Dealing with Unwanted Childlessness at Christmas

Ministering to and Caring for Infertile Couples During the Holidays

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Stained glass window with Jesus, Mary and Joseph - Stephen J. Sullivan
Stained glass window with Jesus, Mary and Joseph - Stephen J. Sullivan
The celebration of Christ's birth can be a hard and lonely time for couples struggling with infertility. There are ways to bless and encourage them during Advent.

Couples who want children and have not been blessed with them yet can find certain times of the year very challenging. Mother’s Day and Father’s Day most readily come to mind. But Christmas would also rank very high on that list. For the couple without children it can present some difficult and heartbreaking situations.

The entire holiday of Christmas revolves around the birth of a baby and his parents. Every carol speaks of a baby. We reflect on Mary and Joseph, the parents, and their roles in the birth.

Activities and celebrations are usually centered on family, especially children. The children’s Christmas program at church is often one of the highlights of the season. Families gather at church on Christmas Eve, bringing along their little ones brimming with excitement. It is easy for the childless couple sitting there in the pew to feel like outsiders in almost every sense of the word.

Christmas is also such a regular milestone in the calendar of our lives that it often a reminder that another year has passed and there is still no baby in the nursery. Dealing with childlessness can be easier during the regular daily living of the rest of year. But when Christmas comes around again, it is almost impossible to ignore that another entire year has passed with a dream still unfulfilled.

How can people best relate to the childless couple during this time of the year?

Ask What They Need

The most obvious place to start is oftentimes the most overlooked. If you know the couple well enough, ask them what they need.

  • Do they need privacy?
  • Do they need busyness to distract them from their pain?
  • Do they need a “normal” Christmas celebration like everyone else?
  • Do they need to go out of town?
  • Do they need to spend time with their nieces and nephews?
  • Do they need a shoulder to cry on?

Only the couple will know what they need during the Christmas season. And that need could change from year to year. What might have been a blessing last year could be a burden this year. If you think even asking the question might be painful, send a handwritten note, expressing your desire to love them during this time of the year and asking how you can best minister to them.

Involve Childless Couples in Church Celebrations

It is very easy to focus on the children during Christmas. Their natural joy and anticipation is everywhere! But those without children have just as much to offer in the celebration of Christ’s birth as the families.

There are many ways to involve them in the celebrations. Again, ask them how they would like to be involved. This could include:

  • Doing an Advent reading
  • Being a narrator in the Christmas program
  • Organizing a caroling party for the shut-ins
  • Organizing a food drive for the needy
  • Decorating the church

Pray, Pray, Pray

Pray for the couple. All believers are in need of prayer and this is especially true for the childless couple at Christmas. Ways to pray for them include:

  • That God would sustain them and give them emotional and physical strength
  • That they would find joy in Christmas celebrations
  • That the peace of God that transcends all understanding would guard their hearts and minds in Christ Jesus
  • That the Holy Spirit would move others around them to bless them and encourage them
  • For God to grant them the desire of their heart and give them a child

Look for ways to love and bless your brothers and sisters in Christ as they continue their journey this year!

Sallie Schaaf Borrink, David Borrink

Sallie Schaaf Borrink - Sallie Borrink is a professional writer with extensive experience with business clients, the consumer market, and online destinations.

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Comments

Dec 12, 2008 6:24 PM
Guest :
I am a childless person (married for 20 years)- in late 40's and I never will be able to have children. The holidays are terrible. It's all about the kids well I don't have kids! Church is no different and I've been told that there was a reason God chose me not to have children. What could that possibly be? That I would be a worse parent than that woman who murdered her 2 year old in Florida or the parent who beats their child senseless. During the holiday season this is especially acute. I am an outcast and have stopped attending church because of this- afterall the reason we are here is to procreate so I must be a total failure to God and our purpose on earth. I used to love the holiday season and now I hate it. It is a time of sadness for me- when it should be a time of joy. A hint for those who don't know how to act- don't feel sorry for me but accept me as I am- know that I may be sad but know that it comes and goes. Don't treat me as though I am a pariah being punished by God and therefore only worthy of your pity and not friendship.
Oct 7, 2009 2:05 PM
Guest :
I think that some of this also pertains to couples who don't have children yet, by choice. I often feel left out at family gatherings because we are the only ones without kids yet (by choice,however). My sister-in-law suggested that this year we only give gifts to the kids because "Its about them -not us" This seems weird, but I am exteremly offended by that. So, until we have kids we are just spectators? It seems inconsiderate to me.....the gifts for their kids ARE gifts for them in a sense - so, because we don't have kids we just get left out? They never ever would have suggested this if they were still a young married couple without kids! Why can't adults participate at christmas too? It doesn't have to be expensive gifts - heck make me a macarroni collage for all I care. Its the act of giving that is the point, not the price. Leaving grown-ups out of gift giving doesn't seem noble at all-it show that you are a stick in the mud in my opinion.
Dec 23, 2009 4:11 PM
Guest :
Childlessness is a reason I don't attend church in general. I tire of being chastised for sins which by and large I don't even commit and too much emphasis is put on having children. Our adoption from China has ground to a complete halt and it may not even happen at all at this point, 5+ years after starting. Meanwhile, we don't feel comfortable adopting a non-white baby because my devoutly Baptist family has used the n-word every time I've been around them since my earliest childhood memories. If you want to minister to help the childless how about teaching not to hate.
Jan 7, 2010 2:38 PM
Guest :
Found this article really useful. Only wish more was was made of this subject in the media, as there is so little understanding towards the childless in a society which is becoming almost unbearably child-centred. So that those who don't have children feel marginalised. Our families is not at all understanding to our fertility issues, and this now makes christmas so hard. We are ok if left alone to deal with it, but my sibling keeps wanting us to cook the christmas dinner for everyone and all their kids, but we just don't feel upto it. This causes arguments, so we are no longer invited to their dinners, so spend it just the two of us + pets, but for us Christmas is something just to get through, and abit empty and disappointing..Where we had hope, as the years have passed that diminishes. It also feels very lonely. The family don't contact or send Christmas cards, as they have their own families, and don't realise that couples like us need more support at these times and just to know we are not on our own. When we try to discuss it with them, and why we can't face doing a large Christmas dinner they just argue with us and say it is an excuse and that we have to accept our situation or stop moaning about it, which came from the mother-in-law. We rarely do talk about it with them or show our sadness as we realise they can never fully understand our situation, but just wish they would be a bit more sympathetic at times like Christmas. Instead we just have to cut ourselves off from them until we feel stronger to deal with them.
Mar 10, 2010 9:15 AM
Guest :
Breaking News--childlessness and grief about that doesn't just occur amongst couples. I've been single all my life ( now in my 60s) and very early in my life, my teen yrs, I discovered for medical reasons I'd never have children...and this has affected me and relationships all my life.
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