Christian psychiatrist Paul D. Meier says that there are “only 3 choices for any person involved in an unhappy marriage: (1) get a divorce —the greatest cop-out and by far the most immature choice; (2) tough out the marriage without working to improve it —another immature decision but not quite as irresponsible as divorce; and (3) maturely face up to personal hang-ups and choose to build an intimate marriage out of the existing one —the only really mature choice to make.”
In your case, the moment of truth has come, for your partner probably has already ruled out the second option and chosen the first without even considering the third. The question is, “What will you do?” Surrender to the pressures of the world’s way of thinking and the emotions of the moment? Or make a choice based on confidence in the eternal truths of Scripture?
The stakes are higher than one may realize at the time. One choice clearly leads to the bitterness and defeat of divorce as well as lost opportunities for blessing. “Divorce is more painful than death,” a woman told me, “because it’s never really over.”
Dr Meier says that when couples run away from their problems by divorcing and remarrying, “then there are four miserable people instead of just two…. Why spread misery?” he asks. “Bad marriages are contagious! Numerous psychiatric marriage relationships get divorced —no matter how good their intentions may be —they nearly always remarry into the very same type of neurotic relationship they had before.”
When you choose the pathway of irrevocable commitment to your mate and your marriage — regardless of how troubled your relationship may seem— you will find that choice leading you into a place of agape love and peace and personal growth. These are just some of the rewards, for the chances are very good that you will also be able to enjoy the blessings that God has wanted to bestow on your marriage from the beginning.
I am not suggesting that the healing of a marriage is an easy process when one partner resists it. But are any easy choices open to you, after all? Torn relationships involve pain, whatever you do about them. As Peter points out in his first letter, it is far better to suffer (if suffer you must) for doing right, than for doing wrong. He makes it clear that God’s favor and blessing shine on the one who patiently suffers, if necessary, in order to do His will. Meeting your marriage problems in a biblical manner is productive rather than pointless, and whatever hurts your encounter will be less damaging than the long-term effects of divorce would be.
“The very word divorce should be cut out of the vocabulary of a couple when they marry,” a woman with a restored marriage said, “because God’s way is so much better for anyone who is willing to give it a try.”
Another woman, considering the turbulent events of the past year that had driven her to grow emotionally and spiritually while she “loved her husband back” to their marriage, said, “It’s been all gain for me. I’m a different person now. The process was humbling, but it was worth it!”
A man said, “During the time when I was trying to win my wife’s love and hold our family together, sometimes I got so tired of rejection that I didn’t feel anything except a determination to do what the Bible said and leave the results with God. The only thing I was sure of was that somehow God would work it out for my good because He promised that in His Word. I never imagined the love affair He has actually given us. He really does do more than we can ask or think!”
While these comments from the far side of the problem are encouraging, I understand that the feelings you may be experiencing right now within the problem are less than pleasant. Many others have been where you are now and can empathize with what you are going through: shock, hurt, rejection, emotional confusion, temptation to bitterness, and of course, pressures from all sides that sometimes make you want to give up.
My heartfelt goal is to help you clarify your thoughts, stabilize your emotions, and learn to behave in a consistent, purposeful way that will save your marriage and bring a new dimension of love into your relationship.
So, if you are willing to make a commitment to your marriage based on the eternal principles and promises of the Word of God, you can take heart and let hope grow in promises of the Word of God, you can take heart and let hope grow in proportion to your commitment. Contrary to what the world believes, one person can save a marriage. In fact, most of the people I counsel belong in this category. Even when both come to see me, one is usually dragging the other along, in a manner of speaking, and only one really cares about the outcome in most cases.
Marriage counselor Anne Kristin Carroll says, “If you think there’s no hope because you are the only one in your relationship who wants or cares enough to try to save your marriage, you are wrong!” She adds, “In my experience most torn marriages are brought to new life, new vitality by the interest, basically, of only one party.” This has been my experience as well. I have seen numerous marriages saved when only one partner applied biblical principles in a whole hearted commitment to the mate and the marriage.
Some have not been saved. Usually this is because the individual is convinced that nothing will change the partner —that the longstanding problem of alcoholism or financial irresponsibility or whatever cannot be solved, and he or she simply gives up.
Occasionally, the partner desiring a divorce has developed such a strong emotional attachment to another person that it is not broken off in time to save the marriage. Often, however, this infatuation ends while the divorce is being delayed and the unfaithful partner thanks the committed mate for standing fast and preserving the marriage.
In a relatively few cases, one partner pressured by family and “loyal” friends, develops a deep bitterness toward the other and is actually encouraged in this hostility by parents and even, sometimes, church members so that efforts at reconciliation may be unavailing.
But in the great majority of cases, the outcome depends squarely on the committed partner’s ability to behave consistently in accord with biblical principles designed by the Author of marriage. So, in a very literal sense, it is all up to you. You need not expect your partner to do anything constructive about the marriage if he or she wants out.
Clarifying Your Thoughts
When the Bible says, “Gird up the loins of your mind” (1 Peter 1:13), it means to get your mental powers in a state of alertness for proper action. You must do this without delay. Often the Lord will provide the opportunity for some quiet, uninterrupted Bible study and prayerful consideration of God’s plan for your situation. You may also learn some important things about yourself during this time.
When one husband moved out, his parents lovingly helped the wife by keeping the children several weeks while she prepared mentally and spiritually for the challenges ahead.
One young wife was ready to dissolve her marriage until a friend in her garden club led her to the Lord. “I only knew two Scriptures at the beginning,” the wife said, “but they were exactly what I needed: ‘God is not a man, that he should lie’ (Numbers 23:19) and ‘With God nothing shall be impossible’ (Luke 1:37).
“With those truths as a foundation I began to study the Bible, desperately trying to dig out God’s purpose for marriage and all that He had to say about it. I found out for myself that if I were to obey Him, then I would have to become committed to my marriage and my husband, even though he was involved with another woman and we were on the verge of divorce.
“Coming to this decision didn’t make things any easier emotionally at first, but it did show me a clear path of action, and the situation actually became less complicated because there was no more confusion about what to do! I refused to sign the divorce papers. I had gathered evidence identifying the other woman and proving my husband’s unfaithfulness. I destroyed it all. I didn’t need it anymore.”
A University of Chicago professor described this generation’s dilemma with the now familiar quotation: “We lack the language to teach what is right and wrong.” But the Bible-believing Christian caught in an emotionally fraught situation does not have that problem. The language of God concerning divorce is plain enough for any reader. For example:
For the Lord, the God of Israel says: I hate divorce and marital separation, and him who covers his garment [his wife] with violence. Therefore keep a watch upon your spirit [that it may be controlled by My Spirit], that you deal not treacherously and faithlessly [with your marriage mate] (Malachi 2:16 AMPLIFIED).
He replied, ‘Have you never read that He Who made them from the beginning made them male and female’. And said, ‘For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and shall be united firmly (joined inseparably) to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh? So they are no longer two but one flesh. What therefore God has joined together, let not man put asunder’ (separate) (Matthew 19:4-6 AMPLIFIED).
As you try to gain clarity of thought concerning your marital situation viewed in light of the teaching of Scripture, I suggest that you read the first five chapters of the book, Love Life for Every Married Couple and search the Scriptures that have to do with marriage. Let me remind you once more of the eternal principle that undergirds the biblical counsel we offer: It is God’s will in every marriage for the couple to love each other with an absorbing spiritual, emotional, and physical attraction that continues to grow throughout their lifetime together.
It should be crystal clear that God intends for you and your mate to picture the love-bond of Christ and His church and that you must beware of substitutes who sometimes find their way into the vacuum of a troubled relationship. Obviously, infidelity and divorce are paths that move away from God’s plan and blessing. But when you pour yourself into restoring love to your marriage, you can be sure that the force of His will is at work with you in the process.
It is important to fill your mind with positive biblical input: biblical counseling, preaching, and teaching; good books and Bible-study tapes; and friends who will affirm you in your commitment to your marriage. You need to take in truth from those who are as committed to the permanence of marriage as the Bible is. And don’t listen to anyone else! Develop tunnel vision in this area as Proverbs 4:25-27 commands:
Let your eyes look directly ahead, and let your gaze be fixed straight in front of you. Watch the path of your feet, and all your ways will be established. Do not turn to the right nor to the left; turn your foot from evil (NASB).
You need to maintain this total mental commitment to the truth or you will be swamped by waves of human opinion and bad advice, sometimes from seemingly religious people.
One young man came to me, confused because he had been told to do nothing to win back his wife. He had been told to concentrate on his vertical relationship with God. I said to him, “This is true, but you can please God only when you are doing what the Bible says you are to do. You must be right in line with God’s Word. We have no other direction for this life. When we are in total accord with the Word, then we can relax and God has the freedom to work with us. He always works with us on the basis of the information that we have from His Word. So the more you know of the Word of God concerning marriage and love and His abhorrence of divorce, the more equipped you will be to let God do His full work and have His full way in your life.”
“I had to take a stand on this matter of outside influence,” a wife told me. “Everyone has been anxious to give me advice about my marriage. I refuse to discuss it with people who hold an unbiblical viewpoint, or people who try to turn me against my husband, or people who make me feel sorry for myself and encourage weakness in me. I can’t afford to be around worldly friends anymore. They tear me down; they tear my husband down. They may mean well, but they are so misguided. I want to be with people who will stand with me and support me when I might falter.”
When your mind is settled, your thoughts clarified, and your commitment made, you will find that you no longer lie at the mercy of outside events, reacting to every new circumstance with fresh pain and bewilderment. Instead, your viewpoint becomes, “This is what I am going to do, no matter what, because it is God’s way to do it. I can count on His wisdom, and I can trust Him with the results of a course of action based on His Word.”
“I’m not standing by my marriage anymore on the basis of what the outcome will be,” one woman told me. “People urge me to dump my husband, give up on him because he’s made my life miserable; they tell me I deserve someone better, that I wouldn’t have any trouble finding someone else to love me.
My answer is that marriage is sacred; marriage is permanent; I am committed by my marriage vows; I am one flesh with my husband; and then I really shock them! I tell them that even if there is no happy ending for our marriage, I will not regret the stand I have taken. I will know that I made the right decision and followed the only course possible for me. I will have done all that I could.
“But my trust is not in what I am dong,” she added. “It is in God and His Word. He has a perfect, loving plan for my life, and He’s wise enough and powerful enough to carry it out, if I cooperate by following His counsel. So I’m going to keep on obeying Him in my marriage and I’ll leave the results with Him. I am at peace with that.”
[Marriage Missions editors' note: The authors, Dr Ed Wheat and Gloria Okes Perkins go on from this point to include a lot more valuable advice. For many different reasons, including honoring their copyright privileges, we need to shorten this article. Plus we think you need to obtain the book yourself because of the additional advice you'll benefit from reading. But we do want to end this article with some practical advice that was given at the end of this chapter hoping it will spur you on to start this journey towards saving your marriage, even if you have to try to do it alone.]
A happy wife wrote me a note of thanks for my counsel which gave her the courage to stick with her marriage. She said, “One little thing you said to me meant so much. You said, ‘So what if your husband doesn’t tell you he loves you right now!” I knew you were right. I really wasn’t that important.“ This wife found that putting up with a little rejection was worth it in the long run in order to have a revitalized marriage.
I have talked with many women who tell me that when they do not feel their husband’s love, the Lord has a way of loving them that is almost tangible. “Like being in the sunshine, just feeling the warmth of His love,” several wives agreed.
A lovely young wife carried that a step further in her own trying situation. She said that it was often difficult dressing to go out for the evening with her husband because she knew in advance that he would not treat her the way she longed to be treated. So she developed the habit of thinking of the Lord Jesus as her friend and escort of the evening. “It helped me tremendously,“ she said. “I looked my best for Him, I behaved my best for Him, and I was constantly aware of His steadying presence with me!”
In summary, you need to give love to your mate biblically, emotionally, and physically whether you receive a response or not. This is altogether possible through agape love. One wife, whose husband was involved with another woman, said, “I tried to show him that my love for him did not depend on how he treated me. I still showed him physical affection. I said to him sometimes, ‘I love you, no matter what you are doing right now, and I believe the Lord means for us to be together.’ I sent him little cards with appropriate messages that messages that expressed my caring while we were apart. And, do you know, when we reconciled, I found that he had saved every one of them!”
I asked some wives who had been through the experience to give me their list of do’s and don’ts for any woman trying to save her marriage. Here are the excellent suggestions they compiled:
• There can be no growth in your relationship as long as there is doubt as to your commitment to your marriage. Make your commitment!
• When your husband withholds his love, trust the Lord to meet your emotional needs. He won’t let you down!
• Give your husband honor, love, and biblical respect even though his actions do not deserve it. Give him warm acceptance no matter what. The more hopeless your situation is, the more your loving behavior is apt to be accepted as genuine.
• Don’t try to reform your husband. Just love him.
• Live one day at a time.
• Don’t try to do it on your own. The Lord is with you!
• Don’t be bitter against anyone in the situation. Never turn your children against their father. Forgive!
• Don’t ask family or friends to take sides against your husband.
• Don’t discuss your intimate marriage problems. Don’t give fuel to gossip. Confide in the Lord, your counselor, and perhaps a close Christian friend whom you can trust to keep silence.
• Choose your biblical counselor wisely. Never discuss your problems with a friend of the opposite sex.
• Spend as much time in the Word of God as possible.
• Concentrate on yourself, redeeming the mistakes you made, and asking God to show you how to change, rather than concentrating on your partner’s failures.
• Do not separate. Encourage your husband to stay in the home, no matter what.
• Do not give your husband a divorce. Do all in your power to delay or prevent it. If you must consult a lawyer, make it clear to the lawyer that it is only for your financial protection and that of your children. Find a Christian lawyer who will help you preserve your marriage.
• Spend your time with people who will encourage you in spiritual growth.
• Do not overcompensate with your children. They need your love and stability while their father is gone, but they still need discipline. It will be hard to build a new love relationship with your husband when he does come home if the children are out of control.
• Do not try to defend yourself from gossip or criticism. Keep your mouth shut. The Lord will fight for you and you will hold your peace.
• Remember that the most innocent thing you say will get twisted. Avoid loose talk and do not listen to tale-bearing.
• When you do anything (large or small) to pull the marriage apart, you are going against God’s will. Let that be your guideline for all decisions.
• Don’t expect your husband to change overnight when he does come back home.
• The hardest time may be when you are reconciled and you have a tendency to fall back into old habit patterns. Don’t do it!
• Hope all things, believe all things, and endure all things.
The above article goes on to give more helpful information including a first person narrative expository of the love story of Hosea, from the Bible. This article comes from the book Love Life for Every Married Couple, by Dr Ed Wheat and Gloria Okes Perkins, published by Zondervan Publishing House, www.zondervan.com.
This book details the process of rediscovering the joy of marriage through practical counsel involving communication and an understanding of each other in our sexual make-up. In Love Life for Every Married Couple, Physician Ed Wheat will help you improve your marriage through sharing, touching, appreciating and focusing healing attention on your mate. Answering physical, psychological and stress-related questions in a Christian context, Dr. Wheat demonstrates how to bring your feelings of love back to life.
They also have a shorter version of this book which is a mass market paperback titled, How to Save Your Marriage Alone, by the same authors. You won’t get all of the information that the other book gives on sexual issues among other topics. This book just concentrates on the above subject.
If you can’t find the book at a distributor near you, you can order the book directly from the publisher at www.zondervan.com. If you live outside of the U.S. you can go to their web site and on their Home Page go into the section titled, “Information Desk.” Click on “International Distributors” for a list of distributors in your area.
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(ZIMBABWE) Hi, Please help me pray. I am a young lady and not yet married. I know this is mainly for married people, but I think I can get spiritual biblical help. I love my boyfriend so much and we are making plans to get married but recently he started seeing someone else (a friend’s wife) and when I asked him, he denied it. He has just become cold and very insensitive. Whenever we are together he gets phone calls and texts from different girls and this is upsetting me. I know you might tell me to just walk away but it’s not that easy. I just want the Lord to help me walk away if I have to.
(USA) I’m married to a passive aggressive man. I have a major 1 axis mental illness called Jealous Delusional Disorder. I’ve been married to him for almost 2 years, we’ve been together for almost 3. My previous (2nd) husband passed away in 2006 from melanoma in his eye, which matasticized into his lungs and liver. My (1st) husband left me after entering into a half way house, after we had just lost our children to the child protective services. I never was able to comply with the 2 year reunification plan as I had a mental illness which was not understood at the time, nor was I medicated for it.
I’ve since gotten on medication (Risperdal) and have come a long way but I think this marriage was a rebound relationship and I’m finding it virtually impossible to live with him. Please look up Passive Aggressive Personality. Also, women who are widowed become insecure because of their husband’s death, but to get involved with a PAP has been so stressful, I’m reaching out for prayer, guidance and help. Thanks.
(USA) Fafa, You have no idea how much your denial of the truth will come up to DEEPLY hurt you in the future. Just look around this web site. You will see over and over again where people had warning signs not to marry the person they decided to marry anyway, and they can’t express enough how much they regret it. Love based on emotions, rather than truth, will eventually disintegrate and then all you are left with is regrets and lost years, where you could have been living a much better life and instead you are totally spent emotionally.
You’re right in thinking that we would encourage you to walk away from a man who has already cheated on you, and lied to you, and shown additional lack of character in not honoring someone else’s marriage promise. It might not be easy, but neither is putting up with adultery year after year, and empty promises, and coldness and insensitivity, and lies, and loneliness when your “partner” is joining up with someone else. And that is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the hurt you will experience.
The Bible tells us to guard our hearts. If we decide to do things otherwise, please don’t expect Him to answer your prayer to “help” you “walk away” if you “have to.” With disobedience comes a huge price. I hope you will consider my words and will run… not walk away from this relationship. It’s the most loving thing I can tell you to do. Fafa, you are in my prayers.
(USA) Hello, I am 26 years old and I am really struggling with my decision to fight for my marriage or to walk away. My husband physically abused me in April and we have been separated for about 3 months. The thing is I still love him. I don’t know if he is seeing someone else but I suspect that he is. I am constantly praying and asking God for guidance. This isn’t the first time that he has gotten physical, and he doesn’t seem to see anything wrong with it. He has apologized but it doesn’t seem sincere.
Now he has turned the tables and said that I am the one that turned my back on him. I want to trust him and give him another chance but I am afraid that he will do this again. I am so lonely, and when he is not doing these things he is actually a good guy. Please pray for me and any advice would be greatly appreciated. Is this what the vows mean when they say ” For better or for worse”? I don’t want to start over but fear he has found someone else and I may have to. PLEASE PRAY FOR ME!!! I really need help!
(US) I am trying to get through a difficult time. He has filed for divorce, and is with the other person. I do not want a divorce, because I love him. I believe that if I didn’t love him, I wouldn’t think twice, but the feelings and emotions kicks in, just trying to get through a tough time. I really need prayer!!!
(USA) I am going through the same situation almost, and I also want my husband back. I would ask for all of you who are here or come here to please pray for my husband to come back home. He is missed by all of us. I pray that he is able to still feel the Love of God.
(USA) I am in a darkness… My husband of 13 years (we have been together for 18) left last week. He says he has been depressed and he doesn’t know why. He had the same situation a few years back and had even gotten suicidal due partly to job issues. But he got a new job in the same field so things were better, until now. He says that he thinks getting the new job was just a band aide. He is trying to get counseling but I don’t know how serious he really is about it. He moved out and still comes to the house while I am at work and takes care of the bills but he says when he comes to the house he gets depressed and high anxiety.
I miss him with every core of my being. I believe that when you take those vows it is till death. He, on the other hand, says he doesn’t know if we will get back together or not and it is breaking my heart into pieces. He said he had to leave because he didn’t want to get to the point of suicide again. This I understand, but why can’t I help?
I cry everyday because I miss him so much. I worry also that when he calls I am always saying the wrong thing and pushing him further away. I have been asking him if we could see each other and he says it’s to soon, which I guess is true but I long to see him. Some people tell you to act this way and others say that way. I am just so confused. It’s like when someone gets kidnapped, you don’t know whether they are alive or dead. I am in that situation. I don’t know if he will come back or not.
I want to be there to support him and give him comfort. I am praying everyday that there is a miracle, and that God heals his mind and that he can come back to us. I also pray for strength and patience. Please pray for me and him.
(PHILIPPINES) This article gave me a glimpse of hope. I am really depressed and I don’t know what to do anymore. My husband and I are separated for almost 2 months and last week he went in other place and never disclosed any information. He told me his phones are not activated in that area but he would try to email me but until now I havent received any… I am too worried.
I want to give up and whenever I have thought of that it gives me peace but I love my husband so much and I don’t want to leave our marriage. I feel totally devastated and I started to waver with my faith… my situation seems hopeless. I think my husband is trying to avoid me, that’s why he started to shut all his phones. Even my mother in law is not communicating with me anymore. I don’t know if God still want me to stay in this marriage. I feel God is punishing me and I think should give up now for my marriage, it is too painful. Please pray for me.
(USA) I need everyone’s prayers for my marriage. My father passed away a few weeks ago and this was the time my husband chose to abandon me after 18 years of marriage. I cannot believe he would do this. Please pray for me that God will touch his heart and lead him back to me. I am a mental wreck trying to deal with this. Any advice would be well taken. We are both Christians and I do not understand what happened. He will not accept my calls. I do not know where he is but spoke with a family member that he still loves me, is praying for me and will go to counseling. Help!!
(USA) Dear Pat, I’m so sorry that you are suffering the loss of your father. This in itself is such a difficult thing to go through. My prayers are with you. And then to have your husband compound your grief by abandoning you… I can only imagine the pain and confusion. What a sad time for you. I’m sure many people who come to this web site will be quietly supporting you in prayer.
As far as your husband, all I can think of is that he doesn’t know how to handle feelings very well. Some people will run from a crisis situation when they are faced with having to deal with more than they think they can handle. They erase from their minds what harm that will do to complicate the situation even more, and like a child who doesn’t want to acknowledge something bad, they will close their eyes thinking that when they open them the “bad thing” will have gone away. Of course, we know it won’t, but the kid in some of us imagines it might. It’s kind of like the “head in the sand” situation with ostriches.
I’m not sure if this is what is happening with your husband or not. It might be one more thing that piles upon the other things he has in his mind as far as too much to deal with and he’s running from it and sending you “love” from afar, because that is all he feels he is capable of doing. I’m not sure.
But whatever it is, you obviously have a lot to sort out. I really don’t think his leaving is as much about you as it is about him. I might be wrong, but that’s my perception. I don’t know all of the circumstances surrounding what is going on in your life, other than your dad passing, but your husband has something different happening inside of him to do this. This isn’t the way Christ would handle matters.
I just posted an additional link into the article “I Love You But I’m Not IN LOVE With You Anymore” — which I recommend you read. You can find the article in the “Save My Marriage” section. The link I’d especially like you to explore (contained in that article) is titled “Those Aren’t Fighting Words, Dear.”
The reason I think this article might help you is because this woman’s husband kind of went off the deep end emotionally and she was able to recognize that it wasn’t a time to panic, but to put her eyes on what was immediately in front of her instead and let him sort his problems out. I don’t know if that is what you are to do or not, but I’d like you to prayerfully consider what she learned through this.
You TRULY need your marriage partner at this time, but for some reason, he is putting himself out of reach. I believe God would tell you to let him sort out his own problems… don’t compound all that you are trying to sort out by trying to run after him and figure his problems out as well, as to why he would abandon you at this time. Look to the Lord and the healing He can and will bring to your heart as you cry out to Him and look to Him for comfort, and peace of mind. He will never abandon you. Allow Him to be the “lifter of your head” and to take on your tears and burdens and minister to your heart.
I encourage you to open the book of Psalms and use it as a guideline to pour out your heart and grief to the Lord. You have a right to feel hurt right now on many levels. But allow the Lord to be your savior and to help you through this time. Prayerfully, He will work in your husband’s heart and mind and eventually your husband will wake up and realize that this is not a time to draw apart from each other but to find ways to come closer together. If he IS a Christian, then pray the Lord will help him as He is helping you on the level your husband needs it.
“Even in darkness light dawns for the upright” (Psalm 112:4a). I pray that for you Pat, that God will enlighten you and help you to reach for His light and that He will minister to your heart and your situation. May God bless you and keep you.
(USA) Hi, I just came back from my first marriage counselor meeting. She is a Christian counselor as well so I thought how lucky am I. I thought it went pretty good. The counselor had me contact my husband through my daughter in law( I have not spoken directly to him in 2 weeks and I knew he would not hang up on her) and he called back to state he will call the counselor as a courtesy but has already filed for divorce and just cannot live with me anymore.
I am in total shock to say the least. I had been gone less than a week to bury my father and now this. I think he has had a mental breakdown. Any advise as to how to cling to this marriage of 18 and 1/2 years?
Please continue the prayers. I will not give up
(S. AFRICA) Yes, I am very much alone in trying to save my marriage. I am confronted with rejection over and over. My husband has signed an overseas working contract and refuses to communicate with me. He is already “engaged” to this other woman even though we are still married. He wants a divorce and has told me I will never hear or see him again. He plans to marry her and immigrate to New Zealand. My heart is broken that after 35 years of marriage this could be happening. My case sounds hopeless doesn’t it? I continue to pray for God’s answers and intervention. I will not give up. I am standing fast for the preservation of our marriage. Please join me in prayer.