Home Pastors Articles for Pastors What Does the Bible Say About Divorce? Let’s Start Believing the Scriptures

What Does the Bible Say About Divorce? Let’s Start Believing the Scriptures

what does the Bible say about divorce Rethinking the Divorce Issue: Let’s Start Believing the Scriptures

Most SBC churches I know have in their bylaws a statement that divorce disqualifies a church member from being considered as a pastor or a deacon. I’m suggesting we need to start asking what does the bible say about divorce — then believing God’s word and quit making divorce the unpardonable sin.

The qualifications for deacons are found in I Timothy 3:8-13. Verse 12 says, “Husband of one wife.” The “one wife” business, of course, has been interpreted in a dozen ways, everything from a deacon must be married (no unmarried person, whether single or widowed, can be a deacon), to no divorced person at all  (no matter how many years ago and what kind of record of faithfulness you have achieved over the decades; sorry, Charlie!), to no in a polygamous relationship, and so forth. On a related subject, some churches have women deacons because, while verse 11 says “the women also”—traditionally interpreted to mean wives of deacons—no similar statement is given in I Timothy 3:1-7 where qualifications for pastors are found. If verse 11 refers to the deacons’ wives there should be something earlier about pastors’ wives. But there isn’t. So many a church has decided verse 11 is referring to women deacons. (Argue all you wish, but Paul is not here to tell us what he had in mind.)

The point is: Since these verses are not clear, faithful brothers and sisters in Christ interpret them in various ways. So, why then do our churches so consistently insist that I Timothy 3:12 prohibits a divorced person from becoming a deacon?

What does the Bible Say About Divorce?

I suggest the answer is found in Matthew 19:9. “And I say to you, whoever divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, and marries another, commits adultery; and whoever marries her who is divorced commits adultery.” This clearly states that unless a person has “grounds” for divorce, a remarriage is adultery.

A group of deacons in one church I served decided the church needed a line in the bylaws prohibiting a man married to a divorced woman from becoming a deacon. They cited this passage as evidence. I urged against this, saying the Timothy passage was sufficient.  (Long story short, they took it to the floor of the church anyway and a huge fight erupted. Finally, they dropped the matter, and grew angry at the church for not following them. I asked, “What do you think about deacons not following their pastor?” No answer.)

Divorce continues to divide the church today. Many a man or woman who has seen their marriage break up has had to learn first hand how poorly our congregations deal with this issue.

A man told me, “Had I murdered my wife, I’d have served maybe 20 years in prison, then got out and joined the church and could have become a deacon. But all I did was divorce her.” He was calling the church out for its hypocrisy, that divorce is a harsher crime to many in the church than murder.

All of the above is just to prepare us to look at one text. I Corinthians 6:9-11 deserves to be carved in stone and erected in the front yard of our churches. It’s that pivotal.

Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the Kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners will inherit the kingdom of God. And such were some of you. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God.

Such were some of you.

Such. Were. Some. Of. You.

You may have been those things at one time. You might have been a thief or drunkard, a idol worshiper, and promiscuous. But no more. You are saved. Born again. A new creation.

What does the Bible say about divorce? You have been washed in the blood of the Lamb, you have been set apart as holy by the Lord God (sanctified), and you have been made righteous (justified) in Jesus’ name by the Spirit of God.

You may have been an adulterer. Matthew 19:9 says you were if you did what Jesus said. But you’ve been forgiven. You are no longer an adulterer. You are pure in the sight of God.

What does the Bible say about divorce? If we believed Scripture we would quit holding people’s past against them so long as they qualify in godliness and holiness.

This article originally appeared here.