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Series: Difficult Relationships: When Grace Becomes Visible Part 1
Broken relationships are not the exception—they are the human experience.
In this opening episode of our new series, Paul and Rebecca Turner begin at the very beginning. Before there were fractured marriages, strained parent-child dynamics, or siblings who no longer speak, there was a garden. In the book of Genesis, mankind’s relationship with God was shattered by sin. When Adam and Eve fell, fellowship was broken—and every human relationship since has felt the ripple effects.
From there, the fracture spreads. Adam and Eve turn on one another. Cain’s jealousy and resentment erupt in violence against Abel. Later, Joseph’s brothers betray him out of envy. Throughout Scripture, we see the same patterns we see in our homes today: jealousy, disappointment, betrayal, failure, unmet expectations, wounded pride.
Why do relationships break?
Sometimes it is resentment.
Sometimes it is betrayal.
Sometimes someone fails us.
Sometimes we fail them.
Sometimes we simply feel we deserved more.
But here is the hope that frames this entire series: when relationships break, grace has an opportunity to become visible.
Paul and Rebecca take us to Romans 5:10, where we are reminded that when we were enemies, Christ died for us. God did not wait for reconciliation to begin grace. He moved toward us in the middle of hostility. He demonstrated all-consuming grace.
We cannot cheapen grace. When we minimize grace, we miss its transforming power. We never get to see what grace does in betrayal, what grace does when loyalty is tested, what grace does when we feel overlooked or wronged.
What does grace do when a marriage feels strained?
What does grace do between siblings who carry old wounds?
What does grace do in parent-child relationships marked by disappointment?
God’s grace works—but it works on His timeline.
In this foundational episode, Paul and Rebecca lay the groundwork for a journey through difficult relationships, especially within families and marriages. Because when grace becomes visible in the places that hurt the most, it doesn’t just repair relationships—it reveals the heart of God.
Join us as we begin exploring what happens when relationships break… and grace steps in.
By Paul and Rebecca TurnerSeries: Difficult Relationships: When Grace Becomes Visible Part 1
Broken relationships are not the exception—they are the human experience.
In this opening episode of our new series, Paul and Rebecca Turner begin at the very beginning. Before there were fractured marriages, strained parent-child dynamics, or siblings who no longer speak, there was a garden. In the book of Genesis, mankind’s relationship with God was shattered by sin. When Adam and Eve fell, fellowship was broken—and every human relationship since has felt the ripple effects.
From there, the fracture spreads. Adam and Eve turn on one another. Cain’s jealousy and resentment erupt in violence against Abel. Later, Joseph’s brothers betray him out of envy. Throughout Scripture, we see the same patterns we see in our homes today: jealousy, disappointment, betrayal, failure, unmet expectations, wounded pride.
Why do relationships break?
Sometimes it is resentment.
Sometimes it is betrayal.
Sometimes someone fails us.
Sometimes we fail them.
Sometimes we simply feel we deserved more.
But here is the hope that frames this entire series: when relationships break, grace has an opportunity to become visible.
Paul and Rebecca take us to Romans 5:10, where we are reminded that when we were enemies, Christ died for us. God did not wait for reconciliation to begin grace. He moved toward us in the middle of hostility. He demonstrated all-consuming grace.
We cannot cheapen grace. When we minimize grace, we miss its transforming power. We never get to see what grace does in betrayal, what grace does when loyalty is tested, what grace does when we feel overlooked or wronged.
What does grace do when a marriage feels strained?
What does grace do between siblings who carry old wounds?
What does grace do in parent-child relationships marked by disappointment?
God’s grace works—but it works on His timeline.
In this foundational episode, Paul and Rebecca lay the groundwork for a journey through difficult relationships, especially within families and marriages. Because when grace becomes visible in the places that hurt the most, it doesn’t just repair relationships—it reveals the heart of God.
Join us as we begin exploring what happens when relationships break… and grace steps in.