Abuse Violates God’s Covenant Marriage

Spiritual abuse is any attempt to exert power and control over someone using religion, faith, or beliefs, which is never more true than when scripture is misused or falsely applied to coerce an abuse victim to remain in an abusive marriage “at the risk of being condemned by God and shunned by the church.
 
While this might seem farfetched, countless abuse victims encounter spiritual abuse daily within and without the church, and are coerced by false and abuser friendly theology to remain in an abusive marriage — “or suffer the consequences of disobeying God,” according to their spiritual abusers. For the untold number of abuse victims who have been spiritually abused, and Christians who have been led to believe that God’s marriage covenant tolerates abuse, prohibits abuse victims from either divorcing an abuser or remarrying after escaping from an abusive relationship, you deserve the truth. 
 
God created the marriage covenant for His good purpose, and we, His children, are the beneficiaries. God’s good purpose for marriage is love, a love so profound that God tells us it embodies the love that Christ has for the church (Ephesians 5:25-30). Abuse is the enemy of the marriage covenant and it’s root, hatred, is the spiritual equivalent of murder (1 John 3:15). Mankind, some being religious wolves, has historically, biblically and intentionally distorted the purpose of covenant marriage, and converted God’s purpose — to love like Christ loved the church, into a Godless agreement responsible for tolerating any behavior including behavior that rejects Christ (Ephesians 5:21), rebels against God (Romans 1:28-32), and defiles God’s marriage covenant agreement (Ephesians 5:32-33).
 
I pray every Christian hears and shares this truth…”God is not a man, that He should lie, or a son of man, that He should change His mind. Does He speak and not act? Does He promise and not fulfill?” (Numbers 23:19). The religious lies and false teaching that surround marriage, divorce and remarriage are often promoted by the same religious blind guides that delight in telling an abuse victim that “God hates divorce“…but conveniently, and falsely, loves the destruction of His child at the hands of a depraved imposter masquerading as a spouse.
 
These same blind religious guides treat God’s covenant marriage as a religious institution rather than God’s commandment to love as Christ loves the church. This toxic theology exalts the institution of marriage above God’s purpose and the soul of the people in the marriage — creating an idol out of marriage. Conveniently, this “man-ufactured” theology also gives husbands false, sovereign power over the mind, body and spirit of wives. When the Bible is read, or taught, from the diabolical perspective of husbands owning wives as opposed to husbands agreeing to love wives as Christ loves the church, covenant marriage is corrupted and distorted.
 
Abuse victims are abused by several false applications of scripture and abuser friendly theologies, chief among which are wedding vows, “God hates divorce” and adultery is the only biblical grounds for divorce.
 
Marriage vows don’t establish the biblical marriage covenant agreement, marriage vows don’t determine who God joins together and marriage vows don’t come from God…they are man-made, created in the 1500’s by religious men as a ritual for people who married in the church building. “The wedding vows as we know them originated in what is known as the Book of Common Prayer (BCP,) a liturgical book used by the churches of the Anglican Communion. Originally published in 1549 under what then was the Church of England, during the reign of Edward VI, the BCP was written by Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury — although it was followed soon thereafter by edited versions just a few years later.” For more on the origin of wedding vows click here.
 
Man created a church ritual, wedding vows, then told the unsuspecting that God created them, and that lie was told big enough and long enough that God’s people believed it…for what purpose? Get ready for it…Religion. Religion wanted the power to decide who could and couldn’t get married — to keep their religious denominations pure. In other words, a church member couldn’t get married to someone outside of their religion, they couldn’t get married outside of the church building, and they couldn’t be joined together by God unless they married in the church and used the man-made wedding vows. It’s that simple. I’m not saying wedding vows are inherently evil, I’m saying they are not used exclusively by Christians or believers, they do not bypass God joining His child together and they don’t establish a marriage covenant agreement…God’s examination of the heart and the mind does.
 
Many today believe that they are joined together by God because they exchanged wedding vows with a monster. This isn’t biblical, it’s a lie. God joins hearts together in marriage that He has examined and deemed qualified for His purpose — to love like Christ loved the church: “I the LORD search the heart and examine the mind, to reward each person according to their conduct, according to what their deeds deserve” (Jeremiah 17:10). God has never examined the heart of a wicked, deceptive, abusive malignant narcissist hell bent on destruction and joined them together with His child…that would make God a liar: “For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future” (Jeremiah 29:11). A monster masquerading as a covenant mate is not a God ordained covenant mate…they are a mistake. And when we make a mistake, God makes a way for our escape (1 Corinthians 10:13).
 
Anytime man creates anything that gives man power to play God, or spiritually bypass God’s marriage covenant agreement and purpose, you can be sure that there will be false teaching that follows to support it…and marriage, divorce and remarriage is no exception. The bible, when properly translated, does not say, “God hates divorce.” In fact, this scripture is often grossly misused and abused. In context, God said he hated the filthy, unfaithful religious men who were doing violence to the ones they were supposed to love by using divorce to throw their God ordained wives away to have affairs: “…The man who hates and divorces his wife,” says the Lord, the God of Israel, “does violence to the one he should protect,” says the Lord Almighty” (Malachi 2:11-16, NIV)…which agrees with God’s hatred of evil and violence being perpetrated against His child by anyone including a spouse (Psalm 11:5, Psalm 82:2-4).
 
Just as false, adultery is not the only biblical grounds for divorce. Abandonment, physical or behavioral, is also biblical grounds for divorce (1 Corinthians 7:15). Jesus spoke of divorce to the same religious men who God spoke to in Malachi 2:11-16, and He was rebuking their use of divorce for their for fleshly reasons. Jesus’ focus was on their corrupt use of divorce, not the only cause for divorce (Matthew Ch. 5, Ch. 19).  Biblical grounds for divorce means that God’s child was betrayed in a marriage relationship protected by God’s covenant agreement to love…love as God defines love (1 Corinthians 13:4-8). Divorce doesn’t end a marriage that violates God’s marriage covenant, treason and betrayal does. Legal divorce is God’s divine justice for the injured spouse (Romans 13:4), and restores the legal status of single. Restoration of divine and legal rights as a single person gives you biblical authority to remarry…biblical divorce restores the rights of a single person by nullifying the marriage covenant agreement broken by treason and betrayal.
 
If you are sitting in a destructive marriage believing a lie that keeps you bound or you are struggling to walk in your freedom from a destructive marriage because of the lies you’ve been told…trust this: if anyone tells you otherwise or disagrees with God’s truth about covenant marriage, they are a liar: “…let God be true but every man a liar. As it is written: “That You may be justified in Your words, And may overcome when You are judged” (Romans 3:4).
 
“How long will you defend the unjust and show partiality to the wicked? Defend the weak and the fatherless; uphold the cause of the poor and the oppressed. Rescue the weak and the needy; deliver them from the hand of the wicked” (Psalm 82:2-4)

Is it ever safe to go back to or reconcile with an abusive spouse?

The short answer is no, the long answer is, it depends

Disclaimer: Returning to a physically violent or actively abusive relationship is never recommended. 

While some might say returning to or reconciling with an abusive spouse should never be considered, many abuse victims have or will consider reconciling with their abuser. Statistically speaking, an abuse victim returns to an abusive relationship on average 7 times…with the promise and hope of the abuser changing. There’s no shame in wanting or hoping or believing someone will change…someone who has every reason to change and should have every reason to be remorseful and repentant. But the reality is, the chances of a malignant abuser changing, long-term, are extremely low. Understanding the realities and conditions that either support or predict successful reconciliation are critical for navigating this complex issue.

There are at least three major factors that determine if reconciliation should even be considered and the likelihood of success:

  1. Trauma Recovery 
  2. Personal Agency
  3. Durable Apology

We can’t sugarcoat the truth about reconciling with an abuser. Abuse is not only behavior, it’s a mentality — a years practiced, deeply ingrained dysfunctional and depraved mentality or style of relating. I’m going to start with Durable Apology because reconciliation is most often considered as the result of an abuser’s apology, or more often than not an “apolo–lie” — a fake, insincere or impermanent apology. The first and most important step to determine if reconciliation should even be considered — all things being equal, is if the abuser’s apology is durable. Let’s be clear, an abuser is no stranger to the game of manipulating emotions for selfish gain — an apology without change is nothing more than manipulation.

I know there are some who will tell you, uninformed churches included, “an abuser can change overnight,” but let me tell you the truth: that’s a lie, a half-truth — if it’s true at all. At best, the overnight was over years and with intensive work on the part of the abuser — supported by a genuinely repentant heart. Yes, the apology can seem remorse filled, genuine sounding and maybe even sincere in the moment but a durable apology requires work — work to address and treat the underlying emotional and mental dysfunction that drive the abuser’s dysfunctional and destructive style of relating.

For clarity, spousal abuse is not a marriage problem, abuse is a behavioral problem that the abuser, not the marriage, is 100% responsible for. Marriage counseling is not for an abusive relationship, and will serve no beneficial purpose other than empowering the abuser to believe that the injured spouse is at least partly or jointly responsible for their abusive behavior. The abuser’s work is not “joint or marriage counseling work,” the abuser’s work is individual work to address their abusive behavior.

I don’t care if they claim they’ve found Jesus, I don’t care if the whole church prayed and laid hands on them, and I don’t care if they believe they’ve changed, an abusive mentality cannot be “fixed” by the abuser apologizing — healing from an abusive mentality takes intensive, long-term work. How long? For as long as it takes, and then a lifetime of commitment to resisting any temptation to slip back into old, familiar ways. And let me make this clear…neither the church or the church pastor are trained psychological professionals, 99% of the time, and therefore they are not resources for an abuser’s psychological work. Spiritual support, yes, but not the psychological support the abuser needs and must obtain.

Deliverance is instant but healing takes time, commitment and work to understand, unlearn and heal the root causes of the abusive mentality.

A durable apology is based on their proactive, unforced participation in the required work, intensive psychological work, with a trained professionals to address their emotionally dysfunctional and abusive mentality, as well as the self-inflicted damage that practicing depraved indifference causes. If an apology is not paired with or accompanied by genuine repentance evidenced by the abuser doing the work, it will not and cannot be durable…it will be short-lived and simply be an invitation to reenlist for another round of abuse.

This leads us to the often overlooked but unavoidable truth: an abuser’s apology does not instantly or magically heal the victim from the mental, emotional, spiritual and physical trauma caused by the abusive relationship. In most cases, trauma recovery hasn’t even begun and/or the victim hasn’t had the time or the ability to fully process their post-traumatic stress. 

Reconciliation without healing or consideration for the unhealed trauma will have less than favorable results. The body keeps the score, and without healing or without the safety, patience and space to heal, premature reconciliation can have an adverse reaction. They are aren’t healed and you aren’t healed, therefore a victim cannot feel safe within her own body because the environment is not safe — due to the abuser’s unhealed, unresolved inner conflict. Without healing, the abuser is subject to relapse or return to their old ways, which results in the environmental safety being predictably unpredictable. Unpredictability undermines safety, and environmental safety is a requirement for a victim recovering from relational trauma.

The love language for an abuse victim is safety. Safety isn’t created by an apology, and creating safety is not an overnight process — internally or externally. Without safety, healing is next to impossible. Trauma triggers, traumatic memories, trust issues and hypervigilance cannot be regulated in an unsafe environment and without a victim feeling safe within their own body. The reconciliation that disregards this truth is more than likely attempting to bypass the victims trauma and rush into “normalcy.” The reality is, unless or until the victim is able to feel safe in the environment, feeling safe in their body is impossible. This takes time, and unless an abuser can create and sustain environmental safety and, has the patience, the empathy and the compassion to allow the victim space and time to heal, the reconciliation will more than likely retraumatize the victim. 

The victim’s safety is also largely dependent on the victim’s personal agency, which creates and supports a balance of power. Reconciliation cannot mean business as usual or going back to the way things were, as far as the victim’s personal agency is concerned. Abuse relies on an imbalance of power to coerce and control. A victim’s personal agency, or lack thereof, undermines safety, stability and a balance of power. 

Personal agency means the victim has the authority and the ability to make decisions for their safety and wellbeing, and to expect personal boundaries to be respected without fear of retaliation, tantrums, punishment or threat. Without personal agency, a victim is not safe and the reconciliation is nothing more than an invitation to sign up for another tour of duty in the abuser’s war.

The absence of any one of the three major factors — Trauma Recovery, Personal Agency or Durable Apology, is an absolute red flag and a recipe for disaster. Prayer and faith are important parts of the equation but be not deceived, faith — and apologies, without works is dead (James 2:14-26). Applying these three factors will also help to identify the motive or an unhealthy motive for reconciliation. A reconciliation that does not start from the foundation up and is not motivated by these three factors — at a minimum, is highly unlikely to be either healthy or in the best interests of the victim.

For additional resources and support for an abusive relationship, visit the Recommended Reading/FAQ’s on our Resources Page. For information about the heart of God for abuse victims and biblical clarity regarding divorce from an abuser, Click Here.