"Why does God create babies that have disabilities, or that can't live? Why would He do that since He loves his people?"
This was the question I heard from my six year old's lips one night at the dinner table. This was the question I struggled to answer as tears streamed down my face. This was the moment I had been waiting for, but yet my heart was crushed within me as I struggled to answer his question.
Four years ago, when Wesley was born, Zach was only two-and-a-half years old, and he had no idea that there was anything different about his brother. Sure, he noticed that we now went to countless doctors' appointments and that therapists often visited the house to spend time playing with his brother, but to him, this was his new normal. Didn't all babies receive therapies to teach them how to do new things? Didn't all babies visit multiple specialists to closely examine every part of them and address health concerns? Even as Wesley grew older and his differences became obvious to others, Zach never seemed to notice. He loved Wesley for who he was and was oblivious to the fact that other children his age had far surpassed him developmentally.
But this past year, Zach's eyes have begun to open to the reality that his brother is different. He has been listening to the adults around him discuss his brother for four years now, and as he grows up, he is beginning to understand everything we have been talking about. A few months ago, as Wesley was stimming, my head turned sharply in surprise as Zach casually said "Wesley does that because he has special needs." Thus began our conversations about how God creates everyone different. We have discussed how God creates some people that are tall, some people that are short, some people that learn things quickly, and some people who need extra help and time to learn things. Then we talk about how God loves everyone and how He creates everyone exactly the way He intends. We are all fearfully and wonderfully made. God has not made any mistakes.
These are easy topics to discuss when the conversation is generalized. I have had many opportunities to talk with Zach about being kind to others who are different than us, being patient with others who do not learn things as quickly as we do, and loving others even when their differences annoy us. The conversation is much more difficult when we talk specifics. My own faith is tested as we talk about Wesley and as Zach asks specific questions about what these delays really mean for him. Do I really know that God's works are wonderful? Does my soul know it very well? I often fight back tears when Zach discusses the future, casually mentioning things such as "you will be a grandma when Wesley and Liam and I have children". My heart is crushed within me as I sadly smile at him, not ready to give him the full picture quite yet. He will know soon enough.
But none of these conversations have been as difficult as the night that Zach asked me why. I listened to the trust in his voice as he asked these questions with the faith of a child. He was not accusing God of anything, but seeking to understand, in his young mind, why the God that he knows to be good and loving, and who creates all things fearfully and wonderfully, would choose to create a child in such a way that they would suffer or even die. And as I tried to answer my son, stumbling over the words, I wept. In that moment, it felt as if I had a minute or two to explain God's goodness in the midst of suffering in words that a six year old could understand, but no words were sufficient to the task. Nothing felt adequate. So, I stumbled through answers about the effect of sin in this world, the promise that God will work all things for good, and the truth that really, I just don't know. I don't know why God creates babies with holes in their hearts, non-functioning or deformed organs, life-threatening diseases, and other physical and cognitive disabilities. I don't know why He created Wesley with a chromosomal abnormality either. But, I do know that God is good.
And so, that's what we talk about, Zach and I. I don't know what the future holds. I don't know why God has allowed Wesley's specific sufferings. But I know that God is good. I believe this with all my heart. And, more than anything, I want Zach to believe this too. Disability will be a part of his life, so I pray that even though he may not understand the whys of disability, he will trust that since God has formed Wesley's parts, knitting him together in his mother's womb, this means that Wesley is fearfully and wonderfully made.
For now, when Zach speaks about Wesley's special needs, he speaks of them in a matter-of-fact way. Disability doesn't pain him or make him think any less of Wesley. It just is what it is. But I hear a tenderness in Zach's voice when he brings up this topic. For example, just this week, as we observed one of Wesley's therapy sessions from the two-way glass, I saw a look of concern come into Zach's eyes as he saw Wesley's therapist pull out something new and set it up. He turned to me with apprehension and said, "That is too hard for a four year old with special needs. Does Miss Jess know that Wesley has special needs?" His heart of compassion and love for his brother is beautiful, and his innocence as he asks these questions touches my heart.
As Zach grows older, his innocence will fade and the realities of disability will set in. But I pray that when they do, his trust in God and belief in God's goodness and perfect plan in the midst of disability will remain.