The Adopted Son

About The Adopted Son

Why This Exists

Most devotionals give you a thought and a verse. The Adopted Son goes somewhere else entirely — into the deep places where trauma lives, where shame has built its walls, where the fear of God breaks every chain that willpower never could. These devotionals are written from within the story, not from a distance. They are written by a man who has been to the bottom and encountered the Living God there.

If you have ever felt like your wounds were too old, your patterns too ingrained, or your history too complicated for God to reach — this is for you.

About the Author

A Life Built on Both Sides of the Lens

Wes Shinn is a visual storyteller, photojournalist, filmmaker, and minister whose life and calling have been forged in some of the most demanding arenas a creative can inhabit. He spent a decade as a U.S. Coast Guard photojournalist, documenting the weight of human crisis amid major national disasters — learning to find beauty, dignity, and truth in the most unforgiving moments. That decade did not just sharpen his eye. It formed his theology of presence: the conviction that bearing witness to someone's story is a sacred act.

He went on to build one of the most decorated wedding photography careers in the country, photographing more than 330 weddings and earning international recognition as a World Top 10 Off-Camera Flash Photographer. His post-production work at CBN Creative Media extended his storytelling into the broadcast realm.

He is also a man pursuing a Private Pilot License — drawn, perhaps inevitably, toward the kind of perspective that only altitude can provide.

But none of those credentials are why he writes these devotionals.

A Man Who Has Actually Been There

Wes was born out of rape. His biological mother was 16. There was every reason his life should not have begun — and yet God had written his name before the foundation of the world. He was adopted into a family that loved him deeply and raised him in the faith. And still, the wounds of early separation planted something deep: an attachment wound that would take decades to fully name, a war between the desperate desire to be loved and the terror that love itself would one day leave.

He gave his life to Christ at 18 — after a youth pastor stepped in during the crisis of his mother's cancer diagnosis, and after God supernaturally removed that cancer in a moment that has not returned to this day. That encounter was undeniable. But salvation opens a door that the soul still has to walk through, and walking through requires surrender, which he was not yet ready to give fully.

In his 20s, serving in the military in Hawaii, he was raped by a woman. The wound that already existed around intimacy and rejection deepened. He carried it silently. He hardened. He learned to keep people close enough to feel safe, but never close enough to know the truth.

He met Keiko — a licensed counselor, preacher, and minister of inner healing — and he knew immediately it was a miracle from God. They have three children named Hana, Elias, and Emi, and a life rooted in charismatic Christian faith and church leadership. But even in the arms of a marriage built by God, Wes spent fifteen years operating from the same divided place: knowing who he was in Christ, but living out of who he had always been in the flesh. Pride. Manipulation. Shame masked as confidence. The false self was performing where the true self was too afraid to stand.

Then came the breaking point. Keiko looked at him in despair and told him she didn't love him anymore. And in that shattering, something shifted. He stopped performing for God and started pursuing Him — not out of religious discipline, but out of desperate, irreducible need.

The Night Everything Changed

In February 2026, at 2 AM, Wes encountered the presence of God in a way that defied every category his theology had prepared him for.

He saw a vision of his wife in prayer, a dove hovering over her. He reached for the dove and stepped out of the vision. When he returned to where he had been praying, he found himself frozen — physically unable to move, arrested in the Holy Spirit. No pain. Full awareness. Immovable.

A figure appeared. Gold like diamonds on the robe. A brightness that made a face impossible to see. A weight that was unlike anything he had encountered in this world.

And the figure spoke:

"My presence brings fear because love is who I am and truth is what I see.

Shame and rejection do not know me — because they are of the enemy,

and wherever I am, they cannot exist because of my presence."

"Perfect fear casts out shame.

Peace be inside your mind because I am rewiring the circuits of your neurons.

You are mine. You belong to me.

The fear of me brings peace because I love you. I claim you."

What years of counseling, accountability partners, self-improvement, and religious effort could not do — the presence of God did in one night. Not because those tools are without value. But because some chains are not put on by human hands, they cannot be removed by human effort alone.

"Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom."  — 2 Corinthians 3:17

Why The Adopted Son

The Adopted Son is not a platform built on success. It is a platform built on encounter. Every devotional published here emerges from the intersection of Wes's life as a visual storyteller, his formal study of Scripture and theology, his integration of psychology and faith, and — above all — the weight of having been in the room when God showed up.

The name comes from the deepest wound and the deepest healing: the identity of an adopted son. First, the biological reality — born into impossible circumstances, placed into the arms of a family that chose him. Then, the spiritual reality — adopted into the family of God, not because of merit but because of a Father who called his name before he could speak it.

"For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, 'Abba! Father!'"  — Romans 8:15

What psychology calls an attachment disorder, God calls an orphan spirit. And Romans 8:15 is not just a verse — it is a direct prescription for the deepest wound the human soul can carry.

Devotionals That Go Beyond the Surface

Wes brings to this ministry what two decades of storytelling have built into him: the ability to stay present in the uncomfortable, to find the frame that makes the invisible visible, and to bear witness to something true even when it costs something to see it clearly.

The devotionals in The Adopted Son weave together Scripture, church history, psychology, and personal testimony — not to impress, but to reach. Because the person who most needs to encounter God is often the person who has been burned by religion, numbed by familiarity, or convinced that transformation only happens to other people.

Wes knows what it is to carry a testimony that feels too heavy to share. He also knows what happens when you share it anyway — when the word of your testimony, covered in the blood of the Lamb, becomes a weapon against the enemy's hold on someone else's life.

"They triumphed over him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony."  — Revelation 12:11

For Every Person Still Hiding

The Adopted Son is written for the person who has been told their story is too complicated for God to redeem. The person sitting in church who looks fine on the outside and is quietly falling apart on the inside. The man carrying hidden sin that started as a wound, long before it became a habit. The woman who keeps people at arm's length because intimacy has always ended in rejection. The believer who knows the Word but hasn't let it reach the deepest places yet.

Wes was all of those people. He is not writing from a place of having arrived — he is writing from a place of having been found.

"The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit."  — Psalm 34:18

A Declaration

I was born from rape. My biological mother was 16.

There was every reason I shouldn't be here.

But God had plans — to prosper me, to make me a light, to make me a testimony.

I am an adopted son of Christ.

And that is who I want the world to know.


"For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future."  — Jeremiah 29:11