Marriage is under pressure today.
Divorce is common. Pornography is widespread. Commitment often feels optional. Many people wonder whether lifelong faithfulness is even realistic anymore.
Yet when Jesus speaks in Matthew 5:27-37, He presents a radically different vision. He calls His followers to something deeper than cultural norms and higher than outward behavior. He points us back to God’s design for marriage—a design built on faithfulness, integrity, forgiveness, and lifelong commitment.
While these teachings can feel challenging, they ultimately reveal God’s desire to bless and protect His people. Jesus is not trying to make life harder. He is showing us a better way to live.
Throughout the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus consistently addresses the heart.
The religious leaders of His day often focused on outward appearances. As long as someone seemed righteous on the surface, deeper issues could be ignored.
Jesus challenges that mindset.
Instead of merely asking whether someone has committed adultery, He asks what is happening in the heart. Instead of focusing only on legal divorce, He addresses commitment and faithfulness. Instead of discussing technical rules about oaths, He emphasizes honesty and integrity.
God cares about more than actions. He cares about the condition of the heart that produces those actions.
In Matthew 5:27-28, Jesus says:
“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ But I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart.”
These words remind us that sexual faithfulness begins long before physical actions occur.
Jesus addresses the internal desires that eventually lead to outward sin. He exposes the reality that lust damages relationships even when no physical affair takes place.
One of the greatest challenges facing marriages today is pornography.
Modern culture often treats pornography as harmless entertainment or a private matter. Scripture presents a very different perspective.
Pornography:
Jesus compares sin to a dangerous disease that must be taken seriously. Just as a person would aggressively treat a life-threatening illness, believers are called to remove anything that threatens their spiritual health and relationships.
The goal is not merely behavior modification. The goal is a transformed heart that honors God and values others as people rather than objects.
Jesus then addresses divorce in Matthew 5:31-32.
In His day, many people viewed marriage as disposable. Some religious teachers allowed divorce for nearly any reason.
Jesus calls His listeners back to God’s original intention.
Marriage is not simply a contract of convenience. It is a covenant—a lifelong promise between a husband and wife before God.
Every marriage experiences challenges.
There will be seasons of disagreement, disappointment, frustration, and hardship. Yet God’s design is not to abandon the relationship when difficulties arise.
Instead, Scripture calls couples to:
Many of the strongest marriages are not those without problems. They are marriages where two imperfect people consistently choose faithfulness through those problems.
One of the most important themes running through Jesus’ teaching is forgiveness.
Healthy marriages require forgiveness because every spouse is a sinner living with another sinner.
Without forgiveness:
With forgiveness:
Forgiveness does not mean ignoring sin or pretending hurt never happened. It means bringing pain to God and refusing to let bitterness control the future.
The gospel itself is built upon forgiveness. Because Christ has forgiven us, we are empowered to forgive others.
Discussions about marriage and divorce often bring pain for many readers.
Some carry regrets from past decisions. Others have experienced betrayal, abandonment, or broken relationships.
The good news of the gospel is that Jesus does not abandon those who have failed.
Scripture teaches that:
No failure places someone beyond God’s grace.
When we confess our sins, Christ forgives. He restores broken people and continues His work of renewal in their lives. The answer to past failure is not despair but repentance and faith in the mercy of God.
Jesus concludes this section by addressing honesty.
He says:
“Let what you say be simply ‘Yes’ or ‘No’” (Matthew 5:37).
In the ancient world, people often used elaborate oaths to convince others they were telling the truth.
Jesus points to a better standard.
His followers should be known for such honesty and integrity that extra promises become unnecessary.
A person who reflects Christ:
Trust forms the foundation of every healthy relationship. Whether in marriage, family, friendships, or church life, honesty strengthens the bonds that hold people together.
The teachings of Jesus often challenge cultural assumptions.
Our culture frequently celebrates self-fulfillment over sacrifice, personal happiness over commitment, and convenience over covenant.
Jesus calls His people to a different way.
He calls believers to:
These values are not restrictions meant to diminish life. They are gifts intended to protect us from unnecessary pain and lead us toward genuine flourishing.
Matthew 5 reminds us that God’s standards are high.
None of us perfectly embody purity, faithfulness, forgiveness, or integrity. Every person falls short.
Yet the same Savior who calls us to holiness also offers forgiveness.
Jesus reveals our sin, but He also carries that sin to the cross.
Through His death and resurrection, believers receive:
God’s design for marriage reflects His faithful love for His people. And even when we fail, His grace remains greater than our failures.
That is the hope found at the heart of the gospel.