There is a mystery hiding in plain sight.
One that even most pulpits avoid because it exposes a silent epidemic among believers: spiritual DNA of marriage.
The modern church calls it “monogamy,” yet in heaven’s language, it is fragmented oneness.
Souls joined and divided repeatedly, each time weakening the covenant power of union.
What began in Eden as divine fusion has become in our generation a revolving door of one-person-at-a-time relationships, mistaken for purity and maturity.
This is not romance.
It’s a spiritual crisis in the highest order.
Myth of modern monogamy
The modern world defines monogamy as “one partner at a time.”
It does not require lifetime faithfulness; only serial exclusivity.
A man or woman can have six partners before marriage, marry one, divorce, and remarry, yet still claim to be monogamous.
But the heavens do not record relationships this way.
In the scroll of eternity, each sexual act, each covenant of flesh, creates a spiritual fusion, a joining of two souls.
So, a person who has been “with” six people is not monogamous in spirit but spiritually polygamous, carrying fragments of six different covenants within one soul.
That is why Yehoshua said, “Whoever divorces and marries another commits adultery.” (Mark 10:11) He was not attacking love or remarriage; He was revealing the hidden law of covenant: once joined, fusion cannot be undone by paperwork.
Forgotten science of oneness
In Genesis 2:24, the phrase “the two shall become one flesh” is not poetic.
The Hebrew word echad means fused, intertwined, made inseparable.
It is the same word used to describe God’s unity: “The LORD our God, the LORD is one (echad).” (Deuteronomy 6:4)
When man and woman unite, a spiritual law activates their souls, bodies and destinies intertwine.
This is why Paul warned, “Do you not know that he who unites himself with a prostitute is one with her in body?” (1 Corinthians 6:16)
He didn’t say, “They are just sleeping together.”
He said, one with her. Every union is a covenant exchange of destiny spirit to spirit, blood to blood, life to life.
That is why soul ties form, memories linger, and spiritual confusion often follows because unseen bonds remain long after the physical act.
Silent church
The early believers understood this mystery.
They taught purity before marriage, not because of moral appearances, but because of covenant science.
They knew that every union fuses destiny.
But as centuries passed, religion replaced revelation. Rome redefined marriage as a civil contract.
Churches adopted legal forms and called them “Christian weddings.”
Purity became a moral slogan, not a spiritual law.
The result? Millions of Christians married under state ordinances, carrying hidden covenants from past unions.
They are spiritually joined to former partners yet physically united to new ones.
The spirit realm reads this as polygamy, even if society calls it “one partner at a time.”
Why do many marriages fail, even in churches? Because people enter union with divided souls, carrying pieces of old partners into new covenants.
Spiritually, it looks like trying to glue a broken mirror. Each fragment reflects another person, another history, another bond.
No matter how strong the love, confusion follows because the foundation is spiritually fragmented.
That is why Yehoshua called for cleansing and renewal, not condemnation.
He knew that the only way to restore purity was not through shame, but through spiritual washing in His blood.
Path of cleansing, renewal
There is hope, even for the fragmented.
The blood of Yehoshua is powerful enough to dissolve every false fusion and restore covenant purity.
Here is how restoration begins: Repentance: Acknowledge every ungodly bond and repent sincerely before God. (Psalm 51:10).
Renunciation: Verbally renounce every soul tie and covenant formed outside divine order.
Spiritual cleansing: Through fasting, prayer, and communion, invite the Holy Spirit to purify the inner man. (1 John 1:9).
Renewal of covenant: Enter into a new covenant through Yehoshua’s blood, not human desire. (Hebrews 9:14–15) Purity in Practice: Guard your body and heart as temples of divine union, waiting on the covenant.
God joins, not man.
Without this, people unknowingly walk into marriages already spiritually “married” to others, creating generational confusion.
Solomon’s search for purity
Solomon, the wisest man in Scripture, studied love and intimacy like a scientist studying atoms.
He had 700 wives and 300 concubines, yet in the end, he confessed: “Among a thousand women, I found none righteous.” (Ecclesiastes 7:28)
He wasn’t condemning women. He was mourning the loss of covenant purity.
Solomon discovered that human desire without divine order creates chaos.
He saw that no matter how many partners one may have, true oneness is a spiritual miracle, not a physical arrangement.
Only Yehoshua could restore what was lost in Eden, the original purity of two becoming one in the Spirit.
Today, many Christians wear wedding rings but carry invisible chains.
They celebrate ceremonies but hide confusion.
They speak of “soulmates” but ignore the law of souls.
The Church, meanwhile, avoids the topic because it threatens comfort.
To preach about spiritual polygamy would mean confronting: The culture of casual sex, the wounds of divorce and the impurity hiding behind religious marriages.
But until the Church faces it, we will continue raising generations who believe they are monogamous when, spiritually, they are not.
Yehoshua’s restoration call
Yehoshua’s invitation is not condemnation; it is restoration.
He calls believers back to the original design: oneness by covenant, not partnership by law.
In His blood, every broken fusion can be healed.
Every false bond can be erased.
He restores the spiritual DNA of marriage not as an ordinance, but as a scroll covenant written in heaven.
When two purified souls unite under His covenant, it is no longer lust, contract, or culture.
It is divine fusion, watched by angels and sealed in eternity.
That is the true meaning of “What God has joined together.”
Heaven is calling for the reformation of marriage.
Not modernised romance or state-licensed unions, but scroll-based covenants of oneness.
Before any man becomes a husband, he must be trained in sacrifice.
Before any woman becomes a wife, she must be trained in covenant humility.
Without that, we are not forming marriages; we are performing ceremonies.
The world may laugh at purity, but heaven records covenants, not certificates.
The goal is not just to marry; it is to become one in God.
The truth
Divorce can end a relationship on paper, but not in heaven.
Oneness is eternal; it cannot be dissolved by law.
Modern monogamy may look faithful, but if the soul carries fragments from many, it is still spiritual polygamy.
Only through Yehoshua’s blood can the fragmented be made whole again.
The Church must return to this truth, for without oneness, we have no marriage; and without covenant purity, we have no witness to the Kingdom.
