While it is difficult to get an opinion from God as to his like or dislike of polygamy (see my previous post), it is not difficult to get his opinion about divorce. He hates it. It is this hatred of divorce by God that should set the theme for our discussion of divorce. If I am a Christian, I should hate what God hates and God hates divorce.
Despite the hatred by God of divorce, it is still biblically allowed. Divorce is allowed by the law of Moses very early on and it remains a constant force in the Bible from then on. Ultimately, this seems to be an allowance by God because of sin and the nature of marriage in its cultural contract form. Doesn't stop Him from hating it, but it does indicate God understands the why of it.
There are basically three biblical reasons God would allow a divorce:
1. Sexual Infidelity: As much as God hates divorce, he hates unfaithfulness even more. Jesus himself gives this as a reason for it. This reason ultimately points to something deeper and that is that sex is not simply about fun or procreation. Sex is the ultimate expression of the spiritual covenant of marriage and to engage in adultery in any form shows a lack of understanding of this idea. This why not only should sex not be engaged in before marriage; it also should be kept in the confines of marriage.
2. Mixed Faith Marriage: The Bible has nothing really positive to say about a marriage between an unbeliever and a believer and that goes throughout the entire Bible. In one case after the exile, Israelite men are forced to divorce their wives for this reason or give up their inheritance in Israel. When we get to the New Testament there is a change though and that is that the believer should stay with the unbeliever unless the unbeliever wants out. Paul in 1st Corinthians is not defying Jesus so much as he is considering a further implication of Jesus' teaching. That of the impossibility for such a marriage to achieve covenant without both parties understanding the true nature of love and self-sacrifice, which are found only in genuine faith in God. The believer should treat their marriage as a covenant and strive for the ideal, but if the unbeliever wants out, the believer can depart free of obligation.
3. Hardness of Heart: I simply do not see that Jesus Teaching in Matthew 19 and other places nullifies this idea. The divorce law of Moses still stands because Jesus himself said he had not come to destroy the law or the prophets. The fact is God still allows for hardness of heart, because hardness of heart is still going to happen. People are still going to fail in how they view marriage, act in selfishness to the point that even the cultural and contractual sides of their marriage are not being kept, violate their marriage vows and thus become hardened of heart. It is still an out, but I would say God doesn't like it very much given Jesus' words. This reason should be avoided at all costs but it still is there in case it happens. One thing though we can say about divorce is that it never is considered a sin that is unforgivable by God.
That said, we need to be reminded that God still hates divorce. It means then the Christian should make every effort to save their marriage and to strive to see that they view it as a spiritual covenant above the cultural contract. Ultimately this is about shifting out understanding of marriage from the selfishness of the contract and moving it to the self-sacrifice of the covenant. For the Christian it becomes very important to understand the difference between the two and strive for the covenant.
Next: God and the Cultural Contract.
Previous: The Bible and Polygamy
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