"Every good and perfect gift is from above..." James 1:17

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Jordan?...Is that you?

Hi everyone!  It's Jordan.  Sarah's husband.  Yes, I know.  You were wondering when I was going to post on my own family blog.  For those of you who know me, you are not at all surprised that I have not posted on this blog and now that I am posting, it may be a surprise.  Those of you who do not know me may be wondering if Sarah's husband is even involved much in the adoption process.  I can't say that I am as involved as Sarah is with the adoption process. I don't correspond with our adoption coordinator like Sarah does and never posted on this blog before now.  I am mostly involved through Sarah and she is involved in it all and is doing a great job administratively with the adoption agency, preparing herself to be a mother, preparing our house for kiddos, keeping me informed throughout the process with all the changes and updates, and certainly keeping you all updated.  Sarah is doing a great job and I am not going to get in her way.  I don't want to see Mamma Grizzly (read an earlier post).  However, do not be mistaken of my excitement.  I am excited to be a father to kids who have been wishing, hoping, and praying for parents throughout most of their lives just as we have been wishing, hoping, and praying for children.

After Sarah told me that she wanted to adopt a kid out of the foster care system and the long battle with God that brought her through this process, it took me only a day to be on board with the idea.  After hearing Sarah's testimony that night and praying with her about it, God spoke quickly and directly to me.  Since then, I have been more excited about adopting kids to give them the same hope that my parents gave me than most anything I have been excited about in my life.

I have taken a few courses in school over the past 3 years that have taught me a lot about the foundations on which Judaism and Christianity were founded.  One thing that has been made clear to me is that the entire Bible from cover to cover has one consistent theme:  God desires a relationship with us and for us to have the same close relationship with others.  Time and time again, He has made a new covenant with His people in order to start over in building a relationship with them.  His unconditional love for us demanded that He give His only son as a ransom for us.  There was no other way for Him to have a relationship with us where He could love us and we could love Him than for Him to commit the greatest act of love one can offer:  to lay down one's own life for a friend (John 15:13).

Notice above I mentioned "for Him to have a relationship with us where He could love us and we could love Him."  See, a relationship takes two parties.  It is give and take from both parties.  Who has been in a relationship where all they did was give and the other person took?  If you have been in that kind of relationship, you probably weren't for long.  I believe it is the same way with our relationship with God.  It is not suppose to be God who is always giving and we who are always taking.  We can give and God can take, too.  And I think He wants to take from us.  Imagine having something that God--the creator of the starry night, the expanses of the oceans, and the tallest of mountains--wants from you.  You may be wondering what you have that God could ever want.  He wants you.  Remember:  the relationship takes two.  He gave us His life.  Shouldn't we now be willingly to give Him ours?

"Oh, but Jordan what about my rights.  I have the right to my own life and the right to opportunity and to pursue my own dreams.  The right to have my own kids.  The right to have a luxurious retirement if I so choose.  And what about my rights to life, liberty, and property.  That's in the Declaration of Independence, you know?"

Yeah...read it.  I agree.  You have those rights and I agree with our Founding Fathers that those rights are given to us by God.  America is great because of the value we place on those rights for ourselves and for all of humankind.  But we have become so use to these rights that we do not know nor do we want to find out what life is like without those rights.  Well, if those rights are given to us by God than we can certainly argue that we are entitled to them.  I believe that I'm entitled to them.  If God gave them to me, then no man can take them away.........but me.

"But me?....I can take away my own rights?"  (And finally, here is the point to my preaching.)

Sarah and I are a part of a great group of friends from our local church that we meet with weekly.  Throughout the past two years several couples have started families of their own while Sarah and I and another couple have decided to adopt.  Some have said that it is unfair that a healthy, responsible couple like Sarah and I have not been able to conceive while there are fathers and mothers in this world that cannot take care of themselves,  much more a child.  I cannot say that I see it as unfair at all...now.

I have come to see adoption as an opportunity from God to experience the very nature of Him.  I will love and have loved these kids, unconditionally, before they ever meet me just as God loved us and died for us before we were ever created.  I will continue to love them as they come to live with me as my children even though they may have had a rough start to life and may have some things they need to work through, just as God continues to love me despite my shortcomings and sins.  I will continue to love them as I raise them up so that they will have the opportunity to live out their greatest potential as God has loved us and has given us rights so that we are able to live out the potential that He has placed inside each of us.  And I will continue to love them so that they know what love is, so that when the time comes for them to love God and love others, they will be prepared to lay down their life and their rights for their friend and have the same opportunity as I do to experience the very nature of God.

I hope God has spoken to you throughout this reading as He has spoken to me throughout this adoption process.  Loving God is far bigger than any religious ritual, amount of money one can give, reading your Bible everyday, praying your daily requests to God, or going to church every week.  Loving God is complete surrender.  The reason why those Christian practices I just mentioned hold so much importance to us is because neither one of them requires us to completely surrender ourselves yet still enabling us to practice our faith.  The apostle Paul claimed to rejoice in his suffering because he knew the joy that was found in complete surrender to God.  There is so much joy to be grasped when we experience the nature of God.  And in order to experience the very nature of God, we must completely surrender ourselves for others in the same manner He did for us.  Only then can we know what it means to love as God loves.  And that is what adoption is to me.

Jordan, the soon-to-be-daddy, Ames.

5 comments:

  1. Whew, AMEN to that!!!!!

    Love,
    The soon to be Grammy :)

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  2. Your understanding of God's heart for all is the perfect foundation on which to build your family! As you and Sarah live the practical, daily application of your words, keep looking to the ONE who loves perfectly. Drink daily from the 'fount of every blessing'!

    Love, Mom

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  3. Well said! God is great and even though there may be times in your future with your children when you are struggling He will answer your prayers. I have given some of my past burdens to God and He has replenished me. I may not know the "why's" right now but I wholeheartedly believe God has a reason for everything we go thru in our lives and when our time has come to meet him face to face all of our questions will be answered. I believe God has put the love for these unknown children in your hearts because you and Sarah are his sheppards.
    with love

    Michelle

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  4. JD way to go... your message is so true and as the Mom of a natural child with an adoptive father, I want to affirm you in your desires, passions and love for your soon to be children. They will surely be blessed with you and Sarah for parents.
    Blessings to you both,
    Lori Sadler

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  5. lindalee1974@gmail.comJanuary 9, 2011 at 2:46 PM

    JD, your outlook on the adoption as related to God is just wonderful. My oldest son, Keith and his wife Debbie were also not able to have children. Because of Debbie's age (44 at that time) they felt it would be too hard on them to wait for an adopted child. They instead adopted 2 sibling Labrador Retrievers. I know this is not the same as what you and Sarah are looking forward to, but to them it was right. Keep up the faith and the right children will be your's in the near future. I firmly believe this and continue to prat for you both.

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