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This attempt at understanding the meaning of the NT leaching on
divorce and remarriage argues that both Jesus and Paul condemned
divorce without valid grounds and discouraged divorce even for valid
grounds, that both Jesus and Paul affirmed the OT grounds for
divorce, that the OT allowed divorce for adultery and for neglect or
abuse, and that both Jesus and Paul condemned remarriage after an
invalid divorce but not after a valid divorce. After a three-page
introduction, the volume traces the history of divorce and
remarriage in eleven chapters: the ancient Near East—marriage is a
contract; the Pentateuch—the divorce certificate allows remarriage;
the later prophets—breaking marriage vows is condemned;
intertestamental period—increasing rights for women; rabbinic
teaching—increasing grounds for divorce; Jesus' teaching—divorce on
biblical grounds only; Paul's teaching— biblical grounds include
neglect; marriage vows—vows inherited from the Bible and Judaism;
history of divorce—interpretations in church history; modem
reinterpretations— different ways to understand the biblical text;
and pastoral conclusions—reversing institutionalized
misunderstandings. Instone-Brewer is a research fellow at Tyndale
House in Cambridge, UK.
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