As mentioned earlier, I choose to address 1 Cor 7 later. The betrothal explanation of the exception clause does not have any prblem with anything in 1 Cor 7.Homer wrote:AVoice,
Sorry you misunderstand me. I understand very well what this is about. You wrote:
Neither does my position allow for the first clause to apply to the betrothed. What I said was that you can not prove the second clause pertains to a betrothed woman. Whether it could is a different matter.My argument does not allow the first clause, 'whoever divorces his wife', to pertain to the betrothed wife. Under my model, in accordance with how the rules of how language work, it works well to read the exception clause to pertain exclusively to the betrothal divorce. But you do not understand this. Ask Matt to explain it to you since he says he understands it. Ask someone you know to read the posts I referred to earlier and they may be able to explain to you what this thread is about.
No, I am in complete agreement with Matt. My position is exactly as he stated in his most recent post.So Homer, you are in disagreement with Matt.
No, I do understand and do not deny that can be done. But all the other clauses clearly are about real married people so your assumption is unlikely and unproven, nor can it be.But as I have demonstrated more than once, which you do not understand, a side point NOT directly related to the subject can be interjected. Since it is not directly related, it is known as a "non essential" part of the sentence.
Consider the following:Separation is as far as what the NT allows, and it is reasonably allowed as Paul also touches on that.
Man is capable of putting asunder by way of divorcing.
1 Corinthians 7:10-15
New King James Version (NKJV)
10. Now to the married I command, yet not I but the Lord: A wife is not to depart from her husband. 11. But even if she does depart, let her remain unmarried or be reconciled to her husband. And a husband is not to divorce his wife.
Here we have Paul's instructions to Christian couples. If they separate, they are not to divorce, but are to remain unmarried or reconcile.
12. But to the rest I, not the Lord, say: If any brother has a wife who does not believe, and she is willing to live with him, let him not divorce her. 13. And a woman who has a husband who does not believe, if he is willing to live with her, let her not divorce him. 14. For the unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife, and the unbelieving wife is sanctified by the husband; otherwise your children would be unclean, but now they are holy.
And here Paul addresses couples who are composed of a believing spouse and an unbeliever. He is speaking about a subject Jesus never addressed. But it doesn't really appear to be new but rather a reiteration of the Law:
15. But if the unbeliever departs, let him depart; a brother or a sister is not under bondage in such cases. But God has called us to peace.
Failure to fulfill marital duties by abandonment could end the marriage:
Exodus 21:9-11
New King James Version (NKJV)
9. And if he has betrothed her to his son, he shall deal with her according to the custom of daughters. 10. If he takes another wife, he shall not diminish her food, her clothing, and her marriage rights. 11. And if he does not do these three for her, then she shall go out free, without paying money.
If the unbeliever is unwilling to live with the believer, and leaves, the believing brother or sister may divorce the unbeliever. The believing spouse is not under bondage (douloo a verb, to make a slave or servant, be put into bondage). One who is no longer a slave is set free of obligation; the people Paul wrote to certainly knew what being a slave meant. I know you reference v. 39 but if there is no exception Paul has clearly contradicted himself. And please do not bring up the issue of Jewish betrothal; Paul is speaking to gentiles.
If Paul in v.15 does not provide an exception to what he instructed in v. 10-11, then why did he say it? He clearly is giving different instructions to different groups.
Consider Jesus' words in Matthew:
Matthew 19:7-8
New King James Version (NKJV)
7. They said to Him, “Why then did Moses command to give a certificate of divorce, and to put her away?”
8. He said to them, “Moses, because of the hardness of your hearts, permitted you to divorce your wives, but from the beginning it was not so.
Now it might be assumed Moses was giving those hard hearted Jews who wanted rid of their wives a way out. As though he said "you guys are mean so I will allow you to get rid of any wife you do not like". I do not think this was the case at all. I believe this exception granted by Moses was for the protection of the woman: so they could escape being beaten, would have proof of their divorce, and could find a new husband who would provide for them. As in the passage in Exodus 21, the wife who was not treated properly must be set free. So Moses demanded she be properly divorced with legal papers as proof.
Now I would ask you to think: do you think really think Jesus is "meaner than Moses"? The Jesus who said His burden is light?
Regarding your challenge on the exception clause, I would offer you this:
The Smith family owns a property with an easement granting permanent access to a property behind theirs. This easement right gives the David family use of a lane which the Smith's also use for their driveway. Another neighbor, the Jeffry family, has been given permission the use the lane also. It adjoins their property. So Blackberry lane is used by three families. But other people have been tresspassing and causing problems by driving through the Jeffry's proprerty. The Jeffrys ask the Smiths for help with the tresspassers. So Mr. Smith put up a large sign at the entrance to the lane which says: NO TRESSPASSING - VIOLATORS WILL BE PROSECUTED. During the annual neighborhood picnic Mr. Smith informs all the neighbors "We have put up a no tresspassing sign on the lane; except for the Davids, Jeffrys, and any neighborhood families, and those having business with them, we will prosecute tresspassers".
Here are two examples of communication addressed to different groups. The intention of Mr. Smith is unchanged by either communication, although one contains an exception and the other does not.
Bear in mind that Mark and Luke are addressed to a different audience than Matthew. There is no contradiction; your betrothal exception is as unnecessary as it is unlikely.
The subject at hand is the grammar and whether language can function after the manner the divorce for adultery model says it must within the contexts.
NO TRESSPASSING - VIOLATORS WILL BE PROSECUTED
We have put up a no tresspassing sign on the lane; except for the Davids, Jeffrys, and any neighborhood families, and those having business with them, we will prosecute tresspassers.
The example you gave simply identifies the trespassers.
True, they both say the same thing but the exception clause is non essential, like how it is when the exception clause in Matthew is understood to pertain to the betrothal divorce.
You could have put it in the Matt 19:9 format to make the exception clause 'essential', which is what is being sought in this excercise. My modification of your example making the exception clause essential:
Whoever uses Blackberry Lane, commits an act of trespassing.
Whoever uses Blackberry Lane, except for those with permission, commits an act of trespassing.
The first is a complete prohibition with no hint that it is anything else, the second is not at all a complete prohibition, very clearly granting permission, howsoever limited that may be.
Here we have, as we have when comparing Matt 19:9 and Luke 16:18, two entirely separate and different messages, which is also what we have WHEN fornication is changed to mean adultery. When fornication is understood to mean fornication and thereby pertain to the betrothal divorce, the exception clause is 'non essential' and works just as well as your example above, two separte statements, one possessing an exception clause, the other not possessing that exception clause and yet both are in complete agreement.
The assignment is to create a similarly formatted sentence where the exception clause is essential as in my modification of your example above and yet independently the sentence without the exception and the sentence with the exception both say the same thing.
No one has yet to produce such a thing.
Can we insert an exception clause that is 'non essential' into my modified version of your example? So far we have it without an exception clause and then we have it with an exception clause that is essential. The third version will be with a 'non essential' exception clause that does not provide permission for that which the sentence is obviously referring to.
1) Whoever uses Blackberry Lane, commits an act of trespassing.
2) Whoever uses Blackberry Lane, except for those with permission, commits an act of trespassing.
3)Whoever uses Blackberry Lane, saving for its photographic desireability, commits an act of trespassing.
When fornication is changed to relate to the post marital offense (adultery) the exception clause is essential to the overall meaning of the entire sentence. When fornication is understood to possess its exclusive premarital definition and is thereby understood to pertain exclusively to the betrothal divorce, the exception clause functions similarly as in the 3rd version above; it jumps out of the apparent immediate context. This non essential exception clause, though applying to something not directly related, still grants permission: just not at all the permission that directly relates to what the sentence is actually talking about.
The request for a parallel to Matt 5:32 may prove more difficult because the format is not directly what the person does, but what he causes as it relates to someone else.
An acceptable parallel would simply be an action that causes something negative with an exception clause between the two statements. On page two of this thread, I posted a document called "What Does Jesus' Exception Clause Mean". There is such an example in that paper that relates to water flow on a farm situation. A prohibition is made, and an exception exists, but the exception relates to permission not directly related to the topic at hand. So there is absolutely no permission granted to what the topic is about and yet there exists an exception clause clearly indicating a kind of permission.
Such is the case with Jesus' exception clause.
Homer, you cannot prove that the post marital sexual sin is what Jesus' exception clause is pertaining to. But I can prove that it could not have pertained to the post marital sexual sin (adultery).