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Thinking about it a little more, Matthew 5:32 makes little sense the way you (and the SAB, it would seem) are interpreting it. Without the exception, it basically says if a man divorces his wife he causes her to become an adulterer. So, when you throw the exception in there it says if a man divorces his wife, unless she was unfaithful, causes her to be an adulterer. But if she was unfaithful, wouldn't she already be an adulterer?
That is precisely what I was going to point out. The exception clause can very easily be seen as pertaining to whether or not the husband is causing the wife to be an adulteress by divorcing her. As such, Matthew 5:32 doesn't necessarily mean that divorce is fine and dandy if the wife has committed adultery, but may just be indicating whether or not the husband is responsible for the wife pursuing another man.
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So, maybe it means if HE was unfaithful then he woudn't be causing her to be an adulterer if he divorced her?
This part doesn't make sense. If he was unfaithful but she wasn't, and then he divorced her, causing her to need to remarry for sustenance, then why wouldn't he be responsible for her pursuit of another man? I think that the exception clause pertains only to the wife, not the husband (at least in its specificity in the text).
"As for the truth, it seems like we just pick a theory." -- Emily Saliers of Indigo Girls
