1 Corinthiens 7:39

39 Une femme est liée aussi longtemps que son mari est vivant; mais si le mari meurt, elle est libre de se marier à qui elle veut; seulement, que ce soit dans le Seigneur.

1 Corinthiens 7:39 Meaning and Commentary

1 Corinthians 7:39

The wife is bound by the law as long as her husband liveth,
&c.] That is, she is bound to her husband, by the law of marriage, during his life; nor can the bond of marriage between them be dissolved but by the death of one of them, except in the cases of adultery, and wilful desertion, see ( Romans 7:2 Romans 7:3 ) .

But if her husband be dead;
or "asleep", for so the word may be rendered; though it designs death: death is often expressed by sleeping in Scripture; for the dead will not always remain in such a state, but be raised from thence at the last day, just as persons are awaked out of sleep. The Alexandrian copy reads (apoyanh) , "dead"; and so seems the Ethiopic version to have read.

She is at liberty to marry whom she will:
so that second marriages are lawful, though condemned by many of the ancients: the liberty of a widow is greater than that of a virgin, because a virgin is under the power, and at the dispose of her parents; but a widow is at her own dispose; and death having dissolved her former obligation, she is at entire liberty to marry, or not marry, and to marry whom she pleases, that is not forbidden by the laws of God:

only in the Lord;
not that it is absolutely necessary that her husband should be in the Lord, a converted person, a believer in Christ; though such an one should be most desirable and eligible: but either that she should continue in the possession of her faith in Christ, and not relinquish it for the sake of an husband; or that she enter into this state in the fear of the Lord, calling upon him, and consulting him in such an important affair; and take care that whom she marries is not within the line prohibited by the Lord.

1 Corinthiens 7:39 In-Context

37 Mais celui qui a pris une ferme résolution, sans contrainte et avec l'exercice de sa propre volonté, et qui a décidé en son coeur de garder sa fille vierge, celui-là fait bien.
38 Ainsi, celui qui marie sa fille fait bien, et celui qui ne la marie pas fait mieux.
39 Une femme est liée aussi longtemps que son mari est vivant; mais si le mari meurt, elle est libre de se marier à qui elle veut; seulement, que ce soit dans le Seigneur.
40 Elle est plus heureuse, néanmoins, si elle demeure comme elle est, suivant mon avis. Et moi aussi, je crois avoir l'Esprit de Dieu.
The Louis Segond 1910 is in the public domain.