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February 24, 2009 10:50 AM

Elisabeth Elliot on Childlessness

Elisabeth Elliot

The Childless Man or Woman

Children, God tells us, are a heritage from Him. Is the man or woman to whom He gives no children therefore disinherited? Surely not. The Lord gave portions of land to each tribe of Israel except one. "The tribe of Levi... received no holding; the Lord God of Israel is their portion, as he promised them" (Joshua 13:14, NEB). Withholding what He granted to the rest, He gave to Levi a higher privilege. May we not see childlessness in the same light? I believe there is a special gift for those to whom God does not give the gift of physical fatherhood or motherhood.

I have known many women (and a few men) who have sorrowed deeply over being childless. My brother-in-law Bert Elliot and his wife Colleen, missionaries in Peru for more than forty years, longed for children of their own. They asked the Lord for children if that would best glorify Him. His answer was no. They wondered about adoption, which would not have been nearly so difficult there as it is in the States. Again the answer seemed to be no, but God has given them the privilege of fathering and mothering hundreds of Peruvians, both white and Indian, in the jungle and in the high Andes, where they bear on their shoulders the care of dozens of little churches.

A woman of about fifty wrote, "Each Mother's Day became a little harder for me as I realized another year had gone by and after many years of marriage I am still childless--the only woman in my Sunday School class who is not a mother. The morning service started... I could not see the pastor for the tears in my eyes. Almost at the end of his message he said, 'I know there are some of you women here this morning who would like to be mothers, but for some reason God has chosen differently. Don't question Him. He has a reason."

Childlessness, for those who deeply desire children, is real suffering. Seen in the light of Calvary and accepted in the name of Christ, it becomes a chance to share in His sufferings. Acceptance of the will of the Father took Him to the Cross. We find our peace as we identify with Him in His death and resurrection.

Look around your church. If you are a parent, look for those who aren't. Might they not be ready to "father" or "mother" you or your children, to be adopted as a grandparent, for example, or an aunt or uncle? My life was enriched by unmarried aunts and friends who paid attention to us children, celebrated our birthdays and sometimes even helped us with homework. The love they would have poured out on their own children had God given them marriage, they poured out instead on us, and we were blessed as we could not have been had they had children. Their loss was our gain, and, as Ugo Bassi a young Italian preacher, said many years ago, we are to measure our lives "by loss and not by gain, not by the wine drunk but by the wine poured forth, for Love's strength standeth in Love's sacrifice, and he who suffereth most hath most to give."

What of the thousands who have not had the mothers and fathers they desperately longed for while they were growing up? Is not God calling all whose ears are open to Him to recognize the wounds of the world and to pour forth His love to the lonely young man whose relationship with his father seems to have destroyed his fitness for manhood? Or to the expectant mother whose own mother is far away, or indifferent, or dead, who longs for a mother to share her joy? Whose will be the strong shoulder of sympathy (the word means "to suffer with") ready to bear another's burdens?--not with the tepid sentimentality which only weakens, but with the burning love which gives hope and cheer and strength?

My correspondent says God has given her "several kids adopted in my heart to pray for, whose mothers say they haven't time to pray." Another girl asked her to be grandmother to her new baby. "Well, what a blessing and how this has changed my life!" she says. "If I had sat around and felt sorry for myself look at the above blessings I would have missed. What a thrill on Mother's Day this year to get a Grandmother card!"

And what of the young childless woman? Is she merely to mark time, hoping against hope that someday she will be given a child? There are always younger people who need a boost, some encouragement in their struggles against the pull of the world, a listening ear when they face hard decisions, someone who will simply take time out to pray with them, to walk with them the way of the cross with its tremendous demand--the difficult and powerful life of glad surrender and acceptance. As the branches of the wine pour out their sweetness, so young women may see their opportunity, as branches of the True Vine to pour out their lives for the world.

~~~~~~~

As always, I'd like  to encourage you to include Elisabeth Elliot in your morning reading.  She gives you a lot to think about during the day.  Subscribe to her daily devotions here.  You can also see a bunch of my favorites here.




Love,
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Posted in Elisabeth Elliot, Inspiration | Permalink

Comments

Barbara- What an interesting devotional! It has given me much to chew on all day...

I cannot imagine the pain of childlessness.. and I don't mean to make light of that with my post.. but this devotional brought many other thoughts to mind that are not neccasarily related to childlessness...

I think, for many of us, we have unfulfilled dreams. They can take many shapes and forms... but after reading this devotional I had this thought: I wonder if God allows some of those dreams to NOT be unfulfilled in *our way* but in * his way*. Meaning, that maybe he takes some dreams and fulfills them in ways that we might not have expected, like serving others. Perhaps, in serving others, the dream is fulfilled in ways we might have never imagined???

I thought, too of the 40 years it took to enter the promised land because the people COMPLAINED AND COMPLAINED. God had awesome plans for their lives, but all they could see is the here and the now. I wonder if, for some people, they miss those blessings, those fulfilled dreams, because they were unwilling to trust God and let him do it in his way?

Just musing... maybe your other readers will have thoughts on this...

Posted by: Lisa | February 24, 2009 6:40 PM

I came here via Kansas Milkmaid...thanks for sharing such a wonderful article as this!! I and some friends are working out way through broken dreams and some in serious illness. It is hard at those times to hang onto TRUTH...but this is such excellent encouragement, which I shall pass on to my friends!! Thanks!!

Posted by: Elizabeth | February 24, 2009 11:57 PM

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