mattrose wrote:AVoice wrote:
You are not interpreting porneia to mean 'sexual sin". You are very clearly defining it in this context to mean "post marital sexual sin". That is where only part of the much larger argument against the divorce for adultery model is found. It appears plain to me that you are using that conclusion of what porneia means in this context as part of your argument instead of objectively allowing both conclusions to run their course of scrutiny and evaluation.
In healthy debate, you must trust that your oppenent knows his own position. You declare that I am not interpreting porneia to mean sexual sin. You are wrong. I believe that the exception clause provides a legitimate means to divorce if the following sexual sins are found to be present: fornication during the betrothal period, if the marriage is determined to be incest, or adultery after the marriage ceremony. Obviously the latter (adultery) would have been the most common form of porneia and so it is the one most directly addressed. Your position particularizes porneia for this passage. My positon keeps its meaning broad. You are claiming that I am particularizing it as much as you, but in a different way (adultery instead of fornication). You are incorrect.
Thank you for clarifying your position. I did not get it, that you are taking the exception clause to also INCLUDE the premarital divorce for fornication. While you certainly apply it to the post marital divorce for her sexual sin, which is correctly identified as adultery, you suppose that your view can also include at the same time the premarital divorce for fornication!
Let me say this before I continue.
The various takes on HOW the verses in 5:32 and 19:9 can be read should be allowed to undergo the scrutiny the contexts present. Each of us should respect the questions the other asks. The questions we ask of each other will test whether or not the contexts can support that 'take'.
First of all, we each need to acknowledge that we understand how the other is reading it under their model. Given the words used in the text, can we accept that the opposing side has a reasonable way of reading it in that way?
Once we put ourselves in each other's shoes, we should then ask questions of each other allowing the actual texts to prove our particular 'take'.
Now that I understand that you are including the premarital sexual sin alongside adultery as what the exception clause covers, the question that you did not answer for me, which Homer asked, becomes especially applicable to your position:
Do you say that no engaged couple today may end their engagement for any reason other than fornication?
Honest reason must admit that it is possible to reasonably read the exception clause as a complete aside (given the dual usage of the words husband wife and divorce and the normal definition of fornication and the fact that they practiced a premarital divorce for fornication, not adultery). Under this model, that non essential 'aside' is exempt from Homer's question. This is because such asides, that are completely non essential, by their very nature, are inserted possessing their own unique connotation and application. Such connotation and application, by virtue of the fact that it is a non essential, are separate from the points the sentence is making, which sentences can totally ignore that "non essential".
In short, by including the premarital divorce along with adultery as what the exception clause pertains to, you have made the premarital divorce just as essential as the post marital divorce, and hence answerable to the above question Homer has presented. I await your answer.