YeshuaFan
Well-Known Member
- Oct 19, 2018
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In a Christian marriage, would not one of the parties committing adultery and refuse to repent and forsake it cause the relationship to be ruptured then also?I don't think Paul says that.
Divorce is off the table for believers. There is no acceptable reason for a believer to desire a divorce.
But Paul places the situation of a believer married to an unbeliever in a different category with different instructions from a believer married to a believer. After saying, "To the married..." and giving them instructions based on Jesus' actual teaching (Matthew 19), he explicitly says, "To the rest..." and gives different instructions based on his own Holy Spirit inspiration to a situation Jesus never talked about, believers married to unbelievers.
In that situation, if the unbeliever walks away, the believer is free to remarry...another believer. But even in that situation, the believer is not permitted to desire divorce. If the unbelieving spouse is happy to allow the believer to do his or her Christian thing with other Christians, the believing spouse has no acceptable reason to seek divorce.
When the unbelieving spouse leaves the marriage, Paul says the believing spouse is no longer "bound." Then later in the letter, he explains that by "bound" he is talking about being able to remarry.
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