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| From Examples Tertullian Passes to Direct Dogmatic Teachings. He Begins with the Lord's Teaching. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
IX.—From Examples Tertullian Passes to Direct Dogmatic
Teachings. He Begins with the Lord’s Teaching.
But grant that these argumentations may be thought to be
forced and founded on conjectures, if no dogmatic teachings have
stood parallel with them which the Lord uttered in treating of divorce,
which, permitted formerly, He now prohibits, first because “from
the beginning it was not so,” like plurality of marriage;
secondly, because “What God hath conjoined, man shall not
separate,”652
652 See Matt. xix. 3–8, where, however, Tertullian’s
order is reversed. Comp. with this chapter, c. v. above. | —for fear,
namely, that he contravene the Lord: for He alone shall
“separate” who has “conjoined” (separate,
moreover, not through the harshness of divorce, which (harshness) He
censures and restrains, but through the debt of death) if, indeed,
“one of two sparrows falleth not on the ground without the
Father’s will.”653 Therefore if
those whom God has conjoined man shall not separate by divorce, it is
equally congruous that those whom God has separated by death man is not
to conjoin by marriage; the joining of the separation will be just as
contrary to God’s will as would have been the separation of the
conjunction.
So far as regards the non-destruction of
the will of God, and the restruction of the law of “the
beginning.” But another reason, too, conspires; nay, not
another, but (one) which imposed the law of “the
beginning,” and moved the will of God to prohibit divorce:
the fact that (he) who shall have dismissed his wife, except on the
ground of adultery, makes her commit adultery; and (he) who shall have
married a (woman) dismissed by her husband, of course commits
adultery.654 A divorced
woman cannot even marry legitimately; and if she commit any such act
without the name of marriage, does it not fall under the category of
adultery, in that adultery is crime in the way of marriage? Such
is God’s verdict, within straiter limits than men’s, that
universally, whether through marriage or promiscuously, the admission
of a second man (to intercourse) is pronounced adultery by Him.
For let us see what marriage is in the eye of God; and thus we shall
learn what adultery equally is. Marriage is (this): when
God joins “two into one flesh;” or else, finding (them
already) joined in the same flesh, has given His seal to the
conjunction. Adultery is (this): when, the two having
been—in whatsoever way—disjoined, other—nay,
rather alien—flesh is mingled (with either): flesh
concerning which it cannot be affirmed, “This is flesh out of my
flesh, and this bone out of my bones.”655
For this, once for all done and pronounced, as from the beginning, so
now too, cannot apply to “other” flesh. Accordingly,
it will be without cause that you will say that God wills not a
divorced woman to be joined to another man “while her husband
liveth,” as if He do will it “when he is
dead;”656 whereas if she is not
bound to him when dead, no more is she when living. “Alike
when divorce dissevers marriage as when death does, she will not be
bound to him by whom the binding medium has been broken
off.” To whom, then, will she be bound? In the eye of
God, it matters nought whether she marry during her life or after his
death. For it is not against him that she sins, but against
herself. “Any sin which a man may have committed is
external to the body; but (he) who commits adultery sins against his
own body.” But—as we have previously laid down
above—whoever shall intermingle with himself “other”
flesh, over and above that pristine flesh which God either conjoined
into two or else found (already) conjoined, commits adultery. And
the reason why He has abolished divorce, which “was not from the
beginning,” is, that He may strengthen that which “was from
the beginning”—the permanent conjunction, (namely), of
“two into one flesh:” for fear that necessity or
opportunity for a third union of flesh may make an irruption
(into His dominion); permitting divorce to no cause but one—if,
(that is), the (evil) against which precaution is taken chance to have
occurred beforehand. So true, moreover, is it that divorce
“was not from the beginning,” that among the Romans it is
not till after the six hundredth year from the building of the city
that this kind of “hard-heartedness”657
is set down as having been committed. But they indulge in
promiscuous adulteries, even without divorcing (their partners):
to us, even if we do divorce them, even marriage will not be
lawful.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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