The heart and mind are the true lens of the camera.
–Yousuf Karsh
Yeah, my family is amazing
Changed by broken walls
It was never an easy journey to get there.
When I said we wanted to visit her orphanage in 2010 when we were there to adopt her, we met resistance. It was too far. The train was too fast for a child. We would be too tired. We would bring germs from America. We wouldn’t want to go. But, that’s where they were wrong. I was determined to go, determined to physically enter into her history even if only for a moment. And so, we went. We drove about 3 hours there to stand at the gate, walk across the grounds, allow the ayis who knew our child infinitely more than we did to dote on our baby, and take lots of pictures.
I had never been more aware of my foreignity as I was at that moment. We were out of place, standing among ayis speed talking in a language only unrecognizable to the two of us. They pointed at us and spoke freely, knowing we would stand still in front of them and smile regardless of what they said. We watched as our new baby responded in a way we could not. She wasn’t a stranger there; they knew her and she knew them. We were the strangers surrounded by grey cement walls and dusty ground. The only thing I felt connected to there were the very walls themselves. I tried desperately to grab hold of something to take home with us, not even knowing really what, while the walls seemed to desperately present themselves as cheerful with some colorful cardboard cut outs stuck to them for now until the next rainfall would turn them into more dust on the ground. I cried. It sorta felt like the grey, tiled walls were crying too.
When I said I wanted to visit the location of the old orphanage a few weeks ago, I met resistance. It was too far. We would be too tired. It wasn’t safe. We wouldn’t want to go. And, while I had been determined to get there, I was willing to let it go. I had already been given so much, and it wasn’t the reason why I came.
When the driver pulled our van over and pointed to the right, my heart stopped for a moment.
There I was again, standing at a new gate that looked 50 years old already, looking at what used to be.
Most of the walls that had cried along with me four years ago were no more. I stood looking at what was in front of me and cried alone.
It’s China. Buildings are built and torn down and built again to be torn down again. It’s a seemingly never-ending cycle of building and destruction. Standing witness to it before me, I didn’t feel like the foreigner I had four years ago. Everything was different now. At the very moment I stood crying on Bao Ping Road, my daughter who had been there, who had lived behind those gates and inside those broken walls, was sleeping soundly beside her sister in a warm bed in the place she knows and I know as home.
I saw a picture of adoption that day in the form of broken walls and a quiet construction site.
They gave us a bag of dirt the day we received our daughter in March 2010. The director handed us a little bag of stones and dust from the grounds of the orphanage. I thought it was nice, thoughtful, a memento for her to have as she got older. We put it in a special box for her along with the clothes she came to us in and other special things. Now that gift means something entirely different. It is not a memento; it’s a monument. It gently says:
Those walls that were the only home you knew need to come down now. Let God turn them to dust, as hard as that may be, so that He can build new walls, strong walls, walls that will not crumble, walls where you will never be alone. It’s never an easy journey to get there; but, stone by stone, brick by brick, while it may be a painstaking journey, you can get there. Accept this gift so that you always remember your story and so that you can trace the work of the Repairer of Broken Walls, the Restorer of Crumbling Dwellings, the One who makes beautiful things out of stones, dirt, and dust.
Visit and Serve Again
We knew that adoption would change our daughter’s life; we did not realize how much it would change our lives. After adopting our youngest of our four children from China in 2010, we realized that adoption doesn’t end with red inked stamps on (a lot of) paperwork. It’s a journey that is just beginning when you receive your child. Mark and I were led to start The Sparrow Fund in 2011 to support families in that journey, providing (a) grants to families to receive preadoption counsel and support and medical reviews of their referral and (b) training and support as they move forward as a family.
While The Sparrow Fund is committed to encouraging and supporting adoptive families, we also care deeply for the children around the world who are waiting for families and the men and women who have been called to care for them everyday. That is why we are going to China, a country our family has come to love. That is why we’re partnering with America World Adoption Agency and I’m leading a team as we all leave our families and our jobs and all our comforts of home to go to an orphanage in Shaanxi Province and serve.
Is He nudging you to join us? Is He nudging you to go? Caring for orphans is not an act of service reserved for people who are the passionate types who want to change the world. God has called every one of us to care for orphans. If we believe His Word that they are close to His heart, than why would we who identify ourselves with Him and desire to be more like Him not also hold orphans close to our heart and act accordingly? We’re looking for a few very ordinary people who love Him and believe He can and will use us to do extraordinary things as we join Him in His work on the campus of an orphanage behind gates in a bustling city in central China.
Together, we’ll watch little moon-shaped eyes marvel at bubbles for the first time, feed bottles to babies struggling to overcome physical challenges to eat, build friendships started with charades because of language gaps, study little ones waiting so that we can advocate for them once home so that they may become beloved sons and daughters, and eat some pretty amazing food unlike any takeout Chinese you can get in the States. But, most importantly, we’ll experience God together and see Him more clearly as the God of the universe who can redeem all things.
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