SealedEternal
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- Jan 6, 2008
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(FoC;52039)
Are you asking why they use that passage to argue marriage?If so, I agree with the question.Romans there isnt about marriage itself and if it is, since Paul is speaking to those who 'know the law' it would seem that he's forgotten that in the law there WAS means to leave the marriage given without the death of the husband.Paul isnt that forgetful, I dont believe, he had to have known full well about Deut 24:!-4 and this writ of divorce, being a 'pharisee, son of a pharisee'.It is clear in the context of Romans that marriage is not the topic.
What Bible are you guys reading. Paul is using what he considered to be an indisputable fact that marriage can only be dissolved by death to make an analogy about Christ's death being sufficient to free us from the letter of the Law and walk in newness of the Spirit of it by having it written on our hearts and minds by His Spirit.For an analogy to be effective, the pretext must be fully true and widely understood, in order to teach a similar concept on another issue. Therefore Paul's statement that the married woman is bound by law to her husband while he is living, that only death can break that covenant, and subsequent marriages while her husband lives are actually adulterous affairs, must be fully true statements that everyone agreed upon as a given, or the analogy failed and didn't make any sense.If Paul's pretexts were in error and marriage isn't for life and remarriage while a spouse lives wasn't adultery, then there is no reason to assume that Christ's death sufficiently freed us from the letter of the Law to walk in newness of the Spirit, or in other words perhaps he died needlessly. The only other possibility if Paul's pretexts were false, is that He wasn't inspired by God, scripture is not reliable, and he didn't understand how to make a proper analogy. I believe it is far more likely that he meant exactly what he said, and marriage is in fact indissolvible except by death as he said.SealedEternal
Are you asking why they use that passage to argue marriage?If so, I agree with the question.Romans there isnt about marriage itself and if it is, since Paul is speaking to those who 'know the law' it would seem that he's forgotten that in the law there WAS means to leave the marriage given without the death of the husband.Paul isnt that forgetful, I dont believe, he had to have known full well about Deut 24:!-4 and this writ of divorce, being a 'pharisee, son of a pharisee'.It is clear in the context of Romans that marriage is not the topic.

What Bible are you guys reading. Paul is using what he considered to be an indisputable fact that marriage can only be dissolved by death to make an analogy about Christ's death being sufficient to free us from the letter of the Law and walk in newness of the Spirit of it by having it written on our hearts and minds by His Spirit.For an analogy to be effective, the pretext must be fully true and widely understood, in order to teach a similar concept on another issue. Therefore Paul's statement that the married woman is bound by law to her husband while he is living, that only death can break that covenant, and subsequent marriages while her husband lives are actually adulterous affairs, must be fully true statements that everyone agreed upon as a given, or the analogy failed and didn't make any sense.If Paul's pretexts were in error and marriage isn't for life and remarriage while a spouse lives wasn't adultery, then there is no reason to assume that Christ's death sufficiently freed us from the letter of the Law to walk in newness of the Spirit, or in other words perhaps he died needlessly. The only other possibility if Paul's pretexts were false, is that He wasn't inspired by God, scripture is not reliable, and he didn't understand how to make a proper analogy. I believe it is far more likely that he meant exactly what he said, and marriage is in fact indissolvible except by death as he said.SealedEternal