That’s another story teaser / clickbait intro, not a complete or verifiable account on its own.
It’s written to set up curiosity, but it leaves out:
- what actually happened
- where/when it took place
- any source or context
🧠 What this kind of line usually is
Phrases like:
“after meeting in a Bible study group… life that felt too good to be true…”
are commonly used in:
- Inspirational or dramatic magazine stories
- Social media storytelling posts
- Fictional or lightly fictionalized narratives
They’re designed to:
- Build emotional interest
- Suggest a coming twist or tragedy
- Encourage readers to “see more”
⚠️ Reality check
Without full context or a reliable source, this is not verifiable information about real people or events—it’s just an opening hook.
👍 If you want
I can:
- Find out if this is a real story and summarize it
- Or turn it into a full short story with a twist ending
- Or explain why “too good to be true” relationship stories are so common in media 👍