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Anonymous
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That's a very interesting scenario. I see the sequence of events somewhat different, but the outcome would be similar in many respects. In your example, John has committed adultery with Michelle. John is an adulterer and Michelle is an adulteress. Judy is innocent in this example.Mark C said:John is a Christian man and marries Judy, a Christian woman. Neither have been married before. A few years into the marriage, John decides he no longer desires Judy and has an affair with married non-Christian Michelle. During this time he abuses Judy for a while, and then abandons her to move in with now-separated Michelle. Judy eventually files for and receives a state-recognized certificate of divorce (get) signed by John.
I contend, in summary, that Judy has met the requirements of BOTH what the Bible says about marriage and divorce, and the terms of her flawed State-ordained contract. She is able to remarry.
As I see it, John is required to take his wife Judy back and to stop committing adultery with Michelle. If Judy cannot convince him of this on her own, she is to take one or two other believers with her to convince him of his sin. If John will not listen to them, she is to bring the matter to the elders of their congregation (you did say they were believers). If John will still not listen even to the congregation, he is to be dismissed as an infidel and she free per Exodus 21:11 (wife abandonment and replacement) and 1 Cor. 7:15-16. Since John, as an ACTING unbeliever, is choosing to unlawfully separate himself from Judy, she is certainly free to let him go.
I don’t necessarily see this as giving her permission to remarry though, given all the other NT verses (Matthew 19:9, Mark 10:11-12, Luke 16:18, Romans 7:2-3, 1 Corinthians 7:39) that explicitly state the opposite. When in doubt, the explicit in Scripture should always interpret the implicit. However, she certainly is free to remain unmarried, through no fault of her own.
But you have brought up a very interesting point. In your example, John committed adultery with another man's wife. Adultery under the Mosaic law warranted the death penalty and John’s life would have been forfeit for his role in the adultery, thereby indirectly freeing Judy to remarry in that case. But if we change Michelle’s marital status from married to unmarried, we have a completely different outcome even though the situation is basically identical, at least from Judy's perspective. If Michelle was an unmarried woman (ie. a mistress/affair scenario), then there is no Mosaic death penalty for John and therefore no possible way for Judy to remarry in such a case. It’s just as unfair for Judy in both cases. She's still been abused, she’s still abandoned, she’s still unmarried, her husband is still off with another woman, and she’s still unable to remarry while John lives. Certainly we wouldn’t say she’s entitled to remarry in cases where the man committed no adultery which would be worthy of death under the Mosaic law, would we?
Personally, I’m all in favor of hanging John up by his short and curlies for his mistreatment of his wife, but the issue here is whether Judy has any Scriptural permission to remarry. Is Judy's ability to remarry solely determined by the marital status of the woman John sleeps with? So if Michelle is an unmarried woman, do we change our verdict regarding Judy's marital status?
In Him,
David