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How much did you pay for her?

Amazon     CLC Publications

Understanding why people say what they do is the first step toward compassion, as it allows us to glimpse another’s perspective. This can lead to giving others grace, an undeserved gift of letting people off the hook for what they say that eventually leads us to forgive them.

How much did you pay for her? challenges adoptive parents to develop a better understanding of the motivations behind what can seem like an endless stream of questions and comments about their family. At the same time, it addresses the truth of how these exchanges really feel. This book will encourage adoptive families with a desire to forgive in their hearts to respond positively to those with whom they engage, transforming pain into gain.

 

 

Endorsements

Professional Review

Marlo Schalesky, author of Empty Womb, Aching Heart, Hope and Help for Those Struggling with Infertility.
For adoptive parents (especially those who have adopted internationally), Christine Rhyner's How Much Did You Pay for Her? will come as a welcome source of wisdom and hope for dealing with all the comments, assumptions, and off-base attitudes that adoptive parents must often face. Filled with personal examples, Biblical wisdom, and insights based on real experience, Rhyner leads readers on a journey through various hurts and how to heal and offer forgiveness through each one. I recommend How Much Did You Pay for Her? as a valuable resource for those facing the unique challenges and joys of adoption.


Brave and honest. Full of faith and grace.   ★★★★★

Joy DeKok, Amazon Kindle Reviewer
In her book, How Much Did You Pay For Her?, Christine Rhyner deals with the unfairness of infertility, the need to forgive the unkindnesses of others, and the need to forgive yourself (and sometimes God) for bodies unable to conceive. (Really, standing on your head is not the answer!) She does so with honesty, grace, courage, wisdom, and spiritual depth.

Her journey (and snippets of others) is shared with the kind of transparent honesty often lacking in books about adoption and or infertility. Each chapter includes Healing Questions to help readers sort through their journey.

The author writes about topics we sometimes resist because they make us uncomfortable. And, she chooses grace. For herself and others who were intentionally or unintentionally unkind. This book is an excellent resource for those unable to conceive and on the adoption pathway. Pastors, counselors, mentors, family, and friends of those facing the difficulties and joys of adoption will also benefit from How Much Did You Pay for Her?.

I found the author's bravery and honesty refreshing; her faith and grace spiritually renewing.


An intelligent, insightful and well-written book   ★★★★★

James Albanese, Amazon Paperback Reviewer
An intelligent, insightful and well-written book, Christine Rhyner takes you on her journey from infertility to the "happy mother of children". And, what a journey it is! I eagerly read through this interesting and thought provoking story of hurt, coping and faith building experiences that sets her and her book apart. Ms. Rhyner is raw, tender and transparent in her reconciliation with her God, herself and others. The beautiful outcome is evident. This book is both inspiring and hopeful for all who are working through the hardships of infertility and the arduous process of adoption and the hurts and disappointments that accompany their journey. With this read, many will come away with a new perspective on suffering and surrender; many will come away freer in their souls and fuller in their lives with their children they hold.


Professional Review

Jeffrey L. Nitz, LCSW Vice President of Adoption and Family Services - Bethany Christian Services
Any person who has gone through infertility and has walked the path of adoption will find in Ms. Rhyner’s work both an author who keenly understands the common anguish and hurts that come with the wounding comments of family and friends, as well as useful insights and applications for navigating these from the perspective of biblical principles. Thank you, Christine, for not only acknowledging the offense and pain caused by others, often unknowingly, but leading the reader to the vital path of grace and forgiveness that is often sorely missing in adoption literature


Professional Review

Daniel Nehrbass, Ph.D. is the president of Nightlight Christian Adoptions
Rhyner s book is a positive paradox of moderation and extremes. Averse to legalism, she is a welcome voice of moderation when it comes to issues of assisted reproductive technology, name-it-and-claim-it theology, and the just rely on God, not on science mentality. She brings to her adoption story a balanced view of spiritual warfare, and a modest view of each person s role in the life of adopted children (we cannot save the world). On the other hand, Rhyner is extreme in her dispensation of grace and forgiveness. She is unrelenting in her desire to understand, rather than react, to the potentially hurtful comments that adoptive parents inevitably hear. Although there is nothing selfish about Rhyner s quest to extend grace to those around her, the journey is largely about the self. For example, she says, It humbles me to consider the possibility that the adoption of my children has far more to do with God s plan for their lives than with my desire to have given birth to them. She sees her adoption as a tool through which God developed character traits within her. We would all do well to examine our own histories to see how God used them as a tool for fashioning us into His image.