agrogers wrote:foc wrote:...and historical evidence, I will change my views immediately...
As i understand it, the early church fathers did not allow remarriage under any circumstances. i have collected a few of the quotes from their writings here:
http://rogers.ag.googlepages.com/divorc ... rchfathers
Not entirely accurate.
Tertullian early on was definitely a voice of reason who did allow for remarriage after divorce when adutlery was the reason for that divorce.
It was mainly his contact with the Montanists that drove him into unscriptural nonsense.
Also, many of those ECFs taught outright heresies, such as pennance and confession to a priest...not to mention a that at least one major ECF was a Universalist who believed that even demons might be reconciled to God.
YOu'll have to forgive me if I dont trust a single thing from these 'fathers' in any matter of doctrine.
Again, it is not a direct answer to your question. Rather, the fact that the early church teaching did not allow remarriage even after adultery suggests to me that the 'except for fornication' was primalrily intended for Matthew's audience.
That group of men you trust for marriage doctrine also taught pennance and confessing to priests, among other abominable doctrines...do you agree with those as well?
Here is a quote from Hermas in 80AD:
And I can give you a list of horrid quotes from some of these same men who said detestable things about women and about sex even within the confines of a lawful marriage...their words are meaningless to me in matters of doctrine.
I understand that some people place little value on the teachings of such men. And they undoubtedly got it wrong in places. But it is 'historical' as you requested.
No, they got it wrong in a LOT of MAJOR places....not just a few minor ones.
Ill be eventually adding to this page....
Heresies of the Early Church "fathers”
When I do finally finish that particular study, Im sure that no one who reads it will be able to trust the doctrines of those men who could not even agree among themselves about many critical areas of doctrine.
