This is my point, though. Who are we loving? No one, not even God. By supporting these marriages to stay together, you are not loving the abuser by letting them get away without serious consequences to their equally serious behaviour. And for the abused spouse, we are not loving them by suggesting they need to stay married to someone who is abusing them. There is no love. Therefore, since God is love, there is no godliness in this type of situation.
I don't relate to your line of reasoning at all. I was posting about verbal abuse. Jesus loved sinners who physically abused Him to the point of nailing Him on a cross. He still loved them. Peter glorified God by his death, according to John, which tradition tells us was an upside down crucifixion.
I'm not advising letting an abuser get away with abusive behavior either.
If we are talking about verbal abuse, let's say a man is married to a woman who occasionally gets angry and calls him a loser and insults his mother. Is it 'not love' if we don't tell the man to divorce his wife... over verbal abuse?
I know someone insulting you all the time can wear you down, especially if you begin to believe that person. It's not a pretty thing. But the Bible never says that is grounds for divorce. Not every spouse of someone who posts here is a Christian either.
I don't believe the reason we have more divorce in society these days than a couple of generations ago is because society or the church is more loving. I think the problem is rampant sin and the breakdown of needed social more's for the most part.
How do we measure love? Jesus said, if you love me, you will keep my commandments. He also said that if a man puts away His wife, except it be for fornication, and marries another, he commits adultery. And he that marries her that is divorced commits adultery.
He didn't say it wasn't adultery if your wife hit you in the head with a rolling pin and you put her away and married someone else. That doesn't make it not adultery. Adultery occurs when there is divorce and remarriage, not physically protecting yourself in another location, but remarrying someone else contrary to what Christ taught here in the passage.
I realize there are extreme situations. Normally, a king's general should stay with his king and continue to serve him on the battle field. But Saul was throwing spears at David and trying to kill him, so David ran away. But he still would not raise his hand against the Lord's anointed. He did not participate in any conspiracies to make another man (which would be himself in this case) king in the place of Saul while Saul was still alive. He did run to save his life. But he wasn't unfaithful to his king or to His God. Normally, a wife should stay by her husband. There are some people in extreme situations, but that doesn't justify their sinning against God.
Grounds for divorce include a hard heart. It is unloving to suggest that people with hard hearts should stay married. Sure, you can respond by saying "Jesus said it was not that way from the beginning, etc" but we are not in the beginning. We live in a sinful world. Jesus was basically saying that we need to keep our hearts soft toward our spouse in order to lessen the chances of divorce.
Also, I can understand restrictions on advising divorce. Anyone with an email address can get an account here and give any kind of advice.