Tag Archives: ministry with children

Jenny Davant: Adoption and Ministry

Sharon pulled me aside after church one Sunday. She spoke softly about my daughter as she said, “I noticed that Allison didn’t hug me this morning.” We made eye contact and smiled. Sharon, a pillar of my small-town church, stood proudly and shared a significant moment with me. I put my hand on her arm and replied, “That is wonderful news! Thank you for loving her so well.”

Years before this private celebration, my little church in Iowa hired a single, childless pastor. They had all my time and energy, knowing that little existed to compete with last-minute calls and meetings. When I decided to become a mother, I changed the rules. I began speaking to them about adoption and children a year before taking my first foster care class. They needed plenty of time to prepare for the changes.

The decision to adopt was not difficult. At 38 years old, I was still single with no man in sight. I wanted to be a mother more than I wanted to be a wife. I knew that I was not up for the difficulties of pregnancy and childbirth as a single woman. This left me looking into adoption, specifically adoption through foster care. 

The average person in the pew does not understand the experience of foster parenting and adoption. There are parenting classes, visits from DHS, and waiting for a phone call. Foster-to-adopt offers none of the miraculous celebration that comes with childbirth. It does, however, offer plenty of messiness and heartbreak. I needed to bring my church family on my journey toward motherhood.

I began educating church folks as much as possible about the pressing need for foster parents and the nature of loving someone else’s children. Our Wednesday knitting group got regular updates from foster care classes. I was open about my doubts and fears, my limitations as a single mother, and the heartbreak that accompanies childhood trauma. I told the Church Council that foster care always has a goal of reunifying children with their family of origin. I spoke at Friday night supper clubs about how our church will fall in love with children only to say goodbye. 

On top of this, I wrote and preached about foster care. I preached about the difficulty of selfless love and our call to care for the least of these. My church members were in a meeting with me when I got the first call to pick up a baby with less than an hour’s notice. They were also with me when I got the call to return the baby with even less time to say goodbye. They saw me sob. 

My daughters were my second foster placement. They were sisters, ages 8 years old and 10 months, who were in the foster-to-adopt process. These little girls would not be reunited with birth parents. My older daughter, Allison, seemed to be made for the role of a pastor’s kid. From her first day at church, she worked the crowd. Allison made it to every single person in worship on a Sunday morning. Every person, familiar or stranger, received a hello and a hug. 

Sharon, my wise church leader, listened carefully during knitting when I explained that foster kids often seek out hugs and love from everyone. Some of them try to be cheerful all the time. This is a delight for church people. Who doesn’t love a little girl with a big smile and a hug? 

Sharon listened when I shared my heartbreak about Allison. Allison was trying to earn love. She came from a childhood wherein keeping adults happy kept her from being abused. Sharon heard me when I said that my biggest triumph as Allison’s mother occurred when she was genuinely grumpy with me. A grumpy child trusts that you will love her even in imperfection. She trusts that she is safe to be fully human in your presence.

Sharon heard me. She loved my daughter well. She celebrated the first Sunday that Allison did not offer her an obligatory hug and a fake smile. Months of trust-building and consistency paid off. My daughter felt safe.

My journey toward motherhood opened the door for church folks to love in ways they never knew to love before. It was every bit as heartbreaking and messy as promised. 

The day that I adopted my girls, the church packed the benches of our tiny courtroom to stand witness to the celebration. They cried with me and loved my children well. The next Sunday, they surprised us by officially welcoming Allison and Megan into the church as members. They explained that they missed out on baptizing my girls as babies and they wanted to make Allison and Megan’s place in our church official. I’m proud to say that Allison hugged very few people that day. She was safe. She was loved.

Rev. Jenny Davant pastors in Texas, having served previously in Iowa and North Carolina.

Becky Caswell-Speight: “Wake Up! God’s Calling”

Last Sunday, during a lesson on God calling Samuel (I Sam. 3:1-10), one of the children looked up at me and said, “Boy I’m sure glad that I’m not Samuel. I like to sleep too much. I wouldn’t have woken up if God kept calling after me.” After a few inner giggles, I replied, “Yeah, I really like my sleep, too.”

This conversation reminded me of my two girls and one of the many interactions that happen in our family because of the movie “Frozen.”At our house we have a love/hate relationship with the movie.

My four year old daughter Evelyn LOVES it! Her entire room from the calendar to the bedspread is decorated in “Frozen.” She has cups, plates, dolls, stuffed animals books and posters all displaying Elsa, Anna, Olaf, and Sven. She loves to play pretend and dress up in her Elsa costume and the day is pure perfection if she has the chance to wear an Elsa braid.

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Her big sister Ainsley, one the other hand, if she never has to hear about Elsa’s ice powers again, it won’t be too soon. You might think her dislike exists because her younger sister woke up to breakfast and the movie every single morning for six months. But you would be wrong.

I believe that her pure dislike for the movie came about the time her younger sister memorized every song and line and started using it to torture her–I mean, wake her up–in the morning.

A normal morning sounds a bit like this:

Evelyn: Sissy! Psst! [shakes Ainsley a little harder] Psst! Psst! Sissy! [shakes Ainsley again] Wake up, wake up! Wake up, Sissy!
Ainlsey: Evelyn, leave me alone [said in the most groggy go away voice that she can muster].
Evelyn: I just can’t! The sky’s awake, so I’m awake. We have to play!
Ainlsey: Go away, Evelyn!

This interaction is always topped off by Ainsley with a dramatic flop onto her back and a hand on her forehead for added effect. This repeats at least three or four times until Ainsley drags herself out of bed and into the playroom to act out whatever scene Evelyn has chosen.

Back to Samuel: As Samuel was lying down after a long day of caring for the Temple, he hears, “Samuel!” He thinks it is Eli calling, but Eli says no. So Samuel goes back to bed. Twice more, as he is  beginning to go back to sleep, he hears, “Samuel.”

Still not recognizing God’s voice, Samuel goes back to Eli each time. Eli, being a smart man, finally tells Samuel if he hears his name being called again it is God and to reply accordingly.

Finally after the fourth call, Samuel finally understands that it is God’s voice calling his name and he answers, “Lord, speak, for your servant is listening.”

Why couldn’t Samuel hear God’s voice? If it is God’s voice wouldn’t you think he would recognize that? Samuel thought Eli was calling him. Even after hearing God’s voice three times he still had to rely on Eli to help him understand.

Samuel could have been tired. Maybe it wasn’t the perfect time for Samuel to recognize God’s call. If he was anything like Elsa, my oldest daughter Ainsley, or my little Sunday school friend, he could have missed the call once or twice because he “really likes his sleep.”

The good thing is that God calls us. Sometimes God calls us and we don’t hear the call. Sometimes God calls and we don’t understand it. Sometime God calls and we aren’t ready to follow it.

The good news is that even if we don’t understand the call, God keeps calling. God keeps calling.

So . . . how is God calling you? How is God helping you wake up to follow your calling?

May God give us ears to hear and courage to follow.

Rebecca Caswell-Speight, Minister of Families with Children at Smoke Rise Baptist Church in Stone Mountain, GA, has served as a minster in many settings. Recently transplanted from Louisville, KY,  she and her husband, Josh, are parents to two vibrant, growing girls.