Christian Wedding Vows After Escaping an Abusive Marriage

by | Feb 10, 2026 | Marriage & Divorce, Remarriage After Abuse, Will I Find Love Again?

Christian Wedding Vows After Escaping an Abusive Marriage

Safer Wedding Vows for Remarriage After Abuse

When Christian remarry after abuse, they ask an important question: What do wedding vows sound like when you’ve lived through betrayal, abuse, or spiritual coercion—and you’re not willing to repeat the same theology that harmed you the first time?

Many abuse survivors entered their first marriage with sincerity and faith, only to discover that their vows were later used against them. Words meant to express devotion were weaponized to excuse bad behavior and demand endurance without accountability. Here are some post-abuse wedding vows to consider.


💛 Trauma-Informed Christian Vows — Structure

1️⃣ Start with safety + presence (not “you complete me”)

Trauma-informed vows avoid language of possession or dependency. For remarriage after a toxic marriage, the vows name peace, agency, and mutual presence. These vows reject fear-based theology and center peace—something survivors often had to reclaim safety intentionally

Examples

  • “With you, I learned what peace can feel like.”

  • “You’ve shown me love can be steady, not scary.”

  • “I knew you were my person because you honored my voice.”


2️⃣ Name what’s healing about them

Rather than romanticizing or minimizing, trauma-informed vows name concrete qualities that build trust.

  • “I love the way you listen without fixing.”

  • “I love how you respect boundaries as a form of love.”

  • “You reflect God’s kindness in the way you care.”


3️⃣ Make promises that include repair + accountability

This is where trauma-informed vows most clearly differ from traditional scripts.

Love is not defined by endurance alone, but by truth, repentance, and change.

  • “I promise to tell the truth and welcome the light.”

  • “I promise to seek forgiveness and do the work of change.”

  • “I will never use faith, vows, or Scripture to control you.”

  • “I promise love will always include consent and respect.”


4️⃣ Close with freedom + grace (not chains)

Biblical covenant is chosen, not coerced.

  • “Today I choose you freely, and I will keep choosing you with God’s help.”

  • “May our covenant be a place of safety, joy, and truth.”

  • “Love will not demand your suffering; love will protect your flourishing.”


More Examples of Trauma-Informed Christian Wedding Vows

  • “Before God, I promise to love you with gentleness and integrity.”

  • “I vow to honor your voice, boundaries, and dignity as God’s image-bearer.”

  • “I promise to seek repair when I fall short, not excuses.”

  • “I will tell the truth, because love rejoices in truth.”

  • “I will never use Scripture, faith, or vows to control you.”

  • “With God’s help, I will protect your flourishing, not demand your suffering.”

These vows are not anti-biblical.

They are deeply biblical.


✨ Sample Trauma-Informed Christian Vow (Short)

“Before God, I promise to love you with gentleness and integrity—to honor your voice, respect your boundaries, seek repair when I fail, and build a marriage where trust and grace can grow.”


✨ Sample Trauma-Informed Christian Vow (Long)

“Before God, and in the presence of those who love us, I choose you freely and with joy.

I promise to love you with gentleness and integrity—not with control, entitlement, or fear.

I vow to honor your voice, your boundaries, and your dignity as God’s beloved creation.

I promise to walk with you in truth, because love rejoices in truth and cannot flourish in secrecy.

When life is heavy, I will not abandon you.
When life is joyful, I will celebrate with you.
And when I fall short—as I surely will—I promise to seek repentance, repair, and growth, not excuses or denial.

I will never use faith, Scripture, or vows to silence you or demand your suffering.

Instead, with God’s help, I will build a home where peace is possible, where love is safe, where forgiveness is real, and where accountability is welcomed.

Today I do not promise perfection.

I promise presence.
I promise honesty.
I promise humility.
I promise to keep choosing love that protects, love that heals, and love that reflects the heart of Christ.

May our covenant be a place of safety, joy, and grace.

And may the Lord bless our marriage with enduring kindness, deep trust, and a love that helps us both flourish.”


What Makes a Wedding Vow Trauma-Informed and Biblical?

1. Safety Is Assumed

Biblical love is not frightening.

2. Accountability Is Included

Love allows failure—but never excuses ongoing harm. Forgiveness without repentance is addressed more fully here: https://lifesavingdivorce.com/forgiveness1/

3. Faith Is Not Used as Control

God’s Word is never meant to dominate or silence. Trauma-informed vows explicitly reject spiritual coercion.

4. Freedom Is Honored

Biblical love is chosen daily, not enforced through fear.


“But Those Don’t Sound Traditional Enough”

Even recognizable Christian vows can be weaponized when stripped of biblical justice—especially in age-gap, blended, or second marriages, where power dynamics matter.

This is why protecting children and future generations from abusive theology is critical.


Are Traditional Wedding Vows Actually Biblical?

Most “traditional” wedding vows are not direct quotes from Scripture. Many come from the Anglican Church’s Book of Common Prayer, not from a biblical command.

Phrases like “for better or worse” and “till death do us part” are part of church wedding liturgy from the 1500’s. Yet sometimes they are used as a license for abuse, or a requirement to endure harm without accountability.


Why Trauma-Informed Vows Make Some People Uncomfortable

Chains often look holy to those who benefit from them.

Trauma-informed vows remove leverage. They reject “stay-at-any-cost” theology. They insist that covenant includes accountability—and consequences for covenant-breaking.

That makes some bystanders uneasy. Some people feel more comfortable with vows that have teeth—vows that can be used to pressure victims of abuse to remain in unsafe marriages. That’s one reason I often talk about weaponized theology.

See these common Christian marriage myths:  https://lifesavingdivorce.com/myths

But Scripture consistently sides with truth, justice, and the protection of the vulnerable—not with appearances or forced permanence.


Wedding Vows Were Never Meant to Be Chains

If your first marriage taught you that vows function like traps, you are not alone.

Many survivors entered marriage sincerely, only to discover that vows were treated as immunity for harm.

But biblical covenant does not require victims to enable unrepentant sin.

Marriage vows were meant to protect love—not imprison the faithful.

You are allowed to write vows that reflect God’s heart.
You are allowed to write vows that center safety.
You are allowed to write vows that cannot be weaponized.

Because covenant was never meant to function as a cage.

It was meant to function as love.


Why These Vows Matter

Trauma-informed wedding vows don’t weaken marriage. They strengthen it by refusing to spiritualize harm or excuse unrepentant behavior.

They reflect a God who:

  • values truth over appearances
  • protects the vulnerable
  • calls for repentance, not silence
  • never confuses suffering with holiness

If traditional vows were used against you in the past, you are not required to repeat them unchanged. You are allowed to speak promises that reflect wisdom, healing, and biblical justice.

Because vows were never meant to trap the faithful.

They were meant to express love.


 

Are you going through a life-saving divorce? I’d like to invite you to my private Facebook group, “Life-Saving Divorce for Separated or Divorced Christians.” Just click the link and ANSWER the 3 QUESTIONS. This is a group for women and men of faith who have walked this path, or are considering it. Allies and people helpers are also welcome.  I’ve also written a book about spiritual abuse and divorce for Christians. You may also sign up for my email list below.

50 MOST POPULAR BLOG POSTS

Start Here

Physical and Emotional Abuse & Infidelity

God Allows Divorce to Protect Victims

 

Does God Hate Divorce? No, Most English Bible Translations Don’t Say That


How to Find a Good Supportive Church

 

What If My Pastor Says It Would Be Wrong to Get Divorced for
Abuse?

Divorce Saves Lives: The Surprising (Wonderful!) Truth About Divorce Nobody
Told You

Will I Ever Find Love Again? Dating After Divorce: Good News

Common Myths

FOLLOW

Get the Life-Saving Divorce Book

The Life-Saving Divorce is about divorces for very serious reasons: a pattern of sexual immorality, physical abuse, chronic emotional abuse, life-altering addictions, abandonment, or severe neglect. This book will give you hope for your future, and optimism about your children. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Ways to purchase the book

Order in paperback or KINDLE on   :

Order on   :

Sign up for the email list for find out about helpful new blog posts, videos, and FREE Kindle book giveaways