Houston Chronicle Sunday

Lysa TerKeurst talks faith, cancer and her husband’s affair in new book.

- By Emily McFarlan Miller

From the outside, it seemed like Lysa TerKeurst had it all.

TerKeurst founded a successful Christian nonprofit, Proverbs 31 Ministries, named for the descriptio­n of a woman of “noble character” in the closing words of the biblical book of Proverbs that many Christian women look to for inspiratio­n. The ministry reaches more than 6 million women through its social-media accounts, as well as its daily devotions, radio messages, conference­s and other resources.

She was a popular speaker and had written a number of books for those women, many rooted in her own, often relatable struggles. Those books include the New York Times best-seller “Made to Crave” about losing weight, “Unglued“about managing emotions, “The Best Yes” about struggling with busyness and “Capture His Heart: Becoming the Godly Wife Your Husband Desires.”

Then, about two years ago, everything fell apart. TerKeurst announced her husband was having an affair. Months later, she was diagnosed with breast cancer.

So TerKeurst did what she’s always done.

She wrote about it. She shares what she learned in a new book, released last week, called “It’s Not Supposed to Be This Way: Finding Unexpected Strength When Disappoint­ments Leave You Shattered.”

“Some of those things are my greatest fears, and honestly it shocked me to my core that my family would experience this,” she said. “I was more heartbroke­n than I’ve ever been in my life, and I’ve been through a lot of hard things.”

After a double mastectomy, TerKeurst has been declared cancer-free, she writes in the book. And she said she and her husband now are working toward restoratio­n in their marriage, noting, “We’re not there yet.”

That’s her story, and not everybody’s will end the same, she stressed.

The author and ministry leader talked to Religion News Service about facing life’s disappoint­ments, finding unexpected strength and the role her faith played in that.

Q: You’re very vulnerable in all your books, but “It’s Not Supposed to Be This Way” seems particular­ly personal. Why was it important for you to be so vulnerable with your readers?

A: I wanted to tackle that raw angst that we all have when we know that we serve a good God — I think most Christians would agree to that — but we serve a good God who allows hurt. That can be really complicate­d, and it can cause a deep spiritual wrestling when God’s timing seems questionab­le, when his promises seem doubtful, when his lack of interventi­on seems hurtful. It can really rattle us and shake us to the core.

I knew that I wanted to write the message, but I didn’t know how the story was going to unfold or how it would turn out, so I was forced to write from that messy middle place. But I think it’s a gift to the reader because that’s where most all of us live. Most of us don’t live with every circumstan­ce in our lives tied up in a neat, nice bow when we’re singing “Kumbaya” and just having a praise party over all circumstan­ces. We’ve either just been through some really hard stuff or in the middle of hard stuff or we’re headed to some hard stuff. I guess people would say, “Well, that’s not very positive.” No, I’m positive. We’ve either been through hard stuff, we’re in it or we’re headed to it.

Q: Any one of those things would be hard for someone to go through. But you were going through them at the same time and very publicly. What role did your faith play in that?

A: Telling it publicly was not something I did immediatel­y. I kept the news private for 18 months, but it became apparent that either the story was going to be told through the rumor mill because it was slowly leaking out, or I could get ahead of it and tell it with facts and with the deepest request for people to pray for us. When I did share the story, I was quite honestly terrified of how people would react. I didn’t want to invite the weight of public opinion into our very private pain. I did it with a lot of prayer but also a lot of trepidatio­n.

However, when the news came out, I was so amazed that the church did what the church should do — big “C” church, the Christian community. Instead of unleashing a bunch of judgment and questions that I feared, it actually unleashed millions of people to pray for us. And I feel like we’re still reaping the blessing of those prayers even now.

Q: You write about some of the “bumperstic­ker” advice that well-meaning people share with their friends going through disappoint­ments. What are some of those things people may not realize are actually hurtful?

A: So many times I think Christians feel the need to explain something about God in the midst of someone else’s hardship, and I would just encourage them not to do that. The Bible makes it clear: “Weep with those who weep.” So sit down and weep with them. If they’re weeping, weep. If they’re laughing, laugh. If they need practical stuff done, then get practical stuff done without feeling the angst, like I’ve got to say the perfect thing.

Not all of our words need to be profound. Not all of our words need to be deeply spiritual. They can just be simple, like, “I love you,” “I’m here for you,” “I’m going to go buy you a gallon of milk,” “I’m going to mow your yard,” “I’m gonna take care of your kids for an hour so you can go take a nap.” Some of those things will speak more about God using you to bring his presence into a situation than any kind of bumper-sticker statement ever could.

Q: You’re writing about a theology of suffering: Does God cause disappoint­ments in people’s lives? Does God allow them? Does God use them? How do you as a Christian reconcile disappoint­ment with what you believe about God?

A: I think any time our faith and our feelings come in conflict with one another, it can be very, very disillusio­ning — almost spirituall­y disorienti­ng. We know God will work good for us, but here’s where we get in trouble: We like to run ahead of God and write the good story and then hold God accountabl­e to a story that we’ve written, not the one that he’s promised.

One thing, just in a practical sense, I’ve had to learn is when I’m sitting in the midst of my hardships, I have to force my brain to not consume my prayer life with all of my suggestion­s of how God needs to fix this. No human should have to carry the weight of being their own God. But so many of us are exhausted trying. We feel like we have to make all these suggestion­s to God. Really, when I look at especially the hardships in my marriage — and now I’ve been in this for almost three years — not one of my suggestion­s of how God could fix things, restore things or redeem things ever came to pass. But I have to say that God has woven together a story that was so unlikely, so full of ups and downs and twists and turns, I would have never been courageous enough to write it. I also could have never experience­d the outcome that only God could have allowed me to experience.

 ?? Courtesy of Thomas Nelson ?? Lysa TerKeurst is the founder of the Christian nonprofit Proverbs 31 Ministries.
Courtesy of Thomas Nelson Lysa TerKeurst is the founder of the Christian nonprofit Proverbs 31 Ministries.
 ??  ?? By Lysa TerKeurst Nelson, Thomas, Inc. 256 pages, $24.99 ‘It’s Not Supposed to Be This Way’
By Lysa TerKeurst Nelson, Thomas, Inc. 256 pages, $24.99 ‘It’s Not Supposed to Be This Way’

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