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Can a Christian marry a non-Christian?
Q: Can you please unpack 1 Corinthians 7:14? “For the unbelieving husband has been sanctified through his wife, and the unbelieving wife has been sanctified through her believing husband. Otherwise your children would be unclean, but as it is, they are holy.”
I have had someone use this as a proponent for unbelievers to marry believers to be sanctified? But also in scripture it tells us to not be unequally yoked with unbelievers. The last part I am lost about is the children being unclean. Would very much appreciate your help!
Summary
In this episode, Dr. E unpacks 1 Corinthians 7:14 and addresses a common misunderstanding of the passage. Paul is not encouraging believers to marry unbelievers in order to sanctify them. Instead, he is speaking to existing marriages where one spouse comes to faith after the marriage has already begun.
Dr. Easley explains that the presence of a Christian in a non-Christian home brings a preserving and godly influence. The unbelieving spouse and children are “set apart” by that influence, not automatically saved. This passage highlights the value of remaining faithful in a difficult spiritual environment rather than abandoning a marriage because one spouse does not share the same faith.
The conversation also explores the biblical principle of being unequally yoked. While God can graciously work through mixed-faith marriages, Dr. Easley argues that God’s design for marriage is a union between two believers pursuing Christ together. Shared faith affects every aspect of life, from family decisions and parenting to priorities and spiritual growth.
For those dating, the encouragement is clear: pursue Christ first. Rather than searching for the perfect spouse, focus on becoming the person God has called you to be and look for someone running the same race toward Jesus.
Takeaways:
- 1 Corinthians 7 addresses existing marriages where one spouse becomes a Christian, not dating or marriage choices before marriage.
- The presence of a believer in a non-Christian home brings a godly and preserving influence.
- Sanctification in this passage does not mean an unbelieving spouse is automatically saved.
- God’s design for marriage is a covenant between two believers becoming one flesh.
- While God can redeem mixed-faith marriages, pursuing one intentionally is unwise and spiritually risky.
- The best preparation for marriage is pursuing Christ wholeheartedly and finding someone doing the same.
Find more episodes of Ask Dr. E here.
If you’ve got a question for Dr. Easley, call or text us your question at 615-281-9694 or email at question@michaelincontext.com.