For anyone who wants to answer, before having kids, how much time did you give to considering and weighing the following:
1. Financial cost
2. What would happen in the case of a divorce
3. The possibility that the baby might not be physically or mentally healthy when born and would require constant care (and how that would affect not just the parents, but the quality of life of the child)
4. How your own schedule and priorities would change
5. Who would work, who would stay home, and what would happen if the plan changed when one of the parents wanted to do something different
6. The expectations of each marital partner (romantic, sexual, normal attention) post-baby and how to handle the shift that would come when attention and energy diverted to the child
7. How to handle a child that wasn't what you expected (emotional trouble, psychological problems, or simply a kid you don't like very much - there's a confession by a mother on a parenting website that says she loves her son, but she just doesn't like him very much)
Overall, I think if you're in a healthy relationship, having children is just the next logical progression. As a few others have stated, my wife and I are also deeply faithful and the Bible tells us to "go forth and multiply" so there is that for a literal interpretation I guess. I dunno, when we were dating, we both knew we each wanted kids, so that was never a stumbling block. As for the why, like I mentioned above, it was just the natural thing to do.
1. It was in our minds, but I like to tell people who ask about kids that if you wait until you think you're financially ready, you'll never have kids. My wife nursed as long as our daughter wanted to (about 13 months if I recall) and cloth diapered, so that helped offset some costs (versus formula and using disposables, which we did, just not that many).
2. Not really part of our planning process. I guess a divorce is always a possibility in any relationship, but for our relationship, not a practical part of the overall planning process. I guess we took our vows seriously when we said "Till death do us part". (before I'm attacked, I'm not saying no one else thinks that as well...just our situation)
3. I think if you think of all the "what if's", you'd never leave the house. Is it a possibility? Yes, but you mitigate the risk by leading a healthy lifestyle, good nutrition during the pregnancy, etc. I think I would definitely struggle if put in that situation, but it doesn't change the fact that they're your child and made in God's image.
4. Our overall goal is for my wife to stay at home, but she has a great job at church which pretty much allows this to a point, so this wasn't really a factor in our planning.
5. See above
6. Initially I really struggled with the lack of romantic contact with my wife post baby, even though it was completely understandable. There are times that you think back to how you as a couple used to behave, but honestly, if I had to choose between bringing my daughter into our bed because of a bad dream or a thunderstorm versus letting her "tough it out" and getting some "quality" time with my wife, it's different, because that family snuggle and affirmation together IS quality time. The romance returns, and it's important as your kids get older to see that Mommy & Daddy are in love and have that as a standard of what solid relationships look like.
7. Again, they're still your child and at the end of the day, a miniature "you" so not much of a question here as far as I'm concerned.
I just saw a funny picture on FB yesterday that said "Children are like farts, you don't mind your own but can't stand other people's." Pretty appropriate if you ask me.
At the end of the day, watching my daughter learn things and find her way in the world is the most rewarding experience I've ever had. Someone else mentioned that as a person of faith, the minute you become responsible for another human, it's simply amazing. As a Christian, I think the way I felt the minute I held my little 5 pound miracle gave me the skinniest peak into the kind of love that God has for each one of us.
It's easy to make a baby folks, it's another thing entirely to be a parent.