The over 36,000 people who have left stories who used principles inspired by the story of Fireproof are not fictional. Neither are the thousands who've turned marriages around with the help of ministries that are experienced in that work. Some of those ministries, I've mentioned above.
Other than the weirdness of knowing such an exact number who can attribute the saving of their marriage to a book/movie/merchandising machine... The principles in "Fireproof" are actually mainstream pop psychology, employed in personal therapy since the 1970s. It was rebranded and resold as a Christian ideology as a marketing technique... One that worked as the Christian community ate it up.
While I'm sure that people found inspiration in it, maybe even salvaged their marriage in some form, the fact is that people can draw inspiration in anything to save their marriage. Like I know not one, not two, but four couples who attribute the saving of their relationships to principles espoused in "Star Wars." That all being said, it is (in the end) a movie, and a book, born of outdated principle that had been discarded due to it's basic rooting in gender stereotypes and uneven spousal investment into the health of the marriage. To recommend it as a means to save a marriage is about as helpful as me suggesting "Star Wars." To reccomend it as THE means to save a marriage, something that works consistently, it's disingenuous. And for people who want that spiritual key to a healthy marriage, suggesting something rooted not in faith, but outdated pop psychology, presenting this as a spiritual answer... Well, it's a outright lie. And a dumb one at that, as anybody who knows their Bible knows that "Fireproof" and its techniques aren't in there, though some principles can be haphazardly tied back to it for the intrepid folks who like to merchandise faith and those who want to believe it.
I think one of the disturbing thing about the answers to this question is the nastiness--the inability to see and have compassion for both sides, and this strange desire to tell people what to do.
When somebody comes to a forum with a question and a specific desire to hear people's opinions on a matter, it's not exactly random or strange that people give the feedback that was solicited.
You are accountable for your words--we all are. But instead of pointing someone toward God, you assume that marriages with problems are headed for the trash heap.
This isn't a marriage with a problem. It's a marriage that's over in all senses but the legal one, and the question is if he should sign off on the legal aspect. It's a marriage that fell apart after a husband abused (by his admission, I might add) his spouse for a prolonged period, and she needed to break away.
A marriage with a problem is "my husband/wife does x, y, and z... What do I do to overcome it?" When somebody says "I abused my wife, she's gone and has been gone for months, and she notified me the legal paperwork is on it's way, should I sign?" That's not a marriage with a problem, that's a marriage that's over. A marriage that's been in the "trash heap" ever since the moment he turned from husband to abuser and she turned from wife to victim.
So the solutions here seemed pretty reasonable... Point him towards God, but with the understanding that he's going there as a man without a wife, a man who did unacceptable things that lead to the demise of his marriage.
If you have a hobby of giving people advice, and putting them down in the relative anonymity of the Internet, why not try a safer hobby, like putting your head in a lion's mouth, or sword swallowing?
Is that an attempt at exemplifying the tolerance and Godly behavior you demand of others? Because from here, it just looks like you being snarky.
Because either you're giving God's advice, or your own. And I'm hearing a lot of people's own. And some even assume that many askers just ask to justify what they've already chosen to do, so what does it matter if the advice is bad, assumed that if they won't take better advice anyway, what does it matter? Very dangerous.
You do realize that goes for you as well... Right? You're giving your own advice, you just attempt to justify it by kind of picking and choosing what you like out of the Bible that justifies your own personal agenda as you see it and as you believe that God sees it. And you're doing so to serve your own pride... In your advice, you manage to not only inflict upon all of us your opinion, but the opinion that God blesses your advice more than others, and thus you're more Godly than the rest of us. So you give everybody your opinion as well as meet a self-satisfying and prideful need to exemplify yourself over others, as well as express that you feel your advice, being more correct and thus more Godly, means you're better off spiritually than the rest of us.
So... Is this advice given to help the situation, or is this advice given so you can pat yourself on the back for just how enlightened you are? Considering you're spending more time rebuking others for their apparent "less spiritual" answers and are appalled that nobody is as enlightened as you are, I think the answer is obvious.
The lack of faith is also astonishing. As if God's hands are tied. What should a person, hurt, pray for their spouse? Pray for God's will in their life and your own. Pray for help forgiving, pray for direction, pray for willingness to do God's will in the relationship, pray for your future, for your children, for people to help, pray that God will mold you into something greater and that if it's His will for the marriage to continue, that He continually guide you, and make your ministry together stronger, among other things.
Again, not advice for anybody... It's a put down for people you feel aren't as Godly as you and a simultaneous boost of your own vanity for being so much more enlightened than everybody else.
Matthew 12:36-37:
But I tell you that every careless word people speak, they will give an accounting for in the day of judgment. "For by your words you will be justified, and by your words you will be condemned."
That does run your way as well, including on if on the day of judgment God wants to know why you advocated why a woman who escaped her abuser should reconcile with him in God's name.