Remarriage Regulations: Biblical, Historical, and Legal Perspectives

Biblical Regulations on Remarriage

According to the Bible, remarriage is restricted while a covenant spouse is still alive:

  • Jesus taught: “Anyone who divorces his wife and marries another woman commits adultery” (Luke 16:18, NIV).
  • Paul wrote: “A woman is bound to her husband as long as he lives” (1 Corinthians 7:39, NIV).
  • In the Old Testament, remarrying a former spouse after she has married another man was forbidden: “That would be detestable in the eyes of the Lord” (Deuteronomy 24:1–4, NIV).

The only biblically lawful reason for remarriage is the death of a spouse. Remarriage after divorce is viewed in many cases as ongoing adultery unless repentance and restoration to the original spouse occurs.


Historical Church Regulations

  • Early Church Fathers (1st–5th centuries), including Hermas, Tertullian, and Augustine, taught that remarriage while a first spouse lived was adultery, regardless of cause.
  • The Catholic Church still teaches the indissolubility of marriage, allowing remarriage only after annulment or death of a spouse.
  • Protestant Reformers like Martin Luther and John Calvin permitted remarriage after divorce for limited reasons (e.g., adultery or abandonment), but insisted on pastoral oversight and civil accountability.
  • In Puritan New England, remarriage was allowed only after an official court-approved divorce.


Civil Regulations on Remarriage (United States & Abroad)

  • United States: Laws on remarriage vary by state. Some require a waiting period after divorce (e.g., Texas – 30 days). Others have no restrictions, though bigamy is illegal in all 50 states.
  • United Kingdom: After the Matrimonial Causes Act of 1857, remarriage was allowed for the innocent party. By 1937, additional grounds like cruelty and insanity were added, allowing remarriage in more cases.
  • Islamic countries: Remarriage is often regulated by Sharia law, requiring conditions such as iddah (waiting period) for women.
  • Catholic canon law still forbids remarriage without annulment, and remarriage without Church permission renders the marriage invalid in ecclesiastical terms.


Recommended Books on Remarriage Laws and Doctrine

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Jesus, Divorce, and Remarriage in Their Historical Setting – Gordon Wenham

A detailed biblical and historical analysis of Jesus’ teachings.

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Adultery: Infidelity and the Law – Deborah L. Rhode

A legal and social exploration of adultery and remarriage regulation in modern jurisprudence.

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Trials for Adultery: The History of Divorces (Vol. IV) – Historic UK case archive

Documents real court proceedings from historical English divorce law.


Recommended Books on Adultery Law and Remarriage Doctrine

Jesus, Divorce, and Remarriage in Their Historical Setting — Gordon J. Wenham

A concise and scholarly study arguing that Jesus permitted separation in cases of sexual immorality but did not allow divorce and remarriage

Adultery: Infidelity and the Law — Deborah L. Rhode

A legal, cultural, and social examination of adultery laws in the U.S. and beyond, analyzing how these laws evolved and their effects on society

Trials for Adultery: The History of Divorces (Vol. IV) — A Civilian (historic UK case archive)

A collection of 18th-century English divorce trials linked to adultery, cruelty, impotence, and fornication—offering original primary records and social context


Why These Titles Matter

  • Biblical & Historical Insight: Wenham’s work examines how Jesus’ teachings would have been interpreted in first-century marriage culture and by the early Church .
  • Legal & Cultural Framework: Rhode traces U.S. and global adultery laws, revealing how legal definitions and social norms impacted marriage, privacy, and gender bias .
  • Authentic Case Studies: The Trials for Adultery volumes preserve original English court proceedings, exposing the scandal, social influence, and legal standards of past centuries .


Suggested Reading Summaries

  • Wenham: Challenges common evangelical interpretations by emphasizing Jesus’ prohibition of remarriage aside from death and offers a close historical-cultural reading of biblical texts .
  • Rhode: Highlights how adultery laws disproportionately impacted women and explores the policy implications for modern jurisdictions, calling for the repeal of adultery statutes in many U.S. states .
  • Trials: Documents real-life divorce scenarios in 18th-century England, showing public perception, legal process, and patriarchal influence in adjudicating adultery cases .


References

  • Wenham, G. J. (2023). Jesus, Divorce, and Remarriage: In Their Historical Setting. Lexham Press.
  • Rhode, D. L. (1995). Adultery: Infidelity and the Law. Harvard University Press.
  • Leckie, B. (1999). Culture and Adultery: The Novel, the Newspaper, and the Law, 1857–1914. University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Matrimonial Causes Act 1857 (UK). (1857). Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrimonial_Causes_Act_1857
  • Commonwealth (Adultery) Act (1650). (1650). Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commonwealth_(Adultery)_Act_(1650)