Skip to main content

When Your Family Falls Apart

Share This article

Every month in our country more than 1 million children learn their family is being broken by divorce. In 85 percent of these divorces, one spouse desperately wants to save the marriage.

Perhaps you are in that group. You wanted to get the help you needed to save your marriage, but your spouse was unwilling to go with you.

Let's take a look at some redemptive things the Lord can do to help you build another future for yourself and your children.

Much of our frustration in life comes from attempting to control what we cannot control and neglecting to control what we can. Your spouse has taken out of your hands some of the options you would have preferred.

But God is not going to punish you for disobedience on your spouse's part. Yet there are big issues you are going to have to face.

Dealing With the Loss

Grief and mourning are never pleasant. However, they do vary in intensity depending upon the timing and circumstances leading up to the divorce. For example, if the former spouse has been verbally and physically abusive to you or to your children, a certain amount of relief comes along with the pain of your family's falling apart. And you experience a similar mixture of feelings when the marriage has a long history of infidelity.

However, the most aggravated and intense pain is experienced when suddenly, almost out of the blue, your spouse announces he or she is leaving the marriage. Coming to terms with either kind of pain will take from 6 to 8 months. Attempting to avoid dealing with the loss will only further complicate your life. As you deal with loss, you will find yourself going through stages of recovery:

1. A period of shock. You will find it hard to believe that what is happening to you actually is happening.

2. A barrage of feelings. Anger, guilt, frustration -- all of these emotions are going to churn up within you. They will not settle down right away, either.

3. A period of wanting to find God's will. You may tell yourself, "I know it is not His will that a marriage end in divorce. I did not have anything to do about this. Now how do I find God? Where is He?"

That is when you want to remember Jeremiah's trip to the potter's house (see ). Just as Jeremiah saw the potter make another vessel out of the one that was marred, God knows you did everything you could to save your marriage and He is not going to punish you for what your mate did. He will help you find a new future for yourself. Be patient and know that, when you are through this, God will bring you into a good place.

Reassuring the Children

Children never feel more overwhelmed and powerless than when their parents divorce. It is very important for you to explain to the children what is happening as early in the process as possible. They do not need to know all of the details, but they do need to know why you are divorcing. The younger the children are, the more likely they are to be perplexed by the fact that even though their parents are Christians, they are divorcing.

You need to explain to them as well as you can. You may want to be prepared to say to them, "Well, honey, it is not God's will for two people who are Christians to divorce, but we do not always do God's will."

They should also understand that neither of their parents is divorcing them. Make it as easy as possible for your children to have a loving relationship with both parents. Explain to the children when the family is going to separate and if Mommy is going to leave or Daddy is going to leave, where he or she is going to live.

It also helps to take the child by where the parent is going to stay, because the child is going to worry about who is going to take care of Mommy or Daddy.

As long as there is some hope for reconciliation, that is a good thing. But when you as a parent feel that all hope for reconciliation is gone, be honest in expressing that to your children.

Otherwise small children will be praying for reconciliation and wondering why God is not answering their prayer when one or both of their parents are not interested in reconciliation.

Establishing a Single Parent Family

The next step in recovery has to do with establishing a single parent family. The former couple will need to get settled in two separate residences. The routine of child support payments, custody arrangements, and parental visitation will need to be established. All of this will take at least 2 or 3 months. As soon as possible, the children need to be establishing two residences. Suitcases should be eliminated so that everything is duplicated in the home where the child will visit as well as the home where he will live. All the child needs to do is to go from the custodial parent 's home to the home of the parent the child is visiting.

As nearly as possible, two homes should be provided for the child so that he can feel at home with either parent.

This may be difficult because often the custodial parent wants to feel like the "authentic" or "real" parent. But the custodial parent needs to recognize that, regardless of the issues with his or her previous spouse, the previous spouse is still a parent of the children.

And often when the spouse who got the divorce is not following the Lord, the Christian parent is greatly concerned about the moral values in the visitation home. But there is nothing you can do about that if the court has determined what visitation rights are for the ex-spouse.

You have to live your life so that the child will be able to see the way you live and the way his other parent lives and come to a judgment in his own life later. Focus on the quality of life you demonstrate to your child in your walk with God.

Reviewing the Previous Marriage

The wise person will begin to ask himself some difficult, soul-searching questions as he reviews the previous marriage. How wise was my first mate-choice? Was I a believer when I married? Did I marry a believer? Did I bring crippling baggage from my family into my marriage?

If the person came from a divorced family, it is important to ask, "Did this marriage fail for similar reasons?" In other words, without blaming oneself entirely for the failure of one's marriage, a person should use this period of recovery to honestly assess the extent to which his or her behavior may have contributed substantially to the failure of the marriage.

Two important benefits should come out of this grueling introspection:

1. A wiser mate choice. Most divorced people will marry again whether or not they had biblical grounds for their first divorce.

2. The opportunity to ask themselves, "What about me?" Are there things about themselves they need to ask the Lord to help them change before they go into another marriage?

Learning To Live Again

You want to be sure that you win the battle for your happiness as a divorced person before you think about another marriage. By this time, you know from experience that marriage never makes anybody happy. Marriage only intensifies the state in which marriage found you. Your happiness is too important for God to put in anyone else's hands but yours and His.

When He has helped you find happiness as a single divorced parent, you should be very careful about risking that happiness to any relationship. As you know, there is only one thing worse than not being married, and that is being married to the wrong person.

Take a careful look at another person before you get involved with him or her. It is not enough to know that he or she is a Christian. You need to know that the person has found happiness and joy in his or her relationship with Jesus. Then, if you have found that same happiness and joy, neither of you will need the other to make him or her happy. Rather, by bringing your personal happiness into each other's lives, you may both find greater happiness.

Do you know Jesus Christ as your personal Savior? Have you found happiness in Him? As broken as your life may be, He can help you put it together again. Put the broken pieces in His hands!


Copyright © Media Ministries of the Assemblies of God.

Share This article

About The Author

Richard
Dobbins

Dr. Richard D. Dobbins is the leader of EMERGE Ministries of Akron, Ohio. He serves on the faculty of Ashland Theological Seminary and initiated the coordination of their master s program in Pastoral Counseling. An acclaimed author, Dr. Dobbins has created numerous film/video presentations on topics of interest to believers and has written many books, booklets, articles and audiotapes on Christian mental health care.