I’ve never had to wonder where my next feed would come from.
For as long as I can remember the low growls of hunger have been quickly
satiated by a stocked refrigerator and pantry brimming with snacks. Hunger is
not a pain I have felt acutely, except for when I wait too long to eat or am
too busy (or lazy) to walk the five feet to the endless supply of food to meet
my needs.
But I have felt the hunger pains of another.
Feedings have always been a source of anxiety for me as a
mother. From the early days of the twins’ life, I cried as they struggled to
eat on their own, only to be met with exhaustion from working too hard, causing
them to choose sleep over food. Every meal matters for premature babies, but
sometimes eating is just too overwhelming when you weigh five and six pounds at
six weeks old. So I struggled and cried and pumped and cried. With each
finished bottle we rejoiced. With each minute spent hovered over the kitchen
sink washing pump parts and bottle parts, I quietly prayed I would never have
to do this amount of work to feed my little people again. With each feeding I
hoped in weak, new mother desperation that these ounces of milk would fill their
hungry bellies and put fat on their little bones.
Over time it did. Over time they grew. Over time they
enjoyed eating. Their desperate cries for food grew less frequent, and I
started to forget what it was like to experience the hunger pains.
And now we have Seth.
Seth, who came out with a knife and fork (as the
pediatrician likes to say). When you are nearly nine pounds at birth, your
feeding situation is far less dire. But I’ve been reminded again of the
desperation I felt in those early days with Luke and Zach.
While I’ve never been in want for food, I have held a baby
who has forgotten that food will come if he will only calm down, trust his
mother’s care, and receive it. I may not have to beg God for my daily bread to
come down, but I do regularly find myself praying for daily bread to come
through me for the well-being of my baby.
Like so much of motherhood, feeding Seth is an exercise of
faith. I’m reminded with every feeding that the same God who cares for the
sparrows, cares for my baby. The God who waters the plants with rain from
above, also provides food for image bearers like my son. “Give us this day, our daily bread,” I say
quickly in a prayer, yet I fret and forget my hurried prayer when Seth doesn’t
seem to get what he desperately needs through me—his only source of the daily
bread I just prayed for.
God is in the business of stripping us of every ounce of
perceived strength and self-sufficiency. So while I stare at my full
refrigerator and basket full of groceries and think I’m not in want for food, I
am brought to my knees in weakness when the most
needy people in my life cry out in hunger and I don’t have the energy or supply
to give it.
Like every weakness God gives us, this is a call to trust in
the God who sustains everything, who is upholding the universe by his very
word. The God who spoke everything into existence, made manna fall from heaven
for the Israelites, and opens blind eyes calls me to trust that he will sustain
my baby through me.
“Give us this day, our daily bread,” I pray again. “And give
us our milk, too”