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Why Adoption Became Russell Moore's Personal Cause

And why more evangelicals should be joining him.
Courtesy of RussellMoore.com

Why Adoption Became Russell Moore's Personal Cause

Russell Moore, dean of the School of Theology at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, recently talked with Religion News Service about why adoption has become his personal cause and why more evangelicals should be joining him. On the eve of the 40th anniversary of theRoe v. WadeSupreme Court decision that legalized abortion, Moore said adoption fits evangelicals' anti-abortion values, even as he maintains adoption isn't right for every family.

The interview has been edited for length and clarity.

You have written on a range of pop culture, political and social issues, so why have you made adoption—and specifically Christian adoption—your big cause?

My wife and I went through several years of infertility and miscarriages and found ourselves going through the process of adoption and we felt very much alone. So I started to write about the issue of adoption really to address people who are in the same situation that we were, which is not understanding and seeing the meaning of that rich metaphor of adoption in Scripture, not understanding how adoption makes a real family.

What do you see as the biblical metaphor of adoption?

Scripture says that Christians have been adopted into the family of God, and so regardless of background, regardless of past, everyone who is in Christ is part of the family.

With gay marriage legislation moving ahead and not as many victories as they would like on abortion, is this a cause where evangelicals could see more success?

I don't really see success in terms of legislative or cultural victory. I see it more in calling evangelical Christians back to a commitment that we've always had to shelter the vulnerable.

Are you suggesting that evangelical churches specifically or churches in general be more involved?

At the level of the common good, this is something that all people should be concerned about. But it's consistent for evangelical Christians to be pro-orphan.

Adoption has been a growing issue for evangelical churches in the last decade. How are they doing, and how much further do they have to go to meet your goals?

What most churches want, when they start to think about this issue, is a preprogrammed initiative, a set of instructions. I don't think this issue works that way. It has to be organic. It has to be flexible. It has to create a culture within a congregation.

It will be congregational cultures that start to change with the inclusion of the families who are adopting and fostering and caring for orphans. I think that's a long-term project over a generation, not something short-term.

Could this be a form of evangelism—the idea that children adopted by evangelicals may become evangelicals themselves?

Adoption and orphan care and foster care are not a covert means of evangelism any more than Christians having babies is a form of reproductive evangelism. It's simply Christians love children, and part of what it means to love children is to share the gospel.

Prospective parents often think of having children that look like them and have all 10 fingers and 10 toes. But should adoption be a nondiscriminatory calling?

Absolutely. That's one of the reasons why you have many Christians who are particularly adopting special needs children who are in all sorts of points of vulnerability, from AIDS to cleft palate to fetal alcohol syndrome. I also think that any family that's adopting needs to understand that this child is a person and not a project. Someone who believes that adoption is simply going to meet some void within that person's life is not someone who should adopt.


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Displaying 1–5 of 8 comments

Evita Vresnoc

April 06, 2013  3:33pm

Actually, a better interview question would have been... If you adopted 2 kids because you were infertile and found your heart for the orphan, why would you then proceed to have 3 kids biologically? I'll never understand why Russell Moore is the leading Christian spokesperson. A spokeman that rejected 3 times the cause he is speaking out in support of.

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Elizabeth DeVore

January 10, 2013  12:49pm

Kat, the article mentions that only his oldest two sons are adopted. I obviously don't know his story, but when we adopted, we were not allowed to choose the gender of the child unless we already had children only of the opposite gender.

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Addison Cooper

January 07, 2013  8:16pm

As an adoption social worker and a Christian, I support Russell's desire to see Christians more actively involved in adoption. I'm glad that foster care was mentioned. Lots of kids in foster care are not able to return to living with their family, and they need to be adopted. Many people are eager to adopt infants, but foster kids often wait a long time to be adopted - because they're not White, because they're part of a sibling set, or because they're older than, say, 3. But if Christians rise to the challenge - to adopt children just because the children are in need of loving parents - the need would be met, or at least mostly met.

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Kat McH

January 04, 2013  8:38pm

Did the interviewer not think to ask the most obvious question: with 5 boys and no girls, why is it that Russell Moore adopts only children of his own gender? Does his wife have any say in this at all?

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Grace Duplessis

January 04, 2013  6:06pm

Beautiful. If every family adopted just one child, just one. Then we will truly be showing God's grace and love. Thank you Moore family for opening up your hearts to the unwanted.

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