August 9, 2013
Goodbye. One simple
word that we say a hundred times a day in one way or another. Yet, it is a word with so much potential
emotion that we rarely feel. Our kids
and everyone around them felt the full weight of goodbye on Thursday morning. The staff who found them, loved them,
protected them, raised them, and nurtured them as well as any parent would
finally came to the day they all had prayed for; a day to let them go. The other children at the orphanage who had
shared life in everyway imaginable with our kids and come to love them as
brothers and sisters, had to give their tearful hugs and wave goodbye from the
gate without any guarantee of seeing one another again. It was a rich, beautiful, difficult morning. We cry when we feel the loss of something
dear. We cry when we have been loved
deeply. We cry because we were not made
for a world that requires goodbyes and our hearts ache for a permanent resting
place. Tears are a gift and great
reminder that this world is not our home and that our relationships here are
only a dim reflection of what we will one day find in Christ himself. But, while we live here we do cry as many did
Thursday morning. The eldest cried
quietly to herself staring out the window of the van. The middle didn’t say a word but silently lay
across the back seat of the van and the youngest chatted and giggled wondering
why everyone was crying. (It did provide
a bit of levity amidst all the goodbyes.)
To all those who have been part of the last three years of caring for
our children: Thank You! In the short time we have spent with them it
is so obvious how deeply they have been loved.
They are so full of life, energy, ideas, and laughter. There has been so much healing that has taken
place at your hands and I cannot thank you, staff from the orphanage, for all
that you poured into our kids. Where one
might expect to see fear and bitterness in these kids, I find only a desire to
be loved and a great capacity for loving!
The verse from 1 John 4 comes to mind about perfect love casting out
fear….and you all have done that so well.
You love well, not just because you are great at caring for kids (which
you are), but because you love the children in your care with the love of
Christ and that changes hearts and lives.
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!
May God give you strength and wisdom as you continue to pour out that
same love on those who remain in your care and all the little ones yet to enter
your doors. Our prayers are with
you!
Hey Rebecca! Wow, thank you for sharing these stories. Mind blowing to imagine what it is like for those 3 to be leaving the life they've known. Helps me know how to pray for the transition for you all. It's been so long since I've seen you on our visits back to St. Louis, but the last time I was at your house, one of the last things you mentioned was that you had your eyes on 3 siblings in the Philippines. What a long road for all of you. Thank you, Lord. It will be good to stay in touch a little with this blog. Thanks for sharing!
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