoke Greek and quoted the Greek Septuagint along with the rest of the New Testament writers, He very likely would have used “Septuagint vocabulary” in talking about marriage in Matthew 5 and 19. Upon these considerations my friend then asked me the critical question that I had not yet asked myself: If porneia in its specific usage can sometimes particularly address cases of “fornication,” and can possibly be used in some cases <<when referring to the betrothal period>> to address betrothal-fornication, and one of the primary examples of betrothal-fornication is in Deuteronomy 22, then wouldn’t the Greek Septuagint use porneia in this passage? “I don’t know,” I replied, “But we can find out right now.” And so we skimmed together throughout the Greek in Deuteronomy 22 to jointly verify and prove whether or not porneia would be used to address fornication during betrothal, and not some other word such as “adultery” [μοιχεύω (moicheúō)] which would be very possible for such a situation since the couple was already considered husband and wife.  As we skimmed, we got to a certain verse toward the end, and there it was:

 

Deu_22:21 LXX …ἐκπορνεῦσαι… [ekporneúsai]

 

Greek: “ἐκ” (ek), meaning “out,” plus “πορνεύω” (porneúō: a variation of porneia), meaning to commit prostitution, coming together to essentially mean: to act “out” (and commit) prostitution/ “fornication” (see Strong’s G1608, G4203, and G4202).

 

So from this confirmation of porneia, my friend and I both saw that in Greek, Deuteronomy 22 uses the same word [πορνεία (porneia)] to describe fornication during betrothal <<emphasis premarital engaged state>> that Jesus uses in Matthew 5 to describe the only case where God allows divorce. In addition to this, I later confirmed that this use of porneia in Deuteronomy 22 is distinct from the commandment to not commit adultery in this very same book:

 

Deu_5:17 Jos.Trans. you shall not commit adultery

 

Deu_5:17 LXX οὐ μοιχεύσεις[ou moicheúseis]

 

And this commandment is also quoted by Jesus word-for-word in warning against adultery just before talking about divorce and remarriage in Matthew 5:27:

 

Mat_5:27 CAB You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’

 

Mat_5:27 Greekοὐ μοιχεύσεις […ou moicheúseis]

 

So in Mat_5:27-32 Jesus uses the same word for adultery [μοιχεύω (moicheúō)] as Deu_5:17 does in forbidding sins against marriage, and He then uses the same word for the exception [πορνεία (porneia)] that Deu_22:21 does in addressing sins done before a wedding during betrothal. Do you think that Jesus could have meant to use porneia to address the same unique case of betrothal-fornication that Deuteronomy 22 did?

 

The Discovery of Logos in Matthew 5

Earlier that same year I was sitting at my desk and reading through all of the passages about marriage in the New Testament in Greek to make sure that I had not missed anything due to English translations. This was one of the first times that I seriously read through Matthew 5 in Greek, and this time I found something that made me so excited that I verbally got loud!

When talking about the exception, Jesus does not actually say, “except for the cause of prostitution,” but He actually says, “except for a word of prostitution,” [παρεκτὸς λόγου πορνείας].

 

Chart: Translations, Greek, and the Actual Meaning of Matthew 5:32

The NIV

for

marital unfaithfulness

The KJV

the cause

of fornication,

The Bible (Greek)

λογου

(logou)

πορνειας

(porneias)

Strong’s Number

G3056

G4202

The Actual Meaning

a word/ saying/ report (of)

prostitution/ “fornication”

 

This is huge! But what could it mean? My first thoughts were how this “word” or “report” compared with Joseph hearing a report about Mary’s pregnancy, and how he considered divorcing her after receiving this kind of report, as we talked about earlier in the detailed coverage of Joseph and Mary. Could there be some kind of a link here?

If Joseph had it in mind to divorce Mary in Matthew chapter 1 because he received some report that she had committed prostitution before their wedding, and then in chapter 5 Jesus explicitly teaches that divorce must only happen when there is a “word” (or “report”) of prostitution, then what do you think the chances are that both cases in Matthew are addressing the same thing? If they are talking about the same thing, then the exception in Matthew chapter 5 is about betrothal, just like the situation of Joseph and Mary in Matthew chapter 1.

 

The Problem: Logou Porneias Seems Like a Phrase!?

>> add: IdiomA mode of expression peculiar to a language; peculiarity of expression or phraseology. In this sense, it is used in the plural to denote forms of speech or phraseology, peculiar to a nation or language.” (Webster)

Finding logos in Matthew 5 was thrilling enough to keep me praying, meditating, and researching for a long time, but the adventure did not end there. In 2006, I was still wrestling through these details, and I returned again to my desk and opened to the passages on marriage, laboring over them in Greek.

I looked intently again at Matthew 5, and as I stared at the Greek, I could not help but be powerfully drawn again to those words, “λόγου πορνείας” (logou porneias): “a word of prostitution.” I had read more of the Greek New Testament by this time, and now it seemed more and more obvious that these words were very unusual in the way that they were being used compared to the rest of the New Testament.

“A word of prostitution”? Since when in the New Testament has logos ever been used like this? When has anyone in Scripture ever talked about “a word of prostitution?” I kept stirring over and over in my mind of all the other occurrences in which logos is used in the New Testament, and how unique this one was. After considering this unusual Greek wording, I was deeply moved that these words were not just simple communication, but a type of unique phrase.

 

Notice that Jesus did not say anything like:

·       An act of prostitution

·       The defilement of prostitution

·       The cause of prostitution (as many English versions mistranslate)

·       The crime of prostitution

 

But He simply said:

·       A word of prostitution

 

How do you “word” prostitution? Do you see how this begs for some kind of an explanation?

To explain this problem technically in terms of linguistics, when you describe an action-verb by using nouns (things) you are often doing this because you presuppose that the listener or reader already knows the details of the action which is being implied by the noun (“thing”). As an example of this, we might say “the police are giving out lots of tickets today on the highway.” We do not need to specify that “drivers” are the ones receiving these tickets because we already know about things like “automobiles” and “drivers.”

 

Chart: Implications Chart

Statement

Implication

“the police are giving out lots of tickets today on the highway.”

You already know about automobiles, drivers, etc.

A word of prostitution

What does this imply that you already know?

 

When I say that these words in Matthew 5 are some kind of a phrase, please feel the full impact of what I am getting at: A phrase is when you take normal words and put them together so that they take on a new and specialized meaning. When something becomes a phrase, things that would otherwise be normal words have become a summarized way of speaking that have taken on connotations and meanings far greater than the words themselves can convey. As another example, no one understands the phrase “it is raining cats and dogs” unless they have already learned it means “it is raining heavily” from previous experience. When compared to the Greek in the rest of the New Testament, after reading “a word of prostitution” (logou porneias) in Matthew 5, in light of its indirect linguistic usage, it became more and more obvious that this was not a simple and straightforward combination of words which we could directly relate to in modern cultures, but that it had to have been used previously as a phrase somewhere else in ancient Jewish culture for Jesus to use it here in Matthew 5 without explanation.

And so I searched and scoured through the New Testament for anything that would shed light on this phrase, but not once anywhere else in the New Testament was prostitution ever even referred to in the sense of a “word” or “report” (logos). I had even asked my Intro to Greek teacher what this meant, but doing this still didn’t help me completely comprehend the nature of the phrase, since it did not reveal where such a wording originated from, and what its significance was. In that moment of intense consideration and desperation for truth, I suddenly remembered the challenging question that I had been posed with about the Septuagint the previous year.

 

The Answer to Logos in Mat 5: The Greek Old Testament!

I had searched through the New Testament for an answer, but somehow I had not yet looked through and considered the Greek Old Testament to determine what “a word of prostitution” could be. As this realization was rising in my mind, I determined in prayer before God that if the phrase “λόγου πορνείας” (logou porneias) was referring to betrothal, then it would have to be somehow used in the betrothal chapter in the Greek Old Testament, Deuteronomy 22.

I had fought so hard and so long for the teaching of the permanency of one flesh marriage, and I had even fought for and taught the betrothal teaching, but I did not want to keep teaching anything just because I thought it was right, but I wanted so desperately to actually submit with real integrity to the living dictates of the Scriptures whatever they would be. I did not want to just look to support what I wanted to teach, but I wanted to actually teach whatever the Bible was actually saying. And now, as reverently as I could, I weakly placed a challenge before God: I could no longer promote the phrase in Matthew as speaking of betrothal if logos was not somehow used in the betrothal chapter. I was somewhat terrified at my commitment because as much as I could remember, I could not think of any place where logos could possibly be used in the Greek of Deuteronomy 22.

So I searched with great eagerness, somewhat not expecting to find logos, and after having glanced through very quickly and not seeing it, and then beginning to go through the first part of the chapter again in detail, I began to feel the sobering reality of possibly not being able to teach betrothal anymore.

 

And then I hit verse fourteen!

 

Not only is logos in Deuteronomy 22, it is in there three times!!! Not only is it in there three times, but it is in every way surrounding, addressing, and describing the prostitution-sin against betrothal! Are you excited about this yet, or are you still struggling to believe me? Then believe the Bible and see this for yourself:

 

>>R!

>> Get updated, grayed version

Deu_22:13-21 CAB  And if anyone should take a wife, and dwell [συνοικήσῃ] with her, and hate her,  14  and attach [ἐπιθῇ] to her reproachful [προφασιστικοὺς] words [λόγους (logous)], and bring against [κατενέγκῃ] her an evil name [ὄνομα πονηρὸν], and say [λέγῃ (leg)], I took this woman, and when I came to her I found not her tokens of virginity [παρθένια];  15  then the father and the mother of the young woman [παιδὸς] shall take and bring out [ἐξοίσουσιν] the young woman’s tokens of virginity to the elders of the city to the gate.  16  And the father of the young woman [παιδὸς] shall say [ἐρεῖ] to the elders, I gave this my daughter to this man for a wife;  17  and now he has hated her, and attaches [ἐπιτίθησιν] reproachful [προφασιστικοὺς] words [λόγους (logous)] to her, saying [λέγων (legōn)], I have not found tokens of virginity with your daughter; and these are the tokens of my daughter’s virginity. And they shall unfold [ἀναπτύξουσιν] the garment [ἱμάτιον] before the elders of the city.  18  And the elders of that city shall take that man, and shall chastise [παιδεύσουσιν] him,  19  and shall fine him a hundred shekels, and shall give them to the father of the young woman [νεάνιδος], because he has brought forth [ἐξήνεγκεν] an evil name [ὄνομα πονηρὸν] against a virgin of Israel; and she shall be his wife: he shall never be able to put her away [ἐξαποστεῖλαι].  20  But if this report [ὁ λόγος (ho logos)] be [γένηται] true, and the tokens of virginity are not found for the young woman [νεάνιδι];  21  then shall they bring out [ἐξάξουσιν] the young woman [νεᾶνιν] to the doors of her father’s house, and* shall stone [λιθοβολήσουσιν] her with stones [ἐν λίθοις], and she shall die [ἀποθανεῖται]; because [ὅτι] she has wrought [ἐποίησεν] folly [ἀφροσύνην] among the children of Israel, to defile** the house of her father by harlotry [ἐκπορνεῦσαι (ekporneusai)]: so you shall remove [ἐξαρεῖς] the evil one [τὸν πονηρὸν] from [ἐξ] among you.

 

[Note: This passage is covered in greater detail, including the Greek, in the appendix entitled, “A Translation and Analysis of the Primary Divorce and Remarriage Passages.”]

 

I very much realize that this is all a lot to take in and comprehend, and that is why I have gone to such great lengths to make it as clear as I possibly can. In an effort to clearly summarize the effects of the Greek here, I am providing the following chart:

 

Chart: A Summary of the Use of Logos in Deuteronomy 22 and Matthew 5

Scripture Reference

Greek

English Pronunciation

Explanation

Deu_22:14

λγους... νομα πονηρν

logous… honoma poneron

A word/ saying (logous) that brings on an “evil” or “perverse” (poneron) name (honoma).

 

Note: in Greek “perverse” (poneron) rhymes with prostitution/ “fornication” (porneia) – this is a play on words in Greek

Deu_22:17,

Deu_22:19

λγους... νομα πονηρν

logous… honoma poneron

Deu_22:20,

Deu_22:21

ὁ λόγος... κπορνεσαι... πονηρν

 

ho logos… ekporneusai… poneron

this saying (λγος; logos) of… committing prostitution/ “fornication” (ἐκπορνεῦσαι; ekporneusai), where “ἐκπορνεῦσαι” (ekporneusai) means to act out “πορνεία” (porneia; as used in Mat_5:32 in the next row)

Mat_5:32

λόγου πορνείας

logou porneias

A word/ saying/ report of prostitution/ “fornication”

 

Do you see the pattern? From the three occurrences in Deuteronomy 22, to the culmination of this terminology in Matthew 5, we can see this pattern repeating throughout the Bible.

In Greek, “to say” is “λέγω” (legō), and it is directly related to “λόγος” (logos) as you may be able to tell from the way it sounds (see Strong’s G3056 and G3004). Although it is in different forms, the Greek word “λέγω” (legō) is used twice in this passage:

 

Deu_22:14 – λέγῃ (leg)

Deu_22:17 – λέγων (legōn)

 

These two words (logos and legō) are actually linked together in the Greek of Deu_22:17 in the words, “now he has hated her, and attaches reproachful words [λόγους] to her, saying [λέγων]…” (CAB) – In the Greek word order, these two words are together next to each other: “νῦν ἐπιτίθησιν αὐτῇ προφασιστικοὺς λόγους λέγων Οὐχ εὕρηκα τῇ θυγατρί σου παρθένια.” If we include the related word legō in our count of references to logos (as Deu_22:17 somewhat does by association) then logos is referenced 5 times in this betrothal passage!:

 

Deu_22:14 [(1) λγους…(ὄνομα πονηρὸν)…(2) λγῃ], v. Deu_22:17 [(3) λγους (4) λγων], (v. Deu_22:19 [ὄνομα πονηρὸν]), v. Deu_22:20 [(5) ὁ λόγος (singular)], (v. Deu_22:21 [ἐκπορνεῦσαι…πονηρὸν])

 

Judah and TamarA Word of Porneia in Gen 38?

After finding logos in Matthew 5 and Deuteronomy 22, I later found that the only other place in Scripture that comes close to paralleling the use of logos and porneia, as far as I have found so far, is the incident of Judah and Tamar:

 

Gen_38:24 CAB And it came to pass after three months, that it was told Judah, saying [λέγοντεςG3004 (légontes)], Tamar your daughter-in-law has grievously played the harlot [ἐκπεπόρνευκενG1608 (ekpeporneúken)], and behold she is with child by harlotry [πορνείαςG4202 (porneias)]; and Judah said, Bring her out, and let her be burned.

 

Forms of Logos and Porneia in Genesis 38

·       Remember that λέγοντεςG3004 (légontes) in Greek (“to say”) is related to the word for “word” (as seen previously).

·       ἘκπεπόρνευκενG1608 (ekpeporneúken) is a compound containing porneia, and this is why it is typically represented as four words here: “grievously played the harlot”; It is the exact same Greek wording as found in Deu_22:21

·       πορνείαςG4202 (porneias) is the exact same form of porneia as found in Mat_5:32

 

Chart: “she is with child by harlotry” – Literally and Figuratively

Greek

ἐν

γαστρὶ

ἔχει

ἐκ

πορνείας

English

in

bowelled

having

out of

prostitution/ “fornication”

Figurative Meaning

pregnant

having the pregnancy

as a result of

Having sex while not being married

 

Even though this passage is not specifically talking about marriage at this point, marriage had been an idea on the horizon (Gen_38:6-11; Gen_38:14).

>> revise end of paragraph

Did you notice that in this example as well as that of Deuteronomy 22, porneia is used to clearly refer to sex before marriage that would stop a person from going on to be wedded to a rightful spouse? While many people today try to say that porneia always means any and every kind of sexual immorality, this use of porneia in Gen_38:24 cannot possibly refer to homosexuality, bestiality (sex with animals), or any other such varieties of sexual perversion that people try to permanently and universally blur porneia into, since none of these would have resulted in Tamar becoming pregnant before getting married. This is one of many passages that prove that porneia can be used in a specific sense to indicate sex before marriage in certain contexts that do not really include other varieties of sexual sin. Do you think that Jesus also used porneia the same way as these examples, especially since He (in the same way) also included the word logos?

It is clear that when they saw Tamar pregnant, they perceived her to have had sex before marriage, and they used the word porneia to describe this sin, and it is described as needing to be “reported” to the woman’s male authority when they found her pregnant. In three months Tamar was reported to Judah, and in three months Mary was reported to her authorities, including Joseph. Marry was reported to her family (usually especially meaning her father and or brothers – Gen_34:5-7; 2Sa_13:20-21; Gen_34:2-7; and also: Deu_22:13-24) and after that, they reported Mary’s condition to Joseph also, and this is the same thing that they did with reporting Tamar to Judah. Do you see that this “report of prostitution” before marriage is the exact same terminology that Jesus uses in describing a “report” of prostitution that allows divorce?

>> Judah had unadvisedly determined to burn Tamar without confirming evidence, the law clarified that you actually need to have two or three sources of evidence before applying the death penalty, and Jesus came along and clarified that if you do not have two sources of evidence but you have “a word” then this could be just grounds to divorce, just like Joseph had concluded out of his righteousness

It is interesting that we have yet another passage that essentially ties logos (or legō) to porneia to describe a situation of fornication. With these two examples that are comparable in the Greek Old Testament, shouldn’t we suspect that Jesus is following right in line with this Biblical terminology as He so frequently does with other Greek Septuagint vocabulary?

 

2Sa_3:7-8 – Ishbosheth’s Word-Accusation Against Abner and Rizpah

2Sa_3:7-8 CAB  And Saul had a concubine [παλλακ] named Rizpah, the daughter of Jol; and Ishbosheth the son of Saul said [επεν] to Abner, Why have you *gone in to [*εσλθες πρς – entered toward (and) into] my father’s concubine?  8  And Abner was very angry [θυμθη] with Ishbosheth for [περὶ – around/ “concerning”] this saying [Hebrew MT: “דברי” (DiV’ray) – these words; Greek LXX: τολγου  this/the (τοῦ) word. (Other than the grammatical form, this is the same as “ὁ λόγος” in Deu_22:20 LXX]; and Abner said to him, Am I a dog’s head? I have this day showed kindness with the house of Saul your father, and with his brethren and friends, and have not gone over to the house of David, and do you this day seek a charge against [ἐπιζητεῖς ἐπ᾿ – upon (ἐπι-) seek (ζητεῖς) upon (ἐπ᾿); fig. questioning/ “examination” (of)] me concerning [πρ – lit. over] injury [δικας – unrighteousness/ “injustice” (NETS)] to a woman?

 

Spoken word used interchangeably:

2Sa 3:11 CAB  And Ishbosheth could not any longer answer Abner a word [ῥῆμα], because he feared him.

 

[Technical Source Text Note: Throughout numerous minor details of this passage, over and over again the Hebrew DSS agrees with the Greek LXX and disagrees with the Hebrew MT. Tragically, a whole in the DSS document (4QSama) prevents us from knowing exactly what it said (in Hebrew) about the “word” or “words” in v. 8. (see Dead Sea Scrolls Bible, p. 238) – but in either case, either “a word” or “words” is used to describe a report of fornication, which is very similar to Jesus’ exception in Mat_5:32]

 

Notice These Things about 2Sa 3

 

---------------

> other slightly comparable examples of reporting porneia include: the false report against (the unmarried man) Joseph, Diana > Dinah and Shechem (does this use legei?)

 

A Singular Word! – Now we Are Getting Really Specific!

 

A Singular Word - This is where it really gets Specific!

- all of these extra examples are only somewhat related. It really gets specific when we start considering the singularity of a word!

- but how does this compare with the Pro singular word??

 

Climax into The One Word

In Deu 22 the repeated theme of word*s* of prostitution is climaxed into a doctrinal Phrase when it is summarized as A Word of prostitution (which is a way of summarising all of his words as one “Word” or ‘testimony’ of her fornication)

 

 

>Talmud

Note 1: I have removed footnote numbers from the following quote for the purposes of this book. (Emphasis is also added)

Note 2: In this case, regular, square brackets (i.e. “[ ]”) are their notes, and special, grayed, curly brackets (i.e. “{ }”) are mine

 

Is there anything, he said, which is declared valid on the word of one witness and invalid on the word of two? No, said Raba…” and they say things like this lest a “dispute might be assigned {i.e. determined} on the word of one witness

 

(Babylonian Talmud: Tractate Gittin, CHAPTER II, GEMARA, 3rd paragraph & under Gittin 15b)

http://www.halakhah.com/gittin/gittin_15.html#chapter_ii

 

if one person’s “…word is accepted…there is a danger of creating the impression that confirmation of signatures to documents in general requires only one witness.”

(Babylonian Talmud: Tractate Gittin, Folio 3a, 4th paragraph)

http://www.halakhah.com/gittin/gittin_3.html

 

 

Also see: “…the women whose word cannot be taken…”

(Babylonian Talmud, Gittin, CHAPTER VI, GEMARA, 4th paragraph)

http://www.halakhah.com/gittin/gittin_62.html#chapter_vi

 

More examples

 

>> correct language::

[Note: although these quotes are immediately addressing witnessing written documents (contracts) the principal is consistently applied to verifying crimes as well. There is something to this effect in the word: by the mouth of two or three let every Word be]

 

Standardize Refs:

Insert:

“Talmud: ...as translated under... Mr. I...”

 

(Sotah 4:1, from the Soncino Babylonian Talmud, translated by I. Epstein, available at www.halakhah.com, retrieved 2/15/11)

Note: To understand more about the Talmud, Mishnah, and Sotah, see the Bibliography under “Talmud”.

 

one word can confess to rape:

http://www.halakhah.com/kethuboth/kethuboth_41.html#chapter_iv

 

\/

 

and this is exactly how it is used in the New Testament!:

 

By The Mouth Of Two Or Three

by the mouth of to or three let every Word be established - one word by one mouth certainly cannot prove anyone guilty!

 

And what does Jesus say?

 

Except for a (singular) word of fornication

 

This is definitely talking about an unproven, unverified, act of prostitution with only one “Word” of testimony to the crime! And adultery is never really an issue in such cases since the bitter water test did not cease to be used until many years later.

 

This would mean that Jesus is almost certainly addressing an issue of sex before marriage.

 

Can you see yet that Jesus’ Word of prostitution is excessively steeped in the Biblical language throughout the Scriptures??

 

--

Adultery: one unproven word of adultery never stays unproven, because a man can go to the priest for the test whenever he may feel the need. One suspition never needs t stay that way with adultery because they have a divine means of solving that. It is the forication that specifically does not have a prescribed solution.

 

Extra:

·  Because if he says, ‘It was written in my presence’, his word is taken and no witnesses are required to confirm the validity of the Get.

http://www.halakhah.com/gittin/gittin_8.html

http://www.halakhah.com/gittin/gittin_5.html

 

Mat_5: give her a standing away writing – this includes two witnesses (Talmud)

Whoever divorces except a word of prostitution

 

 

A Summary of Logos

>>! ADD: Deu 22:20-21The word of prostitution Jesus references is about losing your virginity (fornication) – it simply does not work when applied to adultery, because you cannot have a word of losing your virginity by committing adultery against your spouse!

We see that Matthew 5 and Deuteronomy 22 both use logos and porneia in making commandments concerning marriage. It is clear from the context that all three uses of logos in Deuteronomy 22 are dealing with the potential fornication of a woman in betrothal. The third time logos is used, an intensified form of porneiaἐκπορνεῦσαι(ekporneusai) is explicitly applied to the girl’s* fornication. It is clear in Deuteronomy 22, and even more so in Genesis 38, that when the word porneia is used it is not a generic reference to all kinds of sexual immorality, but a specific reference to fornication (sex before marriage).

[* παιδὸς (paidos) – i.e. she is a young girl (Deu_22:15), usually younger than 16 years old, who becomes a woman [γυναῖκα (gunaika)] after marriage (Deu_22:14)]

 

With Deuteronomy 22, it is intriguing enough that it uses porneia for a betrothal situation, but it is even more compounding that it also uses logos in this way. Doesn’t Jesus imitate this pattern when He uses these very same two words for the one and only case where it is righteous to divorce? We should see clearly from this that teaching betrothal as the exception in Matthew 5 is not at all dependant on some “narrow” or “exclusive definition” of porneia as fornication (as some have mockingly protested), since there is actually a double confirmation with porneia walking hand in hand with logos, all the way back to the betrothal chapter in Deuteronomy 22.

If the language of Jesus strategically matches the Greek vocabulary of the betrothal section in Deuteronomy 22, how could Jesus not be talking about the same thing?

 

>> Add:

 

Deu_22 Foretells Jesus’ Teaching on No Divorce, and the Exception During Betrothal

Deu_22 says “no divorce” – this is Jesus’ attitude: when they bring up Deu_24 He brings up Deu_22 (not far from what they are quoting)

 

Deu_22:19 – if he truly ended her virginity, then no hard hearted divorce is allowed!

Deu_22:29 – if he raped her, and ended her virginity, then no hard hearted divorce is allowed!

 

So what happens when we enter the New Covenant? You are completely forbidden divorce as long as you end her virginity, even if you do not do any wrong against her; Jesus removes the possibility for you to lie about her not being a virgin; Jesus makes you free from the evil necessary for you to rape her, and Jesus altogether casts out the permission for you to divorce her, because He altogether takes out a hard heart from you!

 

If Jesus removes the permission to divorce, He has pealed the commandment back to Deu_22 where you no longer can divorce her, apart from a betrothal prostitution, and this ‘word of prostitution’ is the very terminology Jesus uses.

 

In Jesus’ kingdom, it is not as a punishment for you doing wrong to her, but because you have repented of all the wrong you have done to God, and now are unwilling to do her or God any wrong by divorcing the wife of your youth, whom you ended her virginity.

 

What About the Early Church and Betrothal?

>>!

Athenagorious

Even after they abandon a ‘no divorce at all’ position, they still could not shake Jesus’ association with Deu_22, because even  Tertullian says,  “___” – this is a clear reference to the betrothal chapter, even though he did not believe in betrothal. Though he wants to escape this as the exception, yet he cannot escape it in explaining why Jesus forbade divorce!

 

“The Creator, however, except on account of adultery, does not put asunder what He Himself joined together, the same Moses in another passage enacting that he who had married after violence to a damsel, should thenceforth not have it in his power to put away his wife. (Deu_22:28-29) Now, if a compulsory marriage contracted after violence shall be permanent, how much rather shall a voluntary one, the result of agreement! This has the sanction of the prophet: “Thou shalt not forsake the wife of thy youth.” (Mal_2:15) Thus you have Christ following spontaneously the tracks of the Creator everywhere, both in permitting divorce and in for-bidding it.”

3.01.38

 

5. The Context of the Exception Clause Demands a Betrothal-Exception

Note: much more content for this section is currently being compiled, refined, and developed in the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research.”

 

>> Re-quote Clament’s Quote Again!!

>> If the exception is for prostitution before marriage, then it makes a whole lot of sense why disciples thought that it would be better never to enter that never-divorce-state of marriage to begin with. If the disciples understood Jesus to allow no divorce after marriage, then we can easily see why His disciples would think never to marry.

 

Reckless and Sloppy Claims Against Betrothal

There is a very strong majority throughout christendom that opposes those who advocate a betrothal-exception. One of their most audacious, ongoing claims is that betrothal advocates are all depending solely on ‘the narrow interpretation of porneia as fornication’ to ‘establish their view on marriage.’ Furthermore, they say that the exception of Mat_19:9 cannot be referring to betrothal because the context is dealing with wedded marriage, not simple “engagements.” But did you know that both of these claims cannot be upheld if we submit to every verse in Matthew 5 and 19? Nevertheless, these anti-betrothal assertions are constantly presented as the more “educated” positions on divorce and remarriage, and betrothal advocates are portrayed as “unscholarly,” idealistic conservatives.

From what I have seen so far, it seems that it is really high time someone confronted the irrational and thoughtless claims against a betrothal-exception. It does not seem like this has really been done yet, as thoroughly as is needed for all sanity and solidity to be established. It is time that the fool-hearty claims of unreasoning men be put to silence, and that we give an honest and realistic consideration to the context of the exception clause. 

 

It is About Context, Not Porneia!

It turns out that it is actually the context surrounding the exception clause (not the word porneia itself) that has held me to a betrothal-exception so long. I have actually tried to leave the betrothal teaching multiple times, and I keep running into countless Scriptures and solid context every time which will not let me go. I thank God that it is the entire weight of the Scriptures that constantly teaches us a betrothal exception, not the definition of one word! – And as we move further into discussing “context,” did you notice that nothing in this book has been established on the simple basis of “narrowly defining porneia”?

 

The Most Basic Contextual Needs – Submission and Diligence

There is a lot of talk among pastors and seminaries about the importance of context when “interpreting the Bible,” and while we need to repent of our overall rebellious posture of profaning the Holy Scriptures with our human interpretations, yet still, there is a very real reason why people in “bible schools” and seminaries have often become so emphatic about “context.”

It is not just the common fact that everything in all language ought to be always “interpreted” in context per-say, but that there is a great fundamental difference in the way modern culture communicates and the way the Bible communicates. We tend to speak in all kinds of directions with extremely short attention spans, and we have to always specify every statement we make lest at any moment those who listen to us quickly get lost as to what we are saying.  When we turn this tendency toward reading the Bible the result is very destructive. – Often, we as readers and listeners simply refuse to invest the necessary care and energy to endure and persist in seeking truth so that we may understand the message being proclaimed to us.

In great contrast to our sloppiness, the Bible is much more riveted on context than we are used to, to the degree that our shallow modern cultures, with our quick and impulsive reading habits nearly always miss all or most of the entire context which the Bible’s communication is dependent upon. I call this greater dependence on context the “Hyper-Context Principal,” because shallow cultures typically need to think of Scripture in a “Hyper-Context” mode in order to reasonably receive its message. Our negligence in this area is one of the real reasons we feel like we need so much “interpretation,” and we end up making the Bible out to be much more cryptic than it really is.

Although it goes without saying that things like prophecies and parables are intentionally encoded in deep mysteries to keep perverted and foolish people from understanding what is spoken of (Dan_12:10 >> add: ‘ever hearing’), yet when it comes to the standards of personal righteousness that we are commanded to hold each other morally and socially accountable to, the Bible is extremely direct and clear to demand our obedience to the truth that we are responsible for applying. Especially when someone actually translates what the Scriptures actually say, and we are sensitive to cultural differences, the moral commands of the Bible do not need to be constantly “interpreted” before we can obey them like we so often think they do, but instead, we as readers of the Bible need to repent of being shallow and unsubmissive toward all of the context which we keep neglecting. The Bible is far more practical than we have ever given it credit for, and the fundamental essence of the great divide between our understanding and what the Bible is saying is not due to its lack of clarity, but our lack of discipline, humility, diligence and worship for God’s Laws of Truth.

We often find ourselves very lost when reading the Bible because we already forgot what was said a few verses earlier a long time ago and we are ready to move on to other “immediately inspiring (or gratifying) statements” while Paul on the other hand is still telling you about the great truth you already forgot about a few verses ago. So pay attention! The Bible was never intended to be a “quick read,” (or a Reader’s Digest) nor can you readily fragment its sayings as you please and suppose for a moment that you have any idea what it is referencing without carefully submitting yourself to the rules of communication it has established.

Even after you may finally accurately understand the linguistic statements of the Bible (which is hard enough itself with irresponsible English versions) you still have to always hold your attention to a much more riveted dependence on context. Every statement must be conscientiously considered with surrounding statements and you have to believe that the one speaking is not contradicting himself or jumping around in a thousand different directions, but is consistently saying the same thing the whole time in order for you, as a modern reader from a much more shallow social context, to honestly say that you are submitting to the facts of what is being said. Most people get overwhelmed at these things and simply give up on understanding the Bible, while others simply go get professionally trained on how to convince church people that challenging passages do not actually mean what they clearly say, but those who repent of being shallow and rebellious and become faithful, diligent, and hungry, respond in faith to crucify their shallow mindset and are rewarded with truth!

This contextual need is not actually an issue of “interpretation” as so many make it out to be, but it is an issue of simply being diligent and considerate to submit to every statement the Bible makes, and to not be shallow and impulsive when reading as we tend to be.

We do not really understand deep and spiritual truth and moral laws as quickly as we think we should; we actually need a lot more time than we are usually willing to spend in order to deeply consider the surpassing truth which is proclaimed throughout the Bible. The clear proof that we usually mess up most of the time in this area is that when we draw conclusions about what the Bible teaches in a given verse we end up flatly contradicting other verses which are often in the immediate context of what we just read!

As helpful as “Bible verses” can be for reference purposes, it turns out that the very concept itself of “verses” being in the Bible can be tricky for us, in as much as we tend to frequently misunderstand them to suggest that such sayings are actually being broken down into small, self-governing units of thought – which is usually not the case at all in the Bible. You cannot honestly go and fragment a verse and suppose your own conclusions upon it without carefully and reverently subjecting your reading comprehension under the governing statements which surround it. When you read and come across an absolute statement in a given verse, hold on to it with your life, lest you quickly turn around and recklessly break it as a lawless pervert and forgetful hearer the next time you are tempted to fragment another verse later on and free yourself from righteousness.

Let us consider this “Hyper-Context Principal” so we may submit to every word of God and not make truth out as though it contradicts itself for the sake of the common practice of our shallow cultures and quick and cheap interpretations. If we pay attention and submit every time God talks and ask God for understanding, then we will no longer need to interpret the Bible with our defiling ideas, but we can actually listen to the truth being given, not be a ‘forgetful hearer,’ (Jas_1:25) and simply obey everything it says.

We do not need to go die in a cemetery to know that context is important (as so many do) since there is no profit in being a “more informed” (yet de-educated) breaker of God’s laws. But instead, by faith, in truth, we need to have a submissive posture to diligently keep every detail in mind of every saying which God speaks, and treasure it in our hearts when reading the Scriptures, as the law that now brings life. With the faith that comes out of fervent reverence, we can believe and agree with the governing passages of what God consistently says as we read each verse.

 

Summaries of the Basic Contextual Needs

·       Although the “academic” needs of a real translation of the Bible and an informed sensitivity to cultural details is important, the biggest need we have is actually moral (not academic)

·       Moral commands in the Bible do not need to be “interpreted,” they need to be obeyed

·       If we simply submit to everything God says, we will no longer be deluded into thinking we have to (re) “interpret” passages so we can avoid obeying them

·       “When you read and come across an absolute statement in a given verse, hold on to it with your life…”

·       Especially when there are absolute statements in the Scriptures, we need to reverently submit, and not pretend that God is contradicting Himself

·       You do not have a right to develop your own opinion and beliefs about the Bible; You are commanded to repent of your religion and obey what the Bible says, not what you want it to mean

·       Don’t “be a ‘forgetful hearer,’ (Jas_1:25)… obey everything it says”

·       Being sensitive to the “Hyper-Context Principal,” can help us be more conscientious and reasonable when reading the Scriptures

·       “The Bible was never intended to be a ‘quick read,’ (or a Reader’s Digest)” – so don’t fragment its statements as though they were “being broken down into small, self-governing units of thought”

·       Be “diligent and considerate to submit to every statement the Bible makes,” do not be “shallow and impulsive when reading”

·       Spend the necessary time it takes “to deeply consider the surpassing truth which is proclaimed throughout the Bible”

·       “discipline, humility, diligence and worship for God’s Laws of Truth” go a long way for understanding truth, and fervent reverence produces powerful faith to make you related to the solid laws of God and able to obey them faithfully.

 

>> * Some outstanding examples of a hyper-dependence on context include: - Balam (OT passage and NT refs); Mat_5:27-30; - the genealogies (they presuppose that you have paid attention and remembered names of people mentioned in other books, even if they were only named once!); entire books that are especially like this include: Job; Ecc; Song of Songs; Most of the Epistles and Revelation.

 

Matthew 5 & 19; Mar 10 – Jesus Did Not Re-teach Moses – Jesus Taught that Deu 24 Tolerated Evil, NOT that ‘Moses Really Meant to Regulate Something Good’

The context of the exception clause makes it morally impossible for you to conclude that Jesus was simply clarifying What Moses Commanded

Jesus Did Not Teach Moses

>> make a master version of this and point all refs back to it

>> make a shorter version of this for Deu_24 Amendments section

 

Although it is clear that Jesus confronted the divorce sin that Moses temporarily tolerated, there are many unsubmitted people today, going around teaching that Jesus told us What Moses really meant. While it is one thing to simply be confused over these things, it is wicked and rebellious to teach this, and we need to repent of it. Such people would like to contradict Jesus’ complete confrontation of this divorce sin and make it out like Jesus was simply teaching the same thing as Moses taught. Surprisingly, this confusion against Moses and Jesus teachings often includes some people seeking to support adulterous remarriage as well as others seeking to oppose it. In either case, we need to arrange our lives under the authority of the Scriptures and fervently repent of this wickedness and agree with Jesus and believe these things exactly like He said them:

 

Mat_5:31-32 CAB “Furthermore it has been said, ‘Whoever divorces his wife, let him give her a divorce certificate.’  32  But [δὲ] I say to you

 

Mat_19:7-9 CAB They said to Him, “Why then did Moses command to give a certificate of divorce, and to put her away?”  8  He said to them, “Moses, because of the hardness of your hearts, permitted you to divorce your wives, but [δὲ] from the beginning it has not been thus.  9  And [δὲ – but] I say to you

 

Note that the double use of “but” [δὲ] in the Greek of Matthew 19 makes a double (or emphatic) reinforced, contrast with what Moses had permitted.

 

Mar_10:5-6 CAB And Jesus answered and said to them, “In view of your hardheartedness he wrote this commandment for you.  6  But [δὲ] from the beginning

 

Jesus did not say, ‘Moses permitted you to divorce your wives in an evil way because he actually meant that you should only divorce your wives for good reasons,’ (that would be an illogical statement!) but instead Jesus says that Moses really did mean to permit them to divorce their wives, even though this divorce was allowing evil.

>> divorce is the subject of hardness which Jesus now forbids:

From the beginning it was not so

It is clear that Jesus is opposing hard hearted divorce by this; It is absolutely clear that Moses was not ‘preventing greater evils’ as the wicked insist, but that he was permitting a current evil which could not be done away with because of their hard hearts.

    It is absolutely clear that every time Jesus mentioned the divorce which Moses tolerated, He contrasts it with what He is now teaching for the New Covenant. Let us no longer be wicked and insist that Jesus was interpreting what Moses meant, because Jesus ascribed his actions to regulating and tolerating evil, not to enforcing what God really wanted.

 

·       Jesus made it clear that he was teaching something different than the divorce which Moses permitted in Deuteronomy 24

·       Surprisingly, there are still people going around saying that Jesus was clarifying what Moses taught

·       If Jesus said, “It has been said[i.e. by Moses to the Israelites] But I say to you” (Mat_5:31-32), and you still have the nerve to insist that Jesus was clarifying what Moses meant, it is clear that you are a liar and need to repent

·       The very fact that Jesus says, “but I say to you” establishes that He is teaching some radically new legislation that has not been established before

·       People who do not submit under the authority of Jesus do not go to heaven.  If you let your soul be irrational and teach contrary to Jesus’ is clear statements your damnation is just

·       It is absolutely clear that Moses permitted divorce and it is in this very light which Jesus forbids it

·       Jesus’ one exception for divorce cannot possibly be what Moses meant in Deuteronomy 24, because Jesus completely condemned the hard hearts that called for this permission

·       Jesus’ divorce exception actually has to be something very different from Moses divorce permission in order for the exception to not be a hard hearted divorce as those tolerated under Moses

 

> Although Jesus made it clear that He was contrasting His teaching with what Moses permitted

   

What does

this look like?

   

 

Moses permitted a man to divorce a woman on the basis that she ‘did not find favor in his eyes’ – this sounds a lot like why many people divorce today. But this is the very reason 1Co_7 commands spouses to be well minded toward each other. You just simply cannot do that if you are hard hearted.

 

Who is Actually Guilty Here?

It is clear from both the Jewish Talmud as well as the New Testament Scriptures themselves (Mat_19; Mar_10) that the Jews consistently considered Deuteronomy 24 to contain the particular cause or causes of fault in a woman to permit divorce.

 

Mat_19:7 CAB They said to Him, “Why then did Moses command to give a certificate of divorce, and to put her away?”

 

But Jesus emphatically confronted this hypocritical debate and demanded that Deuteronomy 24 instead contained an accommodation for the particular guilt in the hardness of men who wickedly divorced their wives. Instead of engaging this debate on conventional terms to determine what “some uncleanness” was in the woman in Deuteronomy 24 (as recorded in the Talmud and practice to this day), by calling the men “hard hearted” and guilty in their divorces Jesus over through the entire basis of their assumption to begin with that there was a lawful reason at all in Deuteronomy 24 for the men to keep divorcing their wives. This is an absolute stance condemning their divorces, which plainly shows that Moses permitted them to divorce their wives without a lawful cause against them, for the simple “cause” that the men were hard hearted. No matter what “some shameful matter” was [LXX: ἄσχημον πρᾶγμα], the men were still guilty for divorcing their wives, but now the absolute rule for hart-purified followers of Jesus, is, ‘when the one God has yoked ‘the one’ together, man may not put space between them.’ (Mat_19:6)

>> put injustice permitted by Deuteronomy

Real followers of Jesus who are hoping by faith in truth to inherit salvation do not have the prerogative to try and adjust Moses’ or Jesus’ Words and make Jesus to seem to be saying the same thing we want to think that Moses actually meant. We need to face up to the fact that Moses put up with this evil for the sake of the evil people he managed and that God now demands something much higher from us today if we are going to actually inherit heaven and escape the destiny of those whose sins were tolerated. This is what Jesus clearly taught, and we need to repent of trying to pretty up the picture of wickedness which Moses was ordained by God to manage. Jesus condemns this perverse hard heart today, including its wicked divorces described in Deuteronomy 24 which were temporarily allowed by Moses until truth could come inside of the heart of men to stop perverse divorces.

>> Jesus condemned sin in sinful man, and we need to do that too

Whatever we make of the exception clause where Jesus did allow divorce, if we are going to be submissive and honest followers of Jesus, then we have to conclude that it has to be something very different than the hard hearted divorce which Moses permitted in Deuteronomy 24!

    If we finally come to the reasonable point as we should, and agree with Jesus that His divorce exception is different than Moses’ general divorce permission, then we need to determine what then did Jesus allow divorce for…

 

Stop Fragmenting Porneia; Submit to the Clear Command!

 

This is Very Important!

 

While most people zero in on the word porneia (Mat_19:9) and fragment this one word and make endless debates over its definition to prove what the exception is (just like they did previously with Deuteronomy 24 I might add!) Jesus already told us what the difference was between His rules and what had been allowed previously: ‘so ‘the one’ which the one God has yoked together man may not put space between,’ (Mat_19:6). This absolute rule was already clearly set before Jesus ever said anything about an exception. It is impossible that we should now conclude that the exception reverses this! If Jesus already told us that His standard is different than Moses because He no longer allows the separation of yoked spouses, why are we going about thinking to force porneia into teaching an exception that includes all sexual immorality, when this flies in the face of the clear rule that has already been set in place?

It is only when we get to our non-Jewish context that people start complaining and grumbling against the idea of ‘divorcing before the marriage yoke.’ There were two basic types of divorce in Jewish society: divorce before marriage (Deuteronomy 22/ Matthew 1), and divorce after (Deuteronomy 24). These were regularly discussed as two distinct parts of the same issue among the Jews. Never mind all of this foolish nonsense of saying Matthew 19’s context does not address betrothal divorce. The Jews always considered Deuteronomy 22 to be directly linked with Deuteronomy 24. When Jesus came, He absolutely closed the door to divorcing after the marriage yoke (Mat_19:6), and gave one exception for divorce which could then only occur [before] it. This possibility is wide open among the Jewish context which Jesus addressed, and if we find ourselves not being “Jewish” enough to understand this, God has kindly supplied the Jewish Scriptures (in Hebrew and Greek) which talk at length about this, and even use the same words (not just porneia) which Jesus uses for the exception.

Notice that it is only after Jesus completely closes the door for the general divorce permission from Deuteronomy 24 (which occurred after marriage), that He then gives an exception for divorce. Unlike nearly every other rabbi of His day, Jesus refused to find a lawful cause to divorce in Deuteronomy 24, but instead gave the one cause of prostitution, which can only be found in Deuteronomy 22 when describing betrothal. After Jesus closed the door for Deuteronomy 24’s divorce of yoked spouses, the only other divorce left open was the Deuteronomy 22 divorce of non-yoked spouses, which uses the exact same words as Jesus’ exception! Do you not yet see how Mat_5 and 19 have to be speaking about betrothal after you give an honest consideration to their context?

This non-yoked divorce of Deuteronomy 22 was so limiting and restrictive, Jesus’ disciples could not conceive of how it could be profitable (or safe) to ever marry and begin cohabitation (Mat_19:10) if indeed men could never be permitted to separate themselves from their wives after God had yoked them together (Mat_19:6).

Do you see that before (Mat_19:6) and after (Mat_19:10) the exception (Mat_19:9), Mat_19 shows us that divorce becomes no longer available after the marriage yoke. If divorce is not available after the marriage yoke, then the context makes it certain that the only divorce which Jesus could have permitted would have to occur before the marriage yoke.

The Exception Was Not What Anyone Wanted

 

Deu 22 and Beyond – Facing the Fact of Divorce During Betrothal

>> divorce is directly implied by the restriction of it in particular cases

>> if Moses says, you cannot divorce her if you make a false charge, then it implies a permission to divorce her if you did not make a false charge. – again, this is the way the Jews always understood it and this is also what God Himself practices, and Joseph very clearly acts this out in the New Testament.

We can see: (1) if he falsely accuses her of fornication, he cannot divorce her after marriage; if the report proves true one way or the other, then she is stoned; but if he does not charge her with anything and it is unproven before marriage, then he can ‘divorce her quietly’ like Joseph did.

 

Especially by now, I would hope that we are all familiar with the fact that the Bible very clearly describes divorce during betrothal to be a righteous divorce as we have seen in Mat_1:18-19. From this plain and simple passage we are required to face the fact that divorce during betrothal was:

 

(1) An existing, accepted, Jewish practice, and

(2) considered “righteous” before God.

 

But I have found it extremely helpful to dig deeper and perceive exactly where this ‘divorce during betrothal’ came from. – It turns out that this is actually somewhat communicated in the betrothal chapter, Deuteronomy 22. When a man lied about finding his wife to not be a virgin during the seven-day marriage feast, it says…

 

>>R

Deu_22:18-19 CAB  And the elders of that city shall take that man, and shall chastise him,  19  and shall fine him a hundred shekels, and shall give them to the father of the young woman, because he has brought forth an evil name against a virgin of Israel; and she shall be his wife: he shall never be able to put her away.

 

And again, if a man raped a woman it says,

 

Deu_22:28-29 CAB  And if anyone should find a young virgin who has not been betrothed, and should force her and lie with her, and be found,  29  the man who lay with her shall give to the father of the damsel fifty silver shekels, and she shall be his wife, because he has humbled her; he shall never be able to put her away.

(also see Exo_22:16-17) >> add to authority of father

 

We see from these two commands in the betrothal chapter (Deuteronomy 22) that a restriction is placed on a man’s authority to divorce a woman after he has sinned against her honor and taken away her virginity. This clearly implies that the man has the authority to divorce her, even before marriage, as long as he does not sin against her in this way. When you consider the fact that betrothal is a binding one flesh covenant, it is easy to see why Jews (including righteous Joseph) always understood that divorce was permitted during betrothal (before getting married) according to Deuteronomy 22, especially when it was for unproven fornication.

    This can be easy enough to notice when comparing the betrothal chapter (Deuteronomy 22) with Joseph’s example (Matthew 1), but it keeps getting clearer and clearer when you keep “doing your homework”:

 

Deu_22:25-27 CAB But if a man find in the field a young woman that is betrothed, and he should force her and lie with her, you shall slay the man that lay with her only.  26  And the young woman has not committed a sin worthy of death; as if a man should rise up against his neighbor, and slay him, so is this thing;  27  because he found her in the field; the betrothed young woman cried, and there was none to help her.

 

Interestingly, a very periphrastic, commentary-version of this passage which was sometimes used by some Jews has an additional phrase that reflected the common understanding of Judaism during New Testament times, and really helps illustrate Joseph’s situation:

 

“…if a man find a damsel in the wilderness, and do violence to her and lie with her, the man only shall die who lay with her, for the damsel is not guilty of death; but her husband may put her away from him by a bill of divorcement; for as when a man lieth in wait for his neighbour and taketh his life, so is this matter: he found her upon the face of the field ; the betrothed damsel cried out for help, but there was no one to deliver her.”

> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Targum_Pseudo-Jonathan

 

(Commentary on Deu_22:25-27 – Targum Pseudo-Jonathan [or, as some call it, Targum Yerushalmi/ “Jerusalem Targum”] – English Translation by JW Etheridge)

 

Do you see the extra phrase in this paraphrase? This understanding was common enough among Jews, and similar concepts can be found in abundance throughout the Jewish Talmud* (especially in the extensive tract called Gittin). Many Jewish writings call for divorce during betrothal if the death penalty somehow cannot be enforced “by the mouth of two or three witnesses.” [* Talmud Note: I have spent well over an entire week compiling quotes from the Talmud, and if God may help us, we hope to eventually include some of these key quotes from the Talmud and make them available in the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research” and or in this book.]

    After trying to clarify Deuteronomy 22, a little bit later this same paraphrase (or commentary) then goes even further by saying,

 

“A man should not take a wife who is bowed down (or violated)…”

 

(Commentary on Deu_23:1 – source same as before)

 

>> Insert Greek here and include it below

 

Whether it was unproven rape or even unproven fornication, the Jewish rabbis consistently allowed divorce during betrothal for these “unproven” situations whenever it was clear that a woman’s virginity was somehow ended before the marriage celebration.

   Do you see how this Law, and these types of Jewish understandings of the Law, come to bear on Marry in Joseph’s situation? Doesn’t this help illustrate why Joseph was thinking of divorcing Mary during betrothal, and doesn’t it also provide an intriguing backdrop at the beginning of Matthew before Jesus ever gives an ‘exception clause’ for divorce?

    But it is important to add to this the fact that the Jews were not just innovating and making up new ideas about divorcing during betrothal, because this is actually the exact same picture God gives to His very own betrothed bride:

 

Isa_50:1 CAB  Thus says the Lord, Of what kind is your mother's bill of divorcement, by which I put her away? Or to which debtor have I sold you? Behold, you are sold for your sins, and for your iniquities have I put your mother away.

 

Jer_3:8 CAB  And I saw that (for all the sins of which she was convicted, wherein the house of Israel committed adultery, and I put her away, and gave into her hands a certificate of divorce) yet faithless Judah feared not, but went and also committed fornication herself.

 

- The punishment of an adulteress?

- ‘I will send you away…’

 

>> if Jesus condemned the unrighteous wedded divorce of Deu_24, the only righteous divorce left in the Old Testament is during betrothal. We should not strain at this and make it out to be more difficult than it really is.

 

 and He make an exception that sounds a whole lot like Deuteronomy 22, we should not think it strange that Jesus

 

We can clearly see that divorce during betrothal is a definite possibility in the Bible, and it was so defining among the Jews that you cannot escape Joseph’s righteous, Jewish example of this. Joseph thought to divorce Mary during betrothal just like Jews did all throughout the Talmud (except that he thought to do it quietly with a more righteous and perfect heart than they). This is the divorce God did, and this is the divorce Joseph did. And if we are going to be honest, we have to face the fact that this is a definite possibility for Jesus to reference when dealing with the exception clause in the book of Matthew.

 

The Common Fornication-Divorce that the Rabbis Constantly Dealt With

Throughout the enormous volumes of the Ancient Jewish Talmud an overwhelming amount of legal discussion is thoroughly debated on every point for all kinds of unforeseen difficult legal cases that were brought to the rabbis. This scene of a man bringing his bride to a rabbi and giving his (initially unproven) ‘word’ (or unproven testimony) that he did not find her a virgin, comes up repeatedly over and over in various tracks within the Talmud, as the rabbis tried to determine without any question whether or not the woman had remained a virgin during betrothal. This is the same scene from Deuteronomy 22 which they discussed when dealing with such cases.

And whenever the Jews discussed the divorce of Deuteronomy 24, the potential of divorce before marriage was always just around the corner in Deuteronomy 22. The Jews constantly compared and contrasted Deuteronomy 22 with Deuteronomy 24 in numerous places throughout the Talmud, and these things are also consistently presented this way in works like Josephus, so that these discussions always go hand-in-hand. For ancient Jewish rabbis, you are always asking, ‘what about divorcing before marriage, and what about divorcing after?’ You would be really hard pressed to demonstrate that Jesus (being in the place of a Jewish rabbi) meant something entirely different than this common practice among the Jews in light of all the evidence we have presented.

And this parallel between Deuteronomy 22 and 24 is not only very solid in history and Jewish culture, but it is very Scriptural, since (for example) Deuteronomy 22 and 24 (especially in Greek) both start the exact same way with the same words!

 

Deu_22:13 CAB  And if anyone should take a wife, and dwell with her…

 

Deu_24:1 CAB    And if anyone should take a wife, and should dwell with her…

 

In fact, although I have not yet found an English version* that does this justice here, it turns out that the Greek is actually the exact same words in both passages!:

 

Deu_22:13 LXX  Ἐὰν δέ τις λάβῃ γυναῖκα καὶ συνοικήσῃ αὐτῇ…

Deu_24:1    LXX  Ἐὰν δέ τις λάβῃ γυναῖκα καὶ συνοικήσῃ αὐτῇ…

 

[* English versions that misrepresent the Greek of the LXX and wrongly make it look different here include: Brenton, CAB, and NETS]

 

Both passages go on to describe situations where a husband “hates” his wife and seeks to get out of the marriage. These passages are very clearly associated together, since they are very clearly paralleling the same discussion of the same situation, except that one describes a man seeking to get rid of a woman for sexual crimes before marriage (Deuteronomy 22), while the other describes a man trying to get rid of her for non-sexual reasons after marriage (Deuteronomy 24).

Not only this, but it actually turns out that there is a real and consistent pattern to the divorce passages in Deuteronomy:

 

Three Categories of Women Which a Man May Seek to Get Rid of

(A) Deu_21:10-17 – A married (non-Israelite) captive wife (for non-sexual reasons)

(B) Deu_22:13-21 – An unmarried (betrothed) Israelite wife (for sexual charges), (i.e. Mat_1:18-19), (also compare the rest of Deu_22:22-29)

(C) Deu_24:1-4 – A married Israelite wife (for non-sexual reasons)

 

We seek that a man seeking to end betrothal commitments is somewhat “sandwiched” between a man seeking to end marriage commitments, and both of these cases require a divorce certificate to end the social obligation to a wife (esp. Mat_1:18-19; Deu_24:1-4) – the only difference being that one is righteous and the other is wicked!

From all of this, it is very clear that Deuteronomy 22 (the betrothal chapter) is truly within the context of the divorce which Jesus is discussing when quoting Deuteronomy 24, when also referencing words from Deuteronomy 22. This can very clearly be demonstrated from all throughout history as well as the very Scriptures themselves!

    Jesus condemned their discussion of reasons to divorce after marriage from Deuteronomy 24, and instead gave only one solution in the form of a recognized divorce exception established in Deuteronomy 22, and constantly enforced by the Jews of unproven immorality before marriage. This pre-marriage-yoke1, divorce-solution for a word2 of porneia3 particularly pertained to Jesus as a rabbi, just as these things are constantly discussed and debated by the rabbis in the Talmud, and recorded for us as a brief example in Matthew one4 before Jesus ever gave an exception clause.

when it came to the infamous ‘unproven cases,’

    Unproven adultery was brought to the priests so that they may apply the test of the bitter waters in order to determine her guilt (Numbers 5). Unproven fornication before marriage was constantly brought to the rabbis, which is constantly discussed in the Talmud, and repeatedly referenced in the Scriptures. Jesus was not a priest in Jewish society (Heb_8:4). Jesus was a rabbi. Jesus did not pertain to the unproven adultery brought to the priests, but to the unproven fornication brought to the rabbis.

 

1. Pre-marriage-yoke: Mat_19:6, Mat_19:10

2. (a) divorce-solution for a word…: Deu_22:14 [λγους…λγῃ], v. Deu_22:17 [λγους λγων], v. Deu_22:20 [ὁ λόγος]; Mat_5:32 [λόγου]

3. Porneia: (Deu_22:14 [ὄνομα πονηρὸν], Deu_22:19 [ὄνομα πονηρὸν]), Deu_22:21 [ἐκπορνεῦσαι…(πονηρὸν)]; Mat_5:32 (πορνείας); Mat_19:9 (πορνείᾳ)

4. Matthew one: All of these things are played out in Mat_1:18-19

 

A Betrothal Exception Leaves You Agreeing With Jesus; An Adultery Exception Has You Disagreeing with Him

A Betrothal Leaves You Agreeing with the “No Separation” Command for Yoked Spouses; an Adultery Exception Demands that you can Break Jesus’ Absolute Command not to separate

Betrothal is the ONLY answer that leaves you in agreement with the Mat/Mark context: Betrothal-divorce obeys Jesus absolute and clear command to “not put space between” – wedded divorce disobeys this, and this is why Paul quoted this “no separation” command and applied it absolutely with no exceptions and strengthened it by specifically commanding us to never part with an unbeliever (which would definitely include a majority of immoral Corinthian men). The “no separation” command comes directly from the mouth of Jesus; Jesus then sent us (the nations) Paul to ‘open our eyes’ (I bless God!), and while Paul permitted (and encouraged) us to not marry in times of particular persecution, he told us ‘absolutely no (active) separation’ for wedded couples. It would be unadvisable and hazardous to disagree.

 

 

Do Not Separate is An Absolute Command

Mar_10: makes it absolute

1Co_7: makes it absolute

 

Whether from the mouth of Paul or Jesus Himself, the context of Mat 19 and Mar 10 does not disprove betrothal, it demands it.

 

The Two Divorces in the Law of Moses – The Solid Context For Betrothal!

>> move all the unfair divorce proofs to Deu_24!

We have spent a great amount of this chapter very briefly summarizing some of the greatest proofs for betrothal, but in the end this is actually an extremely simple issue.

 

Chart: The Old Covenant Allowed Two Basic Types of Divorce

Type

Pre-wedded

Sexual-Based

Divorce

Wedded

Non-Sexual-Based

Divorce

Scripture

Reference(s)

Deu 22; Mat 1

& all throughout the prophets (esp. Isa 50 and Jer 2 - 3)

Deu 24

(Deu_21:13-14)

Specific

Cause(s)

Prostitution

[“fornication”]

24:1:

- Wife finds no favor

(in husbands eyes)

- Something shameful

(found in her)

(Note: this is a generic, unspecified “problem”)

- Husband does not delight in her

(Deu_21:14)

(Note: Ultimately, he needs no real reason at all)

24:3:

- Husband hates her

(This covers just about any “cause” you can think of!)

Moral Quality?

Righteous

(see below)

Hardhearted

(see below)

Who is Guilty

in this?

The Immoral, Divorced Woman*

(Jer_3:8; Isa_50:1;

In appearance: Mat_1:18-19, etc.)

The Man

Who Divorces

(Mat_19:8; Mar_10:4-5)

Summary

Before Marriage

the essential reason to divorce would be for sexual unfaithfulness

After Marriage

the reasons to divorce could be for all kinds of things!

[* unless it is the case of rape in the field: Deu_22:25-29; Gen_34:1-31; 2Sa_13:14-20 (v. 2Sa_13:13 & 2Sa_13:20 – no one would marry her because of this); etc.]

> The Differences Between Moses’ General Divorce Permission & Jesus One Divorce Exception

 

If you divorce after the marriage yoke like Jesus specifically told you not to, then you will cause your wedded wife to commit adultery, but if you divorce the righteous divorce during betrothal for “prostitution” (a sexual cause) before marriage, you will not be the cause of her unfaithfulness. This is an extremely solid summary of Matthew 5 and 19.

    If you come to the point where you finally honestly understand Jesus’ extreme teaching about marriage as He actually said it, then surely you will start feeling like His disciple’s when they first heard it:

 

The Question

Mat_19:3 CAB  The Pharisees also came to Him, testing Him, and saying to Him, "Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife *for just any reason [* κατὰ πᾶσαν αἰτίαν – lit. down according to every cause (clearly including multiple causes, even for non-sexual reasons)]?"

 

The Conclusion

Mat_19:10 CAB  His disciples said to Him, "If such is *the case [ἡ αἰτία – lit. the one cause] of the man with his wife, it is better not to marry [i.e. enter into wedded, cohabitation]."

 

If your concept of Jesus’ teaching sounds fair to the average person, then it is clear that you are not one of his disciples, because you have drawn a totally different conclusion than they did! If you come up with multiple reasons to divorce, then it is clear that you are one of the Pharisees who also taught this.

    But if you are going to be a Pharisee or a disciple, you need to go ahead and make up your mind, because these two types of divorce were always taken together all throughout Judaism (as can be seen throughout many Jewish works such as the Talmud and even Josephus).

    Jesus very clearly knocked down the non-sexual, wedded, “divorce for any reason” suffered in Deuteronomy 24 and promoted by the Pharisees, but affirmed the divorce for unproven prostitution as given in Deuteronomy 22. These are the two types of divorce the Jews always debated over, and these are the two issues Jesus addressed. It is extremely clear that Jesus picked the divorce for sexual reasons and rejected the non-sexual divorce, and He even used the same words in His exception clause to do this. It would have been enough for Him to specify the “sexual aspect” of His exception with the Word porneia since this is the same word Deuteronomy 22 uses, but in Matthew 5 He goes so far as to even use two words from Deuteronomy 22:

 

Deu_22:20-21   λόγος...ἐκπορνεῦσαι” (LXX)

Mat_5:32          λόγου      πορνείας”   (GNT)

[Note: These two correlating Greek words are covered much more thoroughly later]

 

Seeing that these things make it extremely clear that Jesus’ exception is a reference to the sexual-based divorce of Deuteronomy 22 and Matthew 1, it is unavoidable to face the fact that the exception for divorce takes place before marriage during betrothal, just like Deuteronomy 22 describes, and just like Jewish rabbis constantly debated, and just like Joseph fulfilled in all righteousness, and just like God has been practicing Himself with His own people for thousands and thousands of years!

    If we have been practicing and promoting the hard-hearted wedded divorce of Deuteronomy 24, now is the time to be zealous and repent and take up the righteous legacy fulfilled in the New Covenant which Moses spoke of, Joseph fulfilled, and Jesus commanded!

 

This section has shown that “the exception” mentioned in Matthew is a matter of fornication which would have taken place during betrothal, and not adultery or some other immorality that would have taken place after coming together in marriage. But there are even more important considerations to make in the next points concerning this exception.

 

Important Responses to Emails

Based on what is included in DivRem Extras

 

(1) The first underlined statement is actually not an obscure or difficult problem at all for betrothal, but it looks like Bob simply does not want to believe what God said to His people in Jer CH 2 & 3, and assumes that we will also disagree with God as well since it does not seem practical to most people.

As far as a “formal engagement” – that depends very much on what you mean by “formal engagement,” and if you are agreeing to be man and woman/ “husband” and “wife” in the process?

 

The first underlined statement is actually not a problem at all. That is exactly what God said to His people in Jer CH 2 & 3. Now if God said that betrothal divorce and remarriage was immoral, then who are we to protest? But for equating betrothal with a formal engagement, this simply ignores the fact that they are not inherently equivalent at all. (hint: engagements never require a divorce, nor do they usually agree to “now” be husband and wife as done in the Bible) – This writer protests not because it is implausible, but because it is disagreeable with what he wants, and he assumes that we will take it as being impractical, and yet his assumptions are wrong for those subjected to the Bible, since God already said it was this way in Jer, so we are simply obliged to accept it this way.

 

(2) The other underlined statements all deal with the “context” argument/ fallacy: this is a simple absurdity of ignoring the word “except” – which never refers to the primary scenario in discussion. We all know that Mat 19 and Mark 10 are dealing primarily with divorcing wedded marriage (Deu 24) which is why betrothal is a proper candidate for an exception, especially since it is discussed only two chapters previous to this primary passage in question (Deu 22). This also ignores the fact that betrothal is part of being “one flesh” just as marriage is, unlike engagement. – That’s why we call it “Betrothal” in order to draw the listener’s attention to the fact that this is a special part of being husband and wife that we don’t usually practice in our engagements (although some still do this in other cultures).

 

The over arching context of Mat_19 is not “marriage” (cohabitation) but “One Flesh” (covenant) which definitely includes the betrothal, since that is where the covenant is established! (Otherwise the Church is to be considered not in covenant and not ‘One Spirit’ with Jesus as 1Co 6 & Eph 5 say, since she is merely betrothed to Him)! – It is high time that people read and subjected themselves to the Bible and understood before drawing conclusions.

 

Although they are different “scenarios” divorcing for Betrothal is not ‘some other’ (unrelated) context from wedded-divorce, since it cannot be viewed (Biblically) as our engagements can be separated from our marriages.

 

Betrothal is not only within the general context of Matthew, it is also within the (extended) context of Deu 24 which they are quoting.

 

This is why the Talmud discusses betrothal-divorce and wedded-divorce all in the same breath. They ARE the same context according to the Jews. If we complain about “different contexts” then this is an extremely sloppy and ignorant position to take (historically and especially Biblically!).

 

 

An exception by nature draws from an alternative scenario from within the context which does not violate the reason for giving the primary statement. Betrothal-divorce does this; wedded divorce flies in the face of this, and gives people room to do the very thing God absolutely told them not to do.

 

---------------

 

6. Matthew 5 Shows that the Exception Does Not Allow Remarriage

Whether in English or in Greek, it is clear and certain that Matthew 5:31-32 condemns remarriage, even if done after the exception that allows divorce.

>> Paul understood the innocent party to have no right to remarry

>> “The only “exception” that was given here in Matthew

5:32 is from the guilt of causing a woman to commit adultery. It

says absolutely nothing about an exception for remarriage.” (mdr_taylor.pdf)

>> “…as a pastor, I find it difficult to counsel and make decisions on such important and potentially lifechanging issues, based upon a purported Jewish custom that cannot

be explicitly stated or emphatically quoted from the Bible” (mdr_taylor, p. 29)

 

The Porneia Exception Does Not End One Flesh

>> is this different than ‘sin does not end one flesh’ – and where should I put this?? – should I simply put a summary earlier and then put the main teaching here?

This is an extremely simple and basic reality that we need to come to terms with!

Hosea

God demand a return

 

Matthew 5 and 19 Focus on Two Different Things Concerning Divorce and Adultery

>> I think I need to move a lot of this to the previous basic coverage of Mat_5

>> do I even need this point here?

The more liberal interpretations of the remarriage issue have deemed the exceptive elements of Mat 5 and 19 as a liberal “exception clause,” presuming that these exceptive elements permit remarriage. It is important to note that they typically insist that both chapters show this view. Many of them would say, “You commit adultery if you remarry, ‘except’ if you divorced her for adultery,” [although the exception is not about “adultery” but a report of “prostitution” during betrothal].

First, as a matter of clarification, the exception of Mat 5 is focused on how the man is responsible for a woman’s adultery after being divorced and remarried, whereas Mat_19:9 is focused on the man’s (personal) adultery because of his own remarriage (after divorcing). These are two very different specific foci, though they both follow a husband divorcing his wife and end with the wife committing adultery:

 

Mat_5:32 a KJB But I say unto you, That whoever divorces his wife…causes her to commit adultery

 

Mat_19:9 a KJV And I say unto you, Whosoever shall put away his wife… and shall marry another, [He] committeth adultery…

 

Do you see the difference in emphasis? I don’t think that even liberals would disagree with the distinction that I am making here.

    Note that in Matthew 5, whether or not the man that divorces his wife directly commits adultery himself is not the issue whereas in Mat 19 it is. In Matthew 5 it is only said about him in this verse, that he “…causes her to commit adultery…” Nevertheless as Jesus says later in this same book,

 

Mat_18:7 WEB Woe to the world because of occasions of stumbling [σκανδάλων – falling]! For it must be that the occasions [of falling (σκάνδαλα)] come, but woe to that person through whom the occasion [of falling (σκάνδαλον)] comes!

 

So the man is certainly not guiltless in this case, concerning his wife’s adulterous remarriage. Indeed, “woe” to her, but more-so “woe” to him for causing her!

    Also note that, though it is not specifically said here that it would be adultery for him to remarry, it is clearly shown that it would be by the fact that the two (the divorcee and the divorced) are still married after the divorce, (regardless of the wife’s innocence or guilt in the divorce).  If this were not true, it could not be said that she commits adultery for remarrying. A remarriage can only be adulterous if in fact the first marriage is still intact. The sin of “Adultery” with someone necessitates a third party to whom one of the adulterers is lawfully married.

If you have enough integrity to take the Bible at face value even in this case, as you ought to, you will then have to say that “innocence or guilt,” and “faithfulness or unfaithfulness” have no bearing in this issue to “free” a spouse to remarry.  If you then squirm to be free of this striking reality, you will only have the alternative of saying that Jesus was giving the man more permission to remarry than the woman, because immediately following this he says, “…whoever marries her that is divorced commits adultery,” (Mat_5:32 b KJB / Mat_19:9) – and there are NO exceptions given to this at all. And if men and women are on equal ground in this respect then, “whoever marries [him] that is divorced commits adultery” which is confirmed by Mar_10:11-12.

So if you go on trying to say that the husband has more rights from Jesus commands to remarry than the wife, you will sadly be found a fool who has not taken the Gospel of Mark to heart. This is because the “men are exempt” or “different” interpretation is in all practical effect struck down by what Jesus said in Mark to clearly and finally set men and women on the same plane in this respect:

 

Mar_10:11-12 CAB  …Whoever should put away his wife and marry another commits adulteryG3429 against her.  12  And if a wife should put away her husband and be married to another, she commits adultery.

 

We can see clearly that Jesus puts the man and the woman on the same level in this issue of the permanency of marriage.  There is no excuse for concluding that men and women have different “rights” to marry: Both equally commit adultery upon remarriage as long as their previous spouse lives, and this is exemplified by the statement about the woman saying “…whoever marries her that is divorced commits adultery” so that if we combine Matthew and Marks accounts, we find that neither differences in sex nor differences in guilt or innocence change the rules of the permanency of the marriage covenant.

 

The Ridiculous Attempts to Apply The Exception to the Second Half of the Verse

There are those who try to apply the exception (in the first part of the verse) to the woman who remarries (in the second part). This is wrong because it requires unwarranted re-interpretation rather than a consistent progressive reading. Despite this, it is very common among church leadership to confuse, mix up and regroup this verse in order to present a permissive interpretation. But to understand this practice, let me first give you a visual help:

 

Mat_5:32 KJV [1st Statement: …whosoever shall put away his wife, (exception: saving for the cause of fornication,) causeth her to commit adultery]: [2st Statement: and whosoever shall marry her that is divorced committeth adultery]

 

·       Note that the first statement deals with the sin of divorce, and the second deals with the sin of remarriage

·       The sin of divorce has an exception in it, while the sin of remarriage has none

·       This passage twice addresses “whosoever[s],” but only once makes an exception

·       Note that the exception is within the first statement, and so permits an exceptive divorce, and is not in the second statement permitting an “exceptive remarriage

·       The second statement stands alone without exception.

 

Liberal church philosophers try to cross the exception over from permitting an EXCEPTIVE divorce (in the first statement), to a general permission to remarriage (imposed upon the second statement).

 

So although the verse says this:

Mat_5:32 KJV [1st Statement: …whosoever shall put away his wife, (exception: saving for the cause of fornication,) causeth her to commit adultery]: [2st Statement: and whosoever shall marry her that is divorced committeth adultery.]

 

The second part is treated by liberals like it says this:

“…and whoever marries her that is divorced commits adultery [unless she was divorced for committing fornication]

 

But moving the exception to the second statement ends up backfiring in a very noticeable way: The exception clearly does not belong when applied to the second statement, because that would say that one divorced for fornication does not commit adultery when she remarries, but the innocent one does.  Is the immoral person found more innocent before God to be allowed to remarry? Is such a person less defiled? But in fact, this even causes a problem for liberal thinkers. So to resolve this confusing predicament, they then reverse the exception as well as its location to say:

 

“…and whoever marries her that is divorced [for committing fornication] commits adultery”

 

In this way, an unfounded re-interpretation has been adopted as the standard Protestant interpretation for this verse. But as they do this, did you notice that in order for them to place the small exception within a sentence that addresses the majority of situations, they also have to completely drop out the exceptive words for it to make any sense at all (i.e. “unless she was…”)? What was said in the first statement as an exception, is lawlessly reapplied in the second as a common, normalized practice that addresses the majority of people looking for a way out of their marriage, and to do this you actually have to take out the specifying word “except” for it to fit! This is because of the dynamic of the terms “whoever” and “except.”

If anything contrary is added to an otherwise all-inclusive statement (such as “whoever”) it requires that this addition addresses a small minority (such as, “except for this case…”). This dynamic is frustrated in the standard protestant interpretation because the exception (which belongs as an exception within the first statement) naturally finds no “exceptive” room in the second statement, because the second statement is deliberately structured to address “whoever,” which includes an innocent divorced wife who was introduced in the first statement.

However, even if the exception seamlessly fit when inserted into the second statement, in any case, you are still adding to Jesus’ Words what He never said if you do this. This alone in and of itself is wrong, and we ought to easily recognize this.

The permission for remarriage must be present for a liberal “exception clause” to work (as defined in the first paragraph). But in this passage the innocent wife is said to commit adultery when she remarries, and so does the second man who marries her. But because the guilt that the man bears for causing the adultery in his wife’s remarriage is the primary issue here (because it is patterned out of the same issue addressed in Deuteronomy 24:1-4), the first husband’s potential for committing adultery with his own body by remarrying after a divorce is not specifically addressed until later (Mat_19:9; Mar_10:10-12). But for the wife’s adultery which the man has become guilty of causing, notice that EVERY remarriage referred to in Matthew 5 is called “adultery,” and the man becomes guilty of causing it in every one of these cases.

    If we will be honest it is very clear, even in English, that the exception does not allow remarriage in Matthew 5. Because of this clarity in Matthew 5, what should we expect to find in Matthew 19?

 

7. None of the Ancient Source Text Variations of Matthew 19:9 Permit Remarriage

A Brief Overview of the Major Textual Variations for Mat_19:9

>> 1. the differences between the two variations 2. Erasmus did not author ei 3. context of the disciples

 

>> When I have time to review: Should I move this to be before discussing Matthew 19 not allowing remarriage?

>> documented in appx….. ex. cl. Re.

>> add the 3rd textual variations

 

We have seen how the exception in Matthew 5 definitely does not allow remarriage, and now we need to consider the exception in Matthew 19. The tragic difficulty about this is that there are some source text variations for the exception here, but despite this, the great assurance for our particular needs here when grappling with the marriage issue is that virtually every considerable source text variation we have for Matthew 19:9 agrees in not allowing remarriage after divorce.

Note 1: We intend to not only go over the most likely textual variations for Matthew 19:9 here, but initially we intend to even include notable textual variations that are very unlikely, in very unreliable versions (that is, poor and inaccurate copies of the Greek New Testament). – Just because we cover certain textual variations for the sake of being thorough and complete does not in any way imply that such textual variations are really worthy of being considered as realistic possibilities of the most authentic version of the exception clause in Matthew 19:9.

Note 2: Because I do not know of another way to meet these challenging and ignored needs, this section of the book tends to be a lot more technical than the rest of the book. These subjects are both morally and even academically challenging, but please do not become overwhelmed with this! I know the things we are about to summarize can feel like way too much to bear (especially for the average reader), but there is a reason I have chosen to take such a difficult path.

Just because nearly all English versions simplify many difficult complications throughout the Scriptures does not mean that this is all we are responsible for considering. It is faithless and treacherous to not face the difficult reality of some of the problems that are out there when it comes to a few particular passages of the Bible. By being upfront and honest, and diligent with great difficulties, we make ourselves candidates to be crowned as those who have sought and obtained truth without fear.

By starting with the “Source Text Variations in Matthew 19:9,” we are beginning with the most difficult aspect of this verse we possibly can, and advancing to a sharper and more defined focus as we progress. Our aim is to start with the chaotic problem and progress to solidity as God helps us in endurance with much faith and confirmation.

 

Further Notes

Note 3: There is a massive amount of information which I am effectively summarizing in this section for the purposes of this book. If at any point you need to see the original documentation for the summaries given here, including images of original ancient documents, you are free to browse through the massive amount of very technical research I have compiled and documented in the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research

Note 4: I have researched over countless hours and numerous years seeking to make this section as complete and accurate as possible. As usual, If you know of any reliable information or resources that may help improve this section I deeply appreciate your feedback.

 

Variation #1: The Textus Receptus and Other Traditional Sources Allow Divorce, But Not Remarriage

What difference does the exception word make in Variation #1, and what ancient sources support it?

 

>> how often do I quote var1 throughout the Book?

>> this can be called the exception of the “received text” because this is what the church (both living and apostate) has always taught from the very beginning. This is what was handed down in Latin, especially after the 400s when Greek became less predominate and Latin took over.

For the purposes of this book, up until this point, when briefly referencing Mat_19:9 we have generally used the traditional Greek text of the New Testament called The Textus Receptus1. This is the Greek text which the KJV is based on, and all of the Protestant reformers used. This is one of the first Critical Greek Texts1 that was standardized from the textual variations which were available and published with the printing press and widely distributed, and as it continued spanning over numerous revisions and editions, was commonly considered the most authoritative compilation of the Greek New Testament from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century*.

 

[* i.e. during the 1800s, most scholars started to shift over to Alexandrian-type texts for the GNT, as it is to this day]

>> add all of this (paragraphs) to Bibliog???

 

Variation #1 basically says:

[a man may divorce]only* upon prostitution” (Mat_19:9-TR Jos.Trans.) [Greek: εἰ μὴ ἐπὶ πορνείᾳ]

 

[* Translational Note: The brief representation of “εἰ μὴ” (ei mē) as “only” involves many details which are covered in some of the following sections]

 

The distinctive aspect of Variation #1 is that it includes the Greek word “εἰ” (ei) which makes this version of the exception basically say ‘only’ [μὴ vs. εἰ μὴ]. Without this small word (ei), Mat_19:9 would simply deny a man the permission to divorce upon prostitution (see Variation #2).

Variation #1 is an exception allowing divorce for prostitution [or fornication], but not remarriage. Despite this, this version of the exception has been misrepresented as allowing both divorce and remarriage by most Protestant English bible versions. [Note: this is the same translational issue which we just briefly referenced in the “Translational Note”].

 

Variation #1 is supported by…

·       What is commonly called the Textus Receptus, which includes most every traditional, critical compilation of the Greek New Testament1 (i.e. Critical Greek Text), which in turn has current support from…

·       The marginal note in Codex Leicestrensis2 – that is, Leicestrensis (a copy of the Greek New Testament dated to the 1400s) has a correction off to the side of Mat_19:9’s text which specifies ei mē as the correct reading, as well as…

·       A number of early quotes from church leaders3, and

·       Most every Latin copy4 throughout history (from ancient to modern) many of which were naturally made from much older copies of the Greek New Testament than we have available today.

 

[Note 1: Please remember to familiarize yourself with some of these basic concepts about the Greek New Testament in the Bibliography under “GNT” if you have not already.

The rest of these notes very briefly reference the basis for Variation #1, which is usually ignored:

Note 2: The issues surrounding Codex Leicestrensis are covered in the “Exception Clause Research.”

Note 3: Leaders within the early church who more or less support Variation #1 include: Clement of Alexandria (150 – 215 AD), Origen (About 184/5 – 253/4 AD) – who explicitly said that Variation #1 [which he quoted as “ἐὰν μὴ”] indicated ‘only’ [ἢ μόνῃ πορνείᾳ]), and (after the Nicene Apostasy) the one who is called “Basil the Great” (329-379 AD). (These quotes are documented in the “Exception Clause Research,” under, “A Number of Early Church Quotes Support Variation #1”).

Note 4: “εἰ μὴ ἐπὶ πορνείᾳ” (GNT-TR) = “nisi ob fornicationem” – This Latin version of ei mē is supported by nearly every Latin version (from ancient to modern) including the very ancient Old Latin versions (including Codex Vercellensis – the oldest Latin copy we have, dated from the ~300s AD), the officialized Latin Vulgate itself (400s), the Clementine Vulgate (1500s), and the modern Nova Vulgate (since 1979). – Also, please be aware that I have very thoroughly documented and summarized the indisputable, direct correlation between the Greek “εἰ μὴ” (ei mē) and the Latin “nisi” in the “Exception Clause Research” under, “…Support For Having Ei Mē”, “The Latin Vulgate, and Other Latin Versions” (etc.), and, “…The Latin Vulgate Affirms ei mē in Matthew 19:9

Note 5: Variation #1 has quite a bit more support than many people admit. Although it is very certain that this is a very ancient textual variation, many today have tried to discredit it by more or less acting like it was “invented” in the 1500s by the gross humanist, Desiderius Erasmus, which is very irresponsible and inaccurate. Although I do not necessarily consider this textual variation to be the most authentic, I do insist that we at least be honest and have some integrity about this variation (unlike many irresponsible and irrational “scholars”) and because of this I have very thoroughly documented a significant number of sources that support it in the “Exception Clause Research” (as referenced in Note 4).

Note 6: In a few cases (mostly in Latin), Variation #1 sometimes includes a “word” of prostitution as seen in Mat_5:32, while still retaining a distinct text in Mat_19:9 (and this is agreed with in Greek by Clement of Alexandria, as seen in our “Exception Clause Research”). In an even smaller number of cases, a “word” is sometimes added to some of the following variations as well].

>> Add: (from “Old Greek” copies to the Latin Vulgate, to the Clementine Vulgate and even Nova Vulgata as well)

On the other hand, there are alternative Greek source texts that would read like this previous interpretation, without “uncompounding” a compound word.

    Historically we would tend to be more familiar with the “The Textus Receptus” since this is the Greek source text used by the King James Version and all such translations in this “textual tradition.”  But “The Majority Text” is a slightly different Greek source text to translate from, rather than the “The Textus Receptus” (Received Text). When it comes to Matthew 19:9, “The Textus Receptus” (KJV Greek Text) says, “ειμη” (“If” compounded with “not” that make “except” or “only”) while the majority of the Majority Text documents that we have today simply say “μη” (“not”). This is also consistent with the other famous (or infamous?) source texts known as the Alexandrian text types (for example, that which NIV and most other modern versions use today). 

 

Variation #2: The Byzantine Majority Text And Some Alexandrian Texts Say “Not Upon Prostitution”

Most all Greek texts do not actually have an “except” word at all in Matthew 19:9

> including the “Majority Text” & “Alexandrian Texts”

 

If the textual variation in the Majority of the Greek Texts we have is more accurate, then Matthew 19:9 would read a bit different.

 

Variation #2 basically says:

[a man]may not divorce upon prostitution” (Mat_19:9-Byz Jos.Trans.) [Greek: μὴ ἐπὶ πορνείᾳ]

 

[Note: the word “divorce” (lit. loose away) has been reordered here for English purposes]

 

Variation #2 is supported by…

·       The majority of the Greek copies of the New Testament that we currently have, including…

·       Most every Greek copy of the Byzantine Majority Text Type*

·       Some Alexandrian Texts**

·       Most other classes (or “families”) of Greek texts

 

[* As represented in the various critical Greek compilations of the New Testament commonly known as The Byzantine Majority Text. – This is essentially the same as the Textus Receptus (as seen in Variation #1) except they compile it differently (for example, The Byzantine Majority Text often puts less weight on certain sources, especially non-Greek sources such as the Latin Vulgate, when deciding between textual variations).

** “Some Alexandrian Texts” support Variation #2 – Most notably, Codex Sinaiticus, (but not Codex Vaticanus, which has Mat_5:32’s exception as seen in Variation #3)]

 

With the Majority of Greek texts, if we take the negative Greek word “μὴ” (mē), “not,” as it is normally used throughout the Greek New Testament, instead of allowing an exception for divorce, mē would negate even the possibility of divorcing a wife for prostitution or “fornication” in Mat_19:9, since there would be no word at all that could indicate an “exception” to begin with. Mē would not just exclude remarriage, but it would not even allow divorce. If we consider mē to be the most reliable variation in Mat_19:9 (as most modern professionals do today), in Greek this makes it even more farfetched to say that some “exception” also allows a remarriage, since (if it is taken as it is usually used in the New Testament) it would then even negate the permission to divorce.

Although most all versions today have switched over to using this Greek variation (especially since it is also in some Alexandrian texts) yet only a few have actually been honest and consistent enough with this decision to switch from saying “except” to “not” in English with Mat_19:9!

Important Greek Grammatical Note: The same grammar in Mat_19:9 (called the Subjunctive Mood) is commonly used in countless places throughout the Greek New Testament using this same negative word (mē) to deny permission as a negative command (for example, Mar_10:19/ Luk_18:20; Mat_5:17; and many others).

 

[Technical Reminder Note: These texts are documented in the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research,” especially under the small title that says, “Sources that Support ‘Not Upon Prostitution’”]

 

>> A few versions that are actually willing to put into English what they have chosen in Greek include: ALT, ACV, ANT, Darby, and I need to continue after Disciple’s Bible when ES is fixed

 

Because of this, it is reasonable and consistent to understand this as saying, ‘you may not (mē) divorce for prostitution.’

    The great irony here seems to be that even though it is clear that this textual variation has been around from early days, the church still managed to conclude (before and after the Apostasy of Nicaea) that divorce could only happen for prostitution, and that all remarriage was adultery. (Note: this agrees with every copy of Mat_5:32, which is what the early church usually referred to).

    With all of the countless hours reading countless works on this issue, with the majority of them promoting this textual variation, I have not found one person who can even begin to reasonably explain the unanimous church view in light of this textual variation, (not to mention Joseph in Mat_1:18-19 and Jesus in Mat_5:32!). Note: I am not “opposed” to this textual variation in Mat_19:9, I am just demanding that we actually be honest with it and give a reasonable answer if we are going to fervently promote it, and most people who insistently promote it do not meet this need in their explanations.

    Even though this textual variation by far currently has more Greek texts to support it, none of the ancient or modern Latin copies I have read support it, nor does even one church leader before Nicaea. For the Greek leaders before Nicaea this textual variation (if original) seems to remain a mystery, but after Nicaea, Latin became dominant, so most people came to primarily read the ancient Latin versions and then also the (standardized) Latin Vulgate (early 400’s) both of which have the same Latin form* of Variation #1 in it (i.e. the “Textus Receptus” exception). [* nisi ob fornicationem].

    If such an exception-variation denying divorce for prostitution flourished in the neglected Greek copies while everyone was paying attention to an exception in Latin that allowed divorce for prostitution, this is partly understandable, especially since they were in the premier of their nearly universal apostasy when Latin took over as the dominate language. This is factual enough that they indeed accomplished such an unbelievable feet (at least eventually), since we still have enough of the copies that they used to confirm this fact, but the main question is whether or not they truly transferred the correct exception into Latin before they apostated and eventually let the two texts have different exceptions.

    Despite all of these difficult questions, most of those who compile Critical Greek Texts of the New Testament consider this textual variation to be the most reliable, while most professional translators continue to misrepresent it however they feel like representing it with no real accountability to the actual text itself. People started translating the clause in Mat_19:9 as “except” when they used to accept Variation #1, but then when they switched to the “negative” mē in Variation #2 they went on to defy the Greek they had chosen by continuing to represent it as a permission! Even though most all modern Bible versions are based on this textual variation* they continue to misrepresent this negation as an ‘exception’ to allow both divorce and remarriage without any textual, contextual, or historical basis.

 

[* Most modern professionals are using Codex Sinaiticus for Mat_19:9, which is one of the primary Alexandrian Greek Texts, and (unlike its counterpart, Codex Vaticanus) Codex Sinaiticus has Variation #2 in Mat_19:9 a]

[Reminder Note: For many years I have researched these textual variations, and I continue to research to this day. If you have any sound and solid information or considerations that may help improve the summaries and provide answers to these sections, any help is greatly appreciated!]

 

---------------

 

>> The small difference between these last two variations is ei

>> get classical examples of questions in Scripture raised by Negative Mē

>> bb gateway!

>> no one would think this to be a question because it is not in the indicative mood….. right??

 

>> most all Bible versions today are representing this Greek text as though it were a positive exception, when in fact it is a negative statement

>> Despite all of these Greek texts with a negative mē opposing divorce for prostitution, although the majority of bible versions are using this type of Greek, yet still representing it as though there were an exception allowing remarriage here! They can’t even be honest and consistent with the particular Greek text they have chosen!

>> Grammatically, variation #2 would halt your exception-efforts within addressing divorce before you ever got to the remarriage clause, even more so than variation #1.

    If you chose variation #1 or #2, you would still not be permitted to remarry by any means.

I have not only read many works promoting this, but I have also gone so far as to contact some of these professional translators and ask them why they represent this negation as an ‘exception’ that allows remarriage, and they can only provide haphazard justifications for re-phrasing the text!

 

Mat_19:9 Jos.Trans. But I say to you, that anyone may not divorce his wife upon prostitution [or fornication]. And the one who marries another is committing adultery. And anyone who marries her who is divorced is committing adultery.

 

MCFALL’S VERSION. Now I say to you that who, for example, may have divorced his wife—he may not have divorced37 her for fornication—and may have married another woman, he becomes adulterous by marrying her. And the man having married a divorced wife, he becomes adulterous by marrying her.

[www.btinternet.com/~lmf12]

Dr. McFall is an advocate of such a reading, and goes into much length to show why Matthew 19:9 should be represented this way. [see: www.btinternet.com/~lmf12]

[Note: If you deny permission for anything in the subjunctive mood (as in Mat_19:9) you have to use mē (as seen in the Greek words and grammar of Mat_19:18 as compared with Mar_10:19/ Luk_18:20)] – if you negate anything in this mood you have to use mē.

---------------

What Does the Negation Mean in the Subjunctive?

 

(1) http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0052%3Aform%3Dsubj

- Probably not an exhortation

- Might not be “Prohibitive: The second or third person aorist subjunctive without ἄν is used in prohibitions. The negative is μή” – but does the fact that αν greatly precedes this mean that it can be prohibitive?

- could be a “doubtful denial

- could be positive??: “μὴ ἀγροικότερον τὸ ἀληθὲς εἰπεῖνPlat. Gorg. 462e; I suspect it’s too rude to tell the truth

- that lest we ‘may not’ divorce upon prostitution

 

(2) http://mythfolklore.net/bibgreek/croy/verbs/162.htm

- You have to conclude that it is either denying permission or the reality of such a divorce

- you cannot  say the no comment theory, because denying the fact of saying something is accomplished with “ου” in the indicative (1Jn_5:16). – Mat_19:9 has the wrong word and the wrong grammar for saying ‘I’m not talking about that subject.’

 

(3) General

http://www.ntgreek.net/lesson29.htm

 

Variation #3: A Minority of Alexandrian and Caesarean Texts Have Matthew 5’s Exception in Matthew 19

>>! There are a number of texts like this in Greek and Latin, but none of them have been definitive

>> add links to ex. cl. Re.

There are a minority of Greek copies of the New Testament that have Matthew 5’s exception in Matthew 19. Some only do this in part (compare Variation #4), but others have the entire text of Matthew 5’s exception in Matthew 19. So far, I do not know of any bible version or any Greek commentator who has actively promoted this version of the exception as the most authentic textual variation. Most people I have read consider this tendency to be the result of irresponsible copyists. The accidental mistake and or intentional crime of making two different texts look alike is called “Assimilation,” and this is what most people consider Variation #3 and Variation #4 to be a result of.

The most notable text to include Matthew 5 in Matthew 19 is Codex Vaticanus, which is one of the principle Alexandrian texts used today, which actually disagrees with Codex Sinaiticus here (the other principle Alexandrian text). The other primary family of Greek texts that provide support for this (which is commonly considered unreliable) are sometimes called “Caesarean texts,” but virtually no one would compile a critical Greek New Testament based on prioritizing these texts.

It is not that it is impossible that Matthew 19 originally read exactly the same as Matthew 5, it is just that no one that I’ve read so far has been able to present notable, authoritative support for this, except the consideration that Codex Vaticanus has it, and that there are possibly a few quotes from some early church leaders that may somewhat imply that Matthew 19 might have been the same as Matthew 5. Nevertheless, there are a number of documents that support this reading which are documented in the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research,” especially under the small title that says, “Sources that Purely Support Mat_5:32’s Exception in Mat_19:9.” If anyone does find notable, authoritative support for this variation, I would really like to know!

This textual variation currently has so little support among textual professionals that basically none of those who have compiled the major Alexandrian-based critical Greek New Testament texts consider this textual variation to be the most accurate by having it as their base text. This includes the critical compilations done by Westcott and Hort, Nestle-Aland, the United Bible Societies, (and more recently) the Society of Biblical Literature (i.e. the SBLGNT), and a few others.

> remember Bibliography for this last sentence

Although this variation is typically considered a very unlikely variation, if we did conclude that Matthew 19:9’s exception has exactly the same text as Matthew 5:32’s, then this entire issue would be extremely simplified: you could only divorce for “a word of prostitution” and it would be absolutely clear that you could not remarry without it being adultery. – Even Codex Vaticanus clearly says ‘…and the one who marries her who is divorced commits adultery,’ (Mat_19:9 b Codex Vaticanus) Note: We do not need to cover this textual variation anymore than we have here, especially since we have already covered Matthew 5’s exception in the previous section entitled, “Matthew 5 Shows that the Exception Does Not Allow Remarriage.”

 

Variation #4?: Mixed-up Versions that Allow Remarriage?

For the most part there are no copies of the New Testament that have an exception that allows remarriage, except in the misrepresentations found in English and other irresponsible versions. The closest thing that comes to this in Greek (which is almost not worth mentioning) is a great minority of very haphazard and unreliable texts like Codex Bezae Cantabrigiensis, but the only way Codex Bezae actually does this is by recklessly jumbling up the Greek text by mixing Matthew 5’s exception in with Matthew 19’s Greek text*.

It seems that a great number of people have noted the great number of problems for Codex Bezae, and I do not know of anyone who currently thinks its many textual variations are authentic. Virtually every study I’ve read on Codex Bezae considers it’s textual variations to be textual corruptions. Nevertheless, there are a number of documents that support this reading which are documented in the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research,” especially under the small title that says, “Sources that Confuse and Mix Mat_5:32’s Exception Together with Mat_19:9’s Exception.”

 

Codex Bezae and texts like it are so unreliable that, so far…

·       The only way this variation even rarely makes it into any Bibles is through detailed footnotes

·       The liberal critic Karl Lachmann (1793-1851) is the only one I know of that has integrated this type of a variation as the base text in his edition of the Greek New Testament
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Lachmann

·       I have only found one person so far who even had the nerve to translate Codex Bezae into English:
The Primitive New Testament. Stamford and London, 1745 – By William Whiston, (1667-1752)
[Publisher: Stamford, Whiston; Call number: AFE-2546; Details: http://studybible.info/version/Whiston]

 

Please Note: the only texts of the Greek New Testament that have an exception that could allow remarriage are very unreliable texts like Codex Bezae, which are constantly noted for having many obvious mistakes! Virtually no one accepts these textual variations (or rather, corruptions) to be original. – This includes everything from the numerous quotes from original Christianity and even the analysis of many professionals in charge today. Especially because most everyone recognizes that Variation #4 is simply a typical corruption very much like so many other problems commonly found in a few careless Greek texts like Codex Bezae, there is not much of a practical need to cover this textual variation much further.

 

[* Note: To see the original faded text of Codex Bezae for Mat 5 and 19 (in Latin and in Greek), plus a very thorough Greek analysis of its mix up of Mat 5 and 19’s text, see the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research”]

 

Variation #1 and #2 – The Two Primary Exception-Options

From all of these (sometimes overwhelming) details about the textual variations for the exception in Mat_19:9, we basically have two primary possibilities:

 

Variation #1: You can divorce “only[ειμη (ei mē)] for prostitution/ “fornication.”

This is according to the Textus Receptus, most every Latin copy (from ancient to modern), a number of early quotes from church leaders, and a few other sources in Latin and Greek.

 

Variation #2: You can “not[μη (mē)] even divorce for prostitution/ “fornication.”

This is according to the Majority (and some Alexandrian) Greek Texts

 

Basic Summaries and Considerations about The Two Primary Exception-Options

·       Remember that we do not need to expand much more on Variation #3 because (1) As far as I have seen so far, it does not currently have much support among authoritative copies of the Greek New Testament, and this is currently reflected by the position of most all textual professionals and or church leaders in general, and (2) it is exactly the same as Matthew 5:32’s exception, and we have already thoroughly considered how this exception cannot in any way allow remarriage.

·       Beyond Variation #1 and Variation #2 most people would say that there are not really any other variations that are practical candidates for the most authentic text of the “exception” in Mat_19:9. (Variation #3 is only occasionally included in the footnotes of some versions).

·       Virtually every textual professional agrees that Matthew 19’s “exception” is one of these two variations, and currently most agree that Variation #2 is the most likely reading to be authentic.

·       Traditionally Variation #1 has been preferred, but currently Variation #2 is now preferred among professionals.

·       Variation #1’s primary support is in the near uniformity of virtually all ancient Latin copies (with a few ancient sources in Greek) and Variation #2’s primary support is from the majority of all Greek copies of the New Testament we have today (including the most ancient Greek copies we have).

·       Notice that the differences between Variation #1 and Variation #2 which we are discussing here is the small Greek word ei, [Variation #1: “εἰμὴ” (ei mē) – “only”; Variation #2: “μὴ” (mē) – “not”].

·       Notice that in both of these primary textual variations, there is not any permission at all given for remarriage. In both cases, it is clear that all remarriage after divorce is adultery, which is exactly what is taught throughout every other New Testament passage on remarriage*.

 

[* See especially: Mar_10:10-12; Rom_7:2-3; Luk_16:18; (etc)]

 

8. So What Should We Do With All Of These “Exception Variations”? – Summaries of Solid Proclamations from Matthew 5

>>H!

The Main Points to Consider From All of these Challenging Textual Questions

 

Although it is clear that there is a lot to consider when grappling with the source text variations for Mat_19:9, yet for the sake of integrity and honesty we should always remind ourselves that, in the end, basically no matter what source text a person uses, there is no permission to remarry.

 

---------------

the no matter which variation is used

Do Textual Variations Change any Permission to remarry?

For most source texts, the “μὴ” in Matt 19:9 negates the permission to divorce; for the few that support an exception, the ei mē qualifies it, but in both cases, no matter which of the two major source texts you use,

[this might also be phrased: may not divorce unless upon…]

 

From Mat 5 to 19 – Repetition of the Exception Proves that Remarriage is Not An Option

What can we learn and say about the two times that the exception is applied by Jesus in Matthew?

>>! should this go with “the SOM helps us with textual variations”?

>> Does it work now that I moved it? (>> Doesn’t this belong somewhere else?)

 

Before we consider source text variations, let’s consider some things that are even more basic no matter what text you use.

If the exception does not have to do with remarriage the first time in Mathew 5 why should we think the second time in Mathew 19 it would include remarriage? It is only logical to say that the same teaching recorded by the same author, quoting the same person, in the same book, concerning the same specific subject matter, referencing the same Old Testament passage, containing the same exception, would retain the same meaning and the same rules for such an exception. If such an exception clearly does not give the right to remarry in the first passage, then we should not think that it would adapt to include the right of remarriage in the second passage.

Now please understand that it is unavoidable that Matthew 5 makes no provision for remarriage no matter how you translate it or which source text you use, but it only allows for divorce for only one case. Why then was it so easy for the early Church to conclude that Matthew 5 and 19 were saying the exact same thing, if in fact, the second occurrence permitted remarriage as we so commonly understand and preach in our churches today?

    The only reasonable conclusion from early Church history, from reading the actual Greek, and even the proofs carried over into English is that the exception cannot include remarriage, not in Matthew 5 nor even in Matthew 19. Whatever we understand about Mat_19:9, we cannot conclude that it introduces something contrary to the absolute rule previously laid down in Mat_5:32. We should understand Mat_19:9 as a repetition of the same teaching as previously seen in Mat_5:32, not an innovation to now allow remarriage.

 

Matthew 5 Helps us With Matthew 19

When there are a number of possible textual variations for Mat_19:9, it is important to not branch out on one of these textual variations and establish conclusions that are somehow “different” and contrary to the solid declarations found in Matthew 5 which basically have no major variations between any Greek text. We basically know for sure what Mat_5:31-32’s primary, original Greek text is, and no major Greek source text disagrees with this, therefore it would not be advisable to base our conclusions on marriage based on any textual variation of Mat_19:9 with an understanding that is somehow strangely different from what we already know that Jesus teaches in Matthew 5.

You do not even need faith to see that a conclusion supposedly based on Mat_19:9 that is contrary to Mat_5:32 is flawed. Even if you do not believe in the Truthfulness of Jesus’ Words, yet, if you have even a little “literary honesty” you know that it is unreasonable to suppose that Matthew would record his Hero as changing His mind and being inconsistent and irrational when teaching on marriage. Any textual variation that does this is clearly wrong, and anyone who concludes this is certainly being irresponsible with the facts set before them.

If we know that Matthew 1 and 5 taught that divorce must only happen for porneia, can we honestly understand that Matthew 19 has a different standard? And if remarriage after divorce is always adultery in Matthew 5, we should know for sure that it is the same for Matthew 19, and this fact in particular is confirmed over and over throughout the New Testament so that it cannot be missed by anyone eager to obey the laws of God on marriage.

As for the divorce exception, it is sure that the man is not guilty for divorcing his wife in Mat_5:32 for “a word of prostitution,” but (as some ask) though the man is not “guilty” for her remarriage, are we sure this divorce is really righteous for him? But Joseph’s actions in Mat_1:18-19 prove that this divorce is righteous, and there are no textual variations that can obscure his righteousness! Should we even need to mention here that this same standard is practiced by God all throughout the Old Testament as declared by the mouth of the Prophets? How should all of this affect our understanding of Mat_19:9?

Whatever we do with Mat_19:9, we should be sure that we are understanding that it is consistent in affirming the same things established in Mat_5:31-32, and then we can be safe from making unreasoning conclusions as we consider and search for which textual variation is the right original Greek text for Mat_19:9.

 

Matthew 5 – The Divorce and Remarriage Teaching in The Sermon on the Mount

 

Mat_5:31-32’s teaching on marriage is found toward the beginning of the most defining sermon ever preached in history, which is commonly called The Sermon on the Mount (Mat 5 – 7). Jesus taught us that the Words in The Sermon on the Mount were a rock that we could build our entire life upon and never fall (Mat_7:24-29)*. Because of this, Mat_5:31-32 should have the preeminence in determining marriage for several reasons:

 

·       It is part of the “Sermon On the Mount,” therefore we know that it is the starting place and entire bases for the whole New Covenant

·       The “Sermon On the Mount” is by far the most important passage for summarizing and defining the entire New Covenant in all of Scripture, including the issue of divorce and remarriage

·       This is how the Early Church before Nicaea always used this sermon, and this was what they nearly always quoted for the teaching against divorce and remarriage

·       None of the early Church ever saw any conflict or difference between what was taught in Matthew 5 and 19

·       There are no major differences in any of the main texts in Mat_5:32. Virtually every text clearly says that divorce and remarriage is always adultery (even when the exception allows divorce).

 

I thank God that basically no one really can claim that we do not have the original words for Mat_5:32, and because of this, no one who has read The Sermon on the Mount can make any real claim on Judgment day that they did not know that divorce and remarriage was adultery.

 

[* It goes without saying that Mat_7:24-29 applies to all of Jesus’ Words, by extension. However, when Jesus referred to obeying “these words of mine” that were like building your house on a rock, this promise was initially spoken over everything He had just taught them in The Sermon on the Mount, including His declaration that divorce and remarriage was adultery]

 

The Context of Matthew 19:9 Supports an “Only” Variation

Whether or not we particularly affirm Variation #1, we can still see that the clear context of Matthew 19 shows that Jesus is allowing divorce “only” for prostitution

 

Did you know that the Gospel of Matthew is very specific to present the disciples as understanding “one cause” (in v. 10) for divorce after listening to Jesus as opposed to the many “causes” originally suggested by the Pharisees (in v. 3)? Whether we see it in English or not, this is definitely the correlation which is made in Greek.

 

If the disciples understood Jesus as permitting divorce for only one reason, doesn’t this support variation #1, which says, “only upon prostitution”?

 

---------------

>>revise with what is in ex. cl. Re.

Those who compiled the TR supported it in Greek, but we cannot blame the TR; The Latin Vulgate had it, but we cannot blame it’s compiler Jerome because it was in the Old Greek versions long before Jerome compiled and revised the Vulgate.

 

So many people blame Erasmus (an anti christian critic who first compiled the TR) but it is abundantly clear that neither Erasmus nor Jerome invented the exception, but that it dates back at least to some ancient time when such a reading was common enough for the New Testament to be repeatedly distributed.

 

9. Recognizing More Specifically Why None of the Variations of Matthew 19 Allow Remarriage

Explaining and considering the details of the exception variations

>> I need a summary of all of these translational/ parenthetical/ EC things

 

We have considered many details about the major textual variations for Mat_19:9, but now we need to particularly answer why they do not allow remarriage, and eventually, we even need to especially answer this for Variation #1 since this is the primary variation which has been most commonly high jacked by the lawlessness of Protestants to allow remarriage after divorce.

>> Perhaps one day I can add this to this section: By default we are all born under the curse of scattered language. We do not have a “right” to have God’s Words in our language any more than the lost tribes scattered throughout the earth. If God allows us to have any generally accurate representation of His Words in our language it is because of His kindness and mercy that he has amazingly privileged us more than those who have never heard. If God does allow this, He may do it inaccurately through the pen of a false scribe. In the worst case scenario people could go to hell as a result of the lawlessness of the translator, and the filthy criminal who misrepresented God’s Words will suffer unbearable torment at judgment as a result.

Each real Christian has his particular place in Jesus’ Body. In this sense Jesus promised to send the Pharisees “scribes.” If we receive whom God sends, then Jesus says we are receiving Him. God does still send scribes, and you are about to read some help pertaining to Matthew 19 which I urge you to heed. Since Jesus does not have to send us this help, if He does send it and we reject it, we are of all people most cursed for refusing the Help God sent.

 

Mat_19:3-10 KJB And the Pharisees also came to Him, tempting Him and saying to Him, “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for every cause [αἰτίαν (same as v. 10)]?” 4 And he answered and said to them, “Haven’t you read, that at the beginning He which made them made them male and female, 5 And said, For this cause a man shall leave his father and mother, and shall cleaveG4347 to his wife: and the two shall be oneG3391 flesh? 6 Therefore they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has fastened [or yoked] together, let man not separateG5563. [Greek: let man not put space in between] 7 They said to him, “Why did Moses then give command to give a writing of divorcement, and to put her away?” 8 He said to them, “Because of the hardness of your hearts Moses permitted you to put away your wives: but from the beginning it was not so. 9 And I say to you, any oneG3739, G302 divorcesG630 his wife, onlyG1508 for prostitutionG4202 [i.e. fornication]. And if he marries another, he is committing adultery:G3429 [μοιχᾶται – Present Tense] and whoever marries her who is divorcedG630 is committing adulteryG3429, [μοιχᾶται – Present Tense] 10 His disciples said to Him, If this is *the cause [*ἡ αἰτία – lit. the one cause (i.e. which a man can request, as mentioned previously by the Pharisees in v. 3)] of the man with his wife, it is not good to marry....

This is straightforward enough, but a great problem has arisen with the way that this is usually represented in English, since most versions misrepresent the exception in Mat_19:9 as though it allows remarriage:

 

Mat_19:9 KJV  And I say unto you, Whosoever shall put away his wife, except it be for fornication, and shall marry another, committeth adultery: and whoso marrieth her which is put away doth commit adultery.

 

Matthew 19 Translation Appeals Before We Go into More Details

Please heed the following warnings when wrestling with the right representation of the Greek of Mat_19:9 in English:

 

·       Much of what is commonly said in English about the teachings of Matthew 19 cannot actually be supported in Greek (no matter what variation you use).

·       A lot of people say and believe a lot of things about Matthew 19 today, and seem to often find partial support for their heresy in the faulty aspects of irresponsible English bible versions, but these faulty conclusions do not actually have the same support in the original Greek.

·       Whether it is the lawlessness of “KJV-only” proponents, or (even worse) the astonishing apostasy and sloppiness of those who praise versions like NIV or even the wicked, so-called NLT, as for you (the reader), please don’t have a wicked heart and say, “I love my English translation that man has given me more than God’s Words (as recorded in Greek) that God has given me.”

·       It doesn’t matter how you have been raised or what distorted views you or I may be inclined to cling to, none of them change the fact that God’s Words (in the truest sense) have been perfectly recorded in Greek, and are often imperfectly represented in English. The perfect gift in Greek is far superior to the imperfect representation in translations, and you would be foolish to sacrifice the true substance for a distorted shadow.

·       Be loyal to God, not to translations. They mean nothing if they don’t align with what God says.

·       Please thoroughly hear these things all the way through:

Pro_18:13 Jos.Trans. Any [one] who answers a word [λόγον (logon)] before he hears [ἀκοῦσαι (hakousai)], it is thoughtlessness [ἀφροσύνη – senselessness/ fig. foolishness/ recklessness] and reproach to him.


> Sync any updates to this into repent of words

 

Please be patient and completely weigh everything said before jumping to conclusions or to dismissing things because it seems “no one else is saying this” – I know it is hard to follow and complicated, but may God grant us understanding into all truth through the things we are about to go over.

 

Matthew 5 vs. Matthew 19 – The Difference Between Exception Words in Variation #1

The need to represent ei mē in English is probably the most decisive distinction to make when translating Matthew 19:9 from Variation #1. When the two Greek words, “ει” (ei – G1487) and “μη” (mē – G3361) are combined they produce the compound word, “ειμη” (eimē – G1508). This is the very reason why translations often render this compound as one word – typically either “except” or “only.”  It does not directly, literally mean “except” or “only” but it is often used that way by context, so translators often represent it this way. Because of this we have to ask ourselves which way it functions in Matthew 19. Understanding Ei mē is enough of a challenge in and of itself, but these things are even more complicated when you consider that it is a completely different story when it comes to Matthew 5!

We should keep in mind that it is only because this compound word (ei mē) is often translated as “except” in Matthew 19 that most people incorrectly think that it is the same “exception” word found in Matthew 5. But let the reader know that they are two completely different words!

 

When you look in a typical English version and see:

 

Mat_5:32 WEB ...except for the cause of sexual immorality…

and

Mat_19:9 WEBexcept for sexual immorality…

 

These are two completely different words that must not be confused as the same word! The following chart helps clarify this:

 

Chart: The Two Exception Words Used in Matthew

>>! Improve definitions

Scripture Reference

The

Greek

A Compound of...

Short Definition

Mat_5:32

παρεκτοςG3924

(par-ektos)

παράG3844 + ἐκτόςG1622

“Besides” (what is)  “outside” (of what we are talking about); (except)

Mat_19:9

εἰμὴ G1508

(ei-mē)

ειG1487 + μηG3361

“If” + “Not” = “Except”/ “only”

(when used that way)

Mat_5:32 – “παρά” [next to/ aside (from…)] + “ἐκτός” [outside/ other than/(except)]

Mat_19:9 – “ει” [if] + “μη[not]

 

We can see that the pieces that make up the two “exception” words are totally different. Because of this, the rules that govern each word are also different. The exception word in Mat_5:32 [lit. next to (and) outside of] is quite naturally used to speak of “exceptions” in just about every context, but did you know that the “exception” word in Mat_19:9 is very different?

Throughout the Greek New Testament “ειμη” (ei mē), as used in Matthew 19:9 (Not in Mat_5:32), almost always means “except” or “only” (depending on the context and grammatical setup). – Because of this, if we use Variation #1 (the primary variation Protestants have used to allow remarriage), we need to determine if ei mē is used as “except” or “only” in Mat_19:9. – Please pay attention here! These are two very different words with very different linguistic rules that apply to them, and we need to be conscientious as to how we comprehend the differences between Matthew 5 and 19!

The problem with bible versions using ei mē as “except” in Matthew 19:9 is that an exception like this would basically require an absolute statement preceding it for it to mean “except” in this case. This principle is somewhat true in English, but it is much more so the case with this Greek compound word because “ei mē” in and of its self does not independently mean “except,” but it is used this way when the surrounding elements demand this upon the term.  

 

This may seem a bit complicated, but we are seeking to cover this very thoroughly in the following points…

>> Exceptions without absolute statement preceding: Mat_18:3 (but this one establishes it as a possibility by adding “v” – if it is so; and the statement is hinged by the repetition of mh)

 

The Early Church’s Understanding of the Greek of Mat 19

>> although there were a few details that were explained differently, every single leader who ever wrote before Niceie< said the exception allowed divorce but not remarriage.

As documented in the appendix entitled, “The Historical Church Teaching,” all of the early church leaders read pre-English versions of the Bible. When they read Matthew 19, most of them read it in the original Greek:

 

ΛΕΓΩΔΕΥΜΙΝΟΤΙΟΣΑΝ

ΑΠΟΛΥΣΗΤΗΝΓΥΝΑΙΚΑ

ΑΥΤΟΥΕΙΜΗΕΠΙΠΟΡΝΕ

ΙΑΚΑΙΓΑΜΗΣΗΑΛΛΗΝΜ

ΟΙΧΑΤΑΙΚΑΙΟΑΠΟΛΕΛΥ

ΜΕΝΗΝΓΑΜΗΣΑΣΜΟΙΧΑ

ΤΑΙ

 

(Mat_19:9 GNT-TR*)

 

[* Note 1: I have formatted this text to most closely match the ancient manuscripts used in the first century (i.e. ALL CAPS; no spaces)

Note 2: Although I happen to be using the TR (Textus Receptus) as a base text, this should not be understood as a particular approval of Variation #1. Notice that I have grayed the word “ΕΙ” – As we have already said, Variation #1 would say “ΕΙΜΗ” (only) while Variation #2 would simply have the exception as “ΜΗ” (not); Nevertheless, virtually every single early church writer before the 300’s taught as though they were reading Variation #1 by unanimously allowing divorce “only” for prostitution (without remarriage) so it may be appropriate to represent this as their reading for this reason]

 

Those in the early Church read Mat_19:9 with clearer eyes than we have today among those who read Greek, since not only were they significantly less removed from the original language by time and culture, but even more than this they had not yet been polluted with the theoretical theologies of theologians and modern christianity. I often thank God when reading them, because they are neither “Catholic” (in the modern sense of the word) nor are they “Protestant,” but the earliest Christians are actually amazingly Biblical. Since most English-speaking people cannot read this verse (morally or linguistically), help from courageous sources such as these can often be very vital.

It is extremely noteworthy that these church leaders, who had a better chance to read the Scriptures more accurately than we do, repeatedly said that the exception in Matthew was only for divorce and not remarriage. Even after tragic corruptions, numerous early Church writings (from saint to heretic) unanimously show that when they read Mat_19:9, they did not see in the Greek text of Jesus and Paul’s teachings any permission whatsoever to remarry. – Even those who wavered some on other issues and points unanimously confirmed that divorce and remarriage was never allowed, even if the exception applied to their situation:

>>! I need get the complete references for these quotes

>> I also need to switch some people in here and take some out (I think)

>> I do not know the quality of some I have here…

 

“According to our teacher… they are sinners who contract a second marriage, even though it is in accord with human law…”

(Justine Martyr, First Apology 15)

 

“That scripture counsels marriage, however, and never allows any release from the union, is expressly contained in the law: ‘You shall not divorce a wife, except for reason of adultery.’ And it regards as adultery the marriage of a spouse, while the one from whom a separation was made is still alive.”

 

‘Whoever takes a divorced woman as wife commits adultery,’ it says; for ‘if anyone divorce his wife, he debauches her;’ that is, he compels her to commit adultery.”

 

“And not only does he that divorces her become the cause of this, but also he that takes the woman and gives her the opportunity of sinning; for if he did not take her, she would return to her husband.”

(Miscellanies 2:23:145:3)

 

“So long as a husband lives, be he adulterer, be he sodomite, be he addicted to every kind of vice, if she left him on account of his crimes he is still her husband, still, and she may not take another.”

(Letters 55:3)

 

It is not until around the time leading up to the great apostasy of the Council of Nicea (325 AD) that you even hear of people trying to get permission to allow remarriage in the church, and even then remarriage was opposed by every leader and writer within the Church that we have record of before Nicea.

 

General Problems with Matthew 19:9 in English Versions

We see that numerous early references to the teaching in Matthew 5 and 19 all consistently understood that the exception was for divorce alone and not for remarriage, no matter what the circumstances. How can this be this way when most versions in English* do not seem to even allow this understanding? As we noted earlier, the KJV (like most other English versions*) says, “…except it be for fornication, and shall marry another….” Most English versions* have a curious habit of connecting the exception to remarriage, and this is especially peculiar and noticeable if you are used to reading Greek or even Latin throughout history and hearing the general teaching of the church before Protestantism*.

    Please be Aware of this Historical Note: Many movements related to Protestantism and various “reformations” were largely responsible for putting the Bible into English, but this was not without a number of various doctrinal scandals in the process! May I alert the English reader that Mat_19:9 has also been misrepresented in this way? But who would dare to call the bluff on this hoax in this adulterous generation?

 

The way that Matthew 19:9 is Commonly Represented in English today Has Many Problems!

(1) Our representation of Mat_19:9 disagrees with every early (Greek and Latin) Church leader (from saint to heretic) who ever wrote on this subject, (especially before the corruptions around the 300’s).

(2) It disagrees with six other clear, New Testament Scriptures which unquestionably present the law of divorce and remarriage to give absolutely no permission for remarriage as long as the two live (with or without fornication, adultery, or divorce). – This is including the parallel passage in the very same book: Mat_5:32. Even if you stay within the very same book and compare Matthew 19 with Matthew 5, chapter 5 very clearly does not allow remarriage whatsoever for the divorced woman without charging her with adultery. Can we reasonably make a conclusion about Matthew 19 that actually contradicts Matthew 5?

(3) Even if you stay within Matthew 19, allowing remarriage would contradict the very same chapter and verse itself:  If we set the chapter (not to mention the very verse itself) to contradict itself we have definitely violated the doctrine of the infallibility of Scripture, (Psa_12:6; Pro_30:5-6; Rom_3:4; 2Ti_3:15-17; 2Pe_1:21). If we say that this verse allows an exception which permits divorce and remarriage, we say that it teaches something contrary to the rest of the chapter:

 

Mat_19:6 KJV …What therefore God hath joined [συνέζευξεν – fastened/ yoked] together, let not man put asunder.

- No exception!

 

Mat_19:9 c KJB whoever marries her who is divorcedG630 is committing adultery G3429.

- No exception!

 

With these examples, it is certain that there is no exception for the innocent, chaste, divorced wife, because “whoever” marries her “is committing adultery,” (Mat_19:9 c KJB). But the fact that we now have so many versions claiming that Mat_19:9 “excepts” and or “changes” this absolute standard is actually an unnecessary contradiction which has basically never really posed a difficulty before Protestant versions of the Bible were produced.

Today, most church people would desire to have the first part of Mat_19:9 say that there is an exception allowing for remarriage, despite the fact that the second part of the verse (and the rest of the Bible) clearly and directly says that there is not. But despite the common misrepresentations of the exception in English, the Greek actually does not support applying the exception to allow remarriage, especially when held next to the context of the chapter it is found in.

    The Greek may just as well be translated differently.  An understanding of Greek shows that the exceptive statement does not alter the phrase that follows as English translations typically imply. This leaves the context to be the overriding authority for interpreting this verse. Again, any creditable translator will confirm that a watchful eye for context is absolutely necessary and dominant when translating correctly.

 

The Parenthetical Nature of The Matthew 19:9 Exception Clause

 

(1) Context Proves the Parenthetical Nature of the Exception Clause

Have you ever noticed or considered that there is a parallel passage recording the same events in Mark 10 as seen in Matthew 19 when Jesus teaches against divorce and remarriage? Have you ever wrestled with the fact that, although there are variations in the details presented, the two accounts still give essentially the same teaching except for the big fact that Mark does not include anything about divorcing for prostitution at all? What is more is that Luke 16 also repeats this same phrase in a different scenario, and although it is nearly identical to the wording of Mat_19:9, it does not have any form of an exception clause!

    One of the very strong proofs that the fornication note in Mat_19:9 has to be a parenthetical statement is that basically the exact same teaching is used in Mark 10 and the same wording is used in Luke 16 without any exception. Now, if Mark and Luke understand and present the exact same saying without an exception as inspired Scripture, it is clear that the basic saying itself is fully capable of standing on its own as an absolute statement without a critical and defining need to always mention an exception.

    It is absolutely clear from this, from both the immediate grammar and by the extended comparison of parallel passages, that the fornication note in Mat_19:9 is a side statement (about divorce) that cannot by any means overthrow the absolute rule (against remarriage) as given in Mark 10, Luke 16, and the rest of the Bible.

    If we can understand this as a parenthetical divorce note (as it always has been understood since original Christianity) then it is very easy to see how this does not alter the clear rule that divorce and remarriage is adultery. But if we high jack this saying in a fragmented, English misrepresentation of Mat_19:9 (as most have done) and present it as a defining and altering exception allowing remarriage, then we have created a new “problem” where the Scriptures now seem to disagree with each other, and we are forced to change our theology and break Jesus clear and absolute law against divorce and remarriage.

 

(2) What Exactly is a Parenthetical Phrase?

Obviously, Koine Greek1 does not have parenthesis marks [i.e. “()” – a type of punctuation for written language] as we do in English today, but as with most languages, it did have parenthetical phrases, which essentially accomplish the same purpose without punctuation.

    A Parenthetical Phrase or Statement is a saying or note that temporarily breaks the train of thought and digresses off topic in the middle of a sentence in order to make side notes, distinctions, and or clarifications that the listener or reader may not be aware of. The goal of such statements is “to set a parenthetical phrase off from its root sentence”2 and make “a digression (or a clarification).”2 A Parenthetical Phrase is “when you want to quickly insert a detail without distracting the reader”2 and give “a subordinate clause: a nonessential phrase.”2

    One of the ways that you know that a statement is a Parenthetical Phrase is when you can temporarily remove it and the sentence still remains intact and does not change or distort the point of the speaker. – When we apply this to divorce and remarriage, I need to ask you a very important question: When you remove the exception clause from Jesus’ divorce and remarriage teaching, does it radically alter the message that Jesus has about divorce and remarriage? If so, I’ve got news for you: Mark and Luke in their Gospels already “removed” it, and you need to make a decision whether or not you consider their writings to be authoritative Scripture! It is extremely clear that Mark, Luke, and the entire early Church (from saint to heretic) understood the prostitution note in Matthew as a parenthetical phrase by frequently quoting the marriage teaching without it! How about you? Are you willing to submissively quote the marriage teaching along with Mark and Luke and believe that it is still perfectly true with no critical need to “clarify” or embellish something to give people a way to escape the charge of adultery for remarriage? Mark and Luke clearly treated the exception as “a nonessential phrase.”2 and I am pleading with God that you also would be found in their glorious company!

    If Jesus’ teaching is drastically altered when you remove the exception clause, then you’ve got the big problem of a contradiction of Scripture, but if in fact, Matthew is simply including a parenthetical phrase which does not alter the message of Jesus’ teaching, then the Scripture still perfectly agrees in Matthew 19 as well as Mark and Luke, but we have to deal with English translations which have misrepresented Jesus’ teaching. So you need to make the basic decision up front of whether you consider the Gospels themselves as being more authoritative and reliable or if you consider that English translations have faithfully and accurately represented the Words of Jesus in Matthew. As for me, I will go with the original Words of Jesus any day over the shameful apostasy of modern christianity, and I will set my ambition on the hope of attaining to the righteous legacy of original Christianity which constantly stood against the adultery of divorce and remarriage, even if every English Bible version today disagrees!

 

So we see that the parenthetical nature of the fornication note in Matthew 19:9 can be seen in the Greek grammar, but this can also be seen by compelling evidence that is even carried over into English.

 

[(1) Koine Greek – the common Greek language used in the LXX (Greek Old Testament) & GNT (Greek New Testament), which was in use around 300 BC to 300 AD. (See Bibliography)

(2) Source: www.dailywritingtips.com/parenthetical-phrases]

Retrieved 10/27/11

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parentheses#Parentheses_.28_.29.2C_.5B_.5D.2C_or_.7B_.7D]

Retrieved 11/1/11

This is what I mean when I say that the exception clause has a

 

“Only Upon Prostitution” Grammatically Accomplishes Something

Greek Grammar Shows that the “Exception” actually accomplishes something “upon [ἐπὶ] prostitution,” rather than moving on to Allow Remarriage

>>H! persecuted writer B could probably help here!

>> and Confirms the Parenthetical Nature of the Exception Clause

>> combine this into what has already been said in the previous point

 

No matter which Greek variation of the Matthew 19:9 exception that you may go with, there is something inherently parenthetical about its posture which has been embedded in the sentence structure surrounding it. Although it is even easier to demonstrate the same principals in Variation #2, I am ambitious to show these things with greater security by focusing particularly on the more challenging wording found in Variation #1, so that we may answer the most difficult questions first, and at the same time, also know for sure that it applies in all of the more simplistic cases as well.

    In Variation #1, the words ei mē are the Greek words for “if not.” But just because ei basically means “if” and mē basically means “not,” that does not at all mean that “if not” means the same thing in Greek as it does in English.

In Greek this compound ei mē has an extremely “flexible” and dynamic capacity to make a qualification when it is positioned to relate to two things that a speaker wishes to affect each other. Ei mē does not mean “except” by itself, but if it is put in the position to except two things it has the linguistic capacity (or technically, it has the semantic range) to do this in Greek. Simply put: The way you make it “except” something is by putting it into the position where it has to make an exception between two things. But this is not all it can do.

Ei mē is so flexible in its ability “to make a qualification” between two things, that it can also specify one thing upon another, much like saying “only” in English. Whenever ei mē is qualifying two things but it is not clearly in the position to “except” them, it nearly always makes a specification instead. (You may want to read the examples we are about to give and then come back and read these three paragraphs again to fully understand all of this).

>>! I think some examples here would help…

 

Cases* that Make Ei Mē “Except” Something

(A) Make Ei Mē to be Preceded By An Absolute Statement and Followed By An Exception

That is: Absolute Statement + Ei Mē + Exception

Example: All humans go to hell, except [lit. if (they are) not (of)] those who obey the Bible

 

(B) Make Ei Mē Begin a Sentence, Add an Exception, and Then Tag an Absolute Statement onto The End

That is: Ei Mē + Exception + Absolute Statement

Example: Except [lit. if (they are) not (of)] those who obey the Bible, all humans go to hell

 

When Does Ei Mē Function as Only?

To help this make a bit more sense, let’s compare Case A with ei mē when it is used as “only”:

 

·       [Any Object – Absolute Statement] + “ειμη” (eimē – if-not) + affected Object, can make ei mē function as “except” (Case A exception)

·       [Any Object – Not an Absolute Statement] + “ειμη” (eimē – if-not) + affected Object, can make ei mē function as “only” (a specification)

Example of ei mē as “only”: A human may escape going to hell only if they obey the Bible

 

Greek Note: Yes, “if-not” (ei mē) can actually be used as “only” in Greek sentences like this. I know that can be hard to grasp, but that is just one of the ways Greek works which is much different than English.

 

Did you notice that the words, “All humans go to hell…” form an absolute statement but the words “A human may escape going to hell” do not form an absolute statement? This is why ei mē would function as “except” if it followed the words “All humans go to hell…” (Case A exception) but it would definitely function as “only” if it followed the words “A human may escape going to hell…” (a specification).

 

[* Numerous examples of ei mē making exceptions and specifications throughout the entire Greek Old and New Testaments (LXX and GNT) can be seen in the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research.” (We are about to go over some examples where ei mē specifies things in a moment); Also note: it is nearly impossible to represent ei mē directly and literally in English whenever it functions as “only” in Greek because we do not usually have anything that even comes close to this in our language.]

 

Because Matthew 19:9 has an action verb preceding it (i.e. ‘one may divorce…’), and it does not begin a sentence, we can focus on Case A for the purposes of determining what is being said in Matthew 19:9. But have you noticed that the words, ‘one may divorce…’ do not make an absolute statement? This means that the “exception” ei mē is actually a specification in Matthew 19:9 because (without a preceding absolute statement) it has to specify the next object that follows, which in this case is “prostitution.” It is not put in the posture where it “has to make an exception between two things” therefore it simply specifies one upon the other, and this is the way ei mē is consistently represented in most all Bible versions, except when it comes to Matthew 19:9! But truly, ei mē functions as a specification in this passage, just like it does in every other passage that is like it!

 

Mat_19:9 ‘…anyone may divorce his wife [an action-verb – but not an absolute statement!] only [εἰ μὴ (ei mē)] upon prostitution. And if he marries another woman, he commits adultery. And the one who marries one who has been divorced commits adultery’ [No Exception!] Jos.Trans.

 

Grammatically speaking, this is exactly like our previous specification-example, which we can somewhat expand here to conform to Mat_19:9:

A human may escape going to hell only if they obey the Bible. And if they go back to a life style of living in sin they will go to hell. And everyone who does not repent of living in sin will go to hell.

[* “if he” is expressed within the grammar of “marries”: γαμήσῃ (Subjunctive Mood; Third Person, Singular)]

 

Because Matthew 19:9 precedes “ειμη” (ei mē) by an action-verb but does not precede it with an absolute statement, it does not function as “except” in Greek.  It is reasonable to represent it as “only” in such a case, but most bible versions would not dare do this because it would mean that readers of English Bibles would be able to see that the one case where divorce is allowed it does not permit remarriage, and what a catastrophe this could cause!

 

Ei Mē Does Not Tackle Three Objects At Once

Because ei mē has the linguistic capacity to make a qualification between two things, it can only deal with two objects at once when being used this way. It cannot go ahead and add the third object of remarriage into this equation, because it has already accomplished its grammatical function when it specified that divorce was for prostitution. The exception word in Matthew 19:9 is placed between two objects so that it modifies the preceding action verb “divorce” onto [or lit. upon (ἐπὶ)] the following object of “prostitution.” Ei mē never tackles the third object (of excepting remarriage) like most English versions want so desperately to falsely make it look like. Ei mē makes Matthew 19:9 have a specification allowing divorce, it does not except the following adultery of remarriage.

If anyone wants to represent ei mē as though it is making an exception allowing remarriage, I demand that they produce at least one example like this in the entire Bible (LXX or GNT) where ei mē tackles three objects at once like this, so that after specifying divorce upon prostitution it might also go on to “except” remarriage, and I can affirm after thoroughly searching every single reference possible in the entire Bible*, that I have not seen even one example of ei mē being used like this!

 

[* I have documented every occurrence of ei mē in the entire Greek Old and New Testaments (the LXX and the GNT) and I have documented this thorough research in lists of references and their analysis in the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research”]

 

---------------

The action verb (“divorce”) does not provide a preceding absolute statement, therefore it is clear that ei mē is being used to specify not to except

 

I searched through every single occurrence of ei mē in the entire Greek Old and New Testaments* and analyzed every single occurrence of this term in Scripture.

 

The 3 “Independent Clauses” in Matthew 19:9

>> Although it is not an absolute statement, yet it is an “independent clause”

 

“Only Upon Prostitution” Completes an Independent Clause

The first part of Mat_19:9 forms what grammarians call an “independent clause.”  This is important because most people don’t realize that something has already been accomplished in the first part of this verse, and the word group addressing remarriage forms a second “independent clause.”

 

English Versions Usually Mess This Up

This is because of the way it is typically represented in English:

The statement, “Whosoever shall put away his wife, except it be for fornication…” (KJV) sounds like an incomplete sentence, but this is very misleading. We have reworded it in English to make it sound like an incomplete clause, which is not true in Greek. Jesus’ words actually say “anyone may not divorce his wife, unless upon fornication” – this is an “independent clause” because it can stand alone and form a sentence and say something with or without conjoining it with other clauses.

 

The first, introductory, independent clause says, ‘you can only divorce for prostitution’ (this achieves its purpose)

The Second independent clause says, ‘marrying another is adultery’

The third independent clause says, ‘she commits adultery if she is remarried’

 

We see that this first statement is in fact a very complete statement that negates permission to divorce (except for prostitution) before ever addressing remarriage.

 

Some Natural Examples that Agree With the Parenthetical Nature of the Exception Clause, Even in English!

>> repetition of the way the 1st paragraph began in the last section

Whether it is Variation #1 or Variation #2 the “exception clause” has a parenthetical nature which does not allow it to permit remarriage, even if divorce is allowed in Variation #1. In Greek it is easy enough to see that even with the exception clause in Variation #1, ei mē is a side-statement permitting divorce, which does not overthrow the entire statement as a whole so that it also allows remarriage as most represent it in English.

Not that long ago in 1957 some of these Greek considerations were published in a book which was endorsed by the head leader (called the Superintendent) of the Assemblies of God (which had been one of the fastest growing denominations in the United States). As we have quoted in the appendix entitled, “The Historical Church Teaching,” in 1957 the General Superintendent of the Assemblies of God, Ralph M. Riggs, wrote the Foreword to Does Divorce Dissolve Marriage? (by Milton T. Wells) in which he fully approved and encouraged this thorough book on marriage that also taught that, in the Greek, the exception does not alter the phrase, “and marries another.” After reading this book many years ago, a few years later not only did I see this to be true by learning to read the Greek myself, but I also confirmed these details by other people who speak Greek, some of whom even teach it.

Contrary to the agenda of most modern religious professionals today and their mistranslations, the Greek has stayed consistently disallowing remarriage from the beginning, which is why this has actually been the historical Church teaching from the very earliest writers we have on this issue!

If it is not surprising enough to see this coming through a main-line denomination with the approval of its leadership in 1957, of all the even more unexpected things to happen, after so much compromise and apostasy, even more recently a few bible versions have come out that represent the English consistently this way, showing these verses to actually be consistent with the early church view! (…at least partly in the way they represent the exception in Mat_19:9):

 

NCV – New Century Version (1987)

“I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife and marries another woman is guilty of adultery. The only reason for a man to divorce his wife is if his wife has sexual relations with another man.” (NCV on Mat_19:9)

 

[NCV (like nearly all modern versions) is based on Alexandrian Texts of the New Testament (specifically, the third edition of the United Bible Societies [see GNT in the Bibliography for more]) – based on this, they should theoretically be representing Variation #2, but they are still representing this verse as if it were Variation #1]

 

BWE – Bible In Worldwide English New Testament (1996)

“But I tell you this. No man may send his wife away unless she has committed adultery. If he does, and if he marries another woman, he commits adultery. And if a man marries a woman who has been sent away by her husband, he commits adultery.’” (BWE on Mat_19:9)

http://www.biblegateway.com/versions/Worldwide-English-New-Testament-WE/

 

[Source: “Taken from THE JESUS BOOK - The Bible in Worldwide English. Copyright SOON Educational Publications, Derby DE65 6BN, UK. Used by permission.” – I have not yet been able to determine which variation this may or may not reflect, especially since, from what I have read, it seems to be unclear if the original goal of this version was really much more than simply “teaching English” by providing an easy-to-read version. But for what it is worth, it is interesting to see the exception being understood in a clear way that does not allow remarriage.]

 

NIrV – New International Reader’s Version (1998)

“Here is what I tell you. Anyone who divorces his wife and gets married to another woman commits adultery. A man may divorce his wife only if she has not been faithful to him.” (NIrV on Mat_19:9)

 

[NIrV is naturally based on Alexandrian Texts of the New Testament, especially since it is based on NIV – this means that it is supposed to be representing Variation #2 (even though the wording is really that of Variation #1). (Note: For what it is worth, NIrV claims to have continually referred to the Greek when updating this version from NIV to NIrV)]

 

Do you see that in these versions the exception is presented as allowing divorce alone, but not remarriage? Although it goes without saying that none of these are really authoritative versions as a whole, yet on this one point I would commend their rendering of Matthew 19:9 inasmuch as it breaks from modern assumptions about some theoretical “exception” which allows remarriage, and this is extremely unusual for a modern version to do!  This is very surprising, not because it represents some new teaching that no one has ever thought of before, but an unexpected acknowledgment of a very ancient one, which finally gives us something in English which is somewhat consistent with the actual Greek, which has always been taught for countless years before Protestantism, and which even dates back to the early church, which is embraced at least here on this one point by modern versions. Though these versions are by no means superior bible versions, it is intriguing that the exception is not directly linked to remarriage, and in this one respect, they are more accurate than many other more literal translations.

Of course, just because others are reaffirming this, it does not in any way make it true. But I do hope you will consider the evidence in this point and all of the proofs that I am showing in the preceding and following points and consider all of these resources which I have made and compiled to help bring things to you directly from the Greek!

 

Examples Where Translators Know that Ei Mē, Specifies Rather than Making an Exception

>>R

>> We can see that ei mē is very idiomatic throughout the LXX

>> Notice that in all these cases there are basically no absolute statements preceding the ei mē. These examples represent similar cases as found in Mat 19:9

 

I am providing some extremely important examples here from my research that demonstrate why I represent the exception word in Mat_19:9 as “only.” Note: As a basis for this point, I have gone through every single occurrence of ei mē in the entire Bible (LXX and GNT) and documented this in the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research.” The following are only some of the more important examples that I collected from this.

    You may also be interested to know that I have not only carefully considered these passages in the Greek of the LXX, but I have also consulted multiple English translations of the Septuagint (including CAB* and NETS) and compared them when compiling and providing these examples.

 

[* Also note: CAB is essentially the same as the classical Septuagint (LXX) translation done by Sir Lancelot Charles Lee Brenton (1807-1862) originally published in 1851”; (see Bibliography)]

 

(1) Examples Where Ei Mē Specifies as “Truly” or “Surely

1Ki_20:23 [21:23] CAB*but if [* ἐὰν δ] we should [theoretically] fight against [ πολεμσωμενV-AAS-1P – Subjunctive Mood (same grammar as used in Mat_19:9)] them in the plain, verily [εἰ μὴ (NTES: “then”)] *we shall prevail [κραταισομενV-FAI-1P] against [πρ] them.

 

2Ki_5:20 CAB And Gehazi…said…as the Lord lives [ζV-PAS-3S – Subjunctive Mood (same grammar as used in Mat_19:9)], [ὅτι] I will surely [εἰ μὴ] run after him, and take something from him. [Lit. Grammar: if the lord lives (a grammatically ‘theoretical’ setup), then I will surely (εἰ μὴ) do this…]

[ζῇ κύριος ὅτι εἰ μὴ]

> NTES agrees: “surely”

> a solemn declaration, [not a question, because it is Subjunctive]

 

These first two examples are extremely important because they are using the very same grammatical structure as Mat_19:9. If you will carefully consider these two examples (1Ki_20:23 and 2Ki_5:20) you can see that if we represented Mat_19:9 the same way as these verses use ei mē, there is no way that any exception could allow remarriage! We can return to this consideration toward the end of this point, but for now let’s continue to look at many more examples related to this!

 

2Ki_9:26 CAB Surely [εἰ μὴ], I have seen [εἶδονV-AAI-3P] yesterday the blood of Naboth, and the blood of his sons, says [φησὶνV-PAI-3S] the Lord… [NETS agrees]

 

Job_22:20 CAB Verily [εἰ μὴ] their substance has been utterly destroyed [φανσθηV-API-3S], and the fire shall devour [καταφάγεται V-FMI-3S] what is left of their property. [NETS = “except” - this is an illogical rendering]

 

Note: Some compilers of some LXX source texts consider this verse to be a latter addition to the LXX, but either way it is still an example in the Greek language where ei mē is used as a specifying affirmation rather than making an exception.

 

Jer_15:11 CAB Woe is me, my mother! You have born me as some man of strife, and at variance with the whole earth. I have not helped others, nor has anyone helped me; my strength has failed among them that curse me. [i.e. those that persecute Jeremiah for prophesying]  11 Be it so [γενοιτοV-AMO-3S (O = Optitive); ALS p. 109], Lord [δέσποτα – ruler (i.e. addressing God)], in their prosperity [κατευθυνοντωνV-PAPGP]; surely [εἰ μὴ] I stood before You in the time of their calamities, and in the time of their affliction, for their good against the enemy. [NETS = “otherwise” - this is an illogical rendering]

 

Although the language can be very difficult to follow here, Jeremiah is saying that he truly interceded for them when they were being troubled by their enemies, but now these same people are persecuting him “in their prosperity,” and now he is venting to God about this. (See the rest of this chapter for the context, such as Jer_15:15, etc.). – In this passage ei mē affirms the reality of Jeremiah’s intercession, it clearly does not make an “exception” for anything.

 

Jer_48:27 [Jer_31:27] CAB For [καὶ – and] surely [εἰ μὴ] Israel was [ἦνV-IAI-3S] to you a laughing stock, and was found [εὑρέθηV-API-3S] among your thefts, because you fought against him.

 

[Translational Note: Although CAB has this as “surely” here, NETS represents it as a question instead: “And if not [εἰ μὴ], was Israel a jest for you?” (NETS). Either way you represent ei mē in English (as “surely” or as a question), the Greek ei mē is specifying in this case, not excepting (especially in light of the surrounding context).]

 

Eze_5:11 CAB Therefore, as I live [ζωV-PAI-1S], says the Lord; surely [εἰ μὴ], because you have defiled [εμιαναςV-AAI-2S] My holy things with all your abominations, I also will reject [απωσομαιV-FMI-1S] you; My eye shall not spare [φεισεταιV-FMI-3S], and I will have no mercy. [NETS agrees]

 

(2) Examples Where Ei Mē Basically Specifies as Only

Job_42:8 CAB …And My servant Job shall pray [ εὔξεταιV-FMI-3S – lit. request (a basic root for the Greek word for prayer)] for you, for I will only [εἰ μὴ] accept [λήμψομαιV-FMI-1S] him… [NETS agrees]

: for but his sake, I would have destroyed you, for you have not spoken the truth against My servant Job.

> (twice; repeated exception? or, as CAB says: (1) ‘only’ [ὅτι εἰ μὴ] (2) except);

 

Note: Some compilers of some LXX source texts consider this verse to be a latter addition to the LXX, but either way it is still an example in the Greek language where ei mē is used as a specifying affirmation rather than making an exception.

 

[Also note: there is a lot more to consider with the Greek of this passage, but I have focused in on the most critical aspect]

 

·       Did you notice that ei mē is preceded by an action verb (“shall pray”), but this verb is not an absolute statement?

·       Did you notice that ei mē does not make an exception in this “prayer”?

·       Ei mē is used to specify “him” (Job), not to make an exception.

·       This passage could have said something like, “I will not accept anyone’s prayer for you, except [εἰ μὴ] Job’s,” but instead, because the actual verb “shall pray” is not an absolute statement, it has to specify the following object (“him” – Job).

·       This is a slightly different way of using ei mē that does not make an altering exception to an absolute rule, but simply specifies one thing within an absolute rule.

·       Can you see similarities with the way this passage uses ei mē and the way Mat_19:9 uses it?

·       Job_42:8 uses ei mē to specify “Job” and Mat_19:9 uses it to specify ‘one reason to divorce,’ but neither is really making an “exception” in the proper sense from everything else that is being said in each passage.

·       Because Mat_19:9, is specifying (much like Job_42:8 LXX) it cannot be “excepting” to also allow remarriage.

 

> Did you notice that Job is not going to pray for his friends except for ‘some exception’?

 

Eze_20:39 CAB And as for you, O house of Israel, thus says the Lord, even the Lord: Put away [εξαρατεV-AAD-2P – “aor act impv” (ALS p. 200) – “D” is wrong?] each one his evil practices, and hereafter if [εἰ μὴ – i.e. something like, only if or surely if] you hearken [εισακουετεV-PAI-2P] to Me, then shall you no more profane My holy name by your gifts and by devices. [NETS = “unless”]

 

Although this case is hard to categorize for representation in English, did you notice that it is clear, no matter how ei mē is represented there is no exception here, but ei mē is clearly specifying Israel’s obedience to God as the solution to their sin problems. No one is making an exception to either “doing evil” or “obediently listening” to God, but instead, listening is specified as the solution, and the LXX uses ei mē to accomplish this specification. Do you see how Mat_19:9 (TR) uses ei mē to specify prostitution as the “only” reason to divorce, and we have no real reason for insisting that it makes an “exception” that this divorce permission should also extend into allowing remarriage?

 

(3) Examples Where Ei Mē Specifies a Question

Isa_40:28 CAB And now, *have you not known [* οὐκ ἔγνωςV-AAI-2S]? *Have you not heard [* εἰ μὴ ἤκουσαςV-AAI-2S]? The eternal God, the God that formed the ends of the earth, shall not hunger, nor be weary, and there is no searching of His understanding.

> (turned into a question [I don’t think it’s an Ab.Q.?]); [NETS agrees]

 

We can see in this example that ei mē can be used to raise a rhetorical question*. In this example ei mē does not make an exception to “hearing,” nor does it make an exception to God being the eternal God (and anyone with a little orthodoxy knows that!). It is clear that (1) they have heard, and (2) God is the eternal God! Ei mē does not make an exception to any of these things, it actually specifies these facts.

 

Additional, Possible, Specifying Question Examples:

·       In some texts ei mē is used in Job_12:10 as a question, but in all texts it specifies rather than excepting.

(v. Job_12:9 = Ab.Q. if it is original; otherwise, in v. Job_12:10 ei mē is used as a question);

[Grammar: there are no verbs in the Greek text of this verse, (except ζωντωνV-PAPGP)]

·        As seen previously, NETS considers ei mē in Jer_48:27 to be asking a question rather than making an affirmation

 

Although the grammar of Mat_19:9 does not particularly allow us to specify “prostitution” within a question**, these “question” examples still generally show us another way which ei mē repeatedly specifies what follows. Ei mē does not make an “exception” in any of these examples, but it specifies what follows, much like ei mē works in Mat_19:9 (Variation #1).

 

[* In Greek grammar this is sometimes referred to as, “The power of mē to raise a question”]

>> read all examples

[** My understanding so far is that the use of the “Subjunctive Mood” for the theoretical scenario in Mat_19:9 means that Jesus was most likely not “Specifying a Question,” (as seen here) since that usually requires a different mood called the “Indicative Mood, that is, Isa_40:28 uses the Indicative Mood and that is why it can be a question, whereas Mat_19:9 uses a different grammar (the Subjunctive Mood) and because of this it cannot raise the question as easily as Isa_40:28; summary: Isa_40:28 = a question (which is possible in the Indicative Mood); Mat_19:9 = a theoretical scenario (by the Subjunctive Mood), and is therefore not likely a question]

 

Important Grammar Considerations for Ei Mē

>>H!

In Greek there is a special grammar for communicating theoretical scenarios, and this grammar is called the “Subjunctive Mood.” This is the “Grammatical Mood” Jesus speaks in, in Mat_19:9 when describing a theoretical scenario of ‘A man possibly divorcing [ἀπολύσῃ] his wife.’ It is in the grammar of this theoretical scenario which Jesus gives the exception. While the use of the “Subjunctive Mood” does not appear to allow us to “Specify a Question” (as some of the examples we saw) it does allow us to specify as “truly” or “only” in Mat_19:9, especially since this is very similar to the first two examples we already looked at that also use the “Subjunctive Mood” in this way. That is, 1Ki_20:23; 2Ki_5:20; Mat_19:9 all use the “Subjunctive Mood” and specify their theoretical scenarios by using ei mē. When both 1Ki_20:23 and 2Ki_5:20 even use the same grammatical setup as Mat_19:9, it makes it really hard to insist that Mat_19:9 is making an “exception” that allows remarriage, since it is very obvious that it would be impossible to conclude that ei mē is used like this in 1Ki_20:23 and 2Ki_5:20.

 

Summaries of How Ei Mē Often Specifies Rather than Excepting

>> why it is not a question

>>H! tie this all together and make sure an average reader understands

All of these examples prove that ei mē can definitely specify the object that follows it.  It does not always work as an “exception.”

    No matter how you represent ei mē, if you represent it consistently with the principals demonstrated in these examples, it is clear that the divorce exception can in no way allow remarriage. Whether it is used as “truly” or “only,” especially when ei mē is proceeded by an action-verb which does not accomplish an absolute statement, it consistently specifies the object following it instead of making an exception, and that is exactly what the case is in Mat_19:9 (Variation #1). In fact, the first two examples given (1Ki_20:23; 2Ki_5:20) go so far as to even use the same grammatical set up that Mat_19:9 uses!

No wonder no one in original Church history ever considered the “exception” to allow remarriage! Whether they were using the original Greek or the ancient Latin translations (which definitely had ei mē represented as nisi [as seen in Variation #1]), they were not using dishonest English versions and they were not surrounded by the perversions of modern christianity! Whether it was in Greek or even Latin, they all knew the exception did not allow remarriage!

Ei mē specifies prostitution as the “only” allowed divorce in Mat_19:9 (Variation #1), just like it specifies so many different things in the numerous examples we have just seen. It is only reasonable to conclude that ei mē is used to specify the reason to divorce in Mat_19:9 and not to except the adultery of remarriage, and this is just like ei mē is used in the many examples shown here, and this is just like the “exception” was always understood by original Christianity, no matter what language they spoke. We are obliged to repent and conform to such truth!

 

[* Reminder Note: I have gone through every single occurrence of ei mē in the entire Bible (LXX and GNT) and documented this in the appendix entitled, “Exception Clause Research”]

 

>> move the three objects reference??

Whether it should be understood as “truly,” or as “only,” in any case, ei mē specifies the fornication exception, it does not tackle three objects at once (divorce…prostitution…and marrying another) to allow remarriage. – Because there is not one example in the entire Bible (LXX or GNT) where ei mē tackles three objects at once*,

 

Although the grammar of Mat_19:9 does not permit ei mē to be read as a question*, it does allow it to be understood and represented in the following ways…

 

If Jesus intended to use ei mē as a question, the exception would be, ‘if anyone divorces his wife, is it not upon prostitution?’

 

I have chosen to represent ei mē in the most non-presuming way I could by having it as “only,” but these other renderings are also very possible.

 

Ei mē Summary

If you are going to have an exception at all in Mat_19:9, then the only textual variation that even comes close to this is “ei mē,” but even when we give ei mē thorough consideration and actually pay attention to the way it is used in the LXX, we see that even it does not allow remarriage but only specifies permission to divorce.

 

Origen Confirmed that “Only” Is A Reasonable Representation of Ei Mē for Matthew 19:9

>>! Review

>> We need to summarize here:

As we said in a small note previously, Origen (About 184/5 – 253/4 AD) explicitly said that ei mē (which he quoted as “ἐὰν μὴ”*ean mē) indicated ‘only prostitution’ (“ἢ μόνῃ πορνείᾳ”). – Origen used a slight variation of Variation #1 and as he discussed it, he paraphrased it with an alternative word for “only”/ “alone”/ “one” – μόνῃ (monē), (where we get “mono” from).

We see that Origen, who spoke and read Greek fluently (along with numerous other languages), understood a phraseology almost exactly the same as Variation #1 [ἐὰν μὴ ἐπὶ πορνείᾳ] to indicate “only upon prostitution.”

 

[* “ἐὰν μὴ” (lit. if maybe not) in Greek is almost the exact same compound word as “εἰ μὴ” (lit. if not)]

 

>>! Check ref:

(Origen, Origen’s Commentary on the Gospel of Matthew, Book XIV, point 24; Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. 9; in e-Sword at 9.13.29)

 

Charting the Greek of Mat 19 Helps Us More Exactly Understand This Verse

 

Chart: Matthew 19:9 Translational Chart

Note: Word-order is according to the original Greek, not the English

 

KJV

Greek

Significance

More Accurately

I say

λεγωG3004

 

I say

And

δεG1161

 

but

unto you,

υμινG5213

 

to you

 

οτιG3754

A setup for what He is about to say; often works as quotation marks in English

that

Whosoever

οςG3739 ανG302

one (ος) + may be (fig. any), (αν)

one may

[fig. anyone]

shall put away

απολυσηG630

divorce – in the “Subjunctive Mood” (i.e. may divorce…)

loose away

 

τηνG3588

“the” (specific)

the

wife,

γυναικαG1135

Lit. woman; functionally: wife (because of “την” and “αυτου,” as seen in the next row)

woman

his

αυτουG846

Lit. of him – qualifies the preceding word, “γυναικα” as meaning wife rather than simply any woman

of him [his wife]

except

εἰμὴG1508

[εἰG1487 + μὴG3361]

 

(Variation #1)

A compound word meaning “except” or “only.” In this case it means only, because it is not preceded by an absolute statement.

only

[or may not unless…]

it be

 

Added by KJV for old English readability

 

for

επιG1909

 

upon

fornication,

πορνειαG4202

Pronounced: porneia

prostitution

[i.e. fornication]

and

καιG2532

Does not work as a conjunction the same way “and” does in English

and

shall marry

γαμησηG1060

The “one who commits” an action is often implicitly present in the action words of many non-English languages

the one who marries

another,

αλληνG243

 

another

committeth adultery:

μοιχαταιG3429

Present tense indicates ongoing action

is committing adultery

 

So from examining the Greek, we can summarize…

 

Mat_19:9 Jos.Trans.-functional But I say to you, that one may divorce his wife only upon prostitution [or fornication]. And the one who marries another is committing adultery. And anyone who marries her who is divorced is committing adultery.

 

A Summary of Why Matthew 19:9 Does Not Allow Remarriage

We have considered an overwhelming amount of condensed information that represents many years of research so that we may demonstrate with much security that none of the variations of Matthew 19:9 allow remarriage.

 

·       We ought not to complacently settle with the dishonest scandals of our current, Protestant English versions any longer, especially when they introduce apparent “exception-contradictions” among the Gospels as well as the epistles that were never there before in church history.

·       We ought to carefully and thoroughly study all of the details throughout Matthew 5 and 19 to be sure and know what Jesus’ fornication note is saying.

·       We ought to reverently consider that, although divorce was allowed “only upon prostitution,” original Christianity never permitted any nonsense about some “exception” allowing remarriage that nearly every church teaches today.

·       We ought to reasonably consider that Matthew 5 had already clearly given a parenthetical divorce exception (no matter how you translate it), so we have never really been entitled to add a remarriage exception to Matthew 19 to begin with.

·       We ought to carefully consider the parenthetical nature of the exception clause, which is not only noticeable in the immediate grammar of the Greek text of Matthew 19 itself, but is also undeniably confirmed by Mark, and Luke, and the rest of the New Testament and all throughout original Christianity (from saint to heretic).

·       We ought to understand that this parenthetical nature holds true for every variation of Matthew 19:9, and even with Variation #1, ei mē specifies as “only” allowing divorce and not remarriage (as even Origen described it from Greek).

·       We ought to consider that with Variation #1 these specifying principles of ei mē are, at times, demonstrated not only by a few more recent versions when representing Matthew 19:9 in English, but they are also scattered all throughout the Greek Septuagint (LXX) and consistently represented by multiple translators in English as specifying something rather than excepting, (and some clearly specifying examples of ei mē even use the same grammatical setup as Mat_19:9).

 

From all of these things it is abundantly clear that no matter what exception variation you choose, Matthew 19:9’s fornication note does not by any means allow remarriage, and if you question Mark and Luke’s authority to state it this way, then I question the safety of your soul.

 

None of this would have ever even become such a huge issue to begin with if we had actually first believed and submitted under the clarity of what Matthew 5 had said before we sought to molest Matthew 19.

 

[Mar_10:10-12; Luk_16:18]

 

>> the whole world in the hearts of all of Protestantism!

>> Study EI uses… does is it ever represented as unless??

>> 1Co_15:2

>> somehow establish if/ when permission is extended by the negation – what grammar is MicFall basing the perception of permission

>> Start representing this this way consistently!!! – literal and consistent is better

>> Expound new literal rendition of “Only”!!: “May not unless” (ei raising plausibility/ possibility – ways that ei is translated prove that this would be the way to represent it… But in every even, the if (plausibility) and or the not (negating permission) do not alter beyond the word they address; they either forbid permission or else allow it, but an exceptive scenario has not been established, so it cannot carry over into the words that follow)

 

10. The Spiritual Parallel Confirms Both Betrothal and No Remarriage

Husbands and Wives Specifically Reflect Jesus and the Church

>> Add OT Betrothal somewhere here…

>> God understood that it was appropriate to divorce during betrothal - Joseph - (the ec all understood you could divorce for the exception)

>> Hosea 2:19-20 – NC is to a renewal of this betrothal: 2 Corinthians 11:2

>> “Jesus referred to himself as the bridegroom (Matthew 9:15; Mark 2:19-20; Luke 5:34-35), and John the Baptist also referred to Jesus as the bridegroom (John 3:29)… Once the rapture comes, and we know Jesus as he knows us (1 Corinthians 13:12) [1Jn_3:1 etc.], which is equivalent to the consummation of the marriage, then there is no possibility of him divorcing us or putting us away after that, “so shall we ever be with the Lord.” (1 Thessalonians 4:17). This confirms that divorce is not permitted for any reason after the consummation of a lawful marriage.”

>> those who are against a betrothal-exception have got a lot of ignorant theories why they do not believe it, but they cannot be solid with integrity and answer why Betrothal is so overt and powerful throughout the whole Bible. They usually will not face the facts and answer why a Betrothal-exception is so consistent from the prophets, to Joseph, and yes, even to Jesus.

 

God’s Engagement is a Betrothal!

>> Reject foolish heresies saying that Israel was not in a betrothal

>> Quote Talmud here…?

Jesus proposed to us an engagement by taking the communion cup “and… saying, ‘…drink all of it,’ (Mat_26:27 Jos.Trans.).” If a Jewish wife-to-be did not drink all of the drink in the engagement cup that Jews sometimes used, then she was saying that she did not want to marry the man who offered it to her. Jesus proposed to us in this same way for a reason.

 

Chart: Betrothed Church

Jesus’ Bride

Scripture Reference

We who obey the Biblical Gospel are called the sons of God,

Mat_5:44-45; Joh_1:12; Rom_8:4; Gal_4:5-7; Heb_12:7; 1Jn_2:29-1Jn_3:1-3; Phi_2:15

but still, we are not all the way adopted yet.

Rom_8:19-23; Eph_1:5

In the same way, we who obey Jesus are even now corporately called the Bride of Christ,

Isa_62:5; Hos_2:19-20; Joh_3:29; Rev_22:17; (also see the verses in the next rows…)

And just as marriage makes people “One Flesh,” so also God’s Church is presently “One Spirit” with Jesus.

1Co_6:16-17; Eph_5:22-33, especially: Eph_5:30-32

The True Assembly of Real Christians currently makes up Jesus’ bride, and is in covenant with Him even to the point that we are presently called “one spirit” with Him, yet the marriage supper has not yet happened but is instead prophesied to be an event coming in the future.

Mat_22:1-14; Mat_25:1-13; Rev_18:4, Rev_18:20, Rev_18:24; Rev_19:1-14; Rev_21:2, Rev_21:9;

This is because Jesus’ Assembly is “betrothed” to Jesus in a one spirit covenant relationship, but is not yet “cohabiting” in the Ultimate Spiritual Marriage.

“…for I have betrothed you to one husband, to present you as a pure virgin to Christ,” (2Co_11:2 CAB)

 

Please note this reality: At no time has anyone experienced a consummated marriage relationship with God, whether it be National Israel, the Church, or the Apostles. Not even those who have been made perfect in heaven (Compare: Heb_7:19; Heb_9:9; Heb_10:1; Heb_11:40; Heb_12:22-23) have been exalted to the point of consummation with Jesus yet. In fact, these very people, from the Old as well as the New Testament, are scheduled to be at the marriage supper that is yet to come (Mat_8:11; Luk_13:28) and are waiting in the meantime (ex. Heb_12:1; 1Th_4:15-17; Rev_6:9).

It is surprising to me how many well-meaning people have mistakenly thought that Israel entered into a “wedded” marriage relationship with God the Father, when Scripture directly says that they were in a betrothed relationship (Jer_2:32*) just as the New Testament saints are said to be in betrothal (2Co_11:2).

 

[* compare Jer_2:2 MT]

 

Jer 2 – Divorce is Possible During Betrothal to God, But Not After The Marriage Feast

So many countless multitudes have completely ignored the fact that God was clearly in a betrothal when He divorced Israel in the Old Covenant:

 

>>R! insert Hebrew!!

Jer_2:2-3 CAB  I remember the kindness of your youth [νετητς], and the love [γπης] of your betrothal [τελεισες],  3  in following [ξακολουθσα] the Holy One of Israel, says the Lord, [v.3, LXX]Israel was holiness [γιος] unto the Lord, and the firstfruits [ρχγενημτων] of His increase…

 

Jer_2:7 CAB  …you went in [εἰσήλθατε], and defiled [μινατε] My land [a clear reference to the defilement of remarriage as seen in Deu_24:1-4 as well as Jer_3:1-3], and made My heritage [κληρονομαν] an abomination.

 

Jer_2:9 CAB  Therefore [διτοτο] I will yet [τι] plead with you [ κριθσομαι πρςμςhave judgment toward you all; fig. take you to law/ the (local) court, i.e., culturally: take you to the leading rabies of the city and bring the accusation that you have been with another man, and then let them judge you accordingly], and will plead with [ κριθσομαι – have judgment / law toward] your children’s children.

Jer_2:16 CAB  Also the children of Memphis and Tahpanhes have known [γνωσν] you, and mocked [κατπαιζν] you.

 

Jer_2:21-29 CAB  Yet I planted you a fruitful vine, entirely of the right sort [ πσανληθινν – NETS: “from a pure stock”??] — how are you a strange vine turned to bitterness!  22  Though [ἐὰν] you should wash [ποπλν] yourself with lye, and use much soap, still you are stained [κεκηλδωσαι] by [ν – in] your iniquities [δικαις – unrighteousness-es/ injustices] before [ναντον] Me, says the Lord.  23  How will you say [ρες], I am not polluted [μινθην], and have not gone after [ πορεθην – somewhat related to “πορνεία” (porneia); (same as v. 25)] Baal?…  24  she has extended her ways [ πλτυνεν] over [φ᾿] the waters of the desert [note: “waters” are typically an image for the peoples (i.e. that she prostituted herself with)]; she was hurried along [πνευματοφορεῖτο – difficult Greek: lit. she is carrying herself along (by) spirit; or “she was wind-borne” (NETS), fig. blown around by the wind (see ALS p. 230; 450)] by [ν – in] the lusts [πιθυμαις – same as Mat_5:27-30] of her soul; she is given up to them, who will turn her back? None that seek her shall be weary [κοπισουσιν]; at the time of her humiliation [ταπεινσει – i.e. very clearly: when she is cheapened by filthy prostitution; (this word is often used to describe rape, but in this case the “humiliation” is voluntary!)] they shall find her.  25  Withdraw [πστρεψον – turn away] your foot from [π] a rough way, and your throat from [π] thirst: but she said I will strengthen myself [ νδριομαι – lit. I will act myself (as) a man; fig. I will encourage myself] — for she loved [γαπκει] strangers, and went after them [πορεετο – (same as v. 23)].  26  As is the shame [ασχνη] of a thief when he is caught, so shall the children of Israel be ashamed [ασχυνθσονται]; they, and their kings, and their princes [ρχοντες], and their priests, and their prophets.  27  They said to a tree, You are my father; and to a stone, You have begotten me; and they have turned their backs to [π᾿ – upon] Me, and not their faces [πρσωπα]. Yet [καὶ – and] in the time [καιρῷ – season] of their afflictions [κακν – i.e. when bad stuff is happening to them] they will say, Arise [νστα], and save us.  28  And where are your gods which you have made for yourself? Will they arise [εἰ ναστσονται] and save you in the time [καιρῷ – season] of your affliction [κακσες]? For according to the number of your cities were your gods, O Judah; and according to the number [ριθμν] of the streets of Jerusalem they sacrificed to Baal.  29  Why [να τ] do you speak unto [πρς – toward] Me? You all have been ungodly [σεβσατε – irreverent], and you all have transgressed [νομήσατε] against [ες – into/ unto] Me, says the Lord.

 

Jer_2:31-33 CAB  Therefore hear the word [ λγον] of the Lord: thus says [λγει] the Lord, Have I been [γενμην – become] a wilderness or a dry land to Israel? Why [διτί – through (fig. because of and on account of) what] have My people said [επεν], We will not be ruled over [κυριευθησμεθαlorded over, i.e. as a wife under her lord/ “husband” (κυριεύσει – Gen_3:16 LXX)], and will not come to [πρς – toward] You anymore [τι]?  32  Will a bride [νμφη (numphē) – where we get the word nuptial] forget [πιλσεται (ALS p. 223)] her attire [κσμον], or a virgin [παρθένος – (primary virgin word)] her ornaments [στηθοδεσμδαchest-bond (i.e. women need this before going in public); fig. girdle (compare ALS p. 503; G4737?)]? But My people have forgotten [πελθετ] Me days *without number [ν οκστινριθμς]!  33  What [τ] fair [καλν – lit. good/ well] device [πιτηδεσεις >] will you yet [ἔτι] employ [< πιτηδεσεις] in your ways, so as to seek love [γπησιν]? It shall not be so; moreover [λλκαὶ – but (stronger contrast) also] you have done wickedly [πονηρεσω – fig. pervertedly (sounds like porneia)] in corrupting [μιναι – defiling (as in 2:7, 23; 3:1-2, etc.; Deu_24:1-4; etc.)] your ways;

 

Jer_2:35 CAB  Yet [καὶ – and] you said, I am innocent [θῷός]: only [λλὰ – but (stronger contrast)] let His wrath [θυμςhot breathing; fig. anger] be turned away [ποστραφτω] from [π᾿] me. Behold, I will *plead with you [κρνομαι πρςhave judgment toward you], in that you say, I have not sinned.

 

Notice the Betrothal in Jer 2!

>> past Talmud words here!

>> finish this

Although the exact wording for betrothal is not consistently established between the MT and LXX for verse 2, we do have an extremely clear reference to betrothal in verse 3.

Whether we (non-Jews) realize it or not, the words “holiness unto the Lord” very clearly speak of betrothal in Jewish culture. For example, it is recorded all throughout the ancient Talmud that when a man established a betrothal a woman was then called “erusha” or “holi-fied” or “sanctified” to the man, since she had been purchased and “set apart” to this particular man (which is what “holiness” means!). In fact, the Talmud has an extensive tract of endless discussion about betrothal and that is the very title of this entire long and extensive section – Erusha!

    Verses 22-23 are a clear reference to tainting betrothal (i.e. their “Holiness”) and defiling it with intimacy with other “men” (in this case other gods).

 

At the very beginning of Jeremiah 2 it is very certain and definite that God speaks of Israel’s betrothal to Himself. In Jeremiah 3 God speaks of divorcing Israel during this betrothal time. From this and countless other passages like it, it is abundantly clear that God is willing to divorce during betrothal, and constantly speaks in this way throughout the prophets. But God also speaks of a time that is coming when He will have a “marriage feast” with all His people, and after this there is no divorce (Rev 19-22)!

 

How this Correlates with the Betrothed Bride in the New Covenant

>>! this might need a different title for the rest of this……

We, who are the “Bride of Christ,” have not been to the marriage supper yet, nor have we been “consummated” yet. We are waiting to be found faithful. Only on this side of eternity, do we have to watch ourselves so that we are not divorced from Jesus.  But people who do not understand this, do not understand the issue of divorce and remarriage.

I once had a roommate who was asked, “If the exception is about the engagement and not consummated marriages, then why did God divorce Israel?” and this is a very good question:  Would God ask us to do more than He is willing to do? If He commands us never to divorce after consummation then why did He divorce Israel?  If we can understand the principles that are missing behind this question then we can gain a lot of understanding.

We must realize that the original societal practices surrounding marriage were strategically retained by the Jews during the times of the Bible, because these Jewish ways of celebrating the marriage covenant directly reflect the way God offers salvation through the New Covenant to relate to mankind.  In other words, Jews used to do marriage very differently than we do, and God has chosen this as a model, parable, and physical representation for how He has offered to relate to mankind, including Jewish betrothal.

So what does all of this say?  God’s divine and mysterious, pre-wedded, spiritual, marriage relationship with His Church shows us how we ought to be doing marriage among ourselves as humans here on earth.  If we are only allowed to divorce before being wedded, then it will be reflected in God’s relationship with mankind.  Do you expect that it is possible at all for God to ever divorce His people after entering into His eternal Kingdom after the wedding feast? If not, then neither should we defy such a truth by thinking that it is ever permitted for us to divorce a spouse after our wedding day. If we do this anyway, then we violate the Holy image that God left for people on the earth, and we will have to answer to Him who is in Love with His Bride on Judgment Day, as those who have lied to all of mankind against His bride, and against His unending faithfulness to her, by marring such an image of His spiritual wedding that is yet to come, by securing a divorce here on earth after cohabiting with a spouse. The image of marriage that God left here on earth is serious business!

If we are expected to understand that humans are ever to be allowed to divorce after marriage, then the same would have to hold true with God’s relationship with mankind, since marriage is a divine picture of the redemption of mankind.

For some reason, we want the comforting thought of being eternally excepted by God with everlasting acceptance and security in eternal goodness, but we think we can also allow divorce and remarriage among our married couples. But on the contrary, we see very clearly from these Scriptures that God was only willing to divorce his people before marriage, during the betrothal stage.  Hopefully it is easy for us to see that there is no possibility of divorce between God and his people after “The Marriage Supper of the Lamb.”  Since the wedding represents this consummated relationship with God, we ought to learn from the example that God has shown us that we are not to divorce after we are wedded. We are in deep trouble if we violate the parable of marriage that God has given us by allowing divorce after being wedded, because it was given to us representing His relationship with mankind.  We are not simply marring marriage, we are disrespecting God’s image of salvation and the redemption of the human race unto Himself. We are opposing the very idea that humans ought to turn from their sin and honor God when we spit on the picture of this by sanctioning divorce and remarriage.

It is bad enough to divorce, but if we go even further by remarrying, we are committing ourselves to the distortion of the image of marriage that God left us to point to a relationship with Him. If we remarry after divorce, then, by virtue of our actions and positions, we are communicating a rebellious lie that says God is unfaithful to His wayward bride, and promoting His bride to waywardly remain in the idolatry of remarriage:

 

God is Not Looking for Others to Marry After Divorce

Is God ready to divorce humans in order to marry others?  No Way! There is only one Bride of Jesus, and He has no other suitable alternatives in mind. In the same way, even by divorcing during betrothal, Jesus has no other in mind to marry, and neither should we. It is true that a number of the members of the Body will be cut off and wither because they become cancerous vines in the Divine Root (Rom_11:17-22) which must be cut out to avoid polluting the whole Body with sin.  A wife may cut out and remove cancerous members because of problems in her body, but this does not change her identity as the wife of her husband.  In such a cancerous case, the member was of the same nature and essence of the body, and continued as part of it until the essence and nature of that member turned contrary and destructive to the nourishment of the whole, in which case, it was better to be permanently disunited with it than to allow infection and destruction also to the other members. From this point on she becomes bereaved of a piece of flesh that once was a part of her being but now lays dead outside of her. At the same time she is grateful and relieved for the greater good of her body that the wicked cancer is removed which had clung and overtaken the previous member.

All of this mention of cancer is to say that, although we see certain members who would have inherited heaven who have now fallen by the wayside, this is no evidence at all that God has changed his mind about His overall bride. He Loves her eternally with unquenchable Love, (Son_8:6-7) and will do all that it takes to see her healthy and cancer free, because no matter what may transpire in the mean time, He will see to it that He marries her, and that she ends up being His precious and glorious bride, cohabiting with Him forever.

There is still only One Body (Rom_12:4-5; 1Co_10:17; 1Co_12:12-25; Eph_2:16; Eph_4:4; Col_3:15) and one Bride (Rev_21:9-27) that Jesus has in mind, whether they be from the Old Covenant or the New.  Ultimately not even premarital unfaithfulness will change His mind and ultimate determination as to what bride He has chosen for Himself for eternity. In the end, she will be pure, and God will never change His mind so as to consider another even in the face of needing to temporarily divorce her in the mean time. He is eternally faithful, and because of this, so should our faithfulness infinitely endure to our spouses, until death do us part.

 

The Jewish Surprise Marriage

>> expand and quote on surprise marriages

And just as the Jewish wife did not know when her husband would come and take her home to be his wife, so also we wait not knowing at what hour Jesus will return:

 

Mat_24:42-44; Mat_25:1-13; Mar_13:33-37; 1Co_16:13; 1Th_5:6; 2Ti_4:5; Rev_16:15; (and Compare with: Mat_1:18)

 

Temporary Divorce: The Only Option Allowed and Exemplified By God Himself

The question arises, “Why does Jesus permit divorce at all if God so clearly opposes it?” The answer is actually very powerful. Let’s start by remembering again the scene where God divorced Israel:

 

>>R – find other refs and insert Greek? – We need Hebrew notes

Jeremiah 3 Shows the Sins For which God Officially Divorced Israel, and God’s Determination to Take Her Back!

Jer_3:1 CAB  …But you have played the harlot with many shepherds, and have returned to Me, says the Lord.

Jer_3:20 CAB  But as a wife acts treacherously against her husband, so has the house of Israel dealt treacherously against Me…

Jer_3:7 CABTurn again to Me

Jer_3:8 CAB   And I saw that (for all the sins of which she was convicted, wherein the house of Israel committed adultery, and I put her away, and gave into her hands a certificate of divorce)…

Jer_3:14 CAB  Turn, you children that have revolted, says the Lord; for I will rule over you…

Jer_3:20 MKJV Surely as a wife treacherously departs from her husband, so you have dealt treacherously with me…

Jer_3:8 KJV And I saw, when for all the causes whereby backsliding Israel committed adultery I had put her away, and given her a bill of divorce…

Jer_3:1 KJB …but you played the harlot with many lovers; yet return again to me, says the LORD.

Jer_3:14 KJB Return, O backsliding children, says the LORD; for I am married unto you…

 

Did you notice that God called for reconciliation in this passage? Do you recall that this whole scene took place during God’s betrothal to Israel? Israel’s hardhearted divorce, (Mat_19:8) which God opposes, (Mal_2:14), is different from the exceptive divorce which God Himself exemplifies and Jesus allows (Mat_5:32).

Long before Jesus gave an exception clause, God previously exemplified this type of divorce, which included an official divorce certificate (as seen previously in Isa_50:1 and Jer_3:8) by temporarily divorcing Israel during their spiritual betrothal.  This temporary divorce during betrothal which even calls for reconciliation is the softhearted divorce which Jesus allows. If we will digest this definite distinction, this can help us comprehend how God in no way approves of hardhearted divorce which happens after consummation, and is intended to be permanent.  In showing this heart of temporary divorce during betrothal, what does God say to His people after He divorced them?

 

Jer_3:7 CAB …Turn again to Me…

 

If we are honest we can see that this is much different than the divorce which we usually have in mind today in our sinful and adulterous generation, because unlike us, God has reconciliation as His great plan for Israel, so that His divorce is only temporary, and He only does this during betrothal, and never for remarriage.

 

Real Christians (Who Go to Heaven) Follow God’s Example

1Jn_4:17 CAB  By this love has been perfected with us: that we may have confidence in the day of judgment; because just as He is, we also are in this world.

 

And if God does not divorce and remarry, then He shows us that we do not have this right either.

 

Joh_13:16 Jos.Trans. truly, truly, I say to you, no slave is greater than the lord of him [his lord/ master]

Joseph faithfully followed in this example which God gave, and today Jesus demands that we do the same.

 

11. The True Exception Has to be Consistent With The True Revolutionary

>> I think much of this has already been said previously

>> should this go with ‘Jesus restored one flesh reverence’?

>> I think I need to specify that Jesus was not the first person to call dar immoral

 

Jesus Taught Something Revolutionary

In teaching on marriage, Jesus did not simply clarify the Old Covenant, nor did He teach the filth of human theology spread about by Rabbis. He taught a profound revolution that shocked people and challenged them to the core of everything they knew and believed in life.

>> add third school of thought

 

Two Schools of Thought Regarding the Law

The liberal views of today that people suggest Jesus to have preached, were already around in His day. Everyone knew about the divorce controversy. Two significant schools of thought were Shammai (the conservative) and Hillel (the liberal). Both of their theological teachings centered around Deuteronomy 24:1-4. Please consider the big-picture implications if we suggest that Jesus simply aligned Himself with the mortal religious philosophers of His day. Or consider the irreconcilable complications if we say that Jesus was merely clarifying what Moses had already said in the Law, when Jesus Himself directly showed us that He was NOT teaching what Moses taught, but rather some greater standard, (Mat_5:31-32).

 

Remember these theologians and their stances interpreting the Deuteronomy divorce passage:

 

Hillel – ‘You can divorce your wives for anything including burning your food’

Shammai – ‘You can only divorce for big things like sexual sin and adultery’

 

These two views of Deuteronomy 24 were prevalent then, and it is amazing that they are also prevalent today, and this prevalence is primarily in the church! Someone is considered “conservative” if they were to agree with Shammai’s interpretation of the Old Covenant, (which Law we are not supposed to be under).

>> I think this should be part of some conclusions about the exception

 

>> Repetition! – Gather this together and prove it once

Jesus Was Not Teaching Shammai, Hillel, or Repeating the Law

People seem to miss this all-important big-picture point: Jesus could not have taught Shammai, Hillel, or the Law of Moses for that matter, given the reaction of His disciples. There is no reasonable explanation for the reaction of Jesus’ disciples apart from a totally new, revolutionary (and stringent) teaching that seemed impossible to keep:

 

Mat_19:10 KJV His disciples said to him, “If this is the case [Greek: the one cause (as opposed to the many causes mentioned previously by the Pharisees in v. 3)] of the man with his wife, it is not good to marry!”

 

Understand that the disciple’s reaction reflected the sense of what Jesus was saying, and He authenticated the accuracy of their conclusion (Mat_19:11-12; Mar_10:10-12).

For what it’s worth, John Gill says it correctly:

 

“Being surprised at this account of things, it being quite contrary to what they had been taught, and very different from the general practice and usage of their nation…”

(John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible; on Mat_19:10)

 

And also others say:

 

“Christ’s doctrine on marriage not only separated Him toto caelo from Pharisaic opinions of all shades, but was too high even for the Twelve (Bruce, -a well-known commentator-).

Such a rigid marriage law was too high for their loose Jewish ideas. It seemed to them as if it would be impossible to live up to so high an ideal. If a man could not get rid of his wife, if he [got] tired of her, it were better not to marry.”

 

(The People’s New Testament (1891) by B. W. Johnson)

 

If what Jesus was saying was already a socially acceptable Jewish norm, then the disciples had no explanation for being so shocked.

We rebelliously care to subtract every bit of potency and wonder out of Jesus’ teachings, but these hard teachings were what caused His renegade band of disciples to turn the world upside down (Act_17:6)! It is ridiculous and vain to try to negate the revolutionary significance of Jesus’ teaching on divorce and remarriage by relegating it to the predictable interpretations and teachings of that day.

So understand this: if the disciples took Jesus’ use of porneia to be a “general term” for all kinds of sexual immorality, as so many pastors propagate, and we can divorce and remarry if your spouse cheats on you, then Jesus’ doctrine was no greater or profound than Shammai, or Hillel’s teachings that were already around. Today’s dishonest pastors indicate that Jesus was simply saying, “I agree with Shammai, it has to be a sexual immorality to divorce and remarry;” or “I agree with Hillel;” or “I’m telling you what Moses meant;” instead of accurately representing Jesus’ teaching as the Bible records it to be: “You have heard that it was said… But I say to you!” (Mat_5:27, Mat_5:32)

There is a reason for the contrasting word “BUT.” It distinguishes and contrasts what follows from what precedes. And remember it says that Jesus did not come preaching the Law but the kingdom (as seen in: Mat_4:17; Luk_16:16).

Jesus certainly could have made his speech so much briefer by referring to these philosophies, and interpretations as the Pharisees certainly expected Him to do in one way or the other. Certainly Jesus would have used such an explanation if His goal was to establish the weak standards we have today! But please notice that He didn’t do anything like this! He courageously declared what their fleshly theologians had never dared to teach before: A Divine Revolution!

 

Will We be The Same Old Pharisees, or Revolutionary Disciples?

If it is true that a person can divorce their spouse if they cheat on them after marriage, and find a new person, then everyone still has many ways out of the commitment of marriage. This is what many from this generation have all heard all their lives if they were raised in church, and this is what the disciples and the rest of the Jews in their day had also heard their whole lives. If Jesus had reiterated this same lifeless, predictable teaching allowing remarriage as they had heard over and over, then there would be nothing impressive about this scenario, just as today, there is certainly nothing impressive or challenging about the majority of modern christianity. It is bad enough to be dead and compromising today, but let us have at least some integrity to admit that Jesus was not this way! But it is obvious from the Scriptures that the interpretation that the disciples left with was quite different from everything that they had ever heard their whole life, and if we also would believe it today, it would also revolutionize us in the same way it did the disciples. It is no wonder why most churches today struggle in sin, compromise and death without the revolutionary life of the disciples, because we preach and promote the same death of sin the Pharisee’s taught and the disciples previously heard! As to our obedience, life, and Love for God, we have come to be no better off today in church than before Jesus ever came and overthrew the doctrine of the Pharisees.

 

Exception Clause Summary

>>H

With souls on the line and morality in the balance, it is extremely necessary and even critical to know what Jesus’ exception for divorce addresses.

 


Chapter 4 First Corinthians Seven

We are currently developing the bulk of this chapter in the appendix resource entitled, “A Translation and Analysis of the Primary Divorce and Remarriage Passages.” In the mean time we have included the most critical elements here for this chapter.

>> many more questions that go far beyong the ‘Pauline exception’ are covered in this appx...... Please remmember to check back at DarBook.com every few years to get the latest very important updates to the book, includimg our latest releases in pri

 

> Whenever the new section may be added

We are generally doing this entire chapter “commentary style” by giving the text at the beginning and then constantly referring back to it throughout this entire chapter. So instead of giving the same text over and over again, as a diligent reader, please keep referring back to the main text for each point that follows.

 

1. Summaries of First Corinthians Seven

 

>>R!!

v. 1Co_7:1-5 – Commands for frequent intimacy between spouses. [ex. cl. Re.]

v. 1Co_7:1-2 – Prostitution/ fornication vs. “having” a spouse (sexually)

v. 1Co_7:3-4 – Give over mental [εὔνοιαν (v.3)] affection as being indebted [ὀφειλὴν], and bodily [ἰδίου σώματος (v.4)] affection as being without personal “rights” [ἐξουσιάζε]

v. 1Co_7:5 – It is ‘stealing*’ if you don’t obey this [* ἀποστερεῖτε – lit to deprive away, fig. as a criminal ‘taking’ or ‘cheating’ someone out of what is theirs]

v. 1Co_7:6-8 – Celibacy is best for the “unmarried” (v. 1Co_7:8) if that is their spiritual gift [update: translation]

v. 1Co_7:9 – “Marriage” [used twice: γαμησάτωσαν/ γαμῆσαι] is preferred over (& contrasted with) “burning”; (correlating with the marriage vs. prostitution/ fornication in v. 1Co_7:2)

v. 1Co_7:10The ‘no separation’ command (‘do not separate your women from you’) is applied to married people (v. 1Co_7:9, not to ‘betrothal scenarios’ [compare v. 1Co_7:6-8]) and is clearly referencing the specific teaching of Jesus (Mat_19:5-6; Mar_10:7-9)

v. 1Co_7:11 – Passively receiving Separation from marriage (v. 1Co_7:9-10) means being ‘without marriage,’ [i.e. cohabitation (as mentioned in the next verse)] yet still being obligated to that spouse [i.e. by one flesh], as being commanded not to marry another; [note: just because you are “without marriage” (i.e. cohabitation) does not mean you are without “one flesh” and are allowed to marry another!]

>> being married means being together in cohabitation; being unmarried means being away from each other

>>?:

v. 1Co_7:12-16 – Continue cohabitation [συν-…οἰκεῖν μετ᾿ – lit. together-…habit with, i.e. fig. marriage (as directly said in v. 1Co_7:11)] with an unbelieving spouse if possible [note: The experience of “marriage” is directly linked with cohabitation here in v. 1Co_7:11-16]

v. 1Co_7:14 – You can be one flesh with an unbeliever, and even clean their pagan flesh by faith*! (So this is certainly a lawful marriage) [* i.e. like David did for Michael]

v. 1Co_7:15 – If the unbeliever leaves, then be content to live in peace (i.e. the “singleness” in v. 1Co_7:11) [i.e. one flesh still exists! – you are not permitted to marry another]

(only unbelievers actively separate from a lawful marriage)

v. 1Co_7:16 – But if you can remain with an unbeliever then you might save them

v. 1Co_7:17 – Live in the particular (morally neutral [v. 1Co_7:19]) life scenario God gives you

v. 1Co_7:18 – Circumcision vs. uncircumcision is another example of individual states of life to remain in; (1st example is v. 1Co_7:12-14)

v. 1Co_7:19 – This is because these things are “Nothing[οὐδέν ἐστιν] morally speaking, as opposed to observing the commands of God which actually matter as “something” moral before God.

v. 1Co_7:20 – Remain in the one calling [τῇ κλήσει ᾗ ἐκλήθη (repetition = emphasis)] given by God

v. 1Co_7:21 – Being a slave is an example of something to remain in (unless you can get free, then go ahead and do that instead)

v. 1Co_7:22 – To God, all who were slaves of men are now free in Jesus, and all who were free from men are made slaves of Jesus

v. 1Co_7:23 – Avoid physical slavery

v. 1Co_7:24 – Remain with God in the one calling in which you were called

v. 1Co_7:25-26 – In light of a particular need [ἐνεστῶσαν ἀνάγκην], it is good (but never commanded) for virgins to remain unmarried

v. 1Co_7:27-28 – For those passively bound by God: do not seek a “loosening thing” [λύσιν]; for those passively loosed by God: do not seek a woman, however, marriage is not sin (though it has troubles in this life)

v. 1Co_7:28-35 – Cohabitation and marriage can be an emotionally involved experience in this life when caring for one’s spouse

v. 1Co_7:29-31 – How even married people can live without being indulgent in this life

v. 1Co_7:32-38 – The benefits of singleness, and how to perceive if it should be for you

v. 1Co_7:39-40

 

> update link at “First Corinthians Seven Definitely Equates Marriage with Cohabitation

 

Is it virgins or widows, or Both?

v. 1Co_7:25 – Remaining as female virgins

v. 1Co_7:26 – Remaining as a male virgin

v. 1Co_7:27 – Bound male/ loosed male

v. 1Co_7:28 – You marry/ a female virgin may marry

 

female virgins (v. 1Co_7:25), male virgin?* (v. 1Co_7:26), (bound male/ loosed male (v. 1Co_7:27)) You marry/ a female virgin may marry (v. 1Co_7:28)

 

* does he mean bachler with the word “a man”-?

 

How to Remain in Morally Neutral States of Life

The morally neutral [οὐδέν – nothing (1Co_7:19)] states of life that we are instructed to remain in (v. 1Co_7:17, 1Co_7:19-20, 1Co_7:24) include:

 

(1) v. 1Co_7:10-11, 1Co_7:15 – Remaining single after passively letting an unbeliever leave (Notice that this scene is given twice, not just once)

(2) v. 1Co_7:12-16 – Remaining in cohabitation when married to an unbeliever

(3) Remaining either circumcised or…

(4) v. 1Co_7:18-19uncircumcised [i.e. remain either Jewish or non-Jewish; don’t become a proselyte by changing your flesh]

(5) Being content to remain a slave (v. 1Co_7:21-23), (if you do not have an occasion to gain your freedom)

(6) v. 1Co_7:25 – Remaining as female virgins

(7) v. 1Co_7:26  – Remaining as a male virgin [or widower?]

(8) v. 1Co_7:27 – Remaining passively bound by God

(9) v. 1Co_7:27-28, 1Co_7:39-40 – Remaining passively loosed* by God [* λέλυσαι (v. 1Co_7:27); ἐλευθέρα (1Co_7:39)]

 

>> v. 1Co_7:25-26 – Remaining as female or male virgins

 

Since God’s commands count (1Co_7:19) it goes without saying that such morally neutral states of life that one may find themselves in do not include dreadful sins that condemn a person to hell, such as: killing, stealing, lying, hating people, gossiping, committing fornication, committing adultery, and so on. It is abundantly clear that remaining in a particular calling from God cannot include keeping your neighbor’s wife in an adulterous remarriage, since Jesus clearly said that this was adultery that would send a person to hell (Mat_5:27-32). Committing adultery by divorce and remarriage is obviously not morally “nothing” when Jesus and Paul call it “adultery.” The command, “thou shalt not commit adultery” is a command from God, therefore, breaking that command (Mat_5:27) by continuing to do what Jesus called adultery (Mat_5:31-32) cannot by any means be called a morally neutral state of life to remain in, because Paul clearly said in this very same statement that keeping God’s commands counts (1Co_7:19). It goes without saying that if you remain in adulterous remarriage, you are not remaining in a calling from God but the sin which God has clearly demanded that all men repent from.

 

2. 1Co 7 – Paul vs. “The Pauline Exception”

 

A. What is it? – Defining the “Pauline Exception”

When people use Matthew 19:9 as a way out of the permanent one flesh marriage bond (as discussed previously), they call it “A Matthean Exception Clause,” but as can be expected, once you go this far it is only a matter of time before you expand that exception to include more reasons to reinforce divorce and remarriage.

What people call, “A Pauline Exception” is yet another very popular addition to the ever-increasing list of “exceptions” and excuses why it’s now considered ok to get remarried after a divorce. By the time church leaders in a particular church start talking about “The Pauline Exception” you can get divorced for just about whatever reason you want, since now there are the made up grounds of what they call “abandonment.” Most church people today quickly flock to 1st Corinthians 7:12 & 15, which say:

 

1Co_7:12-15 KJB …If any brother has a wife that does not believe, and she is pleased to dwell with him, let him not put her away [lit. leave her]G863, G846, 15 But if the unbelieving

depart, let him depart. A brother or a sister is not under bondageG1402 in such cases: but God has called us to peace.

 

But being unsettled with this, and being filled with the humanistic propaganda propagated by Desiderius Erasmus, today’s sick paraphrases, such as the NIV, have misrepresented it as:

 

“But if the unbeliever leaves, let him do so. A believing man or woman is not bound in such circumstances…” (The misrepresentation of 1Co_7:15 in NIV).

 

If you follow the trends and actually read the background information on versions like NIV, then you can see how intentional and strategic their misrepresentations can be. In general, the translational patterns of the NIV very actively liberalize the stringent teaching that the Bible gives us about remarriage.  Others have done even worse in mutilating the Scriptures:

 

“...Under these circumstances a Christian man or Christian woman is not bound by a marriage vow...”

 

(The forgery against 1Co_7:15 by the so-called “bible version” under the false name (pseudonym): “GW” by the so called, GOD’S WORD to the Nations Bible Society”).

 

Now I hope you can see by this point how sick and dishonest “bible versions” can be and to what level they are willing to lie when misrepresenting the Bible.

The tragedy here in 1Co_7:15 is that most church people replace the phrase, “under bondage” (being enslaved) with the word “bound” to say this verse is referencing “being married,” or “bound to a wife…” instead of retaining the actual sense of the word. So in this idea, if someone is not “bound” to a spouse then they are not “married” anymore to the one who deserted them.

 

Many of the people that promote this teaching have so foolishly said,

 

“Paul states explicitly that this is a modification which he enacts on his own Apostolic authority…”

http://www.womenpriests.org/wijngaards/divorce.asp (Emphasis added)

Re-retrieved 6/9/11

 

But the big problem with this statement is that Paul did not have authority over Jesus, but Jesus has authority over Paul. Paul cannot and would not ever seek to usurp authority over Jesus and change His perfect covenant which He established and purchased with the blood of His cross. But people who believe Paul rebelled against Jesus and changed His law on marriage are only raving heretics who care nothing about reverencing the absolute and perfect authority of Jesus. At the very basis of this theology called a “Pauline Exception” most theologians believe that even though Jesus only gave one exception, Paul decided to change this and give his exception too.

 

B. The Fact That Paul Uses Two Different Words Disproves It

The reason that this is wrong is that Paul uses the correct word for being bound to a wife in that same chapter:

 

1Co_7:39 WEB A wife is boundG1210 by law for as long as her husband lives; but if the husband is dead, she is free to be married to whoever she desires, only in the Lord.

 

But if you simply look at the Strong’s numbers associated with the words, you can see that they are not the same word.

 

1Co_7:15 – A brother or a sister is not under bondageG1402

 

1Co_7:39 – A wife is boundG1210 by law… [in marriage]

 

And here are the Greek definitions from Strong’s:

 

(1) Under BondageG1402 (From 1Co_7:15)

“G1402 δουλόω douloō doo-lo’-o From G1401; to enslave (literally or figuratively): - bring into (be under) bondage, X given, become (make) servant.”

(Strong’s Hebrew and Greek Dictionaries)

 

(2) BoundG1210 – by the Law of Marriage (From 1Co_7:39)

G1210 δέω deō deh’-o A primary verb; to bind (in various applications, literally or figuratively): - bind, be in bonds, knit, tie, wind. See also G1163, G1189.”

(Strong’s Hebrew and Greek Dictionaries)

 

Is Marriage Slavery?

I don’t think I’ll ever forget when one of my high school teachers illustrated marriage by drawing a ball and chain on a person’s foot on the marker board.  He was being sarcastic, and while this probably indicates an unhealthy view of marriage, what’s worse is when most church people think that the Bible would stoop to such a level by using a word for enslavement to describe the marriage covenant which God loves! How is it that we feel justified in painting a dreary picture of what God Loves, cherishes and supports? It is reasonable to expect that my high school teacher would have a warped view of man’s obligation to honor the one flesh God made, but it is sickening that anyone would think that the Bible also has such a view of the one flesh covenant!

What is more honest is to take note that we are so estranged from God and the things that He loves, that we project our unhealthy beliefs onto the Bible so that we are even replacing God’s Words with our own sick ideas and philosophies about one flesh and marriage in modern versions. If we pay attention, we may be able to perceive a very revealing indication of deep rooted problems in our church leaders and translators today. But for those who are alive by faith in what God says about being committed to one flesh, obeying Jesus’ commandments and commitments is freeing to those who are led by the Spirit. 

 

But If We Get Back To Greek Details We Can See The Following

These two words have considerable differences in their meaning, and are not universally interchangeable! In fact this word “under bondageG1402,” is used eight other times in the New Testament, and not one of them has anything to do with the one flesh covenant, or even the cohabitation of marriage. Each of these instances has to do with slavery and servants:

 

Act_7:6; Rom_6:18, Rom_6:22; 1Co_7:15; 1Co_9:19; Gal_4:3; Tit_2:9; 2Pe_2:19.

 

If we look at the details of the Greek and the way these terms are used throughout Scripture, we can be sure that this word has nothing to do with being bound into one flesh and obligated unto marriage. 

 

C. The Context of First Corinthians 7 Disproves It Beyond Any Doubt

Even if you don’t care about the Greek realities that these words are not the same at all, the context shows that he is not talking about the bond of marriage when he says, “under bondage.” Please observe that the reverse of “not being under bondage” is not remarriage! If we simply look at the context it is very clear that “being enslaved” is the opposite of being “at peace.”

 

1Co_7:15 KJB …A brother or a sister is not under bondageG1402 in such cases: but God has called us to peace.

 

Real Peace, Not Remarriage!

Paul is clearly contrasting being “under bondage,” with what we are called to as Christians. He doesn’t say, “God has not called us to stay bound to a departed spouse, but to be free to remarry,” as many affirm, but he says that the opposite of being “under bondage” is God’s call to “peace.” Sadly, if we are “free to remarry” in such cases, then it is because we are free from the obligations of righteousness that forbids remarriage, (Rom_6:20-23) not because the Bible has said it was OK. In this state we are not in “peace” as God has called His followers too, but freedom from righteousness is in fact bondage to sin:

 

Rom_6:20-21 CAB  For when you were slaves of sin, you were free in regard to righteousness.  21  So what fruit did you have then of which things you are now ashamed? For the end of those things is death.

 

>> Add back in?: It is more than reasonable to understand this to say that the believing spouse is not to be anxiously and “slavishly inbondaged” to following after the unbelieving spouse to persuade them to return to them.  This would be a much more honest representation of the meaning of the word.  But it is an unreasonable and lawless leap to say that they are not “bound” to the deserting spouse so that they are free to remarry.

>> The peace Jesus gives in not like the world gives

>> Peace doers make new peace that was not already there

>> Peace doers are said to get persecuted for righteousness sake. Now that certainly is a peace that is not like the world gives, isn’t it?

>> “God wants me to be happy” is a predictable peace that every flesh-ball can relate to, no matter how much they hate God.

 

Heretics Love to Believe The Opposite Of The Obvious – Paul is not Double-Minded

The idea of the “Pauline Exception” assumes the opposite of the obvious. There is no doubt that Paul affirms twice in this same chapter that remarriage after a divorce is absolutely not an option. In the beginning he affirms it, and if there were any question about everything that he discussed throughout the chapter, he ends reaffirming this same absolute prohibition (i.e. 1Co_7:10-11, 1Co_7:39). How illogical and double-minded to present this verse as though he contradicts himself in the middle of the chapter, and then reverses his stance again when he ends it?

>> The strivings of de-educators who dare to be free thinkers and never restrict themselves by what is lawful and righteous. They never have to come under the law of Jesus (Mat_7), but do and believe whatever they want to. Such are damned by the condemning Words of Jesus against the lawless.

 

The Underlying Assumption

>> move this???

Perhaps then the advocates of this “Pauline exception” think that marriage is in fact bondage because when they read Paul write about bondage they think he is talking about marriage. Let me point out what is obvious, especially to those who Love the Bible: marriage is not “bondage” but a blessing! Shall I insult your morality and care for God by listing all the innumerable verses?

Even if marriage seemed to be bondage in the flesh, it says in this same chapter, “Whoever is called in the Lord being a slave is Christ’s freedman.” Physically binding situations never make you a slave in the spirit, but what you choose to believe and live out in Jesus makes you a slave or free. Many try to avoid taking responsibility for their own miserable hearts by pretending that their misery is because of their circumstances, instead of saying, I can do all things through Christ [χριστῷ – anointed one] who strengthens me,” (Phi_4:13 CAB). Irresponsible people blame their sin on external circumstances to avoid taking responsibility, admitting their faults, and facing their errors.

 

D. That Which Motivated, Predated that Which was Created

Though it was originally the gross humanist, Desiderius Erasmus, who pioneered the final form of the doctrine in the church’s mind based on liberalizing what Augustine said allowing remarriage for the cause of abandonment, as the alleged “Pauline Exception,” this same spirit was at work within King Saul many thousands of years beforehand.

Saul was demonized (1Sa_16:14-23) with which he tried to kill David (1Sa_18:10-11; 1Sa_19:9-18) and his own son (1Sa_20:32-33) and by which he chased David out of the kingdom for many years until the day of his death (1Sa_19:10; 1Sa_20:42; 1Sa_21:10; 2Sa_1:1; 2Sa_1:12; 2Sa_2:1).

Since David “abandoned” his wife to save his life, Saul saw it fit to use this to justify remarrying his daughter unto another man named Phaltiel, as we have already mentioned, (1Sa_25:44). And we have also mentioned that this was not God’s desire as expressed by righteous David, therefore Michal was restored unto him until the day of her death (2Sa_3:14-16; 2Sa_6:20; 2Sa_6:23). We also see this wicked application of abandonment used by the pagan Philistines against Samson earlier (Jdg_14:19-20- Jdg_15:1-2). Although David was obviously wronged, the Scripture describes the pagan Philistine father as though he actually thought that Samson abandoned his wife, and this is still considered a grave sin. Whether it was David’s or Samson’s case, please note that both times where “abandonment” is specifically used by people in the Scriptures for a reason to remarry, God’s judgment fell on them!

The demonized, murderous King Saul and the pagan-worshiping Philistines used “abandonment” as a cause for remarriage, and their use predated the one that was actively (re)created by the lawlessness of Erasmus unto the Protestant church by this perversion against the Bible. The same spirit motivated all of this in history. Can you swallow the idea of doctrinally following in the footsteps of such examples? Are you teaching people that abandonment “looses” a spouse to remarry? Is “the spirit of Saul, the Philistines and Erasmus” motivating you? Beware lest the same destruction fall upon you that fell upon Saul and the Philistines (1Sa_31:2-4; Jdg_15:4-6) for stacking up the same atrocious guilt of Erasmus.

 

E. Summaries and Conclusions About the “Pauline Exception”

So what people call, “a Pauline Exception” is more properly deemed “An Appalling Exception” because it absurdly suggests that Paul made an addendum to the divorce and remarriage law that was contradictory to Jesus’ New Testament mandate. Paul himself quoted this law of marriage twice in that same chapter, in 1Co_7:10-11 and 1Co_7:39 (and in Rom_7:2-3 as well). Not surprisingly, he did not leave any room at all for an exception clause, or for the supposed “Pauline Exception” that people accuse him of making a few verses later in verse 15. Indeed, they deceptively abuse a Bible verse to overthrow everything else the Bible says in this area, ignoring the actual words that are used, as well as the clear context which is to the contrary. The end result of this type of manipulation and heresy is always the same: To invent yet a new excuse to authorize divorce and remarriage despite the Bible’s clear prohibition on it.

    The central principle of this point of the issue to grasp is that Jesus made absolute and extreme statements about which none of His servants, including the Apostles, had any right or desire whatsoever to change or contradict.

We cannot rightly say that Paul, who was closer, more in Love, and more submitted to Jesus than practically anything we understand, would ever dare to correct what his Master and Lord has declared (Joh_13:16). Remember: You cannot change what God says: Deu_4:2; Deu_12:32; Rev_22:18-19; Pro_30:5-6

How hypocritical of us to quickly remind other apostate so-called churches that “You can’t add or subtract from God’s words” if we then turn around and accuse Paul of doing this very thing!

    This remarriage-permitting cancer called “A Pauline Exception” was first (re)introduced in the church by Erasmus, and then it erupted in more recent times, being strategically propagated by the NIV, and based out of the spirit of Saul and the Philistines.  By mistranslating this verse, ignoring the whole chapter and the rest of the Bible, and by being pushed from the pulpit, this teaching has thoroughly spread throughout all of Protestantism.

While 1 Corinthians 7:15 exhorts us forbidding bondage to the circumstances of other people’s bad choices, the majority of Protestant churches have turned it into the broadest excuse ever to allow remarriage after divorce.  Because of this, long gone are the days when a few minority cases were wrongly allowed to divorce and remarry on the basis of Matthew chapter 19.  Now, to most Protestants, virtually any unhappy marriage situation can qualify for remarriage on the basis of “sexual immorality,” and if not this, at least on the basis of abandonment.

May God quickly grant us that peace that this verse is actually talking about, and turn our hearts in repentance away from seeking to justify our own sin with the excuses that that we are so prone to.

 

27-28 – General Explanation

1Co 7:27-28 – yes, tragically, this verse is usually not adequately translated into English. Ultimately, even in English, you can somewhat get the idea of what these two verses are saying if you are very careful to observe the context: 1Co 7:8-11, 1Co 7:39-40, but in Greek, these verses are much easier to understand. For example, did you know that v. 27 uses the exact same root word as used in v. 39 (i.e. λυω-)? This link is so much more accessible to see in Greek, but in English you have to be much more careful and observant to notice and somewhat catch on to this pattern.

 

If God may somehow help me in writing and compiling all of these things, I’m constantly laboring to finish this and incorporate it into my book, as well as 1Tim CH 3/ 5 (overseers/ “Bishops” & Widows).

 

Whether in Greek or in English, the worst thing you could possibly do is conclude that the Bible repeatedly contradicted itself (1Co 7:8-11 vs. 1Co 7:27-28 vs. 1Co 7:39-40).


Chapter 5 Applications of The Teaching

 

 

>> add intruding into thing he has not seen: people who try to tell a couple they are no longer joined, when this is God’s business!

Sections to add:

 

Q N As

 

 

Mal_2 Says God Hates Divorce, So Why Do you Say People Should Separate Remarriages??

 

The Woman at the Well

>> for the purposes of this book, we are not necessarily answering the spiritual implications of this conversation, but to stay focused on the issue of divorce and remarriage, we are focusing on simply seeing in what basic way this scene may address the issue at hand.

>> to stay focused and on task when writing this point we are not necessarily focusing on why these things were said as much as what was actually said.

 

Clarification: Jesus never said, “you have had five husbands, and the man you are with now is not your husband.” (a typical English misrepresentation of Joh 4:18) – that is a horrible forgery in English bible versions. Jesus actually said, “πέντε γὰρ ἄνδρας ἔσχες, καὶ νῦν ὃν ἔχεις οὐκ ἔστι σου ἀνήρ· τοῦτο ἀληθὲς εἴρηκας.” (the real Joh 4:18) – it is absolutely clear in Greek that Jesus never even called them Husbands but actually insisted on distinguishing them as illicit/ immoral relationships (καὶ νῦν ὃν ἔχεις οὐκ ἔστι σου ἀνήρ). – Although it is extremely hard to represent these things in English because the language barrier is so difficult in this case, yet, there is absolutely no excuse for lying to English readers and making it look like Jesus called them husbands, because that is the exact opposite of what He said!

 

We can plainly see that at the end of this statement Jesus contrasts ‘a husband’ with having a man. But the erroneous impression we have in our mind from mistranslations is that this distinction does not apply to the “five husbands,” yet this is exactly the treachery that English versions have lied to us about. The same disqualification has to apply to the five men, because Jesus used the same term for the five man as he did in saying “the man you now have is not your husband.”

 

When you say “have a man,” that means to “have” him sexually. Because Jesus said she “had” a man without it being the “man of her” it is clear that the man she “had” sexually was not her husband, and so Jesus put a distinguishing specification on the word “have” to indicate that it was illicit and not the husband that Jesus had asked her to go call. This is the exact same terminology which Jesus uses for all five men, but we nearly never include this distinction in English.

---------------

Clarification: this scene is not just about ἀνήρ (aner); the two phrases being used are the exact opposite of each other in Greek when contrasted in this way. “τὸν ἄνδρα σου” = Husband (v. 16); “ἄνδρας ἔσχες” = “having” men (sexually); in Greek it is absolutely clear that Jesus is insisting on contrasting “having” these 5 men (ἄνδρας ἔσχες) with a husband (“σου ἀνήρ”), (v. 18).

[Note: also compare my last comment]

 

This scene is not determined by aner, but by the possessive (“husband”) specification “σου” (sou), (or the lack thereof).

 

 

Your conclusions are right, but I would clarify from Greek that Aner never means “husband” by itself (as can be easily misunderstood from a non-Greek reader’s stand point) – it is much clearer than that.

 

If a dictionary ever includes “husband” as one of the meanings of Aner, this can be confusing to English readers, because when Aner is used in this way it is always qualified with a definite article and something indicating possessiveness.

 

that is, “husband” in English is correlated with at least 2 words (usually 3) in Greek, and this is used in this very passage (τὸν ἄνδρα σου = your husband); So Aner + qualification = what we call “husband.” The 5 men are not only not qualified in Greek as husbands, they are directly contrasted with husbands (καὶ νῦν ὃν ἔχεις οὐκ ἔστι σου ἀνήρ).

---------------

Although understanding the more complex play on words can take a bit of consideration to comprehend, yet the very simple fact that we can see in determining God’s rules about divorce and remarriage is that Jesus never called the five men “husbands.” To the contrary, it is clear that Jesus drew out the fact that these relationships were scandalous and immoral. Now if Jesus brought the woman at the well to acknowledging her sin and glorifying Him as a prophet, how is it we dare to use this gentle conviction of sin as an excuse to go off and leave people in the very scandals Jesus exposed? If anyone wants to come and follow Jesus it is clear that they need to at least leave the sin that Jesus has showed them, but we today want to turn this around to say that people can stay in adultery with another person’s spouse even though Jesus clearly pointed out that she was living in sin!

 

>>R

1Ti_3:

1Ti_5:

>> One-woman man justification makes as much sense as saying church people can __, and get drunk, while it is clear that it says, “drunkards will not inherit” – and that is exactly the same case with divorce and remarriage – it says leaders cannot be it, and it is obviously because ‘they will not inherit’ so they are clearly not fit to leader those who are seeking to!

 

How Christians Sometimes Lose Spouses

If divorce is only allowed for one exception, what can be said about cases where it is sometimes righteous to “lose a wife”

 

 

> But even if you do not accept Malachi’s testimony the principal of

When it comes down to your most cherished stabilities in life, the supremacy of God is always if you are going to be a follower of the real Jesus in the Bible. Marriage always takes second place to honoring God when it comes down to it.

 

God has always taught us to love Him more than family…

 

Deu_13:2-11 CAB  …the Lord your God is testing you, to see whether you love your God with all your heart and with all your soul.  4  You shall follow the Lord your God, and fear Him, and you shall hear His voice, and attach yourselves to Him…  6  And if your brother by your father or mother, or your son, or daughter, or your wife in your bosom, or friend who is equal to your own soul, entreat you secretly, saying, Let us go and serve other gods, which neither you nor your fathers have known… 8  you shall not consent to him, neither shall you hearken to him; and your eye shall not spare him, you shall feel no regret for him, neither shall you at all protect him:  9  <<you shall surely report concerning him,>> and your hands shall be upon him among the first to slay him, and the hands of all the people at the last.  10  And <<they>> shall stone him with stones, and he shall die, because he sought to draw you away from the Lord your God who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.  11  And all Israel shall hear, and fear, and shall not again do according to this evil thing among you.

 

------------------------------

MT Version:

Deu_13:2-11 WEB …Yahweh your God proves you, to know whether you love Yahweh your God with all your heart and with all your soul. <<4>> You shall walk after Yahweh your God, and fear him, and keep his commandments, and obey his voice, and you shall serve him, and cleave to him. …<<6>> If your brother, the son of your mother, or your son, or your daughter, or the wife of your bosom, or your friend, who is as your own soul, entice you secretly, saying, Let us go and serve other gods, which you have not known, you, nor your fathers; … <<8>> you shall not consent to him, nor listen to him; neither shall your eye pity him, neither shall you spare, neither shall you conceal him: <<9>> but you shall surely kill him; your hand shall be first on him to put him to death, and afterwards the hand of all the people. <<10>> You shall stone him to death with stones, because he has sought to draw you away from Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. <<11>> All Israel shall hear, and fear, and shall not do any more such wickedness as this is in the midst of you.

Diedre Notes:

>> vs. 4 in the CAB seems to omit the part that says “and keep his commandment” or does not seem to make an explicit reference to keeping God’s commandments.

>> vs. 9 for the first half or so of the sentence, the part marked is different. There is a reporting him (who tries to get you to serve other gods) vs. killing him (who tries to get you to serve other gods.)

>> vs. 10 There is a plurality in the CAB whereas the WEB makes it singular.

------------------------------

 

God Sometimes Gives Wives to Other Men

“the punishment that would befall the people for their sins, mentionthe deflowering of the women by their captors, which evil would not have been considered as so dreadful had not chastity been regarded in the highest light (Isa. xiii. 16; Zech. xiv. 2; Lam. v. 11; see also Amos vii. 17).”

 

- But this does not mean in marriage, but in punishment and even rape

- include the place in the prophets were God said He would give their wives to others (see news letter)

- David’s concubines

 

This does not mean that they were lawfully and morally remarried to David’s son, but that they were defiled as a punishment

- This also shows that David did not prefer for them to be permitted to be married to others after their permanent defilement – this is an example of Defilement so permanent that it endures beyond even death

 

We see that when God “gives wives to other men,” this is not a reward for the woman, but a punishment of her authority, the man. She is a recipient of the wrath God takes on the man, by having her defiled and polluted. This is the lot of those who function as pawns for God to execute punishment, unless the women somehow find a place of mercy from God for protection and greatness.

- Not Punish a city if 10 righteous in it

- same as children killed for the sins of their parents

- God actually like the wicked King’s child, but punishment still happens unless God has a special eye on person’s life for their protection

 

The Main Thing is Actually Repenting!

>> I would not have thought this at first, but there are actually plenty of completely lost people in fringe corners of modern christianity that would still be willing to say that divorce and remarriage is adultery, and you are free to join them if you want. But what is the point of looking hard-core if you are just going to turn around and live in other filthy sins of your own?

What is the point in claiming to believe un popular teachings if you are entertained by the same things the rest of lost christianity is? What is the point of tell people in church they are in adultery when look, you have the same idolatry sitting in your living room so you may watch the filth on TV that you seem to speak against! Hypocrites! – adulterers and adulteresses friendship with the world… hatred toward God

>> You see the problem is not just divorce and remarriage, but a filthy religion that is fleshly and hates God and loves the indulgence of this evil age.

 

 

Adultery is burning… In hell. Adulterous remarriage is not a solution to avoiding immorality, it is a complete surrender to its lust, and headlong dive into filthiness!

 

But What about that Verse that says ‘Not to Forbid marriage’?

 

“What you are teaching is a doctrine of demons because you will not let these divorced people marry”

 

1Ti_ ‘Teaching to abstain from certain meats’

 

The irony with people accusing anti-adultery proponents of ‘forbidding to marry’ is that they would also have to accuse Paul of ‘forbidding to marry’ if indeed standing against adultery were forbidding to marry:

 

“Let her remain single or else be reconciled”

 

When Paul says, ‘don’t forbid meat’ – It is obvious he does not mean you can go steal meet from your neighbor! If I said, ‘Repent of stealing food from your neighbor’ you would not accuse me of forbidding to eat certain meats, but of forbidding stealing! How much more wicked is it for a person to steal their neighbor’s wife in order to ‘not burn’ and in the name of ‘not forbidding marriage’?

It is much worse to steal a person’s spouse rather than just stealing their food.

We do not forbid marriage, but maintaining stolen property, especially when Jesus called it adultery.

 

1. Warning: Pastors are Propagating the church!

Pastors are among the primary religious propagators of this day. By feeding their “sheep” with the propaganda of adultery, they are breeding goats into wolves. If the church leaders are blindly leading today’s church goers, then they will certainly both fall into a pit, (Luk_6:39)!

 

The Compromised church – Locked in Bondage to Death, Darkness, and Sin

Obeying the Bible is the only answer to heal the chaos that the modern church has now normalized and brought upon herself by disobeying God in this matter. But the church has continued to compromise Jesus clear teaching on divorce and remarriage, because so many people are getting divorced and remarried.  As the church keeps changing and liberalizing its teachings and standards more and more to fit the ever degrading state of pervading normalized immorality among the people, many more onlookers feel all the more free to choose the option that has now been accommodated and accepted before their eyes. Divorce and remarriage is everywhere in the church, and it is increasing more and more. But even if pastors don’t mean it to go this far, without a true and complete repentance, there is nothing that can be done to stop it, since, in the end, you can never determine and halt the resulting extent of damage done once you have committed yourself to a breach from the integrity of truth.

Our present teachings have nearly nothing to do with Truth, but rather of pleasing people and accommodating sin for the sake of the counterfeit of “successful churches” and human “love” over the fear and love of God. But our actions are inexcusable because the Bible has clearly spoken:

 

>DivRem List

Adultery Condemned

Exo_20:14/Deu_5:18; Lev_20:10; Deu_22:22-24; Pro_2:16-19; Pro_6:23-33; Jer_5:7-9; Jer_29:21-23; Eze_23:43-47; Mal_3:5-6; Mat_5:27-32; Mat_19:9, Mat_19:16, Mat_19:18/ Mar_10:17, Mar_10:19/ Luk_18:18, Luk_18:20; 1Co_6:9-10; Gal_5:16-21; Heb_13:4; Rev_2:22-23… etc. Also see: Mat_15:19; Mar_7:21; Rom_13:9-10; Jas_2:11-12; 2Pet_2:14, 2Pet_2:17-22

 

Divorce and Remarriage is Adultery

Mat_5:27-32; Mat_19:3-10; Mar_10:2-12; Luk_16:16-18; Rom_7:2-3; 1Co_7:10-11, 1Co_7:39

 

And instead of warning please issued to a dead and perishing people, we so frequently enter a church building only to see and hear professional speakers playing nice religious games over the deathbeds of the condemned. We hear the demonic sounds of comforting fabrications that call church goers “God’s people” and “The house of the lord,” as though the pews were actually occupied by people who Loved the Bible enough to obey it.

When are we going to walk into churches and hear pastors pleading with their members to repent and save themselves from perishing under the unbearable weight of God’s mighty judgment and fierce wrath against their souls for living in sin (Act_2:40; Act_20:21, Act_20:24; Luk_12:5; 2Co 5:11; Heb_10:31; Jud_1:23)? When are pastors going to hold their people accountable for living in sin and fearlessly taking the name of Jesus upon them? When are we going to stop paying professional entertainers to lie to us and tell us we are all christians on our way to heaven? When are we going to stop calling divorced and remarried people christians and start calling them adulterers that must repent of their immoral relationships to live, like the Scriptures say? But for the sake of those among the church who are in this state, the church and her leaders now sacrifice the Truth to give “vain comfort” to the church’s own destruction (see Zec_10:2-3).

Practically no one that really sees the modern church, except a blind humanistic fool, would even attempt to seriously say that the church as a whole is getting closer and closer to the Truth. The corruption is obvious. It is clear that we are not evolving upward, but corroding downward into sin and then finally into hell itself. It is an obvious blight against us before the church and the rest of the world that the church is slowly and sometimes rapidly declining into her state of apostasy, just as the Scriptures have said warning us over and over (2Th_2:3, 2Th_2:5; 1Ti_4:1-3; 2Ti_4:3-4). “christian” television serves as an obvious reminder that the antichrist is not far off. Yes, his spirit is already in our midst preaching to us!

 

>>R: check out MT/ DSS

Ezr_9:2 CAB …the hand of the rulers has been first in this transgression.

>> this shows us even from the NT that it will be the leaders who corrupt in the end-times:

 

2Pe_2:2-3 CAB  And many will follow after their… [Textual variation: “destructions” (απωλειαις), (T/S Texts), or “lustfulness-es” (ασελγειαις), (B/A Texts); (see “GNT” in the Bibliography)], because of whom the way of truth will be blasphemed.  3  And by covetousness they will exploit you with fabricated words; for a long time their judgment has not been idle, and their destruction will not sleep.

2Pe_2:2-3 KJB And many shall follow their damnable ways; because of whom the way of truth shall be spoken evil of. 3 And through greediness they shall with deceptive words make merchandise of you: whose judgment from of old does not wait, and their damnation does not sleep.

 

In light of the fallen state of the church, it is only reasonable to expect that if the church forsakes long-held strict hard-core positions for more complacent ones, we can be certain that in such cases it is only for the sake of sin, which is exactly what the Scriptures predict.

The pastors have become the fathers of this corruption in the modern Western church having propagated others worse than themselves, by their damnable propaganda (Mat_23:15). And why should we be surprised? The Scriptures have foretold these days, again and again they have been spoken of from the days of the prophets on through the writings of the New Testament.

 

Some Serious Biblical Warnings About Pastors

>>R: research Hebrew/ Greek

In every one of the following verses, the same Hebrew word is used which can, and does, get translated as either “pastor” or “shepherd.” The words “pastor” or “shepherd” are the exact same concept Biblically, but we have distinguished them culturally in English. (This same principal applies in Hebrew as well as Greek). For the sake of direct application, the following passages are all marked with the word “pastor” whenever it is not translated that way.

There are a lot of verses I am about to give you here, so if you like, you can skim through and read only the underlined portions. But in all cases, please be sober minded and clean hearted so that you may nobly consider these verses as they speak to us today, and, “…just as the Holy Spirit says: ‘Today, if you will hear His voice,  8  Do not harden your hearts as in the rebellion, in the day of trial in the wilderness,’” (Heb_3:7-8 CAB).

 

Warnings Throughout the Bible Against Pastors!

Jer_10:20-21 CAB Your tabernacle is in a ruinous state, it has perished; and all your curtains have been torn asunder. My children and my cattle are no more; there is no longer any place for my tent, nor place for my curtains.  21  For the shepherds [pastors] have become foolish G1197, [or messed up or senseless] and have not sought the Lord; therefore the whole pasture has failed, and the sheep have been scattered.

 

Jer_10:20-21 KJV My tabernacle is spoiled, and all my cords are broken: my children are gone forth of me, and they are not: there is none to stretch forth my tent any more, and to set up my curtains. For the pastors are become brutishG1197, [or messed up or senseless] and have not sought the LORD: therefore they shall not prosper, and all their flocks shall be scattered.

 

Jer_12:6-11 CABDo not trust in them, though they shall speak fair words to you.  7  I have forsaken My house, I have left My heritage; I have given My beloved one into the hands of her enemies.  8  My inheritance has become to Me as a lion in a forest; she has uttered her voice against Me; therefore have I hated her.  9...Go, gather together all the wild beasts of the field, and let them come to devour her.  10  Many shepherds [pastors] have destroyed My vineyard, they have defiled My portion, they have made My desirable portion a trackless wilderness.  11  It is made a complete ruin: <<for My>> sake the whole land has been utterly ruined, because there is none that takes the matter to heart.

 

Jer_12:6-11 KJB don’t believe them, though they speak fair words [“words” not in 4QJera] unto you. 7 I have forsaken my house, I have left my heritage; I have given the dearly beloved of my soul into the hand of her enemies. 8 My heritage is unto me as a lion in the forest; it cries out against me: therefore I have hated it. 9 …come… assemble all the beasts of the field, come to devour. 10 Many pastors have destroyed my vineyard, they have trodden my portion under foot, they have made my pleasant portion a desolate wilderness. 11 They have made it desolate, and being desolate it mourns unto me; the whole land is made desolate, because no man takes it to heart.

 

No one takes to heart the corruption in this issue, and so the church acquires cancers.

 

Jer_22:22 CAB  The wind shall tend [i.e. blow away] all your shepherds [pastors], and your lovers shall go into captivity; for then shall you be ashamed and disgraced because of all your lovers. [see: 4QJerc]

 

Jer_22:22 KJB The wind shall eat up [better? From MT: sweep away] all your pastors, and your lovers shall go into captivity: surely then you shall be ashamed and confounded for all your wickedness.

 

Jer_23:1-4 CAB Woe to the shepherds [pastors] that destroy and scatter the sheep of their pasture!  2  Therefore thus says the Lord against them that tend My people: You have scattered My sheep, and driven them out... behold, I will take vengeance upon you according to your evil practices… 4  And I will raise up shepherds to them, who shall feed them…, and <<they shall fear no more, nor be alarmed, says the Lord.>>

 

Jer_23:1-4 KJBWoe be unto the pastors that destroy and scatter the sheep of my pasture!” Says the LORD. 2 Therefore thus says the LORD God of Israel against the pastors that feed my people; “You have scattered my flock, and driven them away… behold, I will visit upon you the evil of your doings, says the LORD… 4 And I will set up pastors over them which shall feed them: and …neither shall they be lacking, says the LORD.”

 

Jer_25:33-37 CAB  And the slain of the Lord shall be in the day of the Lord from one end of the earth even to the other end of the earth. They shall not be buried; they shall be as dung on the face of the earth.  34  Howl, O you shepherds [pastors], and cry; lament, you rams [i.e. male leaders] of the flock: for your days have been completed for slaughter, and you shall fall as the choice rams.  35  And flight shall perish from the shepherds [pastors], and safety from the rams of the flock.  36  A voice of the crying of the shepherds [pastors], and a moaning of the sheep and the rams: for the Lord has destroyed their pastures.  37  And the peaceful dwellings that remain shall be destroyed before the fierceness of My anger.

 

Jer_25:33-37 KJB And the slain of the LORD shall be at that day from one end of the earth even unto the other end of the earth: they shall not be lamented, neither gathered, nor buried; they shall be dung upon the ground. 34 Howl, you pastors, and cry; and wallow yourselves in the ashes, you <<leaders>> of the flock: for the days of your slaughter and of <<your dispersions are accomplished>>; and you shall fall like <<a pleasant vessel>>. 35 And the pastors shall have no way to flee, nor the leaders of the flock to escape. 36 A voice of the cry of the pastors, and a howling of the leaders of the flock, shall be heard: for the LORD has spoiled their pasture. 37 And the peaceable habitations are cut down because of the fierce anger <<of the LORD>>.

 

Jer_50:6-7 CAB  My people have been lost sheep; their shepherds [pastors] thrust them out, they caused them to wander on [DSS: “they have turned back from” (4QJerc)] the mountains; they went from mountain to hill, they forgot their resting place.  7  All that found them consumed them. Their enemies said, Let us not leave them alone, because they have sinned against the Lord…

 

Jer_50:6-7 KJB My people have been lost sheep: their pastors have caused them to go astray, they have turned them away on [DSS: “they have turned back from” (4QJerc)]  the mountains: they have gone from mountain to hill, they have forgotten their resting place. 7 All that found them have devoured them: and their adversaries said, “We do not sin, because they have sinned against the LORD…”

 

Eze_34:1-10 CAB And the word of the Lord came to me, saying,  2  Son of man, prophesy against the shepherds [pastors] of Israel...  4  The weak one you have not strengthened… and the stray one you have not turned back, and the lost you have not sought…  9  for this cause, O shepherds, 10  thus says the Lord God: Behold, I am against the shepherds; and I will require My sheep at their hands, and will turn them back that they shall not feed My sheep… [It is good to read all of chapter 34, especially verses 1-16]

 

Eze_34:1-9 KJB And the word of the LORD came unto me, saying, 2 Son of man, prophesy against the pastors of Israel… 4 The diseased you have not strengthened… neither have you brought again that which was driven away, neither have you sought that which was lost… 9; and I will require my flock at their hand, and cause them to cease from feeding the flock… [It is good to read all of chapter 34, especially verses 1-16]

 

·       Today’s pastors have left those diseased in their sin telling them that it is not sin.

·       They have not “brought again that which was driven away,” [such as the time-honored Biblical Truth of this issue] neither have they “sought that which was lost”

·       “Therefore… the Lord GOD says… I am against the pastors”

 

Isa_56:9-11 CAB  All you beasts of the field, come, devour, all you beasts of the forest.  10  See how they are all blinded; they have not known; they are dumb dogs that will not bark; dreaming of rest, loving to slumber.  11  Yea, they are insatiable dogs, that know not what it is to be filled, and they are <<wicked>>, having no understanding; all have followed their own ways, each according to his will.

 

[Technical Source text Note: I have particularly used CAB for Isaiah, because it is based on the LXX, and this Greek source text is basically what the New Testament usually uses for Isaiah (for more, see the online version of our Bibliography under, “Finding the Old Testament”)]

Isa_56:9-12 WEB All you animals of the field, come to devour, yes, all you animals in the forest. His watchmen are blind, they are all without knowledge; they are all mute dogs, they can’t bark; dreaming, lying down, loving to slumber. Yes, the dogs are greedy, they can never have enough; and these are <<pastors>> who can’t understand: they have all turned to their own way, each one to his gain, from every quarter. Come you, say they, I will get wine, and we will fill ourselves with strong drink; and tomorrow shall be as this day, a day great beyond measure.

 

“Every thing’s fine…” they tell us. “Everyone here is saved…” they lie – as they and their churches wallow in adultery on their way to hell.

 

Zec_10:3 a CAB  My anger was kindled against the shepherds [pastors]

 

And Jesus says:

 

Mat_23:13-16 CAB …you will receive greater condemnation.  14  Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! Because you shut up the kingdom of heaven before men; for you do not enter, nor do you allow those who are entering to go in.  15  Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! Because you travel around land and sea to make one proselyte, and whenever he becomes one, you make him twice as much a son of hell as you.  16  Woe to you, blind guides

>> I think I need to say something like:

It was in the OT and the NT, and it also says it will be like this in the end times when the leaders will be guilty of leading people astray:

>> recall/ combine 2Pe ref here

Heap themselves teachers having itching ears… >> compare others and TSK here…

 

And God also says:

 

Isa_6:10 CAB  …their ears are hard of hearing, and they have closed their eyes; lest they should see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand with their heart, and be converted, and I should heal them.

 

[Technical Source text Note: I have particularly used CAB for Isaiah, because it is based on the LXX, and this Greek source text is basically what the New Testament usually uses for Isaiah – especially with this particular passage (as seen in Isa_6:9-10; Mat_13:14-15; Mar_4:12; Act_28:26-27; Joh_12:40), (for more, see the online version of our Bibliography under, “Finding the Old Testament”)]

See: (1) http://mysite.verizon.net/rgjones3/Septuagint/spIs6-91.html | (2) http://mysite.verizon.net/rgjones3/Septuagint/spIs6-93.html | (3) http://mysite.verizon.net/rgjones3/Septuagint/spIs6-10.html

 

We can protest all we want and say, “these Bible verses do not apply today,” but don’t they apply when it is obvious that we are living in the exact same sins?

If we will repent of our falsehood in this area and no longer except people as christians who are divorced and remarried, including pastors, then we have this promise from God concerning pastors and leaders:

 

Jer_2:8 CAB  …the shepherds [pastors] also sinned against Me…

 

Jer_3:14-15 CAB  Turn, you children that have revolted, says the Lord...  15  And I will give you shepherds [pastors] after My heart, and they shall certainly tend you with knowledge.

 

Jer_3:14-15 KJV Turn, O backsliding children, says the LORD… 15 And I will give you pastors according to mine heart, which shall feed you with knowledge and understanding.

 

(Also remember that we quoted Eze_34:9-16 and Jer_23:4 a few passages ago, and you can also see these references for this same promise).

 

Don’t Lie About Divorce And Remarriage

If Jesus called divorce and remarriage adultery, we are in a dreadful place if we say that it is not continuing in sin:

 

Isa_5:20 CAB  Woe to them that call evil good, and good evil; who make darkness light, and light darkness; who make bitter sweet, and sweet bitter.

 

Pro_17:15 CAB  He that <<pronounces the unjust just, and the just unjust,>> is <<unclean>> and abominable before God.

Pro_17:15 KJV  He that justifieth the wicked, and he that condemneth the just, even they both are abomination to the LORD.

 

And speaking of God’s eternal Kingdom it says,

 

Rev_21:27 WEB  There will in no way enter into it anything profane [κοινὸν – lit. common; fig. unclean/ defiling], or one who causes an abomination or a lie, but only those who are written in the Lamb’s book of life.

 

And again,

 

Rev_22:15 CAB  But outside are dogs and drug users* and fornicators and murderers and idolaters, and everyone who loves and practices a lie.

 

[* φαρμακοὶ – i.e. those who use drugs to connect with the spiritual realm, usually in reference to, magicians/ sorcerers)]

 

We ought to fear God and not “call evil good” (Isa_5:20), and “justify the wicked” (Pro_17:15), because we know that if we do, we will be ‘outside with the dogs’ for ‘loving and making a lie’ (Rev_21:27; Rev_22:15)

 

Some Questions to Ask Yourself As A church Person and or Leader

 

First: Am I leading people to believe that main-stream christianity is going to heaven when the Bible says that it will go to hell?: 2Th_2:3, 2Th_2:5; 1Ti_4:1-3; 2Ti_4:3-4; 2Pe_2:2

 

Rom_9:27 CAB  Isaiah also cries out concerning Israel: “If the number of the sons of Israel were as the sand of the sea, the remnant shall be saved;

 

>>R

Rom_11:5 CAB  Even so then, at this present time also there is a remnant according to the election of grace [favor].

 

Second: Am I sinning against the honor of God and the souls of men by telling them that they are going to heaven when they are in a relationship that God calls adultery and strictly condemns?

 

>DivRem List

Adultery Condemned

Exo_20:14/Deu_5:18; Lev_20:10; Deu_22:22-24; Pro_2:16-19; Pro_6:23-33; Jer_5:7-9; Jer_29:21-23; Eze_23:43-47; Mal_3:5-6; Mat_5:27-32; Mat_19:9, Mat_19:16, Mat_19:18/ Mar_10:17, Mar_10:19/ Luk_18:18, Luk_18:20; 1Co_6:9-10; Gal_5:16-21; Heb_13:4; Rev_2:22-23… etc. Also see: Mat_15:19; Mar_7:21; Rom_13:9-10; Jas_2:11-12; 2Pet_2:14, 2Pet_2:17-22

 

Divorce and Remarriage is Adultery

Mat_5:27-32; Mat_19:3-10; Mar_10:2-12; Luk_16:16-18; Rom_7:2-3; 1Co_7:10-11, 1Co_7:39

 

Eze_3:18-19 CAB When I say to the wicked, You shall surely die; and you have not warned him, to give warning to the wicked, to turn from his ways, that he should live; that wicked man shall die in his iniquity; but his blood will I require at your hand.  19  But if you warn the wicked, and he turn not from his wickedness, and from his way, that wicked man shall die in his iniquity, and you shall deliver your soul. (Also see Eze_33:9)

 

Eze_3:18-19 MKJV When I say to the wicked, You shall surely die; and you do not give him warning, nor speak to warn the wicked from his wicked way, to save his life; the same wicked one shall die in his iniquity; but I will require his blood at your hand. 19 Yet if you warn the wicked, and he does not turn from his wickedness nor from his wicked way, he shall die in his iniquity; but you have delivered your soul. (Also see Eze_33:9)

 

The mercy of God be upon those who do not do these things, and upon those who consider and repent, and the judgment and fierce wrath of God be upon those who continue.

 

2. The REAL Problem: Prioritizing People Before God!

 

Pastors and church Leaders are No Different than School Kids Who Compromise Out of Peer Pressure

Perhaps many of us remember being in Middle School and High School, and perhaps we remember how much peer pressure there is to conform to social norms, and often there is extreme pressure to do things that are foolish and wrong. Young people do what they do because they are young and they are influenced by their friends to do these things because they want to be accepted. Having been raised in typical American culture, I remember what it is like to feel like your whole world revolves around your “friends.”

We may recount how vain and foolish it can be to give yourself to “friends” in school, especially when kids give into the pressure to do bad things, and to even lie to their parents. In school you often don’t realize that in a few years most all of these “friends” will be completely gone, and then what will you have left to show for all of the foolish and sinful things you have done in your few years of pleasing your peers? Your parents whom you lied to are still in your life, but your peers you sought to please are usually all gone. This same reality is even more potent when we talk about church situations.

So many church leaders are compromising just like school kids and even lying before the Father who is over all creation in order to please the people in their congregations. For this fleeting and vain church social life, they will breach integrity over and over and fail to do what is right. But when judgment comes, where will all of their friends be whom they lied for? In that day pastors will be like school kids who have graduated only to find that all of their friends have abandoned them, and they are now left alone to face the reality of life. It is no more fun and games, but now reality must hit, and who can stand when this means judgment before God?

The cheap and fleeting false comfort of telling church goers that they are going to heaven is a social addiction that modern pastors are enslaved to. This foolish and sinful lie is based off of a counterfeit “love” which is not giving people love at all, but is really feeding a social addiction that does not tell people what is in their best interest so as to possibly save their souls from hell.

It is time some real integrity for truth hit our conscious, and we realized how vain, foolish and cheep our socializing is, and we repented for sinning against God to please the people. It is high time that we valued God over pleasing men, so as to not give our lives to fleeting lies and vanity. It is high time that we repented of being school kids pleasing our peers, so that when the reality of judgment hits, we will have some reason and bases to face it boldly with the confidence that comes from a life given to please Jesus.

 

The Root of The Apostasy

We often only see the problems that occur on the surface level while there are underlying roots that are made up of deeper principal matter, which cause exterior visible issues that we mistake for the main problems.  If we deal with the technicalities of surface level problems and forget to remove the principal by which we erred, then we do not cleanse the heart from sin. Because of this, we must truly cleanse ourselves of the principle root of corruption, which means, before we can reasonably finish repenting of our countless sins against marriage, we must first repent of loving people more than God in the first place.

If the divorce and remarriage teaching presented in this writing seems farfetched, impractical, impossible, or inconsistent with your perception of God, I have found that it is almost always a direct result of this root lodged in a person’s heart.  When you deal with this root, the truth of the divorce and remarriage teaching becomes natural and obvious. This teaching is actually very simple in its main and basic essence. It is the unfaithful heart of man that complicates these things in our perception beyond the scope of obedience.

 

church People Have the Same Problem that Other Unbelievers Have

I have found the same type of problem when talking to unbelievers about the subject of apologetics (mostly proving the reliability of the Bible by science) as I have had with church people who do not believe the Biblical marriage teaching. When people oppose me in apologetics, it is never the lack of scientific evidence that is holding them back from following Jesus. The evidence is clearly and certainly stacked in my favor by God: Because God truly made the heavens and earth, and this is obvious, the only reason people don’t believe is because they want to continue in sin. It really comes down to not being willing to repent, change, choose to believe, and give up your life that holds people back. It is not a real need of proof.  The real issue is not whether or not something has been proven, but whether or not people are willing to stop sinning and turn toward Jesus, whether the issue is apologetics or marriage.

But whether it is apologetics or the issue of divorce and remarriage, the same problem is predominant:  Though there may be difficulties, problems to address, and lack of information at first, there is an abundance of proof that clearly shows up in the end and testifies with great certainty when we make our heart aright to look for what is true.  Truth seekers will often go to great lengths to dig up and present the details to reaffirm the reality of what is true.  But beyond this lies the main battlefield where people decide if they’re willing to face the sinfulness of their cherished beliefs, and choose to believe God instead.

After questions have been addressed and truth has been clearly presented, the real issue is no longer what the Bible says, but the eagerness in the heart of people, which will either leap unto obedience or cringe backward from the cost of believing the Truth.

As long as there will be eager and hungry people, humble enough to embrace the truth, there will be revolutionaries who proclaim what the Bible says about divorce and remarriage.

 

Either We Repent or We Fall

It is reported that our pastors are now getting divorced more than our lay people.  If the blind lead the blind, they will certainly both fall (See Mat_15:14 and Luk_6:39)!  Though the Scriptures are clearly against such remarried pastors, they continue in their sin and even propagate it because they love their own lives in this age more than Jesus and His Words. And if we put more value on following our pastors over the Bible, then we will continue to fall into errors at faster and faster speeds.

The reason that this teaching on divorce and remarriage has abruptly become unpopular is not because it is not solidly found in the Scriptures. As I have documented in the appendix entitled, “The Historical Church Teaching,” we can clearly see that the church has basically preached this hard teaching for the vast majority of her existence! The real problem is that we have placed a higher priority on accommodating the remarried people who come to us for answers than our loyalty to Jesus and His Word. If all that we had and desired in the church was the obedience to the truth of the Scriptures, then we would never be so pressed to come up with such disturbing compromises as have been opposed in this book.

 

A Right Priority for Love – It is Time We Finally Loved God FIRST!

Almost invariably we end up loving ourselves first, others second, and give God third place while we go to church every Sunday and claim, that God is first in our life. We will deny the reality of our hypocrisy claiming that we love God with sincerity, but when our beliefs about truth are tested and searched out by the Bible, we are found frauds. But to give us freedom from our facade, Jesus has arranged the two greatest commandments in this order for a reason:

 

Mat_22:37-39 CAB  Jesus said to him, “ ‘You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.’  38  This is the first and great commandment.  39  And the second is like it: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’

 

It is easy to see these two greatest commands consistently repeated in full force throughout the Old and New Testaments, from beginning to end:

 

Love GodDeu_6:5; Deu_10:12; Deu_30:6; Mar_12:32-33; Luk_10:27-28;

Love Neighbor Lev_19:18, Mat_19:19; Mar_12:31-34; Luk_10:27-28; Rom_13:9-10; Gal_5:14; Jam_2:8

 

If we break these, the greatest commandments, we will certainly also break the others. And if we pervert these two by reversing their order, we will also distort the rest of the Bible to suit our perversion, and worship a pagan god in the process.  If we sin so greatly against the two greatest commands, then everything beneath them will be tainted with this same idolatry.

 

The Solution is Prioritizing Jesus… Who is The Truth

The main problem is not with the clarity of the Scriptures but rather with many church leaders with adulterous hearts turning away from the truth for the sake of their human sympathy. They make many attempts to accommodate the apparent needs of remarried couples to stay remarried, and so often, they are even remarried themselves! In light of this, it was quoted at the beginning of this work in the preface:

 

Rom_3:4 Jos.Trans.** ...let God be true, but every man a liar; as it is written, that you may be justified in your words, and overcome in your being judged.

 

It is tragic to say, but we need this verse more and more as the days go by, because more and more people are becoming liars, both in and out of the church, in the forms of leaders and followers, and in every other form in between (1Ti_4:1-2; 2Ti_2:16-19; 2Ti_3:13; 2Th_2:9-12; Also see: 2Pe_3:3; Rev_12:9; Rev_13:14; Rev_18:23).

When you first let God be true in your heart, then you will be able to truly Love others with God’s Love and not simply with the human counterfeit of sympathy. If we do not repent quickly from this attitude of prioritizing people over God, then we will fall under the same curse that was given to Eli, the high priest, when God declared that He was going to take the priesthood from him because of his sin. Even now, God’s Spirit says this to church leaders all over the modern world and beyond:

 

>>R Check Greek & DSS here…

1Sa_2:29-33 CAB  Therefore why have you looked upon My incense offering and My grain offering … and …honored your sons above Me, … I will only honor them that honor Me, and he that despises Me shall be despised. [or cursed or lightly esteemed]  31  Behold,… I will destroy your seed, and the seed of your father’s house.  32  And you shall not have an old man in My house forever.  33  And if I do not destroy a man of yours from My altar, it shall be that his eyes may fail and his soul may perish; and everyone that remains in your house shall fall by the sword of men…

1Sa_2:29-36 LITV Why do you kick at My sacrifice and at My offering… And …honor your sons above Me …those who honor Me I will honor; and those despising Me will be despicable. [or cursed or lightly esteemed] 31 Behold, …I shall cut off your arm, and the arm of your father’s house, that no old man shall be in your house. 32 …And there shall not be an old man in your house all the days. [or forever] 33 And the man of yours that I shall not cut off from My altar shall be to cause your eyes to fail, and to grieve your soul. And all the increase of your house shall die young men…

 

Without urgent repentance from these things, we will not be counted worthy of Him:

 

Mat_10:37 CAB He who loves father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me. And he who loves son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of Me.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       

 

And

 

Luk_14:26 CAB If anyone comes to Me and does not hate his father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters, yes, and his own life also, he cannot be My disciple.

 

Whether one loves their self or others more than God, both are sin, and both disqualify a person from being a True disciple of Jesus, and both disqualify a person from operating in God’s true divine Love. Let us embrace the truth about divorce and remarriage and repent, even at the cost of “every man.” This is the only way in Heaven’s courts that we will be said to be operating in the real Love of God on this issue.

 

3. Your Stance on This Issue is Not Morally Neutral

>> should I incorporate any of the preceding statements?

1Ti_4:16 WEB  Pay attention to yourself, and to your teaching. Continue in these things, for in doing this you will save both yourself and those who hear you.

 

>R

1Ti_6:3-5 CAB  If anyone teaches differently [ ἑτεροδιδασκαλεῖ – lit. does other teaching] and does not consent to [ προσέρχεται – lit. come/ “draw” near to] sound words, even those of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to the doctrine [διδασκαλίᾳ – teaching] which accords with godliness [εὐσέβειαν – lit. good (εὐ) reverence (σέβειαν)/ adoration; see: G2150 > G2152 > G2095 + G4576], 4  he is puffed up, understanding [ἐπιστάμενος – lit. standing upon; fig. establishing the mind on] nothing, but is morbidly concerned with [ νοσῶν περὶ – lit. sick around/ “concerning”] disputes [ζητήσεις – lit. seekings/ “questions”] and word battles, from [ἐξ – out (of)] which come [γίνεται – becomes/ ‘is begotten’] envy, strife, slanders [βλασφημίαι – blasphemies; lit. damage-speakings; fig. slander-speakings (against God or people)], evil suspicions [1ὑπόνοιαι 2πονηραί – 2evil/ wicked/ “perverted,” 1under-minded-thinking],  5  constant wrangling [διαπαρατριβαὶ] of men of corrupt minds [νοῦν] and having been deprived [ἀπεστερημένων] of the truth, supposing [νομιζόντων] that godliness [εὐσέβειαν – lit. good reverence] is a means of profit. Withdraw from such people.

 

1Ti_6:3-5 KJB If any man teach otherwise, and does not consent to wholesome words, the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to the doctrine which is according to godliness; 4 He is proud, knowing nothing, but Has a sick appetite about questions and strifes of words, of which come envy, strife, railings, evil suspicions, 5 Perverse disputings of men of corrupt minds, and destitute of the truth, supposing that godliness is a means of gain: withdraw yourself from such.

 

>>R – Don’t I have this in Judging the church – replace all from there?-

2Jn_1:9-11 CAB  Everyone who transgresses and does not abide in the doctrine of Christ [ τοῦ χριστοῦ – the anointed one] does not have God. He who abides in the doctrine of Christ, this one has both the Father and the Son.  10  If anyone comes to you and does not bring this doctrine, do not receive him into your house, and do not greet him;  11  for he who greets him shares in his evil works.

 

>R

2Th_2:11-12 CAB  And *because of [*διὰ] this, God will send them *strong delusion [*ἐνέργειαν πλάνης – lit. an energizing of trickery/ deception], *in order for [εἰς τὸ – lit. into that of] them to believe the lie [τῷ ψεύδει],  12  so that they all might be damned [κριθῶσι – judged and condemned] who did not believe the truth, but *delighted in [*εὐδοκήσαντες ἐν τῇ – tested and approved in the…] unrighteousness […to be good (in their minds)].

 

4. We Should Be Right Ourselves Before Opposing Other People’s Sins

An Admonition About Application

 

I would admonish all that have believed the Bible on this issue:

 

Jam_1:19 CAB …let every man be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger…

 

Be careful that you handle yourself well, “…speaking the truth in love…” (Eph_4:15 CAB).

 

Remember, there is,

 

Ecc_3:7 CABa time to be silent, and a time to speak;

(Also see: Ecc_3:1, and see “Repent of Words” as referenced in a moment).

> es format: Ecc_3:1

 

And there is also a time to rebuke and confront as John the Baptist, (Mat_3:7-12; Mat_14:3-4; Mar_6:17-18; Luk_3:7-9, Luk_3:19) and a time to gently instruct!

 

>>R

Heb_5:2 CAB being able to deal gently with those who sin in ignorance and go astray, since he himself is also subject to weakness.

 

Also see: 2Ti_2:25; Deu_13:1-18; Deu_18:21-22; 1Jo_4:1-3; 1Jn_4:5-6 (Compare: 1Jn_4:2)

 

>>R: get my own trans of this?? Ab truth?

Jud_1:22-23 WEB On some have compassion, making a distinction, and some save, snatching them out of the fire with fear, hating even the clothing stained by the flesh.

 

Consider:

Jud_1:22-23 CAB  And have mercy on some, making a distinction;  23  but others save with fear, snatching them out of the fire, hating even the garment having been stained by the flesh.

 

Because

 

1Co_14:32 CAB  …the spirits of the prophets are subject to the prophets.

>>!

 

And how much more self-control should you have over your spirit to avoid speaking if you are not even specifically speaking something particularly prophetic? If a man under Divine inspiration is obligated under self-control, then we do not have more rights than they do to speak out.

So practice self-control. You don’t have to blast everyone who disagrees with truth. Don’t be self-motivated to confront people, but actually be spiritual from God instead of your own soul and flesh. God knows when the times and the hearts are right to speak, so listen to Him.

 

(For more on this, see the extremely important Bible study entitled, “Repent of Words” on www.TrueConnection.org)

 

5. Experience – The Bible Actually Works When You Believe and Obey it

 

We have spent so much time to show what the Bible says on marriage, but it is yet valuable to show that this teaching absolutely touches “real life” yielding profoundly deep experiences. Though I have presented a lot of Biblical proofs, this teaching is also real in my life. It is not only a “theological belief,” but also something that I have experienced.

If anyone takes Jesus seriously at all, they end up emphasizing the infinite and perfect authority of the Bible over human opinions derived from their subjective experiences.  We are not to rely on imperfect men, but on the perfect Word of God.  We might be tempted to think from all of this that all experience should be disregarded, but this is not the example given in the Bible itself.  The Biblical principle has always been: if it does not line up with the Bible, then reject it, even if it seems miraculous.  If it is miraculous and completely Biblical then we can know that God has sent it.  If you are not yet familiar with this very basic truth, it is very important to solidify yourself in it:

 

Deu_13:1-18; Deu_18:21-22; 1Jn_4:1-3, 1Jn_4:5-6

 

Because we see this principle alive and displayed in the Scriptures, we ought to follow it as well.  Whatever “experience” we may have to confirm things that are contrary to the Bible, we ought to shun and totally cast out from our presence as a cancerous unclean thing.  Such “experiences” have our death and destruction in mind.  But if we have experiences that confirm the Scriptures and are of the same Spirit, then we can have God’s words confirmed and made more sure in our lives. 

Unfortunately, most people use their subjective personal experiences to deny the clear teachings of the Bible, and this ought to never be done.  We ought to always be on guard that our experience does not become the idol we use to keep us from the truth of the Bible.

In light of these things, I have experienced many things from God on this issue of divorce and remarriage.  As my primary means a solidifying myself in truth, I must know and read what the Bible says on this issue.  But with further joy, confidence, and confirmation I know that my experiences are true because they line up with the Scriptures.  At the same time, I also have the Scriptures “made surer” because they are real and alive in my life! My experiences confirm exactly what the Bible says.  When the Bible prophesies it, and these very prophecies are fulfilled in my life, both are proven to be true.  After strict judgment, I have confirmed my experiences by the Scriptures, and the Scriptures are confirmed by my experiences.

This teaching is engraved in me, because I have lived it.

There are too many things to mention that God has done to confirm this teaching in my life, but among other things, for many years I have repeatedly heard God testify against people, even giving Words of Knowledge to reveal that they were divorced and remarried. In these cases, no man told me that these things were so in their marital life, but they came by the revelation of the Holy Spirit, and were confirmed in human terms over countless situations and relationships.

In one specific case (before I was completely solidified concerning the issue of women speaking in assembly) I was already aware of God’s over-all testimony against a certain guest speaker who had been invited again to a church that I had been attending. As I sat and listened to her I asked God (being perplexed) “What is it Lord?? Why is this speaker off?!” And I heard God’s testimony within myself giving the answer, “Divorced and Remarried.” And without a pause, as the words were presently burning within me, the speaker immediately said, “...and I divorced and then married my present husband.” At the same moment as my heart was burning before God by the insertion of an answer being divinely declared within me by God, it was also immediately inserted into the speaker’s mouth without missing a beat, even though they had not discussed marriage previous to this.

Is it then so possible that God moves people’s mouths to confess their sin and confirm His Word against them without them being aware of it?  I’ve experienced it.  It confirms that the Scriptures are absolutely true. I have experienced so many things like this that I have become all the more convinced of the commission placed on the proclamation of this teaching. God backs me up on this teaching, because He originated it.

 

>>R

Joh_7:16-17 CAB Therefore Jesus answered them and said, “My doctrine is not Mine, but His who sent Me.  17  If anyone desires to do His will, he will know about the doctrine, whether it is from God, or whether I am speaking on My own authority.

 

>> Consider Differences:

Joh_7:16-17 KJVCNT  Jesus answered them, and said, My doctrine is not mine, but his that sent me.  17  If any man will do his will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I speak of myself.

 

Joh_7:16-17 WEB  Jesus therefore answered them, “My teaching is not mine, but his who sent me.   17  If anyone desires to do his will, he will know about the teaching, whether it is from God, or if I am speaking from myself.

 

And if so many stagger in unbelief and set at nothing the consistent and miraculous testimony that I and others with me have had concerning the truth of this teaching, it is no wonder:

 

>>R

Joh_5:45-47 CAB Do not think that I will accuse you to the Father; there is one who accuses you—Moses, in whom you have hoped.  46  For if you believed Moses, you would have believed Me; for he wrote about Me.  47  But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe My words?”

 

>> Consider

Joh_5:45-47  WEB  “Don’t think that I will accuse you to the Father. There is one who accuses you, even Moses, on whom you have set your hope.   46  For if you believed Moses, you would believe me; for he wrote about me.   47  But if you don’t believe his writings, how will you believe my words?”

 

I would like to point out that if I said that God had revealed some inspirational, sugar-coated, easy-<<believism>> fluff to me that made everyone feel better about themselves, then most of the church would applaud me as they do most of the writers of christian books today. But because I testify that God often reveals harsh testimonies against certain people and even sometimes specifically reveals their sin, many are my opposers from within the church. They will treat me as a prophet, even if I do not claim to be one:

>>Diedre: << Is “believism” a actual word, if not perhaps quotes would do, put it in quotes >>

 

>>R: collate variations:

Isa_30:10-11 CAB  who say to the prophets, Report not to us; and to them that see visions, Speak them not to us, but speak and report to us another error;  11  and turn us aside from this way; remove from us this path, and remove from us the oracle of Israel.

>> MT:

Isa_30:10-11 WEB  who tell the seers, “Don’t see;” and to the prophets, “Don’t prophesy to us right things, speak to us smooth things, prophesy deceits,  11  get out of the way, turn aside out of the path, cause the Holy One of Israel to cease from before us.”

 

Some would say that their experience contradicts mine by saying many things like, “the holy spirit witnesses that many divorced and remarried people are saved.”  They will say this even though the couple continues in their second marriage while a first spouse is living, with no concern for how many Scriptures they have to trample upon in the process of defending their lawless and dreadful opinion. I have heard and read so many people saying these types of things to counter the Biblical teaching against divorce and remarriage that I am over-burdened of hearing and seeing this shameful mess of rebellion (2Pe_2:6-19).

I would point out that their “experience with the holy spirit” is contrary to the Scriptures as this work has shown. This shows that it is not the Holy Spirit that they gain their witness from, but some other spirit that dares to oppose the Bible. It is about time we woke up from our apostasy and stopped honoring our pagan spirits above the holy and perfect Cannon of Scripture! If we will first submit to the Scriptures, then we can expect Scriptural experiences to follow. If we honor the Divine authority of the Bible above our own souls, then we can hope in gaining the (Holy) Spirit that wrote the Scriptures to flow through our lives.

>> Experience: we live in a perverted age where people are proud to userp their filthy appinions and wreckless expierences over the Bible, but it is Biblical to use whe it perfectly renforces Scripture, not hen it gloriys a sloppy floppy spirit

 

6. From the End of This Book to the End of this Age

At this time in history, at any moment and with every moment things are so quickly progressing to the coming season of perfect lawlessness when Antichrist will be revealed, and his name will be known and recognized by those whom God has chosen, because they have been anticipating their glorious season of testimony all along. And while I do not know to what degree this particular book may be distributed, I do perceive that it has been set to be a defining help to God’s holy ones as much as it may reach their hands, as I have been joyed by such promises from God in the honor of serving His chosen ones, and have been caused to labor unto this Hope these many years so that you may read these things.

    But though the time is quickly approaching where the Bride is longing to complete her course where she will seal her testimony in her own blood, so also the promised redemption draws near.

    It is unavoidable that at some point in history real Christians will not only see wives cleaving tightly to their first spouses, but also, all at once, as many lamps coming together into one large flame, a persecuted but joyful remnant of people will wake up, come to their senses, stand on their feet, and come from all directions to be one Bride who faithfully holds tightly to her Lawful Husband. If we will hope to make it in the end, the season is here that we must first start holding fast to this hope now!

 

Whether by life or by death, I am laboring intensely with all that I have to be a part of that time, and it is my eager plea and hope that I will meet you there.

 

 

An Overview of Appendices

11/28/09; 12/9 – 12/29/09; 1/30/10; 2/18/10; 2/18/10; 3/16 – 3/18/10; 4/21/10; 12/23/10; 12/25/10; 1/12/11; 5/13/11; (10/13/11)

 

Explanations

The Nature of the Appendices and their Development

This compilation of Appendices is a list of the extra resources available for Divorce and Remarriage Repentance Revolution as seen on the official website:

 

www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com

 

Though many of these extra resources are not finished yet, and are under constant development, they are all currently available online. Eventually we may add some of these resources to the printed version of this book as well in future editions.

    If you check back periodically, you may be able to notice many updates and additions as we hope to have mercy from God to continually make significant improvements until this project may one day finally be completed.

 

>> 1. bibliog is partly available in printed version

>> 2. Wilcox - put a note to hide this for the printed version of the book???

>> add this::  Mostly Research Documentation, not Summary

there are not simplified documents for ease of common use, but these documents are the raw data and research that has been compiled to document and compile the great efforts of research that has gone behind the conclusions in the main book. these are not presented for convenience as much as detailed and through—proof of what truths are summarized and stated elsewhere  

Using the Links

Whether using the printed or the online version of this book, whenever you need to go to any of these resources listed below to make use of the benefits of their digital format (such as visiting the many websites that are referenced) it is generally recommended that you use the shortcut, “www.trueconnection.org/goto/appx” to get to this Overview of Appendices online, and then you may simply click on the links below to get to each appendix.

    But if you ever have to manually enter the links below into a web browser, and for whatever reason you have problems, try adding “www.TrueConnection.org” to the beginning of the link, so that they read, www.trueconnection.org/DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com/...” rather than just saying, “DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com/...” Also please keep in mind that all of our links are case sensitive for now, so that if you mistype any detail of capitalization the link may not work.

 

Divorce And Remarriage Track

The following divorce and remarriage track is designed to help you in your Biblical stance on this issue by summing up all of the primary Scripture references on one piece of paper, so you can have them with you at all times, as needed, or you can simply take them with you and pass them out to those who are hungry for truth.

This is available in PDF format and is designed to be easily copied and redistributed, as needed. It works best if you copy/print the exact same image on both sides of a piece of paper, and then cut the sheet into four pieces.

 

This PDF tract can be found at:

 

www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com/#Resources

 

A Translation and Analysis of the Primary Divorce and Remarriage Passages

www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com/appendix/Translation_Analysis.html

 

Exception Clause Research

www.DivorcAndRemarriageBook.com/appendix/exception_cl_research.html

 

The Historical Church Teaching

www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com/appendix/Historical_Teaching.html

 

Extra Notes on Church History

www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com/appendix/ExtraNotesonChurchHistory.html

 

Marriage Statistics

www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com/appendix/Marriage_Statistics.html

 

Works Cited

www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com/appendix/Works_Cited.html

(Available both online and in the printed book)

 

Bibliography and Glossary

www.trueconnection.org/BibleStudies/Bibliography_and_Glossary.html

(Available both online and in the printed book)

 

Updates & Time Line for The Book

www.DivorceAndRemarriageBook.com/appendix/DivRem_Updates.html

Go to this resource for a record of updates to Divorce and Remarriage Repentance Revolution, especially when you would like to see new sections that have been added or updated since the last printing.

 

Bible Studies Referenced In This Teaching

 

Sin Lists

www.TrueConnection.org/BibleStudies/SinLists.html

 

Repent of Words

www.TrueConnection.org/BibleStudies/Repent_of_Words.html

 

Women in Assembly

www.TrueConnection.org/BibleStudies/Women_in_Assembly.html

 

My compilation of the Book of Malachi

www.trueconnection.org/goto/mal

 

Also see: my Testimony

www.TrueConnection.org/BibleStudies/Josiahs_Testemony.html

 

 

 

 

Judging The Church

www.TrueConnection.org/BibleStudies/Judging_The_Church.htm

 

The Law of Moses

www.TrueConnection.org/BibleStudies/Law_of_Moses.html

 

 

 

 

 


 

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