Healing After Betrayal: How Faith and Therapy Can Restore Your Marriage

Silhouettes of two people standing apart at sunset, reaching out and touching hands to form the shape of a heart against a colorful sky.
Betrayal can leave your marriage shaken, your heart wounded, and your future uncertain. But healing is possible. With faith, honesty, and the right support, couples can rebuild trust and restore connection. If you are both willing to do the work, this painful chapter does not have to be the end of your story.

Healing After Betrayal: How Faith and Therapy Can Restore Your Marriage

You are hurting. Betrayal is one of the deepest wounds a marriage can carry. Whether it’s an
emotional affair, a physical one, or a long pattern of deception, the pain can feel permanent,
like something has broken beyond repair. These feelings are real. They are understandable. And you are not alone in them.

As a licensed marriage and family therapist who blends pastoral care with proven research
based practice, I have sat with many couples in this exact place. Raw. Exhausted. Wondering if their marriage can survive. If that is where you are right now, you are in the right place. The honest answer is that your marriage can heal. But healing asks for more than a quick prayer or wishful thinking. It asks for honest reckoning. It asks for the willingness to do hard, holy work.

And for couples of faith, it asks for the grace to believe that God can redeem what feels
irredeemable.

The Wound Has to Be Named Before It Can Heal

You do not have to rush. One of the first things I do with couples navigating betrayal is help
them slow down. There is often a pull to skip past the pain, to forgive fast, “move on,” and get back to normal. But premature forgiveness, without honest acknowledgment, leaves the wound festering beneath the surface.

Scripture speaks to this. James 5:16 invites us to “confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, that you may be healed.” Confession is not a formality. It is a relational act. The betrayed partner needs to hear what happened. The one who caused harm needs to speak it clearly, without minimizing or deflecting.

From a Gottman therapy lens, this is where attunement begins. Dr. John Gottman’s research
shows that couples who repair after betrayal do so by turning toward each other rather than
away. That starts when one partner stays emotionally present while the other shares their pain without growing defensive. Pastoral confession paired with the skill of emotional attunement is where real healing takes root.

Repentance Is More Than an Apology

There is a difference between remorse and repentance. Remorse says, “I feel bad about what I did.” Repentance says, “I am changing the direction I was moving.” For the betraying partner, this difference matters deeply.

Gottman’s idea of repair attempts fits here. A repair attempt is any action spoken or
behavioral that calms conflict and restores connection. In betrayal recovery, repair attempts
are the daily, steady behaviors that rebuild trust: transparency with devices, keeping
commitments, staying emotionally available even when it’s uncomfortable.

These are not grand gestures. They are small, repeated acts that gather into evidence. Over
time, that evidence becomes the foundation of a new trust, one stronger than before,
because it has been tested. For Christian couples, these repair attempts can be seen as acts of covenant faithfulness. You are not only rebuilding a relationship. You are honoring a vow you made before God.

Why Betrayal Hurts So Deeply

You are not weak for feeling shattered. Betrayal does more than break a promise. It rewrites the story you believed about your marriage. The safety you once felt now feels uncertain. The memories you treasured now carry questions.

This is why betrayal often feels like trauma. Your mind replays moments, searching for clues you may have missed. Your body stays on alert, bracing for the next blow. These responses are normal. They are your heart trying to protect itself from being wounded again.

Naming this pain matters. When couples understand that betrayal injures the brain and body, not only the heart, they stop treating recovery as a test of willpower. Healing becomes a process of restoring safety, step by step. Grace makes room for that process. So does patience. You are allowed to need both.

The Betrayed Partner’s Journey: Grace Is Not the Same as Minimizing

You carry your own work, too. Healing is never a one-person job. Forgiveness, in a Christian framework, does not mean minimizing the harm or pretending it never happened. It means releasing the debt so that you are no longer imprisoned by it. Forgiveness and reconciliation are not the same. Forgiveness is an internal act. Reconciliation
asks both partners to show up and do the work.

In therapy, I help betrayed partners recognize what Gottman researchers call flooding, that
state of emotional overwhelm where the nervous system is so activated that real conversation becomes impossible. Learning to name that state and ask for a short, regulated pause not a stonewalling retreat, is a skill. It can be the difference between a conversation that heals and one that reopens wounds.

Practical Steps Toward Reconciliation

If you and your spouse are in betrayal recovery, here are steps I walk couples through:

 

  • Create a full-disclosure agreement. You deserve honesty. Work with a therapist to
    shape what disclosure looks like for your situation.
  • Build new transparency practices. Open devices, shared calendars, and regular
    check-ins are not punishments. They are scaffolding for rebuilding trust.
  • Schedule intentional connection. Gottman’s “Sound Relationship House” reminds us
    that healing also happens in regular, low-stakes time together, not only in heavy
    conversations.
  • Pray together, even when it’s awkward. Many couples in crisis stop praying.
    Reclaiming that practice, even briefly, reconnects you to the covenant beneath the
    pain.
  • Reach out for support. Betrayal trauma is real. A therapist trained in both relational and faith-sensitive care gives you tools that good intentions alone cannot.

 

Take these steps slowly. You do not have to do them all at once. Progress is built one
honest day at a time. Each small act of repair tells your spouse and yourself that
this marriage is worth fighting for.

There Is Still a Future for Your Marriage

You can heal. I have watched couples walk into my office convinced their marriage was over and walk out months later, with more honesty, depth, and intimacy than they had ever known. This is not easy. It is not a guarantee. But it is possible.

The God who specializes in resurrection does not stop at marriages. If you are both willing to do the work; confessing, repairing, attuning, extending grace, there is still a future for your marriage. And it may be one neither of you expected. Reach out today

Headshot of Jason Lugo
Written By: Jason Lugo, LMFT

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