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This Was Never the Plan: Walking with God through Divorce--Vaneetha Risner

July 7, 2026
00:00

Everybody loves a comeback story. A marriage saved. A relationship restored. But what happens when the divorce actually happens? Vaneetha Risner, author of This Was Never the Plan: Walking with God through the Heartache of Divorce, talks honestly about the lies, shame, and second-guessing that can follow a broken marriage—and why healing starts when you stop trying to rewrite the past. If you're carrying grief, disappointment, or questions that don't have easy answers, this conversation won't talk down to you.

Vaneetha Risner: I don't want anyone listening to think remarriage is the goal because Jesus can fill your life and give you joy. My joy is not because of Joel, even though Joel and I have so much fun together and he brings me joy.

My joy is because of Jesus. He would say the same thing. After his wife died, his joy was in Jesus, and his joy is not in me, even though we love being married to each other.

Dave Wilson: Welcome to FamilyLife Today where we want to help you pursue the relationships that matter most. I’m Dave Wilson.

Ann Wilson: And I’m Ann Wilson. You can find us at familylifetoday.com. This is FamilyLife Today. Okay, I think that this is something that you’re going to love. This conversation is going to be so impactful because every single one of us knows somebody who's walked through a difficult divorce, or they themselves have been through it.

Dave Wilson: I’m guessing you’ve walked through something. I have that's really hard. Whether it’s divorce or anything, today is about divorce, but it’s about any kind of hardship. It was never our plan to walk through hardship, and yet God's with us. We’re going to discover that today with Vaneetha. Let’s go.

Vaneetha Risner: Remember when people used to say, "Is the Bible like your little vitamin?" And people said, "Don’t say that." I’m like, "No, it’s my CPR." That verse 119: He revives. I feel like when I'm with God and I'm in the word, it's like there's a CPR to my heart, the shock on your chest where it revives you.

He revives you. He reminds you. I think we all need that, no matter what we're going through. And it just so happens that you couldn't do it apart from Him.

Ann Wilson: No. And I learned lament, which is just crying out to God in our grief while trusting that God is good. So it’s a both-and. I remember I had this journal where I really just couldn't have pretty words. I told God exactly how I felt. My journal wasn't how great Thou art.

But I got to that. That’s the amazing part, is you start with everything that's hard and, "God, why have you forsaken me?"

Dave Wilson: Just like David.

Vaneetha Risner: Yes, and you end with how great Thou art. That’s where lament takes us. It’s real lament. My sister once looked at my journal and she said, "I did not know that you were allowed to say things like that to God."

She calls it my scream journal still. She's like, "When I looked at your scream journal, I was like, 'Whoa, she is not playing.'"

Ann Wilson: And God wasn't afraid of it.

Vaneetha Risner: No, and that’s why the tenderness of God in hearing my lament and let me pour out everything I felt and then meeting me in that. I’ll never forget it.

Dave Wilson: Was that part of the healing?

Vaneetha Risner: Yes, huge. Because I had a lot of big feelings, a lot of fears, a lot of anger, a lot of confusion, shame. There was just so much. So many fears about the future. What are my kids, how are they going to turn out?

The minute you get divorced, people are like, "Statistics are really bad." For me, I thought, "I'm going to be in a nursing home." I didn't know if I'd even be able to take care of my kids. So I had fears for my own physical being, for them.

"How am I going to make it?" I remember just, "Will I ever laugh?" and I remember asking God, "Are you going to even let me laugh again? Is there going to be joy?"

Ann Wilson: I want to have you talk to our listener who's in it right now. Suffering, maybe they’ve heard the same thing, like they’re going to get divorced. What would you say to them in terms of this part of that tenderness of God?

Vaneetha Risner: I would say God is going to walk you through this. So lean into Him, tell Him everything. Don’t hold anything back. I feel like lament reminds me of a good relationship. In marriage, you want to tell your spouse how you feel.

If you choose not to and tell other people how you feel about your spouse, that’s going to pull you apart. Often that’s what we do. We don’t go to God. We tell everyone else what we think about what God has done to our lives.

That’s grumbling, that’s what the children of Israel did. But lament is going right to God. So for the person who’s listening who’s like, "I have nothing and my life is shreds," take that to God and ask Him to rebuild you and revive you and show you truth and fill you, because I had nothing and God used that in my life.

Dave Wilson: Did you ever walk with guilt or questions toward God, like, "Did my husband leave me for another woman because of my physical...?"

Vaneetha Risner: Oh yeah. Questioning, there was a lot of questions about myself. I really see those as lies that I chose to believe. One, I’m not enough. So then you look in the mirror, you’re like, "I don’t look as good as I did," or "Did I gain weight?"

Ann Wilson: Said every woman in the universe.

Vaneetha Risner: Yeah, you’re like, "Okay, I got a little extra fat now, I got..." We just all look at my ear was different, I don’t like my nose. And then there's the, "Do I talk too much?" "Did I not give him enough space?" "Did he like this? Did I not do that?" Just so many ifs.

And then there was for me like, "Hey, when we got married, I was this pretty, able-bodied person and now it's not looking good." So there's all of these. For that, it was, "God, you knew this. You allowed us to get married, you knew I'd have post-polio. I didn't know that."

So there is all of these like, "What did I do?" And then there's the, "Why didn't I see it?" "This is my fault because I was blind to this," or "I should have thought of counseling earlier. I should have seen the signs. Maybe we were drifting apart," and kind of like, "I can fix it."

But of course, only God can do that. I think sometimes we think we can fix things that only God can do. We need to do our part in terms of being open, being open to criticism. But I think I believed a lot of lies that somehow this was something I could have changed and really bore the weight of that for a long time until I remember once in the car just rolling it over in my mind.

"If I do it this way, if I say it this way, if I write this letter, if I do this, then maybe things would change." We were almost divorced. But I still was holding onto this outcome of wanting my marriage back.

Part of it was because I wanted to look good. The marriages that get put back together, they get the front page. They get the glory story of, "We were on the brink of divorce and yet God intervened," and everybody wants to interview them.

Nobody wants to interview the, "We were on the brink of divorce and we got divorced." That's the back page. We don't want to talk about that. I didn't want to be that person. I didn't want to be the back page.

But I've since realized God was like, "This is not about you and this is not your battle." That was really a release because I felt like I needed to figure it out and this was my job. It was like, "You are trusting in an outcome, you’re not trusting in me."

Ann Wilson: It's releasing control and that's hard to do.

Vaneetha Risner: Yes, because we want our outcomes. God's like, "Hold onto me."

Dave Wilson: How did you get to joy? Because even when I sat at lunch with you and Joel, your husband now, there's joy.

Ann Wilson: You radiate joy. There's joy in both of you guys. I'm like, the life you've had, the things you've gone through, you don't see a deep-welled sense of joy and it's exuding out of you. I don't think a lot of people get there. How do you get there? You wrote about it.

Vaneetha Risner: Joy is really found in Jesus. So I would say the more we put our hope in Jesus, the more joy we have. Recognizing joy has nothing to do with our circumstances. If joy is about our circumstances, then they’re going to ebb and flow.

But joy is something God gives us kind of on the inside and it is independent of that. And then little steps of joy though. That chapter, a lot of it is about figuring out what makes me laugh, what brings me joy, what makes me want to get up in the morning.

For me, deep conversations, coffee with people, laughing. I love to laugh. But joy comes from leaning into God.

Dave Wilson: How long was it for you after the divorce to get to joy? Because I'm reading one chapter here where your daughter is saying, "I hate you." You’re going through trauma as a family, and that's not joyful.

Vaneetha Risner: No, it was not joyful. My joy would start in the morning when I would open up the word, and then by the end of the day, I was like, "I need the Bible right now."

John Piper says, "I get up in the morning and I have to become a Christian again every day." I get up in the morning and I read the Bible and I’m like, "Yes, this is true, I have joy." But it was funny because I didn't think I was showing a lot of joy early on.

I was struggling, but I felt like God was with me. But my younger daughter, she had been the really easy child growing up. People would be like, "How did you get such a perfect child?" "I'm a perfect parent."

But that went south quickly and she was really hard.

Ann Wilson: The ten-year-old at the time of the divorce.

Vaneetha Risner: Yes. And in a little video when I did the Bible study Desperate for Hope, they interviewed her. I was really interested because they didn't prep me or her. They asked her about her faith and she said, "When my parents split up, I was a devil child. I did everything to make my mom's life miserable."

But she said, "I came to Christ knowing my mom had joy and I didn't know where she got it from. I was making her life miserable and her life was worse than mine. Why would she even have joy? I didn't get it and I realized God has to be real for my mom to have joy in the midst of that."

Ann Wilson: That is rich. I'm crying there for the life of my video.

Vaneetha Risner: I cried. I'm like, "Wow." And she had not said that to me. So for parents, your kids may not be telling you while you’re making a difference. She said that 10 years later, 15 years after all that happened.

I was like, "Wow, if I had known that." But they’re watching and they see that God is sustaining you.

Dave Wilson: Yeah, I mean, that's beautiful because I'm looking again at, you go to church and you see all these seats and your whole family won't sit with you. So you’re in a valley and we're talking about joy and she's seeing joy, but man, there were hard times.

And I'm saying that because I know there are people listening that they’re in the valley and they’re like, "Hers wasn't as bad as mine." Yes, it was. It really was. And you held onto Jesus through tears.

Vaneetha Risner: Yeah, it's not like joy doesn't have tears.

Ann Wilson: That's a good point.

Dave Wilson: That's a good way to say it. Mom anger happens. The yelling, the snapping, the hiding in the bathroom with cold coffee. But what's really underneath your anger? Mom of four, Janelle Breitenstein, shares practical help and biblical hope in a free five-session video series. Start today at familylife.com/momanger. So what's dating and the R-word?

Vaneetha Risner: Remarriage. Dating online dating is not fun, just if anybody thinks it's going to be fun, it's not fun. Before that, I would say before somebody would be considered dating, I would say talk to a counselor.

Don’t just say, "Okay, I'm divorced, I'm ready." Because you really need to talk through why you want to date. My counselor really asked me a lot of questions like, "Do you feel like you wouldn't be complete without being remarried?"

I was like, "I don't know." And she said, "Until you can be really happy single, you have no business dating." And it was really good. We worked through that and I prayed through a lot of it and recognized she said, "I have so many people in my office that felt like they needed to remarry right away."

It was basically the first person breathing and interested and it does not go well.

Ann Wilson: And they hadn't healed.

Vaneetha Risner: No, and so you bring all of that baggage and all of that "I want to be loved" into a relationship where it may not be the right person and you're putting too much on them. Second marriages don't work as well, and I think that's a big reason why people aren't healed.

So they’re not looking clearly, they’re just looking like, "I want somebody to parent my children," or "I don't want to be alone," or "Need help with the finances," or "I want to have a baby," or whatever it is, and they are in a rush.

I remember being in my dentist's office and a woman that I had known for years whose husband had left her and she'd remarried very quickly, she just whispered into my ear, "I have one piece of advice for you: don't remarry too quickly."

Nobody heard and then she didn't say anything else and I thought, "Wow." So that's what I would say. But if you feel like after you’ve prayed about it, asked friends, really sought the Lord—and the whole idea of remarriage is controversial in the church, some people feel like you shouldn't get remarried after divorce and I definitely respect that opinion.

I did a lot of work on my own and I do feel like there is biblical grounds for remarriage after divorce and I do talk about that in the book, but it's something that everybody really needs to bring to the Lord.

Ann Wilson: Let me ask you this, because you were ready. Were your girls ready? How do you know that it's okay to date when you have kids?

Vaneetha Risner: My older daughter's the one who told me to start dating. This was after the divorce. She's like, "Mom, you need to get out there."

Ann Wilson: Was she 15?

Vaneetha Risner: She was 16. She was still at home and she was like, "You need to get out there." And I was like, "Get out there?" And she's like, "Yeah, you loved being married." The kids knew that I was actually really happy in my marriage, so it wasn't like I thought we had this horrible marriage, which is maybe the hard part.

Ann Wilson: And they didn't see the repercussions of a bad marriage.

Vaneetha Risner: No. So they said, "You liked being married." I wanted to meet somebody organically, honestly, but then I realized I went to a few things and, this is embarrassing, but you’re looking at everybody's hand like, "Do you have a wedding ring? Okay, maybe we don't need to chat."

I was like, "Who am I becoming? This is weird." So I just decided I needed to not just be looking for somebody. Online dating did work for me for a while, but I think I talk about it in one of the when I was there. I feel like we interviewed you and Joel.

Yeah, so I think we tell the whole story, so people need to listen to that one. We'll put a link in the show notes on that. But met Joel and immediately, before I met him, my sister said to me, "You’re going to marry him," because she heard me talking on the phone to him.

Actually, when he had answered a few questions for me on this before we even spoke, I actually screamed out to my friend who was in the room when I was looking online, "I'm going to marry this guy."

Ann Wilson: What was there that you thought that in your sister thought it?

Vaneetha Risner: The first question, this was on eHarmony at the time, is "What are you passionate about?" People would say like, "God, football, and country, not necessarily in that order." I was like, "I don't think so."

But then Joel said, "I'm passionate about Jesus Christ because there is nothing else to be passionate about." I was like, "Okay, wow. He just went to the top of my list." It was just so different than everybody else.

From the beginning, our conversations, our emails were really deep. I just felt like, "Wow, this is somebody that shares my view of suffering." Joel’s late wife died of cancer and he cared amazingly for her and just I saw the tenderness in him and his love for the Lord.

It was very different than the guy who said over coffee, "What's your favorite book?" And I'm like, "I don't know," and he's like, "Mine is Fifty Shades of Grey." I was like, "I would like to get my latte to go, thank you." That's the end of that conversation.

Dave Wilson: Joel had that? People say that to him? Women?

Vaneetha Risner: Yeah.

Ann Wilson: What would you say to the listener that's been in that dating scene, it hasn't gone well? Should they keep going? How do you submit that to Jesus?

Vaneetha Risner: I would say ask the Lord, because I was actually getting on eHarmony to deactivate because I felt like, "You know what? I just need to stop doing this for a while." And I really felt like I did.

So Joel was the person I met the day I was trying to deactivate. I have friends who haven't remarried that have found so much joy in the Lord and deep friendships. So I would say listen to that.

If you feel like, "Wow, why am I doing this? This isn't getting anywhere," then I would say you don't have to pursue it this way. God can bring people into your life other ways. At the same time, it does take time.

Most people don't log on the first day and there it is. So it has to be a conversation with the Lord. I don't think there's a one-size-fits-all in any way. It is, "Okay, Jesus, what do I do?"

Ann Wilson: I think one of the things that I love too about your book is your appendix the end. This it's a practical toolkit of how to show up when a friend's marriage ends. I've never seen anything like this because do we not all know someone's marriage who has ended? Why did you include this?

Vaneetha Risner: I included the appendix because one, I’m always being asked, "How do I help?" Because for every person who's divorced, there is like five people that are wanting, maybe 50, "What do I do? What do I say?" depending on how close you are.

So that was really the secondary audience for my book was people who want to walk with a friend who’s going through divorce. Part of what I did in the appendix is I have questions for each chapter and I wrote those questions thinking somebody could do them alone.

A lot of them you can journal. But my dream if I was going through divorce and I had that book would be to give it to a friend and have them read it with me and ask me those questions. I wrote it also for the church because I think as the church we can do better.

Often we don't know what to say so we don't say anything. Church leadership has so much going on and it's like, maybe have an informal group of people who have been through divorce who'd be willing to mentor somebody or even just have coffee.

I was dying to know somebody who'd been through divorce who could tell me what is this like, how do I go through this in a godly way?

Well, let me say this: you could get her book. *This Was Never the Plan: Walking with God through the Heartache of Divorce*. Just go to familylifetoday.com, click on the link in the show notes. I would get more than one of these because this is something you could use as a tool for others.

Thinking that there are questions that will help people walk with somebody. Like my mom went through divorce, I watched it as a seven-year-old. There was nobody walking with us. It was a different era then, but it was lonely.

When we walked in church, it felt like, "Oh, there's the boy with no dad." Nobody walked and nobody talked about it. Today, there's resources like this and your story to help, so thanks.

Ann Wilson: I'm curious. I'm thinking of a friend of ours who it was a friend's daughter who went through a divorce. She was young, they hadn't been married, no kids. now she’s remarried.

Her husband has gone through a divorce, now they’re married, they’re blended. Ron Deal's material on blended has been a great resource. I could also see this book as being a great resource.

Could you ever imagine a couple going through the end of the book or even reading the book together and talking through that, rehashing some of the things? Or could they even lead a small group of people that have gone through a divorce and go through this whole thing?

Vaneetha Risner: Yes. That is really kind of a discussion like there's three kind of purposes: for the person to journal and think through, one friend to ask, and then discussion. You could do it as a small group.

It is a discussion guide to open up those questions. I had some people read it and say, "My divorce was a long time ago but I read it and I had no idea all the things that I hadn't thought about. It brought up a lot."

Even if you’re going to marry somebody, let's say, who's been divorced, say, "Can we talk through what has healing looked like for you? Where is there bitterness?" Because sometimes we just don't want to go there. But when somebody’s willing to walk through us with it, it's easier to go there.

Dave Wilson: I wonder if we could end with... I'm thinking there's people listening right now that are walking through that valley and they don't know where it's going and maybe they do. Your last show up is pray. Would you be willing to pray for them?

Vaneetha Risner: Yes, I'd love to. Oh Lord Jesus, thank you that you are good. Lord, I pray for the brother or sister listening who is in a valley, walking through what they never wanted, Lord.

And they’re wondering, "Are you there? Are you with them?" Lord, I just pray for them right now that they would sense your presence, that they would know that you, even though they are walking maybe what feels like through the valley of the shadow of death, they don't need to fear evil because you are with them.

So Lord, I just pray that you would take away the fear of the future, the what-ifs that may be playing in their mind for their children, for their lives, for themselves, for their reputation, for so many things.

Lord, I pray that they could trust you with this and to know that maybe this wasn't their plan, but you are writing a good story with their lives, Lord. Lord, I pray that they would remember that even though this feels like a fire, as Elisabeth Elliot said, God's story never ends in ashes.

So Lord, I pray that they would cling to you right now and open their Bible tomorrow morning and ask you to meet them expectantly. Lord, revive me according to your word, and that they would stay close to you, Lord, because that's the only way to make it through this.

Lord, we love you, but not as much as you love us. In Jesus' name, Amen.

Dave Wilson: Thank you. That was awesome.

Ann Wilson: Before we're done today, I just want to remind our listeners that we know life is full of challenges, and families today need biblical truth more than ever. Isn't that true?

Dave Wilson: That is true.

Ann Wilson: And as a FamilyLife partner, your monthly gift helps bring the truth into homes every single day through podcasts, events, and resources.

Dave Wilson: So let's make a lasting difference together. Become a partner today. Just go to familylifetoday.com and click the donate button. FamilyLife Today is a donor-supported production of FamilyLife, a Cru ministry. 50 years of helping you pursue the relationships that matter most.

This transcript is provided as a written companion to the original message and may contain inaccuracies or transcription errors. For complete context and clarity, please refer to the original audio recording. Time-sensitive references or promotional details may be outdated. This material is intended for personal use and informational purposes only.

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FamilyLife Today® is an award-winning podcast featuring fun, engaging conversations that help families grow together with Jesus while pursuing the relationships that matter most. Hosted by Dave and Ann Wilson, new episodes air every Tuesday and Thursday.

About Dave and Ann Wilson

Dave and Ann Wilson are co-hosts of FamilyLife Today©, FamilyLife’s nationally-syndicated radio program.

Dave and Ann have been married for more than 40 years and have spent the last 35 teaching and mentoring couples and parents across the country. They have been featured speakers at FamilyLife’s Weekend to Remember® since 1993, and have also hosted their own marriage conferences across the country.

Dave and Ann helped plant Kensington Community Church in Detroit, Michigan where they served together in ministry for more than three decades, wrapping up their time at Kensington in 2020.

The Wilsons are the creative force behind DVD teaching series Rock Your Marriage and The Survival Guide To Parenting, as well as authors of the recently released books Vertical Marriage (Zondervan, 2019) and No Perfect Parents (Zondervan, 2021).

Dave is a graduate of the International School of Theology, where he received a Master of Divinity degree. A Ball State University Hall of Fame Quarterback, Dave served the Detroit Lions as Chaplain for thirty-three years. Ann attended the University of Kentucky. She has been active with Dave in ministry as a speaker, writer, small group leader, and mentor to countless women.

The Wilsons live in the Detroit area. They have three grown sons, CJ, Austin, and Cody, three daughters-in-law, and a growing number of grandchildren.

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