What Does The Bible Say About Divorce And Abuse?
What does the Bible really teach about divorce?
I was being interviewed for what would be my first church pastorate, and I was nervous and unsure what to expect. The twelve deacons sat in a row in front of me and took turns asking questions, which I answered as clearly as I could. All went smoothly until they posed this question: “What is your position on divorce and remarriage? Would you remarry a divorcée or divorced man?”
I didn’t know if this was a trick question or an honest one. There might have been a deep-seated pastoral need behind it, or it might have been a test of my orthodoxy. Either way, I didn’t think I could summarize my view in one sentence. When I thought about it further, I couldn’t decide exactly what my view was. I gave a deliberately vague reply. “Every case should be judged on its own merits.”
People Needed Answers
It worked; I got the job. But I made a mental note to study the subject of divorce, and to do it quickly.
It’s a good thing I did. As it turned out, I was surrounded by people who needed answers to questions raised by divorce and remarriage. My Baptist church was located near an Anglican congregation and two Catholic churches. Divorced men and women from these congregations came asking if we would conduct their weddings, having been denied in their local churches. Then I found that some of my deacons had been divorced and remarried. Should I throw them out of church leadership? If I did, I would lose people I considered some of the most spiritual in the church. People with exemplary Christian homes and marriages.
Keywords: abuse, covenant, divorce, intimate partner violence, marriage, neglect, violence
What Does the Bible Say?
The New Testament presents a problem in understanding both what the text says about divorce and its pastoral implications. Jesus appears to say that divorce is allowed only if adultery has occurred. “Whoever divorces a wife, except for sexual indecency, and remarries, commits adultery” (Matt. 19:9). However, this has been interpreted in many different ways. Most say that Jesus allows divorce only for adultery. But some argue that Jesus originally didn’t allow even that. Only in Matthew does he offer an out from marriage: “except for sexual indecency.” Beyond what Jesus says, Paul also allows divorce. He permits it for abandonment by a nonbeliever (1 Cor. 7:12-15). Many theologians add this as a second ground for divorce.
Yet some pastors have found this teaching difficult to accept, because it seems so impractical. Even cruel in certain situations. It suggests there can be no divorce for physical or emotional abuse, and Paul even seems to forbid separation (1 Cor. 7:10).
What Do The Scriptures Really Say?
As a result, some Christians quietly ignore this seemingly “impractical” biblical teaching or find ways around it. For example, they suggest that when Jesus talked about “sexual immorality,” perhaps he included other things like abuse. Or when Paul talked about abandonment by a nonbeliever, perhaps he included any behavior that is not supportive of the marriage. Or perhaps abandonment by anyone who is acting like a nonbeliever. Many have welcomed such stretching of Scripture because they couldn’t accept what they believed the text apparently said.
But does the literal text mean what we think it does? While doing doctoral studies at Cambridge, I likely read every surviving writing of the rabbis of Jesus’ time. I “got inside their heads” enough to begin to understand them. When I began working as a pastor and was confronted almost immediately with divorced men and women who wanted to remarry, my first response was to re-read the Bible. I’d read the biblical texts on divorce many times in the past, but I found something strange as I did so again. They now said something I hadn’t heard before I read the rabbis!
‘Any Cause’ Divorce
The texts hadn’t changed, but my knowledge of the language and culture in which they were written had. I was now reading them like a first-century Jew would have read them, and this time those confusing passages made more sense. My book, Divorce and Remarriage in the Church (InterVarsity Press), is a summary of several academic papers and books I began writing with this new understanding of what Jesus taught.
One of my most dramatic findings concerns a question the Pharisees asked Jesus: “Is it lawful to divorce a wife for any cause?” (Matt. 19:3). This question reminded me that a few decades before Jesus, some rabbis (the Hillelites) had invented a new form of divorce called the “any cause” divorce. By the time of Jesus, this “any cause” divorce had become so popular that almost no one relied on the literal Old Testament grounds for divorce.
The “any cause” divorce was invented from a single word in Deuteronomy 24:1. Moses allowed divorce for “a cause of immorality,” or, more literally, “a thing of nakedness.” Most Jews recognized that this unusual phrase was talking about adultery. But the Hillelite rabbis wondered why Moses had added the word “thing” or “cause” when he only needed to use the word “immorality.” They decided this extra word implied another ground for divorce—divorce for “a cause.” They argued that anything, including a burnt meal or wrinkles not there when you married your wife, could be a cause! The text, they said, taught that divorce was allowed both for adultery and for “any cause.”
The Shammaites Disagreed
Another group of rabbis (the Shammaites) disagreed with this interpretation. They said Moses’ words were a single phrase that referred to no type of divorce “except immorality”—and therefore the new “any cause” divorces were invalid. These opposing views were well known to all first-century Jews. And the Pharisees wanted to know where Jesus stood. “Is it lawful to divorce your wife for any cause?” they asked. In other words: “Is it lawful for us to use the ‘any cause’ divorce?”
When Jesus answered with a resounding no, he wasn’t condemning “divorce for any cause,” but rather the newly invented “any cause” divorce. Jesus agreed firmly with the second group that the phrase didn’t mean divorce was allowable for “immorality” and for “any cause,” but that Deuteronomy 24:1 referred to no type of divorce “except immorality.”
Keywords: abuse, marriage, covenant, divorce, intimate partner violence, neglect, seperation, violence
The Meaning of “Any Cause” Divorce
This was a shocking statement for the crowd and for the disciples. It meant they couldn’t get a divorce whenever they wanted it—there had to be a lawful cause. It also meant that virtually every divorced man or women was not really divorced, because most of them had “any cause” divorces. Luke and Matthew summarized the whole debate in one sentence: Any divorced person who remarried was committing adultery (Matt. 5:32; Luke 16:18), because they were still married. The fact that they said “any divorced person” instead of “virtually all divorced people” is typical Jewish hyperbole—like Mark saying that “everyone” in Jerusalem came to be baptized by John (Mark 1:5). It may not be obvious to us, but their first readers understood clearly what they meant.
Within a few decades, however, no one understood these terms any more. Language often changes quickly (as I found out when my children first heard the Flintstones sing about “a gay old time”). The early church, and even Jewish rabbis, forgot what the “any cause” divorce was, because soon after the days of Jesus, it became the only type of divorce on offer. It was simply called divorce. This meant that when Jesus condemned “divorce for ‘any cause,’ ” later generations thought he meant “divorce for any cause.”
Reaffirming Marriage
Now that we know what Jesus did reject, we can also see what he didn’t reject. He wasn’t rejecting the Old Testament—he was rejecting a faulty Jewish interpretation of the Old Testament. He defended the true meaning of Deuteronomy 24:1. And there is one other surprising thing he didn’t reject: Jesus didn’t reject the other ground for divorce in the Old Testament, which all Jews accepted.
Although the church forgot the other cause for divorce, every Jew in Jesus’ day knew about Exodus 21:10-11, which allowed divorce for neglect. Before rabbis introduced the “any cause” divorce, this was probably the most common type. Exodus says that everyone, even a slave wife, had three rights within marriage—the rights to food, clothing, and love. If these were neglected, the wronged spouse had the right to seek freedom from that marriage. Even women could, and did, get divorces for neglect—though the man still had to write out the divorce certificate. Rabbis said he had to do it voluntarily, so if he resisted, the courts had him beaten till he volunteered!
These three rights became the basis of Jewish marriage vows—we find them listed in marriage certificates discovered near the Dead Sea. In later Jewish and Christian marriages, the language became more formal, such as “love, honor, and keep.” These vows, together with a vow of sexual faithfulness, have always been the basis for marriage. Thus, the vows we make when we marry correspond directly to the biblical grounds for divorce.
The Promise to Love, Honor and Keep
The three provisions of food, clothing, and love were understood literally by the Jews. The wife had to cook and sew, while the husband provided food and materials, or money. They both had to provide the emotional support of marital love, though they could abstain from sex for short periods. Paul taught the same thing. He said that married couples owed each other love (1 Cor. 7:3-5) and material support (1 Cor. 7:33-34). He didn’t say that neglect of these rights was the basis of divorce because he didn’t need to—it was stated on the marriage certificate. Anyone who was neglected, in terms of emotional support or physical support, could legally claim a divorce.
Divorce for neglect included divorce for abuse because this was extreme neglect. There was no question about that end of the spectrum of neglect, but what about the other end? What about abandonment, which was merely a kind of passive neglect? This was an uncertain matter, so Paul deals with it. He says to all believers that they may not abandon their partners, and if they have done so, they should return (1 Cor. 7:10-11). In the case of someone who is abandoned by an unbeliever—someone who won’t obey the command to return—he says that the abandoned person is “no longer bound.”
Anyone in first-century Palestine reading this phrase would think immediately of the wording at the end of all Jewish, and most Roman, divorce certificates: “You are free to marry anyone you wish.”
When is Divorce and Remarriage Allowed?
Putting all this together gives us a clear and consistent set of rules for divorce and remarriage. Divorce is only allowed for a limited number of grounds that are found in the Old Testament and affirmed in the New Testament:
- Adultery (in Deuteronomy 24:1, affirmed by Jesus in Matthew 19)
- Emotional and physical neglect (in Exodus 21:10-11, affirmed by Paul in 1 Corinthians 7)
- Abandonment and abuse (included in neglect, as affirmed in 1 Corinthians 7)
Jewish couples listed these biblical grounds for divorce in their marriage vows. We reiterate them as love, honor, and keep and be faithful to each other. When these vows were broken, it threatened to break up the marriage. As in any broken contract, the wronged party had the right to say, “I forgive you; let’s carry on,” or, “I can’t go on, because this marriage is broken.”
Therefore, while divorce should never happen, God allows it (and subsequent remarriage) when your partner breaks the marriage vows.
Reading the Bible and ancient Jewish documents side-by-side helped me understand much more of the Bible’s teaching about divorce and marriage, not all of which I can summarize here. Dusty scraps of parchment rescued from synagogue rubbish rooms, desert caves, and neglected scholarly collections shone fresh light on the New Testament. Theologians who have long felt that divorce should be allowed for abuse and abandonment may be vindicated. And, more importantly, victims of broken marriages can see that God’s law is both practical and loving.
David Instone-Brewer is senior research fellow in rabbinics and the New Testament at Tyndale House, Cambridge. He is married with two daughters.
Copyright © 2007 Christianity Today.
This is the most informed, easy to read and understand explanation of the Bible’s stance on divorce. Thank you!
You are welcome! Thank you for reading!
I am having a really difficult time understand still. I think I’m so devastated my brain can not comprehend. I’ve prayed about it over and over. I think I’m blocking my self from hearing what God is saying to me. My husband is an addict to pills and marijuana. He’s promised over and over to stop and goes back doing the he same thing. Is that grounds for divorce? The way I think on it is if I stay married God will bless me for faith I have in him to protect my children and me. On the other hand it is affecting my oldest child and myself tremendously. Please give me insight I feel like my inside are ripped apart and I just don’t know anything anymore.
Hi Holly. My name is Julie. My husband was also very addicted (morphine) and in spite of three rock bottoms (for me!), he refused help. He did become abusive. In fact, the very essence of continuing to use without getting help and seeing how it is affecting your family IS abusive. We did get divoced. I sought spiritual advice/care and all of the pastors at our church agreed that it was time for me to go and take the kids. We were no longer safe. Once we seperated, my husband encouraged divorce. He had still not made changes and paperwork became necessary as he was affecting the kids with his bad behavior. :-( Yes, this is a Biblical reason for divorce and seperation. You need to do what you need to do to protect you and your kiddos. Feel free to email me at julie@abuserecovery.org and please know that you are not alone. <3
How do I get enrolled in the Her Journey classes? Are they online?
Give us a call please so that we can help you. 503-846-9284 or 866-262-9284 :-)
Hello, this reading really helped me see that I’m doing the right thing with getting a divorce my husband is a meth addict he did get clean for three years but wasn’t sober from alcohol he ended up being physically abusive to me and our two oldest kids. Before that he was seeking love from other women while still getting love from me and I still stayed because I thought I could forgive and blame the drug use but once he got physically abusive then I completely broke and seeked love from anyone and virtually got that attention and praise from other men on the internet and left him I know I was in the wrong for my behavior, I need to seek a Christian group to help me grow closer to God and not lean on sinful natures please help me get into a group to help me recover since being separated and filing for sole custody and divorce I haven’t seeked any mans attention not only cause I know it’s wrong and still guilty of doing such acts before this point but I feel so unworthy and unclean from even beginning to think a new relationship can be formed for me I just want the Lord close to me and my three children please help me find a group of believers to grow in my faith and heal by the grace of God
Thanks for reading! Glad that you found it helpful. <3
My Christian husband’s abandoned me a year ago because I’m an alcoholic. I was a 29 year old widow when we married. From the honeymoon on he refused to have sex with me or share on any intimate level. I saw him watching homosexual porn throughout our 25 year marriage. Now, after not supporting me for a year he wants a divorce. I’m 57, in bad health with no skill or degree. I’m no longer in a homeless shelter but can’t afford an attorney. God save me!
This is sad. My former husband would work 12 hr shifts and play video games for 12 hrs per night. He also watches pornography and lies about it. He is alone when men are commanded the opposite to love his wife first and foremost. Men love their jobs, money, and materials more than people. They need to love their wife first and foremost.
That is so sad. I went through three marriages that porn was a part of. My mind was poisoned with porn for 15 years before totally relying on God to overcome it. Porn is a compulsive addiction that Satan uses to destroy men and families. It is surprising how many men in the church have problems or had problems with porn. This in largely due to most churches not preaching or teaching about it and sexuality. Today more than ever, there is a tsunami of LGBT and Hollywood anything is okay to add to confusion of even children as early as PreK. The videos and even TV ads. I have found freedom when I went to CR (Celebrate Recovery) that is a Christ centered group for dealing with addictions and sin that has a hold in one’s life.
Correction…. Christian husband not husband’s!
I have had a hard time coming to grips with all that in my heart ! I have been married for 33 years and My husband is a good provider in many ways ,but Because of the years of his addiction to porn the lying and pain of feeling that l was never enough, also trying to push me into swinging . I no longer am in pain over the rejection ,and I have come to know Jesus and that is enough for me! I don’t really have anything in common with him and I have tried to stay in the marriage but my heart has left him and I am only staying because of my family and financial support! And that is a sin in itself???Should I stay or should l go ??? Does years of porn pain give me the right to leave in Gods Eyes? And should I even though it might bring me to poverty? I feeling as though I will understand or really come to grips with what we created in this marriage! I really did love him at one point and I just can’t get back what once was !!! I have tried for a few years now
Kristy, we would love to talk to you more. Please give us a call at 503-846-9284. You are not alone. (Julie)
That is so sad. I went through three marriages that porn was a part of. My mind was poisoned with porn for 15 years before totally relying on God to overcome it. Porn is a compulsive addiction that Satan uses to destroy men and families. It is surprising how many men in the church have problems or had problems with porn. This in largely due to most churches not preaching or teaching about it and sexuality. Today more than ever, there is a tsunami of LGBT and Hollywood anything is okay to add to confusion of even children as early as PreK. The videos and even TV ads. I have found freedom when I went to CR (Celebrate Recovery) that is a Christ centered group for dealing with addictions and sin that has a hold in one’s life.
Kristy, you are not alone. I have been married 31 years and have finally decided enough is enough. I can’t live like this any more. The adultery porn gambling addiction. I deserve better for myself. I have finally started speaking my true. Hurts very much but feels really good at the same time. I have been a faithful wife and mother. He has not kept his vows to me. I feel if I don’t leave, I will turn into what he has become low character Manipulator , deceiver, cheater and a Thief. I don’t wanna be in that place in my life ever. We have two adult beautiful daughters that look up to me . I’m afraid I have stayed in this marriage to long and they see as weak for not leaving sooner but I was financially dependent on him and became numb to it all. I decided leaving is better than this reality, I know this is gonna be the hardest thing but I have to make a choice .. I have a choice. In the past I given up my choice, my Power !! I have to stop being resistant to what I know need to happen in my life to began to live again . It’s time for me to step into my blessings and favor. Freedom to me is not having no fear anymore .. fear of being single, being alone , less money , embarrassment , what everybody/family will say , my own guilt for staying . This pretending, make believe world I lived in is over ..
I was delusional thinking he would change he will honor our marriage we can make it work but time and time again too many times to remember it never happened.
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Thank you. Oh how I wish I had read this about 20 years ago. When I married my verbally abusive husband (19 & 20 yrs old) 40 years ago, there was nothing out there to warn me about the signs.
He was an introvert, but as the years went by, he changed. I walked on egg shells. I worked two jobs to stay away from home. I only told my best friend & after years of listening to me cry and not doing anything about it, I’m sure she was tired of lending her shoulder. But, I was scared that God would be so unhappy with me if I did not live up to my marriage vows. That my Christian witness would be damaged and cause hurt to those I had impacted for Jesus. I stayed and endured till I nearly suffered a mental breakdown. I had found a spiritual counselor at my friend’s church. She at least made me understand I needed to leave to protect my own mental health. I did. I left one afternoon, unplanned and I have not yet been back in that house. God did not strike me dead. In fact, he provided for me in so very many ways. It’s been over three years. I am still “rewiring my brain”. But I read this article yesterday and I finally feel like I was justified in leaving. Even though my friends and family have assured me I was justified. Seeing it explained with scripture just feels my heart with joy and relief. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
So glad it was helpful to you, Cindy. I know many of us wish the same. But for some reason, we were meant to see it now, not then. Prayers for you as you continue to navigate your healing. <3
Reading this post just underlined how I have been feeling. I have been walking on eggshells since day one of my marriage. He doesn’t financially support the home. I have to work nonstop trying to make enough to keep a roof over our heads. He is also emotionally abusive. I learned a few months ago that my young son has a learning difference that is the reasons for some of his problems in school. I started to recognize that his father, my husband also does have a mental health condition. But he refuses to acknowledge that he has a problem. I have been giving him grace, but I now realize I don’t have to cause myself to be destroyed for him. I have been wrestling with the feeling that I could not leave him because God would be displeased. But I am now coming to terms with the fact that this is abuse that I have been enduring for over a decade. I look at others and wonder what is so wrong with me that I deserve this treatment when all I wanted was a God-fearing husband to love me and have a family with.
I have been feeling that I have not prayed enough, that I am supposed to wait for God to change his heart. I’ve been feeling that if I gave up it would mean I don’t trust God, that I wasn’t not hearing from God when I married him, even though I prayed and thought I was making the right decision. I feel like a failure in many ways because I have also not finished school or done anything in my life since being in this stagnant life-sucking situation. A new friend, learning of my situation, has been trying to tell me that I don’t have to stay, that God is not pleased. After reading this article, I am beginning to feel ike maybe it is true. I am trying to plan on making changes this week. My situation is quite complex but I know God will see me through. Thank you for sharing.
You do not deserve the abuse. I remember feeling that way as well. Please know that it is not your fault that he is choosing these behaviors. I hope that you consider giving us a call as we have resources for you. Thanks for visiting and reading.
Thank you for sharing your study and insights on divorce.
I’m currently struggling with a marriage that is emotionally and physically abusive. Problems started before married, tried to call it off and ended up same day with domestic battery charge against me. She lied to the police and they did nothing to make her leave my house and overlooked what she had done. They believed her story what she told them later and arrested me, took me to jail, etc. I married her thinking I will prove my point that im not the violent man she claims and things could be worked out. The case was dismissed as there was no evidence for what she claimed I did. Now, I’m stuck, being manipulated and used as a meal ticket. I’m being made to feel that I can’t divorce her as being told God hates divorce. I was charged a 2nd time too that was dismissed as well. She is a Christian and claims I’m the one not following God. I continually told and called names like Narracisst, bipolar, split personality, and other names ill not publish here. She throws things at me and pop, etc on me when mad, breaks things in the house. It is taking a toll on my mental health, we have done 2 plus years counseling even before married, I voluntarily did 1.5 years of violence prevention program. Tried to divorce and she drug it out with lawyers. I’m thinking peace of mind and not going to jail for something she makes up again may be worth finishing getting a divorce.
Can someone please help me understand if my husband is right on divorcing me. I took a part time job after my husband removed me from credit cards, bank accounts etc. He stopped buying us groceries. We have an 8 year old. After 3 weeks of me working he said I either quit working and sign a post nuptials agreement saying I give up all my rights to community property. I told him I would be willing to sign if I keep my job. So he said no. So I said then I won’t quit my job. After 4 weeks of my working he filled for divorce because he said that by me working..I’m being unfaithful to him and God and he won’t be married to someone who commits infidelity. Am I really committing infidelity by working? I’m just a bookkeeper. Please help me clarify. Is my husband right?
Working is never infidelity. Working does not equal unfaithfulness. Your husband is being abusive. Please consider taking our free Her Journey classes. They are SO very helpful and will help you tremendously as you process and heal this issue of abuse in your marriage. You are not alone and you are worthy of so much more. Please call us M-F, 8-5 Pacific Time Zone. These free clsses will truly help you with these questions and much more.
My husband and I have been married for 11 years and have 3 young children. We love each other (I think) but we never get along. He is verbally abusive during arguments he calls me names, puts me down and threatens me. He also is very controlling. He took all of our money out of savings and says he’s “saving fir us by investing etc” but when we are in arguments he says “you will never see that money” which sadly I know if we divorced us true. Anyway I need some advice. I have stayed with him because I love him and don’t want to let my kids down, but at the same time it can’t be good for them to hear us fighting all the time. Mentally I am exhausted. Do you think this is grounds for divorce?
Hi Frances. Please give our office a call M-F from 8-5pm, Pacific time. We would love to chat with you. We have a free class called “Her Journey” that will really help you decide the path that God wants for you and yours. Each woman’s jouney is different and we would like to offer you that resource, as well as pray for you. I was also in that situation and the HJ class was truly lifesaving for me and my children. It brought me peace, validation and eventually also the path that I needed to take. -ARMS team
hello. my husband and i have been married for 20 years. Always we are figthing and arguing to evertything.We have a boy who is 7 and has tdha, which requieres a lot of atenttion. I have condsiderer divorce altough he refuse it.. We are pastor for 12 years and it has most difficult to me make the decision. He is emotional abusive and onces he hited me.
His behave is violent but in front of others he seems so kind and generous, helping others…
I dont find how deal with him, Im suffer from anxiety and depression. I cant take the decision to divorce him,, but i wish did it, not only for me but also my son..
What do you recommend? SOrry if my english is not clear..
Please give us a call. Our free Her Journey groups would be very helpful for you as you determine your journey forward. We are open M-F, 8-5pm Pacific Time.
Hello! Thank you for sharing this article. I have been in a 3-year separation from my husband as I was told his ongoing porn, drug, and verbal abuse was not grounds for me to divorce. Separated I was told was ok in which I was suggested to see one year of change before having my husband move back in. It has now been 3 years and I found out he has now gone to a strip club a few times. When I got upset after learning this, he asked me where my accountability was as if I were to be sexually submissive to him then he would not have to go to a strip club. He says he wants to be with me and that he will change if he can move back in with me. Yet he only changes for a month to where he holds everything in and then starts to get angry which results in going back to the things he has been doing for the past 3 years. Even before we separated he has struggled with drugs and porn addiction on and off during our 25 years of marriage. For the last five years, it turned into verbal abuse as he would get so angry at me due to the mental health disorder I ended up developing. He could not cope with my OCD and anxiety and would tell me that maybe I was not a Christian due to my anxiety. He began to tear me down to where I became suicidal. I finally began therapy and was getting better. I was blossoming and feeling more confident which he did not like. He kept telling me that I didn’t need him anymore or love him. He became controlling of me and my time. Before we separated he withheld finances from me by taking my name off our bank acct and also canceled my health ins. This is when the verbal abuse became so bad that a few times he got physical. This is when we separated 3 years ago. I just don’t know what to do. I just don’t know how we can be together after being separated this long. I am struggling with hurt and trust issues now.
I am so very sorry for your pain. I have been there as well. You are doing what you need to do and we encourage you to stay on the path of remaining abuse free! I would encourage you to check out our free Her Journey classes as they bring so much healing to thousands of women. You can heal and there is hope. Thanks for sharing with us.
What if the wife neglected the husband for years, emotionally due to depression and anxiety (not physically) so he has an affair. She sees her sin and prays for forgiveness from the Lord and her husband. She loves him with her whole heart and hasn’t neglected him for months. Yet he continued with the affair. He went back and forth between the two. but finally returned to the wife. He feels justified in the affair and doesn’t feel that he sinned. Was he justified?
Infidelity is never justified, but yes, very common when there is abuse or neglect in the home. We do that in order to release the incredible tension at home. If she sees her sin and has prayed for forgiveness, I bet she feels that regret and understands her part in it. And if he does not, then that is hard-because it is between Him and God. God will convict him of His own actions/response as he draws back to the Lord and he will see his part…we will pray that there is understanding and repentance. Sin is never justified but yes, we are human and Satan will intentionally target us with our weaknesses. Sounds like healing is needed to get you both to the next step. We cannot convict other people, we can only love them and continue to pray as the Holy Spirit works in their lives. It is HIS job to convict. I’ve had personal experience in this situation. Please feel free to send me an email at julie@abuserecovery.org
Hi, I’m 64 I live with my husband for 4 1/2 years before we decided that it was time to do it right before God . I had redecated my life back to Christ and I didn’t want to continue to live in fornication. We got married in September of 1992 we been through a lot I gave my heart to this person . I laid my life on the line to give this man a child and God covered and took me through the surgery that I could give him a child a male child to carry on his seed.we begin drifting apart after I had our son be I went through postpartum after having our son and having to have a total hysterectomya year later.he began to work out of town a lot leaving me to take care of our son along.after our so turn 3 I had to go back to work because of financial reasons .plus I had 3 other childrens before we got married by previous marriages,both which was committed Adultery,mental,and physically abused,drugs first marriage at age 15 2 of my oldest kids for 10 years .second marriage the same abuse I had 1 child with him he is deceased.and I have bee married to my husband how for 24 years separated 4years he abandoned me and his son twice in 2013 and I allowed him to come back to try and work through things he came back sick he had prostate cancer and I was their for him thinking maybe this will be his wake up not he left this third time in 2018 and we haven’t been back together.his only reason that he every given me was a peace of mind.and we have talked and I asked him have he found his peace of mind he said know he has only wanted to see me for sex never giving a heartfelt felt apology nor forgiveness on his behalf to me nor his son. an out of the blue he texted and said he needed to talk with me about something really important.,he wants a divorce got them in the mail on today. I don’t know if this is a sign from God to let go and move own with my life my childrens and grandchild’s have be devastated by this he was a deacon in church for years he’s 61 years of age and he have let the devil bewitched him in thinking the grass is greener on the other side. I’m on social security and still having to pay a mortgage that when he left he was 3 months behind on. I’m hurt ,angry to think he would do me like this I was faithful to him never step out on him in any way.he have not supported me nor reached out to see if I need help he has retired got his full retirement and have offered me anything. Im just devastated what I should do spiritually.please give me your wisdom of advice.
Hi Thelma. So very sorry for your pain. We do find that sometimes our spouses make decisions that we may or may not agree with. Occasioanally this is also God making a move when we have been unable to do so. I encourage you to seek some counseling and some groups. We have a list of counselors and coaches here on the site under RESOURCES. I would also highly recommend our free, “Her Journey” classes for you. They are extremely healing and I believe would help you tremendously. Please give us a call M-F, 8-5 Pacific time at 503-846-9284. Praying for you.
And haven’t offered me anything for his retirement
It’s a wonderful, priceless pearl of wisdom. I appreciate you waiting until now to provide us this crucial information. Let’s continue to be informed in this way.
i am still confused. my husband drinks heavly and doesnt spend much time with me i feel like i am falling out of love for him. i do care about him but i cant live like this anymore so could i file for divorce without sinning
Almost thou hast persuaded me! I’ve always struggled with this subject of divorce & especially remarriage. I was taught that divorce was allowed for adultry only, and remarriage was only allowed in a case of a spouses infidelity & only for the innocent party. This article has almost convinced me that divorce is acceptable for the “just causes ” mentioned like abuse & abandonment. HOWEVER, the article does not address the subject of a biblically approved remarriage! It’s my understanding that a person is not allowed to remarry if the divorce was not for adultery. They must remain single or they are committing adultery themselves. Please respond with book chapter & verse to support your answer! TY & God bless.
We want to point out that we are not the authors of this article. However, we are experts in the DV field and we do believe that if a divorce is Biblical, then it is Biblical to get remarried. However, not all may agree with us. :-) We encourage you to seek several people who you trust spiritually to get their thoughts and to spend time in prayer. We will also pray that God speaks to you about this. Here is another article to pursue: https://myonlycomfort.com/2015/04/16/2015-god-hates-divorce/
Hi I am very impressed with the incite on divorce but I still need an answer to whether one can remarry while your husband or ex husband is still alive
We want to point out that we are not the authors of this article. However, we are experts in the DV field and we do believe that if a divorce is Biblical, then it is Biblical to get remarried. However, not all may agree with us. :-) We encourage you to seek several people who you trust spiritually to get their thoughts and to spend time in prayer. We will also pray that God speaks to you about this. Here is another article to pursue: https://myonlycomfort.com/2015/04/16/2015-god-hates-divorce/
This is a very well thought out, and clearly summarized explanation of biblical divorce and remarriage. Very helpful.
Thanks for reading and for your thoughts, Marilyn. :-)
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I divorce my husband cause of use of crack cocaine ,abuse ,tried to kill me by putting broken glass in my food now he is in church as a rev now he telling me we are still married in gods eyes im still his wife now a few months ago he was gonna get married now he broke it off please tell me i did the right thing about leaving him alone and i have the right to divorce him in gods eyes i feel he his punishing me to think i’m sinning for not waiting to be back with him
Hello,
I have read most of the stories here and I really don’t know where to start as regards marriage. Seriously considering divorce because of abandonment, betrayals, Adultery, Abuse but verbal and emotional. I have been financially cut off and left on my own. Everyone around me because of our faith feels I should still remain but I feel stuck, unappreciated and I have lost all affection towards my spouse. All this is affecting our son because we quarrel even in front of him which I am not ok with. He talks to me anyhow and to anyone that cares to listen. Always seeing faults and picking quarrels, never forget the past and will not move on because he doesn’t forgive. The least is endless. This is very painful for me but I need my sanity and I need to grow in my faith with God. Any advice or group to heal from all these would help. I have tried to stay but it’s not working hence my decision to divorce which is hard but necessary at this point because even him , he is tired and was attempting to take our son away and the only way I can stop him is through legal means
Hi Jennifer, we understand how confusing it all is. Many of us have been there. Have you joined a Her Journey group yet? They are free and truly did save my life, as well as many others. Please give us a call at 503-846-9284 for times and locations (they are nationwide and also on Zoom). I believe this group would be very helpful for you. Praying for you.
Thank you for the article. It gave me some really good insight and understanding. I’ve been with my husband for almost 22 years. Married almost 15 years. We have two daughters together. Our oldest is almost 18 years old and our youngest will be 14. Both daughters are from my husband. My husband and I have a long history we’ve known each other since fourth grade and dated in sixth grade for three months then he broke up with me. In my high school years, me and my mom moved to another district so I started going to a different school after I graduated I got a job and to my surprise my now husband worked there. We went after each other out of lust. And we have been together ever since. In The beginning of us getting back together we had broken up five different times. I was the one that ended them every single time and the last time it ended because I was viewing my life and how it was going to be and I didn’t want it to end up being like that forever. He was an alcoholic and a video game addict and that was our life every single day while I was neglected. I told him I could not do this anymore, and that it was final that I was completely done. At that point, I could clearly see where my life was headed if I stayed.
I ended up moving in with my mom. I told him to never come over that we were done. I had truly made up my mind. But he ended up knocking on my mom’s door the very next day asking me back telling me that he was going to change. That he also had changed his mind about not wanting kids and now wanted to make a family. At that point, I was not convinced but felt completely trapped. A year later we had our first child. Nothing changed on his part. We then had our second child 3 1/2 years later. Still no change on his part. Yes he was providing our necessities but that was it. We then moved 3 years later. He always stayed in our basement everyday after work and played video games all night and drank liquor. This went on for 5-6 years. I have always felt like a single parent. In some aspects I still feel like a single parent to this day. He has had and still struggles with narcissistic tendencies.
I gave my life to Christ in 2018 he gave his life to Christ in 2020. In 2021 the day after my birthday he went insane. Telling me and our daughters to tell him that he is God. He was extremely aggressive in his tone and was hallucinating. He even unwelcoming walked in to the neighbors home and sat on their couch..they ended up calling 911. He then went away for 10 days to get medical treatment. This out burst happened again 7 months later.. less intense.. but he was telling me to make the voices in his head to stop. He went away for another 10 days. They classified him with bipolar 2 with psychotic behavior and put him on medication. Here we are in 2024…he told me that his psych meds, and anti-anxiety medicine are the only thing that is keeping him out of the hospital. Me and my husband have an estranged relationship as well with him and his daughters. Our oldest told her dad how she has felt abandoned by him about three weeks ago.. he basically dismissed her and felt she had no right to bring that up. He the past is the past. So now my daughters father wound is still open. Our youngest basically surpresses her hurt and does not talk about it. I’m at a loss. Our home has been and is falling apart. There has been Christian men that have tried to help him for many years but my husband does not use any of the tools given to him. Any Christ like advice would greatly be appreciated.
So sorry you have been through all of that. We would be very happy to talk with you more, and pray with you as well. Please give us a call at 503-846-9284. We are open M-F 8-5, Pacific Time. We look forward to speaking with you more. <3
Hi. My sister has been invoked in a 10 year long relationship of horrible physical, verbal, emotional, and psychological abuse. Through the years, he convinced her and tried to convince my family he was “changed” and had found the Lord. Since we have no control over her free will, they got married. Shortly after, he beat her so bad she was admitted to the hospital, and we were called – not on purpose. We find she had been admitted multiple times before, but nobody told us. She did not want to leave him. She was in an abusive relationship cycle. He was manipulating her, separated her from family and friends. One day he takes it too far and she left. Fast forward, they separate and she stays with us for a while. He does not reach out to apologize, but to try to convince her he is fine and it wouldn’t happen again. She sought Christian Counceling and decided to divorce him. Our family was so happy my sister was safe. This man was not a good man, though he claimed to be a Christ follower. He was an alcoholic with extreme anger issues- for many, many years. Fast forward to today- I find out on accident that my sister is now trying to reconcile with him. She claims he has repented and is on medication, and they are in Counceling. She is sending me scriptures from the Bible on how man and wife should not divorce. I’ve read so many of them. I’m struggling so much to figure out if this is right or not. She claims that it is her obligation to reconcile with him, since he has repented. Is this true? I would think that God would not want such a marriage to continue. Everyone must repent, yes. But why does that mean she must get back with him? Please help provide clarity. We are all at a loss and so extremely worried for her safety. This is not the first time he has claimed repentance.
No one is required to go back when the marriage vows have been broken. God says to look for true fruit and that takes time. Much time. Feel free to ask her to give us a call at 503-846-9284. I believe our programs would truly help her.
Very helpful information
All based in bible ,I read it .
I’ll share it to others
Thanks for sharing. We appreciate it.