|
David Instone- Brewer, a research fellow at Tyndale House,
Cambridge, wishes to provide a biblical foundation for reassessing
current practices of the church regarding divorce and remarriage.
Proposing that the original NT teaching was lost after 70 c.F.
because of ignorance of the Jewish background and rigoristic
tendencies in the early patristic church, he argues that Jesus and
Paul accepted the OT grounds for divorce in cases of adultery and
neglect or abuse, and they allowed for—even if they
discouraged—remarriage after a valid divorce.
Instone-Brewer argues that marriage in the OT is best understood
as a contract that can be broken if either side reneges on the
obligations spelled out in Exod 21:10-11 and Deut 24:1. The OT's
distinctiveness in its ancient Near Eastern context lies in the
expanded rights of women in marriage. The later prophets portray God
as reluctantly divorcing Israel (or Judah) because of her persistent
infidelity. In one of the more extensive chapters, I.-B. examines
rabbinic teaching roughly contemporaneous with the NT, and here he
is fairly careful in sorting out the chronological issues. The
rabbis generally allowed divorce for infertility, unfaithfulness, or
material or emotional neglect, but the Hillelites interpreting Deut
24:1 as encompassing "any matter," allowed for divorce on any
grounds; the Shammaites interpreted Deut 24:1 more narrowly but
accepted divorces granted by Hillelite courts. Jesus' response in
Mark 10:2-12 and Matt 19:3-12 presumes this background but is
abbreviated in ways that would have been understood by a
first-century Jew. Jesus taught that marriage should be lifelong and
monogamous; while neither marriage nor divorce was compulsory, the
latter should be avoided except tor persistent infidelity; and
Hillelite divorces for "any matter'" were invalid. This last point
distinguished Jesus from the Shammaitic pragmatic position. His
silence on divorces based on Exodus 21 suggests that he accepted
Judaism's general practice and allowed divorce (and remarriage) in
cases involving lack of material or emotional support (food,
clothing, love). Paul addressed the added questions raised by a
Greco-Roman context: the believer was free to divorce and remarry
should the unbelieving partner end the marriage.
My diffi-culties with the work are more conceptual and have as
much to do with what he has not considered as with what he argues.
For instance, he writes that the later prophets "devel-oped a
picture of God that is more than a metaphor .. . they concluded that
Yahweh had a real marriage contract with Israel and Judah, and that
Yahweh was a divorcee" (p. 53). The language of divorce is certainly
present, but to what purpose? The prophetic form itself implies an
ongoing relationship, not one mat has been terminated. Is the
divorce language quasi literal or rather an aggrieved spouse's
poetic exaggeration (an option I.-B, does not address)'.' The
chapter on Jesus' teaching argues that the NT logia are highly
abbreviated and can be understood only if one takes into account
what would be "'obvious' to a first-century Jew." Why. then, are
Mark's and Luke's accounts, which have Gentiles as a significant
portion of the audience, even more abbreviated than Matthew's
account?
There is no discussion of how Jesus was tested in the question
put to him. Asking which side of the Shammaite-Hillelite debate he
favored is not really a test, nor is the disciples' reaction that it
would be better not to get married explained by arguing that Jesus
held a more consistent Shammaite position (in rejecting divorces for
"any matter"). What would constitute a test would be probing whether
Jesus accepted Scripture's provisions in this matter. Should the
Pharisees catch Jesus denying the force of Scripture, they could
build a case against him. I.-B. treats the material from Genesis 2
as a digression, but if Jesus were rejecting the Mosaic concession,
he would have to build his case on the very Law he was criticizing.
A similar use of the Law appears in Jesus' debate with the Sadducees
on the question of the resurrection, which, as such, was not
attested by the Torah. Such examples could be multiplied.
The volume offers various useful indexes. Several footnote
references, however, lack a corresponding bibliographical entry
(e.g., references to Jacob Neusner). I.-B.'s sources are almost
exclusively in English.
Earl C. Muller, S.J., Sacred Heart Major Seminary, Detroit, MI
48206
|
|