It may have been the worst day of my life.
I woke up and got ready for work – a teaching assistant at the University of
California – determined to do what up until that point I had been incapable of
doing – taking off my wedding ring. It had been about 18 mos. since my wife
told me that she didn’t love me anymore and then slowly drifted away while I
hunkered down in my own misery telling few friends and trying to be present to
our 6-year-old son. I remember staring at my hand feeling like the ring’s
removal was the same as cutting off my finger and I wept as I tugged at it and
put it away. So I steeled myself for the day, rode off to the History
Department where I was to pick up some materials from the secretary – a
delightfully chatty guy named Mike. I arrived at the office, grabbed my items,
and spent a few moments talking with him about his new baby boy, when Mike
quickly chided, “What kind of married man doesn’t wear his wedding ring?” His
words hit me with a force that I can still feel to this day. I quickly excused
myself – sobbing as I ran out into the fresh air as everything seemed to go
topsy-turvy. How could this happen? Why me? What had I done? Why wouldn’t God
fix this? What would happen to my son? What would happen to my life? And then I
watched as . . .
3Some Pharisees came to him, and
to test him they asked, ‘Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any
cause?’ I perked up because the d-word was used and yet I immediately felt
out of place – I didn’t want my divorce. It was being done to me.
4He answered, ‘Have you not read that the one who made
them at the beginning “made them male and female”, 5and said, “For
this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife,
and the two shall become one flesh”? 6So they are no longer two, but
one. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.’ “O Jesus,” I
whispered, “I have read. I’ve read and prayed and cried. What if one separates
anyway? What if, I was even coming to realize, this was not a good marriage?”
7They said to him, ‘Why then did Moses command us to
give a certificate of dismissal and to divorce her?’ 8He said to
them, ‘It was because you were so hard-hearted that Moses allowed you to
divorce your wives, but at the beginning it was not so. 9And I say
to you, whoever divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, and marries
another commits adultery.’ “So am I doomed? She hasn’t slept with
anyone else but wants out. I don’t feel “hard-hearted” – I feel crushed. I was
just a kid – 21-years-old when I got married. I did the very best I could. Has
that one bad choice sealed my fate? Besides, this feels lopsided speaking only
about what men do. And . . .” I was interrupted – apparently other followers
were also listening.
10His disciples said to him, ‘If such is the case of a
man with his wife, it is better not to marry.’ 11But he said to
them, ‘Not everyone can accept this teaching, but only those to whom it is
given. 12For there are eunuchs who have been so from birth, and
there are eunuchs who have been made eunuchs by others, and there are eunuchs
who have made themselves eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven. Let
anyone accept this who can.’
I’ve pondered Jesus’ conversation a lot
since then. I’ve cried over it, beat myself with it, argued with Jesus about
it, and even wrapped myself in it to try and keep warm. I often speak about
reading the Bible with a human face – and today, I, along with others of you,
am one of those faces. I am divorced and remarried. But you are my community
and know that I love God and that I desire to follow God’s Word – to read both
the Word and my life honestly as a follower of Jesus. So this sermon is my
attempt at that. What does Jesus want to say to us about how to read the Bible
and handle divorce? The first
thing that Jesus wants to communicate is that
1. Marriage wasn’t made to be broken.
The Pharisees want to talk about rules.
They want pragmatics, the simplicity of a regulation that arbitrates blame,
innocence, and outcome. Jesus, however, wants to remind them what’s behind the
law – God’s original intent, disclosed in the creation story. They want rules,
a way to play the game; Jesus wants to remind them of a purpose – a beautiful
story of what God intended – to go back to the beginning so that we could learn
how the world was supposed to work. He wants us to see what God has created to
bring life while they want to stand over loves’ carcass and dicker over who’s
at fault. They wanted him to choose sides in the debate of the time – the
proper reasons a man can lawfully divorce his wife. Basically, there were two
schools of thought. The school of Rabbi Shammai said that only those things
related to sexual impropriety were proper grounds for divorce while the school
of Rabbi Hillel said that a husband might divorce his wife for “anything” as
trivial as spoiling dinner. Jesus, however, doesn’t want to play. In fact, I
get the sense that Jesus doesn’t like to be tested (vs. 3, to “test” someone is
that Biblical discussion that’s not aimed for anyone’s good) – and he surely
doesn’t like anyone adding words to the text that aren’t there – the Pharisees
argue that Moses “commanded” (19:7) divorce and Jesus rightly reminds them that
he “permitted” it (19:8).
But even if divorce was permissible, Jesus
reasons, that doesn’t make it good. So now we enter into that difficult and
tragic discussion about sin. And I think that Jesus’ reference to the creation
story rather than the law is an important one. Jesus’ reminds us that sin is
not so much a broken rule but a beautiful creation story gone wrong. So I am
going to say something now that I suspect might surprise many of you who know
me and my story as one who has both divorced and remarried – divorce is sinful.
The problem, however, is not that we don’t understand the complex nuances of
“divorce” but that we too narrowly define that word “sin.” Sin is that tragic
brokenness that was
not God’s intent. Divorce is that dissolution which was not
part of the design. But our evangelical world wants to frame sin in very
simplistic ways like “rebellion” and focus on fault, which, ironically, is what
happens after Adam and Eve sin. Blame makes sin about rule breaking. Jesus, however, appears to be making a more profound point.
Divorce is a sin because, even if you’re not at fault, it wasn’t made to be broken.
And if you’ve been divorced or if you are a child of divorce, or have been in a
marriage that rightfully had to end because of real neglect or abuse – you know full well, neither innocence nor
rules save you from the horrible pain of its breaking. When the
Adventurer Aron Ralston fell into a deep crevice in Bluejohn
Canyon, Utah, a boulder tumbled after him, pinning his arm. After days, Aron
realized he had to choose between his arm and his life, and so he cut it off
with a dull pocket knife. Divorce is a sin because it’s an amputation. Eugene
Peterson translates Malachi 2:16 with the words: “I hate divorce,” says the God
of Israel. God of Angel Armies says, “I hate the violent dismembering of the
‘one flesh’ of marriage.” Divorce cuts into each partner, into the “one” that
God has joined together. Doing so might be what needs to be done, but it was
never intended. You were meant to keep all your limbs.
The story from Genesis tells us that
it’s not the relationship of marriage that gets broken per se but that people become broken. A broken marriage is a sin
NOT because the institution is threatened but because God made us to be whole
and to delight in wholesome, intimate relationships. We weren’t made to fail
each other. We were made, the Genesis story tells us, to “cleave,” or “stick”
to one another (Genesis 2:24).
Jesus point is that in a broken
world we should go back to the beginning to remind us about who we were made to
be and also who God is. The image of God, our joining in unity – a community of
mutual love and faithfulness– reflected who God is. This stress upon the “image
of God” - might clue us into why Jesus speaks so strongly about divorce.
In the prophetic tradition of the
Old Testament (Jeremiah 3,
Isaiah 54, Malachi 2, Ezekiel 16, and Hosea), the
prophets will speak of God’s love by speaking of God’s commitment to Israel as
a marriage bond, emphasizing God’s grace and lifelong faithfulness, despite
Israel’s infidelity. I wonder if Jesus speaks so strongly about divorce NOT
because he is reinstituting a rigorous bit of case law for us but because he is
trying to remind us something fundamental about God. God will never divorce us.
Our sin [adultery] will not destroy God’s covenant faithfulness nor will it
have the final word over our fate. Jesus, in other words, is not setting up
some rule to be followed at all cost but attempting to illuminate the
fundamental character of God. God made us for love and healthy relationships.
Marriage was designed to reflect God’s faithfulness. But even when we fail –
God will not cease being faithful to us (Hosea 3:1).
But what happens if marriage breaks?
2. Jesus provides a way for those who can’t.
There is a certain irony or tension in
Jesus’ teaching on marriage, divorce, and celibacy. On the one hand, there is
an undeniable fierce kingdom ethic, an ideal that grounds itself firmly in
God’s design and character which understands that marriage was made to be an
indissovable union that reflects God’s faithful love toward us and us toward
each other. But, even as he offers this teaching, challenging the Pharisees’
“hard-heartedness,” he also offers three explicit exception phrases in this
passage: “except for sexual immorality” (19:9); “not everyone can accept this
word . . .” (19:11); and “let the one who is able to accept this accept it”
(19:12).
Let’s take a quick New Testament
lesson. The consensus of New Testament scholars is that the earliest gospel is
the Gospel of Mark, referred to as “Markan priority.” The basic
point is that
the writers of Matthew and Luke borrowed heavily from Mark in their own constructions.
This is important because our text in Matthew also exists in Mark but without
an exception, Jesus says, “Whoever divorces his wife and marries another
commits adultery against her; and if she divorces her husband and marries
another, she commits adultery.” (Mark 10:11-12)
So
Matthew is doing something quite helpful - Matthew is interpreting Jesus for us
and we should listen to him. We should always pay attention to places where the
Bible interprets itself. Matthew is telling us that Jesus’ position is a
general statement not applying to every case, and that the exceptions, the
human elements of a broken world, should be acknowledged and wrestled with
before applying the principle. And what do we make of Matthew’s exception?
What
does Matthew mean by “sexual immorality” [porneia]?
The term could refer to an array of illicit sexual activity and was not the
specific word for “adultery”. The point here is that Matthew intentionally uses
a broad, general term which could refer to a range of sexual improprieties
which, then, allow for remarriage. We’ve
already noted that divorce is bad because marriage was not intended to be
broken. However, there is also an implicit moral logic in the text and the
creation story that divorce and remarriage might be permitted because God loves
us and made us for something more than betrayal, neglect, unfaithfulness, or
abuse. And if in these remarks you hear a wider space of concessions for
divorce that are not explicitly mentioned in the text, which the Apostle Paul
will also hear (1 Cor. 7:12-16) – well, as a servant of Jesus Christ who looks
back at what God intended, that is what I am saying. But always remember that
it is often a terrible concession. And for those of you even considering
leaving your spouse, remember this – God didn’t make you to leave. God made you
to cleave.
Finally, there is an interesting irony in
Jesus’ use of the eunuch, apart from Jesus’ more specific point about celibacy,
divorce and remarriage. For Jesus’ disciples the mention of the eunuch would have
been quite shocking. A eunuch was someone who, often without his consent, was
castrated for some purpose. More importantly, the law clearly stipulated that a
eunuch could not worship as a member of the community (Deut. 23:1). Despite
this, Jesus chose to use such a person as the example of one who could follow
him “for the sake of the kingdom” (19:12). So there is this odd rub of a
challenging ethic coupled with the inclusion and praise of one excluded by the
Bible.
Jesus then uses this very interesting concession
that this is “only to those to whom it has been given” and later “to those who
can accept it.” Jesus’ other teachings, such as forsaking possessions or family
to follow him, never include such a qualification. It would seem then that he
means that this particular teaching (of being celibate and/or not remarrying)
is only for some disciples and not for all while at the same time including
those outside of God’s law as his own disciples. All this points to a reality
that a second marriage after divorce can serve as a sign of grace and
redemption from the sin and the brokenness of the past.
So today, mindful of God’s intent for your
life, having been reminded of God’s design for us as image bearers who have
been broken by sin – sin not always of our own making, I want to speak to those
who are struggling in marriage or recently divorced. Hope and healing can be
found. Go back to vs. 2: “Large crowds followed him, and he
healed them there.”
Are you divorced? Remarried? Struggling? You
are welcome here. More than that, you are invited to participate, to pray, to
serve, to join, to find healing and hope. O make no mistake, you must allow
your own story to be judged by the Genesis story of God’s good intent for your
life. And this may demand a call to repentance, to sacrifice, to celibacy. God
knows I had much to repent of myself – but divorce does not place you outside
the kingdom’s call. So come and receive the wholeness and healing of a redeemed
story today. Let anyone who can accept this accept this. Amen.
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