Hey everyone, it's been a while since I've been here.
I've been through some of my nightmares the last 3 months, my husband cheating and him filing for divorce and stringing me along until I was served and getting back into church and now fighting for custody. I didn't and still don't want to divorce, even though I caught him in pornography and dating sites. But I have no choice but to fight for custody and let him go, but I am wondering what does the Bible say about women like me after divorce? What should I do now?
I am sorry for the pain you are going through. I am assuming you mean your husband was sleeping around and also looking at porn and dating sites, though I am not completely clear on that. But I'll comment a bit on the idea of divorces just for the porn and dating site situation.
With the smut floodgates open with Internet porn, I hear more and more about wives divorcing their husbands over porn use. I know someone who got a divorce where that was an issue.
Jesus did say that he that looks at a woman to lust after her has committed adultery with her already in his heart. But is that grounds for divorce? It's not physical adultery. God looks on the heart. We are to love the Lord with all our hearts. But man and wife are one in body.
If looking with lust is grounds for divorce, it's not just porn, it's seeing a girl in a skimpy clothes, or even dressed like a pilgrim, and looking in order to lust after her. If a man has a wondering eye and allows himself to look with lust just once, it's the same sin as doing so while looking at porn. And I have occasionally heard of a woman saying some guy has a 'cute butt'-- whatever that is supposed to look like. I wonder if the women divorcing men over this can say they have never looked at a man with lust.
'Lust' here is the word for 'covet' in the Greek version of the 10 commandments by the way.
This is going to be an unpopular comment, but I cannot find scripture that says a woman is allowed to divorce a man. In the Old Testament, if a man found uncleanness in his wife and was displeased with her, and gave her a certificate of divorce, and she married another man and was divorced or widowed, he could not take her back as his wife, or else the land would be defiled. In that verse, the man is giving the certificate. There is the passage about the concubine whose husband takes another wife, and if he deprives her of food, clothes, or sex, she is to go free. But it doesn't say she can fill out the certificate.
Jesus comment on Moses' law was that Moses for the hardness of your heart allowed divorce, but from the beginning it was not so. He said that if a man divorced his wife, except it be for fornication, and married another, he committed adultery, and that he that married her that is divorced commits adultery.
I wonder if the proper point of the law of Moses on divorce in Deuteronomy 24 is not to allow divorce, but a restriction of remarried and divorced or widowed wife back so as not to defile the land by wife swapping, rather than actually God allowing divorce. Maybe Moses was allowing it because of the hardness of Israelites' hearts, and God restricted the wife-swapping effect of going back to the first husband.
Since the issue under discussion is men divorcing women and not vice versa, I do not see how it is legitimate to read into this that women can divorce their husbands for fornication. In the Bible, laws about men and women and sex aren't the mirror image of each other. It's not treated the same. The Old Testament regulated polygamy-- but polygyny, not polyamory. Women could not have more than one husband. That's just adultery. I think we can see a case against polygyny in Matthew 19. Wouldn't the same scenario without the divorce--a man marrying two women-- be a violation of the original principle of two being one flesh?
Other passages just outright forbid men divorcing women without the exception clause (except it be for fornication) which just shows up in Matthew. I have also read that the exception clause actually means something like, "without addressing the issue of fornication"-- not coming down on the issue one way or another on the case of fornication. Another conservative interpretation is that it only deals with cases where a man marries a woman who is not a virgin who was supposed to be.
One of the synoptic gospels forbids women divorcing men. I have read that in Israel and Judah in history there may have been just one case of a woman divorcing a man-- Philip's wife divorcing him with a divorce issued by the chief priests and marrying his brother Herod. After that, she would have been known as Herodias. John the Baptist did not consider the situation to be legitimate because he said to Herod, "It is not lawful for thee to have her."
I am concerned to hear about pastors telling wives they can divorce and remarry because the husband is a porn addict instead of advising some other course of action. I'm not convinced of that, though it is a sinful thing to be involved in. I think about the advice in scripture for how wives can win husbands who do not obey the word and Paul's advice on the subject. Grecco-Roman culture was sexualized, and men could be exposed to sexual images. Greek men may not have had much in the way of mores about it, but the apostles did not mention this as a reason to leave an unbeliever. In our culture, unbelievers often seem to think little of viewing porn these days, also.
Looking up women on dating sites... that must be really painful to find out about. That's behavior that could definitely be evidence of an intention to commit adultery. He could just be 'window shopping'-- which isn't a good thing either, or trying to line someone up for after the divorce, still not good especially if you had agreed to reconcile.
Even if he's done the deed, I'd rather hear a testimony of a husband who was forgiven for cheating on his wife, free of porn by the power of God, and learning to have a healthy marriage with his wife. Would you want us to pray with you for that kind of a situation?