The Bible never presents “no contact” as a normal or first-response approach to relationships. Instead, it consistently elevates reconciliation, patience, and forgiveness as the believer’s default posture (Hosea 14:1–2; Matthew 18:21–22). While boundaries are sometimes necessary to protect holiness and prevent destructive influence, those boundaries are not equal to total relational cutoff and require wisdom (Proverbs 13:20; Romans 12:18). Even when Israel was called to separate from idolatrous influence, God still sent prophets repeatedly, showing that His heart is a persistent invitation and restoration rather than final abandonment (Ezekiel 18:23; Jonah 3:1–10). Jesus also taught the process for dealing with sin (Matthew 18:15—17; 2 Corinthians 2:6–8). That process only escalated to removing them from fellowship after repeated refusal to repent, and even then, the goal was to always remain restoration, not disposal. So, while Scripture allows for limited or even significant distance in extreme cases, it resists the modern impulse to make “cutting people off” a quick or casual solution. Instead, we should seek to love well, understand, and reconcile, even when relationships are hard. People are hard, but they are worth it, and we are called to pursue the kind of redemptive love that reflects God’s own pursuit of broken people (Romans 12:21; John 13:34–35).
Going “no contact” has become a go-to phrase in modern culture, often treated like a quick reset button for complicated relationships—something you see suggested in social media advice threads, podcasts, and comment sections whenever someone feels hurt, overwhelmed, or disrespected. Think someone is toxic? Repeatedly hurt by someone? Having difficulty in a relationship? Block, cut off, move on, and don’t look back.
While there are real moments when distance is necessary for safety, healing, or wisdom (abuse, leading you to sin, etc), the ease with which it is often recommended to completely remove someone from your life can subtly train us to avoid hard conversations, resist reconciliation, and treat people as disposable rather than as souls worth patience, truth, and grace.
When we do this, we rob ourselves of the opportunity for growth personally and growth with others that comes through navigating hard things: tension, humility, forgiveness, and honest confrontation. Instead of leaning into the difficult but transformative work of loving people well in truth, we can default to an exit strategy that feels right in the moment but often leaves unresolved wounds beneath the surface. And further, it leaves us empty because God did not call us to abandon what is hard. That is not love. Love is selflessly pursuing what is good for the other, seeking to restore and find understanding, not cutting someone off when they no longer make you happy, or they take "too much emotional bandwidth."
We shouldn't be quick to sever ties. Rather, we should be slow to cut, quick to listen and seek understanding, and committed to pursuing restoration. In a culture that says “disconnect to heal” or "do what is best for you," the gospel calls us to something more demanding and more beautiful: love that tells the truth, endures the tension, and reflects the patience of a God who did not discard us at our worst but pursued us at great cost to Himself.