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anon99031074
Guest
LET no man put asunder. Just like LET no man kill! He doesn’t say it is impossible to break the marriage bond, only that it ideally should not be broken, and that doing so is gravely immoral. But even if it is gravely immoral to break the marriage bond and dissolve the unity God has made through grace, is it unforgivable? I see no reason to think that the RCC is right here and that the Orthodox Church is wrong, It is not a constant tradition, as divorce was granted as a concession to human weakness in the Eastern Churches long before the great schism. And as the references I quoted above suggest, it was also sometimes allowed in the western Church. Furthermore, the Church already allows divorce and remarriage on the basis of the words of Paul, arguing that it is only sacramental marriages that are truly indissoluble. Jesus made no distinction between sacramental and non sacramental marriages. He was speaking to unbaptized Jews when he said “let no man put asunder”, and the basis for the argument was what God intended from the very beginning, not something new due to the sacramental grace given in the new covenant, which is simply added divine aid.Here is a somewhat more detailed article about the issue:
catholic.com/magazine/articles/did-jesus-allow-divorce
It seems to me that an exception for adultery is not merely an exception but a wide open gate, since it effectively would give any couple the ability to divorce, merely by the expedient of one or both of them committing adultery. They might flip a coin to see who gets the nod.
Is the marital bond more permanent that a cell phone contract? Or is it essentially nullifiable by human will? What God has joined together let no man put asunder, except…