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24. Jewish Criticism of the Law of Christ.
But perhaps some Jewish man of those who dare to oppose
the teaching of our Saviour will say, that when Jesus said,
“Whosoever shall put away his
own wife, saving for the cause of fornication, maketh her an
adulteress,”6228 He also gave
permission to put away a wife like as well as Moses did, who was said
by Him to have given laws for the hardness of heart of the people, and
will hold that the saying, “Because he found in her an unseemly
thing,”6229 is to be reckoned
as the same as fornication on account of which with good cause a wife
could be cast away from her husband. But to him it must be said
that, if she who committed adultery was according to the law to be
stoned, clearly it is not in this sense that the unseemly thing is to
be understood. For it is not necessary for adultery or any such
great indecency to write a bill of divorcement and give it into the
hands of the wife; but indeed perhaps Moses called every sin an
unseemly thing, on the discovery of which by the husband in the wife,
as not finding favour in the eyes of her husband, the bill of
divorcement is written, and the wife is sent away from the house of her
husband; “but from the beginning it hath not been
so.”6230 After this
our Saviour says, not at all permitting the dissolution of marriages
for any other sin than fornication alone, when detected in the wife,
“Whosoever shall put away his own wife, saving for the cause of
fornication, maketh her an adulteress.”6231 But it might be a subject for inquiry
if on this account He hinders any one putting away a wife, unless she
be caught in fornication, for any other reason, as for example for
poisoning, or for the destruction during the absence of her husband
from home of an infant born to them, or for any form of murder
whatsoever. And further, if she were found despoiling and
pillaging the house of her husband, though she was not guilty of
fornication, one might ask if he would with reason cast away such an
one, seeing that the Saviour forbids any one to put away his own wife
saving for the cause of fornication. In either case there appears
to be something monstrous, whether it be really monstrous, I do not
know; for to endure sins of such heinousness which seem to be worse
than adultery or fornication, will appear to be irrational; but again
on the other hand to act contrary to the design of the teaching of the
Saviour, every one would acknowledge to be impious. I wonder
therefore why He did not say, Let no one put away his own wife saving
for the cause of fornication, but says, “Whosoever shall put away
his own wife, saving for the cause of fornication, maketh her an
adulteress.”6232 For
confessedly he who puts away his wife when she is not a fornicator,
makes her an adulteress, so far as it lies with him, for if,
“when the husband is living she shall be called an adulteress if
she be joined to another man;”6233 and when by
putting her away, he gives to her the excuse of a second marriage, very
plainly in this way he makes her an adulteress. But as to whether
her being caught in the act of poisoning or committing murder,
furnishes any defence of his dismissal of her, you can inquire
yourselves; for the husband can also in other ways than by putting her
away cause his own wife to commit adultery; as, for example, allowing
her to do what she wishes beyond what is fitting, and stooping to
friendship with what men she wishes, for often from the simplicity of
husbands such false steps happen to wives; but whether there is a
ground of defence or not for such husbands in the case of such false
steps, you will inquire carefully, and deliver your opinion also in
regard to the difficult questions raised by us on the passage.
And even he who withholds himself from his wife makes her oftentimes to
be an adulteress when he does not satisfy her desires, even though he
does so under the appearance of greater gravity and self-control.
And perhaps this man is more culpable who, so far as it rests with him,
makes her an adulteress when he does not satisfy her desires than he
who, for other reason than fornication, has sent her away,—for
poisoning or murder or any of the most grievous sins. But as a
woman is an adulteress, even though she seem to be married to a man,
while the former husband is still living, so also the man who seems to
marry her who has been put away, does not so much marry her as commit
adultery with her according to the declaration of our
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