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Porn Use as Grounds for Divorce: How My Opinion Changed

Last Updated: January 4, 2024

Editor’s Note: The views expressed in this post are the author’s, and do reflect an official stance of Covenant Eyes. While recognizing the reality of brokenness caused by pornography, Covenant Eyes celebrates restored relationships whenever possible. We recommend our article 6 Powerful Stories of Marriages that Overcame Porn if you are looking for encouragement!

I am hurting so much over this…If I believed in divorce I would already have done it, and I am beginning to maybe believe divorce is ok. After all, this seems like a type of adultery to me. Am I wrong?” – Mary Ann

After writing more than 1,200 articles for Covenant Eyes and having replied to too many comments and e-mails to count, undoubtedly the most heart-wrenching stories I hear are from women who are living with a porn-addicted husband.

When a woman has discovered her husband is entrenched in pornography, reactions can vary greatly, but for many women it is nothing short of traumatic. Whether she’s dealing with the initial blow of uncovering a 20-year-long secret addiction, or she’s facing the daily blow of her husband’s coldness, for these women their life feels like a living hell.

In the past, when asked if divorce could ever be a viable option for these women, my typical response has been a reluctant no. As much as my heart went out to these women trapped in horrific marriages, I simply didn’t see any biblical justification for divorce in situations of porn use.

About a year ago I decided I was going to write my Master’s thesis about this topic and had intended to write a robust biblical defense of my position.

I never imaged I would come to the opposite conclusion.

Some Caveats

Before we launch into this issue, let me state a few caveats.

  1. Divorce is ugly. We must acknowledge, when addressing the subject of grounds for divorce, the situation that even prompts us to ask this question is under divine judgment. It is a question that involves real hearts, real homes, and a real God who really hates divorce. So it is with great sobriety that we take up this study.
  2. Having grounds for divorce is not the same as actually getting divorced. This article seeks to answer the grounds question as it relates to pornography. But having legitimate grounds for divorce does not necessitate divorce.
  3. This article is long and heady. This is not a delicate how-to article for couples in crisis. It is a clumsy attempt to summarize a 33,000-word theological Master’s thesis. Reader be warned.
  4. The opinions expressed here are my own. Divorce is a contentious issue, and I won’t dare to assume a single article forever settles the debates. I only hope it is a significant addition to the discussion.

The Central Text: Matthew 19:9

The locus of the debate about whether pornography use is ground for divorce is Matthew 19:9:

I say to you: whoever divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, and marries another, commits adultery.”

Time and space do not permit me to get into every detail of this text, but a few observations are important:

1. This comment comes after a very strong affirmation about the divine intention for marriage. Just a few verses prior, Jesus says, “Have you not read that he who created them from the beginning made them male and female, and said, ‘Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’?” (Matthew 19:4-5).

Jesus uses a type of exegesis common early rabbinic Judaism called gezerah shavah, where the activity of God in the first text (making us male and female) is inferred in the second text (the two becoming one flesh). Thus, God is one who joins man and woman together in the covenant bond of marriage. God is the one who unites husband and wife in whole-life oneness. Therefore, what God has joined together, man should not separate (v.6). Marriage is meant to be a lifelong, loving covenant bond.

2. Jesus strikes at the Pharisees’ liberal view of marriage by saying all remarriages after invalid divorces are adulterous. In Jesus’ day, the majority position, promoted by Rabbi Hillel, was “any cause” divorce: any kind of indecency—real or imaginary—was grounds for divorce. As such, divorce was actually quite common among the Pharisees. This view is reflected in the Pharisee’s opening question to Jesus: “Is it lawful to divorce one’s wife for any cause?” (19:3, italics added). In other words, they were asking, “Jesus, do you agree with Hillel’s position on divorce?”

Jesus’ answer is ruthlessly conservative: getting remarried to another is adultery after getting an invalid divorce. Jesus uses similar logic in other divorce texts (Matthew 5:32; Mark 10:12; Luke 16:18). Against all the cultural expectations of young men to get married, after hearing Jesus’ brazenly conservative view, even the disciples second-guess whether marriage is worth it (Matthew 19:10). Nonetheless, Jesus is stalwart in his view, assaulting the very attitude behind the Pharisees’ question. Marriage is never to be thought of as a casual union, subject to the cavalier whims of an lordly male. Marriage must be treated with respect and reverence.

3. Jesus nuances His view with an exception clause. Jesus’ conservative approach does not mean all marriages are completely undissolvable. After a marriage is severed, remarriage to another is not adulterous in the case of πορνείᾳ (porneia)—sexual immorality.

The majority Protestant position understands porneia to include any illicit sexual intercourse outside of marriage.*

The critical matter for our consideration is this: Would Jesus include pornography use as a divorcible offense?

Straw-Man Arguments

Generally, when I bump into those who think porn use can be grounds for divorce, I come across three very bad arguments. In the past, the weakness of these arguments kept me firmly convinced that pornography in itself could never be biblical grounds for divorce.

Bad Argument #1: Pornography is detrimental to a marriage, therefore it is grounds for divorce.

I agree pornography can be detrimental to a marriage, but grounds for divorce ought not be determined by how detrimental a sin is.

Some theologians want to stretch the definition of porneia to the breaking point, saying it encompasses all manner of offenses like emotional or physical abuse, blasphemy, or other generally destructive behavior. Quite simply, regardless of what we say about these terrible offenses, there’s nothing about the term porneia that suggests these meanings. Jesus was thinking of sexual sins specifically.

Bad Argument #2: Porn = Lust = Adultery = Grounds for Divorce

Viewing porn generally involves lust. In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said the man who looks at a woman lustfully commits adultery with her in his heart (Matthew 5:28). Jesus also said adultery is grounds for divorce—if we take porneia to mean adultery (Matthew 5:32; 19:9). Therefore, it is argued, viewing porn must be grounds for divorce.

There are a couple major problems with this argument. First, it misapplies Jesus’ own words. The intention of Jesus’ teachings in the Sermon on the Mount is to help His disciples understand the heart of the Law (Matthew 5:17). For instance, Jesus said to be innocent of murder is not enough; anger is also sinful and worthy judgment before the court and ultimately hellfire (v.21-22). It would be wrong to take Jesus’ hyperbolic comments about punishing anger and suggest we set up a formal tribunal to dish out penalties to those who speak harsh words to others. Similarly, to suggest spouses have grounds for divorce for moments of lust goes far beyond Jesus’ intention.

Second, to suggest instances of lust provide grounds for divorce is to give nearly any spouse in the world grounds for divorce. This liberalizes Jesus’ position so much it makes Him worse than the Pharisees he was rebuking.

Bad Argument #3: Pornography Comes from the Word Porneia

Some use a linguistic argument showing porneia’s relationship to the modern term “pornography.” The term “pornography,” meaning “writings of/about prostitutes,” stems from the Greek porn– word group.

However, this is an exegetical fallacy. To interpret a Greek term by how that term has impacted modern languages leads to illegitimate conclusions. For instance, when the Bible says, “God loves a cheerful giver” (2 Corinthians 9:8), it uses the term ἱλαρός (hilaros) from which we get the English word “hilarious.” If we tried to use a modern definition of “hilarious” to help us define the meaning of the original Greek term, we would come to erroneous conclusions. This makes a mistake of chronology: the Greek authors of the New Testament are not responsible for the development of another language hundreds of years after they wrote their materials.

Doubt Sets In

In the past when I’ve commented on the subject of porn and divorce, my motivation has been to defend Jesus’ conservative view of marriage against the encroachments of liberalism—all the while, trying to show immense compassion for the person whose spouse is deeply mired in pornography.

I reasoned, “Sure, in instances where porn addiction escalates to physical adultery or when an unbelieving spouse is so mired in porn they utterly abandon the marriage, we can talk about the possibility of divorce. But porn use in an of itself is not a legitimate grounds for divorce.”

Generally, the question tends to be phrased this way: “Can pornography use ever be considered adultery?” If it can, some reason, it could be grounds for divorce. Of course, answers to that question will vary depending on who you talk to.

But I now believe we come to misinformed stances on this issue because we’re simply asking the wrong question.

A couple years ago I watched a short video interview with Pastor Douglas Wilson where he addresses this very question. Wilson’s point is that when Jesus uses the term porneia in Matthew 19:9, it is a broad term for “sexual uncleanness,” including adultery but not limited to adultery.

Not too long after this I read these words by Pastor John MacArthur in his book The Divorce Dilemma: God’s Last Word on Lasting Commitment:

In the Greek text, Jesus employs the word porneia, which is capable of a broad range of meanings. It is a general term for fornication (illicit sexual intercourse), but can also apply to various kinds of lascivious or immoral behavior, ranging from a moral flaw in one’s character (such as an obsessive addiction to pornography) to the act of bestiality—or even worse. It’s not the specific Greek word for adultery, which would be moicheia—but certainly includes adultery. (The Divorce Dilemma, p.23-24)

Here were two conservative theologians saying essentially the same thing: Jesus didn’t say “except for adultery”; He said “except for porneia,” which is a broader term.

I knew further investigation was warranted, so I set out to find answers.

So, What Does Porneia Mean?

Often, lexicons will define porneia as illicit or unsanctioned sexual intercourse or any sexual activity outside of marriage. The word can also have a nuanced meaning determined by context—such as a specific kind of sexual sin like incest or prostitution.

A widespread Protestant position on Matthew 19:9 is that Jesus is speaking primarily of adultery, and there’s good reason to think this. Nearly any kind of porneia you can name, when committed by a married person, is adulterous in effect. Adultery was the commonly assumed ground for divorce in the Near East in Jesus’ day, so undoubtedly, this was the primary manifestation of porneia that would have come to mind for Jesus’ listeners.

But there are many reasons to believe porneia is not merely a synonym for adultery—even though the terms are closely linked.

  • Porneia and adultery are often paired as separate sins in the New Testament (Matthew 15:19; Mark 7:22; 1 Corinthians 6:9; Hebrews 13:4).
  • In the New Testament, the term porneia sometimes implies not just isolated acts of sexual immorality but habitual immorality and an attitude of lasciviousness (Romans 1:29; Galatians 5:19; Colossians 3:5; Revelation 2:21).
  • Other works of Greek literature show porneia is not synonymous with adultery, but is rather the disposition and behavior that leads to adultery (Sirach 23:23; Herm. 1:3-8).
  • Sometimes the word is used to describe an attitude and motivation of lust and objectification (Tobit 8:7).

In other words, porneia focuses on the violating attitude and act, where as adultery focuses on a common effect of this act.

With this broader meaning in mind, it is best to not translate porniea as “adultery” (The Message) or “fornication” (KJV, ASV). The terms “unfaithfulness” (NLT, Phillips) or “sexual unfaithfulness” (CEB) could also lead be misleading. Rather “sexual immorality” (ESV, HCSB, NIV, NKJV) or “unchastity” (NRSV) are closer to the actual meaning.

Prostitution in Rome in the Days of Christ

The word porneia is also undeniably linked to the concept of prostitution. In Greek culture, the complexes where prostitution took place were called porneia. It was also a term of derision: people who held licentious parties in their homes were said to turn their houses into porneia. Thus, if we’re going to understand what the term porneia means, we need to understand the profession of prostitution as it was practiced in Jesus’ day.

Prostitution was practiced all throughout the Mediterranean region, including Israel, Egypt, Chaldea, Phoenicia, Syria—and especially Greece and later Rome. In the sixth century B.C., the statesman Salon of Athens was not only the “father of democracy,” he was also the father of state-sponsored sex slavery, establishing houses of prostitution in Athens and filling them with female slaves. Brothels were found throughout Athens, especially near the marketplace and in front of the citadel. Throughout Greece, it was generally accepted that young men and even married men would frequent prostitutes.

Rome essentially followed much of the Athenian model and developed laws to regulate prostitution. The first time Roman administrators established a full registry of Rome’s brothels there were 64 official bordellos containing 35,000 women and 2,000 men. Prostitution in Rome complimented the mixed sexual morals of the culture.

But the sex industry also had a vibrant and visible entertainment wing. In a class of their own were the prostitutes that engaged in formal entertainment: the aulētris (flute player), the psaltria (singer), and the orchēstris (dancer). These entertainers had a generally low sexual and social status, though highly talented entertainers were counted among the upper-class courtesans. These entertainers were common at Athenian banquets and private parties. Ionian and Phrygian woman were widely know and at times well paid for their skills: a performance of flute playing, zither playing, or drumming combined with erotic dancing that amounted to a striptease. Often they had other skills such as juggling, fencing, and acrobatics.

While these entertainers also worked the streets, they frequented Greek symposia (parties for socializing, drinking, intellectual discussion, and entertainment).There are numerous references to erotic dancers in comedic and sympotic literature. The comic playwright Aristophanes called these women “dancing pornai.”

Pornography as the Entertainment Wing of Prostitution

While the erotic dancers, singers, and flute players of ancient Rome were specialized entertainers in their own right, they were, at the heart of their profession, slave-prostitutes. Their erotic performances at banquets and symposia were a manifestation of their trade—the sale of their bodies for the pleasure of freemen.

The parallels between the modern porn industry and the symposia entertainers of Rome show us that the term porneia was not limited merely to behaviors involving sexual intercourse, but all kind of licentious behaviors, embracing both activity and attitude.

  1. First and foremost is the nature of their professions: the sale of their bodies for sex and their roles as “entertainers” for the lusts and enjoyment of men. For the orchēstris of Rome, the open door symposia was their stage. For prostituted women today, their stage is millions of publicly accessible websites. Thanks to webcam technology, for instance, there is virtually no line between “interactive pornography” and virtual prostitution.
  2. Like the brothels of ancient Athens and Rome, women in porn industry today are subjected to the same kinds of terrible conditions in their line of work: body-punishing sex, STDs, as well as a toxic and abusive environment.
  3. Like many of the lowest class of slave-prostitutes in ancient Rome, many of those featured in porn films today are indeed trafficked women and children. Others are in positions of economic desperation—they “consent” to a life of prostitution, but only in the most demented sense of the word.
  4. Like the few select aulētrides of ancient Rome who climbed ladder of success to be counted among the wealthy and elite, the porn industry too has its superstars. Big money-makers branch out beyond their personal appearances in porn films to build a brand around their name, and like the prostitute-entertainers of old, gain a measure of freedom and wealth.
  5. Like the socially respectable symposia of ancient Rome, the pornography industry in Western culture has become mainstream. With the proliferation of porn, in many circles casual or even routine engagement with porn is seen as normal and healthy. In addition, mainstream movies, television, theater, music, and advertising have become porn-like—what Brian McNair calls “the pornographication of the mainstream.”

The pornography industry is the entertainment wing of prostitution, just as the dancing girls of the brothels (the porneia) in the Roman Empire were the sources of entertainment for Roman nobility.

An analogy might bring some clarity to the question. At what point in the following series of scenarios does someone cease to be guilty of porneia?

  • Scenario #1: A man openly, habitually, and unrepentantly frequents prostitutes to have sex with them (clearly porneia).
  • Scenario #2: A man openly, habitually, and unrepentantly visits homes where prostitution is taking place, but instead of having sex with them, he immerses himself in the sex-saturated environment, watching the orgies, so he can masturbate in front of them.
  • Scenario #3: A man openly, habitually, and unrepentantly connects to prostitutes online to watch live-stream videos of them having sex with others while he masturbates.
  • Scenario #4: A man openly, habitually, and unrepentantly watches recorded videos of prostitutes having sex with others while he masturbates.
  • Scenario #5: A man openly, habitually, and unrepentantly watches the same videos as scenario #4, but the women don’t call themselves prostitutes. They call themselves “porn stars.”

Drawing a hard line is no easy task. The change of physical proximity, timing, or labeling of the participants does not change the fact that in each scenario the man is seeking the services of prostituted women to immerse himself in a world of licentiousness.

Jeremiah 3-4: The Key to Application

In my studies about this issue, the million dollar question I kept asking is this: How does a person differentiate between the everyday lusts of the heart and the kind of porneia Jesus says is a divorcible offense?

The answer is found in the rest of Jesus’ comments to the Pharisees.

After stating his position on the matter, the Pharisees ask Jesus, “Why then did Moses command one to give a certificate of divorce and to send her away?” (Matthew 19:7). The background to their question is the first century debate about Moses’ divorce legislation in Deuteronomy 24:1-4. If Moses permitted divorce, how does this square with Jesus’ very conservative position?

Jesus replies with this statement: “Because of your hardness of heart Moses allowed you to divorce your wives, but from the beginning it was not so” (Matthew 19:8). God permitted divorce under Moses, and still permits divorce, as a concession for the victims of partners with hard and stubborn hearts.

Behind Jesus’ answer is Jeremiah 3-4, God’s dire warning to Judah that judgment is coming unless she repents of her unfaithfulness. As her covenant husband (Isaiah 54:5; Jeremiah 2:2; Ezekiel 16:8-14), God wants to shower blessings on her, but she is rebellious, prostituting herself before other gods. He threatens to divorce Judah just as He did Israel.

That this is the text in Jesus’ mind is evidenced by three major observations:

  • Jeremiah is clearly alluding to Moses’ divorce legislation from Deuteronomy 24 in his prophecy (Jeremiah 3:1,8). In fact, it is the one indisputable text in the whole Old Testament that makes reference to Moses’ divorce law, so it makes perfect sense why Jesus would appeal to it in light of the Pharisee’s question.
  • In the Greek translation of this text (the LXX), the term porneia is used to describe Israel’s sin. “Because she took her whoredom [porniea] lightly, she polluted the land, committing adultery with stone and tree” (3:9). Repeatedly, Judah’s sin is likened to prostitution (3:1-2, 6-10, 13), a sin for which God sent Israel away with a decree of divorce (3:8).
  • In the Greek translation of this text, the term “hardness of heart” (σκληροκαρδίαν) is used (4:4)—the same term Jesus uses to describe the reason why divorce is permissible in certain instances. Judah was not merely playing the whore. She treated her prostitution lightly (3:9). Judah refused to be ashamed of her sin (3:3). She was rebellious (3:13). Her seeming repentance was nothing but pretense (3:10). In a word, Judah was hardhearted in her unfaithfulness.

In other words, if divorces must happen at all, they should happen according to pattern given to us by God Himself. God divorced Israel because of her porneia and hardness of heart, which amounted to more than just adultery—it was unrepentant rebellion. 

On this basis, some Christian denominations have recognized Jesus did not mean that single acts of sexual thoughtlessness are grounds for divorce—not even in case of a physical affair—but rather Jesus was talking about persistent, unrepentant sexual sin.

The same is true of pornography use. Alone, instances of using pornography or even a habit of looking at porn are not the only factors to consider. Rather, it is critical to assess hardness of heart.

Thus, we should not think of grounds for divorce as a solid line one crosses but rather a continuum of heart-hardening sexual rebellion. God did not divorce Israel after a single instance of spiritual adultery—had He done that, He could have divorced her at Mt. Sinai, or in the wilderness, or during the reign of the judges, or during Solomon’s reign. God was patient, but eventually He wrote Israel a bill of divorce and sent her away into exile because of her callousness.

Porn and Hardness of Heart: Practicing Discernment

Even if we’re convinced pornography use can be a manifestation of hardhearted sexual rebellion, how do we assess the state of someone’s heart?

The words of Jesus in Matthew 18:15-17 are particularly helpful in this regard. Here Jesus offers for His followers a model of confrontation in cases of persistent sin.

If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone. If he listens to you, you have gained your brother. But if he does not listen, take one or two others along with you, that every charge may be established by the evidence of two or three witnesses. If he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church. And if he refuses to listen even to the church, let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector.

Jesus presents a three-tiered approach:

  1. In cases of pornography use, assuming the offending partner has not brought the offense to light of his own accord, the first people to discover the offense are often those closest to the situation. This can be spouse, a child, or even an employer. Regardless of the circumstances of the discovery, an individual Christian should approach the offending spouse to discuss the nature of his fault. This should be done with a motivation of restoration: “If he listens to you, you have gained your brother.”
  2. If this confrontation is not followed by a process of clear repentance and reconciliation, “one or two others” should then become involved. These two or three individuals—ideally those who are spiritually mature and objective—can lovingly confront the offender and, if necessary, provide witness to the confrontation should the case be brought to the church as a whole later on.
  3. If this conversation or series of conversations are met with a refusal to listen, the church should be made aware of the sin. How one should “tell it to the church,” of course, involves discernment and will depend somewhat on how the church is governed. In this third stage, the goal is still restoration, not unnecessary humiliation.

If this final confrontation is met with stubborn refusal to listen, the result should be excommunication: “let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector,” that is, as an outsider and unrepentant sinner. And yet even this should be done in a spirit that aims at the sinner’s eventual repentance (1 Corinthians 5:5; 2 Thessalonians 3:14-15).

As for the offended spouse, this process of church discipline should serve as a divinely given means to both expose hardness of heart as well as push the erring person in one direction or another.

Vicki Tiede, in her book When Your Husband is Addicted to Pornography, advocates for women to go through these three levels of confrontation prescribed in Matthew 18:15-17. Tiede includes a couple helpful diagrams for wives to consider so they can discern the Lord’s will in their situation. First, she asks women to consider their own hearts: on a scale of 1 to 10, how forgiving they have been with their husbands?

Forgiveness

Next, she asks women to examine their husbands’ hearts, evidenced by their behavior: on a scale of 1 to 10, how repentant have their husbands been as they have been confronted by the church?

Hardness of Heart

Tiede writes, “Divorce enters the picture if heart is operating near the high end of the scale, with continuous movement towards ten, while your husband’s heart is operating very near the low end of the scale” (p.246).

Once the third and final level of confrontation is reached, Vicki Tiede recommends a time of mediated separation for the couple in order to “create the crisis necessary for him to seek help and finally work toward restoration,” with the goal still being the restoration of the marriage. She writes:

“Think of it this way: the greatest gift you can give your husband is to love God more than you love your husband. God can redeem your husband; you cannot. Thus you love him more by loving in light of his need to repent” (p.244).

It is important churches and spouses avoid unnecessary extremes when it comes to church discipline. On one hand, it is best to keep the number of people involved deliberately small. The tenor behind Jesus’ words is to keep the matter as narrow as possible when it comes to involving others in the communication. On the other hand, church members should avoid making promises of “confidentiality” in the strict sense of the word. To promise not to gossip or slander is biblical, but to promise confidentiality only closes the door to future biblical discipline.

Churches should not rush the process. Each stage of communication might take several meetings, especially if there are at least hints of cooperation from the offending spouse. Plus, only time will tell just how much the erring spouse has truly listened at any stage. The goal is not only the promise to stop the pornographic behavior, but the rebuilding of trust and intimacy in the marriage through changed behavior. Tiede comments:

“You will choose to trust your husband when you are ready. Don’t worry—trusting and forgiving are not the same thing. Rebuilding trust will probably take much longer than it will take to forgive. You will know it’s time to trust when your heart helps you to choose to believe that he will make the right choices. His behaviors will become your trust barometer” (p.89).

Conclusion

In my opinion, pornography use, when it is hardhearted and unrepentant, can certainly qualify as porneia and therefore grounds for divorce.

The Westminster Confession of Faith wisely urges, in the unfortunate and hopefully rare cases where divorce is being considered, that “a public and orderly course of proceeding is to be observed; and the persons concerned in it not left to their own wills and discretion, in their own case.” As in many highly emotional and life-altering situations, when divorce is being considered, God does not want couples to be left on their own to discern His will and wisdom in the matter.

As the church we have a high calling to stand with couples in crisis and point them to the One whose love for His bride knows no end, whose justice is perfect, and whose grace increases more than all the infidelities in the world.


* For the sake of simplicity and brevity, in this article we do not address some of the other views of how porneia should be translated in this text, such as an unlawful or illicit marriage or as premarital sex before or during betrothal. These views have been championed by many intelligent Catholic and Protestant commentators, and they are dealt with at length in my thesis.

  1. Devastating Consequences

    Yes, I completely agree. Why? My dad always had a ” struggle ” with porn. He supposedly got over it after I was an adult. But 2 years ago it was found out he was downloading child porn and sexually abusing his granddaughters. It had been going on for 12 years. He abused 7 of his 13 granddaughters!!!! He is now working on a 58 year prison sentence federal and state…

    So tell me there aren’t consequences!? My mom did the godly woman thing for all those years. Praying for him, forgiving etc… And he kept begging for forgiveness and supposedly repenting.. This stuff is deadly!!! It’s destroyed a huge extended family.
    And oh yeah, he was big in the patriarchal stuff too!

    • Kay Bruner

      I am so, so sorry for the devastation your family has suffered. Too often the church has promoted that idea of “pray and forgive” without boundaries, with terrible, terrible results. Patriarchy all too often leads to these kinds of abuses, as we see demonstrated in the news over and over and over. We need to do better. We need to value women, encourage their voices, and support their healthy boundaries. We need to stand for healthy boundaries, personal responsibility, and consequences to those who make abusive choices, rather than “easy forgiveism.” Thanks for speaking up here about the deadly consequences of bad theology. Blessings, Kay

    • woolgathering

      I actually think that the church fails to recognize how deadly porn is and so treats a cancer like its just a bad flu.Call it the trivializing of the truth. Scientific studies show that porn actually changes the human brain.

      If I had children in the house and my husband brought porn in, I would be asking him to a) be willing to get help that included knowledgable treatment and accountablity or b) move out NOW. To allow that vile stuff in your home is to endanger your kids physically, sexually and spiritually. Porn is not harmless. It is dangerous. It is not normal sexuality. It is a perversion of sexuality.

      I grew up in a home in which porn was being consumed. I am not talking from a fuddy duddy position of religious prudery and ignorance. I watched the slow destruction of my father via this stuff until females were so objectified that all he saw was a potential vagina or object for pleasuring himself. I loved my dad and it was very hard for me to accept that he had become the kind of man he did. Esp since I knew it was all so unecessary and such a tragic loss of a man who was very talented and started out good hearted and gentle.

      I caught him in the act of behaving lustfully and abusively towards a child who was crying and terrified. Her distress did not throw cold water on his overall lustfull demeanor at all nor cause him to back off in horror at the fear he was causing her. He was reading a pornographic novel at the time that depicted a teacher having sex with his female students including an eleven year old, which is about how old we both were.

      Grace was never meant to provide cover for or support for evil or foster stupidity though if you listen to many churches you’d never know that. One poster here referred to not relying on man. I get what she meant. It is dangerous to talk to your average christian, and sadly this includes pastors quite often, because they have their heads in the sand about sin and evil and often practice a nice, respectable cultural christianity that is clueless about the reality of evil and abuse. They whitewash serious problems and practice a cheap and shallow grace. The church today is quite fat, increased with goods and thinks its in need of nothing, when it is more true that it is poor blind and naked and knows it not.

      That’s why one should really be careful to determine that you are dealing with someone who really does walk with God when you get advice on life altering issues. In my rather strong opinion, the church has no right to direct a woman and her children to share quarters with vile sewage from hell. Either the garbage goes or the husband goes. Marriage is not morme important than the souls of those in it.

      I read a story once about a little one who found her father’s stash of porn and after being exposed to it, needed deliverance from an unclean spirit that took advantage of her through it. Thankfully her grandmother had some knowledge of spiritual things and was able to figure out what was going on and deliver the little one of it. Then she confronted her son in law. I myself experienced having an unclean spirit accost me whilst listening to a lewd conversation my father was having with his friends when i was a tiny tot. This stuff is real, demonic and dangerous. I am not saying we ought to just turn our backs on anyone caught in the stuff, without trying to see them get free and restored, just that we should take seriously what we are actually dealing with and get it that this is not just “an issue” its a multi dimensional sin war and a battle for the minds and hearts of people that has eternal consequences. And I don’t think reconcialiation always has to be the goal. No one has the right to pressure/force a woman to reconcile with a perverted husband who may be doing okay now but might wind up dragging her through more years of hell if he relapses. That has to be the choice of the people in the situation.

      Sorry for the long comment. I came here searching for a more nuanced understanding of the word pornea, because I suspected that it might contain the meaning of objectification. The article was very good and enlightening. Look forward to you posting your whole thesis.

  2. Chris

    Some challenges I have with this:
    1. Jesus was speaking to a Jewish, Old Covenant audience…not a Christian, New Covenant audience.
    2. Adultery/Porniea in the Old Testament resulted in the death of the offending party. Therefore remarriage was allowed because the contract/covenant was over at death.
    3. Perhaps they are wrong, but numerous Hebrew and Christian scholars point out that the offense adultery/porniea referenced to, was something that took place during the betrothal period and prior to consummation. Meaning, if the man discovered prior to or at consummation that the women was/had been unclean, then and only then was he allowed to “send her away”…not months are years later or at some later offense.
    4. Jesus says the certificate of divorce was allowed to be given because of the hardness of the offended parties heart…not the heart of the offender. Therefore, if the offended party had a soft heart towards the offender, then no need for divorce.
    5. A divorce certificate under the Old Covenant was only issued by the man…not the woman.
    6. Jesus said “from the beginning it wasn’t so.” Meaning, it was never God’s intent for marriage to end in divorce. It could end by the death of one of the parties and that’s it.
    7. It’s a very difficult subject and taking the most conservative approach is safest way to insure no future sin. Assuming that it’s not sin or that is is O.K. for a Christian to divorce because of “porniea” does not mean you are not sinning and violating God’s commands if you do.

    • Thanks, Chris. Let me see if I can tackle your questions.

      1. To answer your question, let me ask another: Did Jesus intend his followers (whom heard the conversation with the Pharisees and whom He taught to apply this conversation in the verses following) to use His teachings about marriage and divorce for the church later on? Would the apostles, after Jesus’ death and resurrection, have said to themselves, “I know Jesus told us all that business about porneia and hardheartedness when he was here with us, but that only applied up to the point of Pentecost. Now we live by totally different standards. His teachings about this stuff aren’t applicable to use”? I find this interpretation to be a bit strange. In fact, we have evidence that is precisely what they didn’t do when we look at how Paul referred to Jesus’ teachings on marriage and divorce in 1 Corinthians 7.

      2. I agree that adultery was punishable by death according to the Law of Moses, but how are you applying that truth to this circumstance? Are you saying that porneia must only mean adultery because in a New Covenant context, the death penalty isn’t allowed? Can you clarify the significance of this fact in your mind?

      3. The “betrothal view,” as its sometimes called, is popular in certain circles, yes. I have two comments above (comment 1, comment 2) that address this question.

      4. As to who is the one with the hard heart, I answered this above to Roger’s question.

      5. Yes, divorces were only enacted by men, but I’m not sure what significance of this is to the issue. In the parallel text in Mark, Jesus certainly applied this teaching about divorce to women as well as men (Mark 10:12).

      6. Yes, Jesus said, “from the beginning it was not so,” but then he gives the rationale why God allowed for divorce under Moses (and why He Himself wrote a bill of divorce to Israel in Jeremiah 3-4): because of hardheartedness (a condition that didn’t exist in Eden). In other words, the intended contrast is not, “Never ever divorce because divorce wasn’t part of the original design of marriage.” Rather, the contrast is, “Divorce is not part of the original design, so when it happens it is a sign of the presence of hear-hardening sin and should not be done in a manner that compounds it with more sin. It should only be done according to pattern given to us by God who alone responds to sin in a correct manner.” The point of this statement is to shift the debate the Pharisees were having over this issue. They were debating the precise meanings of Deuteronomy 24 as the starting place for the discussion. Jesus said the starting place should be in the original design of marriage in Genesis 1 and 2, that marriage is meant to be lifelong, not something we terminate on a whim.

      7. As I stated in the beginning of the article, grounds for divorce is not the same as actually getting divorced. That is a whole other matter. Just because someone gets divorced because they believe they have biblical grounds (a) does not mean they actually have proper grounds, and (b) does not mean they are doing so with godly motives.

  3. TomGinTX

    Would a husband have grounds for divorcing his wife if she reads romance novels?

    • Great question. As it wasn’t really in the scope of my thesis, I didn’t really address that subject specifically, so my thoughts here will be only preliminary.

      1. Keep in mind, it isn’t just porneia in some general sense that is the grounds for divorce but the hardened heart—or what I call in my thesis “hardhearted sexual rebellion.”

      2. If there’s a scenario where a woman’s relationship to romance novels displays that kind of unrepentant, hardhearted rebellion against her husband, it would certainly be a viable question to ask (provided all the steps of church discipline were followed as outlined in my article).

      3. That said, I’ve personally not met anyone who actually meets this description. This could be because my experiences are limited, but this also could be because the escalation of pornography use and erotic novel use are qualitatively different.

  4. Nick Stuart

    Only men use porn? Who knew? Where do romance novels, 50 Shades of Grey, and magazines like Cosmopolitan fit into the picture? Asking for a friend.

    • Nope. Not at all. We have many articles on our website for women who struggle with porn as well (and not just the soft-core or erotica variety). The article can be applied to female porn users as much as male users (in fact, the example given by Jesus himself in Matthew 19 assumes the woman is the sexual sinner, not the man).

  5. Tim Brown

    Thank you, Luke. I hope many pastors will read what you have offered here and make it part of their toolbox when it come to dealing with these situations in the churches they serve. I appreciate the careful exegesis and pastoral approach. Blessings to you.
    Tim Brown, Pastor
    Calvary Chapel Fremont

    • Jean

      Tim, it’s great to see a Pastor say this. This issue is ramped. Most churches aren’t using tools like this to help the couples in the trauma. And they especially don’t know how to support the spouse of the sex addict, whether male or female. I want to be a support for those that have been betrayed. But most of all I want to see them regain their identity in Christ, and to know who their Heavenly Father truly is to them. Preach it at the pulpit. Teach it. Preach it. The truth will set them free. God is truth. Awesome.

  6. I am commenting here because I would really like to read your full thesis. Thanks much for sharing this thought-provoking research.

    • VJ

      I believe Jesus said that “If a man look at a woman to lust after her has committed adultery in his heart” was Jesus warning men to control their behavior towards women. Jesus knew this would be the fall of man. He was not making an excuse because men are visual sexual beingsI Jesus himself was giving wisdom for men to heed. I have been married for many years to a Christian man who hid his sin from me for many years. Our marriage & family became disfunctional. Everything that was wrong was put on me. I prayed for wisdom and the Lord revealed it to me. I confronted him over & over. Finally partial truth was revealed. I did not know truth until I stumbled upon it. You believe that being addicted to pornograpfhy and acting out in that moment is not adultery? I was really surprised to read your opinion. Jesus, himself, states the case for Adultery.

  7. Roger

    Just want to ask a question. Why do you assume that when Jesus says “your hardness of heart” he is talking about the person guilty of “porneia”? In context would it not make more sense that it’s the person seeking the divorce who has the “hardness of heart”? The question was “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife” and Jesus’ reply is “Because of your hardness of heart Moses allowed you to divorce your wives… whoever divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, and marries another, commits adultery”. It seems like it’s the wife who is guilty of “sexual immorality (porneia)” but it’s because of the husbands “hard heart” that Moses allowed divorce.

    • Fantastic question, Roger. That’s exactly how I read the text for most of my life.

      The primary reason I think it relates to the offending party is because of the connection to Jeremiah 3-4. If this text (which is the only clear Old Testament allusion to Moses’ Deuteronomy 24 divorce law) is the background of Jesus’ comment to the Pharisees (and there are many reasons to think it is), then the hardness of heart is a reference to the one guilty of porneia just as Israel was the one guilty of spiritual porneia.

      Additionally, if we think it is the offended party (in this case, the husband) who has the hard heart, then this means the Law of Moses presents a sub-Christian ethic—that under Moses, God tolerated a hard-hearted dismissal of a spouse. This not only seems to fly in the face of everything Jesus says in Matthew 19, but also many other things said about marriage and divorce in the Bible. (This issue, of course, raises a lot of law-vs-gospel questions, which is a much broader issue.)

      Also, if Jesus means the husband has the hard heart, this doesn’t fit with Deuteronomy 24. In that text, the assumption is that the wife is guilty of indecency and the husband has divorced her because of it. There is no commentary made on the wrongness of the divorce at all (only on what is to be avoided following the divorce). Moses is merely mentioning the scenario without commentary, meaning it was completely ethical under the civil law of Moses. It seems more likely, therefore, that Jesus is commenting on the hard-hearted indecency of the wife.

  8. Vince

    I am really truly blessed by the way you highlight the issue of hardness of heart and the immorality it breeds, drives and sustains. I urge my sisters out there, to bring this into their focus as they wrestle with the porn-masturbation issue in their spouses’ lives. The issue is not just the porn use…but the hardness of heart that sustains it!!!….Sisters can therefore find common cause in approaching this very difficult subject and helping their spouse to address it.

    Sisters, you too suffer from hardness of heart…it afflicts you in many other areas as well such as unhealthy relationships with food and weight, body image issues, insecurity, retail therapy etc…

    I encourage you to tap into the depths of your own struggles with any habitual sins present in your own life and process forgiveness and grace from that place. I believe you’ll find that when you do, you’ll be in a better place to assist the men (husband, son, father, son in-law, church leaders) in your life with this particular global universal goliath all men of all stripes battle with.

    It’s time to start showing more grace, forgiveness, understanding and compassion towards men who have fallen and or regularly fall/fail in this area. The anger, frustration, finger pointing, divorce threats etc do not help. Men and women can really really help each other by clearly recognising that we have a common enemy BUT he focuses on our particular weaknesses to attack us.

    Sisters we NEED your love, understanding, prayers, confidence, affirmation to help us stand strong and win these battles.

    • Broken

      Done and Done. Ten years now, still unrepentant and the heart is even more hardened than before. Unbelievable what grace and forgiveness will do – at some point it begins to ENABLE.

    • Kay Bruner

      We do often have the broken idea that grace and forgiveness means we can’t have boundaries. When we neglect healthy boundaries, yes, then “grace and forgiveness” become enabling. We’ve written about boundaries lots of times, here and here are a couple of favorites. Also, our free download Hope After Porn addresses the issue of boundaries in the stories of several women who had to face that idea as well. Blessings Kay

    • Mamaof6

      I am not sure what the relevance of bringing up a wife’s possible sins of food, weight, retail therapy, etc. have to do with this at all. If you are equating these to a husband’s porn addiction then you are way off base. Of course women have sin issues and I am sure the porn addict has more sin issues than just porn. Maybe he also has food, weight and retail therapy sins too! Non of those are even remotely reasons for divorce and that is what we are talking about here.

    • Ann Nonimus

      Vince, how dare you equate over-eating with betrayal of love and trust? Your grossly stupid analogy shows the callousness of your views of the quality of a woman, and only serves men to justify their turning their attentions to porn. You put the onus on us “sisters” perhaps not giving enough support, and relieving the man of his 100% responsibility. This sin is totally different than others in that it betrays the wife. If a man murdered others in secret, again and again, would you place that in the same category of a repeating sin that needs strength from us “sisters”? Well, this is murdering a relationship. Again and again. Shame on you.

    • Hey Vince. I think you could benefit from reading up a bit on partner trauma… it explains a lot of the unhealthy coping mechanisms in women’s lives when they are dealing with a husband with porn/sex addiction. Another thing to consider: porn has been shown to shut down empathy centers in the brain. I’m hearing a bit of a lack of empathy here for the woman you’ve betrayed (and other betrayed women). It’s not over the top, but there’s a hint of it. Might be worth exploring with God if it’s an issue for you. Finally, men need to be careful about comparing “her over-eating” with my breaking our wedding vows. Yes it’s ubiquitous right now, but it’s not on the same level. Over-eating is pain-masking, not sin. When God wants to give us an example of “the worst possible betrayal” he gives the example of rampant adultery (Ezekiel 16). Paul also warns about sexual sins being uniquely destructive (1 Cor. 6).
      I love to see those struggling supported: but for the most part it needs to be brothers coming together and supporting each other. Their traumatized wives also need support from sisters… and ideally from the man who has failed her, but is now looking to make restitution for this.
      Blessings on your journey to becoming that man.

  9. Vince

    Luke a really excellent and informative article. I am truly blessed by the way you highlight the issue of hardness of heart and the immorality it drives and sustains. Sadly yes, some people, whose hearts aren’t focused on restoration will seek to abuse the truth expressed here. If they’re honest though, I suspect they’ll have a hard time…hardness of heart is evidenced over time and in the context of a purposeful loving church family. This further highlights the need and high value of healthy loving church communities that can take on ANY TYPE of issue.

    • Thanks, Vince.

      My hope is that people will take the totality of Christ’s words to heart. Rather than seeing the exception clause as a line their spouse might cross—something they wait to see so they can eagerly jump to divorce—they will understand that reconciliation is the goal, that marriage is meant to be lifelong. I think Vicki Tiede’s words and diagrams above offer some great counsel in this.

  10. Kenneth

    Luke,
    Thanks for your thoughtful response. I think the interpretation I was thinking of was “whoever divorces—except in cases where one is not a virgin on the wedding night—and marries another, commits adultery.” I first heard this specific explanation in the print version of this: https://heartholiness.wordpress.com/2010/05/09/what-god%E2%80%99s-word-teaches-about-divorce-and-remarriage-by-missionary-ma-daoud/ (section “FORNICATION: WHAT IS IT and WHEN IS IT COMMITTED?”) which also cites the example of Mary and Joseph’s almost divorce. I was not familiar with the Greek/Roman requirements for virginity, but I know Deuteronomy 22:13-21 provides a fairly detailed discussion on the pre-wedding virginity for the Jews.One last question: Were the Greek/Roman betrothal customs similar enough to the Jewish betrothal customs to imply the “except in cases where one is not a virgin on the wedding night” reading in the other Gospels? Citations are always great :-) God bless your ministry.

    Chris,
    I agree that with a porn/lust/masturbation addiction on the table, any betrothal/engagement customs become moot points. I’m more concerned with the reasoning surrounding divorce. I believe Phyllis Tickle said that normalizing widespread divorce in the church discredits the church’s stance against homosexual marriage. But, I digress.

    • Thanks Kenneth,

      Yes, that’s another way of saying the same thing: fornication before or during betrothal would mean a loss of virginity (probably discovered on the wedding night, or in Joseph’s case well before that night). And yes, the Mary and Joseph story is often used to argue for that position.

      The betrothal view has picked up some very intelligent and vocal advocates in recent years, namely John Piper, Abel Isaksson, Mark Geldard, and David Jones, so I’m not saying the view is way out in left field. That said, I think the context helps us see Jesus isn’t talking about betrothal. None the passages cited by Jesus or the Pharisees are about betrothal. Jesus assumes the married couple in question is one flesh already, not just betrothed or just newly married and hurt by a discovery of non-virginity. The very question the Pharisees are asking is the “any cause” divorce position—which Jesus is completely refuting—but betrothal customs don’t seem to be the subject of discussion.

      In my previous comment, I was not saying the Greeks and Romans had the same sexual standards as the Jews regarding virginity. I was saying that IF we are saying Mark didn’t include the exception clause because (1) he was writing to a Gentile audience, and (2) he was writing about betrothal customs, THEN this doesn’t make much sense since Jesus’ exception clause would have been applicable to them because they also had betrothal customs.

      However, as for the Roman premium on virginity, some good resources you could read are Judith Hallett’s Fathers and Daughters in Roman Society: Women and the Elite Family, and Christian Laes and Johan Strubbe’s Youth in the Roman Empire: The Young and the Restless Years?

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