Marriage is a time-honored institution that has blessed humanity
more than most realize. In spite of its beneficence, it has been disrespected,
even assaulted, for many centuries. In this brief essay, we wish to discuss
five foundational truths that pertain to the marriage arrangement.
Divine Origin
In logic
there is a principle known as the Law of the Excluded Middle. A thing either is
or it is not. A line either is straight or it is not straight; there is no
middle position. If it is partially straight and partially crooked then it is
not straight.
Applied
to our present consideration, we must argue: Marriage originated from God, or
else it did not. If it did not originate from God, then it must have originated
from a non-God source. If that was the case, human beings must have originated
the institution, and thus they may do with it as they please. There are no
“marriage rules” save those that people may choose, or that which society
imposes by law. If either is the case, actions are arbitrary — to fluctuate
from place to place or from era to era. Nothing about marriage is static.
On the
other hand, if God is the author of the marriage relationship, he, being
sovereign (Psalm 47:2; cf. Daniel 4:34-35), had the absolute right to set the
rules for ordering this time-honored institution. It will be the thrust of this
discussion to argue the case for the divine origin of marriage, and the Lord’s
autonomous right to regulate the relationship.
Humanists
contend that “marriage” is merely the evolutionary product of a long line of
biological creatures (e.g., some birds and mammals) that appear to have formed
lasting paired relationships (Huxley, 34; cf. Locke & Peterson, 18.311).
There is absolutely no scientific or historical data that substantiate this
assertion. This baseless theory originated in the minds of those who seek an
origin for mankind in a naturalistic fashion.
The case
for the divine origin of marriage can be argued from
various lines of evidence.
First,
the study of both ancient and modern man reveals that marriage is a universal
practice of the human family. The late Dr. Ashley Montague, a prominent
anthropologist, wrote: “There are no societies in which marriage does not
exist” (240). If marriage developed in a random, haphazard, evolutionary
fashion, one might expect that “marriage” would be found in some cultures but
not in others. The evidence, however, simply does not support that view.
Second,
the ancient Hebrew record reveals that marriage is the result of the creation
of man and woman having been made especially for one another as husband and
wife.
And
Jehovah God caused a deep sleep to fall upon the man, and he slept; and he took
one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh: and from the rib, which Jehovah God
had taken from the man, he made a woman, and brought her unto the man. And the
man said, “This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she shall be
called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.” Therefore a man shall leave
his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be
one flesh (Genesis 2:21-24).
In this
connection it should be noted that Jesus Christ, appealing to this very text,
endorsed the proposition that marriage was instituted by God (see: Matthew
19:4-5; Mark 10:6). To repudiate this reality is to cast reflection upon the
Son of God.
Third, as
far back as one may go, exploring the historical records of the past, marriage
has been a part of the fabric of human existence. The code of Hammurabi (c.
2104-2061 B.C.) contains 282 laws of the ancient Babylonian empire. Laws 128
through 161 deal with marriage (Barton, 391-393). Other records, later
discovered and going back centuries earlier, bear similar testimony (Kramer,
51-59). There is no evidence that marriage developed in a piece-meal fashion.
Monogamous
Without
question, marriage was designed to be a monogamous arrangement, i.e., one man
for one woman. The Lord God did not fashion a man and his wives, nor a woman
and her husbands; rather, it was Adam and Eve.
But the
earth’s first murderer, Cain, “went out from the presence of Jehovah” (Genesis
4:16) and many of his offspring followed his rebellious ways. Moses records
that “Lamech took unto him two wives” (4:19).
Up
till this age the original purpose of God in creating one man and one wife and
uniting them in marriage had apparently been understood as sanctioning only
monogamous marriage. In the seventh generation from Adam comes a man in the
line of the Cainites who dares to fly in the face of this divine institution
(Leupold, 219).
Christ
also endorsed monogamy in his comments on Moses’ law (Matthew 19:5), as did
Paul in his analogy between a husband and wife and that of Christ and his one
body (one bride – Romans 7:4), the church (Ephesians 5:22-33; cf. 1:22-23;
4:4).
While
there are some religions (e.g., Islam, and fundamentalist cults of Mormon
persuasion), as well as many primitive cultures that practice polygamy, such is
not sanctioned under Christian law.
A Heterosexual Relationship
The
Genesis record is perfectly clear that the institution of marriage was intended
for a man and a woman, and no aberration is permitted as a substitute, e.g.,
male with male, female with female (cf. Romans 1:26-27) or, for that matter,
humans with animals (Leviticus 18:23; 20:15; Deuteronomy 27:21). Who knows when
sexual deviants may petition for the legalization of human-animal “marriages”?
An atheist recently criticized the biblical laws prohibiting sex with animals.
She felt that such might be bizarre, but she issued no moral objection (Hayes, 184).
Professor
John J. Davis wrote that:
marriage
is to be heterosexual; the mate that God created for Adam, a male, was Eve, a
female. In spite of the persistence with which the “gay liberation movement”
argues the case for legitimizing homosexuality, its case cannot stand in the
light of biblical revelation . . . . The first marriage that God performed is
quite clearly a pattern (78).
Arguments
against so-called “same sex” marriages are irrefutable.
- The biblical pattern excludes
such relationships.
- The unique physiological
design of males and females argues against such unions. A consideration of
the ingeniously designed factors of compatibility in the male/female
sexual relationships are compelling evidence that homosexual unions were
never intended for human beings (see Jackson, 85ff).
- The inability of same-sex
unions to reproduce the species is not in harmony with the divine ideal
for humankind (Genesis 1:27-28).
- Thousands of years of human
history have rejected “same-sex marriage.” This bizarre notion made its
modern debut in 2001, when homosexual “marriage” was legalized in the
Netherlands. Even now only five nations world-wide have adopted the
anti-biblical, illogical, and immoral ideology — the Netherlands, Canada,
Belgium, Spain, and South Africa. However, if many other nations —
including our own — adopt the perverse practice, such will not transform
an evil action into a righteous one (Isaiah 5:20).
- Both Testaments condemn the
horrid practice of same-sex unions (Leviticus 18:22; 20:13; Romans
1:26-27; 1 Corinthians 6:9-11).
- Even in the pre-Christian era
of “toleration” (that overlooked polygamy and loose divorce; see below),
homosexual liaisons were not permitted.
Exclusive Outlet for Sexual Fulfillment
According
to U.S. Census figures for 2005, 4.85 million couples were “living together”
without the benefit of marriage in the United States. The figure represented an
increase of about 1,000% since 1960. Such relationships are a pronounced
violation of Heaven’s marriage law.
In
Genesis 4, Moses records that “the man knew Eve his wife” (v. 1 –
emphasis added). Two terms are of special significance. First, “knew” renders
the Hebrew term yada, used some 956 times in the Old Testament. Though it has a
wide variety of meanings, depending upon context, it is sometimes employed
euphemistically for sexual intimacy, as in the case cited presently (cf. the
Greek eginosken in Matthew 1:24). Second, the Hebrew term ’ishshah (about 781
times in the Old Testament) denotes a female human generally, but in certain
contexts clearly signifies a “wife” as in 4:1, 25 (cf. 7:7).
There is
absolutely no evidence that God ever authorized a sexual relationship apart
from marriage (though that relationship was more loosely tolerated during the
pre-Christian ages; cf. Matthew 19:8). A sexual union with a woman other than a
“wife” (or concubine – a wife with secondary legal status) was considered
adultery (Exodus 20:14).
Under the
New Testament a stricter code is in place (Matthew 19:8-9). In
a letter to the church in Corinth, and in a time of severe persecution, in
response to certain questions submitted to him, Paul wrote:
It is
good for a man not to have sexual relations with a woman. But because of the
temptation to sexual immorality, each man should have his own wife and each
woman her own husband (1 Corinthians 7:1-2 ESV).
Without
question, this inspired text teaches that sexual intimacy outside of the
marriage covenant is “fornication” (KJV, ASV).
Similarly,
the inspired writer of the book of Hebrews declares: “Let marriage be had in
honor among all, and let the bed be undefiled: for fornicators and adulterers
God will judge” (13:4). There are strong deductions that flow from the writer’s
exhortation. “The defilements that dishonor marriage are fornication, which
dishonors marriage in advance, and adultery, which dishonors marriage after it
has been entered into” (Lenski, 1966, 472).
Lifelong Relationship
There are
three matters about the abiding nature of marriage that require exploration.
First, there is the duration of the marital institution as intended originally
by the Creator for the welfare of the human family. Second, there must be a
consideration of that period of toleration that prevailed on account of man’s
immaturity and “hardness of heart” during the epochs of pre-Christian history.
Third, the permanent and exalted standard of the law of Christ must be
recognized. Let us briefly comment on each of these points.
The Divine Ideal
God’s
design and implementation of the “marriage” relationship on behalf of the human
family was intended to facilitate an environment of security, contentment, and
spiritual well-being for those made in his image. As noted already, that ideal
was embodied in a man-woman union that was intended to be a commitment for as
“long as you both shall live” (cf. Romans 7:2; 1 Corinthians 7:39). This
pristine goal was buttressed by the warning of Christ: “What therefore God has
joined together, let not man put asunder” (Matthew 19:6).
In
marriage a husband and wife become “one.” They are not only “one” in the union
of intimacy, they are one “in purpose, in ideals, in sharing of interests, and
one in their children” (Lewis, II.66). Carson observes that: “the ‘one flesh’
in every marriage between a man and a woman is a reenactment of and testimony
to the very structure of humanity as God created it” (412). The female was “out
of man” (1 Corinthians 11:8), and both ultimately were from Jehovah.
The verb
“has joined” derives from a Greek expression that implies being “yoked
together.” Robertson identifies the tense as a “timeless aorist,” which, he
says, indicates what is “always true” (I.154).
The
expression “let not man put asunder” is a command. Any person who destroys a
marriage that God has made is a rebel who arrogates himself to a place that
rivals the Lord. It must not happen. Once a marriage has been made, only the
Creator can terminate it — though human beings, through various “legal”
maneuvers, attempt such regularly; and do disrupt that sacred unity from a practical viewpoint.
Temporal Tolerance
When the
Pharisees asked Jesus why Moses allowed divorce, the Lord replied: “Moses for
your hardness of heart suffered you to put away your wives: but from the
beginning it has not been so” (Matthew 19:8). Divorce (and other marital
digressions) had “grown up amongst a degenerate people, and the Mosaic law
tolerated it as an accommodation to a low level of moral custom” (Allen, 204).
The law
of Moses, in relaxing the original marriage standard (by tolerating polygamy,
capricious divorce, etc.) did not reflect the divine
ideal. It merely acknowledged human weakness (hardness of
heart) during an era of sacred patience (cf. Acts 14:16; 17:30) as Heaven’s
progressive revelation was working towards a loftier plateau of human
responsibility.
J.W.
McGarvey wisely commented:
When
the gospel was introduced God’s chosen time had arrived for bringing this
concession to an end, and since then it has been the most daring interference
with the divine prerogative, for men to venture on a continuance of the same
concession, as though they were possessed of divine authority (164-165).
Marital Restoration
When
Jesus spoke of the epoch of toleration, due to the hardness of men’s hearts, he
drew a sharp contrast between that earlier period of laxness, and that of the
primitive “divine ideal,” reflected in Genesis, and also with the restoration
of such in the Christian dispensation. The Lord declared: “In view of your
hardness of heart, Moses permitted you to put away your wives: but from the beginning it was not so”
(Matthew 19:8).
Of
special interest is the last clause: “from the beginning it was not so.” The
term “beginning” takes the matter back to the commencement of the human family
at the conclusion of the creation week (cf. Mark 10:6). The verbal “was not” is
a Greek perfect tense form. A perfect tense suggests action in the past with
abiding results. Robertson stated that the tense reflects the “permanence of
the divine ideal” (I.154). Vincent commented: “Notwithstanding Moses’
permission, the case has not been so from the beginning until now. The original
ordinance has never been abrogated nor superseded, but continues in force”
(65).
In his
terse style, Lenski said that: “no man in his senses could conclude that by
this Mosaic regulation God had altered his original intention concerning the
permanency of marriage” (1964, 731).
Out of
this background Jesus declared: “Whoever divorces his wife, unless for the
cause of fornication, and marries another, is committing adultery” (Matthew
19:9; cf. 5:32). Under the law of Christ, there is but one reason for a divorce
and a subsequent remarriage — and that is “fornication” (a sexual act with
another person) against an innocent spouse. Unless such has been the case, the
formation of a subsequent union is an adulterous arrangement.
The innocent
victim is thus granted the right of a second marriage; the guilty party is not
authorized to form a new relationship. This marriage law of Christ is not a
mere “church sacrament,” restricted to Christians; rather, it is as wide as the
institution of marriage itself — universal.
Conclusion
God’s
marriage law is a most serious matter, regardless of how carelessly the modern
world flouts it. Let those who honor their Creator respect his laws of marital
integrity.
For a
more detailed study of divorce and remarriage, see the author’s book: The Teaching of Jesus Christ on
Divorce and Remarriage – A Study of Matthew 19:9. For information
call Christian Courier Publications, 1-888-818-2463.
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