Those aren’t examples of annulments. Annulments actually “dissolve” the marriage itself as if it never actually existed in the first place.
What do you mean by “dissolve”? How can it be dissolved if it never actually existed? I think I must be misunderstanding you. It is my understanding that a marriage can only be annuled if it wasn’t validly contracted in the first place. Am I missing something here?
Most of those examples that you gave like Matthew 5:32 & Matthew 19:9 are talking about divorce, not annulments. Divorce involves the breaking of the marriage covenant, which Jesus states that it is “unlawful” to immediately remarry & is considered adultery, unless the divorce was the result of the “fornicating” spouse committing adultery, who received the certificate of divorce. This is a reference back to Deuteronomy 24:1-4.
I agree that it is a reference back to Deuteronomy 24:1-4, but I’m not so sure about your interpretation. I think these two passages have two acceptable interpretations: (1) they refer to intrinsically immoral relationships and the obligation of couples in such unions to separate or (2) they forbid divorce + remarriage (but not divorce by itself, at least not in all cases). In support of interpretation #1, I think it is important to point out that Matthew 5:32 and Matthew 19:9 permit separation only in the case of unchastity. Some see this as referring to unchastity
after the marriage, but I think it may refer to the unchastity
of the union.
Likewise, when Jesus speaks to the Samaritan woman in John Ch.4, Jesus actually acknowledges that she had been legitimately married 5 times, but He doesn’t say “how” those 5 marriages ended. And He was admonishing her fornicating relationship with the man she was currently living with.
I think that’s an acceptable interpretation, but I don’t think it is any more likely than mine. The woman seems to acknowledge that the man she was living with was her husband, and I don’t think we should assume she was lying: I think she really thought he was her husband, at least putatively. Jesus simply says he isn’t
actually her husband. If my interpretation is correct, that is just like an annulment, because it declares a putative husband not an actual husband, while if your interpretation is correct, it’s not. I’ve got no beef with you holding to your interpretation if you think there’s better evidence for it.
Again, this is not an example of an annulment either. Same with those OT passages. And as far as those other NT passages about “rules” of remarriage, they too don’t describe the concept of an religious annulment either.
In that case, how do you answer this argument?
Premise 1: If there are rules for getting married, and the rules aren’t followed, then the marriage is invalid, i.e. not a real marriage, because that’s what rules do.
Premise 2: There are rules for getting married.
Conclusion: Therefore, marriages can be invalid, i.e. not real marriages, whenever they violate the rules for getting married.
Do you think that’s a sound logical syllogism? If not, do you think one of the premises is wrong, or do you think the conclusion doesn’t follow from the premises? I ask because if the argument is sound, then I think annulments spring forth like water from a spring: annulments are just the name we give to a declaration that some couple didn’t follow the rules for getting married, and therefore their marriage was never valid. But that scenario can exist, as shown by the argument above. Therefore, annulments logically follow from the Bible’s rules about marriage. What do you think of that argument?
a marriage annulment…contradicts what Jesus stated, “What God has joined together let no man separate,” which is what happens in an annulment.
I don’t think so, because an annulment can only be granted if the marriage wasn’t valid in the first place. In that case, God didn’t join them together, because they didn’t follow the rules He gave for getting married. Therefore, God didn’t join them together, and they must separate. Does that make sense?