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 Inside Report

The Bible on Marriage, Divorce, & Remarriage

The Bible on Marriage, Divorce, & Remarriage
By Pastor Doug Batchelor

Happily Ever After…
In light of the recent royal marriage extravaganza between Prince William and commoner Kate Middleton, many still remember the wedding of the millennium: Diana Spencer to Prince Charles.

Widely billed as the fairytale story of a beautiful girl who marries a prince, the royal wedding was broadcast around the world to a television audience of 750 million, while 600,000 people lined the streets just to catch a glimpse of Diana en route to the ceremony.

Diana wore a pricey dress with a 25-foot train, and the guest list read like a “who’s who” of the world’s richest and most famous citizens.

It was a wonderful picture of hope and promise, but a lavish wedding does not a loving marriage make. As we all know, within a decade the “wedding of the millennium” unraveled into just another miserable marriage that ended in sordid stories of infidelity and divorce. What made it even sadder was Diana had herself come from a broken home. Her mother had divorced her father when Diana was very young. On the day Diana’s mother left the house, she said to her little girl, “I will be back very soon.”

“Very soon” turned out to be never, and that event deeply impacted Diana for the rest of her short life. In fact, after Diana first met Prince Charles—who apparently was actually going out with her sister at the time—she told her friends that she was going to marry him. Her friends wondered how she could possibly know that. Diana responded, “Because he’s the only man on the planet who is not allowed to divorce me.”

Sadly, no human promise, wisdom, or wealth can keep a marriage together; sin has infected our lives too much for that. But the Bible has the keys to make a marriage a happy and productive one—and avoid the scourge of divorce.

Most Sacred Institution
On January 3, 2004, pop star Britney Spears shocked her fans when she impulsively married her childhood friend Jason Alexander in Las Vegas.

Within 55 hours the marriage was annulled.

Spears said, “I do believe in the sanctity of marriage; I totally do.” But she confessed, “I was in Vegas, and it took over me, and, you know, things got out of hand.”

One obvious reason many people so recklessly jump into marriage is that they figure if it doesn’t work out they can just as quickly jump out. The solemn vows, they reason, are just a required formality.

However, the Bible is not silent regarding the sanctity of marriage. How could it be silent when marriage was created by God? We should expect that the Bible would come with some strict guidelines about what is permitted to cancel a marriage. The many civil and religious laws established to preserve marriage exist because of the high priority of the institution.

After all, how important would marriage be if it could be so easily dissolved? If you could be released from this solemn covenant for the most trivial of reasons, then marriage itself would be trivial—and, as we’ve noted already, this is exactly what’s happening in our culture because marriage is so easy to escape.

Salvation is also a sacred covenant. We might have cause to worry if God honored His covenant to save us the same way many people these days honor their marriage vows.

Fort Knox is one of the most heavily guarded locations in North America. Why? Because its vaults contain approximately 4,600 tons of gold bullion. However, grocery stores are not built like small fortresses—with thick walls, armed guards, and complicated safes—to protect bubblegum. The value of what is inside a location is often best revealed by the level of security protecting it.

It’s the same with marriage. God has placed a formidable wall, a holy hedge, around this institution in order to protect it precisely because it is so valuable, so sacred, so important. The marriage vow is not like children on a playground making fanciful pledges like, “Cross your heart and hope to die.” When a man and woman get married, they are committing themselves to each other in the strongest possible terms. It is a solemn oath made in the presence of God, meant to last as long as those two hearts keep beating in stereo. “For You have blessed it, O Lord, and it shall be blessed forever” (1 Chronicles 17:27 NKJV).

Conditional Commitment?
Joseph Campbell said, “A marriage is a commitment to that which you are. That person is literally your other half. And you and the other are one. … Marriage is a life commitment, and a life commitment means the prime concern of your life. If marriage is not the prime concern, you are not married.”

But what if you are thoroughly convinced that you married the wrong person? Does the vow still need to be kept … really? Psalm 15:1 says, “Lord, who may abide in Your tabernacle? Who may dwell in Your holy hill?” In other words, who will go to heaven? Part of the answer is found in verse 4: “He who swears to his own hurt and does not change” (NKJV). It’s talking about a person who has made a promise he doesn’t really want to keep anymore, but he keeps it anyway because it was a promise.

It’s someone like Jephthah, who promised to dedicate to the Lord whatever came out of his gates when he returned home victorious. (See Judges 11:30, 31.) He likely thought it would be a goat or a cow, but it turned out to be his daughter. Who could have blamed him for taking back that pledge? Yet with a broken heart, he kept his vow, and she was given to serve in the temple for the rest of her life without marrying.

When you stood at the altar and made your vow, did you not know that someday your husband or wife might have days when they act grumpy and look frumpy? Did you never consider that their outward beauty and rippling muscles would eventually sag? They might even snore or someday grow senile and need your constant care. There is no excuse for abandoning your sacred vow because it hurts you.

Remember, the kind of love spoken of in the Bible is an unconditional love. “The Lord has appeared of old to me, saying: ‘Yes, I have loved you with an everlasting love; Therefore with lovingkindness I have drawn you’ ” (Jeremiah 31:3 NKJV). This is the way Jesus loves us. It’s not because we are always lovable, but because He has chosen to love us despite our failures. It’s not a love driven because of what you do for Him. “For I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels nor principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things to come, nor height nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 8:38, 39 NKJV).

It’s a choice to love regardless of whether or not a spouse is always lovable.

Inseparable love? That’s commitment.

Martin Luther said, “The Christian is supposed to love his neighbor, and since his wife is his nearest neighbor, she should be his deepest love.”

One Plus One Equals One
The deep-sea angler is a very interesting ocean fish.

The female is about as big as a volleyball. On the other hand, the male is disproportionately small, like a black jellybean with fins. He has small hook teeth that he uses to bite the female of his dreams and attach himself to her. Once attached, his blood vessels actually join with those of the female—and he will spend the rest of his life merged with her like an extra appendage, getting all of his nourishment from her body in return for fertilizing her eggs. The flesh of the two fish eventually fuses, and they remain permanently connected.

This might not be the most elegant word picture, but it adds new meaning to the Scripture, “Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh” (Genesis 2:24).

Consider the word “cleave” used in this verse; it comes from the Hebrew word dabaq, which means “adhere” or “glue.” In other words, husbands and wives should be super-glued together in their marriage.

There are several ways that a husband and wife become one flesh. The most obvious is when their chromosomes blend together through an act of love to form a new creature, a child made in their image. However, whether or not they have children, this oneness also applies to the spiritual, mental, and physical aspects of their lives and partnership.

According to researchers at the University of California in San Francisco, when a man and woman engage in sexual intimacy, the hormone oxytocin is released, which helps bond the relationship. Oxytocin has been shown to be “associated with the ability to maintain healthy interpersonal relationships and healthy psychological boundaries with other people.” When it is released during sex, it begins creating an emotional bond between individuals. Oxytocin is also associated with mother/infant bonding because it is released during childbirth and breastfeeding.

Let’s be clear though: When a man and woman get married, becoming “one flesh” is far beyond sexual or chemical. Emotions, dreams, responsibilities, and relationships are all melded together. We have all heard stories of how difficult and dangerous it can be to separate conjoined twins when arteries, nerves, and organs are shared. Likewise, separating what God has joined together seldom happens without great risk.

A man and woman in marriage become so closely united in purpose, being, and existence, it is as though they were literally “one flesh.” And two lives so intertwined cannot be divided without causing great pain, emotional bleeding, and scarring. That’s why divorce is always so devastating.

Tips for a Happy Marriage
No question: Marriage can be challenging. But as we have seen, it is intended to be a wonderful gift from God—a blessing, not a burden. “He who finds a wife finds a good thing, And obtains favor from the Lord” (Proverbs 18:22 NKJV).

The key, of course, is communication.

There is a story about an old man and his wife who were celebrating their golden wedding anniversary—50 years of married life. Having spent most of the day with relatives and friends at a big party given in their honor, they returned home. They decided, before retiring, to have a little tea with bread and jam. Seated in the kitchen, the husband opened up a new loaf of bread and handed the end piece (the heel) to his wife. After a long pause, she exploded, saying, “For 50 years you have been dumping the heel of the bread on me. I’ve held my peace, but enough is enough. I refuse to take it anymore, this lack of concern for me and what I like.” On and on she went scolding him. The husband was absolutely astonished at the tirade. When she had finished, another long pause drifted between them. Finally, with misty eyes, he softly said to her, “The heel is my favorite piece.”

I say again: Communicate!

Every marriage faces challenges, some big and some small. Life is precious and short; therefore, focus on the larger battles, working through them as a team while letting go of the incidentals that, in the big scheme of things, don’t really matter. If you are going to pick something apart, make sure it’s worth the effort. Unfortunately, unresolved arguments are a big issue in marriages, often leading to divorce. Therefore, unless the issue is something significant, learn to let some things roll off your back. When you do discuss the big stuff, wait until you’re alone. If the children feel like they’re in the bleachers of a boxing match between mom and dad, it can be very troubling.

Below are a few more points that can help make marriage the blessing it was intended to be. Some of these tips might sound like fortune cookie clichés, but they are true nonetheless.

First, one of the most crucial aspects of marriage is practicing forgiveness. Ben Franklin said, “Keep your eyes wide open before marriage, and half shut afterwards.” We need to learn to apologize when we are wrong—and if we’re smart, we might find something to apologize for even when we know we are right.

As we have been forgiven by God, we should also forgive our spouses, even when they don’t deserve it. “Marriage,” someone said, “is three parts love and seven parts forgiveness.” That’s what biblical forgiveness is all about: forgiving the undeserving. If we don’t learn to forgive, marriage, if it survives, will be like purgatory.

But you might be asking, “How can I love and forgive a person when they have hurt me so deeply? After I have seen their dark and ugly side. How can I love them when they demonstrate so little love for me?” As you think about these questions, keep in mind these are the very questions Jesus can ask about each of us. Despite our selfishness and sin, He loves and forgives us. He gave His life to be one with us. “Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself for her” (Ephesians 5:25 NKJV).

Second, just as the Bible teaches that we are sinners, we must accept the fact that we are married to someone who is physically, emotionally, and spiritually damaged by sin. Get over it. Your spouse has faults. Marriage is the art of two incompatible people learning to live compatibly. Pray your way through his or her faults. You might have to live with those faults, but you don’t have to obsess over them. If you do obsess over them, they will eventually eat you and your marriage alive. A perfect, holy God, through Christ, accepts us as we are; you, who are hardly holy and perfect, must do the same for your spouse. God then transforms us by love. If you would see change in your spouse, exemplify His life and love in your life (Ephesians 5:28).

Don’t always think of yourself first. As fallen humans, our default mode is “Me, Me, Me.” Like a compass that always points inward, our first impulse in any situation is to think of ourselves and of our own needs, survival, and comfort before anyone else’s—and that, unfortunately, includes our spouses. Try, through God’s grace and Spirit, to put your spouse before yourself just as Christ put us before Himself. Such an attitude can, and indeed will, do wonders for any marriage.

And just as Christ put Himself in our situation, for He “was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin,” try to put yourself in your spouse’s shoes (Hebrews 4:15). In other words, when a tense situation arises, step back for a few moments and try to see things from your partner’s perspective. How does this situation impact him? Why would she feel as she does? It’s amazing how this understanding can alleviate a lot of stressful situations that will inevitably arise in a marriage.

Schedule quality personal time together. Time is the stuff of which love is made. Dry dishes together, pull weeds in the garden as a team, or anything else that will bring you together. Remember that immediately after God made marriage, He made the Sabbath—creating a time to build the relationship.

“When a man has taken a new wife, he shall not go out to war or be charged with any business; he shall be free at home one year, and bring happiness to his wife whom he has taken” (Deuteronomy 24:5 NKJV).

Every marriage has its own set of challenges, and no formula guarantees success. But through these simple principles, one can go a long way in helping make marriage better and better as the years go by.

One divorce is one too many. That was not how things were supposed to be. Marriage is sacred. If you understand that it is sacred, you will do everything you possibly can, in God’s grace, to protect it—making it a commitment for life.

So make up your mind now to say in the words of Ruth:

“Entreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee: for whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge: thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God: Where thou diest, will I die, and there will I be buried: the Lord do so to me, and more also, if ought but death part thee and me” (Ruth 1:16, 17).


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Posted on July 12, 2011 10:38 by Amazing Facts Editor

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39 Comments

Teresa Myers
Tuesday, July 12, 2011 6:14 PM
Dear Pastor Doug:
You were a major part of my mother & I joining the Seventh-day Adventist Church. We watch you at least 3 or 4 times a week on 3ABN,and especially enjoy the Adult Sabbath School. My brother-in-law loaned me your book "Caveman". I laughed and cried all the way through it. I was finished in a day and a half and was sad the book was over. I will order another book soon and send a love gift.
God bless your ministry,
Teresa Myers
Ft. Wayne, Indiana
sheila smith
Wednesday, July 13, 2011 9:23 AM
I have enjoyed the inserts from your new book and plan to purchase it. Marriage is sacred and to many of us christians including myself put more time in the wedding than the relationship prior to marriage. I have learned that GOD can provide everything you need if you would allow him. When it comes to marriage honestly, we leave him out picking and choosing as we humans see fit, only to come full circle with the hard fact; you don't have a clue about the best mate for you. Jesus does!
Don
Wednesday, July 13, 2011 1:23 PM
So, You are saying that if someone get divorced and they get remarried, they are living in sin and will be punished by God. What if they accept Jesus after they are remarried and become a good Christian family; are they still living in sin or will he forgive them? I haven't heard anyone give an absolute yes or no on this question.
Joe Gagliano
Wednesday, July 13, 2011 1:37 PM
I not married but have wanted/want to. In my opinion: To love someone is to “fight the battle before the battle.” To set up family camp only when coast is clear. To concede to your partners many Christian soothing request light years in advance. To look at him/her through Re-birth eyes of compassion. And to love someone is to first love God with all your heart, mind, soul, and strength. To have Faith in Jesus Christ as the one who loves him/her more than you or anyone else.
Dan
Wednesday, July 13, 2011 7:47 PM
@don see James 4:17 I think that's all you need to know about what you ask...
Shad
Thursday, July 14, 2011 11:57 PM
Dear AF, It's been a while since you posted the last article. Thanks for another inspired article and I firmly believe that this has been very helpful to those who are married are are planning to get married. God bless you more!
Damian
Friday, July 15, 2011 1:23 PM
Finally, with misty eyes, he softly said to her, “The heel is my favorite piece.” WOW that was my favourite part in the article. God bless you Pastor Doug I really needed this article.
Abigail M. H
Friday, July 15, 2011 7:00 PM
thnx, your article has caused me to do some thinking. I want to do what is right, i am also on the brink of divorce. I married my husband after about a month of dating, realised my mistake and i have been separated from him about a year now. this is so hard. he wants to work things out.
i think i may have been magnifying his faults to get out of the marriage. this is now messy because my previous husband who left me is expecting to mend things. im confused about my loyalties . Help??
mickey88
Friday, July 15, 2011 7:51 PM
very interesting and helpful article. Thanks Pastor Dough
sibusiso
Friday, July 15, 2011 8:29 PM
These are hard words to swallow, but true in every way, one must pray earnestly for a spouse from our God and savior. May God bless and heal all broken and troubled marriages
lee ferrigon
Friday, July 15, 2011 10:56 PM
That was a great and inspiring article, i shall share it with friends. i do wonder about a few things though, for example i have friends where their husbands have beaten them even raped them, are they suppose to keep their marriage vows? Also what about death, i understand when we get old but why would God allow the sin of sickness to end a marriage in its youth?
john
Sunday, July 17, 2011 8:05 AM
thanks for this.
john
poland
Christopher Allen
Tuesday, July 19, 2011 3:28 PM
Nice! This is declining in our society-world. Thats why Christians nee to stick together. Galations, last chapter.
Lorraine
Friday, July 22, 2011 2:53 AM
Dear Pastor Doug, you are so good at explaining what the Bible states on marriage. I believe it with all my heart. I married my husband when I had left the Church, he is not a Christian so he states, then with Gods grace I returned to the Church. I do feel I have been feeling sorry for myself, its been all about me trying to cope with our different views on life and the Sabbath. I think it is now time for me to give my issues to God, and pray for my husband. Thankyou
Jon
Friday, July 22, 2011 4:08 AM
I find this very soothing to here and intuitively I have understood the merit behind staying together and loving one another for eternity. My last girlfriend was suffering from what I believe to be borderline personality disorder and it
made it immensely difficult to forge a lasting intimate, trusting relationship. I kept going back to her to serve her and her 2 kids but her often intense abandonment fears led to infidelity on her part and kept pushing me away. Not sure what should be done????
Vicki
Friday, July 22, 2011 8:51 AM
I am like one of the other people who posed a question. I was married 6 times before my current marriage, but I was not saved, knew nothing about God. My marriage now, for 23 yrs, is a good one, and I believe in God and his word with all my heart. Am I not eligible to be saved because of the past marriages and mistakes?
Lapsina
Friday, July 22, 2011 9:13 PM
what if someone foolishly marries someone who isn't a beleiver and obey-er in Christ, (becuase at the time they aren't living His Word)? Should the beleiver stay "un-equally yoked"? Which is better to break a marriage covenant or stay in a marriage unequally yoked (mingling the wheat and the tares isn't it?)

PLEASE respond.
Dave
Saturday, July 23, 2011 12:47 AM
I really appreciated and enjoyed the article. One question though. Did Jephthah give his daughter to serve in the temple or was she sacrificed as a burnt offering?
Betsy
Sunday, July 24, 2011 8:00 PM
What saddens me most is while we should be the example for the world, we are getting divorces at the same rate as non-believers. We need more books such as this one.
Helen
Saturday, July 30, 2011 10:38 AM
This is a very good article I really enjoyed reading it. Thank you for posting this article and when you read you learn a lot. I love reading and knowing things I need to do to make my marriage a beautiful and a lasting one. Iam married for 4 years and have a wonderful family, my family loves the Lord.
jadedaniel
Wednesday, August 03, 2011 7:06 PM
Dear Pastor Doug,
Thank you for this article. Me and my 6year sweethart married for 5 months find this very inspiring, though we have known & have been bestfriends for long time, we are not free from small arguements and indiffrences. We are just starting our lives together and may we allow God to superglued us in whatever circumtances we will be.
May our good Lord bless you & your loved ones even more. May He find us serving, praising & faithful to Him til the end. See you in heaven!
Melissa Torres
Thursday, August 04, 2011 9:51 AM
My borthers and sisters that have questions about divorce and remarriage I too had the same questions and my soul was troubled as to wether God have forgiven me or not. The Holy Spirit led me to the cross where I saw my Jesus and the abundance of forgiveness there. Then He led me to the story of David a fallen man, beloved by God and restored that through Him the Prophecy of the Messiah may be fullfilled! WE all fall short that's why Jesus died for us! Jesus=forgiveness/salvation!
sonny kaytee
Friday, August 05, 2011 10:27 PM
Thanks Pastor Doug, your narrative on marriage is very thoughful and full of biblical insight. I also found the posted comments very interesting thus giving a view into the lives of men and women living a life of quiet desperation when marriages dont work out and it fails.
mickey{mouse}
Saturday, August 06, 2011 8:33 PM
Matt. chapter 19 give the only reason for divorce, and it also said that it is because of the hardness of the heart. but i believe in the "IDEAL" of the edenic marriage, and we should be going back to Eden, how much more the ideal worship the seventh day sabbath, sacredness of marriage and our total dependence an our creator
Ivonne lopez
Monday, August 08, 2011 10:00 AM
I have been married 20 years and this is the best article to come my way. I have made up my mind to be a better partner and to stop looking at me, me, me, and look and fill the needs of my spouse and best friend.
I love the fish story. thankyou! I needed this.
Alex Moix
Wednesday, August 10, 2011 7:28 PM
THE TRUTH CONCERNING MARRIAGE, DIVORCE, AND REMARRIAGE WHAT JESUS SAID!
9What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder.

10And in the house his disciples asked him again of the same matter.

11And he saith unto them, Whosoever shall put away his wife, and marry another, committeth adultery against her.

12And if a woman shall put away her husband, and be married to another, she committeth adultery.
Reannon Olsen
Saturday, August 20, 2011 6:30 AM
Dear Pastor Doug,

Thanks pastor..i enjoy your acticle very much..it is so inspiring for me...God Bless you...
merin titus sam
Thursday, August 25, 2011 6:12 PM
Dear Pastor Doug ,
This is really an inspiring article .I liked it it makes to realise what life is ment to be helps to overcome problems in a family . thank you for posting
God bless
merin
April
Friday, August 26, 2011 7:53 PM
LAPSINA, It doesn't look as though anyone has responded to your question. I know you posted a while ago, but I hope you will get this. Or, maybe someone else has the same question. You asked if you should stay married to a non-believer and thus be unequally yoked. Please look up these verses that I believe will give you the answer to your question: 1 Cor. 7: 12-24

PRAY for your spouse! God can do the unthinkable! Be patient in affliction (Romans 12:12).

Blessings to you!
Nolan
Sunday, August 28, 2011 4:09 AM
Nice article based on Bibilcal truth. I learned some things that I knew, but seeing it written really hits home.
Mike Bender
Wednesday, August 31, 2011 8:34 AM
Excellent article Pastor Batchelor.

Marriage MUST be held to a high standard.

One issue I didn't see addressed in this excerpt but may be in the book, was if a person not a member in good standing, got divorced and years later seek to be married by SDA pastor. Would that be a blanket yes, no, or would it end up being reviewed on a one by one basis? It seems to me the church should have a standard regarding such things as people denied a situation may be resentful if another was allowed.
Linda
Thursday, September 01, 2011 9:33 AM
This is a very nice article with truth written where its easy to understand. In this day and age we need all the help we can get with marriage been put under attack.So I am very thankful for this article that just comfirm some things to me.Thanks for the encougment through this article about God's words and instiution of marriage.
lovejoy
Saturday, September 03, 2011 2:31 AM
Dear pastor.thank u for this article about marriage and tips of making it more successful one.you are a blessing from above&may God continually blessed you're program.thank yoi
Jim Janda
Saturday, September 03, 2011 5:37 PM
Hi everyone!
I absolutely love this topic of Marriage and I feel that I must tell everyone that reads these posts about the book "Love and Respect" by Emmerson Eggerich. This book is near and dear to my heart because I am recently divorced and it was recommended to me by a friend a little too late. The book explains that men must love their wives but women must respect their husbands. This is the other half of the equasion that is never mentioned in our culture.

Jim Janda
Job masayon
Monday, September 05, 2011 4:14 AM
Thank you for the very inspiring words that help me to know more about happy marriage.
God bless you and this ministry

Thanks a lot Pastor Doug!


Job Masayon

Thailand
Judith Parker
Wednesday, November 16, 2011 4:28 AM
Beautiful and true.
Sydney
Saturday, January 07, 2012 3:40 PM
Enjoyed reading the article and as always learnt a lot of things. God bless. Just a quick question though, where can I find scriptural prove for your statement that ..."Yet with a broken heart, he kept his vow, and she was given to serve in the temple for the rest of her life without marrying" in reference to Jephthah's daughter?
NishaJebith
Wednesday, January 11, 2012 10:28 PM
I really thank God for making me read this article. I was so much confused and stressed about my marriage life. After reading this, my eyes shed tears. The burden in my heart rolled away. Now i am Happy. God bless you.
saudia
Tuesday, February 14, 2012 11:24 PM
With all due respect pastor Doug, Jeptha's daughter was offered as a burnt sacrifice.

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