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The Hope of Divorce and Remarriage

Rethink one of Jesus' most misunderstood teachings.

By Dr. Eli Lizorkin-Girzhel (read bio)

Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.

In the Gospel of Mark, some Pharisees approach Jesus and ask, “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife?” (Mark 10:2). Summarizing His answer, Jesus states,

“Whoever divorces his wife and marries another woman commits adultery against her; and if she herself divorces her husband and marries another man, she is committing adultery” (Mark 10:11–12).

This appears to be an absolute statement denying any legitimacy for divorce and remarriage of any kind. The Gospel of Matthew clarifies the question asked, which differs from Mark’s version. Matthew’s Gospel provides a fuller version of the question, thereby placing Jesus’ answer in its proper context. According to Matthew, the Pharisees tested Jesus by asking, “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any reason?” (Matthew 19:3–9). In other words, Mark’s account seems to present the question as a general inquiry about divorce, while Matthew’s version stresses that the Pharisees were specifically asking about the legitimacy of divorcing a wife for “any reason”—a practice that had become increasingly popular among some Pharisees. This distinction is crucial for understanding Jesus’ response and the context of the debate.

Due to the sinfulness of humanity, the Law of Moses justifiably made concessions for divorce in extreme circumstances, when life together for an Israelite couple would become unbearable. Divorce was not approved or commanded but permitted.

The background of the question asked

The collection of the Holy Hebrew scriptures we today call the Old Testament was the Bible Jesus read. The collection of later writings we today call the New Testament was never meant as an alternative to the Old Testament (Mat 5:17-18). This is very important. The entire Bible is the Word of the Living God. Therefore, to understand Jesus, we must start from his Bible. The key biblical text concerning divorce is found in Deuteronomy 24. (Those interested in a far more detailed analysis, please consult David Instone-Brewer’s work “Divorce and Remarriage in the Bible: The Social and Literary Context” and “Divorce and Remarriage in the Church: Biblical Solutions for Pastoral Realities.”

Understanding this text and the Rabbinic debates about its interpretation—debates current in Jesus’ time—is of utmost importance if we hope to understand Jesus’ words in response to the question.

There we read:

“When a man takes a wife and marries her, and it happens that she finds no favor in his eyes because he has found some indecency (עֶרְוַת דָּבָר, ervat davar) in her, that he writes her a certificate of divorce, puts it in her hand, and sends her away from his house, and she leaves his house and goes and becomes another man’s wife.” (Deut 24:1-4)

Rabbinic materials reveal two main Pharisaic approaches to divorce, attributed to Shammai and Hillel. The debate is documented in the Mishnah (m. Gittin 9:10). Both lived some time before Jesus. Shammai insisted that ervat davar (עֶרְוַת דָּבָר) referred only to sexual immorality. Hillel taught that ervat davar (עֶרְוַת דָּבָר) in Deuteronomy 24:1 could mean anything displeasing to the husband. The Hebrew phrase ervat davar (עֶרְוַת דָּבָר) is very difficult to make sense of. Literally, it may mean something like “nakedness of a thing.” Some translations emphasize the sexual aspect, rendering it as “sexual immorality” or “sexual uncleanness.” For example, the Gospel of Matthew refers to ervat davar (עֶרְוַת דָּבָר) as Greek “πορνείᾳ, porneia.” Others take a broader view, translating it as “something indecent” or “something unseemly,” suggesting it could refer to any behavior or circumstance that the husband finds unacceptable, not necessarily sexual. For example, in the pre-Christian Jewish Septuagint translation (LXX), ἄσχημον πρᾶγμα (aschēmon pragma, “unseemly/indecent matter”) is used. This translation becomes the basis for the “any reason” divorce that Jesus will staunchly oppose.

Jesus’ response to the question asked

To grasp Jesus’ sharp words, we must see the Pharisees’ question in its original context. Essentially, some pharisees asked him, “Which school of Pharisaic thought on divorce do you endorse—Shammai’s ‘strict immorality’ standard or Hillel’s ‘any reason’ divorce?”

Jesus’ response first states that those Pharisees that interpreted ervat davar (עֶרְוַת דָּבָר) in Deuteronomy 24:1 in such a loose way have forsaken the sacred Torah teaching about the creation of Adam and Eve:

“…For this reason a man shall leave his father and his mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’? So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore, what God has joined together, no person is to separate.” (Matt 19:5-6)

The Pharisees that were asking their question challenged Jesus back:

“Why, then, did Moses command to give her a certificate of divorce and send her away?” (Matt 19:7)

Jesus continued his argument and defense of the Pharisaic school of Shammai over against Hillel’s:

“Because of your hardness of heart Moses permitted you to divorce your wives, but from the beginning it has not been this way. And I say to you, whoever divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, and marries another woman commits adultery.” (Matt 19:8-9)

Jesus first evokes the sinful condition of humanity as the only reason Moses’ law permits divorce at all but endorses Shammai’s conservative view: ervat davar (עֶרְוַת דָּבָר) can only mean “sexual immorality”—it cannot possibly refer to anything that the husband does not like about his wife in general. The key takeaway here is that Jesus did not condemn all divorce and remarriage but specifically the divorce and remarriage propagated by some Pharisees during his time. Jesus made a clear and simple statement: anyone who has not obtained a divorce on biblical grounds remains married. Therefore, if such a person “remarries,” they are clearly guilty of adultery.

Other biblical grounds for divorce

In Exodus, we read about a law that God enjoins upon a husband who marries a slave woman. This law helps us understand God’s heart on the matter, and it has to do with neglect and abuse in marriage. We read:

“If he takes to himself another woman, he may not reduce her food, her clothing, or her conjugal rights. But if he will not do these three things for her, then she shall go free for nothing…” (Ex 21:10-11)

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The three provisions of food, clothing, and conjugal rights in Exodus 21:10-11 form the foundational obligations a husband owes to his wife. These reflect God’s concern for justice and dignity within marriage. They reveal a broader principle: marriage is a covenant of mutual care and respect, where each spouse is entitled to basic needs and intimacy.

This principle underscores that marriage is not merely a legal contract but a relationship rooted in love, provision, and mutual honor. These duties apply to both husbands and wives.

The law lets a wife leave without punishment if her husband doesn’t do his duties, and the same goes for the husband. This affirms her right to freedom and protection. Thus, Exodus 21 demonstrates that neglect, specifically the failure to meet these basic marital obligations, constitutes a legitimate reason for divorce, even beyond the explicit grounds in Deuteronomy 24.

Furthermore, physical abuse is generally regarded as a violation of marital obligations and a justification for divorce that safeguards the vulnerable. This understanding refers not to isolated incidents but to ongoing, systematic abuse or neglect, especially when all efforts to restore the marital covenant have been ignored for a prolonged period. The rules in Exodus serve as the basis for marriage duties. They show that God’s law recognizes several valid reasons for divorce.

This principle is also in 1 Corinthians, which prioritizes justice and the oppressed’s welfare. The Apostle Paul, deeply familiar with Mosaic law as a trained Pharisee under Gamaliel (Acts 22:3) and aware of pre-Jesus rabbinic debates, addressed early Gentile Christian believers in Corinth. These believers were considering leaving their pagan spouses. Paul instructs believers to remain married if the pagan spouses consent to live together peacefully. Worshiping a different God is not biblical grounds for divorce. However, if the unbeliever (pagan) leaves, the believer “is not bound” (οὐ δεδούλωται, ou dedoulōtai), literally not enslaved. In this case, the believer is free to remarry (1 Cor 7:10–15). This “Pauline privilege” echoes Exodus 21’s release from neglect, treating willful abandonment as a dissolution of the covenant. Paul’s statement that a valid marriage lasts until death is also applicable: “A wife is bound as long as her husband lives…” (Rom 7:2; 1 Cor 7:39). The apostle presupposes that no biblical grounds for divorce exist in the scenarios he addresses.

In other words, Apostle Paul and Jesus Christ are in complete sync on this important matter. Divorce is permitted only for grave breaches like sexual immorality or abandonment (abuse or neglect), not preference.

Does God hate divorce?

The often repeated claim that “God hates divorce” rests upon an inadequate translation of Malachi 2:16. The Hebrew reads:

כִּי-שָׂנֵא שַׁלַּח, אָמַר יְהוָה אֱלֹהֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל, וְכִסָּה חָמָס עַל-לְבוּשׁוֹ, אָמַר יְהוָה צְבָאוֹת:

Literally the Hebrew states something like:

For he hates, he sends, says LORD, Israel’s God. And he covers with violence his clothes, says LORD of armies.

Some translations, such as NASB in this case, do not stick to the original Hebrew; they switch from the third person to the first, presumably to improve readability.

“For I hate divorce,” says the Lord, the God of Israel, “and him who covers his garment with violence,” says the Lord of armies. (NASB)

However, some translations, such as NIV, in this case, adhere closely to the original Hebrew:

“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)

Context reinforces an NIV-style translation. Malachi condemns treacherous divorce by Israelite men who abandoned covenant wives for foreign women (Mal. 2:14–15), violating the marriage covenant that God Himself witnesses. The sin is not divorce per se, but unjustified divorce—violent abandonment that, in this case, harms an undeserving, vulnerable woman.

But that is not all.

The Biblical Hebrew verb soneh (שֹׂנֵא), typically translated “hate,” implies lesser love rather than absolute loathing. Biblical precedents clarify this: God “loved” Jacob and “hated” Esau (Mal. 1:2–3; Rom. 9:13), meaning He chose one over the other, not that He despised Esau (God’s treatment of Esau shows that He loved Esau too). Similarly, Jesus’ call to “hate” one’s parents (Luke 14:26) demands prioritizing Him above family, not real emotional hatred toward parents. In Malachi, soneh (שֹׂנֵא) refers to a husband who prefers a younger foreign woman to his probably older Israelite wife by callously divorcing her. In the Hebrew text, it is the husband, not God, who does the hating.

In short, “God hates divorce” oversimplifies a nuanced text. He hates the violence that breaks covenants, not the lawful dissolution of marriage. He established regulations to protect the oppressed.

Conclusion

In the sacred tapestry of marriage, woven by God’s own hand from the dawn of creation in Genesis, we observe both an unbreakable covenant and compassionate grace amid human frailty. Jesus’ words in Mark 10:11–12 appear absolute at first glance, yet Matthew 19 unveils the true target: the Pharisees’ “any reason” divorce championed by Hillel’s school. Affirming Shammai’s stricter view, Jesus rejects Hillelian divorces that have risen in popularity. Exodus 21:10–11, though not addressed by Jesus since the question concerned only Deuteronomy 24:1, echoes the heart of the Torah by granting freedom from systematic neglect, abuse, or denial of food, clothing, and conjugal rights—covenantal breaches that destroy the vulnerable. Paul harmonizes this in 1 Corinthians 7:15, releasing the believer from bondage when an unbeliever abandons the marriage.

Yet even when divorce occurs outside these bounds—when hardness of heart leads to unjustified separation, when ervat davar is misapplied or ignored—God’s grace remains astonishingly wide. The cross of Christ does not grade sins by severity; it covers them all. The same blood that forgives idolatry, murder, or greed forgives the sin of an unbiblical divorce. Peter’s denial, David’s adultery and murder, Paul’s horrific persecution of early Jesus followers—none were beyond redemption. Neither is this. Repentance turns the heart back to God, and His forgiveness is complete, restoring the sinner to fellowship with Him and His people.

Beloved, if betrayal, cruelty, desertion, or unrepentant neglect have shattered your marriage on biblical grounds, hear this good news clearly: God understands your pain. Full stop. He prioritizes your dignity and safety above a toxic bond that has gone irreparably wrong. Remarriage, on these biblical grounds and after exhaustive efforts at restoration, is not adultery but a doorway to healing, wholeness, and new covenant love under God’s blessing.

And if the divorce itself was the sin—initiated without scriptural warrant—lift your eyes to the same Savior. His grace is not exhausted by our failures; it is magnified in them. Confess, receive mercy, and walk forward in the freedom of the forgiven. Rise with hope—your Creator redeems broken stories, inviting you into joy and a future brimming with His faithful provision. Seek wise counsel, pursue reconciliation where possible, but know that freedom in Christ includes liberation from oppression for God’s children and the boundless forgiveness that makes all things new.

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Comments (92)

Michael Martens
Michael Martens DE February 24, 2026 at 7:31 PM

Hello brother, first why Paul used the word doulos instead of deos in 1 korinth 7 15 and is the word dolous somewhere found in not biblical texts for divorce or in any divorce certificat? Some say yes and some say no.my wife left me when I came to Christ nearly 6 years ago but I don't want to marry it's OK for me but I have peace over remarrige in my case. Blessings and shalom

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 26, 2026 at 10:57 AM

Michael, it seems that you want to dig deeper. I recommend getting this book and other books of this author - https://www.amazon.com/Divorce-Remarriage-Bible-Literary-Context/dp/0802849431

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Adu-Boampong Franklin
Adu-Boampong Franklin GH December 24, 2025 at 2:44 AM

This is undoubtedly the best article on divorce and Remarriage that I have read. No teacher has dismantled the parts of this "scary" topic as you have done. All my doubts are cleared now. More blessings to Dr. Eli.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL December 24, 2025 at 9:10 AM

Thank you so much. I simplified what Prof. David Instone-Brewer has argued (just want to be clear about that). But things do need to be said clearly. Blessings!

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Jay
Jay US December 15, 2025 at 12:17 AM

Thank you for your insight. The Hebrew background for Jesus' words are indispensable. I was blessed with a beautiful 48 year marriage, but divorce is a fact in my family and our world that needs to be confronted.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL December 16, 2025 at 10:23 PM

Yes, it is never never never ideal.

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Mary Moughon
Mary Moughon US December 13, 2025 at 5:39 AM

Thanks for your prompt and thorough reply! More times than I would have liked, I’ve had to grapple with how to faithfully love friends and family members contemplating remarriage. But when I think about standing before Jesus’ judgment throne, I still feel most comfortable defending (according to His own words in 1 Corinthians 7:11) my simplistic understanding that a divorced person has only two options—to remain unmarried or else to be reconciled to his or her spouse—even if my perspective may be outdated. Though we disagree, Dr. Eli, I’m glad to know you’re carefully contemplating all sides of the issue and am grateful for the detailed explanations you gave me concerning the points I brought up. Shalom!

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL December 13, 2025 at 8:36 PM

While I deeply respect your commitment to a plain reading of 1 Corinthians 7:11, I believe Paul's instruction there addresses separation among believers without biblical grounds, urging reconciliation or celibacy to preserve the marriage bond. However, it doesn't override Jesus' explicit exception in Matthew 19:9, where sexual immorality (porneia) dissolves the one-flesh union, permitting divorce and freeing the innocent party to remarry without committing adultery.
Similarly, in cases of abandonment by an unbeliever (1 Cor. 7:15), the believer is "not bound," implying release from the covenant. Your "simplistic" view is faithful in intent, but Scripture provides these merciful provisions for grievous breaches, reflecting God's hatred of both divorce (Mal. 2:16) and hardened hearts (Matt. 19:8). Grace and peace as we both seek to stand faithfully before Him.

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Mary Moughon
Mary Moughon US December 12, 2025 at 5:49 AM

Your past articles have been greatly enriching, Dr. Eli, but this one distresses me. Can you explain how your teaching squares with the fact that practically all the early church writers—those who conversed in the biblical languages and natively understood the nuances of the culture—proscribed remarriage after divorce, a stance that endured for hundreds of years? In the Western Church, it didn’t gain a foothold until the time of King Henry VIII. Jesus’ command against remarriage in 1 Corinthians 7:10-11 appears crystal clear. Paul’s use of δεδούλωται (bound, under bondage, enslaved) in verse 15 is illuminated by verses 3-4 and 33-34 of the same chapter. Matthew, writing to Jews, is the only gospel writer to include the exception for fornication (not adultery), and in verses 1:18-19, he alludes to the ancient Jewish custom requiring a divorce to end a betrothal. Thank you for considering my query!

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL December 12, 2025 at 9:33 AM

Dear Mary, thank you for your thoughtful and respectful responce.
The early fathers (Hermas to Augustine) almost unanimously forbade remarriage while the first spouse lived, reading Mark/Luke as absolute and limiting Matthew’s πορνεία to incest or betrothal cases. Their near-unanimous voice is weighty and was a vital protection against the serial polygamy of Roman society.
Yet even they were not monolithic—Ambrosiaster (4th cent.) and later Eastern practice (oikonomia) allowed remarriage for adultery/abandonment. The difference today is not Henry VIII but fresh access to the 1st-century Hillel-Shammai debate unknown to most fathers. Jesus opposed “any-cause” divorce, not Shammai’s grounds (porneia); Paul explicitly releases the abandoned (1 Cor 7:15 οὐ δεδούλωται).
We honor the fathers’ protective zeal while believing Scripture itself permits remarriage when the covenant is already shattered by grave, unrepentant breach. Their strictness safeguarded the oppressed; the biblical text still offers hope of new covenant after such destruction.

Reply
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel May 6, 2026 at 7:00 PM

I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.

Aaron Asante-Addai
Aaron Asante-Addai GH December 9, 2025 at 4:22 PM

Dear Dr. Eli, Why did Moses authorize the issuance of a divorce to an undesired wife? I read somewhere that after 430 years in Egypt, the Hebrews had adopted the Egyptian habit of poisoning an undesired wife in order to marry another. Thus, to prevent Hebrew men from killing their undesired wives, Moses allowed divorce by way of a letter, with far better consequences that eliminating them. Is there's any historical factuality to this? Secondly, anywhere Jesus addressed this matter, he conjoined "divorce" and "remarriage". Is that to mean that Jesus was referring to divorce because the person requesting the divorce has an eye on another potential spouse for remarriage? It's difficult to accept that Christ was binding believers into the prison of an institution where one party can choose to be recalcitrant, incorrigible, non-cooperative or outright un-marriable. Please shed some light on this perspective. God bless.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL December 9, 2025 at 10:31 PM

Dear Friend,

Your historical query references an unverified tradition. Biblical scholarship suggests Moses' divorce provision (Deut. 24:1-4) was a regulatory measure, curbing hasty dismissal and protecting women's status in a patriarchal society, though Jesus later clarifies it was a concession to human hardness of heart (Matt. 19:8).

Yes, Jesus consistently links divorce and remarriage (e.g., Matt. 5:32, 19:9), identifying the intent to wed another as the core issue, which turns dismissal into adulterous injustice. He elevates marriage to its original, covenantal ideal. His teaching isn't about imprisoning the abused but about condemning the selfish severing of a one-flesh union for personal convenience. The “exception clause” (Matt. 19:9) and Paul’s counsel (1 Cor. 7:15) show Scripture acknowledges situations where reconciliation is impossible, offering compassionate guidance amidst human brokenness.

God bless.

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John McClendon
John McClendon US December 9, 2025 at 8:07 AM

tyvm Dr. Eli- I knew this in my heart anyway, as the Lord showed me. But I love God's Word that seals the matter. I plan on giving another contribution in Jan. Once again I greatly appreciate you. Shalom!!!

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL December 9, 2025 at 10:31 PM

Blessings, John!

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Alvaro Gutierrez
Alvaro Gutierrez US December 9, 2025 at 5:41 AM

Shalom Dr. Eli. Thank you so much for this article. I still have a couple of questions though and would appreciate if you can clarify them for me. 1) You said in a previous comment that "Marriage binds until death; remarriage while the REAL spouse lives = adultery." (November 20 at 11:35 AM). 2) You also commented that "1 Cor 7:15: if an unbeliever leaves, the believer is “not under bondage”—the bond is dissolved; remarriage is allowed."
* Are you saying that remarriage should only be allowed when the other person is an unbeliever that leaves?
* What about if one commits adultery - is the one that did NOT commit adultery free to remarry since that person did not commit the adultery or still bound and not able to remarry?
Still not very clear to me about these remarriage questions.
Shalom and thanks in advance.
Blessings.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL December 9, 2025 at 10:32 PM

Perhaps, I was not clear enough before. If a person was divorced on biblical grounds, remarriage is legit and will be blessed by God.

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Owen Dyer
Owen Dyer NZ December 9, 2025 at 2:11 AM

That was awesome and informative thankyou

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL December 9, 2025 at 10:33 PM

Blessings!

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Innocent Radiation Ezeamuzie
Innocent Radiation Ezeamuzie NG December 9, 2025 at 1:50 AM

Marriage was not meant for sinners. When Jesus referred to beginning, it was before sin came. All born after Gen3 are born sinners with stony hearts. Only people whose hearts have been converted from stony to fleshy can marry successfully. It is useless to ask two naturally selfish people to become one - impossible. Jesus through his sacrifice is bringing Ezek36:25-27 into reality. People whose hearts He truly converted can successfully marry without worrying permit for divorce. Unfortunately, the church is now full of couples with their stony hearts intact. That is why this matter matters and will remain a matter. Even if one is allowed to divorce or manages to keep a saltless marriage, will his stony heart make heaven? It looks like your piece is offering hard hearted people a means of expressing outwards, divorces that had happened inside, without affecting their consciences. God searches the hearts.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL December 10, 2025 at 8:14 AM

The comment blends partial truths with serious errors. Jesus states in Matthew 19:8 that lifelong, monogamous marriage was God's design "from the beginning," while divorce was a concession to human "hardness of heart." This hard-heartedness is not the universal human condition but a specific sin of defiantly rejecting God's will. While all are sinners (Romans 3:23), believers are given new hearts (Ezekiel 36:26) and called to reflect Christ's covenant love in marriage (Ephesians 5:25-32). This is done imperfectly but through the Spirit's power.

Scripture never claims only the perfectly "soft-hearted" can marry, or that divorce proves a lack of genuine faith. Grace enables obedience, not perfection. While warning against hard-hearted divorce is right, invalidating struggling marriages as inherently "stony-hearted" is not. God commands the forgiven to forgive, to marry, and to remain married (Colossians 3:13). The gospel empowers and transforms marriage; it does not reserve it for a spiritual elite.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel May 6, 2026 at 7:00 PM

I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.