I think we are all in agreement that a wife cannot divorce a husband yes?
Worldly, yes. Biblically, no.
I’m gonna stick my neck out and say that at this point, I am not in agreement with that statement for multiple reasons. I have been doing quite a bit of study on this topic and have found quite a bit of information available that puts the passages in the Gospel in a much clearer light.
1. The primary evidence for the argument that states that a woman is unable to initiate divorce against her husband consists primarily of an argument from omission. I.e; because there is nothing Biblically saying that she can, this must mean that she’s forbidden.
- That the Bible never says that she can (not true per Ex 21:11 at minimum for servants/wives)
- That nowhere does a woman specifically divorce her husband. (I’d beg to differ per Moses and Zipporah)
I don’t agree with everything the author presents, but this book has been verrrry enlightening re the Jewish culture on divorce of all kinds from the Bet Din courts, both currently and historically. https://static1.squarespace.com/sta...Abandoned+Wife+in+Jewish+Law+(Whole+Book).pdf
2. The typical marriage was begun with a covenant or a set of vows primarily by the husband which typically included the three conditions also found in Exodus 21:10
- Food
- Shelter - physical, personal, and spiritual
- Cohabitation and marital duties (IMO provision of children as God allows)
Often the ketubah’s (written covenants) would include language spelling out the exit terms of divorce and were specifically written in a manner that protected the wife and made it legally possible to exit if the terms were breached.
I do agree that divorce is terrible and that God hates it. That is very clear from Scripture. However, Scripture records that God himself initiated divorce and separation for Israel and Judah when they were in violation of their covenants. (Specifically Jer. 3 and Ez 16 among others)
As I mentioned in an earlier post, the only justifiable reason for divorce was for adultery. Our view today of adultery has been grossly truncated to include only sexual indiscretions culturally. In the Biblical times however, adultery was any breach of contract between the two parties. These breeches may be any number of things such as the wife engaging in sexual activities outside the marriage bed, failure to submit and obey her husband, or his failure to provide the basic necessities he’d promised the wife as an incentive for her to accept his proposal. Impotence was considered a breach of covenant and justifiable grounds for the wife to demand a ‘get’.
When you approach the passage in Matt. 19, Christ is specifically addressing the very pointed question, “Is it lawful for a man to put away his wife for every cause?” His initial answer was along the lines that when a man and a woman become one before God, that a man should not put asunder or divorce. Simply put that the man should not divorce his wife. After they question him about Moses’ permissiveness, He basically makes the statement that the only justifiable reason that a man should divorce his wife would be for either premarital sex or extramarital sex (porneia addresses both).
IMO, the primary issue behind the misunderstanding in this passage is when we try to understand the Hebrew culture through the lenses of current English/American culture. In the OT & 1 century Biblical era, it was apparently common enough for a man whose wife was defiled either by extramarital consensual sex (standard adultery), or by defilement through war conquests (Absalom and Davids wives/concubines) or even in the case of defilement through non consensual sex (Reuben and Bilhah) to ‘shalak’ her or to put her away and not touch her again. The best example of this is with Mary and Joseph who was unwilling to make a public spectacle/stoning and was intending to “put her away” privily or secretly. Many times this idea of the shalak is translated as divorce but without a writing of divorcement. He was still providing everything for her except intercourse that he was covenantally obligated to do. Her status was that of a wife that was divorced but not free because he was still providing for her. She had no justifiable reason to leave the household and typically would live the rest of her life as a member of the household, just without the physical intimacy and intercourse. For another man to sleep with this woman would be a breach of the still existing covenant thus resulting in adultery.
So when you approach the passage through the lenses of Hebrew culture, ancient as well as 1st century, Christ is addressing the question posed from the perspective that a man should never be separated from his wife (IMO a writing of divorcement which would result in physical separation, not just intimate separation) “what God has joined, let not [any] man put asunder, [not even the husband IMO] but if there is an issue of adultery, the man may justifiably “shalak” her or privily put her away. IF she decides to leave that position and marry another, then it is of course continued adultery by both parties because the husband never intended to release her. A writing of divorcement however meant just the opposite, so she was a free woman with that.
I know this has gone long but just a recap as I understand the passage.
- A man should never separate what God has joined.
- If she has been unfaithful, he should still fulfill his vows, with the exception of intimacy as that would be unclean?
- He may not divorce his wife for “any” reason to take another wife as this is treachery and a breach of covenant on his part = his adultery.
- However, this does not exclude him from taking another wife, he just may not be treacherous to the first wife to add the additional wife.
- If he has put her away (shalak, where he is still protecting/providing etc), she should not seek another to marry, or be woo’ed by another man as this would equal an additional breach of covenant on her part and the other man but not adultery by her husband.
I understand this is a potentially explosive topic. Once upon a time I believed differently than I do now. The difference is information. There is a lot of secondary information available about this topic that Scripture is largely silent on. It behooves us a men to know wisdom and instruction; to perceive the words of understanding; to receive the instruction of wisdom, justice, and judgement and equity; to give subtlety to the simple, and to the young man knowledge and discretion. To argue from a basis of Scriptural silence when there is plenty of secondary evidence to the contrary is neither wise, nor just.
Peace, love and all the fuzzy stuff.