COVID-19 Update: We are currently recommending that all members and guests wear masks and practice social distancing. Thank you for your cooperation.

In the Family

Over the years, I have been involved with numerous families who adopted children into their families. Adoption is a process that is dear to God's heart.

"For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight. In love he predestined us to be adopted as his sons through Jesus Christ, in accordance with his pleasure and will— to the praise of his glorious grace, which he has freely given us in the One he loves." - Ephesians 1:4-6

In Ephesians 1, Paul uses adoption language to describe our relationship with God. Reflecting on the Apostle's words and my engagement with families who have adopted, I am reminded of the following based on the scripture above.

  • We are loved before we know we are loved! Each of the families that I am connected with has been in the adoption process for a long time. Even while the children were born into difficult places and circumstances, there were people a long way away who loved them deeply. This is the story of Jesus.
  • He chose us to be holy. The places where we were bought up, our 'old home,’ could have been nicer. There were struggles and pain, and – certainly for us – sin. God saw the poverty of where we were living and wanted to bring us to a world of prosperity. It is not financial prosperity but spiritual prosperity. The families in adoption have shown great courage not to let those caught in poverty stay in poverty. There are millions more that need adopting out of spiritual poverty.
  • Jesus takes us from the old to the new. In a spiritual sense, Jesus places us in a new family - God's family. Adoptive parents endure great pain, offer great sacrifice, and take significant risks to incorporate a new child into their family. Jesus does the same.
  • God is familiar with difficult transitions! Both sets of families that I know who have recently adopted have had some 'readjustment' struggles with the children they have adopted. Behavioral, relational, and trust issues seem to be commonplace. In the same way, as we are being transformed and absorbed into God's family, we often have the same problems. Our heavenly Father is full of grace and patience with us.
  • Adoption gives Him great pleasure. Despite some of the trauma of transitioning a new child into a new family, adopting a child brings great pleasure and pride. Knowing that things will be forever different, more profound, and richer provides a joy that few other things can match.

I am grateful for adoptive families; they deserve our prayers. I am thankful for an adoptive Heavenly Father; He deserves my praise.

No Comments


Recent

Archive

Categories

no categories

Tags

no tags