Originally posted by steaver:
Originally posted by bmerr:
Even if Bob and Jane live together for the rest of their lives, neither ever stepping out on the other, they will always be living in adultery, unless they repent, which means acknowledging their sin, and turning from it.
steaver said: Would you conclude that these two (whether born again believers in Christ or not) will not be saved because of this unrepented of sin?
steaver,
bmerr here. This is going to sound harsh, but please understand that my aim is to "speak the truth in love" (Eph 4:15). I would say, and I think I could show from Scripture, that unless these people had already repented, then they did not become Christians at all.
Let me give you my example. I was already a born again believer when I slipped off into a world of drunkenness and fornication. I met a woman who was seperated (not divorced) from her Christian husband, she was not a Christian then. We committed adultery together for two years. She became divorced (according to man's law) and married me. Five years went by and she was called by God and recieved Jesus Christ as her Lord and Savior (sadly, no help from my part). I then repented of my drinking and allowed Jesus to rule my life once again.
Now... are you preaching that my wife and I should have seperated and gotten a divorce?
I can relate somewhat to your situation, especially the drunkeness and fornication part. I've been there, too.
Again, please know that it's hard for me to say the things I'm about to say, because I think highly of you, and I don't want to make you angry, but I, as a Christian, have the obligation to speak the whole council of God.
The woman you met, and later married, was not Scripturally eligible to marry you, having committed adultery against her husband. She was put away for fornication. The second half of Matt 19:9 says, "and whoso marrieth her which is put away doth commit adultery."
From the facts you have given me, the marriage you are in is not Scriptural, and you and your wife are living in adultery. Unless and until you repent of this situation, you can have no hope of inheriting the kingdom of God (1 Cor 6:9-10).
I'm so sorry that I can't tell you differently, steaver.
Second, how do you think our two kids would take this? Do you think they would get over it? (Let me add that it was through our young son that his mother found her way to Christ. What a wonderful reward it would be for him to see that now his mother and father must seperate because of what he had done witnessing for Christ!)
Children in your case are like the innocent victims of a drive-by shooting. They didn't have anything to do with the situation they're in, but they're in it all the same.
In Ezra 10, there was a situation where many of the men of Israel had taken wives of the heathen nations around them. This was not lawful for them to do. (Nationality doesn't matter under the NT, but the scenario is similar.)
These men, in order to bring themselves back into line with God's word, said,
"Now therefore let us make a covenant with our God to put away all the wives, and such as are born of them, according to the counsel of my lord, and of those that tremble at the commandment of our God; and let it be done according to the law" (Ezra 10:3).
Then in 10:11, Ezra commands them to, "Make confession unto the LORD God of your fathers, and do his pleasure: and separate yourselves from the people of the land, and from the strange wives."
Finally in 10:44, we read, "All these had taken strange wives: and some of them had wives by whom they had children."
I'm not sure what to tell you about your children. (Man, I know this is hard.) Jesus said in Luke 14:26,
"If any man come to me, and hate not his father, and mother, and wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be my disciple."
Whatever can be said, Christ must come first.
Thirdly, we have not repented of this adultery, we are still living in adultery (according to your view), so are we condemned (have we lost our salvation) unless we repent of this marriage?
The sin of adultery, as well as all other sin, must be repented of in order to become a Christian in the first place. I cannot answer anything but, "Yes". I wish this was not the case.
I'm sorry for the situation you and your family are in. Any help I can offer is available. I'll be praying for you, my friend.
In Christ,
bmerr