mattrose wrote:Boy, you are a wordy one! I have re-worded/re-arranged your most recent post so that others who are following this thread may have a bit more ease in understanding what you are asking me:
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, namely, "Do you say that no engaged couple today may end their engagement for any reason other than fornication?" I await your answer.
I do include both divorce for fornication (pre-marital sexual sin) and adultery (post-marital sexual sin) as valid applications of the exception clause (since, of course, they both are legitimate meanings of porneia).
As for Homer's question... No, I would not say that engaged couples may only break their engagement if fornication has occurred. The reason is simple, Jewish betrothal culture was recognized as binding. American engagement culture is not so recognized. Breaking a Jewish betrothal required divorce. Breaking an American engagement does not require a divorce. Jewish betrothal was, for all intents and purposes, considered a marriage. American engagement is not considered a marriage. There was no biblical command for the 'betrothal' period to carry the weight that it did. It was a cultural issue that has not carried over into our own culture.
I wouldn't mind if our culture adopted more of a betrothal model, but it hasn't.... so the biblical principles apply somewhat differently to our situation.
See, now we are getting somewhere. Questions are asked and answers are given.
This is Homer's question:
1. I think it must be admitted Jesus is addressing the application of the Law of Moses and establishing His law, which goes back to God's original intention. I believe He allowed divorce for immorality between actual married people. You say the provision for divorce applies only to those who are betrothed. Surely you must believe that Jesus' command regarding divorce applies today. Do you say that no engaged couple today may end their engagement for any reason other than fornication?
Matt, since you are including the premarital divorce along with adultery as what the exception clause applies to, the
question Homer asks applies to you as well. I have answered it.
Since you directly answered the question in the last sentence as it directly relates to today in America, this begs another related question:
By answering Homer's question by referring only to American engagements, you have evaded the question he asked as it would in effect also pertain to Jesus' hearers. So, since you are saying that Jesus was showing respect and in effect reinforcing a cultural issue that the scriptures gave no such weight to, the question still is valid if applied to Jesus' hearers:
Do you say that no engaged couple among Jesus' hearers could end their engagement for any reason other than fornication?
Homer is correct as he reads Jesus' teachings as being revelation of truth intended to apply from then until now:
I think it must be admitted Jesus is addressing the application of the Law of Moses and establishing His law, which goes back to God's original intention.
Your model, by NOT taking the exception clause as a totally separate, non essential aside, (exclusively referring to the cultural premarital divorce in betrothal) makes the betrothal divorce 'essential" and hence bear similar weight as the post marital divorce. So not only does Homer's question need to be aswered as it relates to Jesus' hearers, but the questions created by the implications the grammar creates under your model, also need to be answered.
Since your model lumps the post marital sexual sin equally together with the premarital sexual sin, as what the exception clause refers to, then doesn't the grammar indicate that terminating the betrothal for burning dinner, because it was not for a sexual sin, has caused her to commit adultery? And wouldn't the last clause also apply to the betrothed woman unjustly divorced? Wouldn't the grammar (since the betrothal divorce is essential and just as weighty as the post marital divorce) prohibit a man from marrying her after her divorce which took place before she was married?
Homer, don't you agree that we need some answers from Matt?
And Homer, why on earth would you think that the wives Jesus is directly addressing included the betrothed??
You wrote:
From the Pharisees' question and Jesus' response we recognize that the subject is actual wives, not just betrothed.
This is wrong. From the question and Jesus' response, the subject is EXCLUSIVELY actual wives! There is absolutely nothing indicating he was including the unmarried in his reference to divorce and wives.
This supports the claim that the exception clause was a complete aside, a non essential insertion possessing its own unique connotation and application as is the nature of such non essentials. Jesus is referring EXCLUSIVELY to the joined-in-marriage state and the exception clause is merely a non essential 'aside' interjected into the absolute teaching he is introducing.
The connotation or application, in this case, unique to such non essential 'asides'?
He was not going so far in his prohibition of husbands divorcing their wives as to also prohibit the premarital divorce, which divorce was commonly recognised as being 'for fornication'.
He was emphasising the extent of his prohibition of all post marital divorces by in effect stating that the only way a man can divorcre his "wife" is if he does it BEFORE he marries her.