Childlessness at Christmas

Ministering to and Caring for Infertile Couples During the Holidays

© Sallie Schaaf Borrink

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.

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:

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:

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

If you have found this article helpful, perhaps you would also enjoy:

Keep Jesus the Focus of Christmas

Simplify Christmas Gift Giving

Simple Holiday Meal Planning


The copyright of the article Childlessness at Christmas in Protestantism is owned by Sallie Schaaf Borrink. Permission to republish Childlessness at Christmas must be granted by the author in writing.


Stained glass window with Jesus, Mary and Joseph, Stephen J. Sullivan
       


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