SEVENTH-DAY
ADVENTIST POLICY ON DIVORCE AND REMARRIAGE:
A BRIEF OUTLINE OF HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS
by Gerald Winslow
Introduction
When the General Conference Session in Toronto considers proposed
changes in our Church Manual's statements on divorce and
remarriage, the delegates will be continuing a process that began
many decades ago. From the middle of the 19th century until the
present, Seventh-day Adventists have sought to apply the principles
of Scripture to heart-rending problems encountered when marriages
fail. Gradually, we have enunciated and revised policies with
the goal of being true to the Gospel and guided by God's Spirit.
Pastors seeking to minister to divorced persons in the church
may benefit from a brief sketch of the major steps that have led
our church to its current policy.
Early
Steps
From the earliest beginnings of our organized work, Seventh-day
Adventists have found it necessary to consider our response to
divorce and remarriage. For example, one of the first questions
raised at the 1862 Michigan State Conference was this: "How
shall we treat divorced marriages?"(1) The questioner was
a Brother Sanborn who needed an answer to a practical question.
Should we accept into fellowship individuals who had become divorced
without "biblical justification" and were later remarried?
The difficult query was referred to the Conference committee for
further consideration. There exists, however, no record of any
subsequent action. So we cannot be certain what answer Brother
Sanborn received during these early years.
Eventually,
however, the church's response to marital status of new believers
did become settled. In 1887, for example, Uriah Smith, referring
to remarried people who desired church membership, wrote: "Take
them as they are found, leaving these things that cannot be undone
to the past. . . ."(2) Smith noted that such couples have
long-standing relationships that include children. The best they
could hope to do, upon finding the truth of the Gospel, would
be to live faithful lives in the future. This approach to new
believers, though seldom mentioned in official policies of the
church, has continued to hold sway. For example, the 1976 Autumn
Council action on divorce and church membership says: "When
a new believer is to be admitted to membership in the Seventh-day
Adventist Church, he stands, in relation to the church as a new
creature,' (2 Cor. 5:17) not subject to church discipline for
his past conduct. He shall be eligible for church membership if
his current marriage is legally certificated."(3)
Thus,
from early years onward, new members have generally been welcomed
without blame for past marital difficulties. However, discipline
for those who are already church members when their marriages
falter has been the occasion for far more difficulty. The concern
of the church has been to maintain the highest possible standards
of marital permanence and fidelity for its members, while also
acting with grace and forgiveness toward those who stumble. What,
then, should be the church's response to members whose marriages
end in divorce? Should they be permitted to continue church membership
even if the reasons for the divorce are not considered to be biblical?
If such individuals marry again, should they be removed from membership?
And, if so, may they ever be readmitted to membership while the
second marriage continues? Official answers to such questions
have emerged gradually.
One
early attempt to generate an official policy arrived at the General
Conference Session of 1879.(4) A committee had been asked to address
the "subject of unhappy marriages." In its report, the
committee noted that there was an "alarming tendency"
in the general public toward lax views of marriage; legal divorces
were being granted by courts for flimsy reasons; and the church
had the responsibility to "stay the tide of corruption"
that was sweeping the country. The committee proposed three resolutions
to accomplish its goals. The first stated that the only biblical
cause for divorce is the commission of adultery "by one or
the other of the parties to the marriage contract." The second
proposed a rule that would forbid churches from accepting into
membership anyone who had been divorced for reasons other than
adultery and subsequently remarried. This refusal of membership
was to remain "during the lifetime of the person from whom
such individual was improperly divorced." (It is noteworthy
that this second resolution would have had the effect of nullifying
the already established practice of allowing such new members
into the church.) The third resolution proposed that the cases
of all current members, living in questionable second marriages,
be "dealt with" only after the local church sought advice
from the General Conference Committee or at least the local conference
committee.
The
first of these resolutions passed unanimously. But the second
and third resolutions created dissent, and the leaders withheld
a decision "till after the most mature deliberation."
The record indicates that both James and Ellen White participated
in the discussions. And on the third day, all three resolutions,
including the first one that had already passed, were tabled permanently.
Although we have no record of what the various participants said,
it is clear that our leaders did not come to agreement on the
proposed resolutions.
There
is only one other record of official action on divorce and remarriage
during the 19th century. At the General Conference Session in
1887, the following resolution was passed:
This
resolution made official what was surely the consensus of Adventists
at the time: only adultery was "grounds" for divorce
and remarriage. To this was added one of the first official rules
regarding second marriages, namely, that Seventh-day Adventist
ministers should not perform weddings for people entering second
marriages without biblical justification.
During
her lifetime, Ellen White offered counsel to people with troubled
marriages. Occasionally, she also participated in discussions
of church policy. But she resisted serving as the authority to
resolve cases for which she had no specific light. At one point
she said, "I do not think it is my work to deal with any
such things unless the case has been plainly opened before me.
. . . I cannot take responsibility in such matters. Let those
appointed of God to bear the responsibility deal with it in accordance
with Christian principles."(5) Later, reflecting on his mother's
work, W.C. White wrote: "It was Sister White's intention
that there should not go forth from her pen anything that could
be used as a law or a rule in dealing with these questions of
marriage, divorce, remarriage, and adultery."(6)
Still,
through her books, articles, and letters to individuals, Ellen
White did influence the general direction of the church's practices
regarding divorce and remarriage.(7) While consistently calling
for high moral standards in marriage, and while condemning the
sin of adultery, Ellen White often worked to rehabilitate those
who had erred.(8) She saw no light in breaking up a second marriage,
even though the circumstances that led to the marriage were not
exemplary.(9) She expressed grace and compassion for those injured
by divorce.
Solidifying
Official Policy
A decade after Ellen White's death, Seventh-day Adventists still
had very little in the way of official policy on divorce and remarriage.
As the church grew both in size and complexity of organization,
there was greater need felt for such policy.
In
1925, the church adopted a brief statement of general policy on
divorce. The Autumn Council that year approved of a statement
that deplored divorce and placed "emphatic disapproval upon
any legal action for the separation of those once married, on
any ground other than that given in Matthew 5:32."(10) The
church had not yet developed a church manual, so such resolutions
like this were considered advisory.(11)
In
1932, the church developed the first Church Manual. Among
its provisions was a section on divorce.(12) It repeated the action
of the 1925 Autumn Council, and added a number of other elements,
most of which have continued in subsequent statements of policy.
The 1932 statement called for efforts to effect reconciliation
when marriages were under threat. But sin must not be glossed
over, and the "church must administer discipline in the maintenance
of a high standard of moral purity and integrity." Adventist
ministers were forbidden to perform marriage ceremonies for persons
who had been divorced without "Scriptural grounds."
Following Ellen White's comments on the words of Jesus' Sermon
on the Mount, the policy interpreted biblical grounds for divorce
and remarriage in terms of "fornication." The policy
stated that members should not be permitted to continue in church
fellowship if they remarried while their former spouses, whom
they divorced without biblical reasons, were still alive. However,
the "innocent party" to a divorce did have the "right"
to remarry. It was the responsibility of the officiating minister
to determine whether or not a person had the right to remarry,
based on "satisfactory evidence of the facts of the case."
If in doubt, the minister was to seek counsel from the local conference
officers.
So,
for the first time in 1932, Seventh-day Adventists adopted a policy
that was considered binding on all church members. And in broad
outline, the 1932 policy, with its distinction between guilty
and innocent parties, its emphasis on rights to remarriage for
the innocent but not the guilty, and its provision for excluding
guilty remarried persons from membership, has served as the template
for subsequent church policy.
Ten
years after the first Church Manual, the church looked
again at its divorce and remarriage policy. Some leaders believed
that the 1932 policy needed to be clarified and expanded. A special
study commission was appointed, and it reported to the 1942 Autumn
Council. The result was the adoption of a six-point policy that
solidified the provisions of the 1932 policy and generally made
them stricter.(13) For example, all members found guilty of adultery
must be disfellowshipped, and could only be readmitted to the
church by way of rebaptism even if they had reconciled with their
spouse. People who were disfellowshipped because of wrongful second
marriages could "not be readmitted to church membership so
long as the unscriptural relationship continues." And the
pastor was responsible for investigating "all the circumstances,"
and for requiring any member seeking to remarry to "produce
satisfactory evidence in support of his or her claim."
Moving
Toward Balance
The 1942 statement stands at summit of stringency. For the most
part, subsequent revisions have had a moderating effect.
Already
in 1946, for example, the delegates to the General Conference
Session revised the Church Manual. No longer would it be
required to disfellowship all adulterers. Those who confessed
their misdeeds and were deeply repentant could be placed under
censure for a stipulated period of time. Nor would rebaptism be
required for all such erring ones.
More
significant revisions occurred at the 1950 General Conference
Session and were incorporated in the 1951 Church Manual.
In the introduction to the revised policies, the Manual
stated: "The church believes in the law of God; it also believes
in the forgiving mercy of God. It believes that victory and salvation
can as surely be found by those who have transgressed in the matter
of divorce and remarriage as by those who have failed in any other
of God's holy standards."(14)
The
1950 changes left most of the earlier elements of Adventist policy
intact. Only "unfaithfulness to the marriage vow" could
lead to the dissolution of marriage. If it did, then only the
innocent spouse could remarry with impunity. If the church's reputation
had been sullied by the flagrant actions of a transgressor, the
church might elect to disfellowship him or her even if there was
evidence of genuine repentance. For the first time, this policy
also called for disfellowshipping the person who married someone
who had been divorced without biblical grounds. Members who divorced
without biblical reasons, and remained single, were to be censured.
But, if they later remarried, they and the one they married were
both to be disfellowshipped. The policy did recognize, however,
that some members might, for reasons of safety, need to seek a
legal separation or even a divorce. If such persons did this and
remain chaste and single, they "would not be condemned."
In
all these provisions, the 1950 changes and additions served primarily
to clarify and extend previous policies. But the most noteworthy
change in 1950 was the new provision for readmitting members
who had been disfellowshipped for errant remarriages. The Manual
notes that circumstances of such second marriages may be complicated
in many ways. For example, the welfare of children might be at
stake. Then the Manual stated: "In a case where any
endeavor by a genuinely repentant offender to bring his marital
status into line with the divine ideal presents apparently insuperable
problems, his (or her) plea for readmittance shall before final
action is taken be brought by the church through the pastor or
district leader to the conference for counsel and recommendation
as to any possible steps that the repentant one, or ones, may
take to secure readmittance." If such a one was readmitted
to the church, the policy insisted on rebaptism. And the policy
said that the readmitted member should not hold leadership positions
in the church, especially positions requiring ordination.
This
provision for readmission to membership was the source of considerable
discussion in subsequent years. What, for example, would it mean
for a remarried person to "bring his marital status into
line with the divine ideal"? Is the implication that he or
she should divorce a second time? And what should be counted as
"insuperable problems" which would lead the church to
grant mercy to those in second marriages? How long must such people
wait before being readmitted to membership? Once readmitted, what
positions of leadership, if any, should be open to such people?
These
and many similar questions have continued to provide opportunities
to think about relevant biblical principles and their practical
outworking in policy. While the main provisions of the 1950 statements
have remained in force to the present time, efforts have been
made to answer some of the perplexing questions. For example,
the 1976 Autumn Council established both local conference and
union conference committees to review difficult cases and make
recommendations about how they should be treated.(15) A number
of criteria were also outlined for readmitting formerly disfellowshipped
members. These criteria included evidence of sincere repentance,
the establishment of wholesome family life and a "praiseworthy
reputation," and fulfillment of financial obligations to
one's children or former spouse. The guidelines did not say exactly
how long a person must wait to be readmitted, but they indicated
that "a period of years shall be required."
The
1976 statement also contained another significant development.
In one of the appendices, the meaning of adultery and fornication,
as grounds for divorce, were discussed. For the first time, the
church officially acknowledged that "fornication" (from
the Greek porneia) which Jesus mentions as a reason for
divorce (Matthew 5:32 and 19:9) may have broader meaning than
the act of physical adultery. The statement went on to list examples,
such as sexual perversions, homosexual practices, and "persistent
indulgence in intimate relationships with a partner of the opposite
sex other than the spouse, even though falling short of coitus."(16)
The
most recent revisions of church policy occurred at the 1995 General
Conference Session. At that time, the broadened definition of
"fornication" was approved for inclusion in the Church
Manual.(17) The wording of the Manual was also clarified
regarding those, who for reasons of safety, find it necessary
to seek legal separation or divorce. The revised language makes
it clearer that such members need not be censured for their actions.
Finally, the 1995 General Conference Session voted to establish
a study commission to give thorough reconsideration to the subject
of divorce and remarriage and to make appropriate recommendations
for changes in the Church Manual. The prescribed commission
completed its work in 1999. Its final report to the Administrative
Committee of the General Conference, which was later circulated
among members of the General Conference Committee at the Annual
Council of 1999, called for fuller statement of biblical principles
regarding marriage and care of members who experience divorce
and remarriage. Some of the commission's work has been incorporated
in the proposed changes in the Church Manual that will
receive consideration at the 2000 General Conference Session in
Toronto.
Conclusion
The ongoing discussion of how our church should best treat the
matter of divorce and remarriage is evidence that we desire to
take seriously the principles of the Bible and the guidance of
the Holy Spirit. We should not be surprised that the church has
struggled with these matters from its inception. When we consider
the complexities of marital relationships, the potential for harm
when things go wrong, the desire of the church to protect high
standards of moral conduct, and the conviction that we should
treat our erring members with grace, we should expect to need
God's ongoing guidance. Let us hope and pray that the meetings
in Toronto will represent a further step toward maturity of understanding
God's will and God's grace.
(1)
Joseph Bates, "Business Proceedings of the Michigan State
Conference," Review and Herald, October 14, 1862,
p. 157.
(2)
Uriah Smith, "Divorce and Marriage," Review and Herald,
Feb. 8, 1887, p. 89.
(3)
The Annual Council of the General Conference Committee, General
Actions, October 13-21, 1976, Washington, D.C.
(4)
The record of the 1879 meeting, at which divorce and remarriage
was discussed, was never published. The quotations given here
are from the handwritten minutes of the 1879 General Conference
Session. These minutes are in the General Conference Archives.
A fuller quotation of the relevant portion of the minutes can
be found in the unpublished manuscript of Bert Haloviak, "Law
or Compassion: SDA Approaches to Divorce, Remarriage and Church
Fellowship," presented to the General Conference Divorce
and Remarriage Study Commission, meeting in Hoddeston, England,
September 14-16, 1997 (available on the General Conference Archives
and Statistics website: www.adventist.org/ast). The most comprehensive
historical, ethical, and sociological account of Adventists' treatment
of divorce and remarriage is in Michael Pearson, Millennial
Dreams and Moral Dilemmas: Seventh-day Adventism and Contemporary
Ethics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990), pp.
182-228.
(5)
Ellen White, Manuscript 2, 1913.
(6)
W.C. White, Jan. 6, 1931 quoted in Elbio Pereyra, "Marriage,
Divorce, and Remarriage in the Writings of Ellen G. White,"
unpublished manuscript, Ellen G. White Estate, Feb., 1987.
(7)
In addition to the compilations of Ellen White statements in Adventist
Home, Selected Messages, vol. 2, and Testimonies
on Sexual Behavior, Adultery and Divorce, the following manuscript
releases from the Ellen White Estate have aided the church in
continuing to experience the influence of Ellen White's ministry:
"The Spirit of Prophecy and Adultery, Divorce, Remarriage,
and Church Membership," Manuscript release 448, August, 1975.
"Dealing with Ministers and Workers Who Have Violated the
Seventh Commandment," Manuscript release 449, August, 1975.
"Ellen G. White Counsels Relating to Adultery, Divorce and
Remarriage," a compilation by Robert Olson, June, 1976.
"Marriage, Divorce, and Remarriage in the Writings of Ellen
G. White," by Elbie Pereyra, Feb., 1987.
"Summary of Biblical and E.G. White References to Marriage,
Divorce, and Remarriage," by Teofilo Ferreira, 1997.
(8)
See, for example, the accounts in Elbio Pereyra, "Marriage,
Divorce, and Remarriage in the Writings of Ellen G. White."
Cited above.
(9)
Ellen White, Letter 175, 1901 quoted in Selected Messages,
vol. 2, pp. 341-42.
(10)
"Actions of the Autumn Council of the General Conference
Committee," Meeting in Des Moines, Iowa, Oct., 1925.
(11)
On this point see B. Haloviak, p. 7 of manuscript cited above.
(12)
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, Church Manual,
1932, pp. 175-77.
(13)
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, Church Manual,
1942, pp. 187-89.
(14)
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, Church Manual,
1951, p. 240.
(15)
General Actions of the 1976 Annual Council of the General Conference
Committee, pp. 25-33.
(16)
It should be noted that the 1977 Annual Council of the General
Conference Committee voted to amend Appendix C of the 1976 statement,
resulting in a shorter list of examples of "fornication."
The 1977 statement reads, in part, "Gross sexual perversion,
including homosexual practices, are recognized as a misuse of
sexual powers and a violation of the divine intention in marriage.
As such they are just cause for divorce." General Actions
of the Annual Council, Oct., 1977.
(17)
Following the 1977 Autumn Council's revised statement on the matter,
the Church Manual of 1995 reads: "Unfaithfulness to
the marriage vow has generally been seen to be adultery and/or
fornication. However, the New Testament word for fornication includes
certain other sexual irregularities. (I Cor. 6:9; I Tim. 1:9,
10; Rom. 1:24-27) Therefore, sexual perversions, including homosexual
practices, are also recognized as a misuse of sexual powers and
a violation of the divine intention in marriage. As such they
are just cause for divorce." Church Manual, 1995,
p. 182.