June 8, 2026

When Your Spouse Doesn't Share Your Faith

When Your Spouse Doesn't Share Your Faith
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Experiencing loneliness in a divided faith marriage is a silent struggle, even in good relationships. Learn biblical counsel from 1 Corinthians 7 on why your faithfulness matters, how your presence can be holy ground, and how to love your spouse well while trusting God's unseen work and timeline.

Key Takeaways

  • A divided faith marriage can create a unique loneliness when life's most important aspect isn't shared by your spouse.
  • Biblical counsel from 1 Corinthians 7 advises believing spouses to remain in the marriage, as their presence sanctifies the home and children.
  • Your primary role is to love your spouse well and pray faithfully, entrusting the outcome and timeline to God, not to convert them.
  • God works on a longer timeline than we do, so persevere in faith even when you don't see immediate results.
  • Your faithfulness and presence in the marriage are not wasted; God is working in unseen ways.

In the journey of marriage, there's a unique and often unspoken loneliness that can arise when the most foundational element of your life – your faith – isn't shared by the person closest to you. This is the heart of navigating a divided faith marriage. It's not about disagreements over chores or finances; it's about a deeper disconnect on what truly matters most. Perhaps you found Christ after marriage, or your spouse's beliefs have evolved, leaving you feeling isolated in your spiritual life. This can mean praying alone, attending church services with a partner whose heart isn't fully engaged, and carrying the primary responsibility for faith-based decisions concerning your children.

This silent struggle can persist even in marriages that are otherwise strong and loving. It's a profound sense of being alone in the most important aspect of your being, a feeling many experience without ever articulating it.

The story of Sam and Mike Dahlhauser illustrates this reality. For years, Mike was not hostile to Sam's faith, but he was certainly not interested. Sam chose a path of quiet faithfulness. Instead of lecturing or making her husband her spiritual project, she consistently prayed and remained committed to their marriage. She trusted that God was at work in ways she couldn't yet perceive, even when outward signs of change were absent. This kind of enduring faithfulness, while often uncelebrated, is incredibly powerful, even when it feels like speaking into an empty void.

The Apostle Paul addressed this very situation in his letter to the early church in 1 Corinthians 7. He offered clear counsel to believing spouses: do not leave your unbelieving partner. More than just a directive to stay, Paul revealed a profound truth: the believing spouse brings a unique holiness to the marriage and even to the children. While the practical outworking of this holiness isn't detailed day-by-day, the essence is clear – your presence in that home holds a sacred significance. It is, in a sense, holy ground, set apart by God for His purposes, often at work in ways unseen by us.

This perspective is particularly vital when you've invested years in a relationship with no apparent spiritual movement. It serves as a powerful reminder that God works on a longer timeline than we do. Mike Dahlhauser’s own journey of surrender spanned decades, influenced by his wife's persistent prayers and the support of men from Austin Ridge Bible Church who built meaningful relationships with him. This demonstrates that even long periods without visible change can be fertile ground for God’s deepest, most transformative work.

Drawing from years of counseling couples facing similar challenges in a divided faith marriage, Dr. Bart Leger offers practical encouragement. The core message is liberating: your role was never to convert your spouse. Your true calling is to love them exceptionally well and to remain steadfast in prayer, entrusting the timeline and the ultimate outcome to God. This approach frees you from a burden you were never meant to carry, placing it back into the hands of the One who orchestrates all things. Sam’s experience underscores this; though she couldn't see God’s work, her continued prayer and presence were part of His unfolding plan.

By the time you finish listening, you'll discover:

  • Why a divided-faith marriage carries a loneliness most people never say out loud
  • What Paul tells the believing spouse to do, and why their presence is called holy ground
  • How to love your spouse well without turning their faith into a project

Your presence in your home matters profoundly. Continue to love well, persist in prayer, and trust God with the unseen and the unfolding of time.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the loneliness of a divided faith marriage?

It's the silent struggle of not sharing life's most important core beliefs with the person closest to you, even in an otherwise good marriage.

What does the Bible say about staying married when your spouse doesn't share your faith?

1 Corinthians 7 advises the believing spouse not to leave their unbelieving partner, suggesting their presence brings holiness to the marriage and children.

How can I love my spouse well in a divided faith marriage?

Love them without turning their faith into a project. Focus on loving them well and praying faithfully, leaving the results and timeline to God.

Does my faithfulness matter if I don't see immediate results in a divided faith marriage?

Yes, your faithfulness matters immensely. God works on a longer timeline, and your presence can be considered 'holy ground' even when change isn't immediately visible.

Bart Leger:

Sam Dahlhauser had been married to Mike for years

Bart Leger:

before she ever saw anything that looked like movement. Mike

Bart Leger:

had his own way of handling things, his own version of a

Bart Leger:

life that made sense without God in it. He wasn't hostile to

Bart Leger:

Sam's faith, but he wasn't interested in it either. She

Bart Leger:

didn't lecture him or make his faith her project. She kept

Bart Leger:

praying and showing up for their marriage, trusting that God was

Bart Leger:

doing something she couldn't see. For a long time, she had no

Bart Leger:

evidence that anything was changing. That is one of the

Bart Leger:

loneliest places a person can be. Believing one thing with your

Bart Leger:

whole heart and coming home every day to someone who doesn't

Bart Leger:

share it and wondering if your prayers are going anywhere.

Bart Leger:

We'll come back to what eventually happened in Mike's

Bart Leger:

life, but

Bart Leger:

first, welcome to Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. I'm

Bart Leger:

Bart Leger. If you're married to someone who doesn't share your

Bart Leger:

faith, then this episode is for you. I've counseled many people

Bart Leger:

in exactly this spot. Some of them married someone knowing the

Bart Leger:

faith wasn't shared and went in with their eyes open. Others

Bart Leger:

came to Christ years into a marriage, and suddenly the

Bart Leger:

person they'd built a life with was a stranger on the things

Bart Leger:

that mattered most to them now. In nearly every case, it created

Bart Leger:

some level of conflict because you can't share your deepest

Bart Leger:

hope with someone who doesn't hold it. I've seen how lonely

Bart Leger:

that gets, even in a marriage that's good in every other way.

Bart Leger:

This is a situation many believers live in. The most

Bart Leger:

important thing in your life, your faith, is the one thing the

Bart Leger:

person closest to you doesn't share. You pray alone, or you

Bart Leger:

sit in church next to someone whose heart isn't there, or you

Bart Leger:

sit in church alone as well. The decisions about the kids and

Bart Leger:

faith land mostly on you. And in the middle of regular life,

Bart Leger:

there's a loneliness you rarely put into words, because on paper,

Bart Leger:

the marriage works, and you love each other. You just don't meet

Bart Leger:

in the one place you most want to. This is the exact situation

Bart Leger:

Paul addressed in the early church, and his counsel was

Bart Leger:

direct. Listen to 1 Corinthians 7, verses 13 and 14. And if a

Bart Leger:

believing woman has a husband who is not a believer, and he is

Bart Leger:

willing to continue living with her, she must not leave him. For

Bart Leger:

the believing wife brings holiness to her marriage, and

Bart Leger:

the believing husband brings holiness to his marriage.

Bart Leger:

Otherwise, your children would not be holy. But now, they are

Bart Leger:

holy. Look at what Paul does there. He tells the believing

Bart Leger:

wife to stay, and he tells the believing husband the same. Then

Bart Leger:

he says something striking. The believing spouse brings holiness

Bart Leger:

to the marriage, and even to the children. That is the idea of

Bart Leger:

being set apart for God. Your presence in that home is holy

Bart Leger:

ground, set apart by God for something He's doing. Paul

Bart Leger:

doesn't spell out what that looks like day to day, or even

Bart Leger:

how long it takes. He just says, your being there matters. The

Bart Leger:

faithfulness you think nobody notices is doing something in

Bart Leger:

the unseen places of your home. Notice what Sam didn't do,

Bart Leger:

though. She didn't turn Mike into a project. She didn't

Bart Leger:

lecture him. She loved him and kept praying, and she left the

Bart Leger:

pursuing to God. And here's the encouragement, especially if

Bart Leger:

you've been at this for years with no sign of change. God

Bart Leger:

works on a longer timeline than we do. Mike Dahlhauser describes

Bart Leger:

God pursuing him across decades before he surrendered. Decades.

Bart Leger:

If you're a few years in and discouraged, I believe that's

Bart Leger:

worth remembering. A stretch with no visible change can still

Bart Leger:

be a stretch where God is doing His work in the other person's

Bart Leger:

life. Your job is to love your spouse well and stay faithful in

Bart Leger:

prayer, trusting God with the timeline and the outcome. The

Bart Leger:

converting was never yours to do. God used two things to reach

Bart Leger:

Mike Dahlhauser. One was the persevering prayers of his wife.

Bart Leger:

The other was a group of Christian men at Austin Ridge

Bart Leger:

Bible Church in Austin, Texas, who got close enough to him to

Bart Leger:

make a difference. He describes God's pursuit of him as spanning

Bart Leger:

decades. He didn't walk through a door and find easy faith on

Bart Leger:

the other side. He describes a long resistance and a longer

Bart Leger:

pursuit, and at the end of it, a surrender. Sam's prayers were

Bart Leger:

part of the foundation God laid. Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 7

Bart Leger:

that the believing spouse brings holiness to the marriage. He

Bart Leger:

doesn't define what that looks like day to day or how long it

Bart Leger:

takes. He just says your presence in that home matters.

Bart Leger:

God's at work in the places you can't see. Sam couldn't see it

Bart Leger:

either. She prayed and stayed, and God was working. Here's

Bart Leger:

today's challenge. If you're married to someone who doesn't

Bart Leger:

believe, do one thing today that loves them well with no agenda

Bart Leger:

attached. Make the coffee without a word about church or

Bart Leger:

sit through the show they like. Let your faith look like warmth

Bart Leger:

toward them today, and pray for them once tonight, the kind of

Bart Leger:

prayer you may have stopped praying because it felt like it

Bart Leger:

wasn't working. God hears it, and he's been working the whole

Bart Leger:

time. Father, thank you that you pursue the people we love long

Bart Leger:

after we've run out of strength to pursue them ourselves. For

Bart Leger:

the husband or wife praying alone in a divided home, remind

Bart Leger:

them their presence. There is holy ground, and their

Bart Leger:

faithfulness is never wasted. Do what we cannot do in the heart

Bart Leger:

of the one we married, and give us the patience to keep loving

Bart Leger:

and keep praying while you work in the places we can't see. In

Bart Leger:

Jesus' name, amen. If this episode encouraged you today,

Bart Leger:

would you share it with someone who might need to hear it? Just

Bart Leger:

go to dailydevotionsforbusylives.com

Bart Leger:

slash 255 and copy the link. It only takes a second, and it

Bart Leger:

makes a real difference in someone's day. Thanks for

Bart Leger:

joining me on Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. Remember, your

Bart Leger:

presence in that home is holy ground, and your faithfulness is

Bart Leger:

doing more than you can see. Come back next time for more

Bart Leger:

encouragement to help you live grounded in God's truth. Until

Bart Leger:

then, God bless, and have a great day.