Would you date or marry a separated or divorced person?

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Dino246

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Jun 30, 2015
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If I made my position clear in the OP, it comes from quoting scripture from the Bible. And that's okay.

The underlying issue may be, 'Do you care what Jesus taught? Do you care what the Bible teaches?'

I see a lot of divorce and remarriage going on. Some pastors, preachers, etc. seem to avoid the topic. Church people may imitate what they see other church people doing.
Many people who have a “strong stance” on remarriage overlook the part about ‘except for adultery’. Unless you know the divorce was for other reasons, don’t judge.
 

presidente

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May 29, 2013
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Prepare to wait the rest of your life.
That is a possibility. Marriage is a risky thing. I had a number of concerns as a single man. I didn't want to 'burn' as a single, but I didn't want to set myself up in some kind of relationship limbo in the future, where I'd be waiting to reconcile with my wife, still 'burning' while doing so unable to marry someone else in good conscience because of what Christ said.

Courtship with my wife before I proposed took about 4 intense months, but I settled the matter in prayer first, and I trusted her to be making a real life-time commitment. I also haven't had affairs. I wouldn't want to nuke the relationship with my wife, and it is a sin against the Lord also.
 

tourist

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Mar 13, 2014
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Marriage is a risky thing.
Yes, it is. It is a calculated risk. Like you yourself did, it is best to spend much prayer before proceeding to establish a relationship that may lead to marriage. Even then, it could go sideways.
 

Sculpt

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Apr 18, 2021
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I'm not totally convinced on interpretations of this. The idea of a _man_ remarrying if his wife commits adultery seems to be a reasonable interpretation of the passage, though another approach to the passage is that it is saying, 'setting aside the issue of fornication' as if it is not being discussed. I've read that as a possible interpretation of the Greek, but with the level of Greek I know, I am not asware of that useage, and I read that before I started really studying Greek.

I also don't see anywhere in the Bible where women are allowed to issue a divorce against men at all. God at least tolerated and regulated polygamy in the Old Testament, polygyny, though, but definitely not polyandry. So there is a reason not to treat the sexes the same way based on the Old Testament when it comes to their roles in marriage. The Old Testament did not provide for women to issue divorce certificates against men, and Christ's teachings in Matthew 19 and elsewhere are more restrictive, not more libertine on this issue.
Researching the topic... please check this out, let me know what you think. This researcher over 200 hours researching divorce, including reading the leading books/scholars on the subject. In the video section below (I bookmarked/hyperlinked it so I starts at the right spot) he gives 5 reasons why he is certain that porneia in Mat 5 & 19 is not referring to premarital sex. He also goes over the 5 most suggested possibilities and speaks to what is the most appropriate definition/application and why. Of course, that whole section is appropriate to listen to, but the '5 reasons why it's not premarital sex' is 57:26 to 1:00:47. The start (setup) to the end of that point is just 5 mins.

Also, below the video it bookmarks/hyperlinks to his research on the passages you note: Mark 10, Matthew 19 & I Corinthians 7. You'd probably enjoy checking those out. Well, of course, I'd strongly recommend the entire video for you. He also does a video where he answers the questions and "push back" of the first video on divorce and remarriage: Answering Your Questions and Push-Back on My Divorce and Remarriage Teaching - YouTube.

 

presidente

Senior Member
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Researching the topic... please check this out, let me know what you think. This researcher over 200 hours researching divorce, including reading the leading books/scholars on the subject. In the video section below (I bookmarked/hyperlinked it so I starts at the right spot) he gives 5 reasons why he is certain that porneia in Mat 5 & 19 is not referring to premarital sex. He also goes over the 5 most suggested possibilities and speaks to what is the most appropriate definition/application and why. Of course, that whole section is appropriate to listen to, but the '5 reasons why it's not premarital sex' is 57:26 to 1:00:47. The start (setup) to the end of that point is just 5 mins.

Also, below the video it bookmarks/hyperlinks to his research on the passages you note: Mark 10, Matthew 19 & I Corinthians 7. You'd probably enjoy checking those out. Well, of course, I'd strongly recommend the entire video for you. He also does a video where he answers the questions and "push back" of the first video on divorce and remarriage: Answering Your Questions and Push-Back on My Divorce and Remarriage Teaching - YouTube.

I listened to the section you mentioned. It may be a while before I have a big enough space of time I would dedicate to listen to the whole thing. But I do not think he gave adequate treatment to one of the views he was dealing with, and in that section, he did not address the point I was making either.

He dismissed the idea that it referred to breaking off an engagement. He overlooks something very basic. A couple that is betrothed in Judaism after the husband pays the bride price for virgins is basically married. A divorce would be required after that point. It's like in western culture if the couple had said the words and exchanged the rings in the church service then went and signed the marriage license, but hadn't spent the wedding night together. That's pretty much the stage an 'engaged couple' in their culture would be in.

I am not saying that is my view.

The point I was making is that they are discussing the law of Moses. Under the law of Moses, men could issue divorce certificates to their wives under certain circumstances. The Pharisees wanted to debate those circumstances. Let's back up and consider that. The law of Moses did not allow wives to issue divorce certificates to their husbands. In the passage, Jesus said if a man put away his wife.... except it be fornication.... Let's stop there. It doesn't say a woman put away her husband except it be for fornication.

Women couldn't divorce their husbands. I think Matthew 19 provides a good argument against polygamy. But it is worth noting that there were men in Old Testament times that the Bible indicates were forgiven of sin or righteous before God who were polygamous--Abraham and David. Polygamy was regulated in the Old Testament, but it was only for husbands with more than one wife. A wife could not have more than one husband. If you were a man reading the law of Moses in the polygynous culture before the Babylonian captivity, you probably would have understood adultery to mean a man having sex with a married woman who is not ones wife, not a married man sleeping with an unbetrothed woman. If ancient Israel judges tried to apply the law, how would they treat the case of a married man having sex with an unbetrorthed virgin. Might they not have compelled him to take her as a second wife? And if a married man's brother died without a child, might not the community expect him to take his widowed sister-in-law and raise up seed unto his brother with her? And if he refused because he was monogamous, wouldn't she, if she followed that passage, spit in his face for refusing to take her?

I also think he glides over the fornication before marriage argument for another reason. Those who hold to that view would likely look at the passage in the Old Testament where the man marries a supposed virgin and finds out that she was not a virgin, then goes back to her father to make the accusation. If she is found guilty, she is to be stoned. The fornication could have happened before or during engagement.

I am not convinced that Jesus is referring to something so narrow, but for some of those who held to the traditional view, who'd been reading the other gospels without the exception clause, they would not be concerned with the broad use of fornication in other passages of scripture but see it as a narrow exception. A problem with that is there no real reason to say that it is so narrow. Maybe if they relied on some church tradition, that St. Andrew or one of the other apostles commented on Jesus' words, but I do not know of any statements to that effect.

I do think porneia in Acts 15 is an umbrella term that includes the various types of sexual immorality in Leviticus 18 for which Gentiles were driven out of the land along with the fornication of sex before marriage, which shows up with a similar word in the stoning of the non-virgin bride married off as a virgin passage--playing the harlot in her father's house as it says. (That passage shouldn't be controversial for most Christian couples, except for the menstruation restriction.) In Acts 15, the issue is one of whether Gentiles have to obey the law of Moses. Later Judaism would debate a similar issue, as to whether Gentiles could be righteous without being circumcised, and they realized Gentiles were under the covenant with Noah. I suspect similar theological reasoning was going around a generation or two before Gamaliel II. The apostles and elders in Jerusalem also urged Gentiles to 'abstain from things strangled and from blood' in addition to fornication. The underlying issue may have been what the scriptures required of Gentiles, and what they had was the Old Testament. There was a long list of forbidden sexual activities for which Gentiles were driven out of the land.

I do think fornication includes premarital sex, both from the passage about the non-virgin, and apostolic usage. Paul warns the Corinthians (I Cor. 6) about fornication, warning that the members of Christ should not be members of a harlot. Corinth had pagan temple prostitutes. Some would argue that it means no sex with prostitutes and is limited to that (an idea I have actually encountered). But I Thessalonians 4 says for no man to defraud his brother through fornication, and that God is the avenger of all such. That wording seems more of a fit for the general idea of sex before marriage.

Something to notice about Matthew 19 is that he turns the Pharisees back to the original intention for marriage in Genesis, that two shall be one flesh. They interpreted Moses to say that Moses commanded divorce. Jesus corrected them that Moses prevented divorce. I do not usually care for the NIV that much compared to some other translations, but I do note that in Deuteronomy 24, it's translated to say under X set of circumstances, don't do Y. I mean, if the man is displeased with the wife for a certain category of offense and gives his wife a certificate of divorce and sends her out with a certificate and the second husband divorces her or dies... then she may not marry the first husband again. That would defile the land. It makes the remarriage to the first husband the defiling act without authorizing the divorce. I do not know enough Hebrew to grasp those subtleties, but they may have had Matthew 19 in mind.
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
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A couple that is betrothed in Judaism after the husband pays the bride price for virgins is
basically married. A divorce would be required after that point. It's like in western culture
if the couple had said the words and exchanged the rings in the church service then went
and signed the marriage license, but hadn't spent the wedding night together.
That's pretty much the stage an 'engaged couple' in their culture would be in.
1 Corinthians 7:36 If anyone thinks he is acting improperly toward the virgin he is engaged to,
and if she is getting along in years and he feels he ought to marry, he should do as he wants.
He is not sinning. They should get married. 37 But the man who has settled the matter in his
own mind, who is under no compulsion but has control over his own will, and who has made
up his mind not to marry the virgin--this man also does the right thing. 38 So then, he who
marries the virgin does right, but he who does not marry her does even better.


How would ^ this ^ apply?
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
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1 Corinthians 7:36 If anyone thinks he is acting improperly toward the virgin he is engaged to,
and if she is getting along in years and he feels he ought to marry, he should do as he wants.
He is not sinning. They should get married. 37 But the man who has settled the matter in his
own mind, who is under no compulsion but has control over his own will, and who has made
up his mind not to marry the virgin--this man also does the right thing. 38 So then, he who
marries the virgin does right, but he who does not marry her does even better.


How would ^ this ^ apply?
that scenario is what nearly happened to Jesus parents when Mary found out she was pregnant, of course Joseph had not slept with her and thought she had cheated on him ...

He was going to divorce her or end the engagement, and he would have been ok to do that if the angels hadnt stopped him. Angels are fiercely protective of unborn children.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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1 Corinthians 7:36 If anyone thinks he is acting improperly toward the virgin he is engaged to,
and if she is getting along in years and he feels he ought to marry, he should do as he wants.
He is not sinning. They should get married. 37 But the man who has settled the matter in his
own mind, who is under no compulsion but has control over his own will, and who has made
up his mind not to marry the virgin--this man also does the right thing. 38 So then, he who
marries the virgin does right, but he who does not marry her does even better.


How would ^ this ^ apply?

Some of his readers might have had unconsummated bethrothals locked in already. What I don't get here is why there is no specific consideration of whether the virgin has no compulsion but has control over her own will. The 'due benevolence' verse takes into account both parties, so maybe it is sort of implied by the overall passage that it works both ways.

There may also be an interpretation this is about father's giving in marriage, but control over one's own will fits a lot better with the person he is talking about being a betrothed man, based on the similarity to the ideas ideas earlier in the passage, IMO.
 

Lanolin

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Dec 15, 2018
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Most of the Bible are letters advising men on what to do or not to do. As it was assumed or implied that women couldnt even read.

Proverbs is kind of like that but then Solomon needed all the wisdom he could get. He didnt take the advice though and had hundreds of wives just because he could..he was rich and could afford them all apparently.
 

Lanolin

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Dec 15, 2018
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Cutting a baby in half though was a but drastic but Solomon could have advised divorcees on what to do should they consider divorce.

Now there are many children who have divorced or separated parents who have to decide which parent they like better. A terrible situation for any child to be placed in.
 

Sculpt

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Apr 18, 2021
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It may be a while before I have a big enough space of time I would dedicate to listen to the whole thing.
Brother presidente, you've found a lot of time to make long posts about divorce and remarriage here. Of course, it's unnecessary to listen to it (said video teaching) in one setting.

Did I understand that it is your position that christians who are divorced for any reason are not free to remarry? I believe it's important that you listen to this section of the video that studies 1 Corinthians 7 and into the details of when a christian is free to remarry 1:28:17 to 2:00:48, about 30 mins, which I'll post below to start at that point. Of course, I'd recommend that you watch the entire thing over time/days. I'm sure you will thoroughly enjoy and be edified by it. If you found specific points in it that you found unsound, I'd certainly love to hear your points.

 

Lanolin

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Dec 15, 2018
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There are christians on here who have been divorced and remarried who will be able to tell you. I mean they have already done it its not like there is a law stopping them, and there are different marriage laws in different countries. Even within countries, there are places that people go to remarry, if the churches wont do it, they just remarry at the courthouse or places like Las Vegas and ask a celebrant to officiate instead of an ordained minister. Its legal, though for women the main thing is they have to change their last name. Often divorced women will use their maiden name.

Most christians today dont live under the mosaic law like Moses and the Jewish people did.

Divorce used to favour men, like a husband could put away a wife if she didnt clean up his mess or look pretty enough but now women are divorcing because they dont want to put up with an lying, cheating adulterer or an abusive husband who beats her up or threatens her whenever things dont go his way
 

Lanolin

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Dec 15, 2018
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Jesus met a woman at the well who had had five husbands, and its not said that she was widowed five times.

So I dont know where presidente got the idea from that women in the Bible couldnt divorce.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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Divorce used to favour men, like a husband could put away a wife if she didnt clean up his mess or look pretty enough but now women are divorcing because they dont want to put up with an lying, cheating adulterer or an abusive husband who beats her up or threatens her whenever things dont go his way
Or they don't get the butterflies in their stomach...

Or they get bored...

Or they find someone else who excites them...

Or they want to be independent and live life on their own.

The stereotype of the husband who runs off with his secretary isn't the majority of cases. There are plenty of flighty unfaithful wives out there, too, just as there are unfaithful husbands. Sexual immorality is not required for one to be unfaithful towards ones family and ones commitments.

Malachi 2:16 warns against men divorcing their wives, "therefore take heed to your spirit, that ye deal not treacherously ". But Jeremiah 3:20 also mentions treacherous wives,
Surely, as a wife treacherously departs from her husband, So have you dealt treacherously with Me, O house of Israel,” says the LORD.
(NKJV)
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
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Jesus met a woman at the well who had had five husbands, and its not said that she was widowed five times.

So I dont know where presidente got the idea from that women in the Bible couldnt divorce.
These were Samaritans, so a bit different religion that relied on a version of the first six books of the Bible. But even so the MEN probably divorced HER. They were using a very similar law of Moses with three different verses about the location of the temple/tabernacle and a few other textual variants here and there.
 

tourist

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Mar 13, 2014
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Even within countries, there are places that people go to remarry, if the churches wont do it, they just remarry at the courthouse or places like Las Vegas and ask a celebrant to officiate instead of an ordained minister.
We did the Las Vegas wedding with an ordained minister to officiate.
 

tourist

Senior Member
Mar 13, 2014
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Most of the Bible are letters advising men on what to do or not to do. As it was assumed or implied that women couldnt even read.

Proverbs is kind of like that but then Solomon needed all the wisdom he could get. He didnt take the advice though and had hundreds of wives just because he could..he was rich and could afford them all apparently.
All of those wives led him away from God who gave him the wisdom.