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Mom Win Wednesday: Sara Gabbard

5 / 2 / 185 / 1 / 18

Katie

In honor of National Foster Care Month, I am so excited to introduce Sara Gabbard to our Texting the Truth community today. Welcome, Sara!

Sara

Thanks, Katie. I’m excited to have the opportunity to share today!

Katie

Can you tell us a little about your family and this adorable picture of you all?

Sara

This photo was taken on a recent family vacation. My husband and I have three biological children. Our daughter is 7 and our twin sons are 5. About a year ago, we also welcomed a baby boy into our home through foster care.

Katie

How did you sense God was leading you to foster care?

Sara

A dear friend of mine from college lost a baby boy in a tragic car accident caused by a distracted driver. Years after that we got to have front row seats as she and her husband adopted a beautiful baby girl that she had been dreaming of in detail for years. It was truly meant to be in every way. This experience made me start praying dangerous prayers. Use me God. What is my purpose? What am I supposed to do? How can I do “big things” while I’m raising these three children of ours (who were all under the age of 6 at the time ?)?

God kept putting foster care in front of us. We were suddenly surrounded by all of these amazing foster parents and foster to adoptive parents. We would try a new church on Sunday and the sermon would be about foster care or a related topic, then we would go to another church and it would happen again. After a tragic child abuse story was on the news, my aunt said she thought my husband and I would make excellent foster parents. God wouldn’t leave us alone. So we went to an informational meeting and decided to start our certification process. About 7 months after our first class, we were placed with a beautiful 8 week old baby boy who has changed our entire family for the better.

Katie

I love hearing about how God was orchestrating so many details in your life and introducing you to specific people along the way! I can definitely also relate to feeling like God wouldn’t leave me about something specific He was leading me to.? Now that you have begun this journey of foster care, what have you been learning through the experience?

Sara

I think there are two major lessons we have learned in our first year as foster parents. The first was a realization of how hard it was to trust God in all of this. I am a doer, a fixer, a get it done kind of girl and a self-professed control freak. Foster care will make you acutely aware of how little control you have and how much you need to rely on God to protect this little one in your care. All we can control is how well we love him. We can’t control the magistrates, the biological parents, the case workers or the prosecutors. All we can do is love him well.

The second lesson is the stark realization that the only part of the foster care system that is about the kids is the work we as foster parents do. Caseworkers work to get resources and treatment for biological parents to help them improve themselves so they are fit to parent. Court dates are about the progress parents have or have not made and adjustments to the things they need to do to become safe. This part of the process has been disheartening and frustrating. However, it has also made me want to work even harder as an individual foster parent and with non-profits like Hope’s Closet, that support us locally in the Cincinnati area to advocate for children in foster care as a whole.

Katie

Do you have any advice for other foster moms in the trenches with you?

Sara

The advice I try to continually give myself is to always lead with grace. When dealing with overworked and overwhelmed case workers, lead with grace. When dealing with challenging moments with biological parents, lead with grace. When questioning my ability to parent, give myself grace. Grace covers a multitude of sin, right?

Katie

Amen and amen!? That is advice I always need to hear, too, because it truly applies in so many situations!!

Sara

The other thing that has been critical for us was to find community.  We have found that the support of other good foster parents and our own family has been essential in our first year of foster parenting. Having friends who can answer questions because they have been where you are is so amazing. And I need to give so much credit to our families. They did not receive this call to foster care that we did but they have jumped in and love this little guy with the same intensity that they have loved the ones we birthed.

Katie

Strong support is so important! Are there ways that other families can support foster families like yours? I’m always looking for suggestions about how my family can be involved!

Sara

For those families you know personally who foster, treat their new placements like a new baby regardless of age. Make them dinner in that first week when things are crazy. Ask if there are physical needs you can help with like what shampoo or soap the child is accustomed to using. Give grace for challenging behaviors. There is so much trauma that many children go through before coming into foster care and then being placed into a stranger’s home is another trauma.

Find out if there is a non-profit in your area that supports foster children and foster families. Reach out to them to find out their needs. Pray for foster families, for children in foster care, and for their biological parents to be restored. Regardless of what a child endures before coming into care, nearly every child loves their parents and it’s a huge win when a child can safely go home.

Katie

Thank you for sharing your journey and your heart with us today, Sara. I am so encouraged to hear about how God has been at work in you and your family and how we all can get involved in supporting children in our area!

 

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Our Easter Box Tradition

3 / 19 / 183 / 21 / 18

Six years ago, I started a simple little Easter tradition at our house. My oldest son had just turned two and I was very pregnant (and nauseous!? and exhausted!?) with my second. I felt like everywhere I turned, I was hearing and reading about other people’s amazingly creative and artistically beautiful plans to teach their kids about Easter.

I was intimidated by those ideas, didn’t think I had the energy or ability to pull them off, and wasn’t convinced my son would even understand the significance of Easter anyway.? So, I made up my own super simple and easy project.

I picked a different short story to read from a children’s Bible every day during the week leading up to Easter. After reading, I put a little object to represent that story into a plain old plastic bin. I left the bin out where my son could reach it. He looked through, played with, and talked about the objects whenever he wanted throughout the week. We called this our Easter Box.

Over the years, we’ve carried on our Easter Box tradition, although it hasn’t looked exactly the same every time. Last year I had all four of our kids decorate a little cardboard box to store our items in. Some years, we’ve missed a few days (or even the whole week!) because … well, life happens.? Now that my oldest two kids know how to read, we can add a few verses of Scripture after reading the children’s Bible story version. The depth of understanding and conversation has changed as my kids have grown. But the simplicity and flexibility of the process has stayed the same.

Here are the stories and objects we’ve typically used, along with the Scripture references. I have found I like to read best from the Beginner’s Bible, because the stories are short and straightforward for my young kids.

  • Palm Sunday

Story: The Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem (Mark 11:1-11, Beginner’s Bible pg. 427-432)

Object: a palm leaf (either real or paper)

So far, my kids have always come home from Sunday School with some kind of palm leaf, which makes for a nice and easy start to our Easter Box? … and also leads to lots of parades and shouting of “Hosanna” throughout our house during the week leading up to Easter!?

  • Monday Story: Washing the Disciples Feet (John 13:1-15, Beginner’s Bible pg. 437-439)

Object: a washcloth

In the toddler stage, especially, each of my kids have loved pretending to wash Mommy and Daddy’s feet!

  • Tuesday Story: Passover/Last Supper (Luke 22:7-20, Beginner’s Bible pg. 442-445)

Object: a piece of toy bread

  • Wednesday Story: Judas’ Betrayal (Mark 14:10-11 & 43-46, Beginner’s Bible pg. 446)

Object: a quarter to represent the 30 pieces of silver

This part of the story totally went over my kids’ heads for years. They just had fun playing with a shiny coin. (Supervised to avoid any potential choking hazard.?) But, after years of just introducing this story, now my oldest son at least can understand some of what that betrayal really meant.

  • Thursday Story: Jesus’ Arrest and Crown of Thorns (John 18:12 & 19:1-3, Beginner’s Bible pg. 447-449)

Object: a tiny branch from one of our bushes with little prickles (nothing too sharp)

  • Friday Story: Crucifixion (Mark 15:33-39, Beginner’s Bible pg. 450-452)

Object: a cross made of two craft sticks

  • Saturday Story: Burial (Mark 15:42-47, Beginner’s Bible pg. 453)

Object: a rock to represent the stone in front of the tomb

  • Easter Sunday

Story: Resurrection (Luke 24:1-12, Beginner’s Bible pg. 454-458)

Object: a picture that my kids colored in Sunday School

An easy item to put in the bin again for the end of the week.??

Our Easter Box has become a fun yearly tradition. My kids don’t understand everything yet, but I know that I am planting seeds in their hearts. And they are having fun playing while we do it! I’m eager to see God help them understand more and more about the meaning of the Resurrection in the years to come.

What simple ways do you try to plant seeds of faith in your children’s hearts about the Easter story?

?Katie

To read our original Easter post entitled, Unscrambling Easter: Teaching Kids the Importance without the Pressure, click here.

 

To read our original Easter post full of lots of Easter resources to help plant seeds about Jesus, click here.

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