You can keep on insisting on your interpretation, but it is wrong.putting away is separating, with or without the Bill of Divorce. Jesus was saying that the Bill of Divorce doesn't make it right. The only allowable reason for divorce, is porneia.
You can keep on insisting on your interpretation, but it is wrong.putting away is separating, with or without the Bill of Divorce. Jesus was saying that the Bill of Divorce doesn't make it right. The only allowable reason for divorce, is porneia.
The wife is forbidden from returning IF she went to another man first. If she did not then she can return.I have to disagree strongly with this! Obviously, the husband who has divorced his wife need not divorce his new wife, but Deut 24:1-4 explicitly forbids the wife who was divorced from returning to her first husband, and Jeremiah speaks of this scenario and says that if this were to occur, the land would be polluted.
Not quite correct.Jesus says marriage to a divorced woman is adultery.
Just out of curiosity, what is the Third Way?Many mistakenly believe there is a Third Way option but the fact is there isn't one it's either one or the other.
Thank you.Well there is the Deuteronomy 24 mention of divorce which Jesus said Moses allowed. But the fact is Moses reluctantly allowed this it's probably getting tired of being nagged about divorce. The reason why both he said a woman who had been with another man could not go back to her first husband is that she was committing adultery that's why she is defiled. Yet some people continue to ignore the fact that Jesus said that Moses permitted them to divorce. God never allowed it this is the only time Jesus had to correct Moses regarding the entire Old Testament law.
Another Third Way option that people have tried is the "I wasn't saved when I was married and divorced." But this doesn't work either as this would create a huge loophole anybody could claim that they had backslidden when they divorced their spouse.
Then there are those that push the put away is different from divorce excuse. But the fact is even though put away and divorce are too different words in the Greek this does not mean that they are two different things. Jesus clearly said that anyone who married a divorced woman who was put away is committing adultery.
And by the way the action is continuous it is not a one-time event any man who divorces his wife and marries another is committing adultery any woman that divorces her husband is committing adultery and any man that marries her is committing adultery.
The adultery is continual and the only way to repent is to leave the "marriage" I say "marriage" because God doesn't recognize it if he did it would not be adultery.
Now with that being said if you notice in Scripture an innocent husband who is divorced by his wife is free to marry another woman. However God does not recognize the fact that she divorced him he is still married to her when he marries another he has two wives and if she wants to reconcile he must take her back. The reason is of course as everyone here knows polygny is lawful.
But as someone else has already mentioned on this thread a man that divorced his wife because she committed adultery against him it is wrong for him to divorce her. People need to understand that God takes vows seriously that marriage is vow before God that is for life.
The "Celtic Catholic church" is not affiliated with the Roman Catholic church - it's a tiny little highly liberal denomination, that doesn't restrict sex in any way, they'd be quite happy for you to be a flaming homosexual priest, this liberal approach to sex is their major defining characteristic as far as I can see. They have very little in common with conservative Protestantism or Hebrew Roots either, and even less to do with the Catholics.Not actually correct I was put forward to be a priest in the Celtic Catholic church and the Greek Orthodox church and that is not the case I can tell you first hand that it is not a hard and fast pre requisite. I didn't go through seminary but was presented by two bishops for the office so that may be the difference.
Lol, thank you for the lesson, again. I obviously know nothing about what I was invited to go into, it's amazing that I am able to write.The "Celtic Catholic church" is not affiliated with the Roman Catholic church - it's a tiny little highly liberal denomination, that doesn't restrict sex in any way, they'd be quite happy for you to be a flaming homosexual priest, this liberal approach to sex is their major defining characteristic as far as I can see. They have very little in common with conservative Protestantism or Hebrew Roots either, and even less to do with the Catholics.
Neither is the Greek Orthodox church affiliated with the Catholic church - they're a major denomination that split with the Catholics a thousand years ago and certainly doesn't require priests to be celibate.
Neither of your experiences have anything to do with the Catholic church. The true Roman Catholic church has a very hard rule about priestly celibacy. It has a very small exception allowing Anglican or Orthodox priests that are already married when they were ordained converting to Catholicism to remain priests - but even they are forbidden to remarry if their spouse dies.
To become a Catholic priest
On what planet is "Catholic" not the standard word for Roman Catholic in normal conversation,
and only other Catholics need qualifiers to be clear?
There are not even that many who understand the difference between Catholic and catholic.
The poster may well have meant Roman Catholic but sadly I didn't take the mind reading class, so I have to respond to what is written.
There you go, let it out.So essentially @JudahYAHites in an effort to argue that you were correct, you are throwing @Earth_is- under the bus and saying he had no idea what he was talking about. It's completely obvious to any other reader that he was referring to the Roman Catholic church. And I don't think you're actually foolish enough to mistake his meaning as you appear to be claiming. I think you're just trying to be a smart alec.
The poster may well have meant Roman Catholic but sadly I didn't take the mind reading class, so I have to respond to what is written.
I don't know any other way to interpret it. The standard interpretation I keep hearing from some folks, simply flies in the face of the context of the text in question.You can keep on insisting on your interpretation, but it is wrong.