Showing posts with label Adoption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adoption. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Adoption Fee Paid in Full

The Father has loved us so much! This shows how much he loved us: We are called children of God. And we really are his children. But the people in the world don’t understand that we are God’s children, because they have not known him. Dear friends, now we are children of God. We have not yet been shown what we will be in the future. But we know that when Christ comes again, we will be like him. We will see him just as he is. He is pure, and everyone who has this hope in him keeps themselves pure like Christ. (I John 3:1-3)

I have the rare privilege of being a child of God, adopted into his family, chosen to be his follower. How about you? Relationship with Jesus is the beginning of a life lived under different leadership - self no longer leading the way, but God's Spirit giving us direction. Some children have a birthright because they are 'born into' a family. Others are adopted into a family and know the love of the Father because he has chosen to give them a place within a family. Parents see children as a gift, not a possession. They know the 'relationship' that is formed is permanent - they don't just walk away from it. The other thing we know about parents is that their love is often very self-sacrificing. They'd give everything to help their child. God gave his 'everything' in the form of his Son, taking on human flesh, dying on the cross, so each of us could come into this family of God. Adopted - wanted more than anything else - accepted without question.

If the child disobeys, does the parent stop loving the child or seeking the best outcome for that child? Not at all! In fact, it is not uncommon to see a parent 'double-down' in the intensity of their love at those hard moments when discipline is required in order to see the child restored. Why? The intensity of a parent's love for their child goes beyond the 'reasonable' - it requires 'unreasonable' sacrifices at times. The drive to protect the child is deeper than we can truly understand until we become parents ourselves. Even then, we have a limited view of what God's love must truly be like. God's love makes things 'right' when all that we do and say is pretty much 'wrong'. It looks beyond the act of sin and sees us through eyes of forgiveness - all because of this deep, 'unreasonable', and sometimes 'irrational' love of a Father for his child. 

God gives us all the rights, position, love, and care that a parent gives their child. For those of us with no 'birthright', take heart! He has given us a family and holds us as close to his heart as his children. He always wanted you as part of His family and we should be overjoyed that he pursued us even when we were less than lovely, sinners of all types, and far away from being 'loveable'. Some of us struggle with what the world refers to as a positive self-esteem. We might think we don’t have any value - especially to a holy God who wants us to be holy as he is holy. Our sense of value comes from Him, not from ourselves, anything we can do ourselves, or in what we might find in any self-help course. As a child, fully adopted into his family, we find value beyond anything this world could offer. Just sayin!

Friday, September 5, 2014

You a foster kid? Or adopted?

When a child is placed into a family as a "foster child", the arrangements are usually meant to be temporary.  Unless the foster family and the birth parents are amenable to adoption, that child will remain in the "foster system".  They really don't "belong" to any family - they are simply being cared for under the roof of a family who cares deeply about their well-being.  When a family moves toward adoption, the situation is a little different - the family is saying they want to make things "permanent" and "binding" in this relationship they have been "fostering".  Fostering implies the willingness to "bring up" and "care for" the child - there is a certain amount of nurturing which accompanies this relationship - almost like a mentoring relationship.  Adoption implies something entirely different - for in the action of adoption, the parent takes as their own the one who is from outside their family - giving them their name.  At first, giving someone a name may seem a little insignificant, but within a name, much is established.  The right of "inheritance" is part of this "name" deal.  So, with adoption comes not only being taken as one's own, but it also places the one who assumes the name of the new family a position as an heir.  When God deals with us, he doesn't just foster us, he adopts us into his family - with a new name, new standing, and the full rights of an heir.

All of you are God’s children because of your faith in Christ Jesus.  And when you were baptized, it was as though you had put on Christ in the same way you put on new clothes.  Faith in Christ Jesus is what makes each of you equal with each other, whether you are a Jew or a Greek, a slave or a free person, a man or a woman. (Galations 3:26-28 CEV)

It is faith which must be fostered - nurtured until their is this full desire to become part of the family with any sense of permanence.  God sets about this action of "fostering" our faith - first planting a seed of faith small enough within us to begin to take root.  As we are exposed to the family of God more and more, we begin to experience the nurturing of that faith - until one day it takes full bloom and we say yes to Jesus.  As we say yes to him, we are saying yes to a new name.  We are acknowledging the desire to become part of the family of God - to leave our past identity behind and take on the new! In turn, we come into this place of being a full heir.

I wonder how many of us stop short of becoming full heirs in this family simply because we are not quite willing to sever the relationship we have with our old "family" relationship?  You see, as long as we hold onto the past, we cannot embrace the present, nor explore the possibilities of the future.  I have spoken often of needing to make this transition - moving from being a "foster child" into this place of being fully "adopted".  Something happens in this "ceremony" we call baptism.  There is an "exchange" of sorts - a severing of our ties with the past and an embracing of our new family "ties".  What is symbolized in going into the water and coming out again is this idea of leaving the old behind in the water - raising into the newness of this relationship of grace and love we call being a part of God's family.

Another thing which happens when we move from just being "fostered" in God's family into being fully "adopted" is this idea of being made "equal" with each other.  The foster child has no real share in the inheritance, although the foster parents may make out a will and designate a portion of their inheritance to them, if they desire.  As the fostered child moves into the place of being fully adopted into the family, this places them in a different position. In an earthly sense, there is no "guarantee" being a child - either naturally born into the family or adopted - makes you certain of an inheritance.  I have heard of people leaving all their earthly wealth and treasures to their cat, or giving them away to charitable organizations.  Yet, there is an "exchange" of sorts which occurs at the point of adoption - one which actually carries some "emotional" security which was lacking while just being fostered.

As we look around us, we see many who are probably in that fostering relationship - not quite "secure" yet in the family.  These kids are being nurtured, learning to settle into the idea of permanent relationship.  It is an awesome thing to watch one move from fostered care into family ties.  The emotional "switch" seems to be flipped.  There is a sense of deep security which comes when one recognizes they are "wanted", "loved", and "treasured". I think this is what God does for us - he ensures us we have great value to him, fostering his love and grace in us until we are willing to be embraced fully into the 'permanence' of his care.  To stop short of this is really not what God desires.  For each of us, this point of "flipping the switch" is different. Some will readily embrace this exchange of position, but others need time. All we can do is pray for those who are being "fostered" in is care - for in time, he will help them make the transition into full adoption!  Just sayin!