DIVORCE AND REMARRIAGE
Based on I Cor. 7:10-16
By Pastor Glenn Pease
I got a kick out of the story I heard the other day. This man had
gone to a psychiatrist, and after a great deal of examination he asked the
doctor, "What is wrong with me?" The doctor replied, "I think you are crazy."
"I demand a second opinion," the man insisted. "Very well," said the doctor,
"I also think you are ugly." The only relevance of the story to our theme
is that we are also looking for a second opinion on this issue of divorce
and remarriage. We have looked at what the Old Testament said, and now
we want to look at what the Apostle Paul said.
The Corinthians had
just about every problem known to man, and so we have their problems being
dealt with in Paul's letter to them. This becomes our blessing, for because
of their problems we have authoritative counsel on how to handle them.
What we get from Paul confirms what we studied before. Divorce is not God's
best, and it is never His primary will. However, sometimes it is inevitable
in a world where everyone has a sinful nature. The principle we are seeking
to establish is that whenever divorce is legitimate the right to remarry
is assumed. Moses and Jesus both assumed that divorced people would remarry,
and both gave assurance that it was proper and acceptable to do so when
the divorce was valid.
Paul confirms this in verse 15 by telling
the Christian who has been divorced and deserted by a non-Christian mate
that the marriage has been dissolved, and they are no longer bound. Those
who do not like this conclusion go to verse 39 where Paul says, "A wife
is bound to her husband as long as he lives." They say this has to apply
to the one that Paul says that is not bound in verse 15. It cannot be both
ways. You can't be bound an unbound to a mate at the same time, and so
they say this principle is superior to the words of Paul in verse 15. The
confusion is the result of carelessness with terms. Everyone agrees that
a wife is bound to her husband as long as he lives. That is an absolute
principle, and I have never heard or read of anyone even trying to find
an exception to it. There are no exceptions.
When you introduce
the subject of divorce, however, you are dealing with different terms and
relationships. When a wife is divorced from her husband for adultery, as
Jesus said, or for desertion, as Paul says in verse 15, she is no longer
his wife, and he is no longer her husband. If they were still husband and
wife, they would still be married in the sight of God, and, therefore, bound
to each other. Paul could only say to the wife in verse 15 that she is
not bound, because the divorce from her non-Christian husband made her no
longer his wife. Everywhere that a true divorce takes place the terms husband
and wife no longer apply. We saw in part 1 in our study of Deut. 24:1-4
where divorce changed the husband to a former husband, and set the wife
free to remarry. Paul is not saying in verse 39 that a former wife is bound
to her former husband as long as he lives. That is the very thing we are
establishing that is not true to Scripture, and that is why Paul says in
verse 15 that a mate properly divorced is not bound.
We want to
look now at what appears to be an exception to the principle we are expounding.
In verse 11 Paul tells the Christian wife who has divorced her Christian
husband that she is to remain single and not remarry, but rather seek to
be reconciled. Here is a divorce where remarriage is clearly forbidden.
Why? Because in verse 10 Paul says this kind of divorce is forbidden.
It is not acceptable for two Christians to get divorced. Paul does not
get into the exception of adultery being a valid cause. He is just dealing
with divorce in general. The kind of divorce he is dealing with here is
not valid, and so in God's eyes it does not break the marriage bond. Neither
mate has the right to remarry in such circumstances. One only has the right
when the marriage bond is broken.
This is really not an exception then to the principle we are expounding.
Forbidden divorce naturally does not give the right to remarry. If you
are married it cannot be legitimate to remarry, for this would be bigamy.
The point of the principle we are seeking to establish as being consistent
with all of Scripture is that God expects all unmarried people to have the
right to marry. If you are not married, there is no reason you should be
hindered from getting married. A legitimate divorce returns a person to
the state of being unmarried, and in that state they have the same right
to get married as anyone else who is single. They will have the same desires
and needs that lead them to get married in the first place. There is no
Scripture that says God expects them to remain unmarried. In fact, all
of Scripture expects that they will remarry. If marriage is legitimate
for all unmarried people, then all we have to do is establish that divorce
makes a person no longer married.
Paul does this in verse 11 where he is dealing with the most unacceptable
kind of divorce in all of the Bible. It is the divorce of a Christian wife
from her Christian husband. Note that Paul says that if a Christian wife
does this which is forbidden, she is to remain unmarried, or as some versions
have it, she is to remain single. There is no getting around this clear
word of Paul. Even an illegitimate divorce returns a mate to a state of
singleness where they are no longer married. This Christian wife is now
single says Paul when she divorces her husband. She is not free to remarry,
however, because in God's eyes the marriage bond is not broken, and as far
as He is concerned the man is still her husband, and they are to strive
for reconciliation. Now you can see that if the divorce is legitimate,
and is based on adultery or desertion by a non-Christian, the Christian
is returned to a state of being unmarried with no marriage bond existing.
There is not a hint anywhere in the Bible that this single person is not
free, like all other unmarried people to enter into a relationship that
will lead to marriage.
We need to study these verses carefully to
get as much light as possible on this issue. The first thing Paul does is
make clear who he is addressing. In verse 8 he addressed the unmarried and
widows. Here he addresses the married, and in v. 12 he addresses the rest.
Ignoring this simple fact that Paul is addressing different categories of
people has led to misuse and abuse of this passage. If you read 20 commentaries,
19 of them will point out to you that the rest that Paul addresses in v.
12 are also married, but they are dealt with separately because they are
involved in a mixed marriage with a Christian and a non-Christian. This
is a totally different category than those in verse 10 and 11 where both
are Christians and both are members of the church.
Some commentators
who are more determined to defend their own views than they are to listen
to the Word pay no attention to Paul's distinction here. Listen, for example,
to how one of them avoids Paul's conclusion by forcing Paul to contradict
himself. Commenting on verse 15 he writes, "There are those who make this
verse an argument for a remarriage of divorced people where they point to
the statement that a brother of a sister is not in bondage in such cases.
But this argument is negated entirely by the other statement of Paul in
which he says, "But and if she depart, let her remain unmarried, or be reconciled
to her husband."
Do you see what he has done? He has ignored the
word of Paul to the Christian divorced by the non-Christian to whom he says,
"You are not bound." He goes back to the word of Paul to the two Christians
to whom he says that they are not to remarry. He takes the word that applies
to the two Christians and applies them to the Christian and non-Christian,
and he just ignores Paul's conclusion that they are not in bondage. He
says they have to be in bondage yet, and not set free to remarry because
Paul said they are to remain unmarried, paying no attention to the fact
that Paul draws a clear distinction between the two categories of people.
This is clearly a stubborn refusal to allow Paul to speak for himself.
It is done in order to avoid a conclusion that Paul comes to that does not
fit one's conviction. It is a deliberate abuse to take Paul's conclusion
on the Christian couple and apply it to the couple in the mixed marriage,
for Paul comes to two different conclusions. To ignore this is to reject
the Word of God for the tradition of man. You might differ with Paul when
he shares his own conviction, but no one can question him when he states
what the Lord of the church himself speaks on the issue, which is the case
here with two Christian people. We need to get this distinction clear in
our own minds. In verse 6 Paul says, "I say by permission not of command."
He knows his own conviction is not of absolute authority, for in verse 7
he says he would prefer all Christians to remain single as himself, but
he knows other Christian feel equally strong in their conviction that every
Christian should be happily married. Christians have different gifts Paul
says, and so he knows they will have different convictions, and he does
not expect that his will be acceptable to all.
In verse 12 he again says, "I say, not the Lord." In verse 25 he says,
"I have no command of the Lord but I give you my opinion." It is important
that we pay attention to this distinction between what is clearly commanded
of the Lord, and what is Paul's conviction. Allen Redpath, the one time
pastor of Moody Memorial Church in Chicago, wrote concerning these statements
of Paul, "In other words, he is using his own judgment supported by what
he believes to be the authority of the Holy Spirit. That does not invalidate
this teaching in any way. It does, however, recognize that in matters concerning
marriage there is no law so inclusive as to apply to every situation. Each
case will call for the careful exercise of human judgment under the direction
and authority of the Holy Spirit."
What Redpath says makes so much
sense to pastors who have to wrestle with real life situations where there
is no clear word from the Bible. Paul is doing that in this context, for
he is confronted by issues that never before existed. Paul could not look
to Jesus for a word on a Gentile married to a Jew who did not accept Jesus
as the Messiah. It did not exist in the day of Christ, and so Jesus never
spoke to the issue. Paul had to deal with it without help from Moses in
the Old Testament, or from his Lord. He had no choice but to seek the leading
of the Holy Spirit for wisdom to do what was best. This is what every leader
has to do as he faces situations not covered by Scripture.
In verse
10 Paul says he does not have to wrestle with this issue, for he has the
word of Christ on it. Whether two Christians should get divorced or not
is not a question at all. It is not a matter of majority vote of the Apostles,
or of Paul's conviction. It is a matter of the Lord's command, and Paul
says the Lord has said no to such a divorce. Note that Paul begins in verse
10 with the wife, and then gets to the husband in verse 11. This is in
contrast to all of the rest of the Bible. Why? Because Paul faces a world
totally different from the world of Moses and Jesus. Women did not have
the right to divorce, and so there was no word to them about not doing it.
Paul, however, faces a world where women had the right to divorce their
husbands. They have equal rights in the New Testament, much as is the case
in our own day, and so Paul deals first with the women.
The Lord's command in the Gospels applies to wives as well as husbands,
and so Paul says a wife should not depart or separate from her husband.
The wife is told not to depart because divorce for her means leaving her
husband and going back to mother, or elsewhere. Divorce for the husband
means to put away, or send away, and so we see two different words are used
to describe the women's perspective and the man's, but they both mean divorce.
Paul says a wife should not depart, but Paul knew that saying you shouldn't
do something to a woman does not mean she won't do it. It didn't stop Eve,
and Paul knew that just because it was the Lord's command would not stop
all Christian women from doing it.
He goes on then after saying
you shouldn't do it to say, but if you do, what you shouldn't do, here is
what you should do, when you do what you shouldn't. In other words, Paul
had a backup plan. He was no ivory tower idealist. He knew that real saints
still live like sinners, and so he shows what needs to be done when a Christian
wife fails to do what is best. Paul says here is what is the next best
thing after you have missed the best. Paul's method here is a great lesson.
Like Paul, we must be asking ourselves all the time, what is the next best
thing to do when we have missed God's best? Some Christians are so pessimistic
that when they fail to reach the ideal they collapse in despair and feel
defeated. The proper attitude is this: I have failed to follow the path
to the best, but now which direction can I go to still be in God's will,
and receive the second best, or the third, or the 99th best?
This
is Paul's approach to life, and it is the only realistic approach. Paul
does not go on to look at all the other possible problems that could develop
if this wife also rejects his second command like she does the first. What
if she does go ahead and remarry after he says this is not acceptable?
If she remarried, she would be guilty of adultery, and would thereby destroy
the marriage bond, and kill the union she had with her Christian husband.
Paul is hopeful that Christian couples will see what a blot this would put
on the church, and so avoid this kind of scandal. If the wife remarries
another Christian in the church, and the husband goes on to remarry a Christian
in the church, it is not far removed from wife-swapping, and the church
would be disgraced before the world. Paul says two Christians having serious
marital problems may be forced to separate, and that is bad enough, but
they are to remain unmarried, and seek by all means to overcome their problems
and be reconciled.
Christian couples have an obligation to Christ,
and to His body the church to make sure they get all of the marriage counseling
available to avoid divorce. If divorce comes, they are to be open to reconciliation.
Even when a Christian couple get involved in a situation where adultery
happens, they should labor hard to bring about healing and reconciliation.
Every author you can read agrees that two Christian people should pay any
price to save their marriage.
Paul does not deal with every possible exception. What if a Christian husband
goes off to live in adultery with another woman, and this leads to divorce?
I know of a pastors daughter where this was the case. Her husband is now
married to the woman he went off to live with. The marriage bond was dissolved,
and there was no reason based on the Bible or tradition that would make
anyone assume that he was still her husband. She is now a single woman
again, and she is free to remarry.
I know of another pastors daughter
who was divorced because she discovered her husband was homosexual. Nothing
in the Bible deals with this situation, and so, like Paul, we have to deal
with it seeking the wisdom of the Holy Spirit. She got her divorce and
remarried a Christian man, and there was no way to see that this was not
a wise thing to do. The bottom line in all of this study of divorce and
remarriage is this: Every situation has to be considered on its own merits,
and decisions need to be made in such a way that the grace of God dominates
over any kind of legalism. This is a difficult subject, and the only way
to be right most of the time is to make love the priority.