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The Westminster Confession on Remarriage We disagree (regrettably) with the Westminster Confession concerning its teaching on marriage and divorce. Although, we have a high regard for the Westminster Standards, we cannot agree with the Westminster divines on this point, because we judge —from Scripture—that they have erred grievously. Westminster teaches:
However, Scripture teaches that remarriage while one's original spouse lives is continuous adultery, for both parties:
The message of the Bible is very clear: the only ground for divorce is adultery, and the only options for the divorced are to remain unmarried or be reconciled with their original spouse: ''Let not the wife depart from her husband: but and if she depart, let her remain unmarried or be reconciled to her husband: and let not the husband put away his wife'' (I Cor. 7:11). Divorce (for whatever cause) does not break the marriage bond. A couple may be divorced according to the law of the land, and they may—because of that legal divorce—no longer be living together, but God made them one flesh when He joined them on their wedding day, and He alone has the power to dissolve that one-flesh union at death, and only at death. Scripture is insistent on that point: ''the woman which hath an husband is bound by the law to her husband so long as he liveth'' (Rom. 7:2) and ''the wife is bound by the law as long as her husband liveth'' (I Cor. 7:39). Therefore, Jesus demands that the marriage bond be upheld and defended: ''they are no more twain, but one flesh. What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder'' (Matt. 19:6). The Westminster Confession does not teach that the marriage bond can be broken only by death. It allows remarriage for the innocent party in a divorce because in the view of the Confession the guilty party is to be counted as dead: ''In the case of adultery after marriage, it is lawful for the innocent party to sue out a divorce and, after the divorce, to marry another, as if the offending party were dead'' (Westminster Confession, chapter 24:5; italics mine). However, the Bible allows remarriage, if one's spouse is really dead: ''if the husband be dead, she is loosed from the law of her husband'' (Rom. 7:3) and ''if her husband be dead, she is at liberty to be married to whom she will; only in the Lord'' (I Cor. 7:39), not if one's spouse is only potentially or hypothetically dead. In allowing remarriage for the ''innocent party'' the Westminster divines appealed to the ''exception clauses'' in Matthew's Gospel:
The exception of Matthew 5:32 and 19:9 refers to divorce, not remarriage. Note the position of the clause. Christ does not say, ''Whosoever divorces his wife and marries another, except in the case of fornication, commits adultery.'' Instead, He says, ''Whosoever divorces his wife, except in the case of fornication, and marries another commits adultery.'' The position of the clause proves that Christ is making an exception in the case of divorce, not remarriage. The Westminster divines erred more grievously when they allowed divorce and remarriage in the case of desertion. First of all, their definition of desertion is tragically vague: ''Such wilful desertion as can no way be remedied by the Church, or civil magistrate'' is not what Paul is speaking of in I Corinthians 7:15, the text appealed to as proof for their view that desertion breaks the bond of marriage, allowing remarriage for the deserted spouse. In I Corinthians 7:12-16 Paul is addressing a subject with did not occur in Christ's public ministry: mixed marriage. If the unbeliever is content to live with the believer, the believer may not leave or desert the unbelieving spouse. Paul forbids it. That kind of desertion is sin, and would not constitute grounds for remarriage (even under a mistaken appeal to verse 15). However, the Westminster Confession allows remarriage for all kinds of desertion cases. And they who are ''apt to study arguments'' (Westminster Confession, 24:6) could—and do—appeal to the vagueness of this paragraph when seeking to divorce and remarry.
The kind of desertion Paul speaks about is one where the unbeliever departs because of the piety of the Christian spouse. In that case, the believer can have a good conscience. The spouse left because of the godly behaviour of the Christian. There is no guilt, no need to fear church discipline or disapproval of the saints: ''a brother or a sister is not under bondage in such cases: but God hath called us to peace'' (I Cor. 7:15). ''If the unbelieving depart, let him depart'' is the message of I Corinthians 7:15. None of that means that the bond of marriage has been severed. The unbeliever has sinned in departing. The believer can have a good conscience, but the marriage bond is still maintained. The same chapter proves this (I Cor. 7:39). The believer may not remarry because he is still married (''one flesh'') in God's eyes. If the believer subsequently remarries, even if the state and the church approve, he commits adultery, if his original spouse is still alive. Then he can no longer have a good conscience, can no longer be in peace, and must repent, and end that adulterous relationship. I Corinthians 7:15 does not say ''a brother or a sister is not bound in such cases'' but ''a brother or a sister is not under bondage in such cases.'' The phrases ''not bound'' and ''not under bondage'' are different. That is obvious in the AV, but in some modern versions (example, the NIV) in both places, the text is rendered ''not bound.'' That is an inexcusable mistranslation, occasioned by an antinomian view of divorce and remarriage! A Christian abandoned by his unbelieving spouse is not under bondage, but is certainly still bound. Marriage is a bond, a lifelong, one-flesh union, but it is never described in Scripture as being ''under bondage!'' It is simply unacceptable to say that I Corinthians 7:15 means that a brother or a sister is not bound—not married—in such cases. Westminster erred, and that error has borne bitter fruit. When the Pharisees came to Jesus, they asked, ''Is it lawful for a man to put away his wife for every cause?'' (Matt. 19:3). Jesus responded by referring to the original ordinance in Genesis:
When the Pharisees objected by appealing to Deuteronomy 24, Jesus explained that Moses had legislated for the hard-hearted Israelites (Matt. 19:8): Moses had ''suffered'' (Matt. 19:8) a situation in his day of men putting away their wives and remarrying. Such hard-hearted Israelites could not submit to the law of the LORD (Rom. 8:7), who ''hateth putting away'' (Mal. 2:16), and was a witness to their treacherous dealings with the wives of their youth (Mal. 2:14). But Jesus will not suffer that situation in His kingdom. The hard-hearted in today's church may want to appeal to Deuteronomy 24, but Christ's response is uncompromising:
What was the reaction to this uncompromising doctrine of marriage? The disciples were stunned: ''His disciples say unto him, If the case of the man be so with his wife, it is not good to marry'' (Matthew 19:10). Would the disciples have been shocked if Jesus had taught the same as the Westminster divines? Is anybody stunned if they are told, ''Well, you can get married, and if the marriage breaks down, you can divorce your unfaithful spouse and then marry somebody else?'' Most people think that this is "fair", most people can live with that and see the reasonableness of it. The flesh can handle that kind of doctrine. Would Jesus have answered, as He does in Matthew 19:11, ''all men cannot receive this saying'' if he was allowing the innocent party to remarry? No, only Jesus' doctrine of the unbreakable marriage bond elicits the response, ''if the case of the man be so with his wife, it is not good to marry'' (Matt. 19:10). There is something terribly wrong with the doctrine of marriage taught by the church today. This response of the disciples is not being heard! We disagree with the Westminster Confession on this issue because it contradicts the Scriptures. The Confession contains many excellent statements, and much with which we wholeheartedly agree. If all who claim to be Presbyterians really held the doctrines contained in the Confession, the churches would be in a much better state. We stand with Scripture, and with Christ's, not Westminster's, doctrine of marriage. The Westminster Confession itself gives us leave to test its teachings in the light of Scripture:
This we do, and we conclude that adultery and desertion cannot break the marriage bond to allow remarriage. Man may not and cannot break asunder what God has joined together. Martyn McGeown |