I periodically read from Dr. William Luck's 'Systematic Biblical Ethics' (2013). On page 236 he makes the following statement:
The passage of the Bible he is referring to is Matthew 5:31-32:
In summary, Dr. Luck surmises that adultery is divorce without the other person committing a covenant-breaching act, which in the case of the man would be not providing for his wife (see underlined text in the verses above).
While I think the point about a man supporting is wife is morally good and can be supported with scripture, I am struggling to back up his statement that a man who does not support his wife is committing adultery.
I am curious to hear others thoughts, especially if there is someone who can provide more context to back up what Dr. Luck says with more from the Bible.
And in doing so we have the final connotational element of the definition of adultery: breach of covenant, where the promise breached was an essential one to the covenant of marriage. The woman’s promise was to be exclusive, while the man’s was to provide. Either promise could be breached. Either was adultery.
Unilateral divorce, that is, divorce without the other person having committed a covenant‐breaching act, constitutes the act of adultery, and anyone participating in such a divorce could be charged with that offense. This is underscored by the second saying of Jesus, where, again, the man is guilty of adultery by marrying a woman divorced.
There is considerable more to the text than this, but I thought this was enough to get the conversation started.
The passage of the Bible he is referring to is Matthew 5:31-32:
Matthew 5:31 (WEB) It was also said, 'Whoever shall put away his wife, let him give her a writing of divorce,' 32 but I tell you that whoever puts away his wife, except for the cause of sexual immorality, makes her an adulteress; and whoever marries her when she is put away commits adultery.
In summary, Dr. Luck surmises that adultery is divorce without the other person committing a covenant-breaching act, which in the case of the man would be not providing for his wife (see underlined text in the verses above).
While I think the point about a man supporting is wife is morally good and can be supported with scripture, I am struggling to back up his statement that a man who does not support his wife is committing adultery.
I am curious to hear others thoughts, especially if there is someone who can provide more context to back up what Dr. Luck says with more from the Bible.