As you may have noticed, my blog came to a screeching halt
several months ago…
To summarize:
Three years
ago, I began to feel a stirring in my soul.
A longing. A desire to know God
and to know Him fully. I began to pray
and ask God to reveal Himself to me. To
unite my heart with His. To show me His
glory. In response, I heard God inviting
me into an adventure with Him, to step into the Jordan fully trusting His
ability to make my footstep sure, to keep me on solid ground even though the
river raged (Joshua 3: 5, 13, 17).
My adventure will be risky, it will be
disruptive to your routine life, it will be hard, but we’ll be in it
together. And it will be an adventure,
if you trust Me.
What I
didn’t know was that God’s glory would come to my house in the form of a child,
two children, actually. Through a series
of circumstances, orchestrated only by the One who knows our hearts best, Dave
and I became foster parents. Please do
not place us on the foster parent pedestal of sainthood. There are many out there who deserve such a
position, but not us. We did not set out
to be foster parents, but foster parenthood came to us. Having just recently been certified as
adoptive parents, we got a phone call one late October afternoon. A not-quite-one-year-old boy needed a
long-term foster placement, along with his soon-to-be born baby sister. The chances were high that they might become
available for adoption, but there were no guarantees, except that the road
would be long and bumpy. Would we be
interested? We had 2 hours to make this
life-changing decision. We said yes to
our adoption worker and yes to God. And
the adventure began. Less than 24 hours
later, little K entered our lives and 2 weeks after that, newborn Baby M joined
our newly formed and very raw family.
I’d like to say that I’ve had a heavenly, rapturous experience ever
since, but the truth is, my selfishness has been exposed. I’ve reeled and railed and beat my fists against
the ever-closed door of “Why?”. I’ve
looked at my poor, trapped, diaper-bound, naptime-bound, formerly independent
self, and cried and asked God, “Why, when I asked for bread, did You give me a
snake? Why, when I longed for honey, did
You give me these stones?” And I sank
into the miry clay of selfishness and discontent. I longed for my simple, routine life. “I
wanted an adventure, Lord, not a nightmare.”
But all the while, God held out his hand to me, offering His redemptive
perspective. And I reached for His pinky
finger, still dangling above my own selfish desires, but starting to see,
starting to hear…
“…it’s the Word of God
that turns the rocks in the mouth to loaves on the tongue. That fills our emptiness with the true and
real good, that makes the eyes see,
the body full of light.”
~Ann Voskamp, One
Thousand Gifts
***
As the days
went by, I continued to seek His perspective, to grasp for His heart. It went something like this:
Upon finding
out that I’m a foster mom, the most frequent comment I hear is “I don’t know
how you do it.” For a long time, I
didn’t know how to do it either; I still don’t have it all figured out. Early on, my efforts with Little K were met
with challenging and difficult behaviors: a little heart lashing out at a world
that had let him down. My emotions
became entangled in his, and I prayed and I cried and I begged God for the
mercy and grace and love to not let him down, too. This little one pushed and shoved and I
wanted to run, but God said Stay, so
I did. I prayed and I cried over and
over again as love became hard work, and I knew in the back of my mind that all
this hard work, all this loving, might be met with a bitter end, an end that
would make all this feel worthless, pointless.
I cried out to God again, looking for a way, looking for an answer. And He replied,
“Is not this the kind of fasting I have
chosen: to loose the chains of injustice and untie the cords of the yoke, to
set the oppressed free and break every yoke?
Is it not to share your food with the hungry and to provide the poor
wanderer with shelter—when you see the naked, to clothe him, and not to turn
away from your own flesh and blood? Then
your light will break forth like the dawn, and your healing will quickly
appear; then your righteousness will go before you, and the glory of the LORD
will be your rear guard. Then you will
call, and the LORD will answer; you will cry for help, and He will say: Here am
I” (Isaiah 58:6-9).
And I
understood that this work I was doing was “fasting.” It was hard, it was uncomfortable, it was a
sacrifice; it created an emptiness that only God could fill. The very thing God asked me to do caused me
to cry out for His help. But it was what
God had chosen for us, and He promised to be exceedingly available. The Lord Himself would be my help, the Lord
would be my strength. I began to settle
into His arms and the children began to settle into mine. But the more settled I became, the more each
passing comment of “I don’t know how you do it” stuck like a thorn in my heart,
threatening to tear it in two, urging me to flee, to build up a wall of
defense, to protect myself from the pain that was sure to come, from an ending
that was unknown. Hidden in that phrase
is the understanding that we might love and then let go, love and then lose two
little pieces of our hearts. “How do I do it, Lord? How do I give my all when I don’t know how
this will end?” And He answered,
“Do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow
will worry about itself. Each day has
enough trouble of its own” (Matthew 6:34).
And then, in
that still small voice of His, He whispered,
Love them today. Right now.
Tomorrow is in My hands. Let it
stay there.
A peace
flooded my soul in that moment. With
God’s help, I can do today.
It doesn’t
mean life is easy from here on out. As
God assured me several years ago when He began to prepare my heart for this
very adventure, this is the hardest thing I’ve ever done. But now, when someone says, “I don’t know how
you do it,” I say, “One day at a time.
God has asked me to love these kids today, and I can do that.” I trust in Him and His goodness, and even if
my heart will break, I choose to love today.
It’s not about me. It’s about
Him, and it’s about them. End of
story. No. Beginning of story…
Shortly
after I wrote this, we learned that the dreaded possibility is indeed
happening. The process has begun to
transition these little ones back to their birth parents. Please keep our family, and theirs, in your
prayers.
Thank you for posting, Tiffany! I have been praying and will keep it up.
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