Murray, Divorce 1
Murray, Divorce 1
Murray, Divorce 1
JOHN MURRAY
T
HE question of divorce is one t hat perennially interests
and agitates the church. This is true whether we think
of the church in the most restricted sense as the local congre-
gation or whether we think in terms of the church universal.
The faithful pastor of the local church may consider himself
happy indeed if he does not find himself embroiled in the
complications associated with divorce and marital separations.
And when we consider the matter more broadly we find
deep-seated differences of viewpoint and interpretation within
the historic branches of the Christian church.
It would be presumptuous to claim t hat a study such as is
now being undertaken will resolve the many difficult questions
involved. Nevertheless a better understanding of the teach-
ing of Scripture may be promoted if the pivotal passages are
discussed in correlation with one another and some at t empt
is made to bring the relevant Biblical dat a to the forefront
for reflection and study.
It is quite apparent t hat the first Biblical passage bearing
upon the question is Genesis 2:23, 24. At the very outset
this enunciates the nature and basis of marriage and clearly
implies that divorce or the dissolution of the marriage bond
could not be contemplated otherwise than as a radical breach
of the divine institution. It is impossible to envisage any
dissolution of the bond as anything other than abnormal and
evil. Our Lord' s comments with reference to this Scripture
and the institution underlying it are to the effect of showing
t hat the marriage bond is originally and ideally indissoluble.
The rupture of this divinely instituted human bond is con-
ceivable only if there is first of all the rupture of divine-human
relations. The breach of the divinely instituted order of
right and troth and love in the human sphere must presup-
pose the breach of troth with God.
31
32 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
This breach of troth with God did, of course, occur in the
fall. It was not indeed through the desecration of the marriage
bond t hat sin entered. It was by another avenue. But since
sin did enter the question naturally arises: how does the
abnormal situation created by sin affect the marital relation?
A new complex of conditions and circumstances enters by
sin and since sin desecrates all relationships we are bound to
face the question of the bearing of sin upon the sanctity of
the marriage bond. Granting the basic and original principle
of the indissolubility of the marriage bond, yet, by reason of
sin, are there any conditions under which the marriage tie
may be dissolved with divine sanction and authorisation?
When we ask this question we must never forget t hat the
sinful situation which compels us to raise the question is one
t hat rests under the divine judgment. In like manner the
specific conditions which might require or warrant the dis-
solution of the marriage bond must be regarded as resting
under the condemnation of God. Yet, presupposing divine
condemnation of the sinful situation in its totality and of the
specifically sinful condition t hat might provide the ground for
divorce, it is still possible to envisage a divinely authorised
and instituted right of divorce. It is quite conceivable t hat
while the reason for divorce is sinful the right of divorce for
t hat reason may be divine.
The cardinal passages of Scripture upon which any treat-
ment of the Biblical teaching must turn are: Deuteronomy
24:1-4; Matthew 5:31, 32; 19:3-12; Mark 10:2-12; Luke
16:18; I Corinthians 7:15. Our study will, therefore, be
largely occupied with the interpretation of these passages.
I
Deuteronomy 24:1-4
This passage occupies a unique place in the Old Testament
because it contains, as no other passage in the Old Testament,
specific legislation bearing upon the question of divorce. The
references to this passage in both Testaments confirm the
significance t hat attaches to it in the Old Testament economy
\
DIVORCE 33
(cf. Is. 50:1; Jer. 3:1; Mat t . 5:31; Mat t . 19:7, 8; Mark
10:3-5).
The understanding of the import of this passage has been
perplexed, if not distorted, by the adoption of a translation
that, though possible, is not by any means the most defensible.
This translation has been followed by the Authorised, Revised
and American Revised Versions in English. The Authorised
reads as follows:
When a man hath taken a wife, and married her, and it
come to pass t hat she find no favour in his eyes, because
he hath found some uncleanness in her: then let him write
her a bill of divorcement, and give it in her hand, and send
her out of his house.
2. And when she is departed out of his house, she may
go and be another man' s wife.
3 And if the latter husband hate her, and write her a
bill of divorcement, and giveth it in her hand, and sendeth
her out of his house; or if the latter husband die, which
took her to be his wife ;
4 Her former husband, which sent her away, may not
take her again to be his wife, after t hat she is defiled; for
t hat is abomination before the Lord: and thou shalt not
cause the land to sin, which the Lord thy God giveth thee
for an inheritance.
The crucial point to be noted in this rendering is t hat the
apodosis to the protasis expressed in the first part of verse 1
begins at the middle of the same verse and reads, "then let
him write her a bill of divorcement, and give it in her hand,
and send her out of his house". On this rendering the divorce
could well be construed as mandatory in the circumstance
posited. No doubt many English readers have understood
the passage in this way and so have regarded divorce as com-
manded in the event of the uncleanness mentioned in the
protasis of the sentence. The inference would naturally be
t hat not only was divorce permitted in this case but was also
prescribed.
The English Revised and American Revised Versions alter
the rendering of verse 1 and might possibly be interpreted as
toning down the mandatory feature t hat is prominent in the
34 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
translation of the Authorised Version. They both translate
verse 1 as follows:
When a man taketh a wife, and marrieth her, then it
shall be, if she find no favour in his eyes, because he hath
found some unseemly thing in her, t hat he shall write her
a bill of divorcement, and give it in her hand, and send her
out of his house.
While the apodosis in this case is introduced earlier than in
the case of the Authorised Version and while the English
reader might not be so ready to give mandatory force to the
rendering, careful examination of the construction would lead
the reader to understand t hat the husband in this case was
required to give his wife a bill of divorcement, give it in her
hand and send her out of his house. And the English reader
would still be justified in regarding this piece of Mosaic legis-
lation as not only permitting divorce, in the case of the
uncleanness mentioned, but as also requiring it.
1
What should be recognised and appreciated is t hat this type
of rendering and the view regarding the syntax t hat underlies
it are quite unnecessary and are not supported by scholars
and commentators whose judgment in this matter is worthy
of the greatest deference.
It is significant t hat Calvin in his comments on the passage
in question recognises the precise point which has been raised
by the construction of the passage. He says: "Some inter-
preters do not read these three verses continuously, but sup-
pose the sense to be complete at the end of the first, wherein
the husband testifies t hat he divorces his wife for no offence,
but because her beauty does not satisfy his lust. If, however,
we give more close attention, we shall see t hat it is only one
1
It is the presence of the word "shall" in both clauses "then it shall
be . . . that he shall write her a bill of divorcement" that lends to the
rendering of both the Revised and the American Revised versions the
jussive force. If a rendering similar to that of Joseph Reider had been
adopted the jussive feature would have been eliminated, even though the
form of the translation would not have been materially altered "when
a man taketh a wife, and marrieth her, then it cometh to pass, if she find
no favor in his eyes, because he hath found some unseemly thing in her,
that he writeth her a bill of divorcement, and giveth it in her hand, and
sendeth her out of his house" etc. (Deuteronomy with Commentary, Phila-
delphia, 1937, pp. 220 f.).
DIVORCE 35
provision of the Law, viz., t hat when a man has divorced his
wife, it is not lawful for him to marry her again if she have
married another."
2
More modern scholars, also, of various theological view-
points are insistent t hat the protasis in this passage embraces
the first three verses and t hat it is only at the beginning of
verse 4 t hat the apodosis is introduced.
The comment of C. F. Keil and F. Delitzsch brings out this
construction very clearly: "In these verses . . . divorce is not
establihed as a right; all t hat is done is, t hat in case of a
divorce a reunion with the divorced wife is forbidden, if in
the meantime she had married another man, even though the
second husband had also put her away, or had died. The four
verses form a period, in which vers. 1-3 are the clauses of the
protasis, which describe the matter treated about; and ver. 4
contains the apodosis, with the law concerning the point in
question."
3
S. R. Driver says with reference to this passage:
"The rend, of A. V., R. V., is not here quite exact; v. *-
3
form
the protasis, stating the conditions of the case contemplated,
v.
4
is the apodosis".
4
To the same effect is the comment of
Joseph Reider: "The chief concern of the law is to prevent
remarriage after divorce. Consequently w . 1-3 must be
construed as the protasis and v. 4 alone as the apodosis."
5
To these might be added the same judgment on the part
of others. We can properly regard this view of the construc-
tion and intent of the passage as the one in favour of which
there is an overwhelming preponderance. It is surely a con-
sideration weighted with the closest bearing on this question
t hat the oldest and, on all accounts, the most important
3
Commentaries on the Four Last Books of Moses, Eng. Tr., Vol. Ill, p.
94. "Caeterum quidam interpretes non legunt hos tres versus uno con-
textu, sed plenam sententiam esse volunt, ut mari tus teste tur se divortium
facer cum uxore, non ob crimen, sed quia formae venustas eius libidini
non satisfaciat. Si quis tarnen propius attendai, facile videbit unum esse
duntaxat legis caput, nempe, ubi quis uxorem repudiaverit, fas non esse
iterum earn ducere si alteri nupserit" (Opera, Brunswick, 1882, Voi. XXIV,
p. 658).
3 Biblical Commentary on the Old Testament, Eng. Tr., Edinburgh, 1880,
Vol. Il l , pp,416f.
4
The International Critical Commentary, A Critical and Exegetical Com-
mentary on Deuteronomy, New York, 1916, p. 269.
s Op. cit., p. 220.
36 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
version, the Septuagint, adopts this construction.
6
As trans-
lated the whole passage should then read as follows:
When a man taketh a wife, and marrieth her, and it cometh
to pass, if she find no favour in his eyes, because he hath
found in her some unseemly thing, t hat he writeth her a
bill of divorcement, and giveth it into her hand, and
sendeth her out of his house, and she departeth out of his
house, and goeth and becometh another man' s wife, and
the latter husband hateth her and writeth her a bill of
divorcement, and giveth it into her hand, and sendeth her
out of his house, or if the latter husband, who took her to
be his wife, die; her former husband, which sent her away,
may not take her again to be his wife, after t hat she has
been defiled, for this is an abomination before the Lord,
and thou shalt not cause the land to sin which the Lord
thy God giveth thee for an inheritance.
These observations with respect to construction are of
primary importance because they show t hat this passage does
not make divorce mandatory in the case of the indecency or
uncleanness concerned. It is not even to be understood as
encouraging or advising men to put away their wives in such
a case. Neither is it to be understood as an authorising or
sanctioning of divorce. It simply provides t hat if a man puts
away his wife and she marries another man the former husband
cannot under any conditions take her again to be his wife.
There is nothing, therefore, in this passage itself to warrant
the conclusion t hat divorce is here given divine approval and
is morally legitimated under the conditions specified.
7
6
*> e ris ywciica arfj,
evavTov 6TL evpev kv arfj ,
ypkypei . . . irprepos
75
, . . .
? Commentators like Driver and Reider, for example, though insistent
that verses 1-3 are protasis and verse 4 alone apodosis, nevertheless
assume that the right of divorce is taken for granted. The former says:
"The law is thus not, properly speaking, a law of divorce: the right of
divorce is assumed, as established by custom (comp. 22 2, two cases
in which the right is forfeited); but definite legal formalities are prescribed,
and restrictions are imposed, tending to prevent its being lightly or rashly
exercised*' (op. cit., p. 269). Reider likewise says: "Here, as elsewhere
(Lev. 21.7, 14; 22.13; Num. 30.10), the right of divorce is taken for granted
(it was an absolute right, vested in man, among all Semitic nations),
DIVORCE
37
It must, of course, be fully conceded t hat divorce was
practised. This is taken for granted in this passage, so much
so t hat under certain conditions it is permanently valid and
inviolable. Other passages in the Pentateuch also evince the
practice of divorce (Lev. 21:7, 14; 22:13; Numb. 30:9 (10);
Deut. 22:19, 29; cf. Isa. 50:1; Jer. 3:1; Ezek. 44:22).
It is also conceded t hat divorce was permitted or tolerated.
This is true not simply in the sense in which every event t hat
occurs is permitted but in the sense t hat it was conceded or
suffered as the actual status quo, and the penalty of civil or
ecclesiastical ostracism was not attached to it. This is just
saying t hat a certain freedom in the matter of divorce was
tolerated and when t hat freedom was exercised a civil or
ecclesiastical penalty was not thereby incurred. Deuteronomy
22:19, 29 instances two cases in which this very freedom was
denied and these provisions imply t hat a certain kind of
freedom might be exercised by others who did not fall into
either of these two categories. In this respect the difference
between the Old and New Testaments appears. As we shall
see later on, this freedom, conceded or suffered under the
Mosaic economy, is removed under the gospel dispensation.
It is highly necessary, however, to distinguish between this
hence there are no regulations concerning it" (op. cit., p. 220). It is this
view that is being controverted in this article. To say the least, the writer
maintains that to speak of divorce in this connection as a right is not
precisely correct. The viewpoint adopted is rather in line with that of
Augustine, Calvin, Keil and Delitzsch and others (cf., Calvin: op. cit.,
pp. 93 f.; Keil and Delitzsch: op. cit., pp. 416 ff.; Rudolf Stier: The Words
of the Lord Jesus, Eng. Tr., Edinburgh, 18$5, Vol. I, p. 175). Augustine's
comment is worth quoting here. Referring to the looseness of Gentile
practice he says: "Something similar to this custom, on account of the
hardness of the Israelites, Moses seems to have allowed, concerning a bill
of divorcement (Deut. 24:1; Matt. 19:8). In which matter there appears
rather reproof than approval of divorce" (De Bono Conjugali, Lib. I, Cap.
VIII; cf. also Contra Faustum Manichaeum, Lib. XIX, Cap. XXVI).
In fairness to Driver and as more in accord with the position taken above
a later comment of his should be quoted. He says: "Hebrew law, as re-
marked above, does not institute divorce, but tolerates it, in view of the
imperfections of human nature (wps . Matt.
19
8
), and lays down regulations tending to limit it, and preclude its
abuse" (op. cit., p. 272). It may well be that Driver is not using the word
"right" in the sense of intrinsic right and prerogative.
38 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
sufferance or toleration, on the one hand, and divine approval
or sanction, on the other. As found already there is no evi-
dence to show t hat divorce was approved or morally legiti-
mated. Permission, sufferance, toleration was granted. But
underlying this very notion is the idea of wrong. We do not
properly speak of toleration or sufferance as granted or con-
ceded in connection with what is intrinsically right or desir-
able. It is this line of distinction, too often forgotten or
obliterated, t hat must be appreciated, and it is this distinction
t hat underlies or is expressed in the treatment our Lord pro-
vides on this question, as we shall see later.
When we say t hat an intrinsic wrong is presupposed in the
very sufferance accorded, it is not meant simply t hat a general
or specific sinful condition is presupposed in the practice of
divorce but also t hat in the very act of divorce itself there is
an intrinsic wrong not compatible with the absolute standard
of right. And by sufferance is meant that, while the act was
intrinsically wrong and therefore worthy of censure, the
sanctions attached to this evil were not as severe as the
intrinsic evil of the practice merited. For the hardness of
their heart Moses suffered them to put away their wives.
The subsequent discussion will show t hat the restrictions im-
posed upon the divorce tolerated and practised were neces-
sitated by the very abnormalities and evils associated with the
practice.
The Bill of Divorcement. The bill of divorcement ("I?
)
1
")?),
8
we have good reason to believe, was mandatory in
the case of dismissal. It served a variety of purposes. It was
a legal document and therefore served as a deterrent of hasty
action on the part of the husband it would serve to restrain
frivolous, thoughtless and rash dismissal. It would also be a
testimonial to the woman of her freedom from marital obliga-
tions to the husband who sent her away. And it would be a
8
An example of the bill of divorce can be seen in John Lightfoot: Horae
Hebraicae et Talmudicae, Works, ed. Pitman, London, 1823, Vol. XI,
p. 120. Cf., however, E. Neufeld: Ancient Hebrew Marriage Laws, London,
1944, p. 180. Neufeld says, "the prescribed contents of the letter of
divorce are unknown" and contends that "the historical data at hand
suggest that there was a short formula".
I
DIVORCE 39
protective instrument in the matter of the woman's reputation
and well-being, particularly in the event t hat she married
another man.
9
We may conclude t hat the bill of divorcement was required
by positive enactment in all cases of divorce and was there-
fore in the category of precept or requirement. This should
be borne in mind, as it may bear very closely upon the inter-
pretation of the New Testament passages.
The Unseemly Thing. It has to be admitted t hat it is ex-
ceedingly difficult if not precarious to be certain as to what
the "unseemly thing" really was. The Hebrew is \]
and literally means "nakedness of a thi ng". As is well known,
Rabbinical interpretation was sharply divided on this ques-
tion. The school of Shammai regarded it as unchastity of
behaviour, the school of Hillel as any indecency or anything
displeasing to the husband. Some of the latter school deemed
most frivolous reasons as sufficient.
10
"The writing of divorcement, therefore, was itself ito hardship, but a
benefit, protecting the divorced wife from unfounded imputations, and
declaring her repudiation to be founded upon something less than violation
of her marriage vow. This was the requisition of the law; but what was the
corruption or the false interpretation of it, tacitly implied and afterwards
refuted? This, we learn from a fuller declaration of our Saviour on a differ-
ent occasion, which has been preserved by Mark (10, 2-12), consisted in
regarding the Mosaic precept as a license to repudiate at will; whereas
it was a merciful provision in behalf of the repudiated woman, designed to
mitigate the hardship of divorces, even when unlawful. It was not a general
permission to repudiate, but a stringent requisition that whoever did so
should secure his wife from injury by certifying that she was not chargeable
with unchaste conduct, but divorced upon some minor pretext" (Joseph
Addison Alexander: The Gospel according to Matthew Explained, London,
1884, p. 145; cf. also Driver: op. cit., pp. 272 f.).
1 0
The Talmudical Tract Gittin deals with this diversity of interpretation.
As translated by Leo Auerbach it says: "The House of Shamai says: A
man must not divorce his wife unless he has found her unfaithful. As
was said (Deuteronomy xxiv, 1) Because he hath found some uncleanness
in her. The House of Hillel says: He may divorce her if she only spoiled
a dish for him because it was said: Uncleanness is anything. Rabbi Akiba
says: He may divorce her if he found another that is more beautiful than
his wife, because it was said: (Deut. xxiv, 1) If it come to pass that she find
no favour in his eyes" (The Babylonian Talmud in Selection, New York,
1944, p. 178; cf. also Lightfoot: op. cit., p. 117).
40
WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
The divergence in Rabbinical interpretation provides us
with a convenient approach to the question. If the inter-
pretation of the former school should be demonstrated to be
correct, then the Mosaic legislation here would be almost
identical with the provisions of the New Testament on this
question." An examination of the evidence will show, how-
ever, t hat the truth does not seem to rest with either of these
views.
The following facts bear most cogently against the view
t hat nr i V refers to adultery.
(1) The Pentateuch prescribed death for adultery (Lev.
20:10; Deut. 22:22; cf. Deut. 22:23-27). It must be concluded,
therefore, t hat the provisions of Deuteronomy 24:1-4 cannot
apply to a case of proven adultery on the part of the wife.
She and her guilty partner were both put to death.
(2) It might, however, be pleaded t hat though the divorce
legislation could not apply to a case of proven adultery it
might apply to a case of adultery not proven but on good
grounds suspected. The provisions of Numbers 5:11-31 have
to do with such a case and the ritual prescribed leaves no
place for divorce. This same passage has to do also with the
case of the man who entertains suspicion or jealousy with
reference to his wife when there is no ground in fact for such
suspicion. The provisions of Deuteronomy 24:1-4 cannot
therefore apply to a case of suspected adultery whether such
suspicion be warranted or unwarranted.
(3) Furthermore, the Pentateuch deals with the case of a
man who brings against his newly-wedded wife the charge
John Lightfoot regards the 2 ny")y as meaning adultery. He recon-
ciles this with the other provisions of the Pentateuch regarding adultery
by arguing thus: "When God had established that fatal law of punishing
adultery by death (Deut. xxii.), for the terror of the people, and for their
avoiding of that sin; the same merciful God foreseeing, also, how hard
(occasion being taken from this law) the issue of this might be to the
women, by reason of the roughness of the men, lusting, perhaps after
other women, and loathing their own wives, he mere graciously pro-
vided against such kind of wife-killing by a law, mitigating the former, and
allowed the putting away a wife in the same case, concerning which that
fatal law was given, namely, in the case of adultery" (op. cit., p. 116;
see also p. 117).
DIVORCE 41
of uncleanness (Deut. 22:13-21). If the charge is disproven
by the presentation of the tokens of virginity on the part
of the father and mother of the damsel, then the man may
not put her away "she shall be his wife; he may not put
her away all his days" (vs. 19). If the tokens of virginity
were not found in the damsel, she was to be stoned to death.
So again the provisions of Deuteronomy 24:1-4 cannot apply
to this case.
(4) In Deuteronomy 22:23, 24 we have the provisions for
uncleanness on the part of a virgin betrothed unto a husband.
In this case both the virgin betrothed and the man who defiled
her were to be put to death.
(5) In the case of a betrothed virgin who was forced, Deu-
teronomy 22:25-27 provides t hat the man only was to be put
to death and the virgin was to be treated as guiltless.
(6) In the case of a man who lies with a virgin not be-
trothed, the requirement of Deuteronomy 22:28, 29 is t hat
the man must marry the damsel and he may not put her away
all his days.
We see then t hat the law provides for all sorts of contingen-
cies in the matter of sexual uncleanness. But in none of the
cases instanced above does the phrase ^ ^ I V
o r
even the
word occur. In every case the remedy or redress is
entirely different from recourse to divorce. In none of these
contingencies could the prescriptions of Deuteronomy 24:1-4
apply. We must conclude, therefore, t hat there is no evi-
dence to show t hat "l^T ^11V refers to adultery or to an act
of sexual uncleanness. I ndeei t he evidence is preponderantly
against any such interpretation."
On the other hand, the looser interpretation of the school
of Hillel does not appear to be well supported. The phrase
itself when viewed in the context of Old Testament usage
surely requires something shameful. While it is true t hat the
12
Cf. Keil and Delitzsch: op. cit., p. 417; Driver: op. cit., p. 271; Reider:
op. cit., p. 221; Alexander: op. cit., p. 145. Alexander's comment is: "That
the bill or writing was not a charge of infidelity, but rather a certificate of
innocence in that respect, is clear, because it was to be delivered to the wife
herself, and because the law required an adultress to be punished (Num.
5, 31), not to be thus quietly dismissed".
42 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
phrase 1 3 ^ fll*] itself occurs only once elsewhere in the Old
Testament (Deut. 23:14 (IS)), the word nj-JV occurs fre-
quently in the sense of shameful exposure of the human body
(cf. Gen. 9:22, 23; Exod. 20:26; Lam. 1:8; Ezek. 16:36, 37).
Furthermore, the word is frequently used of illicit sexual inter-
course (cf. especially Lev. 18), even though, as we found above,
there is no evidence to show t hat the phrase " l ^l ^HV means
illicit sexual intercourse in Deuteronomy 24:1. And in Deu-
teronomy 23:14 (15), the only other instance of the phrase
in the Old Testament, it is used with reference to the human
excrement, and the "unclean thi ng" is the failure to cover
up the human excrement in accordance with the law set
forth in the preceding verses. We are forced to the conclusion,
therefore, t hat | *"| means some indecency and im-
propriety of behaviour on the part of the woman. While
falling short of illicit sexual intercourse it may well be that
the indecency consisted in some kind of shameful conduct
connected with sex life. Or it may have been some other kind
of impropriety worthy of censure on the part of the husband.
It is, consequently, necessary to strike a balance between
the rigid interpretation of the school of Shammai and the loose
one of the school of Hillel. We must suppose something
shameful and offensive t hat gives to the husband some legiti-
mate ground for displeasure and complaint.
13
The Defilement and Abomination. The reason why the di-
vorced woman who has married another man may not under
any circumstances return to her first husband is t hat by her
second marriage she has been defiled (^). This root
(Noi?) is used very frequently in the Old Testament, par-
ticularly in the Pentateuch. It is used of moral, religious or
ceremonial pollution. The strength and force of the word
may be seen by the fact t hat when used of moral defilement
it can refer to the grossest types of sexual immorality and
when used of religious defilement can refer to the gross
iniquity of idolatry.
13
Cf., e. g., Neufeld: op. cit., p. 179. " I t would thus seem that the
phrase denoted some gross indecency, some singular impropriety, which
aroused the revulsion of the husband and made his life with her henceforth
an impossibility."
DIVORCE 43
An examination of the Old Testament usage will evince t hat
the defilement involved in this case cannot be reduced to the
level of merely ceremonial defilement but will have to be placed
in the same category as Leviticus 18:20 and Numbers 5:13,
14, 20, 27, 28, 29. There is no ceremonial ritual t hat can
remove the defilement, as in other cases where ceremonial
uncleanness is in view. And if the defilement is not taken into
account and the prohibition to return to the first husband is
violated, the evil is an abomination () to the Lord and
it causes the land to sin.
The very nature of the restriction imposed shows t hat some
kind of gross abnormality is regarded as entering into the
situation. In normal conditions a woman whose husband
died was at liberty to marry another man. If no abnormality
entered into this case we should think t hat it would be
most natural and normal for the woman to return to her
first husband in the event of the death of her second. But
it is just here t hat the law is most jealous. Even in the case
of the death of the second husband the woman may not
return to her first husband. The severity of the restriction
and the reason assigned show the gross irregularity of the
situation created by the second mar r i age" s he has been
defiled".
It should be noted t hat the divorced woman is not prevented
from returning to her husband if she did not marry a second.
It is only in the event of remarriage t hat the defilement enters
and the prohibition takes effect. It should also be noted t hat
the law at this point does not prevent a woman from marrying
a third husband in the event t hat the second husband divorces
her or dies. But in no case may she return to a former hus-
band if once married to another. This peculiarity is very
striking and shows the grave complication t hat is liable to
arise once a bill of divorcement is given. While the bill of
divorcement as such does not prevent reconciliation and
restoration, yet once a second marriage is consummated the
whole relationship changes. The second marriage effects an
unobliterable separation from the first husband. This implies
a unique relation to the first husband and demonstrates t hat
the marriage bond is so sacred that, although divorce may be
given and a certain freedom granted to the divorced persons,
4 4 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
yet there is an unobliterable relationship t hat appears, para-
doxically enough, in the form of an unobliterable separation
in the event t hat a second marriage has been consummated
on the part of the divorced wife. This irremediable separation
only serves to enforce the gross abnormality entailed and
serves to confirm the interpretation given earlier as to the
import of this passage. Divorce was not required, legitimated,
sanctioned or encouraged. It was rather discouraged, and the
severity of the restriction imposed, together with the reason
assigned for this restriction, enforces t hat discouragement.
Divorce was indeed tolerated or suffered. But the evil and
wrong presupposed in t hat very sufferance receive emphatic
declaration in the provision of Deuteronomy 24:4. The penal
sanction attached is a witness to the unobliterable irregularity
entailed in the divorce.
It should indeed be noted t hat it is only with reference to
the prohibited return to the first husband t hat the defilement
concerned is mentioned. The remarriage on the part of the
divorced woman is not expressly stated to be defilement ir-
respective of return to the first husband. For these considera-
tions we are required to exercise great caution before stig-
matising the remarriage as adulterous. One thing is certain,
t hat the second marriage was not placed in the category of
adultery nor the woman regarded as an adulteress in terms
of the Pentateuchal legislation. The woman and her second
husband were not put to death as the Pentateuch required
in the case of adultery. While not stigmatised as adultery in
terms of the Mosaic economy, nevertheless, it is not at all
so certain t hat the remarriage is not regarded as involving
defilement. It may very well be t hat the evil attaching to
divorce and the abnormal situation in which the woman is
placed as the divorcee of her first husband are regarded as
casting their shadow over the second marriage even though
the second marriage is not placed in the category of adultery
and civil or ecclesiastical penalty is not appended.
But even if we suppose t hat defilement is not regarded as
inhering in the second marriage per se, we must observe t hat
the moment return to the first husband is envisaged, then the
DIVORCE 45
marital relation to the second husband takes on an entirely
different complexion. Whatever may be true of the second
marriage, irrespective of return to the first husband, the
moment return is envisaged, then, with reference to the
first husband, the woman has been defiled. And it is this
restoration t hat is called an abomination. All of this forcibly
reminds us of the grave abnormalities t hat inhere in the
practice of divorce. The one insurmountable obstacle to the
marriage of this particular woman with this particular man
is not t hat the woman had been married to another man but
simply t hat the particular man concerned is the man from
whom she had been divorced. It is the fact of divorce t hat
bears the whole onus of ultimate responsibility for the defile-
ment t hat is sure to enter when the first marriage is restored
after a second had been consummated.
Conclusion. Thus within the limits of this passage we have
exemplified and confirmed the principle t hat while divorce
was suffered in the Mosaic economy we have no warrant to
suppose t hat under any circumstances was it sanctioned or
approved as the intrinsic right or prerogative of the husband.
It should not be claimed t hat this interpretation resolves
all difficulties connected with the practice of divorce. But it is
a construction of the passage t hat is grammatically, syntac-
tically and exegetically defensible and it brings principiai
harmony into the teaching of the Old Testament. It eliminates
the inconsistency t hat inheres in the very notion of approval
or sanction and it accords to the practice of divorce a status
t hat is principially consistent with the original institution of
Genesis 2:23, 24 and in harmony with the final word of the
Old Testament on this question :
And this have ye done again, covering the altar of the
Lord with tears, with weeping, and with crying out, inso-
much t hat he regardeth not the offering any more, or
receiveth it with good will at your hand.
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 com-
panion, and the wife of thy covenant.
And did not he make one? Yet had he the residue of the
4 6 WESTMINSTER THEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
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 t hat he hateth
putting away: for one covereth violence with his garment,
saith the Lord of hosts: therefore take heed to your spirit,
t hat ye deal not treacherously (Malachi 2:13-16).
(to be continued)
^ s
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