Posts Tagged ‘grace’


2nd Chance

Everyone deserves a second chance.

So let people have it.

You know exactly who I’m talking about because someone just popped up into your mind.

The former drug-addict that slips in the back of church and sits in the back row until the service is almost over and then slips out again. She deserves it.

The father who wounded you, who didn’t know how to be a good example of God to you, but who is a different man now. He deserves it.

The friend who rejected you and betrayed you but who has called and texted but you won’t answer.  She deserves it.

The woman who committed adultery but is humbled, has accepted God’s grace and is living a different life. She deserves it.

They deserve YOUR grace.

The black and white fact is that everyone of us has been given a second chance. And in all reality, a third, a fourth and a fifth chance. Even if we aren’t drug addicts or adulterers.  Every one of us has been allowed to make huge mistakes and then have been accepted, loved, coddled back into grace.

Grace changes people: hardened ears, solidified hearts and broken people are softened by the grace that you and I can give.

I know you are thinking of someone right now.  They haven’t been able to leave your head since you started reading this post.

Who is it?  Give them grace.

And, yes you might get hurt.  Giving people a second chance exposes you and at the same time it strengthens you.

But as a living recipient of thousands of second chances, I promise you it will be worth it.

Do you need to give grace today? Do you need a second chance?


God Was Late

I wrote yesterday that I’m having trouble seeing the good and beauty in seemingly juxtaposed heartaches right now.

Turns out I was just impatient.

I walked into my daughters’ school today at noon to pick up my preschooler.  I usually walk by the elementary school playground so I can give a quick hug to my second grader during her lunchtime recess.

She’s been having difficulty with her seven- and eight-year-old girlfriends at school lately.  So, confession: I spy on her to see who she’s playing with.

I try to remember what I dressed her in that morning, and because the sea of navy, khaki and white uniforms, she’s hard to locate. I can’t always find her so sometimes I walk away not having hugged her.

But yesterday I found her at the right moment. She was being led away from the playground holding her forehead and crying because someone had accidentally kicked her in an over-enthusiastic leap from the swings into the wood chips.  She was surrounded by four girls, each of them gently touching her in some way.  A hand on a shoulder, someone holding her hand, another touching her arm, all acts of genuine concern.

She saw me and began to cry harder.  One of her little friends recognized me and ran up to tell me what happened.  When I finally reached her, the girls were comforting her; hugging her and promising to invite her to their birthday parties.

Hope let me hug her for a minute or two, but then retreated into the huddle of second grade girls, all offering some other form of comfort that her mother could not.

And I walked away and shook my head.

Not because I was surprised that her girls loved her. But because I was amazed at how I’d failed to trust God.

Yesterday I whined about how my own heart ached for my daughter and her seeming lack of friends who loved her.  I just want to see her accepted and drawn in.  And today, almost as if in response, God shows me in living, breathing color, how much He loves my daughter and cares for her heart. But He showed me how much He loves me by caring enough to bring to my eyes a scene alive with his grace and care.

God was late.  By a day.

But it was in His perfect timing.  His “lateness” created a need in me to trust him more.  He forced me to watch for Him with greater attentiveness and to be careful not to miss Him.

Are you watching for His grace today?


I’m Not Ashamed Anymore

“My New Name” Conclusion from Sarah Markley on Vimeo.

This is who we are.

If you saw me at the park with my girls, you’d see me trying to find a spot in the shade and making sure my three-year-old doesn’t squeeze all the juice out of her juice box unintentionally. You would never know that I was a woman who committed adultery over six years ago.

If you saw Chad and me in our daily lives, you’d watch us get along much more than fight and see that we can get frustrated with each other for silly things, but that we always, always try to work it out.  It wouldn’t be obvious that we almost walked away from each other one Sunday afternoon.

So why did I do this?  Why did I invite the anger and misunderstanding that I assumed would come with telling my story?  Why did I share private things with (essentially) the entire world?

Because God did such a mighty work in me, that I cannot, will not, be ashamed of it.

I’m ashamed of the grief and heartache I caused.  Still, I am.

And I still apologize to God. To Chad.

But I will never be ashamed of the clarifying, beautifying work of the Holy Spirit in my life and in my marriage.  I know that even though I committed crimes against God, He is using it for glory even now in ways I will never understand.

I can never be ashamed of the grace.

So look around.  There are other people like me who’ve behaved poorly in the past.  There are others who have done shameful things and now they are new and different.  They show no signs of the past on their faces.

Extend grace to them.  Grace has been extended to you.

[If you subscribe by email or view in a reader, please click over to the site to view the video or click here to access it through Vimeo]


My New Name – Part 5

SMarkley 5.09-28

FOUNDATION

He told me that Jesus screws up everything.

My husband had been on his own journey during those 24 hours and when I met up with him the next day in the presence of our associate pastor and his wife, Chad said he had to forgive me.

He must.

Because Christ had forgiven him of so much.  He wasn’t that different than I was, in his words, and that we all equally were in need of forgiveness.  In his opinion, he didn’t want to forgive me but he had to. For the love of Christ, he forgave me.  And he did so fully. And he still loved me even though I’d hurt him and ruined everything so desperately.  Jesus in the mix screwed up his desire to hate me, to hold a grudge, to be bitter.

Each day that passed I realized my own sinfulness more, understood God’s grace more and embarked on a campaign to clean my own mind of images that used to comfort but now haunted me.  I never defended my own actions.  From the beginning I understood how my own poor choices and pride had resulted in this affair.

I was done with my old self.  I removed phone numbers from my phone, took pages out of my address book and deleted emails and voicemail messages.  I began to try to erase all that had gone before.  And God softened the hard places of my heart and brought me close.

And together as a couple we made some serious choices.   Our marriage had been diseased from the start and we were beginning to realize the gravity of that.  We poured out all of our alcohol and threw out all of the questionable movies we owned. We cut off our cable and went without television for the next two years.  We existed in an almost monk-like state for as long as it took to heal the relationship that I/we had destroyed.

The foundation that our family-house was built upon wasn’t solid. It never had been.  So metaphorically speaking, we had to tear down the walls and start over.

We immediately began attending crisis marriage counseling.

And then I fell in absolute, head-over, crazy love with this man, my husband.  Different and deeper than when I was 18.  It was a love that had been matured, beaten, broken and mended and it was better than it had ever been before.

I started to let my husband lead and he rose happily to meet that.  I backed off and practiced God-designed submission in the marriage relationship.  I started letting him make decisions and gave my own opinion when he asked for it.  And he asked for it a lot.

And it was so freeing.

I read through the Bible that first year.  Cover to cover, Genesis through Revelation.   Knowledge and spiritual gifts, that I’d suppressed for years, began to flood back to me.  God hadn’t left me, he’d just let me walk away or a long time. But he hadn’t abandoned me.

We created boundaries in our relationship where we’d never had them before.  I am never alone with men.  Ever.  And I tell him everything not because he asks but because I want to.

There were times when he wanted to know details of the actual affair.  And I told him all he wanted to know. That eventually subsided because anything he asked and anything I told him tortured the both of us.  Him because any more details just hurt him more during a time he was trying to heal, and me because I was trying to forget it all.  Trying to remember details just brought up everything I was attempting to forget.

The next months and years were hard, excruciatingly so at times.

But I was still a wife, his wife.  And he still wanted me, amazingly.  I was still a mother.  My daughter still loved me.  And I was still willing to do anything with my whole heart to fight for my family.

** ** **

I’m writing my book about this.  There’s more.  SO MUCH MORE.

Miracles.  Healings.  Protection.  Intimacy.  Love.  Renewal.

But I can say that it has been more than 5 ½ years since January 4, 2004. It has been 5 ½ years of restoration, God’s provision, hard work, tears.

Chad has never thrown it back in my face during an argument.

He’s never brought it up again.  And I have remained absolutely faithful.

We rarely talk about it.  But when we do, it’s with forgiveness and grace and amazement about the power of God.

Know that I am the same woman who had an affair, and at the same time I am completely new.  I am the living proof of the grace of God.

I am the woman in the dust who was caught in adultery.  I was given grace when Jesus spoke directly to me and told me to go and be different.  So I did.

He called me

Loved.

Saved.

Restored.

And these are my new names.

Maybe you hate me.  I understand if you do.

But maybe you don’t.   Maybe you see yourself in me.  Maybe you recognize warning signs in your own marriage.  Maybe you are here reading this for a reason.  Maybe you love knowing that one more person is new in Christ.  Maybe this is you and you can’t stop.  Maybe you need to stop what you are doing and get help.  Maybe you need to confess.

Maybe you understand God’s grace just a little more.

[From the beginning, read Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 and Part 4]

Photo by Misty Matz


My New Name – Part 4

CRASH

She told.

She told our pastors.

On January 4, 2004 Chad and I were invited into a room at our church.  My pastor and his wife and our associate pastor and his wife were there with us.

One of them said directly to me, “Sarah, we know that there is something that you need to tell Chad.”

And there it was, a choice. I could lie.  I was so skilled at it that no one would know I was lying.  I could say that I was drunk when I confessed.  Or I could tell the truth and it would all be over. Everything I’d been trying to hold together for so long would be done.  I hated myself so much and what I was doing to my marriage that I was willing to accept whatever consequences would fall.

I was tired, to be honest.  I was tired of hiding, of lying, of hating myself.

I asked them all to leave so I could address my husband by myself.  They agreed and waited in an adjacent room.

So I told the truth.  Finally.

Only by the power and grace of the Holy Spirit, still waiting on the fringes of my life, did I have the strength to do this. I never claimed that I did this through my own power, and even at the time I recognized the way I was drawn to confess.

I told him everything.  How long.  With whom.  And he raged.  And yelled and threw things and said things even he doesn’t remember now.

And I broke in half.

I began to realize what I had actually done.  How much I’d ruined.

He left and told me to leave. He told me to go to my parent’s house and tell them what I did.

The next hours are a blank in my memory.  There are things I remember and things I don’t.

I know I was suicidal.  I know that my sister drove with me.  I know that I was without hope.  I know that I might be losing my daughter who wasn’t two yet and my husband who I’d never stopped loving.

Before I went to my mother and father’s I found myself on the living room floor of my associate pastor and his wife.  I wept and didn’t know anything else but that I wanted to be different. I didn’t want to live this life anymore, duality reigning and never knowing who I was.  I wanted to love Jesus.  I wanted to love my husband the way he deserved to be loved.  The way I had promised to love him.

She held me and prayed with me.  She told me who I was in Christ.  She helped me to the feet of Jesus and carried me like the man who had to be lowered in through the roof to be healed.  She bore my stretcher and I broke a second time.

And then I left. There were things I had to do.

I drove to my parent’s house and as I crossed the threshold of the home I’d known since I was 3 years old I told them what I’d done.  The only word I associate with that night is harbor.  For so long I had been without an anchor, but now God’s people were beginning to point me to safety.  My parents took me in and loved me.  She told me to take a shower and eat something and made up their bed for me.   Before I slept, I picked up the Bible for the first time in several years.

Psalm 51.

I didn’t know if Chad would ask me for a divorce. I didn’t know if I was going to be forgiven.  I didn’t know if he would let me see my beautiful baby anymore.  All I knew was that I was finished with my old life.  I didn’t know what my new life would look like but I was quickly becoming prepared to accept the consequences.   I knew that Jesus had forgiven me but I didn’t know if my husband would.

And somehow, miraculously, I was immediately sorrowful.  From the beginning I glimpsed the horror and the devastation I had caused. And although this was so difficult, it is what saved me.

I was ready to do anything it took to save my family and to try to revive what I’d killed.

My new names were

Forgiven.

Grace-Lended.

Found.

[PART FIVE: FOUNDATION and the conclusion of this story will be posted tomorrow.]

If you are new today, begin with Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3