Episode #7 Show Notes
Host: Warren Lamb
Guest: Dr. Steve Swartz
Summary
In this episode of The Soul Care Podcast, Warren is joined by Dr. Steve Swartz who presents his carefully researched biblical case that verbal/emotional abuse (reviling) can constitute abandonment under 1 Corinthians 7, potentially providing biblical grounds for divorce. Drawing from 25+ years of pastoral ministry and rigorous hermeneutical ...
Episode #7 Show Notes
Host: Warren Lamb
Guest: Dr. Steve Swartz
Summary
In this episode of The Soul Care Podcast, Warren is joined by Dr. Steve Swartz who presents his carefully researched biblical case that verbal/emotional abuse (reviling) can constitute abandonment under 1 Corinthians 7, potentially providing biblical grounds for divorce. Drawing from 25+ years of pastoral ministry and rigorous hermeneutical study, Dr. Swartz challenges the church to recognize that protecting the vulnerable takes precedence over preserving marriages at all costs. His work represents a significant development within Reformed theology, maintaining fidelity to Scripture while expanding the understanding of how God's Word addresses domestic oppression. This conversation challenges pastors, counselors, and church leaders to examine whether their theology truly protects the oppressed or inadvertently enables oppressors. Dr. Swartz's work represents courageous scholarship that maintains biblical authority while advocating for those trapped in covenant betrayal.
Takeaways
- Biblical fidelity doesn't require rigidity - Careful hermeneutics can expand our understanding without abandoning core principles
- The vulnerable matter more than institutions - Jesus came to set captives free, not preserve marriages at any cost
- Abuse is a gospel issue - Persistent, unrepentant abuse reveals an unregenerate heart
- Churches need reformation - Many inadvertently protect abusers while further traumatizing victims
- Courage is required - Confronting influential abusers may cost churches financially, but purifies them spiritually.
- Churches often commit "secondary abuse" by mishandling initial disclosures
- Women often fear disclosure because of widespread church failures in handling abuse
- Successful, influential men who are revilers often receive protection rather than discipline
- One hour of counseling barely scratches the surface - pastoral humility is essential
Relevant Links
Dr. Swartz Resources
- Abuse, Abandonment, and Divorce: Confronting the Reality of Marital Abuse with Foundational Issues, Biblical Compassion, and Exegetical Objectivity (Steve Swartz)
- Shattered Shepherds: Finding Hope in the Midst of Ministry Disaster (Steve Swartz)
- Sermon Series “Steadfast in the Faith” (Listen in reverse order)
Other Books Mentioned
- Narcissism (Volume 1): Unmasking the Avatar (Biblically) (Warren Lamb)
- Behind the Veil: Exposing the Evil of Domestic Oppression and Providing Hope (Warren Lamb)
- Not Under Bondage: Biblical Divorce for Abuse, Adultery and Desertion (Barbra Roberts)
- Called to Be Holy: The Discipline of the Church (Jeremy Walker)
Other Links
- Truth in Love Biblical Counseling
- Warren’s Blog
- Unbound: Growing Ever-freer in Christ (Truth in Love curriculum)
Warrenism of the Week: “All abuse is evil; all abuse is destructive; NO abuse is permissible by God.”
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