Cindy credits the church leadership with coming alongside them in support. “The American church is typically good at shooting their wounded. Our church decided they were not going to be that church. They wanted to be the hospital for us.”
Cindy turned to the Lord, praying, begging, pleading. She asked God if she should remain in the marriage, while telling him that she didn’t really want to. “I did trust God. It wasn’t God who let me down. It was my husband,” she said. That began a journey to get the help the couple needed. Eighteen months later they were able to get back on the team and have been pastoring since. Life.Church has now grown to 38 locations in 12 states.
Cindy noted that 20 years ago she had a hard time finding resources to help her. That’s what compelled her to write Healing Your Marriage When Trust is Broken. The book was re-released in 2020. She included additional information at the end of each chapter to show where she and Chris were now as compared to 2011 when it first came out. She also added a 20-years-later section that she targeted to all women. “I felt like I was supposed to write it as if people had never gone through a betrayal,” she said. Through the years, women have shared struggles that they may be incorrectly connecting to their husband’s infidelity.
“It is still hard to be married even without a betrayal,” Cindy said. She included her best 20 pieces of advice that can apply to anyone. Some include: Jesus first. Don’t give up on spiritual growth when things are difficult. Seek unity, make sure you are in agreement. Identify the origin of problems. Is the cause of the stress something between the two of you, or something that’s upon you, like children, or work? Once you know the source, you can find better ways to resolve it, rather than just react.
Twenty years later, Cindy said she and Chris have no other option than to be completely honest with each other, and she casts a vision for something deeper and more satisfying than a ho-hum American marriage. “I don’t want marriages to be just typical, I want people to think about their spouse more than themselves. To mutually give to each other and build each other up.”
She inspires people to fight for connection and devotion to each other without having to go through a betrayal. “Who would have known 20 years later I would look at my marriage and say, ‘I love it.’ I truly think I have an amazing marriage,” she said.
“We’ve done an awful lot of work, and God has done more than we could have imagined.” Cindy remembers how she was compelled to practice kindness, forgiveness and choose to trust. Many people ask her how they can learn to forgive. “It is hard to forgive when you don’t feel like forgiving,” she admitted.
Cindy said healing came by doing the hard things, not skipping over pain, having the conversations, crying when she needed to cry, having the right people in their lives to walk through things with them, and pressing into Jesus. She said their healing sped up when they began to help others.