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Essentials

Living the Cross Centered Life Living the Cross Centered Life By C.J. Mahaney Living the Cross Centered Life contains truths about Calvary that will kindle a deeper passion for Jesus Christ in your life. Return today to the very essence of your faith-the cross.

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Sin is a Choiceby Crawford Loritts God has given us the power to overcome temptation—it has been given to us through Holy Spirit. More Repentence articles

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Exercising Our Spiritual Muscles Guests include: Dennis RaineyExercising a muscle only makes it stronger. On today's broadcast, well-known author and speaker, Dennis Rainey, tells you how you can become an all-star by working out your spiritual biceps. More Repentence broadcasts
“Why Would God Let Me Get Pregnant?”

Mary May Larmoyeux

Cathy clutched the steering wheel as she rounded the curve near her parents’ home. She had driven down that same road countless times, but this time was different. She didn’t want to go home—to see her mom and dad face-to-face. 

She didn’t want to look into their eyes after she had told her mom on the phone, “I’m pregnant.” 

She didn’t want to see the tears.

As Cathy peered down from the top of the last hill, she caught a glimpse of her childhood home. She smiled when she saw the front porch swing. But then she remembered the hard conversation with her mom just a few days earlier.

Cathy had put her parents through a lot over the past two years. In her mind, being pregnant would be the “last straw” for them.  She wished she could be like her other friends and just end her problems with an abortion. Oh, she had considered it, but decided that she just couldn’t go through with the procedure.

Her roommates said if she decided to keep the baby they would help her raise the child. They even told her they would arrange their school schedules so someone could always be home.

But that didn’t sound realistic to Cathy.

Cathy was about to face reality. She would see her parents for the first time in months. She wondered why she had accepted her mother’s invitation to come home for the weekend.

The least likely to stray

As Cathy describes herself, she was pretty straight-laced in high school. “Never partied or drank,” she says. “I never had to face consequences because I never did anything bad.”

Her high school friends would have described her as popular … active in church … an athlete … the least likely to stray from her faith. She had been raised in a tight-knit family that went to church every Sunday.

But that all changed when she went to college.

“I just felt kind of lost,” she says. “I wasn’t really sure who I was and who I wanted to be and what I wanted to do.”

No longer surrounded by a loving family and Christian friends, Cathy wanted to be accepted with the college crowd. She started drinking, skipping classes, and having sex with her boyfriend. At first, she sensed a “heart-pounding, ‘this isn’t right’ feeling” when she experimented with this new behavior. Over time, the feeling became very distant and faint. “But it was still there,” she says. “It was always there.”

During finals week at the end of her sophomore year, Cathy and her roommates went to breakfast together and quizzed each other for their upcoming exams. As they were sitting around a restaurant table, Cathy told her friends that she thought she was pregnant. They responded, “Oh, Cathy, you say that every month. If you’re so scared of being pregnant, then stop having sex.”

One of the girls said that she had an extra pregnancy testing kit at the house, and later that day Cathy took the test. “It showed two pink lines, just as clear as a bell,” she says.

Why would God let me get pregnant? she asked herself.

Facing her parents

When Cathy pulled into her parents’ driveway that day, she wondered if they would reject her for getting pregnant. She looked for stacked boxes on the front porch, filled with all of her earthly possessions. But there were none.

“Mom and Dad walked out the front door and just grabbed me and hugged me and started crying,” she says. “It really felt like the prodigal returning. They didn’t have anything but love for me.”

Cathy’s mother had sensed that Cathy’s infrequent visits were a way of distancing herself from the family. “She was hanging around a wilder crowd and doing only what I could imagine,” she says. “So when that phone call came that night Josh [Cathy’s dad] was shocked but I wasn’t.” 

Fortunately, Cathy’s parents had a couple of days to consider the situation before their daughter came home. They prayed and sought counsel. “People helped us see that her sin was no greater than ours, and that was a transformation.”

Cathy’s mom imagined how she would feel when her youngest daughter came home. “I didn’t know if she was going to bristle,” she says. But when Cathy walked through the door, “it was real easy to put our arms around her and cry a little bit, and sit down and talk.”

Cathy’s parents told her that they would continue to love her and support her emotionally and spiritually. “But,” they said, “you are going to have to accept the physical and financial consequences of your choices.”

“We believed with all of our hearts that God wanted Cathy to be reconciled with Him and with us,” Cathy’s mom says, “And part of that was her assuming all of the consequences and us not taking them for her.”

As Cathy visited with her parents, she began to understand what her future as a single mom might look like. “We’re not going to be a babysitter so you can finish school,” her parents said. “We’ll continue paying for college, but we won’t give you any other money.”

Cathy thought it was unfair that God would allow her to suffer the consequences for her lifestyle while many of her friends would not suffer similar consequences. “I wasn’t going to be able to drink with them,” she says. “We couldn’t all sit on the front porch and smoke cigarettes anymore because I was pregnant.” 

And Cathy had no idea how she could raise a child alone.

Trusting God

As she considered her options with her parents, Cathy’s mother asked, “Have you considered adoption?”

Cathy’s best friend had been adopted and told her that she did not feel adopted—that her adopted parents were her parents. Cathy’s mother knew an adoption attorney, and she agreed to see him.  

After visiting with the attorney, Cathy decided that adoption would be the best decision for her. The attorney advised that she cut off contact with the baby’s father and move away. Heeding his advice, Cathy withdrew from college when she was about three months pregnant. She told her boyfriend that she was going to put the baby up for adoption. “I don’t think we’ll ever see one another again,” she said.

She moved in with her sister, and began working at a department store near the apartment. During this time she grew closer to her mom and dad. “She needed us,” her mother says, “because she didn’t have anyone else to help her walk through this.” Every day during Cathy’s pregnancy provided new opportunities for the entire family to trust God.

While living with her sister, Cathy would often put her hands on her stomach and cry out to God. “I remember being totally broken,” she says. “I remember reading a lot of Psalms about David feeling defeated and his enemies that triumphed over him and asking God for help.”

Baby Joshua

Some friends knew of a couple living in another state who desperately wanted to adopt a child. This couple invited Cathy to visit their home for a week. “I was able to be a fly on the wall and see how they did family life,” Cathy says. “While I was in their home, I told them that I wanted them to be my son’s adoptive parents.”

The couple asked Cathy to help them choose a biblical name for the baby, and Joshua was an option. “I liked that,” Cathy says, “because Joshua is my dad’s name.” 

When she told her dad that the baby would be named after him, he just bit his bottom lip and nodded.

Her dad was in the delivery room for his namesake’s birth, along with Cathy’s mom, sister, and the adoptive parents. The adoptive father cut the umbilical cord and handed the baby to Cathy.

A few days later, when Cathy and Joshua were alone in the hospital room, she cradled her son in her arms. “I love you,” she whispered into his ear. “That’s why I’m doing this.” 

Lessons learned

Cathy is grateful for the lessons God taught her through her pregnancy. “Had I not gotten pregnant,” she says, “I don’t know what would have happened with the relationship with my family … Satan meant to destroy me.”

Although her parents forgave her, it was hard for Cathy to forgive herself. From time to time she still recalls specific memories of hurtful conversations that she had with her mom and dad. “It’s appalling that I could have said those things and could have acted that way.”

The invisible wall that once existed between Cathy and her parents has been shattered. “I started to understand the environment that they had tried to put me in to keep me safe,” Cathy says. Today she realizes what her parents had wanted for her.

“I had to go out and face the consequences,” she says, “to understand why you follow God’s rules. Not because He wants to keep you from having fun but because He wants to protect you from things that were not meant for you.”

Related articles
Mom, I'm Pregnant by Leslie Barner
The Stuff Dreams Are Broken Over by Scott Williams
Beyond Abstinence by Dennis and Barbara Rainey
Let Them Come Home by Abraham Piper

Related resources
Surprise Child, by Leslie Leyland Fields
Adoption Journey (starter pack)
Successful Single Parenting, by Gary Richmond
“The Adoption Option” FamilyLife Today audio series


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Showing 1 to 10 of 13   First | Prev | 1 2 | Next | Last 
Anonymous @ 7/21/2009 2:29:39 PM 
Editor's Note: To the grandmother in the UK, I was very sorry to read your statement, "The UK adoption system is dreadful." Do you know about FamilyLife's ministry to orphans, Hope for Orphans? I think you would be encouraged if you visited its website: www.hopefororphans.org.
Anonymous @ 7/16/2009 2:07:35 PM 
As a Grandmother I woud have been heartbroken if my daughters had given any of their childen up for adoption. The UK adoption system is dreadful. Children spend months, even years with foster parents, before going to prospective adoptive parents. By then it is very often too for good attachment to take place and the failure rate is very high.
Anonymous @ 7/9/2009 3:57:45 PM 
What a powerful article. It brought tears to my eyes because I placed a child for adoption 20 years ago. Last year in God's infinite grace and wisdom I was reunited with him. He has turned out well and has a healthy relationship with my current husband and myself as well as our sons. His parents are exactly what God had in mind when I chose to "live my own way" despite the way I was raised. I am forever grateful to the God we serve for giving me beauty for ashes.
Anonymous @ 7/9/2009 10:57:38 AM 
Thank you for this wonderfully written article. I too would agree that putting a child up for adoption is certainly NOT "sweeping it under the rug". It is a heart-wrenching, painful situation for the birth mother and for those who love her. It is something best understood when you have been impacted by it personally. Praise God for the courage of these young mothers (especially) who chose NOT to cover their sin by having an abortion! Praise God for their courage to be nurturers of life and not life-takers. Praise God for their abiltiy to see these children as gifts from God who need to be loved and cared for, either by raising them themselves or giving them up for adoption. God honors them and brings beauty from ashes!
Anonymous @ 7/7/2009 9:34:04 PM 
Wow. I also do not believe that adoption is "sweeping it under the rug." My husband and I are experiencing infertility and feel God leading us to adoption. Adoption is such a beautiful picture of the gospel, our adoption as children of God. Blessings to you, Cathy, also.
Anonymous @ 7/6/2009 7:50:58 PM 
I can personally relate to this story in so many ways! I was in seminary and doing everything right when I found out I was pregnant. I had considered abortion but cancelled my appointment just hours before. The way my parents welcomed me back home was the first time I really understood forgiveness and unconditional love! I was blessed to go to a Christian crisis pergnancy center and received councelling. But even now, 11 years later and having contact with the adoptive parents, I still cry as I remember that bittersweet pain and joy of holding that baby girl in the hospital whispering "I love you that's why I"m doing this". Makes me understand how painful it was for God to give up His perfect Son for us sinners. But I"m thankful how God has blessed me with a wonderful husband of 10 years and 3 awesome kids of my own since I obeyed Him.
Anonymous @ 7/6/2009 1:32:56 PM 
This is such an amazing story! I became a mother at the young age of 14. I decided to keep my daughter and am thankful I did. However, knowing now what I didn't know then...I believe adoption is the best option. Abortion is just a quick fix to a current situation. The effects from an abortion are lifelong and it leaves the young woman left with a lot of emotional pain. I also believe that when we choose abortion, we hinder God's plan. My daughter endured life struggles with me and it was a rough road for both of us. I am blessed that Jesus has given us the abilities to overcome those obstacles. And even more thankful that He put people in my path that helped and encouraged me to walk with Him and to raise my daughter with Christ in the middle of all the chaos. The broken pieces of my past and my teenage pregnancy have been made into this wonderful masterpiece. Jesus has taken it all and worked it into His plan for my life. I now speak to teenage girls at schools about the dangers in p
Anonymous @ 7/6/2009 1:20:45 PM 
Thank you for this story. I work with women who are considering adoption for their unborn baby. Often these women don't have the support of their families, which is why I found Cathy's story an amazing testament of not only what Cathy had to learn from God, but also that her parents had to learn how to love unconditionally without “fixing” everything, & with intent for the greater good, much like God does for each of us. Adoption is an example of how God works all things out for good, taking sin & making it a blessing & chance to grow closer to Him & bring Him glory. I pray that adoption be viewed as a truly responsible choice and not a cop-out. This baby's life is blameless & Cathy chose to face her consequences without potentially passing those consequences on to her son. Praise God for laying adoption on Cathy's heart & for Cathy's courage to allow God's will in her life. Baby Joshua comes from strong roots indeed!
Anonymous @ 7/6/2009 8:56:33 AM 
Our lives have been blessed by two children that we adopted and in both cases the young women who chose adoption made that choice because the bith fathers had issues with drugs and anger and violence. The future they would have faced, birth mother and child, could have been life threatening had they chose parenting over adoption. We have an open adoption and have been amazed how God has had his hand in this from the beginning.
Anonymous @ 7/6/2009 8:33:02 AM 
Wow! I need to say something about the comment that suggests adoption is "sweeping it under the rug." Believe me when I say the consequences of sin did not go away for Cathy. She will continue to experience the loss of her child for a long time to come. Giving your child up for adoption is agony. It is something you do out of a deep, deep love for your baby because you're not ready to give what is needed. The sacrifice Cathy made shows just how much she loved her child - that she was willing to put the needs of her child above her own selfish desire to keep her baby. Blessings to you Cathy.
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