Skip to main content

We Could Have Missed This


A little over two years ago we resigned as associate pastors as we pursued the next “job” that God had for us: missionaries to Mexico.  K-man reunited with his bio family and a week later we left for a month of training in Missouri.

Our goal was to have our budget to leave for Mexico raised in a year, so we closed the door to fostercare.  It didn’t fit in our timeline.  We had always been open to private adoption, but the expenses of that were too great with the daunting assignment of raising money for Mexico as well.  So, we surrendered our hopes of starting a family anytime soon.

However, we decided to call our case worker and let them know that we wanted to stay in the system for a “miracle adoption”... an adoption where both parents had surrendered rights and we would be able to adopt before we left.  We told them that we didn’t expect for this to happen but just wanted to leave our hat in the ring, so to speak.  Being that we had moved to a new apartment they needed to relicense our home, and the case worker told us that someone would be out in about 2 weeks to do that.

4 days later the phone rings.

It was the middle of the afternoon, and we were babysitting K-man for a few days.  I was at my sister’s house with him when I get the call from Noah…

“Can you talk?”
I knew that voice.

I let him explain to me the situation… baby girl, not even 2 days old, healthy, being discharged today, possible fast track to adoption depending on who the father was.

I asked Noah what he thought and he said,
It’s like we’re living in a world of yellow circles and a blue square just walked in.”

Appropriate.

He had already called his dad asking for advice because he knew I would be in the same boat he was in.  You know what his dad’s advice was?

I don’t see the problem.”

I can’t explain to you how those 5 words impacted both of us.  We were still broken over K-man leaving and were heading out to leave to Mexico in a year.  There were SO many variables to this equation, yet this sound and godly man didn’t seem to see a problem. 

Noah and I talked, hung up, prayed, and talked some more… we only had an hour to decide; they were discharging her that afternoon.

Both of our minds were blank, except for one thing: peace.  There was no sense of fear, no overwhelming checks in our guts that advised us to say no.  Only peace.  Not peace with a promise of adoption.  But the kind of promised peace that comes when God’s driving the ship.

We called the caseworkers and told them yes, and then they said that because our new apartment wasn’t licensed yet that they weren’t actually sure she would be able to come to us. 

Save yourself the time and skip Six Flags. Join fostercare. 

A half hour later they decided to skip the formalities, I guess, because they called and said they were discharging her and she would be to us in the next few hours. 

I was actually nervous to tell people.  I was always very open about the dark place that I found myself in when K-man left, and I knew that would be a concern for some of my family.  I used to say, “we’re either gluttons for punishment or have a lot of faith”.

I’ve been inundated lately with this idea.  This idea of not believing God for things.  Here’s the deal… I will always have hope.  I can’t help it.  I’m an optimistic person.  And I’m starting to believe that it’s a gift from Jesus. 

In fostercare you are forced to live in a world of harsh realities; a world of brokenness and sin.  But if I’m going to live in that world then I’m gonna bring Jesus and all His mighty power with me.

When we said yes to Baby A it “seemed” foolish to many, but we knew in our hearts that it was right.  We knew that God had orchestrated her arrival.  We knew that God had not only her in the palm of His hand, but us too.  We felt the brush of his pen every time we encountered trials and obstacles and saw how He overcame them. 

We have seen God do so many miracles over the last 2 years.  Not always the miracles that we asked for, but miracles of His own authority that I could’ve never dreamed of.

One specific miracle that He didn’t answer was when we were basically begging Him to have Baby A be adopted by December 2017 (so we could get to language school by January).  As we came into November and realized this was not happening, we were pretty discouraged.  We had mustered up all our faith.  We gave God our all.  We spoke this miracle into existence.  Yet our hopes and dreams lay stagnant.

Or did they?

I found a pretty intense journal entry the other day from November 2017… I was lamenting to the Lord my frustrations and sorrow at how he was seeming to ignore not just our prayers to adopt Baby A, but adopt in general.  We knew there were millions of children that needed permanent homes, yet my arms remained empty.

It was one month later that we were told about sweet Jesse’s mom and the situation she found herself in.  One month later God picked up His pen again and continued writing a story I never dared to dream.

If God had answered our prayers about Baby A’s adoption in January, then we wouldn’t have our son. 

If we didn’t say yes when that case worker called on September 13, 2016…

We could’ve missed this.  

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Wise Words from a Donkey

One of my favorite movie quotes is from Shrek: "I can't feel my toes!!  I don't have any toes!! -pause- I think I need a hug." (It really just doesn't have the same flair when I type it, but, what're you gonna do...) The other day was a big rainstorm day.  No matter what I did, I couldn't swallow the tears that kept welling up inside of me.  As most of you know, Noah and I are in Springfield, MO right now for missionary training.  So while the speaker is speaking of reaching indigenous people groups and how to effectively reach them, it might be somewhat appropriate for me to shed a tear or two out of passion for the lost.  And believe me, I was banking on that being my fall-back.  But the few lonely tears started to turn into a flowing mighty river that was getting uncontrollable, and I knew I probably couldn't blend in with the group as we sat there taking notes on how to translate Bible stories. Noah, being the amazing guy he i

The Greatest of These

"Jesus knew that the Father had put all things under his power, and that he had come from God and was returning to God; so he got up from the meal, took off his outer clothing, and wrapped a towel around his waist. After that, he poured water into a basin and began to wash his disciples’ feet, drying them with the towel that was wrapped around him." John 13: 3-5 Being that Noah and I travel to different churches every Sunday, we have the opportunity to have a lot of conversations about foster care.  We typically get the same questions that the majority of foster parents get.  Questions like, “How do you give them back?” “Doesn’t it just break your heart?” “Don’t you get so attached?”.  The inquiries are usually followed with ending statements like “I could never do it.”  “I would get too attached.” “It would be too hard for me to let go”.  (PLEASE note this is not a post to guilt anybody into foster care.  That’s not how things are done, and that’s not my heart.  Ju