
A Story of Adoption
By Elizabeth Foss Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 12/22/05)
My son Christian was searching the bookshelves yesterday, apparently
frustrated by the dearth he saw there. Since we have well over 1,000 titles
at his disposal, I wondered what was missing.
"There’s hardly anything on Joseph here! I understand why we need so many
Mary books, but nobody says much about Joseph, you know? And he was a hero …
" he trailed off.
A hero indeed. Though I hadn’t spoken it, I had been meditating lately
about the heroic good of St. Joseph and the Nativity. Commonly, we look at
the story of Christmas as a birth story: We have a round-bellied Madonna
riding on a donkey until she gets to a cave where animals joyfully welcome a
lovely baby. As a mother who has been nine months pregnant during Advent and
a mother with a newborn on Christmas Day, it is easy for me to identify with
the birth story.
But the Nativity story is also a story of adoption. A strong man heard
the call of a God to take into his heart and home a baby that was not his
biological child. Against the raised eyebrows of those around him, but
because he dearly loved his wife and the God they served, he traveled a
great distance. He wasn’t sure what he’d find there; to say that the
accommodations were less than what he was used to is to understate the case.
And then, almost immediately, it was his job to rescue the baby, to save him
from grave danger.
Once they were safely at home, he raised the child as his own. He shared
the faith of his fathers; he taught him the family trade. Certainly, there
were challenges in this family that related to the adoption. This child, at
12, left his foster father for three days to return to the home of his real
Father. How many children of adoption have experienced that same
restlessness and caused the parents who have rescued them the grief that
Mary and Joseph felt while they searched for their child?
St. Joseph was faithful. Perhaps he recognized that we are all children
of adoption. We are all broken, disenfranchised, wounded and in grave
danger. Our Savior makes us brothers and sisters, heirs to His throne. We
become one family of faith, like that little family in Nazareth so many
years ago.
For some reason, the Lord has surrounded me by the miracle of adoption. I
have seven children. Five of them have godparents who are adoptive parents.
Most recently, Christian’s godmother welcomed a little boy from Liberia,
just in time for Thanksgiving.
When I look at the fathers in these families, I am struck by their
courage. Adoptive moms assure me that adoption is rarely ever a man’s idea.
And it is almost always an idea born of a woman’s pain. The sorrowful heart
of a mother meets the sorrowful heart of a child and together they begin a
new life. But how do they get to "together?" They become a family through
the courageous actions of a man who sees the pain of his wife and listens to
her as she tells him about the pain of the child. Rarely, do these women beg
and plead. Rather, like Mary, they trust God. They pour out their hearts in
prayer and God convicts their husbands. The program director for a Catholic
adoption agency assures me that this is not the case of weak, badgered men
who cave to whining women. Rather, they are tender, brave men who recognize
a mutual need and hear a distinct call.
The father who adopts is strong and faithful. He travels to places like
Kazakhstan, Russia, China, Guatemala and even hostile Africa. He saves the
baby — often from abject poverty, illness or death. He is the St. Joseph of
our times.
There are literally millions of children in this world who need rescuing.
We are called in James 1:27 to care for the widows and the orphans. What
does that mean exactly? Do we toss a few coins in the poor box or wrap an
extra gift at Christmastime or do we take a risk? Are there brave men out
there after the heart of St. Joseph who will travel great distances to
difficult places to rescue a baby and give it a home all because it’s the
will of God? It is the will of God.
These are the weakest of us, the poorest, the most defenseless. In this
country, we cannot fathom children who scurry along the murky puddles in
Haiti scavenging for a few slender fish, only to come up without anything.
These children are so malnourished that their hair turns orange and falls
out in clumps. There are "dying rooms" in China where children who have
cerebral palsy or missing hands or missing ears are left in the dark to
starve to death.
And what will become of the children who grow up orphans if we do not
have men like St. Joseph in our midst? According to Shaohannah’s Hope, a
foundation begun by Christian music legend Steven Curtis Chapman, who has
adopted three daughters, "Statistics regarding the future prospects for
children who emancipate from orphanages, the foster care system, or who grow
up as street children are profoundly bleak … . Theft, prostitution,
homelessness, substance abuse, incarceration and suicide affect the lives of
the vast majority of those children who grow up as orphans and never find
permanent, loving homes. In short, orphans by definition are children who
for whatever reason have found themselves in need of permanent, safe, and
loving families. And for such children, being taken in by a family through
the "spirit of adoption" is their greatest need"(www.howtoadopt.org).
They were going to stone the Mother of God. Joseph knew the baby was not
conceived by him. He didn’t understand it. How could this baby be his to
raise? How could he be asked to overcome the opinions of his community, the
misgivings of his own mind, and listen to the call upon his soul? Where
would he find the courage? How could he possibly provide for the childhood
of the child of God Himself? Why couldn’t this be simple? Why couldn’t he
marry Mary and just conceive a baby of his own? Instead, he must set off on
a two-year odyssey to distant and hostile lands to bring home a baby that
didn’t even look like him. And what of the future? This was an extraordinary
way to build a family; how could he know what the future held, particularly
with a beginning like this?
A hero? He was a hero. He was a strong, courageous, man of faith. And
there are men like him today. They are Paul, and Joe, and Mark, and Chuck,
and Scott, and Kevin, and Ed. They are ordinary men who are called to
extraordinary measures for a humble, helpless child and the love of the
woman who becomes the child’s mother. They are the men of the Christmas
story. God bless them!
Foss is a freelance writer from Northern Virginia.
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