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Can You Go to Heaven if You Divorce and Remarry?

GeorgiaGuyinAtlanta

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Can a person divorce and remarry and still go to Heaven?

The reason I ask is because the Bible says that one commits adultery if he divorces his wife and marries another. Since the wedding vows are to be till death do us part, said before God, then does that stand to reason that a person who gets a divorce is not really divorced before the eyes of God, and therefore one is committing adultery by marrying another, as long as their spouse is living?

I'd like to hear your thoughts on this subject.
 

jannikitty

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Can a person divorce and remarry and still go to Heaven?

The reason I ask is because the Bible says that one commits adultery if he divorces his wife and marries another. Since the wedding vows are to be till death do us part, said before God, then does that stand to reason that a person who gets a divorce is not really divorced before the eyes of God, and therefore one is committing adultery by marrying another, as long as their spouse is living?

I'd like to hear your thoughts on this subject.
 
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jannikitty

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No matter what our past experiences going to heaven is something which can be obtained by our relationship with God. Although in the bible divorce is not readily condoned ...Jesus made it very clear that accepting Him and endeavoring to follow Him was the ticket to heaven. If at fault and unrepentant sin remains time to repent and make right with others as much as one can then the slate is wiped clean. He forgives!
 
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Dave L

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Can a person divorce and remarry and still go to Heaven?

The reason I ask is because the Bible says that one commits adultery if he divorces his wife and marries another. Since the wedding vows are to be till death do us part, said before God, then does that stand to reason that a person who gets a divorce is not really divorced before the eyes of God, and therefore one is committing adultery by marrying another, as long as their spouse is living?

I'd like to hear your thoughts on this subject.
The New Covenant does not provide for divorce like the Old Covenant did. All marriage is for life.
 
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joshua 1 9

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Can a person divorce and remarry and still go to Heaven?

The reason I ask is because the Bible says that one commits adultery if he divorces his wife and marries another. Since the wedding vows are to be till death do us part, said before God, then does that stand to reason that a person who gets a divorce is not really divorced before the eyes of God, and therefore one is committing adultery by marrying another, as long as their spouse is living?

I'd like to hear your thoughts on this subject.
Paul said that people that remarry are going to have trouble. There are lots of people in the OT with lots of wives. The women only had one husband though. Land ownership for the most part went to the men.

The Unmarried and Widowed: "Are you committed to a wife? Do not seek to be released. Are you free of commitment? Do not look for a wife. But if you do marry, you have not sinned. And if a virgin marries, she has not sinned. But those who marry will face troubles in this life, and I want to spare you this." (1Cor 7:28)
 
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chevyontheriver

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Can a person divorce and remarry and still go to Heaven?

The reason I ask is because the Bible says that one commits adultery if he divorces his wife and marries another. Since the wedding vows are to be till death do us part, said before God, then does that stand to reason that a person who gets a divorce is not really divorced before the eyes of God, and therefore one is committing adultery by marrying another, as long as their spouse is living?

I'd like to hear your thoughts on this subject.
Can one die in unrepentant serious sin and still go to heaven? I'd guess the answer to that is a 'no'.

Can you marry once, validly, then divorce, and then marry again? Jesus didn't sound like it.

Are there some marriages that are just invalid? A few, like those where you are too closely related, or where one party lies in their vows, or some other uncommon but real circumstances. Those are fodder for annulment. But most marriages fail because of the hard heartedness of people validly married. Those are the ones where you bound yourself for life.

Some people will say that it doesn't matter and you just start again. Jesus wasn't so inclined. I'd say if you were validly married and cant live together any more, you should remain single, as a witness to the vow you took. Even if the other person has renounced their vow.

It's a hard view. But it seems to have been a hard view Jesus was insisting on. His disciples thought, after hearing it, that it might be better to remain single.

Courage.
 
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1213

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Can a person divorce and remarry and still go to Heaven?

I would say divorce is not good. But it can be forgiven. And to get eternal life, one must be righteous:

These will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.
Mat. 25:46

For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Romans 6:23

It may be that also righteous makes mistakes. What I think makes the difference is that righteous regrets if he has done wrongly and wants to be better.
 
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Francis Drake

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My first wife and I were both Christians.

After 20 years, she had an affair and left me. We divorced.

Then the Lord, very distinctly, led me to meet a wonderful Christian lady who had never married. She became my second wife, and we have been joyfully married for 13 years now.

Thank God that he is merciful and kind.
Thank God that I am judged by his righteousness, not my own shortcomings.

Sadly, the church is full of people who interpret scripture, entirely to suit their own circumstances, absolving themselves and finding guilt in everyone else's actions.
God is not like that.
 
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ripple the car

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Can a person divorce and remarry and still go to Heaven?

The reason I ask is because the Bible says that one commits adultery if he divorces his wife and marries another. Since the wedding vows are to be till death do us part, said before God, then does that stand to reason that a person who gets a divorce is not really divorced before the eyes of God, and therefore one is committing adultery by marrying another, as long as their spouse is living?

I'd like to hear your thoughts on this subject.
Yes, it is not something that we should do. The NT is pretty clear on this. It's very, very common to divorce and remarry, but if you look at the plan meaning of Scripture, this is not something that we shoulddo. The only possible exception would be in a "Joseph and Mary" situation, where he (the husband) considered putting her (the wife) away during engagement for perceived adultery.

Matthew 5:32

Matthew 19:9

Mark 10:11-12

Romans 7:1-3
 
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Presbyterian Continuist

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We have to look at the context of the passages where Jesus and Paul spoke about divorce and remarriage, because that is important in understanding why they even brought up the subject.

In the case of Jesus, He was pressured by the hypocritical Pharisees to answer their questions, which they often asked Him to try and trip Him up. He gave the example of divorce under Moses, and God's standards for marriage to show that what was allowable under the external rule of the Mosaic Law, which was quite liberal, the standard of God was much stricter. But His comment about divorce was an example, in the same way that He spoke about looking on a woman to lust after her was adultery even though no actual act was done. If we take this latter example as a rule for Christians, then 95 percent of males would be guilty every time they looked at an attractive woman with lust in their mind, and the other 5 percent would be guilty of lying. The whole point that Jesus was making was that although they were following the external rules of the Mosaic Law, there had to be much more in order to be righteous before God. He said that unless they exceed the righteousness of the Pharisees, they wouldn't make it into the kingdom of God; and the righteousness of the Pharisees was absolutely perfect according to the external rules. Paul said himself that he complied with the Law blameless. So, Jesus was not legislating rules about divorce. He was just using it as an example of obeying an outward set of rules without a change of heart was not enough to justify a person before God. So I don't think it is wise to base reliable doctrine about divorce and remarriage on just an example Jesus gave to the Pharisees.

When Paul wrote to the Corinthians about divorce and remarriage, it was because there was a faction within the Corinthian church who were divorcing their wives for no other reason than they believed that the single life brought them closer to God and in a better spiritual position with Him. It was on the belief that marriage somehow caused a distance between them and God, and they believed they could serve God better by divorcing their wives. So what Paul was saying was that this was not an acceptable reason for divorce. Notice that he does not give any comment about a wife divorcing her husband; nor does he give any instruction about what happens in the case of desertion and domestic violence. This is because he was addressing a particular problem in the Corinthian church which did not include desertion and domestic violence, both of which breaks the marriage contract in the same way as adultery, fornication, or divorce just to be celibate.

Also, to say that a person is condemned to hell because he is divorced and remarried, it to go against the gospel of Christ, which states, "By grace are you saved through faith, and not of yourselves; it is the gift of God; not of works lest anyone should boast in them".

This is why the way to eternal life is very narrow, and few there are who actually find it. It is because many cannot accept that it is through the unmerited grace of God through faith alone in Christ that brings salvation. They hold on to the belief that if they live right and follow God's moral law as well as having a belief in Christ, they will somehow be acceptable to God. They believe that they, and everyone who professes Christianity has to be sinlessly perfect in order to get to heaven. This is why they cannot believe that a divorced and remarried person can get to heaven because these ones, in their own mind, have violated the standards of God. In actual fact they are frustrating the grace of God, and insulting Him, because they are not accepting salvation as God's totally free gift to them. They want to pay Him something by trying to come up to His standards of holiness and requiring others to do the same.
 
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LoveofTruth

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Can a person divorce and remarry and still go to Heaven?

The reason I ask is because the Bible says that one commits adultery if he divorces his wife and marries another. Since the wedding vows are to be till death do us part, said before God, then does that stand to reason that a person who gets a divorce is not really divorced before the eyes of God, and therefore one is committing adultery by marrying another, as long as their spouse is living?

I'd like to hear your thoughts on this subject.
1 Corinthians 7:27. Art thou bound unto a wife? seek not to be loosed. Art thou loosed from a wife? seek not a wife.28. But and if thou marry, thou hast not sinned; and if a virgin marry, she hath not sinned. Nevertheless such shall have trouble in the flesh: but I spare you.”
 
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eleos1954

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Can a person divorce and remarry and still go to Heaven?

The reason I ask is because the Bible says that one commits adultery if he divorces his wife and marries another. Since the wedding vows are to be till death do us part, said before God, then does that stand to reason that a person who gets a divorce is not really divorced before the eyes of God, and therefore one is committing adultery by marrying another, as long as their spouse is living?

I'd like to hear your thoughts on this subject.

Any sin can be forgiven except the sin of blasphemy against the Holy Spirit and that is continual rejection of the conviction of the Holy Spirit in ones heart ... the heart becomes hardened over time and not sensitive or open to being changed by the work of the Holy Spirt in them.

Blasphemy against the Holy Spirit is a perpetual, constant resisting of the drawing love of God’s Spirit, so much so that you lose the capacity to hear the Holy Spirit’s voice. The conscience becomes seared (1 Timothy 4:2). This deadly blasphemy is also called “grieving away” the Holy Spirit. Paul refers to “Grieve not the Holy Spirit, wherewith you are sealed,” meaning we can permanently grieve Him away.

Eventually, a person loses the capacity to repent, and therefore cannot be saved. It is for this sin that a person cannot be forgiven, because they have rejected the Spirit that convicts of sin (John 16:8). So if one is led to ask for forgiveness and have the desire to repent (turn away from sin), then you have probably not committed the unpardonable sin.
 
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Bob Crowley

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Matthew 12:31 NIV
And so I tell you, every kind of sin and slander can be forgiven, but blasphemy against the Spirit will not be forgiven.

Divorce can be forgiven, like any other sin.
 
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Presbyterian Continuist

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Matthew 12:31 NIV

Divorce can be forgiven, like any other sin.
Grace-based Christianity accepts that we are all sinners and no matter how good our performance is, we will never be able to please or be acceptable to God through it. We are always going to get things wrong while we are in this natural body, including divorce. And even if we get everything else right, we will still under-perform because we can never love God with all our heart, soul and strength, and love our neighbor as ourselves.

It is usually the performance-based religious person who thinks they can be justified by their good "Christian" performance who takes the lead in condemning those who get themselves into strife with their sinful flesh, and this includes divorce. Such people tend to be taller than me, and when I look up at them it gives me a pain in the neck!
 
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chevyontheriver

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Matthew 12:31 NIV

Divorce can be forgiven, like any other sin.
That is true. The issue here seems to be more 'divorce and remarriage'. If one is validly married to one person, then marries someone else, is the continuation of the second marriage not a continuing sin? Now maybe the first marriage was not valid, and was annulled. I'm not talking about that. Rather, the case of where the first marriage was valid, but out of the hardness of hearts there was a divorce. The teaching of the Catholic Church, pope Francis' footnote not withstanding, is that validly married people are not free to marry another unless their first spouse dies. The divorce may be forgiven but that doesn't make a right to remarry.
 
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BrotherD

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Can a person divorce and remarry and still go to Heaven?

The reason I ask is because the Bible says that one commits adultery if he divorces his wife and marries another. Since the wedding vows are to be till death do us part, said before God, then does that stand to reason that a person who gets a divorce is not really divorced before the eyes of God, and therefore one is committing adultery by marrying another, as long as their spouse is living?

I'd like to hear your thoughts on this subject.

1 Corinthians 7:39
The wife is bound by the law as long as her husband liveth; but if her husband be dead, she is at liberty to be married to whom she will; only in the Lord.

Romans 7:2-3
2 For the woman which hath an husband is bound by the law to her husband so long as he liveth; but if the husband be dead, she is loosed from the law of her husband.
3 So then if, while her husband liveth, she be married to another man, she shall be called an adulteress: but if her husband be dead, she is free from that law; so that she is no adulteress, though she be married to another man.

I was in an adulterous marriage and i fought night and day trying to find a way to stay in it but these verses say otherwise.
 
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Apex

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ViaCrucis

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Can a person divorce and remarry and still go to Heaven?

The reason I ask is because the Bible says that one commits adultery if he divorces his wife and marries another. Since the wedding vows are to be till death do us part, said before God, then does that stand to reason that a person who gets a divorce is not really divorced before the eyes of God, and therefore one is committing adultery by marrying another, as long as their spouse is living?

I'd like to hear your thoughts on this subject.

Firstly, let's get the "Can they go to heaven?" question out of the way. Yes. Nothing about this topic has any relation to whether a person can "go to heaven". Christ doesn't suddenly stop being our Savior. So that shouldn't even be part of the conversation about the questions of divorce/remarriage.

Christ's teaching on divorce needs to be understood in the context of the time, culture, and place. In Judaism a husband could receive a certificate of divorce and give it to his wife, this was sufficient to divorce. As long as the husband gave it to her, and she received it, the divorce was final. But within Judaism at the time there were two different schools of thought:

Bet Hillel, who followed the teachings of Rabbi Hillel the Elder, taught that a husband could acquire a certificate of divorce for just about any reason, including something as trivial as the wife burning the evening meal.

Bet Shammai, who followed the teachings of Rabbi Shammai, taught that a husband could only acquire a certificate of divorce for serious offenses, such as infidelity.

Jesus' instructions on divorce follow more closely the school of Bet Shammai; whereby divorce should only be permitted for very serious offenses (such as infidelity). Keep in mind, here, that under Jewish halacha it is the husband who presents the certificate of divorce to the wife; while there were (I believe) a way for which a woman could initiate a divorce, I believe it required going to court and the court mandating the husband present the wife with a certificate of divorce.

Jesus hearkens back to Adam and Eve, that the husband leaves mother and father to be joined to his wife, and the two become one flesh, thus Jesus teaches divorce was only permitted under Moses because of human stubbornness; and that the ideal is that what God has joined together let no man separate. But even still, infidelity is still reckoned as legitimate grounds for divorce.

The issue of remarriage becomes further complicated. Jesus says that whoever divorces his wife (except for infidelity) makes her commit adultery, and anyone who marries a divorced woman commits adultery. But let's look at this in the provided context: It was the husband's responsibility to get and deliver the certificate of divorce, and Jesus is speaking against the looseness with which many divorces happened (as per the interpretation of some rabbis of the time)--Jesus' point seems to be that such frivolous divorces are not truly legitimate. And so the husband is abandoning his wife, and the result is if the divorced woman remarries, it amounts to infidelity--it's a bad situation that nobody should find themselves in. Which is why St. Paul in his letters recommends that rather than divorce, husband and wife should separate for a time and work out their issues if possible.

So here's the question: Is divorce always wrong, and does divorce always mean no remarriage? I don't think so. For one, Jesus is clear that in the case of infidelity the divorce is legitimate, and no condemnation is mentioned against either for divorcing (and remarrying) under such circumstances in Lord's Sermon.

Further: Is infidelity the ONLY legitimate grounds? I would argue no, because the alternative would be to say that in abusive marriages the abused spouse must remain, and that is atrocious and completely out of line with the Lord's teaching and way. Infidelity is the most obvious, but isn't exclusively the only valid grounds for divorce. Rather, frivolous divorce is being condemned. And abuse is not frivolous, but deadly serious.

Here I would argue thus: That each individual case must be taken seriously, rather than attempting to apply some kind of fiat proscription, individual circumstances, the people involved, etc need to be taken into consideration--and this therefore, in the context of the Church, must be regarded as a pastoral issue. Where discretion, discernment, compassion, etc are used. Rather than divorce always being condemned, rather than remarriage always being condemned, the cases need to be dealt with on their own grounds. Because ultimately the goal should be the promotion of the good. The problem with fiat style pronouncements in these sorts of matters is that it ignores the circumstances and, worse, ignores the actual human persons involved. It treats the matter as a purely abstract moral question, and not an ethical question of actual human lives.

-CryptoLutheran
 
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Apex

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Christ's teaching on divorce needs to be understood in the context of the time, culture, and place. In Judaism a husband could receive a certificate of divorce and give it to his wife, this was sufficient to divorce. As long as the husband gave it to her, and she received it, the divorce was final. But within Judaism at the time there were two different schools of thought.

Your argument sounds similar to Dr. Instone-Brewer's. In fact, after reading your post, it is hard to imagine that you didn't read his book. Far too few people know about the two schools of thought on divorce during Jesus' day.
 
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