Reeve Lindbergh, youngest child of...
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Reeve Lindbergh, youngest child of Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh, wrote in the New Yorker (August 1998) about her famous parents and family. She tells how over the years a dozen or so confused individuals appeared at her parents' home convinced that they, and nobody else, were the lost baby brother Charles Lindbergh, Jr., who, in fact, had been kidnapped and killed in 1932. While she sometimes resented the times people contacted her with the same claim, she remembers how her father treated them with sensitivity and compassion as he gently led them away from their home, recognizing that they too usually suffered some kind of deep loss in not having a family of their own.
Our heavenly Father has loved us so much that, even though we could not claim to be his own, he has made us his children through Jesus Christ. Not only do we enjoy that benefit here and now, but it will be a tremendous blessing when we are united with him in heaven.
-- Guettler
Our heavenly Father has loved us so much that, even though we could not claim to be his own, he has made us his children through Jesus Christ. Not only do we enjoy that benefit here and now, but it will be a tremendous blessing when we are united with him in heaven.
-- Guettler
