Dear sister Triciacat,
So then do you mean that doctrine concerning fornication is ecclesiastical law and not divine law?
It is a divine law.
Now, I would like to ask you:
Matthew 5:32 states:
Whoever puts away his wife except for the case of fornication porneias], makes her commit adultery moikasthai], and whoever marries the one put away commits adulterymoikatai].
Did you know that this statement is unique to the Gospel of Matthew? Do you know why that is?
Do you understand the difference between
porneias (fornication) and
moikasthai (adultery), or do you think it makes no difference that Jesus used two different words?
Why do you suppose that whoever marries the one that has been divorced commits adultery?
Please answer those questions.
Regardless, are not ecclesiastical laws the result of the Holy Spirit working within the church?
Yes. And how does that exactly justify the Church breaking a divine law? Please explain.
How then would you interpret Matthew 16:19?
It means 1) the power to impose or remit eternal punishment (i.e., forgive sins); 2) the power to impose or remit penance/ temporal punishment; 3) the power to make or cancel laws for the Church (i.e., ecclesiastical laws).
It does not give the Church power to break or cancel the divine laws. The Catholic Church does not claim that for herself, and never has. Are you saying that the Eastern Orthodox Church does? Please clarify.
I am willing to acknowledge that the principle of
oikonomia may be applied to remit #1 and #2 above for a second marriage. But
oikonomia cannot make a sin no longer a sin. If a second marriage occurs, it must be penitential in character, as is the case in the Oriental Orthodox Churches. In the Coptic Orthodox Church, for example, second marriages are considered inferior, and the priest does not grant a blessing of crowning, but rather offers prayers for forgiveness during the ceremony.
Notice that regardless of how one interprets the distinction between
porneias (fornication) and
moikasthai (adultery) in Matthew 5:32, Jesus does not grant permission to remarry after separation in that passage. Far from it, He states clearly that even the one who marries the divorced person also commits adultery. And St. Paul in I Cor 7 permits a second marriage only to widows (presumably also widowers).
What I’ve noticed (which I find very disturbing) is that many Orthodox (both Oriental and Eastern) nowadays don’t think there is really anything wrong with a second or third marriage while the other spouse is still alive. These don’t seem aware of the marked penitential character of the digamist ceremony.
Blessings,
Marduk