When You've Wanted Children and It Hasn't Happened

Experiencing infertility grief and want to know how to pray? This episode explores the unseen sorrow of not having children and how to bring your rawest pain to God, drawing on Hannah's example. Discover that God sees your longing, even when others don't. Your infertility grief prayer is heard.
Key Takeaways
- Infertility and pregnancy loss are profound griefs, often invisible and isolating, especially in church communities. God sees this sorrow, even when others overlook it.
- Hannah's raw prayer in 1 Samuel demonstrates that God receives our unfiltered pain and longing, encouraging us to bring our unedited ache to Him.
- Your grief is never hidden from God; He meets you in your unseen sorrow whether your deepest longings are eventually met or not.
- Even when life brings joy through adoption, the grief of infertility or loss remains a part of your story and is acknowledged by God.
The journey to parenthood is often filled with anticipation, dreams, and profound love. But for many, this path is met with unexpected heartache: the deep, often silent, grief of infertility. This is a unique kind of sorrow, one that can feel isolating, especially within communities that naturally celebrate new life and growing families. In this episode of Daily Devotions for Busy Lives, we explore how God meets this profound ache, drawing parallels with Hannah's heartfelt prayer in the temple and assuring us that our sorrow is never hidden from Him.
The Invisible Grief of Longing
Some losses come with clear markers – a funeral, a shared community outpouring of sympathy. But the longing for a child that remains unmet is a grief that often carries no such rituals. It can be a quiet, persistent ache experienced by couples who spend years trying to conceive, or by individuals who face the devastating reality of recurrent pregnancy loss. This experience often brings a slow, painful realization that a desired life path may not unfold as imagined. The depth of this sorrow can be profound, yet it remains largely invisible to those around you.
Ironically, the church, a place often associated with comfort and community, can sometimes amplify these feelings of loneliness. While the church beautifully celebrates new life through baby dedications and announcements, it can struggle to offer the same depth of understanding and shared grieving for those whose journeys to parenthood are marked by infertility and loss. This can leave individuals feeling unheard and unseen in a space that should feel like home.
Bringing Your Rawest Prayers to God
Chelsea Patterson Sobolik, an author and guest on this episode, shares her personal journey of longing to be a mother. In her early twenties, a routine doctor’s visit revealed a rare condition that meant she would never be able to bear her own child. Navigating a world filled with pregnancy announcements and baby showers, Chelsea found a profound lack of language and understanding for her specific pain. Instead of turning away from God, she brought Him the unvarnished truth of her grief.
The Bible offers a powerful example of this raw honesty in the story of Hannah, found in 1 Samuel 1. Hannah yearned for a child, and when she finally prayed at the temple, her prayer was not a polished or composed plea. She wept with such deep emotion that Eli the priest mistook her distress for intoxication. However, while Eli misread her, God saw her completely. He understood the depth of her anguish, receiving a prayer too profound and raw for spoken words.
This biblical account serves as a profound invitation to us today. We don't need to present God with a perfectly tidy version of our grief, nor do we need to have achieved a sense of peace before approaching Him. You are invited to bring Him the unedited ache, the frustration, the envy that may arise when you hear of others' joyous news. Just as God received Hannah's unfiltered prayer, He receives yours, in all its rawness.
God Sees You in Your Sorrow
The ultimate truth is that what truly matters in our lives runs deeper than the fulfillment of specific desires, including the desire for children. While sometimes this longing is met through biological means or through paths like adoption, at other times, it may not unfold in the way we envisioned. Regardless of the outcome, God’s awareness of your journey is constant. He sees you in the quiet moments of the exam room, in the pews of the church, and in the vulnerable spaces of your heart. His gaze is fixed on a grief that the world might overlook, but He never does.
Pastor Bart Leger shares from his own family’s experience, including the stillbirth of his daughter’s first baby, and from years of counseling couples navigating the challenges of infertility. Chelsea’s story, though not medically resolved, found a new chapter of love and fulfillment through adoption, illustrating that deep love for an adopted child can coexist with the enduring ache of past longing. Her testimony, and Bart's reflection, underscores a vital message: you are seen, deeply and completely, by a God whose love transcends your circumstances.
Key Takeaways from This Episode:
- Understand that infertility and pregnancy loss are valid forms of grief, even when they are invisible to others.
- Learn from Hannah's example how to bring your most raw and unfiltered pain to God in prayer.
- Recognize the profound importance of being seen and known by God, regardless of whether your deepest longings are ultimately met.
Whether your journey leads to the child you've longed for or unfolds in unexpected ways, remember that your grief is never invisible to God. He sees you, He is near, and He offers His presence and comfort through it all.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How can I process the grief of infertility?
You can process infertility grief by acknowledging it as a real loss and bringing your raw, unedited pain to God, just as Hannah did. God sees and hears your deepest longings.
Is my longing for a child seen by God?
Yes, your longing for a child is seen by God, even when it feels invisible to the world around you. He acknowledges and receives the deepest aches of your heart.
How do I pray when I'm hurting deeply from infertility?
When hurting deeply, you can pray with raw honesty, bringing your unedited ache and even envy to God. He receives prayers that are too profound for words.
What does the Bible say about unanswered prayers for children?
The Bible, through stories like Hannah's in 1 Samuel, shows that God receives and understands prayers for children, even when they are accompanied by deep sorrow and are initially unanswered in the way expected.
Chelsea Patterson-Sabolik was adopted as
Bart Leger:a newborn, taken into a family at the very start of her life.
Bart Leger:Growing up in North Carolina, the thing she wanted more than
Bart Leger:almost anything was to one day be a mom herself. In her early
Bart Leger:20s, she went to a doctor expecting a manageable problem.
Bart Leger:Instead, she walked out with a diagnosis, a rare condition that
Bart Leger:meant she would never be able to bear a child of her own. Not
Bart Leger:later, not even with treatment. The one thing she'd always
Bart Leger:wanted was gone for good. She was a young woman in church
Bart Leger:circles where babies get dedicated and pregnancy
Bart Leger:announcements come out every few weeks. she found there's almost
Bart Leger:no language for the woman in the third row, whose body will never
Bart Leger:do that. She'd later titled the opening chapter of her book, The
Bart Leger:Silent Struggle. So before she did anything else, Chelsea faced
Bart Leger:a decision. The diagnosis was settled. The open question was
Bart Leger:what she'd do with God, the same God she'd been praying to for
Bart Leger:the very thing he had allowed to be taken away. We'll come back
Bart Leger:to what she decided and where it led her years later. But first,
Bart Leger:welcome to Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. I'm Bart Leger. If
Bart Leger:you've wanted children and it hasn't happened, I want you to
Bart Leger:know you're not alone. I don't know exactly how you feel, but I
Bart Leger:trust in the God who does. This one is close to my family. Our
Bart Leger:daughter's first baby was stillborn. But by God's grace,
Bart Leger:she went on to have other children. But I watched what
Bart Leger:that loss did, and I won't pretend a later joy erases an
Bart Leger:earlier grief. I've also spent years talking with couples who
Bart Leger:wanted children and found they couldn't have them naturally.
Bart Leger:And I've seen how lonely that unique grief can be and how few
Bart Leger:people know what to say to them. Here's what a lot of people live
Bart Leger:with and rarely say out loud. Couples who spent years trying
Bart Leger:for a child that never came. And women who've lost pregnancies
Bart Leger:without warning, sometimes more than once. Behind it is the slow
Bart Leger:realization that this part of life may not look the way you
Bart Leger:pictured. That's grief, even though no one died the way that
Bart Leger:the world could see, and the ache of it is mostly invisible
Bart Leger:to other people. Church, of all places, can be one of the
Bart Leger:loneliest rooms to feel it in because the church culture
Bart Leger:celebrates babies far more easily than it grieves with the
Bart Leger:ones who don't have them. The Bible doesn't look away from
Bart Leger:this grief. It gives it one of the rawest prayers in all of
Bart Leger:Scripture. Listen to 1 Samuel 1, verses 10-13. Hannah was in deep
Bart Leger:anguish, crying bitterly as she prayed to the Lord. And she made
Bart Leger:this vow, O Lord of heaven's armies, If you will look upon my
Bart Leger:sorrow and answer my prayer and give me a son, then I will give
Bart Leger:him back to you. He will be yours for his entire lifetime.
Bart Leger:And as a sign that he has been dedicated to the Lord, his hair
Bart Leger:will never be cut. As she was praying to the Lord, Eli watched
Bart Leger:her, seeing her lips moving but hearing no sound. He thought she
Bart Leger:had been drinking. Hannah wanted a child and couldn't have one,
Bart Leger:and year after year it broke her. When she finally brought it to
Bart Leger:God, she didn't tidy it up. She prayed with such a band and her
Bart Leger:lips moving and no sound coming out that Eli, the priest on duty,
Bart Leger:assumed she was drunk. He misread her completely. But God
Bart Leger:didn't. He saw what Eli missed and received a prayer too raw
Bart Leger:for words. You don't have to bring God a composed version of
Bart Leger:that grief or make peace with it first. You can bring him the
Bart Leger:unedited ache, even the envy you feel at the next pregnancy
Bart Leger:announcement. The prayer that comes out as tears instead of
Bart Leger:sentences is still one he receives, as he did Hannah's.
Bart Leger:And hold on to this. Whatever happens next. Sometimes the
Bart Leger:longing is met through birth or through a door like adoption you
Bart Leger:haven't even tried to open yet. But sometimes it isn't. At least
Bart Leger:not the way you pictured. Either way, God promises you this. He
Bart Leger:sees you. His eyes are on the grief the world walks right past.
Bart Leger:You're not invisible to him. You never were. Chelsea didn't get a
Bart Leger:reversal. There was no surprise pregnancy and no medical
Bart Leger:turnaround. What she did was stop hiding the grief and
Bart Leger:started bringing it to God. Oh, the raw version. The way Hannah
Bart Leger:did at the temple in 1 Samuel. Hannah prayed so unguarded that
Bart Leger:the priest on duty assumed she was drunk. And God heard her
Bart Leger:anyway. Chelsea brought God that same unfiltered ache and over
Bart Leger:time she found he'd been close all along. She put it in a book
Bart Leger:called Longing for Motherhood written for the next woman in
Bart Leger:that exam room or that third row saying what she'd wished someone
Bart Leger:had said to her. Even when your heart is breaking he feels far
Bart Leger:away. He's right beside you. Years later, she and her husband
Bart Leger:adopted a little boy. The love for her son and the old longing
Bart Leger:live in the same heart now. The thing she prayed never came the
Bart Leger:way she pictured it. But Chelsea Patterson Sobolik will tell you
Bart Leger:that she was seen the whole way through by a God her grief was
Bart Leger:never invisible to. Here's today's challenge. If this is
Bart Leger:your grief, give yourself permission today to stop
Bart Leger:pretending you're okay. moment alone with God and tell him the
Bart Leger:truth of where you are. Out loud if you can, the way Hannah did.
Bart Leger:You don't need the right words. He already knows. And if you can,
Bart Leger:name one safe person, a trusted friend, or maybe a pastor and
Bart Leger:let them in on what you've been feeling alone. This was never
Bart Leger:meant to be born in secret and you were never as alone. You
Bart Leger:were never as alone as it felt. Father, you see every person
Bart Leger:listening who has wanted a child and watched that hope go
Bart Leger:unanswered, including those who've lost pregnancies along
Bart Leger:the way. Thank you that no part of this grief is hidden from you.
Bart Leger:Meet them the way you met Hannah in the rawest version of their
Bart Leger:prayer. Whether or not the longing is ever filled the way
Bart Leger:they hoped, let them know deep down that they are seen and
Bart Leger:loved by you and be near in the rooms where everyone else is
Bart Leger:celebrating. In Jesus' name, amen. If this episode encouraged
Bart Leger:you today, would you share it with someone who might need to
Bart Leger:hear it? Just go to dailydevotionsforbusylives.com
Bart Leger:slash 267 and copy the link. It only takes a second and it might
Bart Leger:make a real difference in someone's day. Thanks for
Bart Leger:joining me on Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. remember,
Bart Leger:whether or not the longing is met the way you hoped, your
Bart Leger:grief is not invisible to God. He sees you and He's near. Come
Bart Leger:back next time for more encouragement to help you live
Bart Leger:grounded in God's truth. Until then, God bless and have a great
Bart Leger:day.




