Then the pair got married in a larger, traditional ceremony on Sept. 30, 2019, at the Montage Palmetto Bluff resort in Bluffton, S.C.
Over 100 guests attended, including Kendall and Kylie Jenner, Jaden Smith, Justine Skye, Dan Smyers and Shay Mooney of country duo Dan + Shay (who also performed) and Bieber’s manager, Scooter Braun.
Since tying the knot, Baldwin and Bieber have been open about their struggles as a couple.
“There was a lot of forgiveness that you needed to have towards me,” he said in a Facebook Watch series. “And vice versa. We both had made mistakes and I think when we understand how much God's forgiven us and given us grace, it gives us the ability to give each other grace."
"Forgiveness is the biggest thing,” Baldwin echoed. “You take a person with all of their mistakes, all of their faults, all of their decisions.”
"We've had to work hard on our relationship. I think that pays off in a way where you just become so connected to each other, and so close and just solid with each other. Obviously, you're my best friend. I think that's the biggest payoff, you get a best friend to do everything with."
Bieber then described the best aspect of being married: "I think the security marriage gives you is that you make a covenant before God to love that person for better or for worse, in sickness and in health."
The musician said the most difficult part of living a married life is dealing with the “blind spots” he hadn’t foreseen before saying “I do.”
"There's a lot of things I need to work on. Forgiveness things, jealousy things, insecurities that I didn't even realize I had until I chose to spend my life with you,” he said. “Realized there were blind spots in my life that I didn't realize I had.”
“That was really hard to work through those things but I think when you choose to work through those things, I feel like now that I've worked through that stuff, you and I are closer than ever," Bieber noted.
Fox News' Julius Young contributed to this report.