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One Flesh
One Covenant
Marriage, Divorce, and Remarriage
(Part 1)
by Dean Taylor |
“…Yet is she thy companion, and the wife of
thy covenant. And did not he make one?” (Mal. 2:14-15).
Divorce…the
very word brings such pain, such heartache, such contention.
It not only divides families, it splits
churches, separates friends, polarizes denominations; it
isolates victims, champions assailants, destroys faith,
and disparages numberless children caught in the middle,
asking—“Why?
Where is God?”
The truth is—God is
there, and He cares about these little ones; He cares
about the families, He hears the prayers of the bereaved, He hears the
cry of the widow and the fatherless—He cares.
He even sees the mistakes, the wrong choices, the disastrous
scenarios; and He stands listening, ready to help. He watched
the sins done in ignorance,
the sins done in hard times, and the sins done blatantly to His face; and
to all these He offers blood—the sacrificial
blood of His Son, Jesus Christ, to atone, redeem, forgive,
reconcile and empower these destroyed lives, so
that they can become beautiful, fruitful children of God once again.
He sees the “impossible situations,” and just like He does with
so many other “impossible” things in our lives, He promises to
bring beauty from ashes, streams in the desert, the oil of joy for mourning,
the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness. God is glorified when He
takes the impossible and says—“DONE.” As it says in Romans
4:17, “…even God, who quickeneth the dead, and calleth those
things which be not as though they were.”
The lives affected by divorce
are real people with real pains. Many have suffered betrayed
trusts and bear deep scars.
They are not an “argument” or
a “doctrine,” they are souls—souls that Jesus died for. Because
of this, they cannot be dismissed, ignored, maligned, or marginalized. As a
people of God, we are called to minister to them. Moreover, as a church in
America, we must recognize that this “people group” is not
merely a passing fad, but an ever increasing element of our morally declining
society.
With these hard situations, like all hard situations, the
temptation is to ignore it and hope it will just go away.
This seems to be the prevailing tendency
among the churches which maintain a conservative, Biblical attitude toward
divorce and remarriage. Defeating words such as, “Let someone else minister
to them,” “They will never fit in here,” or “They’ll
never stay,” are not words of faith. The purpose of the Church
is not to exist as some sterilized, fictitious “Precious-Moments-like” figurine
displayed on a shelf. We are to face the hurts, the pains, the ugly, the
despised, the dark, the diseased, the impossible, and then, administer
Christ to them.
The subway station graffiti often reads “Jesus Saves,” and
if this isn’t true, then we’re wasting our time.
In the next few issues we will be examining the Biblical
guidelines for marriage, divorce, and remarriage. It is my
prayer that, by the grace and anointing of
God, the truth of Jesus will be uplifted, and not my opinion or the opinion
of an agenda or a denomination. “Yea, let God be true, but every
man a liar” (Rom. 3:4). I’m certainly not the final word on divorce
and remarriage. I am a pastor, not a theologian, and I have no desire for a
religious debate for the sake of academic exercise. It is my hope that these
articles might encourage all of us to reach out and minister to those who are
victims of divorce, and mostly, that the scores of souls which feel caught
in “impossible situations” would discover the light of the
Gospel, and find Jesus there waiting with the key of faith that opens any
door! Overall,
it is my prayer that God would strengthen that which remains, as we seek
to hold up what the Word of God has to say on these issues.
Another World
Daily in the midst of the
market place, the water well, and the synagogue—laughing at weddings and crying at
funerals—observing the wink of the money changer’s
eye, and the tremble of the widow’s hand, Jesus walked
for 30 years—watching, pondering, and comparing. He
compared all that was “man” with all that was “divine,” and
taught that by grace men could become partakers of the boundless
storehouse of the Kingdom of God. Although He had voluntarily
laid down His divinity, He knew, even as a child, who His
true father was. Even though His celestial throne was awaiting
His return, Jesus knew Heaven. No idealistic thoughts were
needed to remind Him to “seek those things which are
above.” All the holiness, purity, order, majesty and
worship of that place were created by Him, and it was in
that place that Jesus taught us to pray: “Thy kingdom
come, Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven” (Matt
6:10).
What must it have been like
to be Him—in the everyday hustle and bustle
of shopping, working, synagogue-ing, etc.? When Jesus’ time had come
and he began to teach the people, His words cut through to the very heart and
motive of everything we do. Even our everyday necessities were challenged by
Him. He did not shrink away from bringing attention to our propensity toward
living careless and godless lives. Jesus warned, “For as in the days
that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving
in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into the ark” (Matt
24:38).
He challenged earthly securities, self-defense, judicial
vindication, and all other efforts of human strength and
set them at naught. He took purity and
sin beyond the outward and proceeded to challenge even the inward motives
of our hearts. Revenge, anger, covetousness and lust had
never been taken this
far before. He split the society, changed the world, and brought us a flawless
image of our God.
When discussing divorce and
remarriage, as well as many other of Jesus’ teachings,
the clearer the Kingdom of Heaven is in view, the more sense the teaching will
make. Also, the more the Church represents a faith-filled expression of the
entirety of the Sermon on the Mount, the more clearly a message of repentance
like this will be demonstrated, “not just in word but in power.”
Marriage
Married life was, in the
time of Jesus—perhaps even
more than it is today—the very center of Jewish life.
Indeed, it would appear that it would have been quite a strain
for them to have considered the unmarried man complete. As
it was recorded in the Jewish Talmud, “The man who
is not married at 20 is living in sin.” And also, “Any
man who has no wife is no proper man for it is said ‘male
and female created He them and called their name Adam.’” However,
while the married state was certainly prominent in Jewish
society, divorce had also become an unfortunate experience
of their time. Additionally, while the marriage bond was
highly reverenced, the bond for the man differed somewhat
from that of the woman. Polygamy, which by Jesus’ time
was becoming very out of fashion, was inevitability still
a part of their heritage and domestic identity. What affect
this mindset had on the sense of responsibility from the
men is unknown; but judging from Jesus’ teaching,
it seems that their view was off balance, at least in part,
because of their misunderstanding of what marriage really
was.
Jesus raised the duty and
majesty of marriage higher than it had been for a long
time—“since the beginning.” His illustrations
to it and parables about it demonstrated that Jesus saw
in the marriage relationship
a type or likeness that was so close to His heart that it typified salvation,
redemption and eternal fellowship in heaven. (Matt 25; Eph 5; Rev 20)
That said, as honorable as
Jesus makes marriage out to be, He also showed us that
marriage, itself, was not to be
the very center of our identity and focus.
He taught that this sacred place in our hearts was to be reserved only
for Him. “And there went great multitudes with him: and he turned, and said
unto them, If any man come to me, and hate not his father, and mother, and
wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, yea, and his own life also,
he cannot be my disciple” (Luke 14:25 -26).
Radically challenging the
entire vision and understanding of our life in heaven,
He even disclosed that in that place,
many parts of the normal married life
as we know it will not even exist. “For when they shall rise from the
dead, they neither marry, nor are given in marriage; but are as the angels
which are in heaven” (Mar 12:25 ).
The Beginning
As Jesus was traveling into
the coast of Judea, he was met by a group of Pharisees
who wanted to “tempt” him,
by asking what his position was on divorce. However, before
Jesus would enter into this discussion about divorce, he
apparently felt it necessary to correct their view of marriage.
As Andrew Cornes suggests in the book Divorce and Remarriage,
Biblical Principles & Pastoral Practice, the reason the
Jews were off on their doctrine of divorce and remarriage
was because, like the modern church, the Jews came about
it from the wrong perspective: “They began with the
Biblical passage about divorce…he began with the
key passage about marriage. And one of the points he was
certainly
making was that their mistake stemmed from starting in
the wrong place.”
“The Pharisees also
came unto him, tempting him, and saying unto him, Is
it lawful for a man to put away his wife
for every cause?”
The passage of scripture that Jesus took the Pharisees
to was back to the very first marriage between Adam and Eve,
found in Gen 2:18-25. Jesus answered the Pharisees saying,
“Have ye not read,
that he which made them at the beginning made them male
and female, And said, For this cause
shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to
his wife: and they twain shall be one flesh?” (Matt.
19:4-5)
Here, taking the Pharisees back to the original marriage
in the Garden of Eden, Jesus stated to them what the fundamentals
of marriage actually are. He taught that since the dawning
of creation, marriage essentially requires:
1 One
man and one woman: Modern attempts to disparage the
sanctity of marriage by suggesting the union of same sex
partners defies nature, historical precedent, and common
morality. However, most importantly, it defies the Law of
God at the very core. History itself has borne out that even
when secular nations have ignored this ordained creation
principle, total moral breakdown inevitably follows. So,
the primary element necessary for a lawful marriage is to
have one man and one woman.
2 The
man must leave his father and mother: Interestingly, the focus here is on the man.
The changing of their place
of residence naturally comes to mind. However, since in
the Jewish culture moving was not always the norm, its
connotation
suggests even more than this. It suggests a moving of the
place of loyalty, identity and emotion. Before the marriage,
the man was completely a part of his parents’ “household.” All
of his identity came from there. Now, in this new household,
this chief place of identity, benevolence and loyalty was
to be rendered unto his wife. Cornes suggests that in our
modern culture, which puts little emphasis on the honor
and loyalty given to our parents, this seems but a minor
and
insignificant point. However, to the Israelite, this change
of household identity, authority, and loyalty had a profound
effect on all relationships. (ibid., 57)
3 A
cleaving together: “…For this
cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall
cleave to his wife:
and they twain shall be one flesh” The Hebrew
word for “cleave” in this passage suggests
the idea of being glued together. This word is used in
Job 38:38,
speaking of dirt clods which stick together after the
rain. In another place, it is used by Joshua, referring
to a military
alliance (Josh 23:12). The word is also used referring
to the leprosy that would cling forever to the dishonest
and
greedy Gehazi (2 Kings 5:27). In marriage, the husband
and wife are “glued” together—bound
inseparably into one solitary unit. (Carl Laney, The
Divorce Myth)
In the Greek, the word “cleave” (pros-kol-lah’-o) means:
to glue upon, glue to, or to join one’s self to closely. I’ll never
forget a brilliant, real-life object lesson of this passage I once saw in a
children’s lesson. A few yeas ago, in order to graphically demonstrate
the meaning of this word, Bro. Paul Lloyd from Charity Christian Fellowship,
took a piece of wood that had been glued together the night before and attempted
to separate it with great force as the children looked on expectantly. I’ll
never forget the result—as we all looked on in astonishment, the
board indeed splintered into pieces, but the union was still intact! The
message
was clear.
4 Becoming
one flesh: The
most obvious use of this phrase is realized in the marital
affection between man and wife.
This is certainly in view in Paul’s rebuke to the men
at Corinth in their sin with prostitutes, “Know ye
not that your bodies are the members of Christ? shall I then
take the members of Christ, and make them the members of
an harlot? God forbid. What? know ye not that he which is
joined to an harlot is one body? for two, saith he, shall
be one flesh” (1 Cor. 6:15-16).
Although God ordained that
there be strong emotional and spiritual ties created
through marital affection, the Bible
clearly shows that in marriage, this “one
flesh” identity goes beyond mere physical affection. Taken in isolation,
the “one flesh” attachment of fornication is certainly sharing
in a privilege granted only to the married, and is a serious offence to God.
However, the conjugal act, in and of itself, does not “make” the
marriage. If this were the case, then there would have been no reason to differentiate
between Solomon’s wives and Solomon’s concubines.
Taken in the creation context
of Genesis quoted by Jesus, this miraculous union of
the “two becoming one” is something that is accomplished supernaturally,
by God. God is present at the marriage, and it is God who makes this union.
The first two parts of marriage quoted by Jesus indicate an active process, “leave
and cleave.” This last part, and the one that Jesus seems to bring the
most attention to, is spoken of as an accomplished fact, “and
they twain shall be one flesh.”
Commentator Andrew Cornes,
discussing the phrase “become one flesh” from
the Hebrew, states: “The Hebrew phrase does not describe the process,
but the accomplished fact, the changed situation.” In other words, the
reality of becoming “one flesh” is not just an idea for the married
couple, it is something spiritual and supernatural that God accomplishes at
marriage. This is something that goes beyond basic human comprehension. In
this light, it is indeed a “mystery,” as Paul wrote to the Ephesians: “So
ought men to love their wives as their own bodies. He that loveth his wife
loveth himself. for no man ever yet hated his own flesh; but nourisheth and
cherisheth it, even as the Lord the church: For we are members of his body,
of his flesh, and of his bones. For this cause shall a man leave his father
and mother, and shall be joined unto his wife, and they two shall be one flesh...
This is a great mystery: but I speak concerning Christ and the church” (Eph
5:28-31).
Becoming Blood Relatives
When God made Eve out of
Adam’s rib, He was very
graphically demonstrating the authenticity of this “one
flesh” relationship. When Adam saw her for the first
time he cried out with joy. A literal translation of what
he said is, “This one at last. Bone—my bones!
Flesh—my flesh! This one shall be called woman because
from man this one was taken!” (Carl Laney, The
Divorce Myth)
It is a very interesting
fact that this concept of becoming “one flesh” was
taken so far by Mosaic law, that once a person was married, their spouse’s
family then became related to them, just as if they were their own flesh
and blood.
The various prohibitions
of incestuous marriage found in Leviticus 18 are based
not only on literal blood lines, but
also on these ‘blood’ relationships
created through marriage. Marriage thus created both vertical blood relationships
in the form of children, but it also formed horizontal ‘blood’ relationships
between spouses. In Lev. 18:18 and 20:14, it is written that a man was not
allowed to marry his wife’s mother or sister. Incest laws were common
among ancient civilizations. What made the Hebrew culture different was that
the prohibitions against marrying one’s own family included not just
your own blood relatives, but also those who married your blood relatives.
(Lev. 18:8, 14-16) (Wenham & Heth, Jesus and Divorce)
No Longer Twain
To these basics of marriage,
Jesus added his profound, dominical explanation point!—“Wherefore they
are no more twain, but one flesh” (Matt. 19:6). The
entire focus of the debate was resolved in this God-ordained
fact. The Pharisees were asking about the various legalities
of splitting the two individuals up. However, Jesus attempted
to change their entire way of thinking, informing them that
contrary to what they were thinking, the married couple remained
no longer as two individuals that even could be split up, “they
are no more twain, but one flesh.”
What God Has Put Together
Jesus then concludes the
question of whether or not it was ever allowable to permit
divorce with this weighty command, “What
therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder” (Matt.19:6).
This phrase suggests the
idea of a covenant—a covenant in which God was
an active witness in the marrying process. This is a significant point
because it takes the question about the validity of a
marriage out of the numerous
human scenarios and possibilities, and places it entirely in the hand of
God. He is saying that man may contrive any manner of
legal proceedings and name
it all kinds of various things, but the bottom line is that marriage is
a covenantal unity between man and woman that the Lord
God, himself, has performed. Regardless
of how oblivious the couple may be to the mystery of the spiritual truth
of the union, it is God who has made them one flesh.
The prophet Malachi, more
than any other writer, bears testimony to this covenantal
aspect. When the people of God
were crying to God because they didn’t
understand why their prayers were not being heard, Malachi told them it was
because they were divorcing their wives. He warned them that by doing this
they were breaking their covenant and violating their “one flesh” relationship.
“Yet ye say, Wherefore? Because the LORD hath been
witness between thee and the wife of thy youth, against whom
thou hast dealt treacherously: yet is she thy companion,
and the wife of thy covenant. And did not he make one? Yet
had he the residue of the spirit. And wherefore one? That
he might seek a godly seed. Therefore take heed to your spirit,
and let none deal treacherously against the wife of his youth.
For the LORD, the God of Israel, saith that he hateth putting
away” (Mal 2: 14-16).
The covenantal aspect of
marriage cannot be overlooked. Unfortunately, conservative
commentators on divorce and remarriage
usually divide, for the most part, into two camps—those
who believe that marriage is simply the forming of “one
flesh,” and those who believe that marriage is strictly
a covenant. I believe both concepts are involved in a Biblical
understanding of marriage. While I believe the emphasis of
Jesus’ and Paul’s words were certainly on the “one
flesh” relationship, the covenantal concept, especially
as it pertains to the heart of God, is undoubtedly expressed
in the Scripture and should not be disregarded. To ignore
this aspect of God’s involvement in the marital union
would be dishonest and perhaps even irresponsible. We are
uphold the entire Word of God. Let’s remember, too,
we are told it is a “mystery.”
Contemporary thinking makes very little of covenants, vows
and promises. Almost every culture has some kind of marriage
ceremony. The prophet Malachi is telling
us that God is witness to these ceremonies and does not take the vows spoken
lightly.
Ronald Martin, in his paper “Divorce, Remarriage and Reconciliation” speaks
strongly about vows and covenants saying, “The only vows that did not
stand as spoken, were the vows of a wife or an unmarried daughter, and then
only if they were disallowed at the first hearing by the husband or father.
All other covenants, based on a promise to God, stood as they were uttered
(Num. 30:2, Deut. 23:21-23). Oaths that turned out in be for the hurt of the
one who uttered them stood (Ps 15:41). This keeping of covenants was considered
that important to God that He required that an animal dedicated to him could
not be switched for another animal even if the dedicated animal turned out
to be flawed. He would rather have a sacrifice that was less than perfect than
to have a man change a vow (Lev 27:9-11). Ecclesiastes 5:4-6 clearly teaches
us that it is a sin not to perform our vows, even ones that we later realize
were in error. Jephthah discovered this much to his dismay (Jud 11:30-36).
Joshua also realized this after he made a covenant that clearly violated the
command of God (Ex 23: 32-33 Josh 9:15-21). Yet this covenant needed to stand:
and even generations later, God punished Israel for violating it” (2
Sam 21:1).
Can any vows ever be broken?
Some ask about vows that
have been made to satanic secret societies like the Masons,
or vows of celibacy by converted
Roman Catholic priests, such as Menno Simons. Others ask
about religious groups which require vows at membership,
many of which are spoken without any true sincerity or
conversion of the heart. What happens if the person later
realizes their
vows were made fraudulently, out of peer pressure or for
any other insincere, illegal or dishonest reason. Can these
vows be “broken”? I can’t answer all the
various angles in this particular article on marriage. Perhaps
we will be able to address this concern in a future article,
but let it suffice it to say that vows have always been a
very serious thing in the eyes of God, from the Old Testament
right on through to the teachings of Jesus. Do you think
it is just coincidence that after Jesus’ teaching on
adultery, divorce and remarriage in the Sermon on the Mount,
that Jesus immediately introduces his teachings on oaths?
(Matt 5: 36 Jas 5:12) I don’t think so.
To Conclude
The essence of the teaching
of Jesus is the cross—complete
self-denial, complete abandonment of self-rights and self-interest.
To look at our marriages though the eyes of the cross puts
our marriages in their proper perspective. A healthy marriage
is about each partner seeking to lay his or her life down
for the other. This world’s pursuit of a happy marriage,
with its barrage of self-help books, self-improvement seminars
and “getting the most out of your spouse” attitudes
are not to be the focus in a marriage where Christ is Head.
As God has mysteriously joined man and wife together into
one person, He has done so for a reason. He does this for
a channel of grace—to seek a godly seed, a receptacle
of the divine image, a beacon to the world, which testifies
magnificently of the existence of another realm, one which
exists for no other reason than to bring glory to God!
May our marriages and all of our lives, by the grace of
God,
do just that.
Continue to Part 2...
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