April 25, 2019

Think ‘Possibility’

While this life-changing ministry is sometimes referred to as “Special Needs Ministries,” those who serve in this office of the Seventh-day Adventist Church prefer a more descriptive term called “Possibilities Ministries.” The theme of this ministry says it well: “All are gifted, needed, and treasured!

No More Disabled

For decades, those who are not able to either see, hear, walk, or communicate as does the majority have often been referred to as being “disabled.” While it is important to recognize one’s limitations, being identified in this way can have a limiting effect on the person’s self-perception. Their horizon can become limited, and it can happen in a number of ways.

First, the recipients receiving the “disabled” identity are reminded of what they cannot do. But when they learn that their lives are significant in God’s sight and each person has a purpose, they begin to see their future differently. Their future changes from a perspective of impossibility to that of possibility. Their thinking changes. It is no longer based on a model of scarcity, failure, or shame. With God, life is more about possibilities than impossibilities.

Second, those who see others as being disabled are likely to see more mountains of difficulties than an oasis of possibilities. This isn’t to suggest that tragedies should be denied, but it does suggest that life’s challenges need to be embraced knowing that God can redeem them for our good. 

A few decades ago, an important life-changing principle was stated about our role this way: “Every one who loves God in sincerity and truth, will love the souls for whom Christ has died. If we wish to do good to souls, our success with these souls will be in proportion to their belief in our belief in, and appreciation of, them.1 Whatever the challenge, we should have more engaging conversations about what is possible.

Third, such a label implies that others do not have a disability of their own. The truth is, we are all broken in some way and are also in need of wholeness. It has been reported that 25 percent of all families are affected by disability, and every one of them struggles with questions like, “Why me? Why us? How could God let this happen? Will He fix this?”2 While Possibilities Ministries does focus on specific areas of concern often called disabilities, it does so recognizing that we all face challenges in life. Indeed, we are all “broken” in some way. No one should ever be left to travel alone. We need each other. This is why we have added the unique calling of caregivers as an important part of the Special Needs Ministries.

Together, with God’s guidance, we can begin the journey toward greater wholeness, which opens doors for even more possibilities.

Possibility Ministries 

Possibility Ministries begins with the basic belief that we are all created in the image of God, regardless of our limitations. 

It starts with the premise that each person must be given the opportunity to not only accept Christ but to also share Christ with others. At times it may be necessary to “speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves” (Proverbs 31:8, NIV). We do so because far too often, lives filled with possibilities are not given opportunities to grow, develop, and contribute.

It is often said that we must “give them a piece of the pie” as a way of showing recognition and inclusiveness. However, this can be a limiting approach. It separates one “piece of the pie” from the “whole pie.” Possibilities Ministries does recognize uniqueness, but not at the expense of losing a sense of inclusion, a feeling of belonging. The motto for this ministry makes it clear: “All are gifted, needed, and treasured.” When all are included, all become learners, and therefore, together, we share the “whole pie.”

Together we are community. We are the church. Together we see differently when we begin with a view of abundance, not scarcity. Of God it has been wisely said, “In every emergency we are to feel that the battle is His. His resources are limitless, and apparent impossibilities will make the victory all the greater.”3 We are not, and must not be, limited by impossibility thinking.

Special Needs Ministries begins and ends with a new identity — we are one in Christ. Awareness, acceptance, and action as prompted by the Holy Spirit are the driving forces behind what has become a rapidly expanding movement. This mission field is largely untouched, but that is beginning to change. Many are sensing the calling to reach out to the millions who have been marginalized because of their “disabilities.” The time has come for a “Possibility Ministries” — a time when the church and the community unitedly believe that “All are gifted, needed, and treasured.”

1. Ellen G. White, Fundamentals of Christian Education (Nashville: Southern Publishing Association, 1923), 281; emphasis supplied. 
2. Words of Diane Dokko Kim. Kim is the author of Unbroken Faith: Spiritual Recovery for the Special Needs Parent (Worthy Books, 2018).
3. Ellen G. White, Prophets and Kings (Mountain View, CA: Pacific Press, 1917), 202. 

This commentary was first posted on the Seventh-day Adventist Church Special Needs Ministries site.

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