Daily Program

Small Decisions

Series: Avoiding the Greener Grass Syndrome: An Interview with Ron and Nancy Anderson

Monday, February 5 2007

Leslie Basham: When Nancy Anderson looks back at the early years of her marriage, she realizes that some of the expectations she placed on her husband weren't realistic.

Nancy Anderson: I was very needy, and I was looking for him to meet all of my needs. I was not looking to the Lord to meet any of my needs. Because I was so needy, he felt smothered and would back away. Then I would become critical and controlling and would complain.

Leslie: It's Monday, February 5th, and you're listening to Revive Our Hearts with Nancy Leigh DeMoss. Here's Nancy to introduce today's guests.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: In the last several weeks, we've had three Revive Our Hearts conferences and several thousand women attended those conferences. On the opening Friday night, we ask the women to fill out a little card telling us how we can pray for them. We actually have intercessors that are at the conference to pray for those women and for their needs!

After the conference I read through a lot of those cards. I've just been through a number of them, and I'm just astounded at how many of those prayer requests (as women pour out their hearts) have to do with marriage-related issues—women who are struggling in their marriage.

I remember in this last conference two women said, "I have come to despise my husband." It's just so tragic and heart breaking. It is a privilege to pray for those women. At Revive Our Hearts, we want to do everything we can to shore up difficult marriages, troubled marriages; to provide a lifeline—a life preserver for marriages that may be in trouble.

This week on the broadcast we want to talk with a couple who have been there. They've done that. They know what it's like to have a marriage that's on the brink—and actually—over the brink of disaster. But they also know what it is to see God's restoring, redeeming power in their marriage.

So whether your marriage is in serious trouble; whether you're just starting out your marriage and needing some protection to keep it from getting into serious trouble; or maybe you've been married many years and you have married sons and daughters or grandchildren. Maybe you're single and you're thinking about getting married someday.

Wherever you are in that whole spectrum, you will want to be sure and tune in with us this week and hear an incredible story of God's grace and His miracle-working power in a marriage.

Ron and Nancy Anderson are new friends of mine. Ron and Nancy, welcome to Revive Our Hearts. Thank you so much for being willing to come and share your story with us.

Nancy Anderson: Thank you.

Ron Anderson: Thank you, Nancy, for having us.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: It's our privilege. Nancy, you've written a book called Avoiding the Greener Grass Syndrome. Isn't it true that there's something in the human heart that always thinks, whether it's in marriage or other areas, "If only I could get into another situation my life would be simpler and easier"? You say in that book, "There's not greener grass on the other side. If you water your own grass, that's how you can be blessed!”

I just want to take us back to the early days of your marriage. Nancy, you had been to Bible college. You came from a Christian family. People would not have assumed, probably, when you were in high school or college that you were going to end up in a really desperate and awful marriage. But that's what happened, isn't it?

Nancy Anderson: It is what happened. I knew better, but selfishness is such an insidious thing. It comes in slowly. We began our marriage with a premise that was not true, and that was: It was my husband's job to make me happy. But he thought the same thing! So we sat around waiting.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: He thought that it was your job to make him happy.

Nancy Anderson: Exactly. So we sat around waiting to be made happy—demanding to be made happy. As you might imagine, that doesn't work very well. The teamwork aspect of marriage was not there.

It was a combination of our selfishness, plus a relationship with God that was very shallow. We got in this cycle of, "I'm a bad husband because you're a bad wife, but I am a bad wife because you are a bad husband…etc." Neither one of us was willing to take personal responsibility for our own part in our marriage, and we just kept blaming the other. So we got stuck there.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: That cycle then continued into the early months, and then the first couple years of your marriage. What did it look like? What was life like in the Anderson household?

Ron: The first person who got home got to prepare the argument for the next person who walked through the front door. Then it started. When we got together, we were fighting about something. It could have been finances. It could have been "You didn't do this for me," or "I didn't do that for you,"—all of those things.

I think part of it was, as Nancy stated, the “Selfishness Issue.” We both wanted what we wanted, when we wanted it. When we weren't getting what we wanted, when we wanted it that created . . .

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Some tantrums?

Ron: Yes.

Nancy Anderson: We both liked to make the other person pay.

Ron: (laughing) Right, and we did! We made the other person pay!

Nancy Anderson: There was an issue with friends—where he was spending time with friends outside of our marriage. He'd been single a while, and had been in the service. He had his own life. So he continued some of the “single” things that he had been doing: going out with his friends and things like that. I resented his time away from me. But looking back, I can see I wasn't much fun to be with.

Ron: Remember, my favorite phrase was, “Hey look, I didn't marry you to be your entertainment center.” That is what I felt like. I felt like I had to constantly be entertaining. Over and over I would say, “Look, I'm not your entertainment center. Find something you're interested in. Go do something. I don’t always have to be there to fulfill your entertainment needs.”

Nancy Anderson: I was very needy, and I was looking for him to meet all of my needs. I was not looking to the Lord to meet any of my needs. Because I was so needy, he felt smothered and would back away. Then I would become critical and controlling and would complain.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Wait, wait, wait. Critical, controlling, complaining? Now that's a recipe for disaster!

Nancy Anderson: The three deadly “C's.”

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Ron, how did that affect you?

Ron: First of all, I would try to talk her out of her behavior, which was one of my great gambits. Whenever she was feeling emotional, I would try to talk her out of those feelings—and that would frustrate her.

So she would stop coming to me with emotional needs. I remember once she came to me and she said, “I don't feel like I have any close girlfriends.” So I pull out a piece of paper and a pen, and I start writing.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: You're going to fix it.

Ron: I'm going to fix it. “Nancy's friendship goals—okay, here's what you have to do first. You have to go through the phone book and see what friends you have. Then you have to make luncheon appointments.”

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: If you're going to have friends you have to be “friendly.”

Ron: All of that.

Nancy Anderson: He gave me a lecture.

Ron: Of course, all that did was push her away and aggravate her more. What I probably should have done was put my arms around her and say, “Honey, I'm sorry you're feeling that way. I love you.” But I didn't. Instead, I tried solving her problems.

Nancy Anderson: Yes, I just wanted to be heard and to have him understand where I was coming from. Instead, he kept trying to fix things. Actually, I felt like he was blaming me for not having friends.

Ron: I was. There was an underlying current of, “Well, whatever these problems are that you're dealing with, the root of the problem is really you. I'm going to help you figure that out and solve it. But it really goes back to you not doing something you really should be doing.”

That's not any way to win your wife over to your side of the fence!

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Yet your attitudes and behavior, Nancy, were not really, “Any way to win your husband over to your side of the fence!”

Nancy Anderson: No, and that's the problem. I kept trying to nag him into behaving in a loving fashion. You can't nag someone into any behavior, except leaving you emotionally. That's what he did. He pulled away. The more he pulled away, the more I criticized him for pulling away. So we were in a really bad place.

Ron: One of our problems which frustrated me . . . I'm no angel, believe me, but when I made mistakes in the relationship, I think I was much quicker—and I think Nancy would agree—to say, “I'm wrong, and I’m sorry.” If I was a dentist, I could not have pulled the words, “I'm wrong” out of her mouth!

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Is that true Nancy?

Nancy Anderson: That's absolutely true.

Ron: Just once. I would have paid her, just once, to say, “I'm wrong on this.” It wasn't going to happen. You could see in black and white that she was wrong. But the more I tried to say, “Honey, you've got to be able to see that this is not right, that you're wrong,” the more she fought me on it.

That would just frustrate me to no end. I would get angry. Before you knew it, it would escalate, and I would be cussing at her and saying inappropriate things. That just defeated my whole point.

Nancy Anderson: Right. It was a cycle, like I said, that we got in. Me? I wanted to be right!

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Did you think you were right?

Nancy Anderson: No. Most of the time I knew if I could separate myself from myself, I knew that I was wrong—but I was not going to admit it.

Ron: Oh, and that killed me. I would get so angry. I remember once throwing a frozen pork chop at her! I would get so mad.

Nancy Anderson: It was just stubbornness on my part and my unwillingness to admit that I was wrong. I would rather be right than be loved. Being right almost cost me my marriage.

Ron: Sorry was another word that was difficult for her to say. I don't understand the dynamics of all of that, but it was very hard for her to say, “I'm sorry.” Spiritually speaking, we were dead in the water. I was a fairly new Christian when we got married—about nine months. After we got married, we would find reasons not to go to church. “Well, let's sleep in.” Or, “We're going to go to a movie instead.”

We allowed these other distractions in life to take us away from our foundation—which is really, we think, when we look back on the problems we had—we weren't grounded in the Word. We weren't going to church. We weren't spending time with Christian friends. When we were having problems, we didn't go to our pastor and talk to him about it. We were winging it.

The further we drifted away from the Lord, the more our selfishness grew. Our anger and our frustration grew toward each other grew, and we would take it out on each other. We would have fights until 4:00 in the morning on issues like whether I was yelling or not. We would be fighting over, “If I was yelling or not” until 4:00 in the morning! I'm not exaggerating! It would just escalate. It was awful.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: I think that what you're describing is really, sadly, what is going on in a lot of Christian homes. In your case, that faulty foundation led to some even more serious issues.

Help us understand how you got from the point of saying “I do” at the altar to ending up being in love with a man who wasn't your husband? How did it start?

Nancy Anderson: It was a process, and it was one tiny step at a time. Sin is so slippery. I didn't intend to have an affair. I just intended to sit next to this cute guy at lunch.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: A guy that you worked with?

Nancy Anderson: Correct. We were co-workers on a sales team. The company, of course, wants to build camaraderie and teamwork within the sales force. So we were encouraged to spend time together.

I can actually pinpoint when it crossed the line. One day when we were sitting next to each other at a meeting, his leg bumped up against mine and he did not pull his leg away and I did not pull my leg away. That, I believe, was the turning point because I sent him a signal that I was unguarded; that I was open to the possibility.

From then on, it was gradual but progressive. We made sure that we sat next to each other at lunches. Then when we went out as a group, we made sure we rode in the same car. Then it progressed from there to where we would have dinners together after work, and then eventually more than dinner.

So it was a process. But I knew what I was doing every step of the way. But I thought, “It's just lunch. It's just this. It's just that.”

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Okay. Now you're in the workplace, Nancy, and there's a guy who's treating you differently.

Nancy Anderson: That's right. Because my husband was not complimenting me and was not even kind to me . . . Of course, I was not complimenting him, and I was not kind to him either. We were in this cycle—this destructive cycle.

Then along came Jake who thought I was wonderful, pretty, smart, funny, and everything I did was fabulous!

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Did you treat him a little nicer than you were treating your husband?

Nancy Anderson: I absolutely did! I complimented him. I thought he was wonderful, smart, funny, and I told him so. Of course, when I got married I thought my husband was wonderful, smart, funny, and fabulous—and he is. But I didn't see it at the time.

And so I went—like the title of the book—looking for greener grass, thinking that it would be green, while also failing to water my own lawn. I was taking the energy that I should have been putting into my husband and our marriage and putting it outside our marriage and cultivating an illicit relationship.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: As you put that energy into someone outside your marriage . . .

Nancy Anderson: It grew.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: What grew?

Nancy Anderson: The relationship grew, and so did the distance between my husband and myself. The selfishness grew and the lies. I cannot tell you how many lies I had to tell to myself, to God—who, of course, knew I was lying—but I continued to lie to Him as well. I lied to my husband constantly. I lied to my parents; to my mother. I lied to friends. You have to lie to continue in adultery, and I got so tangled up in the lies that I didn't even know what was true anymore.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: There is an emotional attachment developing here. There is a physical attachment developing outside your marriage. Things could only be getting worse on the home front.

Nancy Anderson: They were. It came to a point where, I asked my husband for . . . not a legal separation, but I said, “I need some time. I need a little space. I'd like to move out for one month.”

Ron: Actually, it started out that she needed a couple of days. She wanted that weekend to herself. We had been fighting so much and I (being naïve) figured, “Okay, give her a little space.”

Those two days turned into a call saying, “You know, I'm not going to be back. I really need a week.” Then, all of a sudden—it's a month! Now she's telling me, “I want a divorce.”

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: How did you respond to that, Ron?

Ron: By begging, pleading, crying on my knees for her not to leave me.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Do you remember that, Nancy?

Nancy Anderson: I do. I do! I could tell you exactly where I was. We were in our little condo in California, and he was sitting on the couch. I had had the conversation with him that I was leaving. I went into the bedroom to pack some more of my things, and I came back out and he was crying and begging me not to go.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Did that touch you?

Nancy Anderson: You know, it didn't. I felt bad because I didn't feel bad. I thought that if he would just go away, my problems would have been solved. I mean, that's how bad it had become. I just wished that he would go away. I didn't wish bad on him. I just wanted him out of my way because he was standing between me and happiness. That's how I perceived it.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: You thought happiness now had a different face and a different name?

Nancy Anderson: I thought happiness was on the other side of the fence.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: With Jake?

Nancy Anderson: Yes, and that's where I wanted to go. Ron was my obstacle, and that's what I saw him as—not a teammate, not a husband. He was an obstacle to my getting what I wanted. So I left and I shut the door and I got in the car and I turned on happy love songs and rolled down the windows and drove over to meet Jake.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: It wasn't only your family that was being affected. Jake had a family, too.

Nancy Anderson: He did. He was married, and he had two small children. It was a ripple effect—I don't even know the ramifications or all the people's lives that were touched and possibly ruined by my selfishness!

I didn't see that at the time. I just had this myopic view of my life: “I,” being the most important thing, and my needs being met was my only goal. Whoever got hurt, “Oh, well.”

Ron: Part of the hard part for me was . . . Here's a person I fell in love with. Before we got married, she was this adorable little . . . she was just wonderful! I knew the day I met her that I was going to marry her. I just instantly fell in love with her. But now I'm talking to her, and I'm talking to somebody I don't know. There is no emotional connection coming from her toward me.

I always describe it as, “I was talking to a wall,” because no amount of begging, no amount of pleading, no amount of asking for a second chance meant anything to her. She could care less.

When I talked to her, I should have just been talking to a wall because there was a wall between her and me. It was a very strange feeling to think that you could be so in love with someone, and that person, at one point, was so in love with you. But now you're talking to this person like you've never met them before.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: This had all happened within two years of getting married?

Ron: Yes. Within two years.

Nancy Leigh DeMoss: Ron and Nancy, we're going to pick up your story in our next time together. I have two things that I want to just comment on here as we wrap this up for today.

First, it's obvious, as I hear your story, that when a marriage comes to the place where divorce is being threatened and the man or the woman is involved in an extramarital—I hate to call it an “affair” because that sounds so happy, and this obviously wasn't a happy thing—but, adultery that really threatens your marriage, that doesn't happen overnight.

It was a series, as you said, Nancy, of little decisions—the decision not to pull your leg back; the decision to give a green light instead of a red light; to communicate that you were available; a series of choices, in both of your lives, that got you into a place that seemed to be utterly hopeless.

That leads me to this second point, which we'll see beautifully illustrated as we continue your story. Even in the most hopeless situation, God is not absent. He was pursuing you when you were not pursuing Him. There was hope; there was help on the way; there was grace. I think it's important that we emphasize that.

Someone listening today is at that point of walking out the door; or carrying on the adulterous relationship; or on their knees begging, crying, pleading with their mate to come home—some place where you just feel, “This is hopeless. This is it; it's over!”

We get emails and prayer cards from those women galore. But one of the reasons we wanted to share Ron and Nancy's story with you is so that you would know that as long as there is God, there is hope! God is a redeeming, restoring God and there is no mess so messy; no pit so deep, that God cannot restore and redeem.

You will not want to miss the continuation of Nancy's story. It's not over. There's pain yet to come, but God is going to intervene on their behalf. We'll talk about how that happened when we continue on the next Revive Our Hearts.

Leslie Basham: Just like Nancy, little decisions can lead to dangerous, adulterous relationships; little decisions can also help protect women from moving into a dangerous situation.

Well how about you? Do you have any hedges in your life? By hedges, I mean principles that guide your small decisions. For instance, a lot of wise women create a hedge by deciding never to ride alone in a car with a married man. It's a small decision that shows they're going to fight hard to protect their marriages and the marriages around them.

To help you set up some personal hedges and guard your marriage, order the "Hedges Pack." It includes a practical booklet by Nancy Leigh DeMoss called Personal "Hedges." This booklet will help you set some important hedges in your life. The "Hedges Pack" also includes the book from our guest, Nancy Anderson. She'll use the negative experience she went through to help you avoid some of her mistakes.

When you order, you'll also receive this week's series on CD, plus we'd like to send you a special Table Talk CD at no additional cost. Since launching the new longer Revive Our Hearts in September, one of the enhancements to the program is a feature called Table Talk, where a group of wise women talk with Nancy about the ways her teaching applies to their lives.

When you order the "Hedges Pack," you'll hear one of these rich, practical table talk sessions in which some pastor's wives talk very openly about temptation married women face and what they've done to protect their marriages. You'll hear a portion of this conversation Friday as well on Revive Our Hearts.

To order the "Hedges Pack," visit ReviveOurHearts.com, or call 1-800-569-5959.

We've received so much good information about setting up hedges to protect our marriages today. It's the type of solid, biblical, and practical material you can hear every day on Revive Our Hearts.

Would you like to keep up with the topics Nancy's covering and make sure you don't miss any helpful teaching that you need? Well, then sign up for the Revive Our Hearts “Daily Connection.” Every day, you'll get key quotes from Nancy, and if you're intrigued or you want to go deeper on that topic, you can use the quick clicks to read the transcript, listen to the audio, or explore books or other resources. In fact, a pastor's wife in India wrote to us not long ago, thanking Nancy for the “Daily Connection.”

She said, “I am very impressed and touched by the thoughts which are sent to me by e-mail every day. Each day has its own reflection. Thank you.” To receive a daily moment of reflection about things that really matter in life, sign-up for the “Daily Connection” when you visit www.ReviveOurHearts.com.

Since Ron and Nancy Anderson have been together talking with us today, you know that they survived adultery—but how? How can a marriage that seems so bad be redeemed? Find out tomorrow, when the story continues on Revive Our Hearts.

Revive Our Hearts with Nancy Leigh DeMoss is an outreach of Life Action Ministries

Note: Special offers available only during the broadcast of the radio series.


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"Wow, this story is my story! Everything so far is exactly what happened to me. I got married and my husband and I fought constantly. Neither one of us would admit we were wrong and we were in the fighting cycle. Long story, short, I commited adultery within two years of being married. Thankfully, I have come to know Jesus as my Savior and have been working on being a better wife/person. God has been so good to me because my husband and I have been working things out. My husband, however, still doesn't know the Lord, and won't talk about this to anyone and doesn't want me to either, which is why I withheld my name. I know what I did haunts him and sometimes I feel bad that I have been forgiven because it still hurts him so much. Please pray for him to know the Lord so he can have some peace. I would also love to be a witness with him, like Ron and Nancy Anderson, showing people the power of God!"

C (on Monday, February 5, 2007 at 8:47 AM)

"I also share this same story. It is almost the mirror image of my life. Three years ago I too became involved with a man outside of my marriage. I was missing everything at home and like you found something more within the workplace. The consequences that I have paid for my actions have sometimes been unbearable. I wonder how and when I will totally be free from judgement and pain, not only from others but from myself as well. I have lost so much along the way, I still struggle with my loss, I have been through counseling and most recently have been put on medication. I would like to say that I have a wonderful relationship with the lord, but that would be a lie. I pray, but actually reading the bible and attending church never seem to fit in my schedule. Possibly that is why I can't get past this heartache. My best advice to anyone thinking of having an affair is to understand that the pain outweighs the pleasure and eventually you will experience pain."

C (on Monday, February 5, 2007 at 10:21 AM)

"C--
I would encourage you to at least talk to a pastor at some solid, Christ-centered Bible-preaching church about your marriage. From what I've read, getting help right off the bat is essential towards the long-term stability of the marriage. Otherwise, things can brew beneath the surface and one day seem insurmountable. Most of all, both of you need to be saturating yourselves with Scripture and prayer and spending time with God together as well. I pray the Lord will lead you both!
Love in Christ,"

R (on Monday, February 5, 2007 at 10:48 AM)

"My husband entered into an adulterous affair. I was too trusting...raising my girls with blinders on! I never made any demands, never set any boundaries, etc. I just continued to allow him to go on his trips, buy his toys, etc. I rationalized this because he had a deprived childhood. I intercepted a phone call through divine intervention one day and woke up! We tried Christian counseling, but he had already made up his mind to leave. We are now legally separated, and he is still in contact with the "other woman". He thinks the grass is greener, but I think down the road, in two years...in five years...he will regret his decision that he basically dumped his family...a wife of 19 years and two wonderful daughters!"

Rita (on Monday, February 5, 2007 at 11:01 AM)

"I was married for 13 years when the Lord entered my heart. One year later my husband left me for a co-worker. I didnt know the "story" behind the Story! I suspected he was saving himself for someone, but just couldnt put my finger on it. When I confronted him he would lie. Point, he left after 14 years of marriage blaming me for everything that went wrong with his life.
To me his life did turn green on the other side of the fence. I have been struggling with the loss of my dreams, my goals and even now, I have wondered why? The Lord is faithful and will never leave me nor forsake me, yet I feel so abandoned.
I just can't shake this hurt.
My ex had lived with this woman for over 9 years before he married her.
I have waited for reconciliation but now all is lost. I have talked to my Pastor and now feel ready to move on. What? shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil? Job 2:10b
Nothing turned out the way I expected.
I did not expect to raise my children myself, nor did I expect to live my life without a relationship of love and commitment. My comforter has given me hope. Isiah 54:5"

Monica (on Monday, February 5, 2007 at 12:14 PM)

"Dear Ladies, Please concider this to save your sanity. And give you God's perspective. What we think right before we go to bed often determines our mind set for the next day. I am really getting a positive mind set by reading Good and Evil by; Michel Pearl. He teaches the Bible by pictures of scenes that occured in the Bible. With Bible quotes too. And verses to look up on the bottom of the page. I have had some very Bible influenced dreams. In fact I'm 51, and woke up with my husband holding my hand:-) It is a great alternative to focusing on ourselves and our problems. God promises us that when we delight ourselves in Him; HE WILL give us the desires of our hearts. Check it out... nogreaterjoy,org
Love in Christ"

Leslie (on Monday, February 5, 2007 at 1:11 PM)

"we were both christians busy serving in church activies.a 25 year marriage we had counseling before marriage He was always selfish and told me to remind him when he was being too selfish. He would never take this conversation well) We have 3 children our two oldest have learning disabilties and our daughter needed heart surgury by 10 days and 2 years of age she is doing well. My husband is extreamely sucess oriented this was driven into him by his parents to be "happy and sucessful! He took a bussiness trip to asia and took up with a woman email then another trip and vaction with her and affair. He was an absetee father his idea of advice was to yell at them and then runaway and not show them how to do anything then step back and support. Any chores around the house were to be delegated to them he wouldnt do anything. So he could be free to ski, work, chat on line or by cell with the other woman. I found an email and confronted him and took him to pastor we attended a weekend to remember and he just glazed over and told me the christan man I knew was dead and let him go if he hurt me too much. He was quick to relay his good things he did but he wouldnt talk to me honestly or pray with me. we continued coulnseling he would do confusing behaviors Leagal help,alies,stayingout all night, bad behavior. he left and filed for divorce and I countered with 3 sessions of court ordered counseling the first is with a christian counselor this Saturday 10th Feb. (annirversy of my mother's death (03) Son graduated from high school (03) In december he Cheated on Me.(03-04). Our children are hurt and distraught as this isnt the values that they were raised with GOD can heal any hurt we are WILLING to give over to him that is what the CROSS IS all about forgiveness. He has nt been back to church at all since he could not play in worship team or be in sound board. (On his terms he wouldnt come to sunday school with me or church as he would then have to answer why arent you on stage or in the sound booth? ) Prayer for boundries to be broken in his heart and restore HIM to the lord and realize that GOD loves him and wants him stop destroying his family and Communicate with his family. Restore our marriage.with new boundries for work and realtionships."

Sharon (on Monday, February 5, 2007 at 1:39 PM)

"My husband was also involved in an adulterous relationship, and every day I still struggle with issues like trust. I found out about it very early on and almost immediately found Rejoice Ministries, and I would like to recommend this ministry for anyone going through this type of situation. They teach you how to love your spouse unconditionally the way Christ loves us. It's so hard for women these days to understand how to love their spouse without putting conditions on that love....that is how I was. I was very much like Nancy Anderson, expecting my husband to meet my every need....I was the ultimate nag. The world teaches us that we deserve more. God needed me to know the truth. It took this horrible situation for God to show me that only He can bring me the joy I desired. I knew early on, that now matter how long or what the circumstances, that I would NEVER give up on my husband, even if I was 80 and in a rocking chair that I would wait on my husband to come to his senses and return home. I learned how to completely surrender my husband and my marriage to the Lord. I learned how to talk to God and that He actually answers my prayers. In the 2 years since this started I can't tell you how many times the Lord took me to a verse, when I was at the point of giving up, that confirmed for me to "Wait on the Lord", that He would restore our marriage in His timing. Today my husband is home and we are working on our marriage. He is a Christian, but he has not come back to the Lord....he has not become truly repentent. But I know God is working on his heart every day. In Job 33:14-33, the Lord showed me that He talks to men in so many different ways, and that soon my husband will repent and not be afraid to share with others that he sinned. In the meantime, I will remain silent, and wait on the Lord, and I will know that it was the Lord that did it!"

Anonymous (on Monday, February 5, 2007 at 1:58 PM)

"A couple of years ago I entered an adulterous relationship with my boss. I was married with two children and he was also married. I was brought up as a Christian but had drifted somewhat along the years; I never made time for Church or Scripture. This man was everything that I was looking for he gave me the attention that I lacked at home, the self confidence that I had lost with my husband, and he was a very religious man. I honestly felt that God had placed him in my life to bring me closer to him. I know how crazy that sounds now!! The affair lasted a couple of months and a friend actually revealed our secret. I thought my life was over, I lost my job, I quit going to College, I lost a couple of my friends, my self esteem and most importantly him so I thought. I stayed with my husband because I wanted to mend the hurt that I had caused my family. I truly wanted to be with the other man, but convinced myself that I had to do this for my family. It has almost been three years since my affair and while I still haven't totally forgiven myself I know that the Lord has forgiven me and my husband has as well. I am proud to say that today I have a better relationship with Jesus Christ, my husband, the friends that I lost along the way, I have a better job, and I will be graduating from College in April and working on my CPA license thereafter. While life is finally good again, my actions hurt so many people along the way; however, I believe the biggest hurt was inflicted upon me. I went through counseling and was put on medication, and through it all my husband never left my side and has worked harder at our marriage then I ever had. My children ages 10 and 6, now have a Mommy and Daddy that not only love them but also truly love each other as well. I stayed with this man because I wanted to mend my family; I never dreamt that I would really fall in love with him again. God works in mysterious ways. May God be with all those involved in affairs and may he bring you all to your knees so you may look up to find him, the one that will truly never leave your side."

Cc (on Monday, February 5, 2007 at 2:50 PM)

"I have read all the above comments from differnt ladies who have been on both sides of adultery. Either the participant or the violated. I was on the violated side. But i truly praise God for His promises for now i have a marriage that has exceeded my greatest hope and dreams to the same man who not only violated my trust through an adulterous relationship but also through abuse, financial mis-use, alcohol abuse and just about every other reason so many marriages end in divorce. I am currently writing a book to help other women in these seemingly hopeless marriages gain God's perspective giving them renewed hope and desire to love as He does. And my husband is very supportive of everything. The same man who was so unbelieably cruel he should have gone to jail. God changes people. But it doesn't happen over night. (or even over a week or month...it was His timing)
But i have to say, the one most important piece of advice i would have to any other woman who is suffering or has suffered in an abusive or adulterous marriage, is to come to a place of total brokenness before the Lord. When you can completely give all you have to Him, including your husband, and recognize your own state of sin and how Christ suffered more than we could ever know and died for us, then we will come to a place where we can begin to forgive and thus love as He does. But without complete brokeness allowing the Lord to heal our hurts and pain, knowing that He knows how badly it hurts, then we will never be able to completely forgive and relase those who have hurt us. To move forward and be blessed by the Lord in our marriages then we must do things His way. It's not been easy at all, but i wouldn't trade anything for what i now have. I give God all the glory ~ He is a miracle worker ~ but we must be willing to lay everything down for Him to mold us into an image closer to Christ than what we are currently and then will come the miracle. It might seem impossible...but trust me, every counselor and after a time of continued deteriorating situations even those godly friends and pastors gave up...allowing me to know that i could be released from my marriage without any judgement. However, having five children, one with special needs, i couldn't imagine doing that to them. Making them go alone to spend time with someone they hardly had any relationship with. Someone they were actually afraid of. I have to admit, I did try to figure a way to divorce and not have to have my children go with him. But although there had been police reports made, due to family influence everything of document was "made to dissappear". My story is actually so unbelievable, i can hardly believe it's not some ugly, ungodly movie...but again, I Praise God for He gave me strength, love and committment to my husband. I am grateful divorce was something that i battled with because i had such love for my children. And it wasn't something i felt was an easy out. I would have missed such a blessing as i now have. But there was a time when i was so torn at a few points i truly felt i wished my life would just end...that the Lord would take us all away in some accident or something. I began to understand how parents could kill their children and then commit suicide. Without faith in such a powerful God i shudder to think where i would have been.
Keep your faith, never doubt God, know that His timing is not our timing. Whatever you are going through, it's a season, one which will pass. Allow God to bring beautiful blooming flowers into your next season. And do not grow weary in well doing...read Nancy's paper on a Broken Heart VS a Proud Heart. This little paper was used many years ago to teach me about brokeness and keep me humble in the midst of many trials. It's because of my broken heart that husband says showed such a testimony of love that he could not imagine me having after how he treated me that he came to a true saving grace with the Lord. But, it wasn't my love, it was Christ's love through me because of my brokeness over my own depravity.
I pray each woman suffering would turn their heart to the Lord and put away all bitterness, wrath, and angry speaking. Although if you've been wronged not only will the world condone your poor attitude, but many churches will as well, stay far away from that as you can. It's when i was completely alone and not a single person ( including myself) could really see anything changing in my situation that i cried out to the Lord for feelings for a man who at that point was living with us, not working, not supporting us, in a bad state of depression, that the Lord gave me love for him. A love i cannot explain but i know it was totally of God. From there He lead me step by step. Next I prayed for affection for him, God gave it. He gave desires for a man i didn't think was possible. He will do the same for you if you will let Him. Call out to him and trust in Him alone.
Christain marriage is far too important to let it go without the greatest fight you have ever been in. And then when any good thing happens and progress is made...give God the glory! For it's not us and our strength it's always Him and what He does through us.
I truly thank Nancy for her committment to bringing the truth of the Lord to all of us women. We all need it daily~"

Kc (on Tuesday, February 6, 2007 at 12:42 AM)

"I was involved with a married man. He complained that his marriage was in shambles and he was only putting up with his wife's crap because they had kids. I thought that I could fill a void in his life and in the end I only ended up hurt. Some women fall into the trap that we can get a man to love us if we offer him something another woman can't. Needless to say, the man that I was involved with said he had no intentions of leaving his wife even though the marriage wasn't working.
I am saved and I always knew God would punish me for this long before I contemplated my actions. I wasn't feeling bad at first, but when I realized that I would not get what I wanted out of this man I was angry. I thought about telling his wife. But then I realized that I had to come to God. I am still dealing with this and praying for God's forgiveness. If we don't allow God to fill the void in our lives for love and acceptance we are destined for failure. There's no other way around it. You have to come to God first. I just regret I had to sink so low to realize that. But that is where God meets us....when we are broken. That's why the book of Hosea is my favorite book. But no matter how much you read the Bible, if you don't put the word into action, its of no use."

Anonymous (on Tuesday, February 6, 2007 at 8:10 PM)

"Well I had went through a divorce because of my adultry in the my first marriage that only lasted 2 years. It was something similiar to Nancy Anderson's story a little different. Yet I had a child and we ended up getting a divorce it was very ugly. I came to know the Lord shortly after we divorced, about 6 months later. It was 2 years that I was saved that the Lord asked me to ask my husband back. I did, kicking and screaming to the Lord telling him if he had forgotten what we went threw. That was the hardest thing I ever had to do. But I was obeident to the Lord I had to walk by faith and not by sight. We have been married now for 5 years now. But it is not easy, before we got remarried my husband had asked me if I still talked to the person I had an affair with. My flesh of course automatically said no. And well that was a lie I still was and not for those reasons but because I was trying to get a job in the law enforcement and basically i was using him to get it. So about a week later after my husband asked me that the Lord had really laid telling the truth to him on my heart. And it was a heavy burden and I told him the truth and well my husband of course wanted nothing to do with me at that point. I begged and pleaded that we had to get married this is what God wanted. I had messed things up. Well we still ended up getting married and well my husband has still not gotten over that little lie that I told even though I asked for forgiveness. My husband has been married before me and his ex-wife cheated on him to. I remember when we got married he asked me whatever I did to not cheat on him. At that time I thought your crazy your the love of my life. Well our marriage went rotten and the way I got revenge was to cheat on him and that's what I did and that's how our first marriage ended up. I have been praying recently because we have been having many conflicts and he keeps saying we were better off alone, and I have to say that it sounds tempting at this point. He keeps saying how easy it is for us to just go to mediation and get a divorce. I know the Lord doesn't want that but I need prayer for him. That he would forgive me for that Lie before we've gotten remarried. We've gone to counseling we done that. I am at the end where I don't know if we will last. What do I do?"

Forgiven (on Wednesday, July 2, 2008 at 11:56 AM)

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