Monday, February 21, 2011

Donations?

Posted by Candace

David and I passed our physicals! We got A+s :). God is absolutely, positively amazing!!! Yet somehow in the midst of my rejoicing my heart breaks for my friends... Sweet Kate is back to treatments, back to dealing with cancer unknowns, and wondering if she will make it past 8. My resiliant and courageous friend, Paula, lost her baby this week. A baby conceived from a marriage of new beginnings...a baby of hope. And my compassionate friend, Erin is watching helplessly as her mother faces yet another battle with cancer. In all this pain and sorrow, I wonder how God expects us to be able to go on. I know He can and will show His glory through all of this, but I can't help but selfishly wish there was no need... I guess we all have a very human side, and we have to believe that God knows and sympathizes with that side of us. That He walks the road with us... side by side... hand in hand. That we are NEVER alone. Is that enough for those suffering? Well, those of you who know Christ, please tell me the last time He has NOT been faithful. I will go to my grave trusting in that faithfulness.

I was asked today how to donate to our adoption process. I hadn't really even thought of it... not because we are rich, but I just figured that since God was leading us to do this, He would provide the resources. But I also don't want to overlook any way that He might like to do that. So if He puts it in your heart to be a part of this journey we are on, then by all means, feel free to give. I have a savings account open that we are using for the adoption funds. You can mail any donations to 5038 Brookstone Ln Loganville, GA 30052 and just label them "Sydney and Kate" :). I will make sure and keep track so that I can send you a special picture of the girls when they come home... proof that you were a part of something in God's plan bigger than us! Is there anything better?

Our adoption coordinator is in the process of mailing us home study packets, so March will be filled with complying with the state of GA. Please pray that we get our "i"s dotted and our "t"s crossed. We continue to take this process one day at a time, praying that it will be as short and smooth as possible... and if and when the roadblocks come, God will glorify His name through them.

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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Whatever You're Doing

Posted by Candace

David and I had blood drawn today for our physicals to see if we qualify for the China program. This is the last hurdle to be passed to make sure we will meet all the Chinese standards. They are strict and many. Health history is a big deal. Please be in prayer that we will pass these exams with flying colors, as unfortunately no amount of studying in the world can prepare us for them :). We go next week for blood test results and the actual physicals.

So much is going on in our little world here at the Robert's home. David and I both feel surrounded by chaotic circumstances. They are popping up at every turn. And yet there is peace... the kind I don't understand. Oh, how I love that kind. I got caught this morning at every red light in Loganville trying to make our Dr. appts on time, but because I did, I heard the following song on theFish. Funny since I never listen to the radio, but here is mine and David's song for this year...

Its time for a healing, time to move on
It's time to fix what's been broken too long
Time to make right, what has been wrong
Its time to find my way to where I belong.

Theres a wave that's crashing over me
And all I can do is surrender

Whatever You're doing, inside of me
It feels like chaos, but somehow there's peace
And its hard to surrender to what I can't see
But I'm giving into something heavenly

Time for a milestone
Time to begin again
Reevaluate who I really am
Am I doing everything to follow Your Will
Or just climbing aimlessly over these hills?

So show me what it is You want from me
I give everything, I surrender

To whatever You're doing, inside of me
If feels like chaos, but somehow there's peace
And though it's hard to surrender to what I can't see
I'm giving in to something heavenly!

Time face to up, clean this old house
Time to breathe in and let everything out
That I've wanted to say for so many years
Time to release all my held back tears

Whatever You're doing, inside of me
If feels like chaos, but I believe
You're up to something bigger than me
Larger than Life
Something Heavenly

I think it is pretty ironic that the name for the group that sings this is "Sanctus Real". David and I were just talking recently about how we are tired of the facade of the Christian life. We are ready for something real. We are ready for lived out Christ in us the hope of glory. We are ready to live to bring glory to His name... not ours, not an organizations, not a denominations, not a churches, only Christ's. We are ready to be real.

Our vision for our family is changing. It used to be "the American Dream" and now I find myself saying to David "Wouldn't it be really neat if someday our family photo looked like a picture of heaven? All races, all nations, all backgrounds... a picture of what God does for us when He rescues us from sin and embraces us into His family. How cool would that be!

So like the song says, who knows what He is doing, but whatever it is, as long as it's Him doing it, I am totally okay with it. Because it is larger than my own little world that I shelter and protect everyday and it is something eventually heavenly. Bring it on...

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Saturday, February 12, 2011

Pain & Pleasure

Posted by Candace

To respond to my wife's post recently on pain. This is one of the best statements I have ever heard on the subject: "Meaninglessness does not come from being weary of pain. Meaninglessness comes from being weary of pleasure. When you have exhausted that last dream and you find it leaves you barren or empty" so says GK Chesterton. For the non Christian Chesterton sums it up well. At the height of his tennis career, Boris Becker said his biggest fight was to resist the urge to commit suicide every day!! For the Christian, God is perpetual novelty. Even though there is pain, there is always hope that is rooted in a realistic foundation of reality.

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On the plane

Posted by Candace

So I was sitting on the plane in Panama yesterday headed to Costa Rica and saw the cutest little girl. Probably a US/South American mix and she was hanging over the headrest the entire flight with a big giant smile on her face the whole time. She lit everyone up for 3-4 rows around her. Made me wonder how soon it will be till we get our new little girls. Also wondering if they will be that happy on the 13 hour flight back to the US hopefully late this year. Praying hard.

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Friday, February 11, 2011

For Your Glory

Posted by Candace


I don't have any adoption updates, but I wanted to share some insight that I have experienced over the last couple of days.

There are rare moments in life when it seems as though a sliver of light from heaven breaks through the darkness of thought here on earth. In these moments, just for a second, you seem to understand things that at one time were beyond your comprehension. Everything comes together and finally makes sense and then instantly it is gone again. I feel like I had a moment like this today and I wanted to share while it all seems to make sense.
Lately I have struggled with God over how much suffering happens on this earth to really good people... to Godly people, who are living their lives to please God... who are sacrificing to do what He has called them to do. Why in the world would God ever take a child from a pastor or a spouse from a missionary or a job from someone who gives of what they have to the Kingdom? This seemed so totally against His Word to me and not only that, but it seemed cruel. People that call themselves atheists will always bring Christians back to this question. Don't you serve a cruel God if He doesn't even take care of His own children?

Have you ever heard of or seen someone that handled a loss with grace and peace? Have you ever cried for someone who instead of crying for themselves was trusting God despite the loss? Have you ever met someone who had suffered so inconceivably, yet seemed to be able to turn it around and use it for good? Then you have experienced the glory of God. I don't think that God's glory can be revealed to us humans on this earth without the realities of suffering... without the realities of evil. I have never seen God's glory in someone born with the world at their feet. I have never seen His glory in anyone claiming to be perfect. And I have never seen His glory in people who have never had a bad day in their life. Rather His glory is shown through those who have been through some "stuff", but continue to trust Him... who have lost dreams and friends and loved ones, but refuse to turn their back on God and blame Him. That is where His glory is shown...
But isn't such a thing unfair? Why serve a God who takes glory from His children through their pain and sufferings? This is where we have to go deeper then any shallow Christianity. We all say that we love God. 85% of Americans claim to be Christians. But how many of us are willing to say, "Jesus, I love You so much that I trust You enough to say 'Your Will be Done', not mine". And how many of us are willing to embrace that Will when it comes with a cross? How many of us trust Jesus so much that even when His plan is for our loss, we somehow rejoice because it brings Him glory.

I put a note on Facebook yesterday about how we were not put on this earth for ourselves. We were put here for someone else. Our Father is reaching out to those that don't know Him through His own children. We are His ambassadors to the world. And sometimes they can only glimpse Him through our sufferings and pain and how we handle them with Him by our side. More people have been saved at funerals then at the celebration of birth. More people have reexamined their lives watching tragedy unfold then watching a family with 2.5 kids and a dog live out the American dream. If we truly love Jesus, we have to be okay with however He chooses to use our lives on this earth. This is HARD truth and this is why I can only stand a glimpse right now of such truth. Am I willing to embrace what God has purposed for me, whether good or bad? To truly love Him, to truly please Him, to truly glorify Him, I have to answer "Yes".
You may be in a really hard place today and you may be blaming God or fighting Him or wishing every moment that you were somewhere else. If he has entrusted you with a suffering, will you embrace it and let Him glorify Himself through it. Will you lay down your preconceived ideas about how your life should've turned out or could've been? Even if your situation was your own doing, will you let go of working it out yourself and hand it over to God? Do you trust Him? Do you believe that He loves you and that His plan will work everything together for good? Maybe sometimes His plan for you works for good in someone else. Are you selfless enough to suffer for anothers good? Hard questions that I am asking myself lately. This is the nitty gritty of the Christian faith. This is what the martyrs answer "yes" to. They have insight into God that we, in our shallow and comfortable lifestyles, push to the background. God's plan is bigger then any one of us and this is only a temporary home. We are all on our way to eternal fellowship with God or eternal seperation from Him. We like to live in the moment, but the truth is, the moment will be over and we will be standing in front of a Holy, Powerful, Living Creator. The One responsible for giving us the life that we are currently living. Will we hear "Well done, good and faithful servant! Enter into the joy of Your Lord."

This is what came together for me in a flash and I know I will quickly go back into the reality of this world... my love for my gorgeous family, my comfortable home, my easy life... but I want the answer to these questions to be "Yes". Father, help me love and trust You enough to embrace ANYTHING that You have purposed for my life to bring glory to Yourself. I can't thank You enough for what you have already done for me. It is the absolute very least I can do.

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Monday, February 7, 2011

The Fingerprints of David and Candace

Posted by Candace


And the fun begins... We got our agency contracts on Saturday, so I thought I would work on those a little today. I spent the morning with David at the bank with a notary public and at the police station with a very nice officer. It was kinda surreal being fingerprinted for the first time. But I think David and I were both glad that we were not there under different circumstances. Even the feel of the place makes you feel a little like a criminal. So turns out, by the end of the day, impatient me had our fingerprints mailed to the FBI and our contracts signed and notarized and sent back to the agency. So more waiting...


The next step is the home study. This will be one of the most grueling parts as we will have a pile of documents to obtain and have notarized and even more to fill out and complete. There will also be 3 visits with a social worker while the state determines the fitness of our home for new babies. I have decided that adoption is more similar to pregnancy then I ever thought. The first trimester in pregnancy often brings nausea, heartburn, soreness, and all kinds of other bodily changes, whereas the first trimester of adoption brings forms, documents, notaries, social workers, and all kinds of breaches of privacy :). The second trimester of pregnancy brings lots of waiting, but also usually the discovery of the sex of your baby. The second trimester of adoption brings waiting as well, waiting to be approved by the state of GA and by the Chinese government, but also the referral and picture of the baby(ies) who will one day be coming home with you. The third trimester of pregnancy brings impatience and more impatience (at least that was every third trimester that I have experienced). Something about being ready makes you impatient, as I'm sure will be the same with adoption. After seeing our child(ren), somehow I don't think it will be easy to wait the 4 months between the referral and the travel to China.


Eerily similar these two ways that God brings children into our lives. One grows in your belly, the other grows in your heart.


Tonight as I think of my girls so far away, my heart is heavy. Not for my girls, but for a 7 year old girl named Kate McRae and her family who sit and wait to see if cancer has returned to her brain and, if it has, how aggressive it will be the second time around. This family is losing their daughter right before their eyes and are powerless to stop it. Kate went through a year of very aggressive treatment before her brain tumor seemed to recede. She spent weeks and months in the cancer ward of a children's hospital throwing up, losing her hair, and watching her childhood pass before her very eyes. They finally received good news about 3 months ago, only to be recently hit with the newest CT scan results that picked up brand new spots that may be cancer. Today my prayers are not for me or my children near or far, but they are for dear, sweet Kate...her mother, Holly... her father, Aaron...her brother and sister, Will and Olivia. I do not even want to allow myself to imagine being in their shoes. I pray with all my soul for Kate's complete healing and for the comfort and peace that only Christ can bring to be upon every decision, every bit of news, and every step before that happens. For Your glory, God.


Please join me in prayers for Kate and also, for our church as we are in the midst of making some important decisions and need the wisdom of Christ. And of course, please continue to pray for 2 little girls that we have yet to meet and a process that is rarely "smooth sailing". Love you...

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Friday, February 4, 2011

Can't Get Past the Evidence

Posted by Candace




Sometimes you wait so long for God to do something, that when He finally starts opening the doors that you have been trying to force open with a crowbar, you almost fall through. I have that feeling right now. I think we are almost in shock at what God is doing and how fast He is doing it. Last year this journey seemed impossible, and now it is not only possible, but it seems to be happening.


A few months ago when David and I first started talking about adoption, I was wavering back and forth so much on whether this was God's purpose or just our desires. My heart wants to step out in faith, but there is always this thought in the back of my mind that maybe I am choosing my own way over God's, just because it seems pleasant. During this struggle (that still goes on at times), I felt God challenging me to take action steps of faith, even though in my mind they seemed stupid. So I cleaned out my upstairs office one day of everything. I started looking at ideas for a room mural that someday soon my sweet sis-in-law, Amanda, will paint. And I made room for our blessing. Shortly afterward, I was walking through a store and saw the cutest little girl outfits. I bought two that were similar, never giving a second thought to "why two?". At the time these things seemed a little obsessive and I even questioned my own rationality :), but looking back I am so glad I took steps of faith. Cause when God starts working and you have chosen faith, you can look back and see the amazingness of what He has been doing all along. Now I have 2 little outfits hanging in my closet singing to me of 2 little girls in a far off land waiting for their daddy and mommy and brothers. "Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." Sometimes God asks you to have faith and sometimes He gives you evidence.


David is far more logical in his approach to life. Once he makes a decision on something, he rarely wavers. One of his most attractive qualities is the complete confidence he has when making decisions. He has always been my rock. The other night we were talking about several things in our lives right now that are just "up in the air"...several things that are beyond our control and unstable and adoption was one of the things on that list. Me, in my emotional way, immediately started to worry. "David, are you rethinking our decision?". If David Roberts is rethinking a decision, there is cause to worry. David looked at me with his best logical face and said "Adoption is the one thing that I am very sure about at this point in my life." He is pretty darn excited about the prospect of daughters. Evidence.


Today my friend, Melissa, called me and told me that she was getting rid of some of her daughter's baby clothes and God told her to pass on a special dress to me. This wasn't just any dress. This was a dress that she had bought in faith that God was going to give her a little girl to add to her brood of boys. Sure enough, just months later, her precious Jael was born. Though the pregnancy had been totally a surprise, Melissa has no doubt that this little girl was a special gift from God to her. I will be so honored to have that little dress hanging in the girls' closet. Her words: "God told me to pass it (the dress) on to you and watch what He will do in your life." Whoa! Evidence.


Do you need some evidence today? Maybe there is something in your life that you are truly hoping for, but you see no way that it will happen. Maybe you have a situation that requires "substance" from God to keep your hope alive. Faith is that evidence of things that you cannot yet see with your eyes. Hold on to your faith. He will bring the evidence.


I made our appointments for physicals that are required for our dossier, so we can make sure that nothing physical will keep us from being approved by China (they are truly strict about things like this). So please be in prayer that we pass with flying colors. We also should be receiving our agency paperwork packet and our fingerprint cards in the mail soon, so that we can really dive into the "paperwork trimester" :). I can assure you that I will never be so happy to be fingerprinted as I will this month! Please pray that this process will go as quickly and smoothly as possible, but also that we will not rush what God is using to prepare us. I am the most impatient person that I know, but it is in the waiting that one day the hindsight will be 20/20. We will look back and see where God used every moment to prepare us for the future.


I know I promised to keep my writing to a minimum, so forgive my excitement in having a blog. If I would have attended college, journalism probably would have been my first choice in a major. So it has been very hard not to give a play by play. I thank each and every one of you from the bottom of my heart for the support, for the kind words, and for your prayers. It is all so important to us and we are so happy to have you on this journey with us. Love you all.




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Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Life: The Great Adventure

Posted by Candace

Welcome to our blog! I figured that I would create a blog to chronicle our adoption journey and keep everyone updated on life at the Roberts' house. Not that we are interesting enough to be reading about every day...but maybe every other day ;)... just kidding. My first post is a background story of what led us to the decision to adopt, so it is fairly long. I promise they won't all be this long, but I wanted to share the entire story...

This story begins about 13 years ago while David and I were making our plans to spend the rest of our lives together. He shared with me his dream of adopting a little girl from China. At the time, China's one child policy was creating an abundance of orphaned girls and he was touched by the need there. I, of course, being a healthy, young woman only had dreams of pregnancy and labor and little children that looked exactly like their parents. But I told him that maybe after we had "our own", we could consider adoption if God opened the doors. It's funny to look back and remember those days when my own dreams and plans were priority and I was consistently asking God not to mess with them. Now I am so thankful that He does...

Most of you know what happened after that... two precious and nearly perfect (sorry, a little "mom indulgence" there) little boys named Jordan and Nathan Roberts. David and I had been married a short 4 years and I was the mother of two children under 3. Wow! it was a whirlwind. Jordan had been our little accessory when Nathan came along with his cleft palate woes. All of the sudden, life was not easy and my dream of a house full of children became a hope that I would ever be able to dream again at all. Sleep deprivation is no joke. This must have been hard on both of us new parents, because David put his foot down and said that two was it. And after months of struggle with Nathan in and out of surgeries, very little sleep, and a rowdy little toddler running around in all my waking moments, I was not in the mood to argue.

To be honest, I had never wanted a girl. I had prayed for boys. My own woes as a child were enough to deter me from wanting to go through that again as the parent. It wasn't until God sent a little girl named Nicole to my Bible school class that I even considered the possibility. I knew Nicole for 3 days, but we bonded from the start. Instead of playing the games, she would sit on the bleachers and chat with me. She wore cozy sweatshirts every day (I have a thing for comfortable sweatshirts) and she didn't seem high maintenance or insecure. By the time Bible school was over, I was thoroughly won over. I couldn't seem to let go of the thought of adding a little girl to our family. I would pray about it and think about it almost daily (I tend to be a little obsessive when I want something :). And then on Easter Sunday morning 2004, I was sitting on my mom-in-laws front porch praying and thanking God for loving me enough to die and I saw a picture in my mind of a little girl in a beautiful dress (I would call it a vision, but some of you might freak out). I felt like God spoke to my heart and told me that one day we would have a little girl. Since that day, I have doubted many times that He promised me anything there on that porch. I like to hide from disappointment, so I tend to doubt God a lot. But He didn't forget...

Less then a year later, I looked down at a positive pregnancy test. No, we were not trying to get pregnant again, as a matter of fact, when I told David, I thought he might jump off a bridge. Jordan and Nathan were 4 and 2. I was staying at home full time, and he had just started Ascend and was never home. We had just bailed ourselves out of personal bankruptcy by refinancing our home, and we were only hanging on by a thread financially. Our marriage was struggling under the weight of two small children, financial problems, and insane schedules, and the last thing David was thinking about was adding to that. I, on the other hand, was so sure that this was a fulfillment of God's promise and I determined to enjoy every last nauseating moment of my pregnancy. Long story short, I was pregnant for 12 weeks before the ultrasound that determined the baby had died in utero. A good bit of inner struggle went on up to that ultrasound and as you can imagine, even more after. I didn't just grieve a miscarriage, I grieved a promise. My faith in God took a big hit here. And looking back, this is where I went back to ground zero. I could no longer ride the coat tails of someone else's view of God, or depend on anything I was taught when I was little. I needed to know for myself if God was real or not. I needed to know for myself why I believed what I believed. If I had to pick a crisis of faith that has determined my relationship with God up to this point. This would be it. I questioned, I cried, I doubted, I feared, I screamed, and ultimately He showed up and proved Himself, not only real, but faithful. I emerged from my darkness with a brighter Light then I thought possible.

Even though my relationship with Jesus was thriving, I was adamant about the fact that I never wanted to be pregnant again (like I said, I hate disappointment). David was quite content with that idea, especially since we couldn't afford that desire. Unfortunately, I pulled an Abraham's wife. What I mean is, I determined that I needed to help God with His promise. After all, He wasn't doing so hot on His own. So I began obsessing over adoption spending a good amount of time researching and planning. China was out at the time, because both parents must be at least 30 to adopt. 30?? Seriously! That was sooo far away (I was 26 at the time, lol). So I researched all kinds of other options. I really think that this became an outlet of my grief for the disappointment of losing a child. And David knew it... he fought me all the way. Course, we didn't have an extra dime either, so he was probably scared to death that God would actually open a door, haha. But God did not open doors and I began to tell myself that I had conjurred the whole thing up in my head. There was no promise, only a silly little girl making believe that God had planted this desire in her heart. Listen to lies and it isn't long before you believe them... But God is faithful!

I had given up, but God never does when He has promised something. Time went on as it does. I turned 30 with fleeting thoughts of China in the back of my mind. "Nah, let it go, Candace. You have a beautiful, healthy family. Why push it? Why be disappointed again? Let it go." So I did. It's easy to believe and follow after a lie when it keeps you in your comfort zone. I think God knew it would take a lot to jolt me out of my dreamless sleep. And it did. In 2008, I became pregnant again. Not only was this unexpected, but it was also very scary to me. I wasn't ready to start over. Nathan had just turned 7 and Jordan was 9. They slept all night, they made their own meals sometimes, they went in the potty, they got out of the car by themselves, and I didn't have to carry a 20 lb bag around with every possible thing I might somehow need when I went to the grocery store. I was scared to death. To compound matters, this pregnancy wasn't normal from the beginning and after many weeks of being bed-ridden sick and waiting for answers, we found out there was no baby at all. Only a perfectly formed sac, no baby in it. An empty promise? or a sign of things to come? It didn't matter at the time because my miscarriage was filled with trauma and horrer. To this day, I don't know why God allowed it to be so difficult, but it did guarantee David's vasectomy and my absolute certainty that we were done with pregnancy. I was done period. Done hoping for a promise that was not going to happen. I didn't think God lied, I just thought that I had missed it.

Now I know this is long, but stay with me, because we have gotten to the best part. Last year, we were riding along in the car and David asked me, "Have you thought any more about adoption?" I turned to him and honestly said, "Not a bit. I think we are done." We dropped the subject. That Sunday at church, our pastor preached on "Hope that does not disappoint." Oh my. I still have the Scripture he used for his message posted on my fridge. "And so, after waiting patiently, Abraham received the promise." Whoa... I still wasn't sure if God was talking or if I was just making stuff up again, so when I got home, I started to pray. God reminded me of a journal that I had started back when I was obsessed with adoption. I pulled it out and started reading. I had written about my "vision". It stirred things in my heart... I told David I thought that we should look into adoption again, and he agreed. I wrote in my journal, " 'Start the process' and with these three words from David, it begins..." I was frustrated by the time frames on international adoptions since the Hauge Treaty in 2007. For China, the wait times were 4-5 years. Other countries were just as bad. I started looking at domestic adoptions and came across an agency in Thomasville, GA that specializes in birthmother semi-open adoptions. The name of the agency, "Open Door Adoptions", of course. I put in a request for information, but a month later had still not heard back from them. I was looking at several other agencies as well, but hitting brick walls at every turn. God was reminding me to hope, but doubt was creeping in. One night a short while ago, I texted one of my dear friends and asked her to pray with me. She was one of the only ones who knew what we were considering. I asked her to pray that if God wanted us to let this desire and dream go, that He would show us now so that we could just move on with life and not waste more precious time on something that wasn't going to happen. The next day I got an email from...wait for it... "Open Door Adoptions". Jane Gilbert profusely apologized that she had missed my email and asked me to call her to discuss our options. I called her and was relieved to hear that there were options, some that we hadn't considered yet. I wanted David to be on the same page, so I asked him to call her. Now I don't know if any of you know where Thomasville is, but it is about 4 hours away from Loganville on the Florida/Georgia border in the middle of nowhere. David calls this woman and calls me back and tells me that he already has a meeting scheduled with a company whose headquarters are in Thomasville and it is 10 minutes from this agency. He set up a meeting with Jane for the same day that he would be down there and he wanted me to come too. Whoa... and I am still not done... almost, but not quite.

So we travel down to Thomasville with literally, the sun rising on one side of our car and a full moon setting on the other while listening to Chris Tomlin's Awakening. Whoa! We get to the agency and have a really nice conversation with the director of both the international and domestic programs, and the international director recommends that we try to get into the China special needs program as there are an abundance of children in it and it cuts the adoption time frame in China from 4-5 years to 1 year. We can specify the special needs that we are willing to accept and they include things from large birthmarks, to cleft palate, to anemia, to short stature. The program is so full that referrals are coming in 2-3 weeks after China has approved your paperwork to adopt. The children are between 1-3 which was our ideal age. And they are mostly girls. Whoa! You know that moment at the end of "Facing the Giants" where the coach has just found out he is going to be a father and he says "God, I'm overwhelmed"? I think we both felt just about like that as we walked out of that sweet place.

Last week as we talked with the woman who heads up the China program for the agency, God just kept confirming this open door... this dream that started 13 years ago... and this promise that was given 7 years ago. The woman, at the very end of the conversation, suggested that after we adopt this first time, we consider adding to our family again from China as it helps in building our adopted child's identity. David and I had already been tossing back and forth the idea of bringing back 2 children at the same time, so David asks about this and Emily tells us that China has just, 4 months ago, started allowing families to adopt 2 children at the same time and it is about 1/3 of the cost of starting all over. Whoa!

So yes, I know there are many more hurdles to pass. Yes, there is much paperwork to be done. And yes, we may have to go sell some body parts to pay for this thing, but can you imagine me doubting such a faithful God right now? This week we named our girls Sydney Grace and Katherine Hope. We know how way ahead of ourselves we are, but we also know how big our God is!

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