The story of Sara is a testimony
of what God can do in a person's life no matter
what they have done or what kind of background
they have come from. He can, and will, turn
things around in miraculous ways!
Sara
didn't have a chance for a "normal" life
right from the beginning. She was conceived
when her brother was only 4 months old and
her parents were not ready, emotionally or
financially, for another child. Sara's mother
tried to abort her with some home remedy
that, obviously, and thankfully, did not
work. When Sara was born prematurely, Sara's
mother did not make the effort to bond with
her which instilled a deep root of rejection
in Sara from birth.
Sara's father was a truck driver and away
from home for several days at a time so he
was often unavailble to nuture Sara either.
As a result, Sara suffered from failure to
thrive syndrome mostly due to emotional neglect.
Sara's mother had mental health issues and
when Sara was around 3 years of age, her
mother felt that the only solution for her
was to commit suicide, only she wanted to
take the children with her. Sara's father
collected rifles and they were proudly displayed
on the walls of their home, Sara's mother's
first thought was to shoot the children and
then herself. When she read a newspaper account
of someone being shot in the head and surviving,
she decided to try another method to ensure
that none of the three survived.
Sara's
mother made a trip to the beach one night.
Her plan to drown the children and
herself was halted when she felt a voice
say "This is not the answer, go back" and
she returned to the shore.
Undaunted, Sara's mother came up with another
plan. After putting the children to bed one
evening, she lit the gas stove in her kitchen.
She stuck her head in the oven and began
inhaling the gas fumes. To her dismay, the
phone began to ring, and ring, and ring.
This was before answering machines, and the
phone continued to ring to the point of distraction,
so Sara's mother answered the phone. On the
other end was her mother who had a bad feeling
and was checking to see if she was okay.
After three failed attempts, Sara's mother
made an appointment with her family doctor
and went to ask him what the best method
was to carry out her suicide/homicide plan.
The doctor told her that he couldn't help
her but that he knew someone that could and
directed her to another doctor, which she
didn't realize was a psychiatrist.
A series of electric shock treatments and
Sara's mother could continue with her life,
at home, and no longer suicidal.
While Sara's mother's mental health appeared
to be stablized to some degree, Sara experienced
physical and emotional abuse by her mother.
(She also grew up with a terrible fear of
lake water.)
Her parents divorced and both remarried
shortly after. Around the same period, Sara
was sexually molested by a teenage boy that
lived on the same block but she never told
anyone.
By the age of twelve, Sara was taking sleeping
pills at night and the next year began using
street drugs. Although she became familiar
with marijuana, mescaline, and LSD, she never
started on speed or heroin. Looking back,
she would tell you that if she had of tried
those drugs, she most likely would have become
addicted and we know what follows from there
to support a habit. Running away from home
didn't solve things, and again, it was a
miracle that she didn't end up on the streets
those times when she did run away.
At the terribly young age of fourteen, Sara
attempted suicide. She truly believed at
the time, that if her own mother didn't,
couldn't love her, that she must be unloveable
and that no one would ever care about her.
She survived her first overdose.
At fifteen, she was self-mutilating, and
continuing to run away from home and do drugs.
At sixteen, Sara was sexually abused by a
young man she knew and endured unwanted sexual
advances by a lesbian. She was skipping school,
failing grades, drinking, and so forth. At
that point in her life, she felt she could
no longer cope with the emotional pain she
was feeling and shut down mentally so that
she would be emotionally numb. That way,
she didn't care if she lived or died. She
didn't care about anything.
Shortly after Sara's seventeenth birthday,
feeling unwanted at home, she moved out on
her own. She had witnessed a lot of violence
in the home and it was a relief to be out
of that environment. She recalled the physical
altercations between her mother and her brother
and between her step-father and her brother,
and, of course, there was the time when she
was beaten by her step-father as well.
She got a job as a clerk in an insurance
company. Her landlord sexually harrassed
her. When she refused the sexual advances
made by a male co-worker, he promptly fired
her when he became her supervisor. So, began
her adult life, going from job to job, apartment
to apartment, boyfriend to boyfriend.
She finally found someone to love her, and
when her relationship with this young man
ended, she was profoundly devastated. When
she looked to her mother for comfort and
support, her mother told her that she didn't
want to listen to her problems anymore. Sara
survived a second sucide attempt at eighteen.
By the time Sara was in her early twenties,
she had endured numerous health issues which
required eight different surgical operations,
she had been hospitalized twice for clinical
depression, and she had also been pregnant
three times. Sara had a pregnancy in the
fallopian tube, a miscarriage, and an abortion.
At the time of the abortion, she believed
that the fetus was equal to a blob of protoplasm
or something and she did not relate to the
pregnancy as an unborn baby, and therefore,
experienced no guilt then.
In retrospect, even though she had wanted
the baby that she miscarried, Sara would
say that she would not have made a very good
mother at that time in her life.
Sara seemed to attract trouble in her life.
She relates an account of having a loaded
rifle pointed in her face by a friend of
one of her boyfriend's. She wasn't afraid
because she didn't think he would really
pull the trigger, and she didn't really care
if he did anyway. Sara believed that she
would die by her own hand and that she wouldn't
live to see her twenty-fifth birthday.
Fast
forward to Easter one year. Sara was watching
the movie "Jesus of Nazareth" on
TV. It seemed like the thing to do at Eastertime.
It was the most well done "religious" movie
she had seen for a long time.
At
the very end of the movie, there was a
close-up of the actor portraying Jesus.
He said "Don't be afraid, I am with
you always, even unto the end of the world." What
happened next changed Sara's life forever.
It was if, at that moment, the real Jesus
Christ was in her living room, speaking to
her directly, and she suddenly realized and
understood that Jesus was real, God was real,
and that she would never have to be alone
again. Her life flashed before her and she
saw all the wrong things she had done as
well as things she neglected to do that she
should have done. Overcome with feelings
of remorse, Sara wept on her knees beside
her bed, asking God to forgive her again
and again. The worst was the horrific realization
that when she had the abortion, she had committed
murder and taken another's life. It was almost
too much to bear.
The next few days, Sara experienced feelings
of peace she had never known, feelings of
unconditional love she had never known, and
a joy she had never known. She knew that
something was radically and wonderfully different.
It was like she had been living in a black
and white world and now she was in a world
full of color, or like she had been in a
dark room with no light source all her life
and then someone brought a lit lamp into
the room. And, thus began her Christian journey.
She had been spiritually born-again by receiving
Jesus' sacrifice on the cross in place of
her punishment for her wrongdoings. Sara
was learning to live with new values, new
guiding principles, new motivation, and could
now grasp the meaning she had been searching
for all along. She hadn't found that meaning
in ologies - astrology, numerology, parapsychology,
and so forth. She had even dabbled in occult
practices trying to fill a spiritual void
that she now realized only God could fill.
Even so, she struggled with the idea of
surrendering control over to this God she
was just getting to know on a personal basis.
It took about six months, and then she gave
her life over to God and asked that He do
with it what He willed for her.
God blessed her immediately with friends
who were strong Christians, with a church
that helped get her grounded in her faith,
with a pastor that was like a father to her,
with a best friend, with a Christian boyfriend,
with a job she had always wanted, working
with behaviourally-challenged children, with
a better place to live, and so forth. In
accepting God's love for her just the way
she was, she was able to learn to love and
accept herself. Sara was also able to let
go of unforgiveness toward her mother and
others who had hurt her. Sara was so enthralled
with God's goodness and grace toward her
that she was willing to do anything or go
through anything for Him.
There is a time, as a Christian, when one
is strong enough spiritually, that we may
have to undergo trials and tests and it was
no different in Sara's case. She had prayed
for unshakable faith not realizing at the
time, that meant circumstances that would
stretch her in every imaginable way.
One year was unbelievable. Sara had become
engaged to a prison chaplain and they had
started a prison ministry together. It seemed
that all her dreams were coming true of having
a real family at last and being in a ministry
serving God when the entire bottom fell out.
Three
weeks before the wedding, her father shot
himself. There weren't any indications
that he had ever accepted Jesus as his Saviour
so not only was it a tragic death, but the
thought that he could have ended his own
life to get out of physical pain (due to
diabetic neuropathy) only to land in hell
was too painful to accept. Even so, she clung
to the verse in Romans 8:28 "All things
work together for good for those who love
God and are called according to His purposes."
A week later, she felt it was necessary
to call off the wedding and break up with
her fiance even though the wedding invitations
had already been mailed out.
A week after that, it became clear that
they were not going to be able to work together
and so Sara bowed out of her position in
the prison ministry. In a span of three weeks,
her entire world had been turned not only
upside down, but inside out as well.
An old boyfriend that went to her church
was there to comfort her, and it led to them
resuming a relationship. He convinced her
that he loved her and proposed. She accepted,
but was was still reeling from all that had
happened and was in a very vulnerable state.
When the pastor pronounced them husband
and wife some months later, an unexplicable
feeling of doom shadowed over Sara which
she didn't understand. It became evident
within a month, that she had made a massive
mistake. The man who she had prayed with
before they married, and who she had read
the Bible with her before the ceremony was
now refusing to do either. She quickly learned
her new husband had a long-term addiction
to pornography and that he had a bad habit
of not telling the truth. Without trust as
a foundation in the marriage, it became evident
that their relationship was headed for major
trouble.
Sara had become pregnant right away, as
planned, as she longed for a child and then
had a miscarriage. When she became pregnant
again, she almost lost that baby too.
After four months of marriage, Sara wanted
out of the relationship, however, she believed
that with enough prayer and Christian counselling,
they would be able to get back on track and
work things out. She didn't know that her
husband wouldn't agree to counselling until
their pastor strongly advised him to attend
with her. He would agree with everything
the counsellor said in the session and then
go home and behave the same way. When Sara
had another child, she knew that she was
probably going to end up a single parent.
Her husband had gone from being emotionally
abusive to being physically and financially
abusive as well.
The abuse toward the children in addition
to failing to provide for the family left
Sara desolate. She went to the pastors and
elders of her church and told them what was
going on in the home. They advised her husband
to move out and the plan was to ensure he
received Christian counselling and then they
would reconcile.
Her husband, however, did not receive counselling
and Sara was too afraid to let him back into
the home. Thus began a nightmare that consisted
of an ongoing legal battle, having to call
the police to have her children returned
to her on more than one occasion, and of
her being stalked and harrassed for a period
of seven years.
In the midst of getting a restraining order
and trying to protect herself and the children,
Sara decided to make the most of the situation
and go back to school. She did not want to
rely on government assistance so she completed
a university degree to ensure that she could
support her children on her own. With no
support from her family, she went to school
full-time, worked two part-time jobs inbetween,
raised the children, and led groups for church
on occasion as well. These whirlwind years
took it's toll on Sara in terms of stress,
health issues, and financial struggles.
At one point, she tried to walk away from
God. Feeling vastly disappointed and discouraged,
she felt that it didn't matter that she had
prayed, that she had praised, that she had
tried to be the best Christian she could
be.
God is faithful. He reached down and picked
her up at the worst moments and got her going
again. Sometimes getting through the days
and weeks felt like she was crawling on pieces
of glass, her life was so painful and it
was so hard to make gains of any kind. Sara
thought of suicide many times but as a Christian
she realized that only God was in a position
grant or take a life.
When she completed her educational pursuits,
Sara had come to the realization that she
would never escape her ex-husband's harrassment
and stalking unless she left the city that
she had lived in all her life. She prayed
and the Lord opened doors of employment and
an apartment in another city and she moved,
but not without another legal battle as her
ex tried to prevent her from leaving the
area.
So, now she was in a new place with a new
job and expecting her life to finally turn
around for the good. Things didn't happen
the way she hoped. For several years, she
faced poverty, obnoxious neighbors, bouts
of pneumonia that almost killed her, and
the ongoing burden of single parenthood.
It seemed like the hard times would never
end. Once again, the Lord intervened, just
enough to take the edge off her pain so that
she could carry on. In her spare time, she
started up a non-profit organization and
it helped to have something positive to focus
on.
Finally, Sara got a break when she got a
full-time position in a nearby city. She
packed up and moved herself and the children
and started anew all over again-this time
renting a house and being able to manage
financially.
Around the same time, Sara confronted her
mother about her childhood. She had given
up on hoping that her mother would ever apologize
and be accountable for the abuse, but she
was hoping that her mother would at least
validate Sara's childhood experience by acknowledging
what it had been like for her as a little
girl. Her mother just kept saying she did
the best she could at the time.
Shortly after, her mother was diagnosed
with inoperable cancer. Hope rose up again
in Sara's heart, that with her mother about
to leave this world, that maybe she would
want to restore their relationship, but her
mother went to her grave without validating
Sara's experience as her daughter. Interestingly
enough, however, was the sense Sara had a
few days after her mother's death, that somehow,
now she loved Sara.
Sara received enough of an inheritance to
purchase her own home. She leads a full,
active life at present. The Lord has opened
doors for Sara to minister to others on a
regular basis. She is nothing like the person
she was before becoming a Christian. Considering
her early childhood, the odds of Sara totally
overcoming her past without the help of the
Lord were astronomical. To go from an abused,
neglected child with zero self-esteem to
being a sucessful mother and career woman
is indeed a miraculous work. No amount of
psychology provided the inner healing she
needed.
The
Bible says that when you accept Jesus as
your Saviour, you become a "new creation" -
old things pass away and everything becomes
new." (2Corinthians 5:17) This is exactly
what Sara and anyone else can experience.
Once accepting Jesus as Lord and Saviour,
you need to get grounded in your faith, find
a good local church to attend, read the Bible
(there are new versions in modern day language),
and develop relationships with other Christians.
Then, they too will experience the miraculous!
If
you would like to know more about experiencing
a brand new beginning with God in your life,
please go to http://christian.sunrisecounselling.com
and click on "How to become a Christian." The
same site also offers Counseling by email
or chat so that you can discuss experiences
you have had that are similar to Sara's or
discuss problems with valuable self-help
resources.
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