Thursday, January 29, 2015

Empty Jars

I don't think I've written anything about this here yet?

November 12-22, 2015


I will be leading another ACT Missions Trips team scheduled to return to the same orphanage our July 2014 team visited!

I was typing a Facebook message to a friend.  Every time I see her face pop up on my newsfeed, I hear this whisper to my heart.  She’s one of MANY people I have asked about joining my team who makes absolutely no sense to my logical and ordered brain (I do have a left-side that operates occasionally!).  As my fingers were flying across the keys, this story from 2 Kings 4:1-7 came to mind…

The wife of a man from the company of the prophets cried out to Elisha, “Your servant my husband is dead, and you know that he revered the LORD. But now his creditor is coming to take my two boys as his slaves.”

Elisha replied to her, “How can I help you? Tell me, what do you have in your house?”

“Your servant has nothing there at all,” she said, “except a small jar of olive oil.”

Elisha said, “Go around and ask all your neighbors for empty jars. Don’t ask for just a few. Then go inside and shut the door behind you and your sons. Pour oil into all the jars, and as each is filled, put it to one side.”

She left him and shut the door behind her and her sons. They brought the jars to her and she kept pouring. When all the jars were full, she said to her son, “Bring me another one.”

But he replied, “There is not a jar left.” Then the oil stopped flowing.

She went and told the man of God, and he said, “Go, sell the oil and pay your debts. You and your sons can live on what is left.”

I HATE asking for help!
Actually, I HATE asking for anything.

Recruiting and fundraising are killer for me, because I have to become vulnerable enough to be rejected, again.  “No,” just hurts sometimes.

God has really ramped up this obedience thing He’s asking of me!  It’s not like I’m sending out random requests to my entire list of contacts, but He is bringing very specific names and faces to mind.  Even when I could help them write their long list of reasons why they are saying, “NO!” He keeps wanting me to obey and ask.  

I loved this widow story since I first discovered it a few years ago.  It’s not the prophet, widow, and oil story that I grew up hearing repeatedly.  This story intrigued me most because the prophet Elisha instructed the widow to actively become a part of the miracle of God’s provision.  She had to knock on door after door after door of all her neighbors and ask for empty jars.  God filled every jar!  

I often wondered if she questioned in reflection about the door she didn’t knock on and the jars she didn’t ask for?  I’ve pondered how humbling this task must have been.  Begging for more emptiness.  

God required her to have expectant anticipation, hope and light in her darkness and despair.

The friend I was messaging today is in one of those empty places in her life right now.  

Yet this is what God desires of us all, as leaders and team member volunteers who join us.  He does not ask us to come to Him full of ourselves and all we can bring or give or do.  He wants our empty vessels to come before Him.  He will fill us, to be poured out for His glory, as we enter into His love story.

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Packing My Suitcase!

Do your feathers ever get ruffled?

Do you get extremely agitated?

Do you ever just want to find an enormous soapbox to stand on so you can shout out to the whole world,
"WHY?!?"

Or is it all just me?

Well, I'm having a moment that I just can't ignore today!!! 

As our ACT Missions team prepared to asy our good-byes to the children we had spent a week falling in love with more and more each day, I fought against the urge to pack all the kids in my suitcase to bring them home.

(Yes, I know that is totally unrealistic and impossible!)  

It wasn't that I wanted to fill my own home beyond capacity, but I just knew that if families could meet these precious kiddos then all the big, scary words used to describe conditions and diagnoses would fade away.  I knew the joy of their laughter that warms your heart, even on a 100 degree, hot and humid day.  I saw their potential and caught glimpses of so much hope for their futures, outside the walls of an orphanage in China and home with a loving and supportive family.  I knew that dates on calendars and chronological ages didn't matter when you are face-to-face with a child longing to be loved.

And...I was right.

TWO members of the November team  that returned to the same orphanage fell in love and felt the urge to bring one of the children home! (uoY KnahT (flip-flopped) and  An Unfinished Fairytale)

Other children whose referral files were not yet prepared for adoption when we left China recently became available, and the flood of requests to adopt some of these children was unbelievable!  More than 20 interested families for children the orphanage staff was uncertain if any family would welcome into their home!?!

So what has me all fired up today?

All the others who are still waiting...

"Caleb"
Caleb is such a great kid!  I have no idea why he is still waiting?  Even with a $4000 Love Without Boundaries grant available to his adoptive family (LWB grant info), he continues to wait.

"Logan"
Such a sweet boy!  Quiet and contemplative at times, but still all boy...and still waiting.

"Jessa"
Our entire team waited with great anticipation for her file to become available!  We knew that her family would be so blessed by this darling girl that her file would be matched in a flash!  But she's waiting?

"Marie"
Such a tiny baby girl when we met her in July.  She had only recently arrived at the orphanage and was still so visibly shocked and traumatized by the loss of her first family.  But even during that one week we spent with her, we watched her begin to emerge from her shell with love and attention.  Her needs seemed so minimal and manageable, we again believed her family would find her as soon as her file arrived, and yet she waits.

"Pia" and "Izzie"
America World had "Izzie's" file for three months, and no family stepped forward to bring her home. Now Great Wall China Adoptions has her file as "Pia," and still this sweet little girl waits for her family.

"Charlie"
His smile is ever present!  He's such a darling boy.  When his family brings him home, he will have access to better nutrition and care, education and physical therapy beyond what he currently receives.  He waits for a family to declare him worthy of love.

"Brandon" 
I don't have a blog link for this little boy, but he is such a playful sweetheart!  He just needs a family.

I just don't understand why all these children are waiting?
Especially, when I also know of so many families waiting for find their son or daughter?

Well, y'all can join me on another ACT Missions Trip team schedule to return to visit the same orphanage, November 12-22, 2015 (2015 team information)  Or I am serious, y'all!  I might need to explore my luggage options to find a way to bring all my kids home!

*****

Information about all of these children can be found through the America World website AWAA Waiting Children

Except for Pia whose file is currently with Great Wall China Adoptions GWCA Waiting Children



Monday, January 19, 2015

An Unfinished Fairytale

When I stepped on a plane bound for China, I thought that a mission trip experience would be defined by the 10-days on the calendar, the six-days we spent at the orphanage and with the staff.  I knew there would be some loose ends to tie up once we got home, but i envisioned an end.

Does that sound harsh or uncaring?

I've heard about "life-changing" mission trips, but typically people re-enter "normal" life and their experience becomes a part of their life.  Rarely have I watched anyone become consumed by a little mission trip, and if they do…well…uhm…they just seem kinda weird and gradually they pull away from "normal" people, so they aren't quite so in-your-face with their passion.

Okay…just read that…harsh, uncaring, judgmental, icy cold hearted are a few censored words that come to mind to describe my attitude.  

So, I went on a little mission trip to China…

…and I never came home…

…a part of my heart remains in an orphanage on the other side of the world…

,,,other parts of my shattered heart have scattered into all the families who are bringing home "my" China sweethearts.

These children fill my thoughts and prayers every day.  I can't close the door and walk away from this experience.  I have become consumed.

The stories of all these children, and their families, and all the connections and intersections of lives from around world blows my mind!!!  Honestly!  I could never make up some of this stuff!

Today, one little Princess I fell in LOVE with has overwhelmed me, again!

I can tell the stories of other children, I can love them, but they never entered that sacred place in my mama's heart where they are loved as one of my own.  This darling girl…I truly love her as a daughter. I have begged my husband to consider adopting her.  I have shed more tears and prayed more prayers over this baby girl!


The ACT Missions team that returned to the same orphanage had another team member fall in LOVE with this same Princess.  This young lady, however, was still a teenager so she was asking her parents to consider adding a little sister.  Her mama said yes, but her daddy sounded like a exact copy of my own husband's arguments against.

Another piece of this princess's story…

A family fell in love with her, they pursued her adoption, traveled to China, met this Princess, and then…

...fears, doubts, challenges, struggles…
...the enemy attacked with a full onslaught…

…and the family disrupted the adoption, the princess was returned to the orphanage, and the family returned home brokenhearted with empty arms.

In May, hearts were crushed, dreams were lost, and a fairytale ended…

…or so it seemed…

But God has been writing this story! 
And He's not done yet!

To save you a bit of the head spinning from the unbelievable, impossible, unimaginable plot twists and turns woven together in this fairytale, I will shorten this a bit…

*  I "met" the First Adoptive Mama through the internet.
*  I "found" the referral file of the princess with another agency.
*  I "met" another adoptive mama interested in adopting the princess.
*  I "introduced" First Mama to the New Mama.
*  I connected the New Mama to the November ACT team leader.

That's a whole lot of "I"…but the real star of the story is GOD!  

He is writing this story, all for His glory!  

I am so humbled that He has allowed me to sit on the sidelines while He orchestras and creates a 
masterpiece!

Today, First Adoptive Mama shared links to two blog posts...



Did you read these?  Is your mind blown?  Yes, you read that right!  First Mama is advocating to help New Mama's family bring the Princess home!!!

From Monday morning needing $3,300 by Wednesday, the family received $2,450 in donations by Monday evening so they needed just another $950 for this stage of the adoption!!!

What is God asking of you?  What is your part of the story He is writing?  Are you called to adopt?  Is He asking you to become a storyteller by joining a missions team?  Are you financially able to assist a family adopting or some one traveling as part of a missions team?  Are you a prayer warrior on the front lines for a family or a missions team?

Don't miss your opportunity to enter into this fairytale of God's passionate love for all!

Saturday, January 17, 2015

"uoY knahT" (flip-flopped)

So are you familiar with the oldie but a goodie Ray Boltz's ballad "Thank You"?  

The image of a person arriving in heaven and being greeted with the people and stories of how lives intersected and were impacted through this one person's life.  A crowd wishing to express their gratutude.


This song came to mind today as I pondered the picture in reverse...

A great crowd gathered around one person with joy and thanksgiving for the honor and privilege to have been a part of the magnificent story God was telling through this one person's life!

In the middle of this celebration, I saw one beautiful, smiling face...


THE MAYOR!!!!

Just in case you haven't ever read anything I've written before about our time in China...

I LOVE THIS BOY!

And I have longed for his family to find him and bring him home!

Our whole family prays for The Mayor and his family.  Stories of our time with him in China are frequently repeated and often requested.  Keziah has even asked, more than once, why we didn't just adopt The Mayor so he could have a home and a family?

So hard to explain this feeling...

...but...

...The Mayor is not my son.

My love for him is strong, passionate, and slightly possessive, but it is not the love I feel for my own kids, my six-pack of sons and daughters.

I love him like children I have babysat for, teens I've worked with in dramas, Kids Choir kids, Children's Worship kids, friends of my own kids...lots and lots of kids.  Some I categorize as part of a whole group.  Some claim a special part of my heart.  They may never know how dear they are to me, but I love silently watching them grow and mature even if from a far.  Memories tigger spontaneous prayers.  They have become my special kids.

The children we met in China in July have become part of that special-to-my-heart group...and yet at a new, more intense level all their own.  "My" China kids are like family.  I stepped into an orphange and discovered  I'm an "Auntie" to 40-50 kids.  The care, concern, and love I feel for these children daily!  It truly hurts my heart!  They are all so far away.

I must confess, though, the joy I experience each time I learn one of my sweethearts has been matched with their family, or when one of them comes home, or watching them grow and blossom through cyber images and the typed stories from their new families...

...Y'all!  I struggle to find words to express the overwhelming, emotional flood of Joy, pure, unfettered, boundless JOY!!!

My best comparison would be the stories people tell about the emotional experience they feel at the birth of their first child.  How suddenly they discover a new and different kind of love, joy, pleasure and pain that is indescribable and inecsapable for the rest of your life.  This new realtionship changes you at the core, from the inside out, forever.

Yep!  
That works!  
That's what happened to my heart in China!  

I "gave birth" to an entire new family of 50 kids and exploded this new found life changing love inside me.

I can't watch it fade away, 
I can't forget it, 
I can't get over it, 
and I don't want to!

So, back to The Mayor...

Yesterday, I began casually reading a recent blog posting from a team member who visited the same orphange in November...


I had to stop reading silently, I couldn't focus, I couldn't process the words, so I began reading it aloud to my two little girls in the room with me.


BIG UGLY CRYING!!!
Snot dripping from my nose, tear streaked cheeks, damped shirt from the flood, hypervenhilating as I attempt to read and comprehend each word!

The Mayor has a family!
He is loved and chosen!
He will come home!

Let's just say, that blog post has created quite a celebration!  

Because God has been writing this story since the beginning of time.  He has intecritly woven together so many lives and hearts centered around this charimatic, hysterically funny, naturally strong leader, SMART, talented boy!  Every team, every team member who has visited this orphanage has fallen in love with him!  You can't really walk through the doors without encountering him, becoming engaged in his plan, and being enchanted by his personality PLUS!

I've tried to warn the family...

PARTY AT YOUR HOUSE!!!

...once this extroverted, social butterfly lands.

We all just long to see our buddy!  Long to see him home!  Long to see him take the world by storm!!!  Cuz trust me on this one, HE WILL!

So my mind created that beautiful new imagery today...

all the lives of all the people who have loved The Mayor...

surrounding this boy in the throne room of his Heavenly Father, his Big Daddy God...

a celebration of thanksgiving for the honor and priviledge of being a part of The Mayor's chapter in God's story!

All these precious children and the stories God is writing through their lives, the beauty mingled with the broken pieces, rising from the ashes...I am so humbled to watch the pages turning before my eyes and witness mysteries unfolding...so many...too numerous recount them all...too complexly intertwined to unravel...and yet...so many unfinished...so many waiting to be told.

The only ending I can find for this post is ask a question...

DO YOU WANT TO GO TO CHINA?

Another America World ACT Missions Trips team will be returning November 12-22, 2015, to continue the story.  (ACT Missions Trip information)  Will you be a part of the celebration party in heaven as we gather together to rejoice in the Greatest Story Ever Told?  What part will you play?



Tuesday, December 23, 2014

A Wish for Christmas Links

This will just be a quick post…


CALEB!!!!


AWAA just posted on their blog today advocating for this sweet boy - 



LOVE This boy!  
Caleb is simply amazing!



Our ACT Missions team also spent time with Caleb in July.  My teammate Gretchen has written several blog posts about him - Caleb blog post . I have started numerous time to blog about Caleb, but I never seem to be able to finish one.  Putting into words everythin I feel and think and remember about him overwhelms me.  If both Gretchen and I could get our husbands to agree to adopt again, we would be fighting over this darling boy!


He need to come home!!!!!

Both myself and the November team leader would LOVE to share with any interested family about our visits with Caleb.




Please share Caleb's story...






Monday, December 8, 2014

Sleepless Saturday Night

Tonight I'm struggling to find sleep.  

150 days since our team left for China, 
and still I think my internal clock is permanently set to China time.

I haven't written a blog post for over a month now.  Not because I have nothing to write about or that I have no more children's stories to tell.  Neither can it be said that I have forgotten about "my" kids.

Time to write gets consumed in the busyness of daily life.  My thoughts overwhelm me as the flood of emotions and memories continues as the tides, ebbing and flowing.

So much…so many…so few!

***  Exciting Updates  ***

Another AWAA/ACT Missions Team returned to love on the children and staff during the first week of November!

One Less has become FOUR Sweethearts HOME!!!

Another family is preparing to leave this week to bring home a Christmas Treasure!!!

A family is currently reviewing the file of another Darling!!!

God continues to weave together His beautiful and amazing LOVE story through the lives of these precious children!  So much beauty in the midst of all the brokenness!

However, my heart aches and breaks more and more with each passing day.  

In the midst of all the Christmas hustle and bustle, I feel the rush around me but feel so detached from the joy of the holiday season.  Decorations, wrappings and trim, lights and bells, sweets and treats, shopping and gifts and gifts and more gifts press in all around me while my thoughts wander back to the children I left behind so far away.

Buying and giving and receiving countless and yet meaningless gifts for which  I, myself, and others have no need has become a source of stress and sadness as I long to give not only material things to the children and staff of the orphanage but also to see each and every one receive the gift of their own family!

I have become discouraged and disillusioned as I have attempted to advocate for the children we met in China.

It seemed so simple in my head! -  Show off pictures of the beautiful kids we met and tell their stories and their forever families will rush to bring them home as quickly as possible!!!  These charming, enchanting, lovable sweethearts would sweep everyone right off their feet just like they did our team!  BAM!  They could all be home within a year!  Yes, I dream BIG!  But I had fallen in LOVE!

However, now Mrs. G.'s question rings in my ears ("Boys")…

…"Why Americans no adopt boys?"

A couple of the youngest boys we met who are under two years old with cleft lip/cleft palate as their only special need had referral files that had just arrived for America World!  So many families request a child under two with a "mild or correctable" special need.  Within recent years cleft conditions have become categorized as mild.  Every day I have checked AWAA's photo listing, anticipating a status change to "Under Review" and the "Matched"!  But after three months, one boy never had a family review his file or pursue his adoption so his file was returned to China and placed on the Shared Listing with almost 2,000 other children waiting for a family.  If these little boys had been girls, they would never have even been posted on a photo listing.  Families are currently waiting 18 months to two years for a little girl as young as possible with a similar condition.

Toodling around the online I stumbled across a treasure today!  One of our team members in July was the Emmy award winning film director Jason Crossman!  He tagged along for half of our week with the children and then flew to Ethiopia to visit children at another orphanage.  His camera captured our journey through the beauty and history in Beijing and then ALL OUR KIDS!  But none of our team has ever seen any of his footage.  He has been working with AWAA on some projects.  Editing and the approval process takes time.  (UGH!  Have I ever mentioned that I have NO patience?)  Discovering that I could get a sneak peek at one of his earliest editing attempts was an honor and privilege.  (He's soooo GOOD at this!!!)

PUDDLE!!!
Ugly crying tears just flowed!

My computer screen was filled with the faces of "my" kids!  Laughing and playing!  Our field trip to the park!  As much as I NEVER wanted to be filmed for all the world to see, I LOVED watching the precious little ones I held in my arms!

Jason captured the moment when I held the very first child I met in the very first room we visited on our first day in the orphanage.  I remember feeling so cautious and timid as we asked permission to interact with the children.  A simple "Yes" melted away the fears until I found a darling four or five year old in my arms.  Her body and muscles were rigid from cerebral palsy's grip on her life.  Flying through the air with the freedom my arms and strength gave her, we laughed together and enjoyed these brief moments before our team was ushered away to another therapy room filled with children and the nannies working to help them learn and grow.

I watched "my" kids and longed to reach through the barriers of a computer screen, through space and time, through thousands of miles that separate us, to reach out and touch them, hold them, laugh and play, dance and sing, to wrap them in my arms and tell them all how much I miss them, each and every one of "my" precious sweethearts!

Oh how I wished that I could share these images with the world!  
I wanted everyone to see "my" kids!  

So many of the children are the older kids with whom we spent so much time together.  We played and exercised together outside.  We enjoyed a field trip adventure to a park and lunch at a restaurant.  We watched them sing and dance to entertain us as their honored guests.  We painted pictures together.  We filled and shaped wontons together and enjoy devouring the delicious wonton soup we had created.

Advocating for these children who stole my heart has broken my heart.  Not one has been matched with a family.  No one has reviewed their files.  No one.

Most of the older children we met were boys, but even the few girls we met have not had a family express interest.  These were some of the children who made it so hard for our team to leave.  These were the boys who waited by the windows of their shared room to shout their good-byes and wave to us as the van drove away for the last time.  These are the children who begged us to help their families find them and bring them home before their 14th birthdays entrap them in the prison of being an orphan forever.

My teammate and I have squabbled over who could convince their husband to bring one boy home first and then how often we would need to travel to visit just to spend more time with him.  One of my daughters keeps asking me about another boy who is already 12 years old, the same age she is now.  She knows about his desire to be adopted and heard from the ACT Missions team who visited in November that he requested a family with brothers.  She wants to know if he has a family, and if not why aren't we going to bring him home.  There are just so many!  So many waiting and waiting!

I understand…older kids aren't cute and cuddly looking…the big words that describe some of their special needs are scary sounding on paper…older child adoption can be challenging and difficult (Oh yeah!  I know about this one!)…families have dreamed of Chinese adoption equalling a daughter, not a son…

BUT

But what about all "my" kids?!?

Christmas is coming!  
I should be celebrating and rejoicing.  
Sugarplums should be dancing in my head.  

Instead, I watched the video of "my" kids one more time as I snuggled under the covers.  Tears dampened my pillow.  I glanced at the clock and adjusted for China time.  Tossing and turning, my thoughts and dreams and prayers return to the beautiful faces, and smiles, and laughter of "my" kids.  My heart aches as I ponder questions and long for answers…

Why, Lord?
How long?
When?
Who?
Where?
Why not?
Please, God?
Soon?

I will try to find joy and peace this Christmas season.  I will enjoy spending precious time with my six children and this first year with my daughter-in-law.  I will rejoice in the birth of Jesus the Christ, the promised Messiah.  Words will fill my thoughts this year…

Redemption
Restoration
Adoption
Sacrifice
Grace
Mercy
LOVE

As I thank my God for the great gift of His Son in my life, I will pray that some day each child I met will some day know and feel this miracle in their own life.

Monday, October 13, 2014

ONE LESS!!!

95 days ago, our ACT Missions team boarded a plane bound for China.  Such a mix of emotions!  So many unknowns!

In the middle of the night, as I tossed and turned, desperately trying to sleep while praying through the anxious butterflies in my stomach, Monday afternoon in China, our first Sweetheart met her Mama and Baba!

Engulfed in the loving arms of her forever family!  

A big brother waiting at home for his sister to come home!  

Ge-ge and Mei-mei!!!

It feels so SURREAL!!!  

Almost like I got to be in the delivery room watching a family born!  I got to spend time lost in this Princess's beautiful smile!  Then returned home to share stories photos of this little Enchantress, the Children's Welfare House that has been her home, and the nannies who have cared for her with her family while they waited for all the paperwork to be processed and approved so they could travel to bring her HOME!

More children are waiting…waiting for their forever families!

What is God calling you to do?  Is He whispering to your heart to grow your family through adoption or foster care?  Is He asking you to GO and Step Into Their Stories by joining an ACT Mission Trip and Becoming a Storyteller?  Are you an incredible intercessor, called to be a prayer warrior for families and mission teams?  Are you able to bless others financially in their calling to GO and adopt?

REJOICING with those who are rejoicing today!

ONE LESS!!!

How many more will go home in the weeks and months ahead?