Tuesday, March 4, 2014

In Her Shoes - Child of My Heart










My friend Amy and her beautiful family



 


This month we are privileged to step into the shoes of five sisters in Christ who graciously share their adoption adventure with us.  Each God-weaved story is a beautiful example of God's love for each of us.  So, sit back, relax, open your heart, and see what God will do through this article in your life. 


"But when the fullness of the time had come, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, that we might receive the adoption as sons.” Galatians 4:4-5 


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Our Miracle Boys


by Joy Meinders


 


I have had a newborn three ways: private adoption, giving birth and foster care. With all three, the bond of motherly love I felt was identical. It is definitely natural to love a newborn.


Our first adoption was through a Christian agency. It took us 7 years to complete the process:  two years for our home study, another three years to save the funds, then "next on the list" for another two years. During this time, my prayers for a child would increase then decrease. It seemed impossible at times. Also, I felt very guilty for thinking that another mom should hand me her child. Our adoption worker would counsel me that she had made choices that placed her in this situation … that had nothing to do with me.


When we finally received news of a birth mother, we were ecstatic! I could hardly believe my dream of becoming a mom was going to come true. I can't put into words adequately, the joy and grief (for the birth mom) as we watched her put a precious son in our car. It was the regulations of the hospital. Everyone was crying and I kept asking our adoption worker how would she ever be ok. He just kept saying, "By the grace of God." It was an incredible joy to be a mom to my angel baby. He was such a good baby, and is very loving and gentle still.


Three years later, I gave birth to another miracle baby. (I know, they all are!). It was several years later that a friend, on Right-To-Life Sunday challenged us-if you are pro-life, what are you going to do about it. The answer will be different for everyone. I started praying, not knowing that my husband had also. God directed both of us, separately, to pray about becoming foster parents, with adopting a possibility.


While going through our foster parenting classes, a guest speaker came in and told us, "You are the guardian of the bond." I have always loved that saying. If we'd allow the children to bond to us, and they moved on, it would aid in their bonding capabilities in the future. We saw this firsthand with the first baby we fostered. She is completely bonded with her family. By doing this, when they leave, it tears your heart, but God repairs your heart and allows you to continue in His strength, doing what He has for you.


When praying for our next placement (while fostering), we earnestly prayed for children and knew if God placed them with us and there became a time for adoption, that was from God. Well, God placed two little, neglected and traumatized boys in our home. Overnight, our house changed dramatically. Screaming ensued and continued for months. It is very difficult to bond and stay committed to boys with endless screaming!


I would call my husband at work and tell him I couldn't do it. He would pray with me and tell me that we'd talk about it when he got home and if they needed a different family, that was ok. He got home and helped, shared his peace and strength, we'd pray together, etc. and I would think, "Ok, this is from God, we can do this." Then, he'd go to work the next day...repeat! I just had to come to the place where I realized, just because God didn't answer how I thought He should, doesn't mean He didn't answer. He did, and He will give me the strength to continue and stay committed to nurturing and growing the bonds with the boys.


Our two older kids were so encouraging to me. My oldest would say, "Aren't you glad we have the boys? I'm so glad they are here." They were both very helpful also.


On the other side, bonding for the boys to us also continues. I praise God the worker could see that they were so bonded to each other, she didn't separate them. One boy was ignored by adults from 2 weeks old on. One would go with anyone, without fear or realizing he shouldn't. The first time our littlest one cried when we left him (a definite different cry from his others), we were thrilled. He was beginning to bond. When my five year old will look at my eyes, I am thankful for that growth of seeing him bond.


One of the hardest things was that I didn't "feel" the bond like a mom feels with her children. (This led to more tears than I can say.). It also brought feelings in me of not being bonded to my older kids. It was such a stretching time that I felt broken. However, once I decided, with God's help, to be committed to be their mom, the bonds started to grow. They are still growing, and I pray they won't stop. Also, my bonds with my older kids and husband are stronger than ever.


One of the most growing times was when God specifically convicted me of a sin area, brought scripture and I repented, the change in my heart resulted in a deeper bond with my boys. Nothing yet in them changed, but God changed me. This definitely is like our relationship with The Lord. When He gives us a trial or an answer we don't want, we can resist it and become angry or we can decide to trust, follow and grow through it. Our bonds with Him will increase abundantly. That trial will turn into a blessing!!


“And He said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore most gladly I will rather boast in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me. Therefore I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in needs, in persecutions, in distresses, for Christ’s sake. For when I am weak, then I am strong.” 2 Corinthians 12:9-10


“I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” Philippians 4:13

 


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Adoption in the Midst of Heartbreak


by
Sarah Heywood




God planted the seed of adoption in
my heart as a young girl.  I never forgot that, although there would be
many periods in my life where I was convinced that God wasn’t necessarily
behind the desire; it was simply one of those wouldn’t-it-be-nice-if thoughts.


But God kept working at my heart
into adulthood.  Despite being married and a busy, homeschooling mom of
four sons (including one with multiple special needs) I never forgot that call
God had placed upon my heart as a girl.


When my youngest son was two, I
began to sense a renewed stirring in my heart towards the idea of adding to our
family through adoption.  We really thought our family was complete,
though.  In fact, I had suffered a small stroke after the birth of the
last baby and doctors had told us our family had better be complete!  The recovery from that stroke took a long
while and I could not believe it when I realized that God was speaking to me
about adoption!  Didn’t He realize all I had going on already?


I gave God a long list of reasons
why adoption at this point in my life was a really, really bad idea.  God
said nothing, but quietly continued to work on heart.  Finally, in
frustration, I told the Lord that if He wanted us to pursue adoption He would
need to give me a clear sign.  I would be completely mum on the subject
and my husband would have to approach me about the idea.  I knew he was
perfectly happy with our four so I didn’t really anticipate that ever
happening.  But if it did, well, then I would have my answer!


Nine months later my husband, Paul,
and I were enjoying a date night.  Midway through our meal, he paused,
looked at me, and asked, “So, what do you think about the idea of
adopting?”  I guess God had given me my sign!


Still, I was frightened.  It
took several months of prayer before I finally came to a complete place of surrender
and willingness to pursue adding to our family.  Once I got there, though,
the doors began to fly open.


Paul and I ended up pursuing
adoption through our state’s foster care system.  Initially, when thinking
about adoption, foster care was the last
way I wanted to do it because of the many horror stories I had heard over the
years.  But yet, once I was completely surrendered to whatever God was
doing in our family, I found I was no longer as worried about which adoption
direction we took.  At the same time, though, I knew with an absolute
certainty that we were walking into pain.  How I knew that, I can’t say,
but I do remember feeling quite peaceful despite that knowledge.  God was
leading and we were following Him, no matter where that would take us.


We took the required classes and
were licensed in January of 2012.  Then, came the waiting for THE
call!  That finally came five months later.  We were ecstatic! 
Two little sisters, nearing the end of their time in foster care needed a
forever family.  The night before I was to pick them up, I couldn’t sleep
because I was so excited!  The next morning we picked up two frightened,
small, little girls and instantly fell in love. 
Well, maybe not instantly.  I wanted to love them right away, but
truthfully, that love took awhile to grow. 


We definitely had a period of
adjustment ahead of us! I had a three year old who was mad at the world and
seemed to delight in finding ways to make her new mom explode in anger. 
She was absolutely determined that nobody would tell her what she could and
could not do!  My eleven-month old was solemn and outwardly compliant, but
it wasn’t until later that her real personality began to emerge and we realized
just how traumatized she had come to us.


Parenting the girls was really hard
at first.  I would make slow progress and then we’d have a required visit
with Birth Mom which would inevitably undo some of the work I had done. 
It seemed like overnight my work load doubled around the house.  Many
times I was cranky with the kids when I should have been rejoicing at how God
had blessed me.  But, thankfully, He was working despite my many
failings. 


As the months wore on, things really
began to fall into place.  My one year old made it clear that I was her mama now.  My now-four
year old, began to call me “Mom” and we began to see improvements in her
behavior.  Paul loved his little girls and they delighted in having a
daddy.  My sons began to treat their new sisters as real siblings, rather
than just some short, visiting strangers.  Birth Mom had her rights
terminated and I began to hesitantly call the girls by the new names Paul and I
had picked.  To my surprise, they seemed to prefer the new names!


I remember wondering, “Where is the
pain?”  Despite bumps here and there, everything really seemed to be
coming together.  That pain I was so sure awaited was nowhere to be found.


It would come, but when it did it
would take a form that I had no way of anticipating.


In June 2013 we were eagerly waiting
for an adoption date.  While our girls had been the daughters of our heart
for some time, it was exciting to anticipate the day that they would also be
legally ours.  On the night of June 5th, Paul went to sleep and
a half hour later woke up in the arms of Jesus.  He was dead at the age of
forty-two after suffering a seizure in sleep.


It’s only been nine months since
that night.  The grief is still pretty raw at times.  I know that
someday I’ll probably have a lot I can say about single parenthood.  Right
now, I am simply breathing in and out as I walk through each day.  I am so
grateful for the loving care of my Heavenly Father who has carried me through
this heartbreak.


Despite Paul’s death, the state
allowed me to keep the girls.   I was so incredibly thankful that God
allowed us to stay together!  Three months later it was a bittersweet day,
as my six children and I met in a court room and listened as a judge declared
that Elizabeth and Eleanor were now my legal daughters.  I am quite
confident that God rolled back the floor of Heaven that morning and Paul was
able to witness the fruition of the dream He had planted in both our hearts!


Raising my children alone is a task
for which I feel very ill-equipped.  But I have every confidence that God
will walk me through, as He has in every other challenging circumstance in my
life.


I had to take the stand the morning
of the adoption.  One of the lawyers for the state asked me why I felt I
should be allowed to adopt these little girls.  I wasn’t expecting that
question.  I thought for a moment and then leaned forward and spoke into
the microphone:  I said, “These girls may
have been born to a different woman, but they were created to be MY children.”


And that is the truth.  Today,
I marvel at God’s persistency in directing Paul and I to pursue adoption when
we thought our arms were already full.  God knew what awaited and in His goodness He longed to provide me with
the comfort that would come in the form of two, small little girls.




"Being
confident of this, that He Who has begun a good work in you will complete it
until the day of Jesus Christ."  Philippians 1:6


 


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How God Opened My Heart and Home


by
Diann Pearson


 


Our story of adoption is a little
different. Most seek to adopt a baby or child a
nd want to know if it is God’s
plan.  In our situation God wanted us to adopt a certain little boy and
wanted to know if we were willing to submit to His plan.


It all started while I was working
one day a month at a care center. A lady I worked with asked me if I could
babysit her little boy. Without a prayer, I said, “ No, I am way too busy with
my husband gone a lot trucking, taking care of the home, homeschooling our four
children and being active in my church.”


She came and ask a second time that
night. When she walked away I prayed, Lord if you want me to do this have her
come one more time which she did. That’s when Jake first entered our lives.


I babysat him and had him often in
the beginning.  He enjoyed coming to church with us on Sundays and
Wednesdays . We would pick him up even when we weren’t babysitting him. As he
got older we didn’t see him as much, due to other things he was involved in.
Then we heard that Jake’s mother had died and Jake was in foster care. 


We had concerns about his birth
family adopting him.  And before, Jake’s
mother had said if anything ever happened to her, she wanted us to take Jake.
We talked with Deptartment of Human Services to express our interest in
adopting Jake. They were glad we showed interest but told us that his uncle and
wife were interested (and would be considered first), along with the birth
father and his grandmother. 


Even though we were fourth in line
to be considered, we felt compelled to take steps toward adoption. We took foster
care classes which included: providing a profile with a snap shot of each
family member, home inspection, pictures of where his room would be, have our
water tested, animals vaccinated, etc. The Lord went before, causing us to take
the 40 hours of class in Cedar Rapids instead of waiting until spring to do it
in Iowa City (which down the road allowed us to have him in our home as foster
parents, because we were certified).


He was stable in our home for a year,
which looked good to the courts. During that time his father released his
rights and the court declared us to be a more suitable home than with the
grandmother, which was Jake’s desire also.


We were thankful that Jake was
younger than our children, due to older siblings teaching the younger. We felt
it was important that our children all agreed with the plan of adoption before
proceeding. We didn’t want them later on to say, “We never wanted to do this.”
I wanted them to understand that he would receive all the same rights and
privileges as they received. Even the inheritance, if there is any. It is
wonderful having God go before us.
   


"Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths."


Proverbs 3:5-6


 


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Whose Need Are You Fulfilling?


by
Mary Kamberger


Let me first introduce
myself as an adoptive mother to seven of my nine children. Our eldest was
domestically adopted in 1986. We then received two biological children in 1992
and 1994. The other six children came to us through China as waiting/special
needs children between September 2004 and December 2009.


We enfolded six children
into our family in just over five years, and all were in some way, physically
challenged as was listed on their paperwork. They, however, also came with
various emotional and mental challenges that were not listed on any piece of
paper. Although I am an RN by trade, I am a stay at home mom by choice who home
schools all the children. Our children from China came home at the ages of 14
months to 14 years, and they are now 10 to 18 years.


The adoption of a child
into any human family can be seen as a comparison of our adoption into God’s
family in many ways, but the points I would like to stress here are only a few.
First of all, consider where the NEED lies. God does not adopt us because He
NEEDS us. Likewise, we adoptive parents should not step into adoption because
we NEED the child to complete us, our family, or our own personal need to love
and nurture.


I would say that most,
if not all, adoptive parents have an overabundance of love and ability to
nurture, or they wouldn’t be stepping into an adoption. And many see that over
time, this adopted child does, in some way, complete them and their family. BUT,
to walk into an adoption with this in mind is to miss the true need.


The only NEED that
should take center stage is the need of the child. Just like within our
relationship to God the only thing we bring to the table is our NEED. God
supplies all the rest: grace, mercy, healing, love, forgiveness. That is our
position in adoption, too. We, as the parents, are to supply all that is needed
within the heart and life of that child…and be prepared to receive nothing in
return.


When the child rejects
us, pushes us away, screams that we are NOT their “real” mother or father, hits,
punches, is totally cold to any emotional overtures we offer, is not on track
for their age – academically, emotionally, physically – when they act out in
inappropriate ways, hurt our other children or animals, deliberately do their
best to hurt us emotionally, physically and mentally, WE…like God…should be
ready to absorb it, deal with it, and CHOOSE to LOVE in the midst of it. Let me
state that point again:  we must CHOOSE (regardless of wanting to or
feeling like it) – to choose to continue to love that child in the midst of
their utter defiance and unacceptance of us.


Didn’t God do this, and
continue to do this, for us? Adoption is not warm and fuzzy. Adoption is not
for the faint hearted. Our spiritual adoption into God’s family came at a VERY
high price – Christ’s very blood pouring out His life for us on the cross.


If you are considering
the adoption of a child, be fully prepared to pour out your very life for that
child. The cost of adoption is high - monetarily high at the very beginning and
emotionally, physically, and mentally high for the rest of your days. The very
fabric of your family will be changed each time you bring another child in.
There is no staying the same, and nothing that promises next year will be any
better.


{Now aren’t you simply just ready to JUMP into adoption?!}


Bringing the child home
is only the beginning of a very long road to health and learning to live as
family. Just like when you are welcomed into God’s family, you are not fully
sanctified as His child. We are positionally secure in the love of God but have
a long way to grow into our completed sanctification. Each child SHOULD be
positionally secure in the assurance of their place within your family, even
though they (and you) have a long way to grow as parent and child.
Unconditional love is a high price and of absolute necessity within the act of
adoption.


Biological children are
wonderful, but let’s be honest – not everyone actually chooses to become
pregnant and birth a child. "Whoops! children" are born…and too often simply
aborted…every day.  Adoption, however, is a conscious, paper-filled,
emotionally arduous act of choosing to love another no matter what….no matter
their skin color, their health, their future academic potential, their unknown
emotional or mental baggage, their inability to love us in return.


Please be ever so wise,
with eyes and hands wide open, with no personal agenda in tow IF you so CHOOSE
to meet the NEED of a child that is fatherless. Your reward will be great and
the Father of all will be there to guide and uphold you every step of the way.


"And let us not grow weary while doing good, for in due
season we shall reap if we do not lose heart." Galatians 6:9


 


"Pure and undefiled religion before God and the Father is
this: to visit orphans and widows in their trouble, and to keep oneself unspotted from the world." James 1:27


 


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Adoption: A Picture of God’s Love


Anonymous

 


My hubby and I adopted a little boy.
I'm not going to bore you with the details of the actual adoption (though I am
enamored with our miracle and the unique way God delivered him to us). I am
normally fairly open about certain details. 
But, I hold back that which is too near to me or hurts too much to think
or talk about.  However, I'd like to be
able to be honest and candid about a few things - so I'd like to remain
anonymous.  And what better way to do
that than guest writing for the blog of a friend. So here goes.


 


A
few things to remember about adoption:


 


1.  It is Biblical.

 

It is a beautiful
picture of our relationship with God through Christ. The more I study the Bible,
the more I am convinced that God gave us what He did here on earth, in the
color and diversity that He did, so we would have better capacity to understand
what He wanted us to know from Scripture. We can't fully understand our
relationship with our Heavenly Father if we look only at biological
relationships. Do you know someone who has been involved in an adoption?  There are, no doubt, countless ways God, in
His love and sovereignty, wants you to learn from that situation. I am positive
that one of them is so you can better imagine how it looks when God adopts us
into His family. What a blessed thing. God is so creative and so good to us.


 


2. 
It is Sensitive.


 

Chances are, if the people you know aren't
volunteering information, they'd probably rather not share. Their silence may
be an oversight, but it probably isn't. Especially if the events are current or
very recent (which means it's on their minds often and they're not talking
about it on purpose). If you want to love them, don't ask for "the
story." Ask them how you can pray for them – sure – of course they need
support and they would likely really appreciate it coming from you.


 


Remember though, we all come into
contact with many people – many good, loving, God-honoring people – but that
doesn't mean every secret is meant for every relationship. Don't take it
personally if someone's best-guarded secrets aren't meant for you. Give them
some space and love them in the most obvious way you can. Always be kind and
pray. Sometimes you may get to do more. But don't push it.


 


I, personally, am much more apt to
share "the story" with someone who has had ample opportunity to ask
for it and never has asked. And then it's only if the time and my emotions are
right. Maybe I'm atypical here, but I'm guessing not. [There are probably
points in this one that would work for far more situations than just that of adoption.]


 


3.  It Hurts.

 

Oh. So. Much.  I will venture a fairly firm guess that no
adoption ever happens without a fair amount of pain somewhere along the way -
for at least one, if not both, of the parties (the adopt-er/ the adopt-ee). And
normally it's both. The child who is to be adopted had a situation. Sometimes
it's fairly neutral, sometimes it's downright ugly. Normally it's somewhere in
between. Lots of times there will be hurts that will have to be dealt with. A
little person with more pain than his years should allow. And even if the child
doesn't remember specifics, one day he will very likely wonder. Or he might
deal with tendencies and emotions that confuse him. He can't quite put his
finger on why he feels xyz but he
does.


 


And then there are the adoptive
parents. Sometimes adoptive parents adopt because it's their "first
choice." For whatever reason God gave them a desire to adopt and they
followed it. No infertility, no miscarriage(s), no opportunity to watch a child
suffer in need. That happens sometimes, of course. On a first child, on a last
child, anywhere in the middle. I know of families like these. These families
still have challenges but much of the hurt comes from the adopted child and his
history and family growing pains – not necessarily a primary loss for the
parents too.


 


But, for many families adoption was
considered when something didn't go "right." I AM NOT saying that
adoption is second rate. We who trust in the absolute sovereignty of God know
that what might not be our first plan for ourselves is still God's best for us.
The little boy I'm raising – the one who calls me "mommy," and needs
me more than he does anyone else – is God's best for me. I see it when I look
at him and I remind myself often. I love him like I'd love someone I made (I
think. I hope.).


 


But, don't for a minute think that
my knowing these things erases all traces of anger, frustration, doubt and
insecurity in my mind. I lost his beginning. I didn't get to make him. When I
go to stuff with him, don't think I don't notice that I'm the only mommy who
bears no resemblance to her child. I am not an Angelina Jolie wannabe. I can't
make a baby.


 


When my girlfriends talk about
morning sickness and episiotomies and mastitis, all things any right-minded
woman would love to scrape by without, well, I missed those things and I don't
feel lucky. I'm not part of the club and likely never will be. I love my son,
but sometimes when I look at him something screams inside me "He's not
even yours!" I chase that out of my head as soon as I can, but I know it.
It's there, and to a degree it's real.


 


Add to that the shame of even having
those thoughts (when you say you trust God and you say you love your son). It's
complicated. It hurts. It isn't easy. Maybe it'll get easier with time. I guess
we'll see. We may be smiling (as we should! And we want to!) but we struggle.
Each struggle is unique but it's there.


 


4. 
It is Amazing.


 

It's positively beautiful. Without it I wouldn't
have my son or the possibility of other future children. Without it my family
would be missing a member who I truly believe God designed for our family –
even if He didn't let me (us) make him. Without it I wouldn't be Mama, and
that's the only thing I've ever really wanted to be. The benefits well outweigh
the costs. This point deserves much more attention, but I've already talked a
lot…


 


As you encounter those who are
directly affected by adoption …


 


·        Be sensitive.


·        Love them selflessly.


·        Pray for them - specifically that
God will use this most-sanctifying life event to make everyone involved into
more of an image of Christ.


·        Look for ways you can speak truth in
love, if you see a Biblical issue that needs addressing and prayerfully feel
burdened to do so. Think about what you are saying to them about this sensitive
issue. Sometimes people say things so flippantly and with no intention to harm
and those are the comments that linger the longest and cut the deepest.


 


We (as "adoption people")
need to develop an measure of "thick skin" because everyone's soft
spots are a little different so we need to be careful not to be over sensitive,
but you (who interact with us and may not always understand) need to be careful
with your words. May we all look for ways to magnify God and His attributes as
we consider this amazing gift that touches us all in some way.


 


A few verses that encourage me
regularly and how specifically they can relate to my adoption journey:


 



"My
grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness."


2 Corinthians 12:9 



My body can't give me a child, but God in
His grace and strength found a way to give me what and who He wanted me to
have.


 


“He
who has begun a good work in you will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ.”
Philippians 1:6 
 


 


I know, without a doubt, that all of the
events surrounding my need/desire to adopt, the process itself, and the
heartache along the way are one of God's biggest sanctifying measures in my
life until now.


 



“Be
still, and know that I am God.” Psalm 46:10
 



When the emotions are overwhelming,
slowing down and focusing on God's character is something that has given me
great peace and the courage to press on when I wanted to quit (and I did
consider quitting…a lot).


 



“Now
to Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or
imagine…” Ephesians 3:20

 

This
is my son. God created this little person so perfectly for our family – it
literally blows my mind. He couldn't have been more perfect for us if we could
have given him our DNA. He is more than I ever could have asked or imagined.
Thank you, Lord, r the gift of Your Son and the gift of mine.