I have a confession to make.
I’m a very happy single woman.
I’ve been married. I’ve also been divorced for twenty years now, which means I’ve been divorced twice as long as I was married. And honestly? I enjoy my life.
Like many young people, I got married for all the wrong reasons. While that marriage gave me the two greatest blessings of my life – my daughters – it also brought tremendous heartache. The relationship was emotionally and verbally abusive, and eventually it ended in divorce.
The Danger of Ignoring God’s Warnings
I entered that marriage as a Christian and married someone who didn’t have a relationship with God.
Like so many others before me, I thought I could save him. I thought my faith would be enough for both of us. I believed I could somehow make it work.
It doesn’t work that way.
God doesn’t work that way.
There’s a reason Scripture warns us against being unequally yoked.
“Do not be yoked together with unbelievers. For what do righteousness and wickedness have in common? Or what fellowship can light have with darkness?” (2 Corinthians 6:14)
But I was young. I was stubborn. And I didn’t want to listen.
Imagine my surprise when, nine years ago, I almost, almost, made the same mistake again.
This time, the man wasn’t simply indifferent toward God. He had an adversarial relationship with Him.
Thankfully, God intervened before history repeated itself.
Running from a Conversation with God
When we started dating, I knew deep down the relationship wasn’t right.
You know those sins we try to hide from God, as if He doesn’t already know? The situations we avoid praying about because we’re afraid of His answer?
That was me.
For months, I didn’t talk to God about the relationship at all. Meanwhile, the relationship became more serious. We started discussing marriage.
What should have been exciting wasn’t.
No one in my life seemed enthusiastic about the relationship. Looking back, I can see why. The warning signs were everywhere.
But I wasn’t paying attention. All I could see was financial security. My mother wouldn’t have to worry about money. I wouldn’t have a mortgage. Life would be easier.
At least, that’s what I told myself.
When Reality Sets In
Then the cracks started showing.
He began telling me what kind of mother I should be. He encouraged my older daughter in choices that directly contradicted my biblical convictions. He routinely brushed aside my younger daughter while prioritizing his own children—children who were carrying significant emotional baggage and unresolved issues.
Suddenly, the future I had imagined didn’t look so appealing.
And then God stepped in.
The Conversation I Couldn’t Avoid
One morning, while I was getting ready for work, I heard God’s voice clearly.
“Are you ever going to talk with Me about this relationship?”
Without hesitation, I answered, “No.”
“Why not?”
“Because I already know Your answer. And it will be no.”
Then God said something I’ll never forget.
“The choice is always yours. But no, this isn’t what I have for you.”
Then He added gently:
“But I still want to talk with you about it. I love you, and I want to hear from you.”
I broke. I knew God already knew everything. He knew my heart. He knew my fears. He knew my motives.
Yet He still wanted me to come to Him.
Not because He needed information.
Because He wanted relationship.
Surrender Changes Everything
That morning I finally prayed.
“God, I’m sorry I’ve tried to hide this from You. If this isn’t from You, please help me make the decision to end it. Prevent the hurt before it happens. I submit my heart to You.”
The moment I prayed, the burden lifted.
I knew exactly what I needed to do.
So I ended the relationship.
The People We Allow to Influence Us Matter
Why share all of this?
Because I know I’m not the only one who has ignored God’s warnings.
And because who we allow into our inner circle matters.
During that relationship, a close friend continually encouraged me toward marriage. Her message wasn’t intentionally harmful, but it wasn’t biblical either.
Her belief was simple: I was incomplete because I was single.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
I’ve always taught my daughters never to expect another human being to complete them. Only God can do that.
No person is responsible for making us whole.
No person is responsible for creating our happiness.
Because eventually, every human being will disappoint us.
If our identity, security, and joy rest on another person, what happens when that person fails?
We already see the consequences all around us. Our culture constantly confuses lust with love and happiness with joy.
But they’re not the same thing.
Joy Is Better Than Happiness
I believe God wants good things for His children.
But more than temporary happiness, He wants to fill us with lasting joy.
“You make known to me the path of life; in Your presence there is fullness of joy; at Your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” (Psalm 16:11)
Joy comes from Him.
It isn’t dependent on circumstances, relationships, bank accounts, or marital status.
When our hearts are full of God’s joy, healthy relationships become an overflow rather than a necessity.
That’s a completely different way of living.
Looking Back at God’s Protection
Sometimes I think about what my life would look like if I hadn’t listened.
What would have happened to my daughters?
How would their lives have changed?
Would my precious granddaughter even exist today? The thought alone makes me shudder.
As I look back, I can see things more clearly than I could then. God revealed that this man was making me his idol. At the same time, I would have made saving him mine.
Neither of us would have been pursuing God first.
And if I’m being honest, I likely would have added another divorce to my life’s résumé.
Instead, God protected me. Not because I deserved it. Not because I had done everything right.
But because He loved me enough to interrupt my plans.
But God…
Those two words have changed countless stories throughout Scripture.
Abraham was old, but God.
Joseph was betrayed, but God.
The Israelites were trapped, but God.
Jesus was crucified, but God raised Him from the dead.
And in my own small story, I was headed toward another painful mistake, but God stepped in.
He pursued me when I was avoiding Him. He spoke when I wasn’t listening. He protected me from consequences I couldn’t yet see. And He reminded me that obedience may cost something in the moment, but it always leads to something better.
Maybe you’re facing a decision right now that you’ve been reluctant to bring before God.
Perhaps you already know what He’s saying, and that’s exactly why you’ve avoided the conversation.
Can I encourage you?
Talk to Him anyway.
Not because He doesn’t already know.
But because He loves you and wants to hear from you.
And sometimes the greatest blessings in our lives begin with two simple words:
But God.




