Divorce and Remarriage

Divorce and Remarriage

by Tony Evans
Divorce and Remarriage

Divorce and Remarriage

by Tony Evans

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Overview

There are many views today on morality, relativity and right and wrong. Dr. Tony Evans refuses to let the voice of God be drowned out amidst the clamor of the crowd.

In the age where people can get a “no-fault” divorce (When is it ever nobody’s fault?) believers who claim to live by God’s word cannot dodge the issue: we cannot skip it, run from it, or ignore it. God has spoken clearly on this subject and while it is far from easy to address, it must be dealt with. Combining a high view of marriage, compassion, and biblical authority, Tony Evans gives invaluable insight into divorce and remarriage as he explores real-life fears and questions by looking at the issue from God’s vantage point, not from our emotional one.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780802483546
Publisher: Moody Publishers
Publication date: 05/01/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 80
Sales rank: 476,296
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

About The Author
DR. TONY EVANS is the founder and senior pastor of Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship in Dallas, founder and president of The Urban Alternative, and former chaplain of the Dallas Cowboys and Dallas Mavericks. He is the first African American to earn a doctoral degree from Dallas Theological Seminary, and the first to publish a study Bible and whole-Bible commentary. His radio broadcast, The Alternative with Dr. Tony Evans, can be heard on over 2,000 US radio outlets daily and in more than 130 countries.

For more information, visit: www.TonyEvans.org.

Read an Excerpt

Divorce and Remarriage


By TONY EVANS

Moody Publishers

Copyright © 2012 Anthony T. Evans
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-8024-0851-8


Chapter One

The Covenant of Marriage

The call to be biblically centered and at the same time compassionate and merciful makes any discussion on divorce and remarriage a delicate one. While we can never let compassion keep us from speaking the truth, we must also always speak the truth with love.

No subject in our churches today carries with it such far-reaching emotional and spiritual implications. The rampant nature of divorce has made it a topic that affects nearly everyone. Some church members are children of divorced parents. Others have divorced or are contemplating divorce themselves. Some have married a divorced man or woman. And yet others have friends or relatives who have gone through a divorce.

Yet for something that affects such a large number of us in one way or another, divorce and remarriage remains the often unacknowledged elephant sitting squarely in the center of the sanctuary. We dance around it, carry on with our praise and worship services next to it, and frequently outright ignore it.

This is dangerous to the body of Christ as a whole and to its members as individuals for a number of reasons. One of those reasons involves the issues of sin, repentance, and restoration. Without addressing the situations of divorce that would not fall within biblical boundaries, many people are left to live their lives experiencing the ongoing consequences of sin while frequently being unaware of the source of those consequences.

Another way this is dangerous to the body of Christ and individuals within it is that often when there has been biblical grounds for divorce, the offended party still lives with undeserved guilt and stigma in his or her life. They might even face social isolation within the church body itself. Likewise, they often fail to seek out or receive the emotional and spiritual healing that they need to become a healthy, functioning individual again after having experienced the trauma of not only what caused the divorce but of the divorce itself. This then frequently leads to further relational difficulties down the road, and a potential increase in future divorces as well.

God hates divorce (Malachi 2:16). He makes that point clear in the book of Malachi. In fact, Malachi 2:16 is the prooftext used with regard to divorce throughout most, if not all, of Christendom. But what is frequently overlooked is that in the very same verse, God says that He also hates "a man covering himself with violence" (NIV).

So what does that mean? Should a woman not divorce a man who beats her? God hates divorce. Or can she divorce him because God also hates him who covers himself with violence?

Gleaning a biblical understanding of divorce, therefore, includes much more than three words in one verse: God hates divorce. While that is indisputable truth, He also hates violence and hate (Malachi 2:16; 1 John 4:20). Understanding God's viewpoint on divorce includes examining the context of biblical covenants that He established as well as the specific covenant of marriage. God has a high standard for the covenant of marriage. He has specific elements that make up a covenant. God never lowers His standards to accommodate us. Rather, we are to elevate our standards to accommodate Him. We must do the adjusting, not God.

My purpose in this book is not to provide an easy exit or excuse for divorce. It is clear that God hates divorce, and because of that, we should hate it, too. It is not my purpose to put divorce on the lower shelf where it can be reached quickly. How to get out of marriage is never God's mentality. My purpose is to paint an accurate picture of God's high standard for marriage and place it against the backdrop of the reality of sin. Keep in mind that sin is always present and is always the cause of every divorce.

Now, it might be that it is the sin of both parties that contributes to the dissolution of the marriage. But there are also many times—and this is something I feel we frequently ignore in the body of Christ—when the divorce is primarily the result of the sin of one party. Throwing around comments such as "It takes two to tango" or "There are always two sides to every story" have done an injustice to many who have already suffered an injustice at the hands of either an abusive, neglectful, or abandoning partner. Sin is involved in a murder or in a theft. But it is not manifested by both parties. Likewise, there are occasions when divorce clearly is one-sided and the offended party has clearly been treated unjustly—oftentimes repeatedly, regularly, and over an extended period of time.

While that may be the exception and not the rule for most of the roughly one million divorces that happen in America each year, I don't want to belittle the reality that some divorce victims face. Keeping that in mind should also help those who have not gone through or experienced a divorce to relate with those who have, without rushing to judgment.

It just might be that we do not know the entire series of events that led to the destruction of the marriage. How an individual relates to or interacts with friends or coworkers isn't always an indicator of how that person treats his or her spouse. In fact, in many of the divorce situations I have counseled involving a spouse who is physically or emotionally abusive, the individual is charming and well-liked publicly. Public behavior is not always the best indicator of private behavior.

The Centrality of the Covenant

I'm convinced that most people are confused about divorce because they are confused about marriage. Whenever you embark on a discussion of divorce without having predicated it on God's teaching about marriage, you have reversed the order. So let's try to get the order right.

Before God laid down his definitive statement about divorce in Malachi 2:16, He revealed His attitude more broadly in light of His definition of marriage. Malachi wrote to a people who were bothered that God would not accept their worship. So, through the prophet, the Lord let them know why He would not accept it. In the midst of this indictment we read,

This is another thing you do: you cover the altar of the Lord with tears, with weeping and with groaning, because He no longer regards the offering or accepts it with favor from your hand.... The Lord has been a witness between you and the wife of your youth, against whom you have dealt treacherously, though she is your companion and your wife by covenant. (Malachi 2:13–14, italics added)

There it is. In that one word, covenant, God defines marriage for us. The reason divorce is very hard and very narrow in Scripture is that marriage is a divinely covenanted relationship. It is not just a haphazard ceremony where two people stand before a preacher, say "I do," and go on a honeymoon.

Unless you understand that marriage is designed by God and for God's purposes, you will view it on the human level only. One of the reasons we are so quick to discount marriage is that we have kept it earthly. We have forgotten that we are illustrating the nature and purposes of God.

A covenant is a spiritually binding relationship between God and His people. It has legal status in the spiritual realm that includes certain agreements, conditions, benefits, and effects. In other words, God operates by the rule of His covenant.

Whenever God sought to formalize His relationship with His people, He established a covenant. Some of these covenants that you might be familiar with include the Abrahamic Covenant, the Mosaic Covenant, the Davidic Covenant, and the New Covenant.

Keep in mind that a covenant is much more than a contract. A contract involves requirements and expectations that can be fulfilled in the absence of any personal relationship. However, a covenant always includes a relationship as well. It has the legal considerations of a contract yet includes an essential relational component.

The purpose of covenants in the Bible was always to expand God's kingdom. A covenant was never established with the end goal of making people happy. However, frequently, married couples will make the mistake of viewing their relationship as a success or failure based on whether one or both parties are happy.

While happiness is the result of a well-functioning covenant, it is never the purpose of it. If you start with the covenant, you will wind up with happiness. But the reverse of that is not true. When you make happiness the goal, then Satan has you where he wants you because he knows what buttons to push and what strings to pull to make you unhappy.

A covenant is designed to reflect God Himself. The marriage covenant in particular is designed to strengthen the capability of each partner to carry out the plan of God in their lives. God is one God, yet He is also distinct in three persons—the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. These three are one in essence and unified in purpose. This makes God Himself the greatest demonstration of a covenantal relationship and the most accurate illustration of the marital covenant. A biblical covenant is a divinely ordained contract that is predicated on relational unity of purpose.

A covenant is much more than a modern-day contract because a covenant is predicated on a relationship. You can enter into a business deal and have no real relationship with the other party as long as the deal looks solid. In a marriage, that's not the case, because marriage is a covenant. It's based on relationship.

If you want to be part of the family of God, you must enter into a covenant relationship with Jesus Christ. A covenant is more than a contract even though covenants have contractual elements. When you enter into a covenant, you commit yourself to a relationship.

Our marriages today are crumbling at such a fast pace, not because we no longer get along, but because we have lost sight of the purpose and prosperity of the marriage covenant.

Marriage matters. It matters to God. It matters to the body of Christ. It matters to the generations coming after it. It matters to our culture, and to the advancement of God's kingdom agenda on earth. Since covenants have such unique intentions, they should never be taken lightly.

This whole concept is so important that I want to look at three truths about covenants before we talk about the specific issues involved in divorce and remarriage. Remember, until we understand God's standard for marriage, we won't know how to address the issue of divorce.

Transcendence

First of all, all legitimate covenants in Scripture are established by God. They're His covenants. There is a fancy theological term for that called transcendence. Transcendence simply means that covenants are both initiated and ruled by God. God, and not man, is sovereign over what the covenant is and how it should operate.

That may seem like an obvious statement to make, but it is a critical piece of the covenant. In order for a covenant to function with the benefits and blessings tied to it, it has to run according to God's transcendence. In fact, every spiritual covenant assumes God's active involvement over, and in all aspects of, the relationship in order for it to work.

When the practical realities of God are dismissed from the covenant of marriage, Satan walks through an open door to invoke chaos in the home.

Marriage is not your covenant. It's God's covenant. You are a participant in it, but it is God's covenant, and, as such, He makes the rules.

Notice once again that Malachi 2:14 says concerning the marriages of the Israelites, "the Lord has been a witness between you and the wife of your youth." The word used for "witness" is uwd and means "to testify, bear witness," like a witness taking the stand in a legal court. God is in the heavenly court testifying against the men because they were divorcing their wives and breaking His covenant.

Remember, God's covenants are contractual. They are a legally binding agreement. So God acted as a witness against the Israelites when it came to their violation of the marriage covenant.

Now, most people respect the fact that God has something to do with the covenant of marriage. That's why they get married in church. Marriage is a spiritually legal arrangement. That's why in the Bible, if you had a legitimate ground for a divorce, you had to get what was called a "certificate of divorce." You could not just go out and get divorced. It had to be legally recognized. In fact, when Jesus spoke about divorce in Matthew 19, he referenced the certificate of divorce that was part of Israelite culture in the Old Testament (Deuteronomy 24:1–4).

This is very important because if a covenant is established by God, it can only be ended by God. Now, that is not what people want to hear. They want God to approve the wedding, but they don't want Him involved in the divorce. But that is not how a spiritually binding covenant works, unfortunately for many. I say unfortunately because many people have gotten a divorce that is not permitted under the conditions we will talk about later, and when they have married someone else, God says they are committing adultery. The reason it is adultery is that, in God's eyes, they are not free from the first covenant. God says marriage is His covenant, and He is the only one who can release someone from it.

Most people don't have that view. They view their marriage as theirs alone. God was welcome at the altar. But He was also left there standing. Yet Jesus said, "What therefore God has joined together, let no man separate" (Matthew 19:6). When someone goes before the judge downtown rather than the Judge uptown, they are giving the earthly judge the power to overrule God—yet God does not accept being overruled by man.

God says, "This is My covenant and My institution, so you must function under My guidelines if you want My blessings."

Hierarchy

A second truth about covenants is that all covenants function under a hierarchy of command. Since covenants are established by God, they must function under a divinely prescribed channel of authority.

In Malachi 2, God says He condemned the Israelite men because they were discarding their legitimate wives. Among their many other spiritual problems, they did not understand a fundamental principle in Scripture: the principle of representation.

If you are a Christian, the reason you are not going to hell is that you have changed representatives. You are no longer in Adam. You are in Christ. He is your new representative. In 1 Corinthians 11:3, Paul says that Christ is under God, every Christian man is under Christ, and the woman is under the man. In Ephesians 6:1, Paul says children are under their parents. Everybody is linked in God's established hierarchy.

This explains something very important: the methodology of Satan in the garden of Eden. Notice that Satan never bothered Adam when he was single. He had to get married before the devil showed up.

Why didn't Satan tempt Adam while he was in the garden by himself? Satan understood the principle of representation and what would happen if the order got reversed.

So who did the serpent approach, Adam? No. He conversed with Eve. What Satan did was produce a break in the order. Eve became the leader, and Adam became the follower. Their roles were switched, and as a result, Satan was in charge of them both.

Two major reasons for divorce today are the failure of men to take seriously their divinely ordained roles of provider, protector, and pastor in the home, and the failure of wives to respect the legitimate role of leadership by their husband if and when he is leading underneath Christ's rule.

One often prevalent yet under-discussed contributor to the breakdown of the family is this issue of headship. The submission of the woman is no secret, but the submission of the man is rarely addressed. Yet it is frequently the lack of submission by a man to Christ and Christ's lordship over his life that leads to the lack of submission by a woman. Men routinely want to be the "head" of the home, yet without being underneath their "Head," and the authority of Christ's established rulership on earth, the church.

Men, let me be absolutely clear on this right now because the man is ultimately held responsible, as the leader, for his home. An unchurched man—and I mean a man who does not regularly and intentionally place himself under the guidance, accountability, and leadership of his local church (and not simply pop in for a few hours every Sunday), is a spiritually uncovered man. A spiritually uncovered man is out of alignment and thus jeopardizes the well-being of not only himself but everyone underneath him.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Divorce and Remarriage by TONY EVANS Copyright © 2012 by Anthony T. Evans. Excerpted by permission of Moody Publishers. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

1 The Covenant of Marriage 5

2 The Conditions for Divorce 24

3 The Role of the Church 43

4 The Road to Love 58

Notes 73

The Urban Alternative 75

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