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Without Condemnation — 24 Comments

    • Kristi, how kind of you to be so compassionate. I wish I didn’t have a story like this to share, but as I said to my dear friend, Karen, God can take even our deepest, worst sin and “work it together for our good,” and I trust for those who might be encouraged not to commit the same sin as I. It means so much to have your encouragement. Thank and God bless you.
      Love
      Lynn

  1. Karen, thank you again for this incredible opportunity to share my story with your beloved readers. As you said, even if they can’t relate personally, it’s important to know that nothing can separate us from God’s love (whether the sin we committed before knowing Christ, or, as in my case here, after). I appreciate *your* courage, especially as a humor author (at least, you write a lot of humor in addition to other genres), to include an essay that is far from humorous. I love you for wanting to help other women and, in turn, hopefully, babies not yet born. Thank you so much for this privilege. God bless you, and Happy New Year!
    Love
    Lynn

  2. Wow! So powerful! Thanks for sharing this moving story of forgiveness, grace and healing. Jesus can truly make all things new.

    • And how powerful to me, dear Glenda, are your gracious words. Thank you. When women who have my background can find love and encouragement from fellow Christians, it gives us the grace to tell the truth. Thank you for your loving support, and indeed, He makes all things new, including a painful, sinful past.
      Love
      Lynn

  3. Lynn, your openness ‘here’ on Karen’s blog (though you were first open at your church) will reach many and they, too, will feel the release of God’s grace through the gift of forgiveness. No shame which comes from hiding. I’ve a friend writing her story, at this time. And she used a quote: A story untold is a story yet to be healed.” Not all the stories in our lives would apply. We love to share the good ones, the happy ones. It takes courage to open up to others but when we do, God opens doors not only for us but for others who have been in hiding too. Bless you in all you have yet to do and share!

    Your friend!
    Lynn (the other Lynn!)

    • Dear “other” and one-and-only-special Lynn!

      Thank you so much for your loving words here. And I’m so proud of your friend for writing her story. There is freedom in the writing and in the telling, as God leads. (Actually, I first revealed my story in my book, which Karen pictured. It’s all there, but not this postscript). I thank God for my pastor, who continued to encourage me to reveal it. Granted, he gave me little time to pray over it, but when we put the choice in God’s hands along with our willingness, He makes it clear when it’s time to come out from the “cave of shame.” Light is healing, and darkness is not. Thank you for sharing so graciously, and for this quote. It’s so true.
      Love
      Lynn

  4. Powerful story …. Both in the sorrow and the redemption. So many women made the same decision, being told it was just a clump of tissue, and have lived with grief and shame since. Thank you Lynn, for helping other women heal through your testimony.

    • Thank you so much, Margie, for these kind, encouraging, and truthful words. They mean so much. And yes, lies abound in this area. Now, more and more, the “tissue” lie can’t be told because of science and ultrasounds, so other, even more deceptive lies replace it–such as “You will be so free. You will not experience guilt. I am happy about my abortion–shouting it from the rooftops.” We’ve heard so many lies. And bottom-line, re: the experience, itself, only women who have committed this sin, and the abortionists who have, can talk about the true ramifications of it. Thank you for pointing out the lies.
      Rejoicing in truth and THE Truth, Jesus, with you,
      Love
      Lynn

  5. Thank you Lynn, for sharing your story that just overflows with the great mercy of our God! We all need His mercy in our lives so much. Oh that we could open our hearts to share that mercy with each other, to let the love of Jesus draw us together, to let Him bind up every wounded place. And thank you Karen, for sharing this here today!

    • Oh Bettie! How comforting and filled with grace your words are to me. Thank you, more than I can say. Yes, yes. We can’t experience His mercy if we don’t expose our sin. And then, that mercy must overflow to others, similarly suffering. I’m truly convinced that one of the main reasons women do not FEEL forgiven for abortion (so important not just to intellectually know God has forgiven this sin when it is confessed to Him), but to EXPERIENCE His forgiveness, is because we have not put into practice James 5:16a, ESV: “Therefore, confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, that you may be healed.” Open confession (I mean here at least to one other Christian–not necessarily to a larger group initially or unless God truly leads you there), is the missing ingredient to why women can’t sense God’s forgiveness and why they can’t forgive themselves. And this fosters mutually extended mercy and that “binding up of wounds” that you mentioned. I can see that you truly understand this. Thank you for sharing.
      Love
      Lynn

  6. What a beautiful testimony of God’s mercy and grace! We all have sin.. we all need His mercy, forgiveness and grace. Immanuel.. God with us. Jesus.. our redeemer, our Savior, our Lord! Thank You Lynn for letting His flow His grace and truth through you as a healing balm to each of us caught in condemnation and shame..

    • Janet, how wise your words, how deep your compassion. Thank you beyond words. You cite something I hoped that my essay would convey. You said, “We all have sin” and “each of us caught in condemnation and shame.” That’s true. I know that (MERCIFULLY!!) not all women have had abortions, and I surely do not downplay the sin of mine. But each of us sins and hides in some way. Each of us has stitched a set of fashionable fig leaves. But once we understand the abundant mercy, love, and forgiveness of Christ, we can spring free from both condemnation and shame, realize how flimsy those fig leaves truly are, and move forward to help others to know and do the same. Thank you for your complete understanding of truth and your loving heart.
      Love
      Lynn

  7. Thank you so much for sharing this story and a special Thank You too Lynn for being willing for Karen to share this with us. It is a difficult situation to admit but God’s love and forgiveness is just waiting for us to ask Him. Jesus is the only “human being” who has walked on this earth who was “sin free”~all of us are guilty of committing sin ~ all of us need forgiveness for “something” and does anyone KNOW if one sin is more “unforgetable” than another? I think not! Bless you for sharing this with us Karen. Love, Margaret

    • What a gracious, generous response, dear Margaret. I can’t thank you enough. While my goal whenever I share this story is not to turn tables and point out someone else’s sins (I must own my own), it does help me not to take any condemnation I receive to heart. Christ died for my sin of abortion, and hard as it was to believe, He no longer wanted me to be weighed down with the guilt of it. He not only forgave me,but cleansed me. I was a slow learner, so He took me all the way to that fathomless ocean to give me a graphic, tangible picture of how deep that cleansing was (and is). And yes, we all sin, so no one can really afford to cast stones. I am so grateful that we have a God and Savior whose mercy and love is infinite enough to cover all the sins of the world. I’m so grateful for your loving response. Thank you.

    • Just seeing this, dear Jan. Thank you for your kind words and support. I don’t feel brave. And I don’t feel beautiful, but I’m humbled by your gracious words. Mostly, what has staggered me over the years is that God can use the ugliness of my sins (whether the heinousness of abortion, alcoholism etc) in a way that is beautifully worked together for good to help others. Karen (I don’t think) doesn’t know that there is a beautiful PS to this story: a baby boy named Ben!!! His mother had intentions of aborting him. Her mother heard my story. BUT God!!! I can’t tell you how beautiful this little boy is. Actually, he’s maybe two now, so not so much a babv, but still beautiful. Wishing you a very Happy New Year. Thanks for commenting.
      Love
      Lynn

  8. Lynn,
    Your words are like a grand symphony of love to the Lord . Bless you for sharing from the overflow of His grace.

    • Aw… that is such a sweet thing to say, Etta Mae. I don’t think, know I *know* that no one has ever said that before about my writing or this story. Thank you. I am a professional Bach singer, so I love all things musical, but I know that is not what you were saying. 🙂 I think though in this world of vastly increasing vitriol, if we live musically before the Lord in praise and thanksgiving of HIS love for us, and in harmony with one another, the world would surely be a better, lovelier place to His resounding glory! Happy New Year, Etta Mae. Keep singing HIS song!
      Love
      Lynn

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