Sanford Family 2006
The Lord was pleased to give us 14 children. The irony  is my husband only wanted 2 children when we were married. And it would have  stuck if the Lord had not given us two sons first. Therefore my husband modified his decision to 3 children because I wanted a daughter!
Since 3 was to be the sum and total of our progeny and  not wanting to 'risk' a third boy, we sought to adopt that little girl.  Nervously, I called the first agency but had to leave a message. With the second  agency, a kind lady answered. After briefly sharing my story of having two sons  and wanting a daughter she told me in no uncertain terms, "You have two healthy  young boys, all you can hope to adopt is a black child, older child, special  needs child, or a sibling group. The wait for a healthy white baby girl would be  years."
I was totally frightened out of my wits by this news of the only  adoptable children!! We are southerners, dark skinned people did not live with  whites, I did not want to change our birth order, how could I ever  help a special needs child, and a sibling group meant way to many children!  So we took a leap of faith for another birth-child and in August of 1990 the  Lord gave us a beautiful red-headed baby girl. Eight weeks later my tubes were  tied. Oh, but God was moving!
September of the next year, Melinda and I had dropped off Joshua and Garrison for their first day of preschool. On our way home, we stopped by  the mailbox to get the mail. It was the normal stuff of mail including the  monthly magazine published by our electric company. On the cover of this  issue was a mom with her two children sitting in a swing on their front porch  reading a book. The bold letters printed across their legs stated 'Home  Schooling' page 12.
We had already heard of home schooling. Our neighbors  across the street had four children, two of which were school age, and they were  home all day! I had watched her for three years and thought she was crazy. Why  would she not want to enjoy time to herself and self-pursuits with her children  safely tucked away in public school? And anyway she just seemed weird.
So there I am in my quiet little living room, my  heart torn because I had just left my two very precious boys at a place of  'higher learning'. Joshua, as a social 4 year old, was all for it but Garrison,  a shy 2 1/2 year old, was clingy. I had to make him stay. It is what you are  supposed to do, right? I hated it but I wanted to be a good mom and prepare my  boys for school. Obviously I could not prepare them. My college degree was not  in teaching. Oh, but God was moving!
After reading the magazine article, I was intrigued. My  husband was guarded but fine with me finding out more. So I gather the children  up the next day and we went to the library to find some books about this  allusive subject. The three-foot self which held all the home school books was  empty except for two. I took them home after requesting from the library several  of the other books to be held for me once they were returned. These books  changed our life. I was convicted of huge sins and saw God for the first time  from, what we would call today, a 'Christian worldview'. We had never been  taught that God wants all of us and every day, not just our Sunday. And that the  Bible is not hard to understand but is the guidebook for all of life. Oh, the  grief, oh, the joy, but God was moving!
We pulled our boys out of preschool after only two days.  Then I introduced myself to my neighbor. She became my friend and mentor. Beth  McDowell is the wife of Stephen McDowell who is a historian, author, and world  conference speaker. He is co-laborer with Paul Jehle, John Eidsmoe, Gary Demar,  David Barton, and William Potter as well as others. We did not understand any of  this at the time. All we knew was they were our kind neighbors who counseled us,  and our children were friends.
This was also when God moved in our hearts to understand  that children are a blessing and the fruit of the womb is his reward.  We wanted more blessing and reward, so we sought to undo what we had done years  before. The doctor was firm and specific, he could untie my tubes. However there  would be a 50/50 chance of each pregnancy being a tubal due to scar tissue and  my life would always be in danger. For my husband the decision was easy, no  surgery. He wanted his wife. For me the news was more devastating, I wanted more  children. Oh, but God was moving!
And so were we. In 1997, State Farm moved my husband  from Virginia to the corporate office in Bloomington, IL. We settled into a  newly built home and new community. We found a evangelical church were folks  actually brought their Bibles and opened them! The desire for more children was  my constant prayer since 1991 and in 1998 it became a burning fire in my heart.  One day in the spring of that year, I opened the local paper to find a full page  ad for some 2,000 children in the Illinois foster care system who were available  for adoption. Up to this point we had only considered international adoptions  which cost loads of money we did not have. The Lord used our 'poverty' to turn  our hearts closer to home to find our children.
To make an already long story short, we pursued a DCFS  adoption. On September 30, 1999 the Lord was pleased to give us a baby girl of  black and white race. On October 20, 1999 the Lord gave us a sibling group of  three girls changing our birth-order. In November of 2003 God took us  international for an adoption. We traveled to Russia to bring home a sibling  group of four, two of which were special needs children. And lastly in May of  2005 we brought home another sibling group of three with very dark skin from the  Philippines. (Both international adoptions were completely financed by the Lord  through family and friends meeting a matching grant through Lifesong for  Orphans and adoption grants with State Farm.)
So what was spoken by the lady from the adoption agency back in the spring of  1989 was actually a prophecy, 'all you can hope to adopt  is a black child, older child, special needs child, or a sibling group', for by this God moved to fulfill our hope and joy of more  children.
Fourteen from Him: seven boys and seven girls. Our  blessing and reward.
~Katherine
  
Wow! How exciting. I bet there were lots of FEARS in those years - as I experience fear even now! Thank you for your example!
ReplyDeleteI know Bob and Katherine and I had never heard their story. I have met some of the children. The Sanfords love their children and provide a very steady and secure home
ReplyDeleteThis is terribly abridged, the second half of the story is God is now using my parents' faithfulness to reach at least six countries! Children truly are arrows in the hand of a mighty man, but it is even better when they are sharpened and aimed by an almighty God!
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