Tuesday, December 3, 2013

God Is...



During my quietest moments, when I take time to examine my life’s events, I draw conclusions about God and my faith that not only help empower my coping skills, but also allow me the luxury of imagining I have it all figured out.  However, as soon as I re-enter the world I share with my fellow human beings, I realize I am no closer to knowing all the solutions to the world’s problems than I was when I first considered them.  
 I harbor no secret knowledge that explains the pain and loss that so many people face in life.  And, truth be told, no one else does, either.  All any of us can do is hold fast to our personal beliefs and faith in an effort to experience that “peace that passes all understanding”.  As Brandan Robertson so eloquently stated in his blog, “The Revangelical Blog”,
“I do, in fact, believe that God exists. And of that, I am pretty darn certain. But I also recognize that I could very well be wrong. I recognize that I cannot prove the existence of God and cannot absolutely know  that there is a God. What I do know is that I experience something that I call God, I have found hope in something I call Jesus, and therefore I believe and have faith  in the religion that bears his name. But it's just that- faith. It's not certain. It's not provable. It's a mystery. And in humility, the Church of the ages has confessed just that- our faith is a mystery. And because it's a mystery, there is always a possibility that we could be wrong.”  
 When I first set out to write this piece, I thought about telling you the stories that accompanied our adoptions: all the “coincidences” and “signs” we encountered along the way.  And, while I have always attributed these incidents as answers to prayers and God’s manner of helping us find our way during a somewhat confusing and emotional time, the cynic in me also recognizes that these events, while certainly unusual, may just simply be twists of fate that our heightened sense of awareness picked up on as we navigated the unchartered waters of bringing a child from another country into our family.
My faith in God and hope in Jesus have a very difficult time reconciling the fact that my greatest joy – adopting my babies – was also someone else’s greatest pain.  And, since I too, have lost a child, my heart breaks for those women who made the unbearable decision to leave their babies at a hospital, hoping against all hope that someone, somewhere, will love them as her own flesh and blood.
Has adoption changed me spiritually, and, if so, how?                                                                                         
I discovered church at an early age.  Many of my early memories include Easter Mass with my cousins, Bible school in the summer, and Sunday morning coffee and doughnuts in the church basement.  After my parents divorced and we moved to the South, my mom allowed me to ride the local Baptist Church bus on Sunday mornings.  On these rides my friends and I sang catchy Bible tunes such as, “This Little Light of Mine”, “I’ve Got the Joy, Joy, Joy, Joy Down in my Heart”, “Deep and Wide”, and “Jesus Loves Me”.  In middle school I attended youth group meetings and social gatherings like hay rides, car washes, and church lock-ins.  In high school I further reinforced my spiritual identity by joining Christian fellowship clubs, one of which I was president of my senior year.  My classmates even voted for me as class chaplain all three years of high school.
And then I went off to college and learned that there are other ways to express one’s faith in a Higher Being.  I met friends from many different religions – and some from no religion.  I opened my mind to the idea that maybe, just maybe, God isn’t one-size-fits-all. 
As I bumbled through life, sometimes making mistakes, sometimes making a good choice or two, I learned about beauty and joy and sorrow and misery.  I also matured in my spiritual beliefs.  Oh, I had doubts – still do, in fact.  When my son died?  I questioned a God who would allow such tragedy to strike the very beings He created.  A year later, when I suffered a late-term miscarriage, I embarked on a six-month long pity party with God as my punching bag.  What did I do to deserve such misfortune?  Finally, when we decided to adopt, I proclaimed that God was smiling on me once again.  My joy was two-fold when I learned I was also pregnant.  Suddenly I was back in God’s favor, I promised to trust Him and stop questioning His existence.
Until one day a friend of mine called and I told her about our adoption plans.  “Oh, how wonderful for you,” she told me.  I sensed a hesitation in her voice, though, and I asked her what was bothering her.
“Well,” she began, “It’s just that when I was sixteen I gave a baby boy up for adoption.”
Oh.
And just like that, it hit me:  I owed my impending joy to someone else’s excruciating heartbreak.
So, after many, many years of learning about my culture’s religion followed by my personal “epiphanies”, I reached another fork in my spiritual road.  How do I reconcile my belief in a Higher Being who looks out for His children with the fact that, despite our earnest and heart-felt prayers many human beings suffer great despair and agony on a daily basis?
I don’t.  Instead of looking at God as some sort of magician – one who gives us what we ask for as long as we possess the correct formula for asking – I have come to recognize God in a very different way.  Remember when Jesus told his disciples that “whenever you see the least of these, there you will find me, too”?  I believe that He was telling us that God dwells within each of us.  He is the common thread that binds all of humanity.  God is not some supernatural power who only looks after those who are lucky enough to find the magic phrases in which to invoke His goodness and blessings.  God is found whenever you look within yourself and find love, compassion, and empathy for others.  God is that little voice you hear that tells you to hold the door open for the person behind you.  God is the touch of emotion you feel when you see a child with dirt on her face.  God is the conviction you get when you know there are people in your community who won’t have a big, fabulous Christmas feast unless someone – namely, you – finds the time and energy to commit to preparing a meal for them.  And God is the hope that when you face insurmountable obstacles in your life someone else will step in and help ease your burden just a bit.  God is the hope that collectively we humans will find a way to put an end to hunger and poverty and war.  God is the hope that families will come together – whether they be here in the United States or halfway across the world on another continent – and love children enough to help provide loving homes for them when their situations seem hopeless.  And, God is the love that binds our families together and reminds us to never judge or elevate ourselves above others simply because we were born into more fortunate circumstances than others.  
God is love.
           ........................................................................................................................................

Dawn Sticklen lives in Joplin, MO with her husband and four children, two of whom are adopted from Russia.  She writes the blog, 'Since You Asked...', where she hopes to make the world a better place, one blog post at a time


Dawn Sticklen lives in Joplin, MO with her husband and four children, two of whom are adopted from Russia.  She writes the blog, 'Since You Asked...', where she hopes to make the world a better place, one blog post at a time.
- See more at: http://joyinthejourneyadoption.blogspot.com/2013/08/connecting-with-my-spouse-charlie-and-me.html#sthash.bVHCkQra.dpuf
Dawn Sticklen lives in Joplin, MO with her husband and four children, two of whom are adopted from Russia.  She writes the blog, 'Since You Asked...', where she hopes to make the world a better place, one blog post at a time.
- See more at: http://joyinthejourneyadoption.blogspot.com/2013/08/connecting-with-my-spouse-charlie-and-me.html#sthash.bVHCkQra.dpuf

1 comment:

  1. Beautifully written Dawn. I always thank God for our birthmothers. I know in the happiest day of my life, it was the saddest of 2 mothers. Thank you for sharing!!!!

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