Last Sunday in church I sat in the general area where I typically sit. I looked two rows over where I spotted a friend of mine and waved hello. A few moments later two more ladies slid into the seats next to my friend, and I thought to myself, “That’s nice that they have each other. All of them are widows, they have created their own row. I’m sure it helps them not feel so alone on a Sunday.
And within moments the Holy Spirit impressed upon my heart, “someday that might be your row too.”
Long pause.
Yes, He’s right. My husband and I are both getting older. He is nine years older than I am and has several medical conditions. Therefore, it’s very possible.
For the next ten minutes my mind swirled and reminisced over the various church rows I have sat in over the last sixty-eight years. It was a journey of memories and seasons of my life and how each season brought a new church row.
The Beginning Row
For the first twenty-four years, there were wooden rows of religion. I was very good at trying please God and earn His favor. I didn’t understand most of it, but I’m good at following rules, and I gave it my best effort.
Then I attended a church with my brother that was very different from my upbringing. People in my row sang with exuberance and passion, while raising hands high into the air. I didn’t know what was happening, and I was a bit scared, but my row seemed happy about Jesus and appeared thrilled to be there.
The Growth Row
Shortly thereafter, I joined a more conservative church and joined the choir. Everyone in my row carried a large Bible, and we sang old hymns that I had never heard before. For the first time I began to understand God’s Words, and I made wonderful friends in adult Sunday school classes. The old life was fading, the new heart and mind were blooming. And I invited many friends, acquaintances, and coworkers to join my row. Some said yes, others rejected the offer. Regardless, I was like a dry sponge soaking in God’s wisdom.
The Weeping Row
In that familiar row, I experienced an unfamiliar grief. I went through an unwanted divorce, and my once cozy row was flooded with tears.
As other happy families and children filled in around me, my row now felt cold, hard, and desolate. A stark reminder that I was alone. What once was my happy place, became the weeping row. It was there that a good friend held my sobbing head above the water, when the devil tried to drown me with shame and grief.
The Rebirth Row
After a remarriage, my row was filled with a new husband and his two sons. Stepfamily living had begun. My row started to warm up as I launched a divorce recovery ministry and encouraged others who were divorced to come sit with me. The pain had a purpose. The scars served a higher calling, and it was the tears of others, and arms of comfort filling my row.
The Unfamiliar Row
Seventeen years later my husband and I went into full time ministry. I left the intimacy, security, and comfort of my hometown row and we moved to a new city.
It was very difficult to leave my precious, familiar, and contented row. Suddenly, I didn’t have anyone to say hello to, no one to invite to sit beside me. I was the newcomer. I was outside the circle.
Moving was harder than I thought it would be. I longed for my established, cozy, memorable row. God was doing a new thing. I didn’t like it.
The Healing Row
I started leading divorce recovery ministry in our new very large church and suddenly I was meeting more weeping men and women than I could count.
They mentioned how Sunday was the hardest day of the week. They hated coming to church alone. I told them where I sit, and that I would be in a particular row the following Sunday. I invited them to join me there.
First it was 3 people from the group, the following week it was 8 who joined our row. Withing a month we were filling the chairs for the entire section. It became known as “the divorce recovery rows.”
The Salvation Row
When that season ended God moved us to another city and ministry. My husband was on staff at a church but once again I knew no one, and I was the odd man out. I decided to lead a women’s Bible study. There I met several women who had been in church their entire life, but no one had ever told them what they had to do to know for certain they were going to heaven when they died.
They knew how to be good, but they didn’t know how to find salvation for their soul. This church would not have been my first choice to attend, but God knew what row He wanted me in. He knew I needed this row; it taught me to obey. My job is to stay hidden in Christ, nothing more—nothing less. I made some great friends in that row; they have remained close to my heart.
The Final Row
That brings me to my current row, where I looked over and saw my widowed friend and the ladies sitting beside her.
Will her row become my row one day? I don’t know.
What I do know now is that one of those rows has been wasted. Whether I was crying or laughing, learning, or just having fun, God has used all of it. And the rows taught me to trust Him, even the ones I didn’t want to sit in.
Not long ago I went back to my hometown and that Sunday attended the church that carries many memories. I sat in my old, familiar row.
That day they were baptizing kids who had accepted Jesus as their Savior. I didn’t know any of them, but suddenly I recognized their family members. The parents of those kids were the ones who came to my first divorce recovery groups. And now their children were walking into the waters of baptism. The harvest of that ministry had passed to the next generation.
As I began to understand the magnitude of what was occurring, I started crying. I could barely control it. I’m sure the people sitting around me thought I was having a breakdown. They had no idea why I was suddenly a blubbering mess.
God’s miraculous, marvelous joy filled my heart and mind as the Holy Spirit revealed the fruit that God multiplied from my row.
It doesn’t get any better.
What row are you in?
Copyright 2025, May not be duplicated without permission.

Laura Petherbridge is an international author and speaker who serves couples and single adults with topics on relationships, stepfamilies, singles, divorce prevention, and divorce recovery. She is the author of When “I Do” Becomes “I Don’t”—Practical Steps for Healing During Separation and Divorce, The Smart Stepmom, co-authored with Ron Deal, and 101 Tips for The Smart Stepmom: Expert Advice From One Stepmom to Another. Her website is www.TheSmartStepmom.com
This is lovely, Laura. What a beautiful way to express spiritual growth seasons of your life.
This was a beautiful reflection on the spiritual stages of your life, Laura. Thank you for sharing it.
Laura!!!!
WHAT a beautiful analogy. Thank you so much for the insight and wisdom. So very true. This post reminds me of the testimony by Chonda Pierce, the Christian comedian she has a talk entitled “second row, Piano side.“ she was the daughter of a pastor and that talk launched her ministry.
you have me thinking and praying… January each year does that to me. It’s also my birthday month, a big time of reflection.
THANK YOU! Psalm 37:4-6
I’m thrilled it blessed you. I’ve seen Chonda twice and her testimony is powerful. Thanks very much! Love, laura