TESTIMONY
		
		The Forehands: Inside a Stained Glass Marriage
		
		By Jewel Graham Taylor
                	The 700 Club
                	
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
		 “You want to marry somebody that's going to be a great mom  and has great morals and high values and someone who loves the Lord. She had  all those intangible,” Dale Forehand tells The 700 Club. “Man, I knew that she  was the one for me.”
		When Dale Forehand saw Jena in the choir loft one Sunday  morning, he knew he had to meet her. Jena recalls, “Dale had a lot of spunk, a  lot of love for life, but he loved the Lord.“
		Still in college, the two dated for four years before  marrying in 1988.
		“We were doing a lot of the things we were told to do,” Dale  says. “Get married, have two kids, have a nice home, climb the corporate  ladder, go to church on Sunday, spend your time at the golf course, pour your  life into your kids. But the problem with the American dream for families and  marriages is you can get so busy chasing that dream [that] you can lose each  other in the process.”
		Jena says, “Dale and I were married for 7 and ½, almost 8 years  when there was just kind of this slow erosion that began to take place in our  marriage.” 
		The arguing turned into yelling which in turn ended in  silence.  The fighting escalated, and Dale  couldn’t take it anymore.  Determined to  regain control, he kicked Jena out of the house.
		“I just kinda threw the gauntlet down one day, and I said, ‘Jena,  I'm done. I'm done with you. I'm done with this marriage. When I get back, you  better be gone.’ I take her suitcase from underneath our bed, take her clothes  out of her dresser and I throw them in that suitcase. I played golf and  delivered my kids to a swimming pool. Yeah, I had just kicked my wife out of  the house. I had just ended my marriage.”
		Jena says, “I felt my world came crashing down, because  everything that identified who I was as a mom and a wife and where I lived was  suddenly just gone. What do you do with that? So you feel like you're standing  in the driveway with a bunch of broken pieces in your hands and how in the  world is something good going to come out of that?”
		Several days later Dale and his twin brother took the kids  out of Vacation Bible School and left town. When her kids disappeared from  church, Jena immediately filed for divorce, determined to get full custody of  her children.  Dale wasn’t giving up  without a fight. He returned, and they took it to court.
		“After we went to the courthouse and finally got before the  judge with our lawyers, they said to us, ‘If you want custody of the kids, you  need to stay in the home with them,’” Jena says. “So we lived in our house  together 15 months. He lived in one bedroom, and I cried myself to sleep every  night.  I can remember the only the  prayer that I could get out was two words, ‘help me.’ You know, I think now  looking back it's probably the best prayers I've ever prayed in my life.” 
		The nights were filled with prayer, but the days were filled  with divorce and custody battles.
		“It’s about gaining stuff that you can use against them in  the court hearing,” Dale explains, “and you got a year and a half to do this  almost. You start wearing tape recorders, and you begin to start saying things  that make a fight out of it and get them to say something or to do something or  to scream or yell or be violent. The pressure rises, and so even though we were  under the divorce decree, the fighting didn't stop.”
		Dale and Jena were the first couple in their county to  receive joint custody.  They were not  happy about their tie. Several months into the divorce, Jena was exhausted from  the continued fighting. “I just remember having this breaking point in my life.  It had to stop. The whole point of the divorce was for this to stop, and it  hasn't stopped. I just opened my mouth and out came, ‘What are we doing? What  are we doing? Would you come home and let's try to fix this thing.’  I promise you. I looked behind me like, ‘Where  in the world? What was that? Where did that come from?’  It kind of took Dale back. I think that was  kind of the moment that was a huge turning point for us.” 
Dale adds, “I'm in a huge battle in my lack of understanding  about how to do it, how to even begin to reconcile a broken marriage.  I needed my marriage to be restored. I needed  my soul to be restored. I needed restoration, not relief.”
		Dale and Jena worked through each and every issue in over  one year of Christian counseling.  With  much prayer and forgiveness, Dale and Jena remarried, determined to keep Christ  at the center of their second marriage.
		  “I just remember going, ‘Thank You, God, for a second chance.  Thank You for restoration for the You have proven Yourself faithful.’ I was  more in love with her at that moment than I had ever been before that time. My  love for her was new; it had changed,” Dale says.
		Jena agrees, “We just went back to an altar two very  different people. I can honestly say Dale and I were very different people the  way we approached life, the way we saw our purpose of life, the way we saw our  identity, the way we saw how we parented. Everything changed because Christ was  now the center of it where He had kind of just been a part of it, but not the  core.”
		Today, Dale and Jena travel the country encouraging couples  with the real life experiences in their book, Stained Glass Marriages. 
		“God is a redeeming God,” says Jena, “and He has taken those  years the locusts have eaten and restored those in our home and restored the  hearts of us as individuals and our children and then us as a family. It's been  a great thing.”
		Dale adds, “The miracle of a restored or a growing or a  thriving marriage is the one miracle that God really does want us to take an  active part in. We have a part to play in the restoration of our homes, the  growing of our love and the development of a marriage that would bring God  honor and glory. With His grace and His power, all things are able.”
      
		
CBN IS HERE FOR YOU!
	Are you seeking answers in life? Are you hurting? 
	Are you facing a difficult situation? 
 A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need.