By Sheri Rose Shepherd
Bestselling Author and Bible Life Coach
When you have dedicated your life to loving, encouraging, praying for,
and pouring yourself into your husband, only to watch him, in a moment
of weakness, destroy the foundation you worked so hard to build, you may
feel as if your entire world has been wiped out. If this describes you,
I invite you to read a real-life love story that I believe will give
you the passion you may need to persevere under any and every trial. It
will also give you a true picture of what love looks like when lived out
with a legacy perspective. I call this story "The Grand Finale."
John and Marie were college sweethearts who dreamed of furthering God's
Kingdom together. During the first decade of their ministry, God blessed
them with a growing church, two beautiful children, and a strong and
loving marriage. Because of their commitment to God and each other, they
became one of the most respected couples in the community. Their
marriage was a beacon of hope to other young couples who wondered what
marriage could be. John loved the ministry, and he loved the life God
had given him. He was passionate about the call of God on his life, and
he truly loved his wife.
One day as John was busy working at the church, a young lady burst
through the door of the church office. She was crying hysterically, and
John came out of his office to see what he might do to help. As she
struggled to catch her breath, she told John about her desperate
attempts to escape from her abusive husband. She was sure he would kill
her if he found her, but she didn't feel safe going to the police
because they had failed to help her in the past. John quickly called
Marie and asked her to take the young lady to a safe place. After Marie
helped this distraught young mom gather her kids and some clothes, she
brought them home to spend the night with her and John.
In a matter of days, Marie and John's love for this young woman led her
to become a Christian. After spending a few weeks in their home, she
seemed like a new person. She was hungry for God and at peace. John and
Marie felt great, knowing they had made such an impact on this young
woman and her kids.
When this woman and her children were still staying in John and Marie's
home several weeks later, many of his good friends and family approached
John and recommended that the woman find housing with another single
mom. He was blinded, saying, "Marie is really helping her. I can't ask
her to leave now; she may fall away from the Lord."
John's good intentions without wisdom and his unwillingness to heed the
warnings of others left him unguarded against the enemy's attack. One
night when Marie was out leading a Bible study, John was home alone with
this woman. She had fallen for Marie's husband and was determined to
have him for herself. Tragically, Marie walked into her home to find
John and the young woman in their bed together. Everything John and
Marie had built was destroyed.
Unable to handle his guilt, John felt like such a failure that he left
his marriage, his children, and his church to marry this young,
attractive woman. Two years into his new marriage, however, he was
diagnosed with acute leukemia and given only ten weeks to live. His
second wife, who was still in her early twenties, decided she did not
want to take care of a dying man. After emptying his bank account, she
left him alone to die. He had no family and no loving church body to
rally around him. In fact, he had nothing to show for his years of hard
work and dedication to ministry.
As tragic as this story is, the ending is proof of God's amazing grace.
Marie decided that when John died, he should be free of guilt and shame.
She went to his bedside, not gloating with condemnation, but offering
to care for and forgive him. Her kids seemed almost angry at her for
loving her ex-husband after all he had done. Her friends from church
asked her why she was helping him. However, Marie wanted her children
and church to remember, not how John had left them, but how she took
care of him, never leaving his bedside until he drew his last breath.
On the day John died, his children and members from his church gathered
around his bedside with Marie. They held hands and shared memories of
how John had touched others' lives when he was walking with God. Marie
got a greater gift. By her sacrifice, she began the healing in her own
heart and in her children's hearts. Today they can all live free of
regret and anger because they said a final good-bye to their father in a
setting of God's glorious love.
Marie finished strong in spite of the devastation, and she gave John and
their kids an amazing final gift: she gave him her forgiveness and the
opportunity to finish what he had started, even if it had to take place
on his deathbed after their marriage had ended.
If you are suffering in a manner that pleases God, keep on doing what is
right, and trust your lives to the God who created you, for he will
never fail you. (1 Peter 4:19)
For more teaching from the Your Heart's Desire book and Bible study, visit www.biblelifecoaching.com.
Quotes to Live By
If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.
(John Quincy Adams)
We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act but a habit. (Aristotle)
Every artist was first an amateur. (Ralph Waldo Emerson)
Nothing can stop the man with the right mental attitude from achieving his goal; nothing on earth can help the man with the wrong mental attitude. (Thomas Jefferson)
It takes ten years to build up a reputation, but only five minutes to ruin one. (Anonymous)
(John Quincy Adams)
We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act but a habit. (Aristotle)
Every artist was first an amateur. (Ralph Waldo Emerson)
Nothing can stop the man with the right mental attitude from achieving his goal; nothing on earth can help the man with the wrong mental attitude. (Thomas Jefferson)
It takes ten years to build up a reputation, but only five minutes to ruin one. (Anonymous)
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