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First Q: In Matthew 5:32, Jesus says that divorce is permissible when the wife is guilty of fornication. But what if the husband is unfaithful?
A: The text (here in Matthew) does not say. But if one brings Galatians 3:28 into the equation, the result is that an adulterous husband is likewise liable to be divorced.
As far as I can tell, in Galatians 3:28, Paul is simply saying anyone can be part of the kingdom of god as long as they have faith in Jesus, even non-Jews, slaves, and women. But that doesn't necessarily mean that Paul thought women were equal to men or that rules weren't different for men and women (See 1 Corinthians 11:7-9, Ephesians 5:22-23, 1 Timothy 2:11-12 for a few examples). So, I would not conclude that Galatians 3:28 implies that rules found in other scriptures that are gender specific automatically apply to both.
In contrast Mark's version of this rule (Mark 10:11-12) is not sexist. It addresses the cases of men divorcing their wives and women divorcing their husbands identically.
Why the difference? Here is one take on it...
www.biblicalperspectives.com/books/marriage/4.html
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Mark mentions the possibility of a woman divorcing her husband (Mark 10:12) because that was common in the Graeco-Roman world. Matthew omits that part of Jesus teaching because Jewish law made no allowance for a woman to divorce her husband. It is evident, then, that each gospel writer selectively recorded those elements of Jesus teaching that would apply to his Christian community.
This makes me wonder, why would the word of god be dependent on its audience? Why wouldn't it be universal?
