Search results
M.E.N.D. is here to provide hope and healing through your journey after the loss of your baby. M.E.N.D. (Mommies Enduring Neonatal Death) is a Christian, non-profit organization that reaches out to families who have suffered the loss of a baby through miscarriage, stillbirth, or early infant death.
Sarah's Laughter - Christian Support for Infertility & Child Loss. Faith-based support groups for primary and secondary infertility, pregnancy after infertility & loss, adoption, and moms of miracles, podcast, and Bible reading plan.
6 dni temu · The U.S. Catholic Conference of Bishops offers consolation at such times through a special “Blessing of Parents After a Miscarriage or Stillbirth.” There are also adaptations for unbaptized children in the Order of Christian Funerals, with readings for children who died before baptism.
5 mar 2020 · Nearly a decade ago, Elise Erikson Barrett wrote What Was Lost: A Christian Journey Through Miscarriage as her personal and pastoral response to a dearth of Christian resources for a loss that is complicated emotionally, communally, and spiritually. Awareness has increased over the past ten years, but persons continue to struggle to find faithful honoring of a common but often unspoken grief ...
2 paź 2024 · Miscarriage is a deeply painful and often misunderstood experience that touches the lives of many families within the Christian community, including my own. As believers, we grapple with the profound loss of a precious life while seeking comfort in our faith.
For more than three decades, Pregnancy Loss Support Program has offered free telephone counseling and support groups for parents who have experienced a miscarriage, stillbirth, newborn death or termination for fetal anomalies as well as support for those who are pregnant following a loss.
Be supportive — visit or call to say, “I care and want to help.” Treat the bereaved couple equally. Men need as much support as women. Be available. Parents need direct help, such as providing a meal, doing errands, and babysitting their other children. Allow the parents to talk about their child; ask but don’t pry.