John's Story: Paying Back What Was Stolen

John Selby stood in a parking lot with cash in his hand, palms sweating, heart racing.
He was about to walk into a bowling alley and face a man who had fired him years earlier. A man he had stolen from. Two thousand dollars, taken during the worst of his addiction. The last words he'd heard from that man: "Don't ever show your face here again."
But God had been clear. The settlement check had come through. The $56,000 in court-ordered restitution was paid. And still, the Lord wasn't finished.
"It's not yours," John felt God saying. "You need to make that right."
So there he was. Nervous. Scared the man would slam the door in his face. But obedient.
The Weight He Carried
John's story doesn't start in that parking lot. It starts with felony charges for arson and breaking and entering. It starts with 99 years of probation and a judge who wasn't feeling merciful. It starts with three months and thirteen days in jail, served right after graduating from Teen Challenge.
"Your sins catch up to you," John says. "Even though I was free, even though I was a newborn Christian, I still had to deal with the consequences."
He watched four other men get sentenced ahead of him that day. All rejected. Then he heard the judge hand down his sentence: ten years for arson, ten years for breaking and entering, to run back to back.
Then the pause.
Time served. Suspended.
John walked out. But the $56,000 in restitution followed him home.
The Wreck That Changed Everything
Shortly after his release, John committed to serving at Teen Challenge. He'd barely started when a head-on collision changed everything. Cracked vertebrae. Brain hemorrhaging. A lacerated liver. His parents were in the car too, both injured.
In the ICU, nurses kept asking about his pain level. John lied through his teeth.
"I'm good," he'd say, even as his body screamed.
He was terrified. He'd seen too many people come through Teen Challenge hooked on opioids that started as legitimate prescriptions. He refused the painkillers until the pain got so severe that doctors had to give him more than he would have needed if he'd just accepted help earlier.
"I was so scared," John admits. "The devil was telling me I'd get addicted again. But I knew I was free. I was just afraid to test it."
That fear, that resolve to protect his freedom at all costs, proved something to him about the work God had done.
And something else happened in that hospital room. A young woman named Amanda drove across the mountain every single day to visit him. She became his wife. They now have two kids: Addison and Levi.
The Check and the Obedience
When the settlement money finally came through, John could have quietly paid off his legal debt and moved on. Nobody would have blamed him. The bowling alley incident was years old. Probably forgotten.
But God doesn't forget the details we'd rather leave buried.
"Not only did you steal from him," John felt the Lord say, "you stole from his whole family. You need to make that right."
He called ahead. Explained his story. Then showed up with cash in hand.
The man was stunned. Not at the money. At the fact that John came back at all.
"He was in awe," John recalls, "that I actually came back and gave it to him."
That moment wasn't about two thousand dollars. It was about a testimony that preached louder than any sermon. Setbacks in recovery are real. Consequences are real. But so is the power of a changed life, walking back into the places where destruction happened and making it right.
Life Now
John married Amanda. They're raising two kids. For years, he served as a youth pastor, pouring into the next generation the same way others poured into him.
His daughter Addison knows he went to jail. She asks why. He tells her she's not ready for the full story yet, but that Daddy made bad decisions and had to live with the consequences.
"We try to do that with her now," John says. "When she does something and it's hard to face the consequences, we tell her: we're protecting you now. Because if Daddy acted like this at work, he wouldn't lose his tablet. He'd lose his job."
The testimony isn't just in the dramatic moments. It's in the daily faithfulness. The parenting. The marriage. The slow, unglamorous work of building a life that honors the God who gave him a second chance.
Want to learn more?
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Read Jordan & Charlcie's Story - Another life transformed through faith-based recovery.
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About the Author
Justin Franich
Justin is a former meth addict who went through Teen Challenge in 2005 and now serves families through resources, referrals, and real talk on recovery.
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