It would
be interesting to study marriage biologically and
sociologically, to get the far and near historical and
social background of it as an institution, especially as it
existed among the ancient Jews, and as it figures in the
teaching of Jesus as recorded in the New Testament. For,
like all social institutions, marriage, and the family which
is the outcome of marriage, must be judged, not by its
status at any particular time, but in the light of its
history. Such a study of it would raise a host of related
historic questions, e.g. What was its origin? What part has
it played in the evolution and civilization of the race?
What social functions has it performed? And then, as a
sequel, Can the services it has rendered to civilization and
progress be performed or secured in any other way? This,
indeed, would call for us to go back even farther — to try
to discover the psychology of the institution and its
history, the beliefs from which it has
[PAGE 629]sprung
and by which it has survived so long. This were a task well
worth while and amply justified by much of the thinking of
our time; for, as one of the three social institutions that
support the much challenged form and fabric of modern
civilization, marriage, private property and the state, its
continued existence, in present form at least, is a matter
of serious discussion and its abolition, along with the
other two, is confidently prophesied. “Marriage, as at
present understood, is an arrangement most closely
associated with the existing social status and stands or
falls with it” (Bebel, Socialism and Sex, 199, Reeves,
London; The Cooperative Commonwealth in Its Outline,
Gronlund, 224). But such a task is entirely outside of and
beyond the purpose of this article.
Neither the Bible in general, nor Jesus
in particular, treats of the family from the point of view
of the historian or the sociologist, but solely from that of
the teacher of religion and morals. In short, their point of
view is theological, rather than sociological. Moses and the
prophets, no less than Jesus and His apostles, accepted
marriage as an existing institution which gave rise to
certain practical, ethical questions, and they dealt with it
accordingly. There is nothing in the record of the teachings
of Jesus and of His apostles to indicate that they gave to
marriage any new social content, custom or sanction. They
simply accepted it as it existed in the conventionalized
civilization of the Jews of their day and used it and the
customs connected with it for ethical or illustrative
purposes. One exception is to be made to this general
statement, namely, that Jesus granted that because of the
exigencies of the social development Moses had modified it
to the extent of permitting and regulating divorce, clearly
indicating, however, at the same time, that He regarded such
modification as out of harmony with the institution as at
first given to mankind. According to the original Divine
purpose it was monogamous, and any form of polygamy, and
apparently of divorce, was excluded by the Divine idea and
purpose. The treatment of the subject here, therefore, will
be limited as follows: Marriage among the Ancient Hebrews
and Other Semites; Betrothal as the First Formal Part of the
Transaction; Wedding Ceremonies Connected with Marriage,
especially as Reflected in the New Testament; and Jesus’
Sanction and Use of the Institution, Teaching concerning
Divorce, etc. [PAGE
630]
1.
MARRIAGE AMONG THE HEBREWS:
With the
Hebrews married life was the normal life. Any exception
called for apology and explanation. “Any Jew who has not a
wife is no man” (Talmud). It was regarded as awaiting
everyone on reaching maturity; and sexual maturity comes
much earlier indeed in the East than with us in the West —
in what we call childhood. The ancient Hebrews, in common
with all Orientals, regarded the family as the social unit.
In this their view of it coincides with that, of modern
sociologists. Of the three great events in the family life,
birth, marriage and death, marriage was regarded as the most
important. It was a step that led to the gravest tribal and
family consequences. In case of a daughter, if she should
prove unsatisfactory to her husband, she would likely be
returned to the ancestral home, discarded and discredited,
and there would be almost inevitably a feeling of injustice
engendered on one side, and a sense of mutual irritation
between the families (Judges 14:20; 1 Samuel 18:19). If she
failed to pass muster with her mother-in-law she would just
as certainly have to go, and the results would be much the
same (compare customs in China). It was a matter affecting
the whole circle of relatives, and possibly tribal amity as
well. It was natural and deemed necessary, therefore, that
the selection of the wife and the arrangement of all
contractual and financial matters connected with it should
be decided upon by the parents or guardians of the couple
involved. Though the consent of the parties was sometimes
sought Genesis 24:8) and romantic attachments were not
unknown (Genesis 29:20; 34:3; Judges 14:1; 1 Samuel 18:20),
the gift or woman in the case was not currently thought of
as having a personal existence at her own disposal. She was
simply a passive unit in the family under the protection and
supreme control of father or brothers. In marriage, she was
practically the chattel, the purchased possession and
personal property of her husband, who was her ba`al or
master (Hos 2:16), she herself being be`ulah (Isaiah 62:4).
The control, however, was not always absolute (Genesis
26:34; Exodus 2:21).
The bargaining instinct, so dominant
among Orientals then as now, played a large part in the
transaction. In idea the family was a little kingdom of
which the father was the king, or absolute ruler. There are
many indications, not only that the family was the unit from
which national coherence was derived, but that this unit was
perpetuated through the supremacy of the oldest male. Thus
society became patriarchal, and this is the key of the
ancient history of the family and the nation. Through the
[PAGE
631]
expansion of the family group was evolved in turn the clan,
the tribe, the nation, and the authority of the father
became in turn that of the chief, the ruler, and the king.
The Oriental cannot conceive, indeed, of any band, or clan,
or company without a “father,” even though there be no kith
or kinship involved in the matter. The “father” in their
thought, too, was God’s representative, and as such he was
simply carrying out God’s purpose, for instance, in
selecting a bride for his son, or giving the bride to be
married to the son of another. This is as true of the far
East as of the near East today. Accordingly, as a rule, the
young people simply acquiesced, without question or
complaint, in what was thus done for them, accepting it as
though God had done it directly. Accordingly, too, the
family and tribal loyalty overshadowed love-making and
patriotism, in the larger sense. Out of this idea of the
solidarity and selectness of the tribe and family springs
the overmastering desire of the Oriental for progeny, and
for the conservation of the family or the tribe at any cost.
Hence, the feuds, bloody and bitter, that persist between
this family or tribe and another that has in any way
violated this sacred law.
Traces of what is known as beena marriage
are found in the Old Testament, e.g. that of Jacob, where
Laban claims Jacob’s wives and children as his own (Genesis
31:31,43), and that of Moses (Exodus 2:21; 4:18). This is
that form of marriage in which the husband is incorporated
into the wife’s tribe, the children belonging to her tribe
and descent being reckoned on her side (compare W. Robertson
Smith, Kinship and Marriage in Early Arabia, 94). In
Samson’s case we seem to have an instance of what is known
among Arabs as tsadqat marriage (from tsadaq, “gift”), the
kid here being the customary tsadaq (Judges 14; 15:1; 16:4).
There is no hint that he meant to take his wife home. It is
differentiated from prostitution in that no disgrace is
attached to it and the children are recognized as legitimate
by the tribe. Such marriages make it easier to understand
the existence of the matriarchate, or the custom of
reckoning the descent of children and property through the
mothers. The influence of polygamy would work in the same
direction, subdividing the family into smaller groups
connected with the several wives. There is, however, no
clear evidence in the Old Testament of polyandry (a
plurality of husbands), though the Levirate marriage is
regarded by some as a survival of it. In other words,
polygamy among the Hebrews seems to have been confined to
polygyny (a plurality of wives). It is easy to trace its
chief causes:
(1)
desire
for a numerous offspring (“May his tribe increase!”);
[PAGE
632] (2)
barrenness of first wife (as in Abraham’s case);
(3)
advantages offered by marital alliances (e.g. Solomon);
(4)
the
custom of making wives of captives taken in war (compare
Psalm 45:3,9);
(5)
slavery,
which as it existed in the Orient almost implied it.
2.
BETROTHAL THE FIRST FORMAL PART:
Betrothal with the ancient Hebrews was of
a more formal and far more binding nature than the
“engagement” is with us. Indeed, it was esteemed a part of
the transaction of marriage, and that the most binding part.
Among the Arabs today it is the only legal ceremony
connected with marriage. Genesis 24:58,60 seems to preserve
for us an example of an ancient formula and blessing for
such an occasion. Its central feature was the dowry
([mohar]), which was paid to the parents, not to the bride.
It may take the form of service (Genesis 29; 1 Samuel
18:25). It is customary in Syria today, when the projected
marriage is approved by both families, and all the financial
preliminaries have been settled, to have this ceremony of
betrothal. It consists in the acceptance before witnesses of
the terms of the marriage as contracted for. Then God’s
blessing is solemnly asked on the union thus provided for,
but to take place probably only after some months, or
perhaps some years. The betrothal effected, all danger from
any further financial fencing and bluffing now being at an
end, happiness and harmony may preside over all the
arrangements for the marriage day. Among the Jews the
betrothal was so far regarded as binding that, if marriage
should not take place, owing to the absconding of the
bridegroom or the breach of contract on his part, the young
woman could not be married to another man until she was
liberated by a due process and a paper of divorce. A similar
custom prevails in China and Japan, and in cases becomes
very oppressive. The marriage may have been intended by the
parents from the infancy of the parties, but this formality
of betrothal is not entered on till the marriage is
considered reasonably certain and measurably near. A
prolonged interval between betrothal and marriage was deemed
undesirable on many accounts, though often an interval was
needed that the groom might render the stipulated service or
pay the price — say a year or two, or, as in the case of
Jacob, it might be seven years. The betrothed parties were
legally in the position of a married couple, and
unfaithfulness was “adultery” (Dt 22:23;Matthew 1:19).
[PAGE
633]
Polygamy is likely to become prevalent
only where conditions are abnormal, as where there is a
disproportionate number of females, as in tribal life in a
state of war. In settled conditions it is possible only to
those able to provide “dowry” and support for each and all
of the wives. The fact of polygamy in Old Testament times is
abundantly witnessed in the cases of Abraham, Jacob, the
judges, David, Solomon, etc. It was prevalent in Issachar (1
Chronicles 7:4); among the middle class (1 Samuel 1:1 f).
But it is treated, even in the Old Testament, as
incompatible with the Divine ideal (Genesis 2:24), and its
original is traced to deliberate departure from that ideal
by Lamech, the Cainite (Genesis 4:19). Kings are warned
against it (Dt 17:17; compare Genesis 29:31; 30). Noah,
Isaac and Joseph had each only one wife, and Bible pictures
of domestic happiness are always connected with monogamy (2
Kings 4; Psalm 128; Proverbs 31; compare Sirach 25:1;
26:1,13). Marriage is applied figuratively, too, to the
union between God and Israel, implying monogamy as the ideal
state. Nevertheless, having the advantage of precedent, it
was long before polygamy fell into disuse in Hebrew society.
Herod had nine wives at one time (Josephus, Ant, XVII, I,
2). Justin Martyr (Dial., 134, 141) reproaches Jews of his
day with having “four or even five wives,” and for “marrying
as many as they wish” (compare Talm). It was not definitely
and formally forbidden among Jews until circa 1000 AD. It
exists still among Jews in Moslem lands. Side by side with
this practice all along has been the ideal principle
(Genesis 2:18) rebuking and modifying it. The legal theory
that made the man “lord” of the wife (Genesis 3:16; Tenth
Commandment) was likewise modified in practice by the
affection of the husband and the personality of the wife.
The difference between a concubine and a wife was largely
due to the wife’s birth and higher position and the fact
that she was usually backed by relatives ready to defend
her. A slave could not be made a concubine without the
wife’s consent (Genesis 16:2).
3.
WEDDING CEREMONIES:
There is a disappointing uncertainty as
to the exact ceremonies or proceedings connected with
marriage in Bible times. We have to paint our picture from
passing allusions or descriptions, and from what we know of
Jewish and Arabic customs. In cases it would seem that there
was nothing beyond betrothal, or the festivities following
it (see Genesis 24:3 ff).
[PAGE
634]
Later,
in the case of a virgin, an interval of not exceeding a year
came to be observed.
The first ceremony, the wedding
procession, apparently a relic of marriage by capture
(compare Judges 5:30; Psalm 45:15), was the first part of
the proceedings. The bridegroom’s “friends” (John 3:29)
went, usually by night, to fetch the bride and her
attendants to the home of the groom (Matthew 9:15; John
3:29). The joyousness of it all is witnessed by the
proverbial “voice of the bridegroom” and the cry, “Behold
the bridegroom cometh!” (Jeremiah 7:34; Revelation 18:23).
The procession was preferably by night, chiefly, we may
infer, that those busy in the day might attend, and that, in
accordance with the oriental love of scenic effects, the
weird panorama of lights and torches might play an engaging
and kindling part.
The marriage supper then followed,
generally in the home of the groom. Today in Syria, as Dr.
Mackie, of Beirut, says, when both parties live in the same
town, the reception may take place in either home; but the
older tradition points to the house of the groom’s parents
as the proper place. It is the bringing home of an already
accredited bride to her covenanted husband. She is escorted
by a company of attendants of her own sex and by male
relatives and friends conveying on mules or by porters
articles of furniture and decoration for the new home. As
the marriage usually takes place in the evening, the house
is given up for the day to the women who are busy robing the
bride and making ready for the coming hospitality. The
bridegroom is absent at the house of a relative or friend,
where men congregate in the evening for the purpose of
escorting him home. When he indicates that it is time to go,
all rise up, and candles and torches are supplied to those
who are to form the procession, and they move off. It is a
very picturesque sight to see such a procession moving along
the unlighted way in the stillness of the starry night,
while, if it be in town or city, on each side of the narrow
street, from the flat housetop or balcony, crowds look down,
and the women take up the peculiar cry of wedding joy that
tells those farther along that the pageant has started. This
cry is taken up all along the route, and gives warning to
those who are waiting with the bride that it is time to
arise and light up the approach, and welcome the bridegroom
with honor. As at the house where the bridegroom receives
his friends before starting some come late, and speeches of
congratulation have to be made, and poems have to be recited
or sung in praise of the groom, and to the honor of his
family, it is often near midnight when the
[PAGE
635]
procession begins. Meanwhile, as the night wears on, and the
duties of robing the bride and adorning the house are all
done, a period of relaxing and drowsy waiting sets in, as
when, in the New Testament parable, both the wise and the
foolish virgins were overcome with sleep. In their case the
distant cry on the street brought the warning to prepare for
the reception, and then came the discovery of the exhausted
oil.
Of the bridegroom’s retinue only a
limited number would enter, their chief duty being that of
escort. They might call next day to offer congratulations.
An Arabic wedding rhyme says:
“To the
bridegroom’s door went the torch-lit array,
And then
like goats they scattered away.”
With
their dispersion, according to custom, the doors would be
closed, leaving within the relatives and invited guests; and
so, when the belated virgins of the parable hastened back,
they too found themselves inexorably shut out by the
etiquette of the occasion. The opportunity of service was
past, and they were no longer needed.
At the home all things would be “made
ready,” if possible on a liberal scale. John 2 gives a
picture of a wedding feast where the resources were strained
to the breaking point. Hospitality was here especially a
sacred duty, and, of course, greatly ministered to the joy
of the occasion. An oriental proverb is significant of the
store set by it:
“He who
does not invite me to his marriage
Will not
have me to his funeral.”
To
decline the invitation to a marriage was a gross insult
(Matthew 22).
It was unusual in Galilee to have a
“ruler of the feast” as in Judea (John 2). There was no
formal religious ceremony connected with the Hebrew marriage
as with us — there is not a hint of such a thing in the
Bible. The marriage was consummated by entrance into the
“chamber,” i.e. the nuptial chamber (Hebrew [chedher]), in
which stood the bridal bed with a canopy ([chuppah]), being
originally the wife’s tent (Genesis 24:67; Judges 4:17). In
all lands of the dispersion the name is still applied to the
embroidered canopy under which the contracting parties stand
or sit during the festivities. In Arabic, Syriac, and Hebrew
the bridegroom is said to “go in” to the bride.
[Page
636]
A general survey of ancient marriage laws
and customs shows that those of the Hebrews are not a
peculiar creation apart from those of other peoples. A
remarkable affinity to those of other branches of the
Semitic races especially, may be noted, and striking
parallels are found in the Code of Hammurabi, with regard,
e.g., to betrothal, dowry, adultery and divorce. But modern
researches have emphasized the relative purity of Old
Testament sexual morality. In this, as in other respects,
the Jews had a message for the world. Yet we should not
expect to find among them the Christian standard. Under the
new dispensation the keynote is struck by our Lord’s action.
The significance of His attending the marriage feast at Cana
and performing His first miracle there can hardly be
exaggerated. The act corresponds, too, with His teaching on
the subject. He, no less than Paul, emphasizes both the
honorableness of the estate and the heinousness of all sins
against it.
4.
JESUS’ SANCTION OF THE INSTITUTION:
The most characteristic use of marriage
and the family by our Lord is that in which He describes the
kingdom of God as a social order in which the relationship
of men to God is like that of sons to a father, and their
relation to each other like that between brothers. This
social ideal, which presents itself vividly and continuously
to His mind, is summed up in this phrase, “Kingdom of God,”
which occurs more than a hundred times in the Synoptic
Gospels. The passages in which it occurs form the interior
climax of His message to men. It is no new and noble
Judaism, taking the form of a political restoration, that He
proclaims, and no “far-off Divine event” to be realized only
in some glorious apocalyptic consummation; but a kingdom of
God “within you,” the chief element of it communion with
God, the loving relation of “children” to a “Father,” a
present possession. Future in a sense it may be, as a result
to be fully realized, and yet present; invisible, and yet
becoming more and more visible as a new social order, a
conscious brotherhood with one common, heavenly Father,
proclaimed in every stage of His teaching in spite of
opposition and varying fortunes with unwavering certainty of
its completion — this is the “kingdom” that Jesus has made
the inalienable possession of the Christian consciousness.
His entire theology may be described as a transfiguration of
the family (see Peabody, Jesus Christ, and the Social
Question, 149 ff; Holtzmann, New Testament Theology, I, 200;
Harnack, History of Dogma, I, 62; B. Weiss, Biblical Theol.
of the New Testament, I, 72, English translation, 1882).
[Page
637]
Beyond this Jesus frequently used figures
drawn from marriage to illustrate His teaching concerning
the coming of the kingdom, as Paul did concerning Christ and
the church. There is no suggestion of reflection upon the
Old Testament teaching about marriage in His teaching except
at one point, the modification of it so as to allow polygamy
and divorce. Everywhere He accepts and deals with it as
sacred and of Divine origin (Matthew 19:9, etc.), but He
treats it as transient, that is of the “flesh” and for this
life only.
5. HIS
TEACHING CONCERNING DIVORCE:
A question of profound interest remains
to be treated: Did Jesus allow under any circumstances the
remarriage of a divorced person during the lifetime of the
partner to the marriage? Or did He allow absolute divorce
for any cause whatsoever? Upon the answer to that question
in every age depend momentous issues, social and civic, as
well as religious. The facts bearing on the question are
confessedly enshrined in the New Testament, and so the
inquiry may be limited to its records. Accepting with the
best scholarship the documents of the New Testament as
emanating from the disciples of Jesus in the second half of
the 1st century AD, the question is, what did these writers
understand Jesus to teach on this subject? If we had only
the Gospels of Mark and Luke and the Epistles of Paul, there
could be but one answer given: Christ did not allow absolute
divorce for any cause (see Mark 10:2 ff; Luke 16:18;
Galatians 1:12; 1 Corinthians 7:10). The Old Testament
permission was a concession, He teaches, to a low moral
state and standard, and opposed to the ideal of marriage
given in Genesis (2:23).
“The position of women in that day was
far from enviable. They could be divorced on the slightest
pretext, and had no recourse at law. Almost all the rights
and privileges of men were withheld from them. What Jesus
said in relation to divorce was more in defense of the
rights of the women of His time than as a guide for the
freer, fuller life of our day. Jesus certainly did not mean
to recommend a hard and enslaving life for women. His whole
life was one long expression of full understanding of them
and sympathy for them” (Patterson, The Measure of a Man, 181
f).
Two sayings attributed to Christ and
recorded by the writer or editor of the First Gospel
(Matthew 5:32; 19:9) seem directly to contravene His
teaching as recorded in Mark and Luke. Here he seems to
allow divorce [Page
638]
for
“fornication” (
ei me
epi porneia],
save for fornication”), an exception which finds no place in
the parallels (compare Corinthians 7:15, which allows
remarriage where a Christian partner is deserted by a
heathen). The sense here demands that “fornication” be taken
in its wider sense (Hos 2:5; Am 7:17; 1 Corinthians 5:1).
Divorce to a Jew carried with it the right of remarriage,
and the words `causeth her to commit adultery’ (Matthew
5:32) show that Jesus assumed that the divorced woman would
marry again. Hence, if He allowed divorce, He also allowed
remarriage. A critical examination of the whole passage in
Matthew has led many scholars to conclude that the exceptive
clause is an interpolation due to the Jewish-Christian
compiler or editor through whose hands the materials passed.
Others think it betrays traces of having been rewritten from
Mark or from a source common to both Matthew and Mark, and
combined with a semi-Jewish tradition, in short, that it is
due to literary revision and compilation. The writer or
compiler attempted to combine the original sayings of Jesus
and His own interpretation. Believing that our Lord had not
come to set aside the authority of Moses, but only certain
Pharisaic exegesis, and supported, as doubtless he was, by a
Jewish-Christian tradition of Palestine, he simply
interpreted Mark’s narrative by inserting what he regarded
as the integral part of an eternal enactment of Yahweh. In
doing this he was unconsciously inconsistent, not only with
Mark and Luke, but also with the context of the First Gospel
itself, owing to his sincere but mistaken belief that the
Law of Moses must not be broken. The view implied by the
exception, of course, is that adultery ipso facto dissolves
the union, and so opens the way to remarriage. But
remarriage closes the door to reconciliation, which on
Christian principles ought always to be possible (compare
Hosea; Jeremiah 3; Hermas, Mand iv.1). Certainly much is to
be said for the view which is steadily gaining ground, that
the exception in Matthew is an editorial addition made under
the pressure of local conditions and practical necessity,
the absolute rule being found too hard (see Hastings,
Dictionary of the Bible (five volumes), extra vol, 27b, and
The Teaching of our Lord as to the Indissolubility of
Marriage, by Stuart Lawrence Tyson, M.A. Oxon., University
of the South, 1912).
The general principle expanded in the New
Testament and the ideal held up before the Christians is
high and clear. How far that ideal can be embodied in
legislation and applied to the community as a whole all are
agreed must [Page
639]
depend
upon social conditions and the general moral development and
environment.