How I came to farewell my denomination of 40 years. Or, How do we know that’s God’s voice?

Does God speak things to you? Even without having touched on this topic with each of them, I’d wager I have friends at every point along that spectrum. 

Some who might say, “Dude (people my age are, after all, GenXers), if you think God is specifically speaking to you outside of the Bible, welcome to heresy.”

Others who talk about hearing God about as clearly and specifically as one could possibly imagine and certainly beyond what most experience.

You might reside at one of those ends or somewhere in between. I’m not today writing to convince you of anything. 

As a college student thirty years ago, I discovered that spectrum along with the fact that some people seemed to have “more” of God than I did. So I wanted it––Him––too. [It’d be immaterial for my purposes here to get into what I think was good or bad about all that was going on there; for now the point is just the story.]

One night, in a long session of earnest seeking and prayer, God spoke. He told me something about my future. Something good that was going to happen to me. And the reason I was being told ahead of time was so that I wouldn’t struggle with pride when it happened. 

Sure enough, the next day, it happened. 

Just not to me. It happened for somebody else.

Not purposely and certainly not knowingly, I’d stepped out in true faith and sincerely believed something my God had told me all while imagining the entire thing. 

At least I’d been smart enough (“you mean faithless enough” the Enemy would long taunt) to keep one foot in reality and make a pre-arrangement with God:

“IF…if for some reason this doesn’t come true? And it turns out this wasn’t You? I’ll meet you THERE where I sit on THAT marble ledge to wait for the cafeteria to open. And we are going to deal.” 

I was sitting. And we dealt. 

As best I can remember, it took rather some time for shock to wear off and devastation to sink in. Hours, perhaps days, but the real effects were long-term. My newfound conviction that God’s voice must be out of my reach devastated my ability to engage the topic for the following five years. For fully ten years, it handicapped me significantly. Not until fifteen years after the fact––the difference between age 20 and age 35––could I honestly say that I no longer experienced its effects when talking or praying about hearing His voice. Fifteen more years are now passed, and well, it’s finally an old, almost humorous story overwritten by many others and hardly thought of. 

_____________

Earlier this year I watched a video put out by the president of the denomination I’ve worked in for two decades and otherwise been a part of for four. He announced a celebratory demolition event at the denomination’s new national office property. 

And the Lord said to my spirit: “You’re going to be at that.” 

That’s odd. Really? I wonder why? That’s like… (checking map) 9 hours away.

But I pretty quickly jumped to Ohhh… hey! I’ll bet I could do that on the motorcycle! Might set a new record for myself…yes! I am going to run this by Tammy. 

And I began to plan my trip, operating out of a sort of a learned default that obeying even when not sure of the reasons is almost always preferable to skipping out because of doubts. I’d come a long way in 30 years. That old college-days wound was such a non-factor by now that it failed to cross my mind even in instances like this.

I did think a lot about the possible whys for such a trip, however, and while I really couldn’t say much for sure, what I began to say out loud to my wife and a few friends was, 

“I think… I’m going to say good-bye to my denomination.” 

Now while that wasn’t exactly a super logical statement, it was also not completely disconnected from a few certain things on the horizon that could have been construed as clouds. Six months earlier, I had filed an official complaint/report about a leader. There was a mediation process of sorts under way. There’d been an inquiry. But in no way did any of those present like some demise of the relationship was imminent. Perhaps some end lay beyond a bend in the road I could not see? I had no real ideas, but even if such an end was months off, I could easily appreciate how a loss like that would be best grieved properly.

Three days after the president’s video released, my denominational employment was terminated. Do we actually need reminders that His sovereignty is not limited by bends in the road? As if. 

But I wouldn’t experience the shock of the news for seven further days until the notice arrived via FedEx. No warning, hint, or discussion had preceded it. It contained one sentence of rationale. Nothing further has ever been added to that.

Clearly there was a lot more going on behind the scenes than I’d been privy to.

Suddenly, my good-bye trip had become über-pertinent.

A few asked why on earth I would consider even bothering with the situation any more––surely I was not still driving up there? But I figured that if the best I’d come up with was that this was good-bye, how could getting that irrevocably confirmed do anything but confirm my trip as well? 

I had to go. Fortunately, I did not take my motorcycle. (If you liked that sentence, take a moment to savor it, maybe print it out and stash it away, because you will never see it again.) I wasn’t in a good place, and driving a car was all I was going to be able to handle. The growing realizations about what people up the ladder must be believing about me… things that had never been explained to me… had left me the night before begging God for sleep for the fourth night in a row. 

Thankfully enough sleep came that by morning I felt I was okay to drive. IF the Psalms were playing. Anything else or nothing over the speakers left me rocking and jittery. But praise God, by Psalm 70 I had stabilized, and then had a car to myself for wonderful, wide hours of phone conversations. That night, at a childhood friend’s house, I slept in an unknown bed with an unknown pillow in a strange room of a strange house better than I’d slept in a week. Finally, tackling the final couple driving hours the next morning, I was back on the road to being myself again. 

_____________

At breakfast I was met by friends driving down just to be with me. When we arrived at the event together, I held back with hat, sunglasses, and covid mask, desperate to stay anonymous. While at the same time fighting to stave off wild imaginings about God engineering deliverance from our nightmare by sending some rescuer with more power than those who’d come against us. Foolishness.

I was there to say good-bye and nothing else. I took my moment alone in front of the demolition fence and reflected on my entire professional life. And felt nothing. Disappointing? Perhaps, but hardly surprising seeing as how I was standing in a parking lot I’d never been in looking at a building I’d never entered.

No catharsis, no tears, no word from above, no sense about the future, no anger, no self-pity. Silence.

“Well, it was really nice seeing you, Dann. We’re so glad we came to eat breakfast with you. We’re going to take off, now. You?”

“Actually, you guys go ahead. I’m going to find a spot at the edge of the parking lot for one more listen in case I’m still going to hear why He sent me up here. Thank you guys so much for coming. I will remember it for the rest of my life.”

I walked to the back of the parking lot and headed to a light pole where it looked like maybe I could sit down. 

Even before I’d gotten to it, He started in:

What if it wasn’t Me who told you to drive up here? What if it was just your imagination?

Yeah, and? I replied.

Oh, my. 

Apparently 2021 is irrelevant even in 2021, then?

Thirty years back, now, sitting there in my mind, even as my physical body is sitting here in the present. I already know his next question––and simultaneously my next answer.

How would you be?

I’d be fine. I’d be… totally fine…

BOOM.

See how far you’ve come? You’ve grown to absolutely know My voice. Along with knowing that it doesn’t matter about reaching 100% certainty about every thing every time, as that is not to be expected. It threatens nothing.

_____________

It truly did not matter to me if “You’re going to be at that” had turned out to be me––though I didn’t believe that––instead of Him. Without thinking much about it, I’d just acted anyway, allowing Him to direct from there. Neither my own faith/worthiness or his faithfulness/worthiness were connected to it like they had so very much been in my youthful episode. So what if I’d gotten this one wrong? I’d done the best I could with the spiritual discernment I possess at this time, and I did what I thought was obeying. If it turned out not to be? Okay, fine.  

The King had just reminded me that I have obeyed his voice over and over again in the fifteen years since my great wound concerning it healed over. Not to mention those times in the previous 15 where I’d stumbled through learning to navigate intimacy and abiding while still unresolved. 

And here, now––during the trials of 2021––I have yet to tell most people some of the ways He has at times spoken. Some of the most spectacular ways of my entire life. 

He has seen me. He knows it all. 

And He cares so much for me that he brought me nine hours from home to say something totally off topic that He declared was the topic. To sit me on a piece of hot concrete that would symbolize a piece of cold marble from thirty years earlier and grant one final healing touch to an old wound I hadn’t even realized could still use it. 

He hadn’t abandoned me then or ever. And isn’t it something how even our failures become integral pieces of how He fashions us into the child He is making us? Every part of me…100% redeemable.

I’d have driven nine hundred hours to be given a message like that.

I looked up and saw my car across the emptying parking lot. 

It was time to go home. 

Trust is Here. Though Strain Remains.

My heart broke for my kids today.

Usually they get more of an “Oh, you’re fine. Such is life!” kind of reaction from me.

But not this. And about this, until now, for some inexplicable reason, I’ve had optimism. But that ended today. My brain could have and should have told my heart weeks ago: it’s just not possible for this to work out. But I hoped for a miracle.

For their sakes.

Today, and it certainly felt an odd thing for me, I quit hoping for them and started crying for them.


A high school junior, an eighth grader, and a fifth, third, and first grader, not to mention a we-have-no-idea grader, will begin school this month in the US of A. And today I admitted to myself for the first time: they won’t be starting the year in the same schools they’ll finish. In other words, instead of one big transition, they’ll have two.

It hurts. In that intimately individualized way other parents will understand.

Don’t get me wrong—there is good news in our life: We’ll be moving into a temporary house at the end of this week and finally, after a month of wandering, be getting our own space. And we have a beautiful vehicle. It was waiting for us when we landed, and we’ll have soon put over 4000 miles on it. And my job search is going fine. Normally. But, unfortunately for my kids, “normal” in the hiring process means time. Procedures and interviews. Phone calls and visits and time.

Did I mention time?

“Lord, we’re grateful for the housing. Thank you. We’re amazed at your provision of an 8-passenger vehicle. We’re thankful for health and fun and families and swimming pools, and cash gifts that have kept us eating at restaurants during endless unpacking and repacking and moving and transitioning. But, Lord, our kids. They’re children, and their understanding is so limited. You know we agonized this past year over them more than anything. You know I would give up the rest if I could exchange it for landing in our new home before they start school.

“Haven’t they known enough trauma, Lord?

“Haven’t we all known enough difficult transition? [This is our fourth move in five years.] Haven’t we gone through enough meltdowns in this month of no routines? [Everett’s latest, though fewer and further between, usually require both of us to get him through them.]

“The adopted 3 are living at the end of their tethers. 

“Because of them… so are the rest of us.”

So it breaks my heart now to have to tell all my kids: “We won’t land before you start school. I am so, so sorry.”

It’s hard to describe just how strongly I wish I didn’t have to.

Sure, for us adults I’m not exactly yearning for yet another difficult assignment, either. Nor would we be excited for any more more attack or resistance or oppression from the enemy. But I’d gladly accept the former or fight the latter if it could mean saving our kids.

But where was I when God laid the foundations of the world?

I am small, and the slice of reality I see is small.

So, just as no one will blame me for not understanding why my children have to suffer, neither is it possible for me to curse God and die. I can’t see what he sees; I don’t know what he knows.

Once again at the end of another rope, we find the only choice is trust. I’m choosing it consciously and quite apart from what I see coming. For when I succeed in looking higher than my fear and and objections and the humorous misapprehension that my ideas are superior, this truth always awaits me: trust doesn’t require “my approval.”

Trust is here. Though strain remains.

Guangzhou Gauche

He sucked on and chewed at the lid of that wide-mouth bottle the rest of the day.

He couldn’t help it.

We finally we quit telling him not to when we realized he couldn’t help it. By that time he’d cleaned it cleaner than new, anyway.

I suppose he was meeting some deep, never-met need. Probably never got to chew or suck on things as a baby. I imagine he had no idea what he was chewing on today.

One can only hope deep-level healing was going on as well.

‘Cause today was rough.

In hindsight, I would totally have said “forget them” about the two minutes.

He’d already fulfilled 13 out of 15, and his heart was in a fine place. This “consequence” of walking hand-in-hand together with me was simply the result of ignoring a simple “no” minutes earlier in the White Swan Hotel. A little concrete demonstration of the contrast between freedom and not-freedom really helps him listen better the next time.

So, holding hands, we walked the crowded Sunday streets of Shamian Island, the cool corner of Guangzhou where the adoption world once ruled (in the days before the foreign embassies pulled out). It’s full of non-Chinese architecture and peaceful walking streets and Western restaurants and feels unlike anywhere else we’ve been in China. We have fond memories from there from our first adoption, and had fun today re-enacting some of those pictures from 2008.

Although it isn’t the totally oddest of sights because of Everett’s small size, certain people do notice and do a double-take at the sight of a foreign man holding the hand of a Chinese boy that big out in public. I especially noticed the prolonged glance of what looked to be a young European guy with his camera, and thought to myself:

I wonder what that guy’s thinking. I’ve seen plenty of white men myself who traveled to Asia for nothing but unsavory reasons…

But hey, what matters is our son, and we’ve got to do what’s best for him. Who cares what strangers think (a mindset that in some situations doesn’t come as easily to me as it does to Tammy), right?

It must have been 11 or 12 minutes into our fifteen when, while handing back Tammy her camera, I inadvertently dropped Everett’s hand. I realized it only afterwards, at which point I grabbed his hand back with a loud, “Whoops! My bad—I dropped your hand! Two more minutes.”

Maybe my suddenness or my loudness in laughing at myself made him think I was angry?

Maybe I triggered some sort of flashback?

Maybe he got frightened by being taken so suddenly from Tammy’s side?

Possibly it was only him missing home and his normal schedule.

We wish we knew.

[We only learned later that what was bothering him the most was all the attention and picture-taking being focused on someone else instead of him. He’s outrageously self-centered and insecure.]

But his descent started from that moment.

I tried to coach him through it:

“Everett, you can do this.

“It’s only 2 more minutes.

“Don’t cry. Really. No one is angry. Your time is just about finished. You can control yourself, you can do it!”

The encouragement got stronger because angry tears were starting to spurt.

We sat down on a concrete edging around plants. Street musicians played nearby, drowning out his sounds. Good.

But lots of people were all around, and some began to notice this gathering storm. There was no mistaking their concerned looks. Bad.

“C’mon, buddy. You can do this. You’re not in trouble. Daddy’s not mad. No one’s mad.” By now, Tammy was also sitting right next to him, on his other side.

“Dann, we’re going to need to get him out of here. There are a lot of people looking at him already. He’s getting louder.”

The crying had become screeching.

“You can do this, Everett. You can control yourself. I believe in you—you’ve come so far. Look around at all the people. You don’t want them looking at you. You don’t want me to have to carry you out of here like an infant, and I don’t want to, either. I don’t want you to be embarrassed. You can do it. We love you.

(We were actually probably saying “we love you” at an almost-every-other sentence rate, as we do in these situations, because that’s what he doubts the most, especially in trauma.)

But it was too late already. Angry growling, clenched fists. Grabbing his pants, his skin. Pinching, pulling, yanking. I opened his right fist and patted his palm gently, hanging onto hope we could still talk him down. But when his left fist broke free of Tammy and clobbered the side of his face, I knew the time for talking was past. I picked him up and held him like I still do my young daughters, and began to walk past the crowd. I could see that the first side street ahead was probably farther than I could carry him, so I scanned for any possible quiet nooks we could duck into along the way. He fought to break his wrists free of my grasp but couldn’t, which only increased his protests. A tiny turn-off to our left proved to be an immediate dead-end. Then a promising abandoned porch area fronting an unused building fizzled when there were people all around it.

We passed every pocket of gawkers and finally reached the side street. I turned left, only to be discouraged at the crowds hardly being any smaller. These people all, too, now turned to look at us. The screeching had become wailing. I stood Everett on his feet near the side of a building, sheltered a bit on one side by a Corinthian pillar. It was by no means the private space I’d been looking for, but nor could I carry him any farther without a break.

I got down to his level, made some eye-contact, and continued my encouragement. I told him it was at least a little bit better of a place than we’d been…but it didn’t matter. The coaster had crested the hill and there would be no slowing it. The screaming turned feral and his eyes held mine and spat hatred. I tried to give him back a tiny measure of his dignity, even control, and let go of his wrists, patting his upper arms instead. Before I could react, multiple blows rained like lightning on his head. So I re-locked one wrist and blocked the path of the other. Only to have him whale the concrete pillar with bare knuckles. So I took both wrists and kept up my verbal coaching and encouragement, though by this point (as always) I was into English only, because what’s registering at a point like this is only (we’ve surmised) the sound of a soothing voice.

Then, Smash!

His head full-speed sideways into concrete. 

Now I had to get him away from the wall; but I didn’t attempt to hold wrists and head, and what I knew would soon become legs, all in a standing position. I just held him in a sort of light hug with one arm and patted his head with the other, which, oddly, he permitted, though his you-think-that-was-loud-I’ve-got-louder! screaming now received top concentration.

And I had a sort of out-of-body experience. 

In my periphery were the stopping, staring, silhouetted people. Watching. Wondering. There was the screaming Chinese teenager, or pre-teen. Screaming. And there was me. White guy in shorts and a blue shirt getting wet with slobber. Standing. Hugging. Patting. Chewing a piece of gum rapid-fire and staring inscrutably into space.

For whatever reason, I never did look around to estimate just how many people were watching us.

I just stared ahead and had odd thoughts:

Is this really my life?

I am really standing here doing this, aren’t I? 

Am I really standing here doing this?

I would have thought that if ever I were told that I would be standing on a crowded street in China doing this I’d feel like dying, hating every second of it. 

Odd that I don’t

Not that I mean I’m liking standing here doing this—far from that—but it’s closer to weird” and further from “absolutely hateful” than I would have guessedI simply know: this is what he needs, so that means I equally know: I don’t have any choice but to stand here and take it, come what may

And, as far as these onlookers I’m choosing not to look at, their stares are probably just soooo beyond the kinds of things that would normally make one consider “what people will think” that it’s almost unexpectedly easy to deal with.

Am I still standing here doing this? Wow, I’m really chewing this gum hard, aren’t I? 

The young European guy walked by again, even though we were a block and a half from the first spot:

“Is he OK?”

“Well, no, actually he’s not. Recently adopted, you know. But he’ll be okay.”

The people watching had grown to be too many again. Plus I’d regained my strength.

“Everett, we’re going to walk. We’re going to try to find a place where there are less people and give you a chance to calm yourself. Let’s go.”

We walked hands-in-hands, and up towards the end of the street there was a spot that was less crowded than any spots had been up until that point (keep in mind this is a relative statement, an opinion colored by many years of living in China). We sat down on more concrete edging around plants. The screaming de-escalated somewhat, though I still couldn’t let him have his hands.

That European guy again!

“It really just doesn’t look right, what’s going on here. I mean, what’s the matter with him?”

I knew where he was coming from. He’s from a culture where people step in when a stranger is in trouble. That’s my culture, too. I wasn’t upset with the guy.

“Really, I know it looks bad, but he’s been my son only for a few months, and this is actually not that abnormal a thing for a kid who has been institutionalized for many years. It’s just that it usually happens at home. He will get through it.”

“But what are you doing to him? Why is he crying so much?” This question came not from the European, but from a Chinese girlfriend/translator who had suddenly materialized. He must have gone to get her so she could quiz Everett, though none of them could have possibly known what I did: Everett wouldn’t be speaking to anyone. I spoke to her instead. In Chinese. I repeated the same things I’d already said. Assured her that he would be alright. Their concerned looks did not go away, and it became obvious just how much of their concern was not only for Everett, but about me.

I patiently repeated myself again, adding even more details I hoped would help them. The most important thing, I insisted, was for people to not stand around looking at us. If they left, we could get on with getting finished. They eventually felt comfortable enough to leave us (or go off and get the police, that is, which I wouldn’t realize until later). But they had no sooner gone than a new crowd had formed off to the other side.

“So what’s with him?” asked some guy who looked to be about twenty.

“You know, I just finished telling someone else the answer to that very question, and it’s not like I can sit here all day and explain it over and over to everyone who asks. This boy has recently been adopted into our family; he lived for years in an institution; he cannot…” I decided I needed to widen my audience: I raised my voice and turned my body so I could be heard not only by the questioner’s crowd, but the other little crowd off to his right, and the largest crowd of all directly behind me.

“He cannot finish crying as long as all of you people stand here watching him! Please, move on and go about your own business. I know what I am doing. This is not unusual, it’s happened many times. He is my son.

“Do you have some proof of that?” Same kid.

Listen, you little college brat, in spite of your commendable level of valor and nobility here, what you need to do is take a long walk off a short pier.

What I actually said (after laughing at him) was: “Of course, but I am in no need of proving anything to you. This is my son. If you want, walk on up ahead and ask the foreign lady with five other kids who I am and what we are doing. But please stop standing here watching us! All of you! He will be OK.”

Another deeply concerned face had bravely crossed the open space from mob to me and was now handing Everett a tissue. She asked him if he was okay, and I half-noticed her looking concernedly at me. She got my full attention when she reached over and actually began patting him in comfort:

“Um! Please do not touch him!”

“People! I know what is going on here,” I continued to the crowds again. “I understand what is happening with him. All of you do not! He is not like you—you have a mom and a dad at home who took care of you while you grew up. He didn’t. He grew up in an orphanage, and it is not easy for those kinds of kids, especially adopted at this age, to enter a family and learn to receive love. He’s healing from a lot of past hurts. I’ll tell you what: if you care about kids so much, go to the local orphanage here and adopt one yourself!”

At this, the crowd dispersed.

Jesus-like, almost. Jesus: the master of I-can-hardly-stop-from-smiling-just-telling-you-how-great-they-were perfect responses…And me: the slobbery-front shirt, gum-chewing, don’t-like-people-looking-at-me-and-this-ain’t-fun regular Dad

Not much of a comparison. And, okay, its not like everyone totally dispersed in the blink of an eye, but still…How had this great response just come from me? 

It was Jesus in me. I don’t have that kind of wherewithal to think of such things on my feet; I’m not that guy who speaks first for justice; I’m the furthest thing from the, as they say, “mama bear” type. When I come up with great responses, it’s usually long after the altercation is over. Days after, sometimes. But this hadn’t been a matter of me scheming how to win an argument, or make myself look good (I’ve hardly been in a less enviable predicament in my life!), or craft some witty comeback. I’d simply risen to the aid of the defenseless. This was a boy who didn’t need any more junk from any more people who didn’t know him worth diddly, and in whose “care” he was receiving zero real love.

And, lo and behold… now he was done.

GZ after

The tantrum was over. We even took a picture together to commemorate finishing up still in one piece.

But it was over. All that was left now was for us to slowly walk back toward family (first stopping to restart my whole defense all over again and charm/reassure/talk faster than the two police officers who intercepted us at the end of the road) and for Everett collapse into mom’s arms.

Well, that and sucking on that bottle lid for the next hours.

“Mom?” He got Tammy’s attention maybe twenty minutes later: “Thank you.” (She still gets most of his lovin’ for the most part, but it’s a heavy, heavy burden she bears.)

“Thanks for what, sweetie?”

“For giving me a chance.”

Profound.

For that’s what we’ve given him, isn’t it.

Please, though, please don’t tell us how great we are. Don’t be impressed with us. Please don’t think we’ve gone out and done something great, ‘cause we haven’t. Or even that we do great all the time with him. ‘Cause we don’t.

I’m not even going to tell you that adopting is for everyone, cause it isn’t.

But if you simply must do something… pray for us. This very minute. And for him. And—I suppose—you could go out and find and give someone else that needs it… a chance.

 

 

GZ shots

A happier time a few days prior: though screaming like a stuck pig for shots a month ago in Thailand, this time with Dad’s coaching he took ’em (three in a row) like a man.