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  • When Is it Really Time to Get a Divorce?

    When Is it Really Time to Get a Divorce?

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    Some Bible versions simply say, “God hates divorce!” While other translations do a better job explaining what God was meaning. “‘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” (NIV; Emphasis mine).

    God hates divorce is not the end of this divorce discussion. It doesn’t give us enough information or any context behind why God is saying this. And it certainly doesn’t tell us when it’s time for a person to divorce, so it should not be the only verse that is looked at when considering a divorce.

    When a Christian is contemplating a divorce, what are we to do with such a message? Many times there is no clear answer about when you should stay married and when you should file for divorce.

    But we can allow several other verses to show us the life God wants us to live, plus allow the Holy Spirit to guide us in making the right direction given our circumstances.

    Biblical Reasons to Get a Divorce

    Let’s get the obvious signs out of the way of adultery and/or abandonment. As stated in the verses below, these are times that have clear signs that it’s time for divorce–especially if a spouse refuses to come back and/or won’t leave the affair partner.

    “But if the unbeliever leaves, let it be so. The brother or the sister is not bound in such circumstances; God has called us to live in peace.” –1 Corinthians 7:15

    “But I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, makes her the victim of adultery, and anyone who marries a divorced woman commits adultery.” –Matthew 5:32

    But…what if your situation doesn’t fit into these categories?

    • What if I’m not married to an unbelieving spouse who has abandoned me?
    • What if there has been no adultery?
    • What if the affair was years ago and church elders suggested forgiveness, grace, and mercy instead of talking about or allowing either party to think about divorce? Can I divorce, now, if I just can’t let go of that pain?

    We are all fallible human beings with a heart that wants to see marriages survive. But sometimes, that’s just not possible.

    Lives are messy. And our lives don’t fit into these nice little definitions of what to do when this or that happens.

    Divorce has to be an option in other circumstances because not allowing divorce as an option, we keep a person trapped in an unsafe and abusive marriage. So let’s look into reasons that are still biblical, but just not laid out as cleary.

    Physical abuse is another sign that most people would agree should be an option if the abuser refuses to get help for the abuse problem and stop the abusive behavior. But what about emotional abuse?

    Emotional abuse is harder to spot than physical abuse, but is just as legitimate and harmful.

    Here are some ways emotional or psychological abuse can manifest, which may mean it’s time for the couple to divorce. Here are 4 signs of emotional abuse in marriage.

    1. Every Conversation Turns to Anger

    If you feel like any conversation about change, about your feelings, or what would improve the marriage turns angry, rage-filled, and you walk away feeling to blame for even opening your mouth, you could be married to an emotionally immature person or an emotional abuser.

    A counselor or coach who specializes in domestic abuse and abuse recovery or a domestic violence shelter can help you understand if you are in an abusive marriage.

    Although marriage counseling might help you recognize this pattern, if all you’re learning in marriage counseling is how to not “set this person off” then it isn’t really helping.

    This is not your doing; it’s not normal. Non-abusive people assert themselves and ask questions to understand another person’s perspective even during conflict. Your counselor or coach can help you find the words to set boundaries and invite your spouse into getting help for themselves to figure out why they often react angrily in conversations with you.

    If they refuse, then you can work on figuring out your next steps, so you can live a life of peace.

    “Do not make friends with a hot-tempered person, do not associate with one easily angered, or you may learn their ways and get yourself ensnared.” —Proverbs 22:24-25

    2. Your Spouse Always Leaving You Feeling Confused and Blamed

    Confusion is not from God; peace is (1 Corinthians 14:33). God wants us all to live a life of peace, not confusion and chaos all the time.

    Peace and marriage go hand in hand; you can’t have one without the other. When there is so much confusion in your life about your marriage, the relationship you have with your spouse, and how you’re being treated, you don’t have a peaceful marriage.

    Life with a toxic person, abuser, or a narcissist is like living on an emotional roller coaster.

    Narcissists love to create unstableness in their relationships; keeping you unable keeps them in control.

    Of course you’d be confused all of the time. Any normal person would be. One minute everything is fine and the next they’re exploding, rageful, and threatening a divorce because you asked them to take out the trash or to come to the table for dinner.

    You can’t be expected to change someone else or lower your self-worth to fit into everything they need you to be. It might be time to consider your next steps.

    Again, invite them into healing for their own life and then do what you need to do to live a peaceful life without all this stress and confusion.

    “If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone.” –Romans 12:18

    3. You’re Constantly Left Feeling Lonely, and Your Spouse Isolates Your Relationships 

    There are people in this world that are just not emotionally available to other people at their stage in life. Some may be able to have a great marriage because they understand this about themselves and allow the other person to find an emotional connection with other people.

    But if your spouse expects you to be their everything but refuses to be emotionally available for you or worse forbids you from connecting with others for emotional support, then divorce might need to be considered.

    This person is robbing you of the connection and emotional intimacy we all need. To be seen, heard, and understood.

    Yes, we should get everything from God first and people second, but humans were created for emotional connection with other humans–physical intimacy is just not enough.

    When it’s not safe to ask your spouse for quality time and emotional connection, you may need to get out to feel less alone in this world. Many divorced people feel more connection, more peace, and less alone after their divorce because of the lack of those things in their marriage.

    4. You Feel Trapped and Utterly Helpless

    I often get emails from ladies who tell me all the medications they are on just to stay married to their angry and controlling spouse. They ask what others should they try, what programs or therapy I’d suggest for them to go through, and prayers to pray, so they don’t have to divorce their unresponsive husbands.

    That’s not what God intended marriage to look like! And you’re kids are watching.

    (Side note: This also goes for both sexes. Also, needing medication for your mental health is one thing; needing it to “keep yourself sane” in a hostile environment is another).

    Photo Credit: ©GettyImages/fizkes

    Shouldn’t We Pray and Hope for Change?

    Of course, there is nothing wrong with praying and having hope for change in another person. We know that God can do anything.

    At the same time, we have to be realistic and set up our own lives in a healthy way. If change doesn’t happen what are the options?

    How long do you wait? What if you’ve been married for 10 or 20 years, and every year is just another year like that last? After you’ve invited your spouse into healing and they reject that and blame you, separation and divorce should be the next option.

    “When the sentence for a crime is not quickly carried out, people’s hearts are filled with schemes to do wrong.” –Ecclesiastes 8:11

    I believe when we put too much hope in saving a marriage that is not salvageable it’s like watching someone in Hospice fighting for their life but not letting them go. Yes, we can hope and pray for a miracle but that doesn’t mean we keep them alive once they are gone. Marriages get to that point as well.

    Many Christians might say there is always hope for a marriage to survive; it’s a promise “for life” as long as you’re both still breathing. But as was my case, sometimes it gets to the point that you’re beating a dead horse that was long dead.

    I just couldn’t be the only one always doing the work on myself and the marriage, praying and hoping while walking on eggshells, and watching the cycles repeat over and over again. If I kept holding onto hope that something was going to change, that’s the definition of insanity right? It does drive you crazy to spend decades hoping for change when there has never been any and no responsibility has been taken.

    Instead, I just continued to take the blame and sacrificing myself, even my walk with God, to save a dead marriage.

    Now, for the most part, my life is peaceful; when I don’t have to speak to people who enjoy being angry, blaming me, and causing chaos without feeling guilty about it.

    I can honestly say I’m thankful I let go and accepted the divorce option. I love a thriving life with God in the center.

    Who Gets to Decide If You Divorce?

    The decision to divorce is a personal decision. No one can make that decision for you unless your spouse is forcing it.

    Seek help from educated people helpers like counselors, abuse experts, Christian mentors, and pastors, as long as they are not telling you exactly what you need to do.

    They should help you make the best decision for your life and future.

    God’s Grace for the Divorced

    God cares for people; for souls. God wants all humans to live a life of peace.

    He wants us to thrive, not merely survive or suffer. God hates what divorce does to the person who’s experiencing physical or emotional violence, the spouse who’s being cheated on, or the one who was abandoned by their partner. He hates that another human would put their spouse in this kind of position; instead of protecting them from that environment.

    But when He sees His children suffering so deeply, He allows for divorce to protect that person from future harm.

    “Do not take advantage of the widow or the fatherless. If you do and they cry out to me, I will certainly hear their cry. My anger will be aroused, and I will kill you with the sword; your wives will become widows and your children fatherless.” –Exodus 22:23

    Related Resource: Listen to our FREE podcast, Reframed: The Power of Perspective. In each episode, Carley provides practical techniques for identifying and reframing negative thinking patterns. Listen to an episode below, and check out all of our episodes on LifeAudio.com.

    Photo Credit: ©GettyImages/LiountmilaKorelidou

    Jen GriceJen Grice is a divorce coach and author of the books, You Can Survive Divorce and Your Restoration Journey about recovery and redemption after divorce. After her own unwanted divorce in 2013, Jen started a ministry to encourage and empower Christian women to not only survive but thrive after divorce caused by adultery, abuse, or abandonment. You can learn more about her ministry at JenGrice.com. Jen can also be found on YouTube talking about preparing for and divorcing a narcissist. And her books can be found at B&N or on Amazon.

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  • How to Trust God Again after Your Divorce

    How to Trust God Again after Your Divorce

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    It is so easy to say we trust God in all things and situations.

    We know we’re supposed to “trust in the Lord with all your heart and not depend on your own understanding” as stated in Proverbs 3:5. But life doesn’t always go as planned. We face many trials and dark, uncertain times.

    Especially when a spouse leaves and refuses to come back. When you’re forced to be the sole provider and main caregiver for your children. And when your entire world falls apart; you don’t know what is going to happen next.

    This is when doubt moves. This is when the devil whispers, did God really say He was going to take care of you? Can you really trust Him with your future?

    Uncertainty about the future is a very real concern for many during and after their divorce. What will life look like when walking this path alone, without the spouse you expected to spend the rest of your life with?

    We often wonder, where is God when all of this is going on. And why is He allowing my partner to leave and/or sin against me?

    Many times in the Bible we read about the lives of others who were living with uncertainty. In my newest book, Your Restoration Journey, an 8-week Bible study for divorced women, I share the stories of many of my favorite Bible characters who also faced mistrust about their future but managed to push through as their restoration story unfolded.

    God wants to give you your restoration story as well!

    Where Is God When Your Marriage Falls Apart?

    The story of the Israelites in the desert was one example I shared for when we wonder where God is when faced with leaving an abusive marriage and walking the path during and after divorce.

    We want Him to come to the rescue and give us our old life back (to the happier times in our marriage) but that’s not always part of His plan.

    For the Israelites, He had something much better planned. They only needed to get through this difficult journey to inherit the divine promise. But they wanted to go back to the land and the life they had known in Egypt.

    The uncertainty and dependence on God for everything were just too much, that’s why they grumbled.

    “The Lord is good, a refuge in times of trouble. He cares for those who trust in him.” – Nahum 1:7

    Even while the Israelites struggled, God sent a constant reminder of His presence, in the form of a cloud by day and a pillar of fire at night (Exodus 13:21).

    The Hebrew phrase ananei hakavod (pronounced: ah-nah-A-hak-a-vard) means divine cloud or Cloud of Glory. God was in the clouds guiding and protecting. He is close to His children both day and night; they find His refuge there in the clouds.

    So when you wonder where is God in my situation, just look up! He’s right there watching over you. And when things seem very dark, remember He keeps you secure under His wing (Psalm 91:4).

    Can I Trust God When I Feel So Much Doubt and Uncertainty?

    I wrote this Bible study to help people of faith understand that they can stop searching for how to obtain their faith and just learn to accept it as a free gift (Ephesians 2:8).

    What is faith? Faith is defined as “a complete trust or confidence in someone or something; a strong belief in God or in the doctrines of a religion, based on spiritual apprehension rather than truth.” 

    In the seven years since my divorce, I talked to countless women who said they feel they have lost their faith during the divorce trial or after.

    They explained they could no longer open their Bible without their eyes being filled with tears and hearts filling with doubt and fear about all they were experiencing. They feel as though God’s Word no longer applies to them.

    That is a lie from the enemy to persuade you to walk away from God and your faith (trusting in God).

    The truth is faith can be present at the same time as doubt. You are free to struggle!

    God still loves the doubter.

    Job knew both pain and uncertainty. He even argued with God. He felt uncertain about the future and why he was experiencing this destruction in his life while remembering that God is in control. He even worshipped God in his grief (Job 1:20) showing God that he had hope and faith even in his anger and resentment.

    Instead of seeing faith as a byproduct of the life you always wanted, understand that it’s the practice of accepting hope when all you feel is despair about your circumstances. Jesus is the divine persuasion to believe in something better in this world.

    Something better is coming. It is the truth about His promises. You only have to believe. There is nothing you can do to work for it; only accept it.

    And when Jesus left this earth to ascend into heaven, He left you an Advocate who is walking with you now (John 14:16-17). The Holy Spirit helps remind you of essential truths about God’s character. He keeps His promises, even to divorced people.

    Through listening to your Internal Guide you understand that no matter what happens or where you go, God is always with you on the journey. He goes before you, is above you watching over you with a protective eye, and inside you directing your paths.

    Why Do You Have to Experience This Pain of Divorce?

    It can be very hard to see any benefit coming from the painful experience of divorce. Why would God allow this to happen, especially to you?

    There is no simple answer to this question, as Job found out when he asked God (Job 7:20). But we can look at the rest of God’s Word for the understanding of what kind of outcome God is guiding us towards.

    Joni Eareckson Tada, in her book The God I love, says, “God allows what he hates to accomplish what he loves.”

    He doesn’t love divorce. He actually hates what it does to innocent victims. It is violence against the one who should have been protected (Malachi 2:16). But He allows it for your protection and to strengthen your faith in Him.

    “So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.” – Isaiah 41:10

    “Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.” – Philippians 4:6

    “Humble yourselves, therefore, under God’s mighty hand, that he may lift you up in due time. Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you.” – 1 Peter 5:6-7

    “And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.” – Romans 8:28

    “For we live by faith, not by sight.” – 2 Corinthians 5:7

    “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

    Throughout the Scriptures, we read to not worry, be anxious, or have fear about the future.

    God will lift you up and strengthen you as you endure. He is your constant Helper. He just asks you to seek Him in prayer and petition; He wants to keep you close.

    He promises to work things out for good. And He will see you through everything and give you hope and a future.

    You Are Accepted, Not Rejected

    One of the main reasons divorced people struggle with their faith after divorce is because they feel unloved and no longer accepted by God. Rejection may be a human reaction to divorce (I too have been shunned), but it’s not God’s response.

    God accepts and loves divorced people.

    Jesus, being God’s character personified, showed us through His encounterings with hurting, oppressed, destitute, and even sinful people that He didn’t condemn them. He just showed them His great compassion and lovingkindness.

    When people cry out to Him, no matter the reason, He sees them and hears their cry.

    Not only does Jesus know the pain of being rejected here on earth but so have several women in the Bible, that I affectionately call “Women of Fearless Faith.” In my book, I talk about five prominent women who remind me that I too can step out in faith and trust God for everything from my basic needs to my heart’s desire, and even in times of trials.

    It’s so hard to pick a favorite, but Hagar, Abraham’s second wife and mother of his firstborn son is a notable mention.

    She was a slave with a name that meant “resident alien.” After being impregnated, and abused by her masters, she thought surviving alone in a desert would be easier than staying in that family. It was in the desert that she met God and gave Him the name, “the God who sees (or looks after) me.”

    This is such a great reminder that no matter what you’re facing now, or after divorce, God sees you, the abuse you have endured, the needs you have, and accepts you right where you are.

    You don’t need to clean yourself up for Him or be married again to gain His acceptance. He walks with you when you are at your lowest point. He hears your cry and comes to your rescue, just as He did the alien slave girl, Hagar.

    It is through this uncertain time, walking with God and getting your needs met, that your faith becomes stronger.

    With a deeply rooted, strong faith, you will be able to weather any storm that comes your way. Then, you’ll be free to share that same comfort and acceptance you felt from God, with other hurting and destitute people.

    You will thrive and shine! This is the restoration journey after divorce.

    Parts of this article was taken from Jen’s book, Your Restoration Journey: Rediscovering Your Faith & Yourself After Divorce, published by Surviving + Thriving Ministries, LLC, used with permission.

    Photo Credit: ©Pexels/Ismael Sanchez

    Jen Grice is a divorce coach and author of the books, You Can Survive Divorce and Your Restoration Journey about recovery and redemption after divorce. After her own unwanted divorce in 2013, Jen started a ministry to encourage and empower Christian women to not only survive but thrive after divorce caused by adultery, abuse, or abandonment. You can learn more about her ministry at JenGrice.com. Jen can also be found on YouTube talking about preparing for and divorcing a narcissist. And her books can be found at B&N or on Amazon.

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