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The Adoption Crusade

What a misleading article in the 'The Nation' can teach evangelicals.

An article titled "The Evangelical Adoption Crusade" appeared Friday in The Nation, lodging a hard-hitting critique of Christians and adoption. Those who disapprove of Christian adoption efforts do so for many reasons. Some are troubled by real and perceived ethical concerns. Some feel an orphan's ethnicity matters more than their need for a family. Some have encountered purported Christians who bear little resemblance to Jesus. But whatever the motives, supporters of Christian adoption and orphan care can gain most not by merely dismissing the critics but by learning from them—even when we disagree profoundly with their claims and conclusions.

Such is the case with "The Evangelical Adoption Crusade." Author Kathryn Joyce spent more than a year seeking to find and amplify what she feels are the worst flaws of the Christian adoption and orphan care movement. But while the article may distort as much as it reveals, Christian orphan advocates would do well to listen to Joyce's concerns. Even if mistaken in many regards, a critic will almost always wake us to legitimate issues if we're attentive. Several vital reminders, in particular, can be taken from this article:

Affirm the complexity and engage it wisely. Every orphan's story includes tragedy, and bringing healing to tragic circumstances is never simple. We must acknowledge this and talk frankly about hard issues like how to do more to hold fragile families together and how to appropriately honor birthmothers. If we're serious about loving orphans well, we must do the hard work of study, preparation, and continual recalibration. The history of efforts to help the needy—both secular and religious—is rife with good intentions gone amuck. Christians should lead the way in always pairing compassion with knowledge.

Ensure that we work with trustworthy organizations. Whether in adoption, orphan care, or any other noble effort, there are always plenty of charlatans. There are also many others with good intent but poor practices. Confirming the quality of an organization before working with it is one of the most important things we can do. (This is one important purpose of the Christian Alliance for Orphans.)

Root out irresponsibility. Even the very best social movements have reckless and unhelpful elements on their fringes. As people of integrity, Christians should be the first to root out irresponsible practices among self-labeled Christian organizations. We must do this gently and graciously at first, but if the behavior persists, we must take aggressive action to bring change.

Make clear that we care for orphans because it reflects God's heart. The article depicts many Christians as adopting simply to proselytize. This is hard for me to imagine given the immense cost, sacrifice, and lifelong commitment of adoption. (There are far easier ways to share one's faith.) But still, the author's perception reminds us that our language and manner should never imply that adoption is merely a scheme to "get souls into heaven." Yes, Christians desire that every person would know the love of God personally, including orphans. But we care for orphans foremost as a reflection of the heart of God, who himself is a "father to the fatherless" and "sets the lonely in families" (Ps. 68).

Admittedly, "The Evangelical Adoption Crusade" misrepresents much and misses even more. It bends the intention of quotes offered by thoughtful adoption advocates who were willing to be self-critical. It presents the reckless Baptist group arrested in Haiti as the emblem of Christian adoption and describes this episode (perhaps wishfully) as "what most people will remember about adoption in Haiti." It misses almost entirely the growth of special needs, older child, and foster adoptions. It ignores the growing vigor among Christians to match international adoption with all manner of in-country care and localized adoption efforts.


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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 13 comments

Original Anna Anna Anna

May 03, 2011  10:54pm

Gregg: I'm not the ones trying to close Christian adoption agencies using law because a Christian adoption agency doesn't want to violent one of its major beliefs and turn over parentless children to homosexuals. Law & homosexuals have a major hate issue towards children wanting to deny them the right to a mother and father as other community children have. Like abortion, the law puts the demands of a population segment over the needs of children. The concept being pushed to "get" children by homosexuals is that Christian parents are the worst to raise children as compared to parents of other religions. In Islam, both girls and boys as young as three are used as sex slaves legally by Sharia law. That is not better than having a child being adopted by western Christian parents out of love. I'm not an evangelical whatever, just an adult who was a child adoptee who fared better with non government Christian adoption. I was lucky not to be handed over to government people. What are you?

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Greg Peterson

May 03, 2011  3:55pm

I think you just added more fuel for the hardly new accusations of evangelical cultural imperialism and a sense of a God given entitlement that was tacitly addressed in the Nation article, Original Anna Anna. Do you represent the average conservative Evangelical?

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Original Anna Anna

April 29, 2011  10:52pm

Well, there is a solution in these foreign countries and this country to stop the "bad" adoption practices of Christians. Leave the kids there so that they can be indotrinated into Islam and learn hate for non-Muslims and for their own kind too who don't agree with them, and in the states, leave the kids for the homosexuals to adopt so they can be indoctrinated into any sex is okay, but morals and ethics and Jesus are not okay. States are already forcing the closing of religious adoption agencies because they refuse to hand over the innocents to the perverts. Never mind that there's so many perverts already after the kiddies underneath the noses of social services or government agencies. Comments on this site seem to indicate the worst thing that could happen to starving, homeless children is adoption by U.S. Christian families who do a much better job of raising children to survive in life than non Christians. I don't see Christian adopted children in the news for bombings, etc.

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