Nearly 6 in 10 Christians Switch Churches When They Divorce
Most Divorcees Don’t Stay—And That Should Concern Church Leaders
Lifeway Research found that nearly 6 in 10 churchgoing Christians switch churches after divorce. That’s not rebellion. Most of the time, it’s self-protection. When a divorce is necessary—especially a life-saving one—people don’t need pressure, gossip, or suspicion. They need safety, clarity, and dignity.
Why Christians Leave Their Church After Divorce
Divorce often triggers a wave of second trauma inside the church: whispers, side-eyes, “well-meaning” lectures, and leaders who treat abuse like a marriage “communication problem.” Many divorcees leave because staying means being managed instead of cared for.
Common reasons divorcees switch churches
- Shame and silence: people hide what’s happening because it feels humiliating to admit it.
- Unsafe counsel: leaders push reconciliation at any cost—even when there’s coercion or cruelty.
- Fear of punishment: some churches discipline the victim instead of confronting the destructive spouse.
- Children caught in the middle: parents are trying to reduce chaos, not increase it.
Pastors: Here’s What to Do Instead
- Assume more abuse exists than you’ve heard about. Abuse is often hidden—especially in religious communities.
- Learn why victims stay quiet. Read survivors’ own explanations here: Why victims stayed silent.
- Train your staff to respond safely. Start here: FREE domestic violence training for church staff.
- Update your church’s framework. Abuse is not “marital conflict.” It’s a character issue and a safety issue. Begin here: How to rethink marital abuse.
- Listen to what survivors say helped—and what harmed. Good vs. bad pastoral counsel (survivors’ words).
A Word to Christians Facing Divorce
If your church responds with condemnation, denial, or pressure to return to an unsafe situation, you may need to find a safer church community. That isn’t bitterness. It’s wisdom. You deserve support that protects the vulnerable and tells the truth about destructive behavior.
One Scripture Church Leaders Should Not Ignore
1 Peter 3:7 (NLT): In the same way, you husbands must give honor to your wives. Treat your wife with understanding as you live together… Treat her as you should so your prayers will not be hindered.
Read more about the Lifeway Research study on churchgoing divorced Christians
- Pastors and Christian Divorcees: What LifeWay’s Surveys Reveal About the Church Divorce Gap
- What the LifeWay Divorce Study Reveals — And Why Focus on the Family Isn’t Talking About It
- LifeWay Identified the Features of Divorced Christians. Why Don’t Focus on the Family’s Marriage Materials Address Them?
Related Resources
- Do my pastors have a say about me getting a divorce?
- What research says about kids in high-conflict homes
- What is a life-saving divorce?


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