Forehands turn their healed marriage into ministry

Forehands turn their healed marriage into ministry

He preaches with the fervor of a prophet. She sings like an angel. Together, they are so dynamic it’s difficult to believe they have each experienced a bitter divorce and custody battle — with each other.

On the outside, the Forehand family seemed perfect. Married on June 11, 1988, Dale was a successful businessman, a deacon at First Baptist Church, Trussville, and a Sunday School teacher. An accomplished soloist, Jena immersed herself in choir activities and raised their two children, Cole and Jorja.

But on the inside, the Forehands marriage was dying.

“(Couples) are looking to their spouses with unrealistic expectations, so they get very disappointed when these are not met,” Dale said. This disappointment often leads to a demand that needs be met by a spouse and when this doesn’t happen, the spouses feel defeated, and many quit.

A dead marriage

Dale knows the defeat all too well, because in July 1996, Dale packed Jena’s bags and told her to leave their suburban home in Bir-mingham. What ensued the following 15 months was a showdown in the courtroom for custody of Cole and Jorja, each parent seeking full rights and each lawyer seeking victory. Jena said she was not shocked Dale asked her to leave their home. “I can’t say it was a major surprise, because our home had the arguments and the bickering and the anger had risen to a high point. We had gotten so angry and tired.”

Waiting for the court date, the Forehands lived in their home — now a prison. Dale lived in the master bedroom while Jena shared bunk beds with Cole.

The day finally arrived when they would bring their battle to the court. With loaded emotions, the Forehands listened to each ripping word, calculating the next move. In the end, they were given joint custody. Dale and Jena left the room feeling destroyed.

Then the unbelievable happened. Four months after the courtroom battle, Jena called Dale and an argument started. Instead of fighting, Jena asked Dale to come get her so they could repair their relationship.

“I chose to reveal myself that day so that Dale could briefly peek into my heart,” Jena explained. “I think it was the Holy Spirit speaking through me.”

She said couples get to a point where they are stripped to the bareness of their souls when experiencing struggles.

“We had such intense pain and hurt from each other, and the thought of continuing this relationship was devastating,” Jena said. But she knew God allowed the  experience to happen because it forced each person to look inward. “I had to look at what things in my life did not reflect Jesus.”

In 1997, Dale and Jena were remarried at The Church at Brook Hills. Symbolizing the beginning of a new marriage but a remembrance of the first, Dale and Jena took the original stone from her wedding ring and put it in a new setting.

That day, Cole told his parents he wanted to know Christ as Savior. They prayed together for the salvation of their firstborn son.

“We have learned and continue to learn to find our fulfillment, need and satisfaction in a deep relationship with Christ,” Jena said. “It is out of this relationship we have something to give to our spouses.”

Dale said a stained glass marriage gave birth to Stained Glass Ministries, adapted from a song by Clay Crosse illustrating an old stained glass window in the attic of a church that is brought out, cleaned up and placed back in the light.

“As I listened to this song, it was our story. Our first marriage had become dirty and dusty, full of pains and stains, but when the grace of God moved in our hearts and His light shone through, what a beautiful work of art we had just experienced,” Dale said.

It was Valentine’s Day in 1998 when Dale and Jena first told the world of their experience. “As God burned that entire experience in our hearts, we knew then the Scripture that spoke of what man had intended for evil, God had turned for good,” Dale said.

Sharing their story

The Forehand family today worships at the Church at Shelby Crossing, a daughter church of Brook Hills. Dale and Jena lead marriage conferences and speak across the country. They will be keynote speakers and lead workshops in LifeWay’s Fall Festival of Marriage in October at Shocco Springs. They have also written a book titled “Stained Glass Marriage” detailing their experience and offering insight into developing a quality marriage.

The Forehands feel it is important to share their story. Dale recently left his career of seven years in property management to devote his time to full-time ministry.

“Too many folks sitting in the pew are wearing masks, afraid to be real, share their struggles and ask for help.

 “We have bought into the lie that if you are a Christian, you are supposed to be perfect. If this were true we would not need Jesus,” Dale said.

The best advice Dale and Jena offer to couples is extensive pre-marital counseling. “Let His character become yours, then flesh that out with the ones you love.”