Abortion: Answering Pro-Abortionists

By Mike Willis

The pro-abortion forces, led by the National Organization For Women, Planned Parenthood, and many mainline Protestant denominations have successfully argued abortion rights on national media. Many Americans have accepted the abortionists’ arguments. These arguments need to be examined in studying this topic. Here are some of the more popular arguments used by those in favor of aborting babies.

1. “The mother has the right to control her own body. ” The woman not only has the right to control her own body, but also the obligation. If the woman had controlled her own body, she would not be pregnant and wanting to kill her unborn child to avoid the consequences of her immorality. If she had kept her passions under control and not been guilty of fornication, she would not desire an abortion. Remember, 81 percent of abortions are performed on unmarried women (Parade Magazine [I October 1989], p. 28).

Though the mother has the right and obligation to control her own body, she must remember that the baby is another body – not her own body. She has no right to decide that this other human being has no right to live, whether that other human being be inside or outside her womb. Civil law is beginning to express concern for the mother’s obligation toward the unborn in recent decisions regarding the birth of babies who are drug addicts. Some mothers have been charged with crime became they have taken drugs which caused their babies to be born addicted to drugs. If we can hold the mother responsible for her treatment of her unborn child when she takes drugs, how much more should the mother be held responsible for making a premeditated decision to kill that child!

Furthermore, for the sake of argument, let us concede that the unborn child is the mother’s body. What would we do with a woman who willfully mutilated her own body? If we saw a woman make a conscious decision to cut off her arm, what would we do? We would put her in some kind of protective custody while we treated her for insanity – insanity which was demonstrated by destroying her own body. But women who claim that the unborn baby is their own body willfully destroy a part of their own body, all the while claiming to be sane. That does not make good sense.

2. “The unborn is not really human until it is born.” If it is not human, what is it? Is it mineral, vegetable, or animal? If it is animal life, is it horse, cow, pig, cat, or just what? To ask the question shows the foolishness of the argument! If a scientist could produce a fetus from non-living matter, he would assert in every scientific journal which would publish his material that he had “created” human life! But our abortion advocates deny that the unborn baby is human life!

The only difference in an unborn and born baby is location and developmental size. Developmental size changes after birth just as certainly as it changes before birth. Hence, one could not rationally argue that the unborn is not human because of changes in developmental size.

We protect the unborn of other species, why not protect unborn babies? Stealing an eagle’s egg or disturbing its nest is punishable by a fine of up to $5,000. Is this because an eagle’s egg is eagle life, a potential eagle? Perhaps, we need to declare babies an endangered species, so our laws could protect them. Inasmuch as 20 million unborn babies have been destroyed since 1973 in America abortuaries, being an unborn baby is probably the most risky time in a person’s life – more risky than exposure to other health risks such as cigarette smoke, cancer producing agents, etc.

3. “It’s better to abort a child than to abuse one. ” What more severe form of child abuse can be committed than to kill a child? Abortion is the worst form of child abuse! If killing the unborn to prevent possible child abuse is justifiable, why not go to those homes where there is actual child abuse and kill those children to prevent child abuse?

. This argument presupposes that aborting unwanted children will cut down child abuse. With 20 million unwanted babies having been killed by abortion in America since 1973, child abuse should be totally eradicated in our society by now! However, that is not the case. There are more cases of child abuse today than ever before. Norman E. Geisler su2eested the reason for this: “Apparently the disregard for human life reflected in the acceptance of abortion is extended from pre-birth to post-birth attitude toward offspring” (“The Bible, Abortion, and Common Sense,” Fundamentalist Journal [May 1985], p. 26).

4. “We cannot legislate morality. ” Abortionists have made every effort to legislate morality since 1973. They not only have wanted to legislate that “abortion is acceptable” but also to use our tax dollars to pay for their abortions! Inasmuch as the Supreme Court has decided that states have the right to restrict abortions, we will see whether or not abortionists think that morals can be legislated! Already they have stepped up activity to legislate their moral standards, throwing aside all of their objections pertaining to legislating morality.

We legislate morals every day. If morality cannot be legislated, we need to remove from our law codes these moral laws which have been incorporated into criminal law: murder, rape, incest, stealing, anti-slavery laws, civil rights legislation. The issue is not whether or not morality can be legislated but whose morality will be legislated! Shall the moral standards of humanism, atheism, and other non-Christian perspectives become the morals of our country, or will Christian ethics be legislated? Shall the majority (those from a Judeo-Christian heritage) be controlled by the minority (those from non-Christian background) or vice versa?

5. “People are going to have abortions anyway, so we may as well legalize it. ” If this argument is valid. it should be equally valid with other criminal acts. Since people are going to commit murder, rape, incest, child abuse, and wife abuse, we may as well legalize them. Stating the argument make it absurdly obvious.

Laws do affect behavior and change attitudes. That has been clearly recognized in the civil rights legislation. Making racial discrimination a crime has made equal housing and equal job opportunities more readily available for minorities. Making abortion illegal will change attitudes and conduct of those who are law abiding citizens. Those who are not law abiding citizens will have to be incarcerated, whether their crime be rape, incest, stealing, racial discrimination, or murder (whether of the born or unborn).

6. “Making abortion illegal will result in mothers dying in back alley abortions. ” Legalized abortion has not saved lives, it has cost lives – 20 million lives since 1973 when the Roe vs. Wade case was decided. If abortion was made illegal, some would violate the law, turning to those who would perform illegal abortions in back alleys. Some would die in back alley abortions. But, how can a few hundred mothers who would make a willful decision to violate the law and die in a back alley abortion chamber compare to the 1.5 million babies which are slaughtered each year in American abortuaries? If we grant that 500 women would die each year in back alley abortions chambers, we still would have reduced the death rate by more than 99 percent.

The arguments of abortion proponents are unconvincing. They should be rejected as unsound.

How Abortions Are Performed

If most of us could witness an abortion, we would walk away in disgust at what we witnessed. If we could see the remains of babies which have been aborted, we would turn away in horror. Here are the graphic descriptions of the “Four Ways To Kill n Unborn Child.”

1. To abort an early pregnancy the doctor inserts a tube through the opening of the womb and connects it to a suction apparatus. The vacuum is so powerful that the baby is instantly broken up into a fluid mass of blood, tissue, and cartilage. It quickly passes through this tube and is collected in a bottle.

2. In the curettage technique the doctor stretches or dilates the mouth of the womb to admit a forceps or currette. He then reaches in and drags or scrapes out the baby and after birth. The surgeon must work by touch alone, often cutting the baby into several pieces in order to get it out. The head may be crushed with the forceps to reduce its size for withdrawal. Bleeding is profuse until the womb is scraped completely empty. The bits and pieces of the baby are then disposed of.

3. Larger babies to be aborted may require an abdominal operation similar to a Caesarean section. The womb is cut open and the baby is lifted out. It usually squirms and moves its arms and legs. It tries to breathe and may manage a fee ble cry. If the lungs are too immature to function normally it will soon stop moving, but frequently the heart continues to beat for several hours before it dies.

4. The doctor can stick a large needle through the mother’s belly wall and into the womb. After withdrawing some fluid, a strong, sterile, saltwater solution is injected – in effect pickling the baby alive. The baby may thrash about for a few moments, but soon it becomes perfectly still and dies. In about 24 hours labor will start and the already dead baby is delivered. This technique can be used right up to the very end of pregnancy (“Four Ways to Kill an Unborn Child”).

The aborted babies are then disposed of, either being treated like trash, sold for collagen, used for experimentation Oust like laboratory rats), or otherwise discarded.

“Diary of An Unborn Child”

One of the – most touching pieces of material published against abortion, has been the “Diary of An Unborn Child,” a hypothetical record of a baby inside its mother’s womb. The material below is physically accurate in detailing the maturation of the unborn baby. I think it will touch your emotions, just as it did mine.

Dairy of An Unborn Child

October 5 – Today my life began. My parents do not know it yet, I am as small as a seed of an apple, but it is I already. And I am to be a girl. I shall have blond hair and blue eyes. Just about everything is settled though, even the fact that I shall love flowers.

October 19 – Some say that I am not a real person yet, that only my mother exists. But I am a real person, just as a small crumb of bread is yet truly bread. My mother is. And I am.

October 23 – My mouth is just beginning to open now. Just think, in a year or so I shall be laughing and later talking. I know what my first word will be: MAMA.

October 25 – My heart began to beat today all by itself. From now on it shall gently beat for the rest of my life without ever stopping to rest! And after many years it will tire. It will stop, and then I shall die.

November 2 – I am growing a bit every day. May arms and legs are beginning to take shape. But I have to wait a long time yet before those little legs will raise me to my mother’s arms, before these little arms will be able to gather flowers and embrace my father.

November 12 – Tiny fingers are beginning to form on my hands. Funny how small they are! I’ll be able to stroke my mother’s hair with them.

November 20 – It wasn’t until today that the doctor told mom that I am living here under her heart. Oh, how happy she must be! Are you happy, mom?

November 25 – My mom and dad are probably thinking about a name for me. But they don’t even know that I am a little girl. I want to be called Kathy. I am getting so big already.

December 10 – My hair is growing. It is smooth and bright and shiny. I wonder what kind of hair mom has.

December 13 – I am just about able to see. It is dark around me. When mom brings me into the world it will be full of sunshine and flowers. But what I want more than anything is to see my mom. How do you look, mom?

December 24 – I wonder if mom hears the whispering of my heart? Some children come into the world a little sick. But my heart is strong and healthy. It beats so evenly: tup-tup, tup-tup. You’ll have a healthy little daughter, mom!

December 28 – Today my mother killed me.

Conclusion

We can sit in the peace and tranquility of our homes and read an article such as this one about abortion. We enjoy the beauty of God’s creation, experience the joys of life, and have the opportunities to participate in the decisions regarding the future of our nation. We can do these things because our mothers did not choose to have an abortion! I can sit with my family around a table to eat cake and ice cream on 22 July because I had a birthday. Don’t you think every child has a right to a birthday?

Guardian of Truth XXXIV: 3, pp. 66, 86-88
February 1, 1990

I Read the News Today — O Boy!

By Stephen P. Willis

I have been keeping track of some of the news items reported the last few months that relate to our lives morally. Some of the decisions of courts have been helpful, some have been appalling. Read on:

Teens Need Help: One out of two high school seniors in America uses marijuana; it is smoked daily by one in 16. 24 percent of fourth graders feel pressured to take drugs. 87 percent of high school seniors use alcohol; 6 percent drink daily. The average age for the first use of drugs is 11. These are problems – sins – that begin early and often continue throughout one’s life. Galatians 5 describes it as “sorcery” (NASB) and “witchcraft” (KJV): the Greek word is pharmakia which is easily seen as involving drugs (v. 20). Verse 21 condemns “drunkenness” and both sins are warned against “that those who practice such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God” (v. 21).

Abortion: The Battle Continues: The former surgeon general, C. Everette Koop, has reported that before the Roe vs. Wade decision of 1973, 393 women died as a result of illegal abortions. Since the decisions more than 23 million babies have been destroyed. In July, Chief Justice Rehnquist wrote that the court upheld the constitutionality of a Missouri law that sharply restricted the availability of publicly funded abortion services and required doctors to test for the viability of a fetus at 20 weeks. Basically, this decision says the battle about abortion can be restricted by state laws.

Up to this point we were considered radical if we decided to vote for a candidate because of his/her one position on abortion. Now this is exactly what the “Pro-Choice” movement is proposing to do. Three states (at least) have started the discussion to limit abortions. Let us hope and pray and vote that they succeed, for the Bible teaches that God recognizes life in the womb. (Read Exod. 21:22-25 which requires a life for the taking of a life; Judg. 13:7 where Samson was a Nazirite to God from the womb to the day of his death, therefore his mother had to honor the intake of grape products while he was in the womb; Jer. 1:5 – Jeremiah was known, consecrated and appointed as a prophet before he was born; Lk. 1:15 – John the Baptizer would be filled with the Holy Spirit while still in his mother’s womb; Matt. 1:20 – Jesus came into the world by conception in his mother’s womb; when he did become life?)

One news week I saw three items where, in the same program on television or in the same magazine the death of animals for the sake of taking their skins was strongly denounced, while at the same time the fact that women might not be as free to abort their babies was also denounced.

Where are our values? It is against the law to touch a sea turtle’s egg, but legal to end a child’s life. It is against the law to touch an eagle or even its empty nest, but for the sake of convenience a pregnancy can be ended. If a woman does not want to be pregnant, say no to the situation that leads to it. This will handle most of the situations. Can we not help with adoptions instead of abortions?

One other thing about this matter: in the August edition of Publishing News it was announced that “editors from 18 women’s magazines have mutually agreed to step up pro-choice coverage.” Included are Cosmopolitan, Family Circle M, Glamour, Mademoiselle, Redbook, Lear’s, Ms. and even Good Housekeeping! I’m sure there will be more involved in this attack than just the “women’s” magazines, so be careful what you read or hear; they are trying to change our minds about pro-life.

The Gay ’90s Are Upon Us: The word “gay” at one time meant an excessive lifestyle. Around 1850 it was used of prostitutes who were called “gay” women. Somewhere after the turn of the century we only associated the happiness of a lifestyle with the word “gay.” No more! The homosexuals have come out of the closet where they once tried to hide their sin. We now have several congressmen openly admitting they are homosexual. Barney Frank admits he has hired a homosexual prostitute. The “United Church of Christ” (Please – no relation to us!) has accepted a 150-member congregation of mostly homosexuals into their Eastern Minnesota association. New York city’s mayor Koch gave bereavement leave to city workers whose “domestic partners” (read: homosexual partner) die. Newsweek said, “It is part of a trend toward giving homosexual and unmarried couples perks once reserved for men and women with marriage licenses.” “The strongest such law is San Francisco’s, which lets those who ‘share one another’s lives in an intimate and committed relationship’ file a declaration making them eligible for full benefits given to married spouses.”

Sodomy was named for the city of Sodom; read about the openness of their sins in Genesis 18:20-21; 19:1-11; the children of Israel were told it is an abomination (Lev. 18:22). The church is told, “Do not be deceived; neither fornicators, . . . nor effeminate, nor homosexuals, . . . shall inherit the kingdom of God” (1 Cor. 6:9-10). It really makes one wonder about the denominations, such as the United Church of Canada, whose governing council has voted to admit homosexual men and women into the clergy. They are not the only group doing such things! Let us be moral, support moral laws and vote for people who respect moral laws.

A Potpourri of Problems: gunman . . . paternity . diabolical plan . . . spend the night together . . . quickie divorce . . . nude photo . . . clandestine meeting . . . unruly customer . . . lie . . . mishap and . . . mystery . . . henchmen . . . pent-up passion . . . searching for . . . kidnaping . . . hit-and-run accident . . . registers under an assumed name . . . employ his masculine wiles . . . act of thievery . . . custody battle . . . found guilty of sexual assault . . . Ooops! This was not the news! This was excerpts from the TV Guide summary of one week’s Soap Opera Guide. Realizing that we all like a good story, let’s make sure we are not filling our minds too much with things like the above instead of the word of God (see Col. 3:16).

Conclusion

“Do not love the world, nor the things in the world. If any one loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but is from the world. And the world is passing away, and also its lusts; but the one who does the will of God abides forever” (1 Jn. 2:15-17). Any sin can be forgiven if one seeks God humbly in repentance. After listing many of the same sins discussed in this short article Paul said, “And such were some of you; but you were washed, but you were sanctified, but you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and in the Spirit of our God” (1 Cor. 6:11). This is our hope in Christ.

Guardian of Truth XXXIV: 2, pp. 52, 56
January 18, 1990

Is Abortion Sinful?

By Mike Willis

On 22 January 1973, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled on the Roe vs. Wade case, striking down Texas law prohibiting abortion. Since 1973, abortion has been legal in the United States. In the court ruling, “personhood” was denied to the unborn, in spite of the fact that the unborn can be heirs, have the right to sue for damages and to have a guardian appointed on their behalf, etc. In the years since the 1973 ruling, 20 million unborn babies have been slaughtered in American abortuaries. More Americans have died by abortion than in all of the wars in which our soldiers have participated.

In July 1989, the Supreme Court upheld the right of the state of Missouri to place restrictions on abortion. This has thrown the abortion issue into the hands of state legislators, making it a political “hot potato” in coming elections.

More than a political issue, abortion is a moral issue. Is it right for a Christian to have an abortion? Christianity has not given a clear-cut answer. The mainline Protestant denominations (Episcopal, United Methodist, United Presbyterian, Disciples of Christ, United Church of Christ, etc.) have taken a pro-abortion stance. The Roman Catholic Church has taken, not only a stance against abortion, but also a stance against birth control. Evangelicals have generally taken a clear-cut stance against abortion. We should not be asking, “What do the churches say?” but “What does the Bible say? Is abortion sinful?”

Why Do Abortions Occur?

A person may ask, “Why do pregnant women desire abortions? ” He may think that abortions are necessary because of rape, incest, birth defects, or because a mother’s life is endangered. Statistically that simply is not true! Less than one percent of abortions are performed as a result of rape, incest, or possible birth defects. Abortions for these reasons have been used to shape public opinion, to create sympathy for the abortionists’ cause.

Most abortions are performed as a form of birth control. 81 percent of American abortions are performed on unmarried women who have conceived out of wedlock (Parade Magazine [1 October 1989], p. 28). Sometimes abortions are performed on married women who (a) do not want a child; (b) do not want another child; (c) do not want a child who may be handicapped or retarded; (d) want a child of another sex. Abortions are not primarily performed on the poor who cannot afford to rear a child. The majority of abortions are performed on white, middle-classed women (The Tennessean [17 April 1989], p. 6-A).

Why Abortion Is Wrong

The person who is desiring to be obedient to the Lord’s word, as revealed in the Bible, cannot have or perform an abortion without being guilty of sin. Here are some reasons for concluding that a person who obtains or performs an abortion is guilty of sin:

1. Abortion is murder. Murder is defined as “the unlawful and malicious or premeditated killing of one human being by another.” The Lord who created man commanded, “Thou shalt not kill” (Exod. 20:13). “Whoso sheddeth man’s blood, by man shall his blood be shed: for in the image of God made he man” (Gen. 9:6). Abortion is a premeditated decision to destroy the life of an unborn child, usually for very selfish reasons. The fact that American law in the Twentieth Century has made it a legal act does not change the law of God.

2. Abortion shows a disregard for human life. The Bible describes man as created in the image of God (Gen. 1:26-27); this is the reason that killing a human being is wrong (Gen. 9:6). No violation of moral law has occurred when a person kills a chicken or eats its egg. But killing a human or destroying its unborn is a violation of moral law. (Ironically, some who work actively to protect the unborn of endangered species such as the bald eagle, can see that the unborn eagle is an eagle, but seemingly cannot identify the unborn baby as a baby!) Abortionists have a distinctly inferior view of human life.

In Bible revelation, children are considered a “heritage of the Lord” (Psa. 127:3) and a “blessing” (Psa. 128:3). A woman who was barren felt particularly unfortunate (see Sarah and Hannah). Many today have a different attitude toward children. When told that they are pregnant, many women, instead of joyfully anticipating a child, view the child as a “threat” to their lifestyle and happiness. The child within the womb is not granted equal status with the mother; the unborn child is considered as something lower than human life. To the abortionist, the unborn child is a mass of cell tissue, a glob, or fetal tissue, not to be granted any protection from harm.

The abortionists’ lower view of life is manifested in the treatment given aborted children. Aborted children are sold to manufacturing companies in order to produce collagen for higher grade shampoos. Dr. Olga Fairfax wrote,

There’s a triple profit to be had (from an abortion). The first is from the abortion (estimated at a half billion dollars a year by Fortune magazine). The second profit comes from the sale of aborted babies’ bodies. The third profit is from unsuspecting customers buying cosmetics.

Babies’ bodies are sold by the bag, $25 a batch or up to $5,500 a pound. The sale of later-term elective abortions at D.C. General Hospital brought $68,000 between 1966 and 1976. The money was used to buy a TV set and cookies and soft drinks for visiting professors (101 Uses for a Dead [or Alive] Baby).

Before abortuaries realized that the sale of aborted babies could be profitable, they were treated like trash, being burned in incendiaries or hauled away with the garbage. Today, some aborted babies are used for experimentation. The treatment given aborted babies confirms that abortion leads to a lower view of human life.

This disregard for human life spills over into euthanasia, child abuse, and disregard for the unproductive members of society. What a difference in attitude toward human life is reflected by comparing the view of life of abortionists with that revealed in the Bible.

3. Abortion is usually performed for selfish reasons. Lord condemned the kind of living which is primarily interested in self. He revealed that a Christian must “love thy neighbor as thyself” (Matt. 22:39). Christian ethics demands that a man “look not every man on his own things, but every man also on the things of others” (Phil. 2:4). The decision to abort a baby usually is made for very selfish reasons. Here are some of them:

a. A child will interefere with a person’s chosen lifestyle. (1) Raising children costs money. The person is unwilling to change his level of living to accommodate another person in the household; instead she chooses to kill the child in order to continue living on the same economic level. (2) Raising children takes time. Raising children will take so much time that a person may not be able to pursue his educational or career goals. Consequently, a choice is made that one’s educational or career goals take a higher priority than the child. The child is killed that the goals may be pursued.

b. A child will interfere with a person’s mental health. “In states where abortion is now legal, mental indications account for as high as 97 percent of the total number performed. Doctors opposed to abortion strongly state that no one has ever established a cause and effect relationship between pregnancy and mental illness” (Dr. John L. Grady, Abortion: Yes or No?, p. 12). Under the pretense that a birth may damage a mother’s mental health, women decide to kill their babies. If giving birth to a baby contributes to mental illness, the entire human race has been and is endangered!

c. An abortion will cover upfornication. Many abortions are performed because fornicators do not want to face the natural consequences of their sin. Fornication is a sin (Gal. 5:19; 1 Cor. 6:9-20). Sexual activity outside of marriage leads to conception of illegitimate babies. Many want to commit fornication without accepting the consequences of their actions. Hence, they kill the baby to (a) hide their fornication or (b) to avoid the responsibilities of parenthood.

4. Abortion is “unnatural affection. ” The Scriptures describe the degenerate as being “without natural affection” (Rom. 1:31). Examples of being “without natural affection” may be varied, including child abuse, neglect of one’s parents, etc. However, the decision to brutally destroy one’s child would certainly be another example of an absence of “natural affection.”

5. Abortion threatens the mental stability of the mother. Already articles are appearing from mothers who are trying to live with the guilt of having murdered their unborn. In many cases a mother is placing a psychological time-bomb within herself when she decides to abort her baby. What will usually happen to these women is this: they will later decide to get married and have a family. Sometime later when she is playing with a baby she decided to let live, the mother will think about her decision to kill her previous baby. Then she will be plagued with guilt. In cases where the conscience has been seared by the teachings of anti-Christian ethics, a mother may never experience this guilt.

6. Those who make their living by killing babies – the doctors and nurses – are guilty of being “greedy offilthy lucre” (1 Tim. 3:3). The Bible commands the Christian to make his living by “working that which is good” (Eph. 4:28). Should a person become so greedy for money that he is willing to stoop to sinful and immoral practices to obtain it, he is “greedy of filthy lucre” (1 Tim. 3:3). A Christian cannot make his living selling illegal drugs, selling liquor, running a house of prostitution, or a baby killing clinic. Those doctors and nurses who are so greedy for money that they will stoop to killing babies to make their living are guilty of sin.

When Does Life Begin?

Someone may object to the charge that abortion is murder by stating that life does not begin until birth. The proabortionists insist that life does not begin until birth. They use language designed to emphasize that the pre-birth child is not a person. They refer to the child as a fetus or fetal tissue. They refer to abortion as “terminating a pregnancy. ” By these terms, abortionists try to reinforce their view that pre-birth infants are not humans.

Some anti-abortionists have argued that life begins at the moment of conception. This has been defended on the biblical grounds that the Greek word brephos is used to describe the child both before and after birth (cf. Lk. 1:41). Passages such as Jeremiah 1:5 and Psalm 139:13-15 also are cited to prove that human life begins at conception.

We may never know for sure when life begins. Norman E. Geisler emphasized how important knowing for certain when life begins is from the abortionists’ point of view. He said, “If no one knows when life begins, it might begin at conception. And if it does begin at that point then abortion is murder” (“The Bible, Abortion, and Common Sense,” Fundamentalists Journal [May 1985], p. 25). Until the abortionists know conclusively that life begins at birth, he should have enough reverence for human life not to act upon his uncertainties!

Conclusion

Abortion is a sin which separates a person from the fellowship of God. Those who receive and perform abortions are guilty of violating the Lord’s revealed will.

(Conclusion in the next issue).

Guardian of Truth XXXIV: 2, pp. 48-51
January 18, 1990

Marriage, Divorce and Remarriage In Church History

By Steve Wolfgang

When asked if I would write a short article on the issue of divorce and remarriage throughout church history, I immediately thought about the history professor who liked to put this essay question at the end of his tests: “Write the history of the world in ten pages or less” (I think it was his weird idea of a joke). I have been asked to limit myself to the so-called “early church fathers” and some of the “Restoration leaders,” and I am happy to comply. In addition to a brief survey of the material and some of the issues, I have provided notes for further reference if anyone is so inclined. These references are safely buried in the endnotes, where they will not harm anyone.

Fortunately for all of us, there has been some fairly recent work published on the views of the “church fathers” regarding these issues. A recent book by affiliates of Dallas Theological Seminary (a dispensational-fundamentalist school in Texas) begins with a chapter on “The Early Church View,” and includes some edited quotations from the Shepherd of Hermas, Justin, Athenagoras, Theophilus of Antioch, Irenaeus, Clement of Alexandria, Origen, and Tertullian.(1) Therefore, I will not take the space (which would well exceed our available space) to quote from these men. Everett Ferguson has observed that “All who strive to be New Testament Christians in the present age are in a way second-century Christians. Not that they have, consciously or unconsciously, followed the second-century church or taken it as an authority. But, at best, we stand in relation to first-century Christians as did second-century Christians.”(2) As another recent author noted, “Christians of all times have the same homework to do.”(3) If someone should desire to do his or her “homework” and read for themselves what these authors said, the relevant texts are recorded in the notes.(4)

William F. Luck’s recent book, Divorce and Remarriage, contains an appendix dealing with the “early church view” in it; he states succinctly the attitude which careful Bible students should take regarding the writers of the immediate post-New Testament centuries: “the inspired text determines the limits of position; extrabiblical interpretations serve only as suggestions. Although the positions of the early church are generally given deference, being closer to the actual teaching themselves, they must neither be given undue weight nor be accepted uncritically.”(5) Indeed, although it may be interesting and even instructive to consider what other men have written about the Bible (Spurgeon once commented that it seemed strange that many who think so much of what the Bible reveals to them think so little of what it has revealed to others), each person ultimately must determine for himself what the Bible teaches regardless of what others may believe. Thus, in another sense, what the ante-Nicene writers, or the Campbells, or anyone else has written is irrelevant.

These recent books on the opinions of the ante-Nicene writers are simply the latest round in an on-going debate within Roman Catholicism and Protestant evangelicalism and Fundamentalism over the last several decades. In some ways, they reflect some of the same developments and the similar effects of modern social circumstances which have been evident among churches of Christ in the same period. The “liberation” of Catholic theology following Vatican II in the 1960’s produced, among other things, a book by Victor Pospishil which asserted that “a distinct majority of the Fathers and the ancient ecclesiastical authorities permitted the remarriage of husbands of adulterous wives, while generally denying it to all wives, even the innocent.”(6) Like some today, Pospishil argued that, in his opinion, the writings of the ante-Nicene authors, and even the biblical texts on divorce and remarriage, are unclear. His argument then was that “the final judgment on this matter belongs to the Catholic Church with her unlimited power of the keys: the authority to grant total divorce and permit the remarriage of divorced Christians.”(7) Noted Catholic writer Joseph Fitzmyer reviewed the book, saying, “Whatever else is to be said about the merits or demerits of this book, the treatment of the Biblical passages is unspeakably bad.”(8) Pospishil’s book may be seen as a typical example of someone who has allowed either his doctrinal presuppositions or the changing moral standards of society (or both), rather than the Bible, to dictate his conclusions.

Not long afterward, an opposite conclusion was reached by “the most comprehensive study ever written on this subject.”(9) That conclusion was “that in the first five centuries [after Christ] all Greek writers and all Latin writers except one agree that marriage following divorce for any reason is adulterous.”(10) The author of that work, Henri Crouzel, is a French Jesuit; but the same position has recently been championed by two authors associated with British and American Fundamentalism, who summarize with endorsement Crouzel’s view that almost uniformly, in the writings of the first five centuries of church history (Ambrosiaster excepted), “the marriage bond was seen to unite both parties until the death of one of them. When a marriage partner was guilty of unchastity, usually understood to mean adultery, the other was expected to separate but did not have the right to remarry.”(11)

What are modern Christians to make of such evidence? Of course, it is uninspired, and thus some may wish simply to dismiss it. It may well represent an extreme view of the biblical teaching, produced largely by the same cultural and doctrinal pre-suppositions which gave rise to other Roman Catholic positions, including celibacy and various features of monasticism. At the very least, it demonstrates that views allowing almost unlimited justification for serial marriages and divorces is totally unknown during the first five centuries after Christ.(12)

Heth and Wenham’s almost opposite extreme view is challenged (I think successfully) by another Fundamentalist author connected with Moody Bible Institute in Chicago. In a long appendix “On the Divorce Teachings of the Early Church,” William F. Luck argues “none of the writings of the early Church Fathers, in spite of their strong belief in their own correctness, is directly associated with the teaching of either Jesus or one of his apostles. By this, I mean that none of the principle sources cited by such writers as Heth and Wenham personally knew either Jesus or one of the disciples.”(13) Furthermore, Luck argues that “a number of writers have mis- or over-read the teachings of certain early Church Fathers and have drawn certain unwarranted conclusions from such teachings.”(14) Arguing that “the ascetic tendencies of most of the conservative Fathers produced biased exegesis of the Gospel texts” and that “their ascetic interests moved them to strict positions on the crucial matter of questionable sexual relations,” Luck concludes, “Their interpretations should therefore be viewed with a critical eye.”(15) Finally, Luck maintains, “we do not conclude that the early traditions of the Church are ‘nearly unanimous’ against all remarriage and divorce.”(16) Of course, not only the early writers but contemporary authors such as Luck, Heth, Wenham, and others must be read with care, discretion, and an eye to what the biblical texts actually say.

Divorce and Remarriage in the “Restoration Movement”

The other major area of church history I was asked to explore for this article is how the so-called “Restorationists” of the past two centuries have viewed the biblical teachings on divorce and remarriage. Probably the place to begin is with Alexander Campbell’s Millennial Harbinger, which broached the subject a few times during its 40-year run. The first such reference is in the Harbinger for February, 1834. Responding to a question regarding Matthew 19 and 1 Corinthians 7, Campbell said, “It seems to me that in all cases of voluntary desertion on the side of the unbelieving party, the marriage covenant is made void, and the believing party is to the deserter as though they never had been married . . . When both parties are in the kingdom, then the husband who puts away his wife, or the wife who leaves her husband, except for whoredom, and who marries another, commits adultery; and whoever marries either of the parties, commits adultery, and is to be discarded from the Christian community.” Campbell added: “I am happy to have the concurrence of brother Walter Scott, who is at this time here on a visit.”(17) In the last volume of the Harbinger, four years after Campbell’s death, an article appeared which stated that “there is nothing in the New Testament law of marriage that is not as applicable, practical, and necessary outside the church as within it.”(18)

Ed Harrell’s history of the antebellum Restoration Movement reports “even during the 1830’s that while the brothel who married an ‘unbeliever’ was ‘to be pited,’ he was not to be ‘put out.’ Alexander Campbell wrote: ‘Certainly no Christian can . . . exclude a person simply for marrying any person not forbidden by the laws of the land.'”(19) However, Harrell continues, most nineteenth century church members “were not so liberal on the question of divorce The generally accepted standard was: ‘There is no release then to husband or wife for the marriage contract unless the other party has been guilty of fornication.’ A few church leaders were liberal enough to concede that ‘desertion,’ practice not uncommon on the frontier, was a just cause for divorce and remarriage, but these were the exceptions.(20) Harrell concludes that “the churches were probably mol diligent in enforcing their code of morality in this area the in any other.”(21)

Despite the fact that the churches of Christ during the late nineteenth century were separating from the Disciples of Christ over a variety of issues and even more basic problems of the authority of the Bible, according to one study of divorce issues in that period, the preachers one hundred years ago “spoke almost with one voice. Only the most avant-garde Disciples in the last years of the century differed from the church’s majority.”(22) The view of “Restoration preachers” in this era can be summarized in this way: “Theologically, divorce was wrong except for the cause of adultery. Socially, the dissolving of the marital bond was detrimental to the fabric of public morals.” The preachers “consistently argued that only sexual intercourse outside of the marriage constituted grounds for divorce. . . . Must a congregation expel members whose marriages ended for causes other than adultery? Church editors unanimously agreed in the affirmative. Can the ‘innocent party’ in a divorce for adultery remarry? Most Disciple leaders replied ‘yes.’ If a person not yet a Christian ‘divorces for other than adultery, remarries, and is then converted, can he enter the fellowship of the congregation? Except for two church spokesmen, the answer demanded that the current, and, in their opinion, unscriptural marriage be dissolved.'”(23)

In the early twentieth century, rising divorce rates were reflected in the increasing number of articles on divorce and remarriage by members of churches of Christ.(24) The Gospel Advocate Index, for instance, lists 31 articles on divorce for the first quarter of the twentieth century; but the next decade, from 1925 to 1935, exceeds that number considerably.(25)Obviously, space limitations forbid an examination of anything but a fraction of these articles, but I propose to survey a representative sample.

Sharing with their religious neighbors a concern over the rising tide of divorces, the Advocate reprinted an article from the Methodist Advocate which declared, “There is but one reason for marriage after divorce, and that is adultery,” and warned ominously, “they who trifle with it are in danger of the flames of hell.”(26) Although James A. Allen, editor of the Advocate in the early 1930s, took the most conservative position (“We have never been able to feel safe in saying that the innocent party may remarry again”(27)), most agree with P.W. Stonestreet’s series of articles later that year, which, while acknowledging that some brethren believed that “the privilege [of divorce and remarriage] does not apply to anyone under any conditions,” argued “that the Bible teaches the privilege of divorce and remarriage under certain conditions is quite generally conceded.”(28) Stonestreet’s articles appeared with the endorsement of F.W. Smith, longtime Advocate staff member and preacher at Franklin, TN, and cited previous articles by E.A. Elam, J.W. Kurfees, and T.B. Larimore, among others, upholding the right of the “innocent party” to remarry.(29) Stonestreet concluded his series of articles, “only two things can break the marriage bond – death and fornication – and in both cases remarriage is allowable; but in the case of separation for other causes, which is sometimes permissible, remarriage is not allowed.”(30)

In 1933, H. Leo Boles, who served during his life both as editor of the Advocate and president of David Lipscomb College, argued that “All Bible students know that God recognizes but one cause for absolute divorce [divorce recognized by God as well as the state]. This is adultery, or fornication. . . . The words of Jesus, as recorded by Matthew, Mark, and Luke, condemn remarriage of a divorced one, and condemn it in terms which admit of no misunderstanding. The Savior mentions one, and only one, cause for putting away one party to the marriage union.” Discussing 1 Corinthians 7, Boles added, “It seems that for some there was given the permission to separate temporarily for other causes than the sin of fornication; but those who were separated were to ‘remain unmarried, or else be reconciled’ to each other. These principles should be taught, and all of God’s people should abide by their teaching.”(31)

R.L. Whiteside’s “Queries and Answers” column received numerous inquires regarding divorce and remarriage. Among Whiteside’s responses were the following: a “brother who married a woman that had divorced her husband for his fornication committed no sin in so doing . . . and if she wants to obey the gospel, she should be given a warm welcome.” Regarding a “brother whose wife will not live with him for no apparent reason other than that she does not want to. . . . If he is not to blame in the matter, she has done and is doing him a great wrong. . . . Can he marry again? He can read Matt. 19:9 as well as I can. He cannot afford to lose his soul because someone does him a great wrong.” Regarding one guilty of adultery who seeks remarriage, Whiteside commented, “If a guilty party remarries, he adds to his guilt. He does not merely commit adultery; he lives in it.”(32)

Although one would be hard pressed to find any preacher willing to argue the right to remarry of one guilty of adultery (to say nothing of the sanctioning of virtually any second marriage which is becoming all too common today), a series of questions put to Whiteside in 1936 indicated that some may have been teaching privately what they would not argue in print or from the pulpit. When asked, “1. Is there a definite stand we can take on the question of divorce and remarriage? 2. Is there a general agreement in the brotherhood on the question? . . . 6. Do our brethren ever withdraw fellowship from divorced and remarried people? 7. Where a number of such couples are in a congregation, and these couples are friends and relatives of almost the entire congregation, what can the preacher or elders do in such a case? Should anything be done? If so, what?”(33) Whiteside responded: “With the possible exception of one of two matters, this page had devoted more space to the discussion of this marriage-and-divorce question than to any other . . . I have already taken a stand on what Jesus and Paul say (Matt. 19:9; 1 Cor. 7:12-15). That stand seems to me to be definite enough for all practical purposes. All I can do about the matter is to invite others to take the same stand, which I here and now do. 2. If the querist is correct in what he says about ‘our preachers,’ there does not seem to be a 4general agreement in the brotherhood on the question.’ But the brotherhood certainly ought to agree with what Jesus and Paul say, and that is the only agreement that is worth mentioning. If the ‘brotherhood’ should agree among themselves and leave Jesus and Paul out of that agreement, so much the worse for the ‘brotherhood.’ . . . 6. I think I have heard of such. There is not much withdrawing done these days, except such withdrawing as is done in factional fights. Discipline is neglected. If other sins are let pass without notice, why wonder at the fact that the marriage of divorcees is also let pass without notice? 7. In such cases it does not seem that much can be done. Churches need to develop a conscience along the line of discipline. . . . It is a sad fact that church members will sometimes side with friends and kindred who are in the wrong. If a preacher will do his duty where so much is wrong, he will preach so that things will improve, or the church will get rid of him.”(34)

In 1939, L.R. Wilson (first president of Florida Christian College and also president of Oklahoma Christian College), argued in the Firm Foundation that “It is possible for a divorced person who as contracted another marriage contrary to the law of Christ – to be saved without breaking the tie thus formed.”(35) This position was reviewed at length by Roy H. Lanier [Sr.], who contrasted the two views in this way: “He believes that somewhere along the line, perhaps at repentance, the union ceases to be adulterous, while I believe the union continues to be adulterous.”(36) A decade later, in the Gospel Advocate, brother Lanier attacked both “the extreme of disallowing divorce even for fornication, and . . . the other extreme of allowing divorce for other reasons.”(37)

Perhaps the most notorious view on divorce and remarriage among brethren in the twentieth century was that of E.C. Fuqua, that non-Christians are under the authority of civil law only, and not amenable to the law of Christ. This theory, “which was beginning to make inroads on the thinking of brethren in many places” by 1954, was challenged by Thomas B. Warren and discussed in the form of a written debate in Fuqua’s paper, the Vindicator, from August to December, 1954.(38)

As noted before, none of this “historical evidence” proves anything scripturally. At best, it informs a discussion of the subject by pointing out potential pitfalls, and perhaps by revealing which concepts are new and perhaps influenced by the spirit of the age, and those which have been advanced by mature, respectable Bible students who do not live in our time. My own “footnote” would be to say that it seems clear to me that some present-day views, advocated by some increasingly vocal brethren who seem bent on justifying almost every kind second (or later) marriage regardless of cause, would have been greeted with abhorrence by the vast majority of the brethren quoted here. It cannot even be said for these views that they have a respectable pedigree, or that brethren of the past would have accepted them. Perhaps the best which can be said of them is that they reflect an increasingly permissive society not inclined to accept the stipulations of the gospel on this subject regardless of how much the restrictions may be expanded.

Endnotes

1. William A. Heth and Gordon J. Wenham, Jesus and Divorce. The Problem with the Evangelical Consensus (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1984).

2. Early Christians Speak (Austin, TX: Sweet Publishing, 197 1), p. 10.

3. William F. Luck, Divorce and Remarriage: Recovering the Biblical View (San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1987), p. 255.

4. The relevant texts include: Shepherd of Hermas (c. 150), 4.1.4- 10; Justin Martyr, First Apology 13-15 (c. 150) and Second Apology 2.1-7; Athenagorus (c. 177), Supplication for the Christians 36; Theophilus of Antioch (c. 180), To Autolycus 3.13; Irenaeus, Against Heresies (c. 185) 3.3.4 and 4.15.2; Clement of Alexandria (c. 150-215), Stromata 2.23.145.3ff., 3.1.4, 3.6.50, and 3.7.57; Origen (c. 185-254), Commentary on Matthew 14.6, 14.23-24; Tertullian (c. 155-220), Ad Uxorem (to his wife) 2.1-2; Against Marcion 4.34 and 5.7; De Monagamia (on Monagamy) 5, 7, 9, and 11. These texts are generally available in reference works such as The Ante-Nicene Fathers (a nineteenth-century set kept in print by Eerdmans), or Ancient Christian Writers. The Works of the Fathers in Translation (a more recent multi-volume set produced by the Catholic publishers, Newman Press). These sets are generally available in college and university libraries.

5. Luck, p. 255.

6. Victor J. Pospishil, Divorce and Remarriage.- Towards A New Catholic Teaching (New York: Herder and Herder, 1967), p. 17.

7. Heth and Wenham, p. 39.

8. J.A. Fitzmyer, “The Matthean Divorce Texts and Some New Palestinian Evidence,” Theological Studies 37 (1976), pp. 197-226; quotation from p. 225, n. 98.

9. Heth and Wenham, p. 22. The title of Henri Crouzel’s book, published in French, is Leglise primitive face au divorce du premier au cinquieme siecle (Paris: Beauchesne, 197 1). Crouzel summarizes his views in English in “Remarriage After Divorce in the Primitive Church: A Propos of a Recent Book,” Irish Theological Quarterly 38:1 (January 1971), pp. 21-41. Informative reviews of Crouzel’s work appear in Theological Studies 33:2 (June 1972), pp. 333-338; and The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 24:1 (January 1873), pp. 60-62.

10. Heth and Wenham, p. 22.

11. Ibid. Heth teaches at Dallas Theological Seminary, and Wenham at the College of St. Paul and St. Mary in Cheltenham, England. Several articles by these two authors advance various portions of their argument. See Heth, “Another Look at the Erasmian View of Divorce and Remarriage,” Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 25:3 (September 1982), pp. 263-272, and “The Meaning of Divorce in Matthew 19:3-9,” Churchman 98:2 (1984), pp. 136152; and Wenham, “Gospel Definitions of Adultery and Women’s Rights,” Expository Times 95:11 (August 1984), pp. 330-332, and Wenham, “Matthew and Divorce: An Old Crux Revisited,” Journal for the Study of the New Testament 22 (October 1984), pp. 95-107.

12. For a fuller discussion of some of these concepts, see Pat Edwin Harrell, Divorce and Remarriage in the Early Church (Austin, TX: R.B. Sweet Publishing Company, 1967), chapter 5. Guy Duty, Divorce and Remarriage (Minneapolis: Bethany House Publishers, 1967, 1983), contains a chapter on “The Church Fathers’ Views on Divorce and Remarriage” which concludes “that those are in error who claim that for the first rive centuries of the Christian Church none of the father allowed remarriage after divorce for adultery” (p. 121). This chapter, however, is based on flimsy secondary evidence.

13. Luck, p. 255.

14. Ibid.

15. Ibid., 269.

16. Ibid.

17. A. Campbell, “Divorces,” Millennial Harbinger 5:2 (February, 1934), pp. 70-73. A variety of situations were raised in the Harbinger for comment by various preachers. In 1843, on anonymous brother, “Adelphos,” posed and answered this question: “There is one cause, and only one, for which we may divorce a wife and marry another. But does this law prohibit a separation, if we continue unmarried, where this cause does not exist? I think not . . . several preachers of the gospel . . . for several years lived apart from their wives, because they could not happily live with them . . . a man must both leave or dismiss his wife and marry another, in order to incur the charge preferred by our Lord, of adultery” (“Divorce,” Millennial Harbinger, New Series 7:2 [February 1843], pp. 72-73).

A decade later, Robert Milligan, writing from Indiana University, posed a number of questions and hypothetical examples regarding marriage and divorce. It is interesting to note that almost a century and a half ago, in an age we now look back upon as more “moral” than the present, preachers were complaining that theirs was an age “when the marriage covenant is so lightly esteemed by orators, legislators, jurists and philosophers.” Milligan concluded, “But it is unnecessary to multiply arguments or illustrations. . . . Christ and Paul . . . concur in saying, that the marriage contract can be dissolved, during the life of both parties, by only one offence; and that the man or the woman, who, being once joined in this holy alliance, shall dissolve it by marrying again, during the life of the other party, unless said party shall have been guilty of the crime specified [fornication] – is guilty of the sin of adultery” (R. Milligan, “The Law of Divorce,” MH, 4th Series, 3:7 [July 1853], pp. 408-413).

Several months later, A. Campbell himself weighed in with these comments: “The Lord, in his own personal ministry, inhibited divorces, except in one case, and that was a palpable violation or renunciation of the nuptial covenant [Campbell had already spent several paragraphs discussing the Greek words moicheia (adultery) and porneia (fornication) – SWI … But Paul, by his office and the inspiration of the spirit of wisdom, felt himself justified in adding to the law enacted by the Lord Jesus Christ another statute or provision, concerning an infidel man who should . . . separate from a Christian wife; and also concerning an unbelieving wife, who should . . . abandon a believing husband. In such cases, a brother or sister in Christ is not under bondage to live with them . . . . But may the believing party marry again? is the more pinching question. Not, indeed, after the unbelieving party is dead, but while he or she yet lives? Does not the declaration, that a brother or sister is not bound . . . indicate this? This is a litigated question . . . ” Campbell proceeds to quote a variety of commentators (in several cases noting with appropriate sarcasm, “This is explaining the passage by quoting it” or “These certainly are noncommittal men – superlatively prudent!”) and concludes, in response to a specific case submitted by a reader: “When a woman finally deserts a Christian husband, and utterly refuses to live with him, we should . . . not consider him obligated to live henceforth without a wife. . . . ” (A.C., “Separation and Divorce,” Millennial Harbinger, 4th series, 3:10 [September, 1853], pp. 529-533).

18. “A Tragedy and Its Lesson,” Millennial Harbinger 41:1 (January 1870). When challenged on this statement, C.L. Loos responded in defense of this position with a long series of arguments supporting the view that those outside the church are amenable to God’s marriage requirements. He asked, and answered, this question, “does not all this [divine instructions regarding marriage and divorce] apply . . . [to) marriage out of the church as within it? We think this ought to be beyond all question. ” In dealing with specific questions posed to him on the meaning of “not under bondage” in 1 Corinthians 7, Loos would say only that “Interpreters are not settled as to whether this means that the abandoned may remarry or not.” But he was adamant in warning those who taught that divine law on marriage and divorce “holds good only when husband and wife are both Christians” that “this suggests some grave questions” (C.L.L., “On Divorce. – Inquiries,” MH41:5 [May 1870], pp. 267-273).

19. David Edwin Harrell, Jr., Quest for a Christian America: Disciples of Christ Social Thought to 1866 (Nashville: Disciples of Christ Historical Society, 1966), p. 197. Harrell quotes James S. Lamar on the policy of a congregation in Pittsburgh: “If a man married a woman who was not a member of the church . . . he was called to account for marrying contrary to the word of the Lord, and he must say – perhaps in the presence of his wife that he was sorry for it; and moreover – though this probably gave the poor woman some comfort – he must promise that he would not do so any more!” (pp. 196-197)

20. D.E. Harrell, Quest, p. 197, quoting an article by “Parthenos” entitled “Marriage – No. II” and Campbell, “Remarks on Parthenos, ” MH 2:5 (May 193 1), pp. 203 and 207.

21. D.E. Harrell, Quest, 197, quoting the Protestant Unionist and Christian Age 5 (January 20, 1849), p. 10.

22. Fred Arthur Bailey, “The Status of Women in the Disciples of Christ Movement, 1865-1900” (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Tennessee, 1979), pp. 157-163. Bailey, now professor of history at Abilene Christian University, formerly taught at Freed-Hardeman College.

23. Bailey, pp. 160-161. References cited by Bailey include:

S.H. Hendrix, “Marriage and Divorce,” American Christian Review, XX (May 25, 1882), 173; “Queries,” Apostolic Times, V (May 1, 1873), 5; J. A. M., “Divorce and Marriage,” ibid. (July 17, 1873), 1; “Queries and Answers,” Christian Oracle, VI (April 18, 1899), 249; John C. Miller, “Marriage and Divorce,” Christian Record, ii.s., II (July 1868), 208-13; Elisha G. Sewell, “Queries,” Gospel Advocate, XX (January 24, 1877), 57; Elisha G. Sewell, “Queries,” ibid., XXVII (July 15, 1885), 438; “Queries,” ibid., XXIX (October 12, 1887), 648; For dissenting views see J. M. Mathes, “Querist’s Department,” Christian Record, ii.s., I (July, 1867), 208; Jacob Wright, “Divorce,” ibid., Il (June, 1868),16165. John W. McGarvey, “Legalized Adultery,” Apostolic Times, IX (January 11, 1877), 17. F. G. Allen, “Marriage and Divorce,” ibid. (September 21, 1877), 569.

John F. Rowe, “Divorce and Adultery,” American Christian Review, XXVII (April 17, 1884), 124; J. H. Ballinger, “Law of Divorce,” ibid. (October 16, 1884), 333; John W. McGarvey, “Queries,”AT, V (March 26,1874),5; Daleph, “Divorce,” ibid., VII (September 16, 1875), 414; “Talks with Querists,” Christian Oracle, VII (September 18, 1890), 594; W. G. Springer, “Marriage, Divorce, Remarriage,” ibid. (December 11, 1890), 788; B. K. Smith, “Divorce,” Christian Pioneer, X (September 29, 1870), n.p.; Isaac Errett, “Querists’ Drawer,” Christian Standard, 11 (October 19, 1867), 330; W. D. Ingram, “Marriage,” Firm Foundation, VI (August 28, 1890), 5; David Lipscomb, “Marriage and Adultery,” GA, XV (May 8, 1873), 445-46; David Lipscomb, “Queries,” ibid., XXVII (November 4, 1885), 710; “Queries,” ibid., XXIX (June 22, 1887), 396; Elisha G. Sewell, “Marriage and Divorce,” ibid., XXXV (August 31, 1893), 547; “Question Drawer,” OPG, III (January, 1881), 52-53.

W. F. Madden, “Marriage-Divorce,” American Christian Review, XIII (November 15, 1870), 362; S. “Divorce-Hard Cases, ” ibid., XVI (July 22, 1873), 226; F. M. Collins, “Divorce, ” ibid., XXIII (January 6, 1880), 1; A. Pickerill, “The Law of Divorce,” ibid. (February 10, 1880), 41; J. Perry Elliott, “The Law of Divorce,” ibid. (February 17, 1880), 49; “Queries and Answers,” Christian Oracle, VI (January 10, 1889), 25; J. M. Mathes, “Querist’s Department,” Christian Record, ii.s., 11 (July 1883), 203; Elisha O. Sewell, “Queries,” GA, XXII (September 23, 1880), 616; “Queries,” ibid., XXIX (August 10, 1887), 499; David Lipscomb, “Queries,” ibid., XXXII (December 3, 1890), 770. For dissenting views see F. S. Coal, “Divorce,” American Christian Review, XXIII (February 10, 1880), 41; R. B. Trimble, “Marriage and Divorce,” ibid., XXVII (June 12, 1884), 185; B. S., “The Sanctity of Marriage,” GA, XXIII (April 12, 1881), 297. In 1894, the theologically liberal Christian Oracle added the vague cause of “mitigating . . . circumstances” to adultery as grounds for divorce. The paper’s editors believed that “the eternal principles of justice and mercy must not be overlooked” under such conditions. “Talks with Querists, ” Christian Oracle, XI (May 3 1, 1894), 338.

24. In 1910, for every 100 marriages there were 8.8 divorces; 13.4 in 1920 and 17.5 in 1930 (Ernest R. Mowrer, Family Disorganization: An Introduction to Sociological Analysis (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1927], pp. 3-28; quoted in William F. Banowsky, Mirror of a Movement. Churches of Christ as Seen Through the Abilene Christian College Lectureship [Dallas: Christian Publishing Company, 1965], pp. 416-424. Banowsky quotes A.O. Colley’s 1920 lecture, which stated: “The New Testament does not recognize but one real cause for divorce, and that is for a married man or married woman to act unfaithful to the marriage vows . . . when committed [fornication) gives the innocent the right to be separated from the guilty. . . . All preachers and elders should teach that everyone that puts away his or her companion and marries another while the first is still living is violating the law of God” (pp. 229-230).

For a discussion on divorce in this period from a historical perspective, see William L. O’Neill, Divorce in the Progressive Era (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1967); and Elaine Tyler May, Great Expectations.- Marriage and Divorce in Post- Victorian America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1980).

25. Jack L. Ray, comp., Gospel Advocate Index, 1855-1982 (Nashville: Gospel Advocate Company, 1985), pp. 238-240.

26. “Divorce and Adultery,” GA 70:41 (October 11, 1928), p. 977.

27. James A. Allen, “Divorce and Remarriage,” GA 72:17 (April 24, 1930), p. 396.

28. P.W. Stonestreet, “God’s Law on Divorce and Remarriage,” GA 72:40 (October 2, 1930), p. 943.

29. See John W. Kurfees, GA 68 (December 9, 1926), and January 13, 1927, p. 39; E.A. Elam, GA 69 (February 10, 1927), p. 131; and T.B. Larimore, GA 69 (March 24, 1927), p. 276.

30. Stonestreet, “God’s Law on Divorce and Remarriage (Chapter 111),” GA 72:42 (October 16, 1930), p. 991. In an earlier article, Stonestreet had argued, “To make Matthew’s fuller record, where the exception is recorded, yield to the limited statements of Mark and Luke, is to reject not only Matthew’s record giving the exception, but all the teaching; for the logical limits of such a course would be to reject the teaching recorded by Matthew, Mark and Luke, because John does not record the teaching. So much for the logic of the advocates of a human theory. . . . It is indeed strange that preachers who are accustomed to preaching baptism as a condition of salvation, opposing the doctrine of faith only, would even suggest making a fuller statement yield to a limited one” (“God’s Law on Divorce and Remarriage [Chapter ll),” GA 72:41 [October 9, 19301, p. 967). Stonestreet concluded that article, “Since fornication is the cause for severing the marriage union, then why may not the guilty party remarry also? The guilty party is already an adulterer or adulteress, and remarriage would only be a further repetition of such a life, and hence nothing is said on that point in the inspired passage” (Ibid., p. 981).

Responding to a reader’s question regarding the right of the guilty party to remarry, Stonestreet commented, “Our Lord’s statement, recorded in Matthew 19:9, affirms the permission of remarriage only of the innocent party. So, unless that permission is divinely given the guilty at some other place in some way, I have no right to teach that.” However, Stonestreet added: “Genuine repentance on the part of the adulterer or adulteress introduces a different character in the same person, whose Scriptural remarriage privilege I neither affirm nor deny” (P.W. Stonestreet, “The Side Issue,” GA 72-50 [December 11, 1930], p. 1191).

31. H. Leo Boles, “Scriptural Cause for Separation,” GA 75:3 (January 19, 1933), p. 58.

In a series of articles that same year, G.C. Brewer advanced a similar argument when he commented on Matthew 19:9, “If language means anything, this teaches that if he puts away his wife for the cause of fornication he does not commit adultery if he marries another. This is the one exception to the rule. That sin will justify a divorce, or permit a divorce.” Furthermore, in response to the argument that Matthew 19:9 should be relegated to Old Testament status and that death, as per Romans 7 is the only cause for remarriage for New Testament Christians, Brewer commented, “Those who offer this explanation have not examined the Scriptures on this point very carefully” (G.C. Brewer, “Christ and Paul on Divorce,” GA 75:29 [July 20, 1933], p. 674). This article was a part of a longer series of articles by Brewer appearing in volume 75 of the Advocate In 1928, Brewer had met Judge Lindsey of Denver in debate on the subject of “companionate marriage.”

32. R.L. Whiteside, “Divorce and Marriage,” GA 76:49 (December 6, 1934), p. 1170.

33. Whiteside, “Questions on the Marriage of Divorcees,” GA 78:14 (April 2, 1936), p. 321.

34. Ibid. See also Whiteside’s Rej7ections (Denton, TX: Inys Whiteside, 1965), pp. 102-109,409-427.

35. L.R. Wilson, “Divorce and Remarriage,” Firm Foundation 56:36 and 56:37 (September 5 and September 12, 1939).

36. Roy H. Lanier [Sr.], “Divorce and Remarriage,” Firm Foundation 56:41 and 56:42 (October 10 and October 17, 1939, p. 1.

37. Roy H. Lanier [Sr.], “Concerning Divorce and Remarriage,” GA 91:33 (August 13, 1949), pp. 517-518.

38. The discussion was later published in book form as The Warren-Fuqua Debate (Ft. Worth: J.E. Snelson Printing Co., 1954); quotation is from p. 7. See also Maurice W. Lusk, III, Marriage, Divorce and Remarriage In the Teachings of Jew and Paul (Atlanta: Guild of Scribes, 1982), especially chapter 9: “The Warren-Fuqua Debate: A Critique.”

Guardian of Truth XXXIV: 1, pp. 27, 29-31
January 4, 1990