This weekend, we want to celebrate some very special moms around the world.
So what’s all the ruckus about Summit 8?
Here’s some things you may not know about Summit:
It’s a work of Christian Alliance for Orphans, which unites Christian organizations and networks of churches to inspire, equip and connect people to care for the orphan.
It’s expected to draw 1,800 to 2,000 pastors, grassroots advocates, organizational leaders and church ministry heads.
Summit provides over 80 workshops on adoption, foster care, advocacy and discipleship. Check out the list here to get a better idea.
There’s also a list of amazing speakers like Rick Warren, Francis Chan, and Steven Curtis Chapman.
“The meaning of life is to give life a meaning.” – Unknown
Give meaning to their lives. Join the family by becoming a Hand of the Shepherd.
Help children lost in the foster care system and orphaned around the world become a part of your family through adoption. Find beginner resources here.
Use your business expertise by partnering with us in development in Haiti.
Invest yourself in praying for the orphan and our work at LSM.
“At the end of our lives, we will not be judged by how many diplomas we have received, how much money we have made or how many great things we have done. We will be judged by ‘I was hungry and you gave me eat. I was naked and you clothed me. I was homeless and you took me in.’” – Mother Teresa
A co-worker shared that quote with me this morning. To be honest, my immediate reaction was “Oh that’s a great one to share. It’ll really make people think.” Enter beam in my eye. Thankfully, God’s been really good over the years at helping me see my own flaws when I’d automatically pass blame on the rest of the American culture instead of looking at my own heart. Truth is, everything in our culture (and many other cultures) tells us that we need to make a name for ourselves, be well educated and live lives of luxury. It’s expected of us, and if we somehow fail to do these things, there’s obviously something we didn’t do right. I buy into it as easily as the next person.
But what about the life of a believer? If we really want to follow Christ, then I believe that should look radically different. It should mean pouring out the resources that we’ve been given and feeding the hungry, giving clothes (maybe even off our own back), and taking in the homeless or the orphan or the down and out. It means using our resources because they aren’t ours to begin with. It means making ourselves less so that Christ can be more.
And maybe, at the end of our lives, even if we can’t say that we were great by American standards, maybe we can say we did our best for God’s standards. I think I agree with Rich Stearns thoughts on this:
“God can do so much with just one person who is willing to be used by Him. Whether that results in the liberation of nations or racial groups, or whether it means that one child [has a family], saying ‘yes’ to God changes the world.” – Rich Stearns, World Vision President
Take Action:
Consider sponsoring a family in Haiti or Ethiopia through our Hand of the Shepherd Program.
We’ve got some events coming up in the next few months. If you’re around these areas, check them out for some great opportunities and ways to get involved in caring for orphans!
Empowered to Connect Conferences
February 17-18, Dallas, Texas and April 20-21, Denver, Colorado
(Check out the intro video HERE. And learn more about Empowered to Connect.)
The Cancer Redemption Project
In an effort to ‘redeem his cancer’, see what a young man is doing to raise money for 6 Homes of Hope with LSM in Haiti. Check out www.cancerredemption.com to see more of how you can get involved in caring for orphans through the Cancer Redemption Project.
LSM Indiana Annual Benefit Auction
If you’re near our home office in Bluffton, IN, we’d love to see you at our annual benefit auction to raise support for the ministry and come together for an evening of giving for the orphan.
Summit VIII (with Christian Alliance for Orphans) May 3-4
One of the leading annual conferences for adoption and orphan care, Summit has become a national hub for the “burgeoning Christian orphan care movement.” We’d love to see you in Southern California this spring for the event!
Keep Tuned for more on these events through the year:
LSM’s 10th Anniversary this summer
Together for Adoption Conference, September 14-15, Atlanta, GA
Orphan Sunday, November 11, 2012
“The ultimate purpose of human adoption by Christians is not to give orphans parents, as important as that is. It is to place them in a Christian home that they might be positioned to receive the gospel, so that within that family the world might witness a representation of God taking in and genuinely loving the helpless, the hopeless, and the despised.” – Dan Cruver “Reclaiming Adoption”
“And thou shalt love the LORD thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might. And these words, which I command thee this day, shall be in thine heart: And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up.” – Deuteronomy 6:6-9 (KJV)
Take Action:
Learn more about the adoption process and how LSM is here to help you find your way through it.
I love this video of Steven Curtis Chapman’s Christmas song, “All I Really Want for Christmas.” May this be something that leads you to give the gift of family this Christmas season.
Take Action:
Learn about our Adoption Resources program where we walk with your family through the entire process of bringing a child into your family.
Support our Adoption Resources Program here.
“We care for orphans not because we are rescuers. We care for orphans because we are the rescued.” – David Platt
Orphan care has become a major topic of discussion and activism in the American church over the last decade. We’re really excited about how God seems to be stirring His people in ways that were just not as common previously. Families are adopting from around the world in greater numbers than we’ve ever seen. Orphanages are being sponsored and visited, and we’re blessed to have many coming alongside organizations like LSM.
But just like any movement, it becomes really easy to follow a trend instead of becoming involved because of our Abba Father. When orphan care happens for this reason though – then we’re starting to make a difference within ourselves, and the outpouring is genuine redemption. It makes all the difference.
The gospel’s foundation for family is clear. And as believers, we’ve been adopted as sons and daughters of God, “no longer a slave, but a son – and if a son, then an heir through God” (Galatians 4:4-7). And so we see laid out clearly a loving Father heart in God, where he offers us a way into His family forever as an heir to reign with Him. What a beautiful picture as we look at God’s love – God’s example – laid out so clearly for us. If God has rescued us this way, then we can do nothing less than pass on this incredible gift to others.
Take Action
Go to our website to learn more about God’s heart for the orphan and how we’re working with churches to answer this mandate.
I read an article by David Taylor, Africa in Crisis: Finding Hope in the Midst of Tragedy that left me with some sobering thoughts. Please pray with me as you read this:
Somewhere in the world, in the last week of October, a baby was born who tipped the human population over the 7 billion mark. Statistically there is a high probability that baby is African. Statistics also tell us this African baby will need to fight for survival, facing the highest child mortality rates in the world. Such is the irony of Africa: the most likely place, and at the same time, the most dangerous place, for a young person to grow up.
By the end of the century, Africa will climb from its current population of 1 billion people to over 3.6 billion, an increase from 15% of the world’s population to 30%. While the rest of the world’s population is slowing down, Africa’s is accelerating. The rapid growth combined with Africa’s current development state has produced a human tragedy on a scale almost impossible to comprehend. In the last thirty years, over 100 million Africans have died from wars, famine, malnutrition and preventable diseases.
7 Billion people in the world. Well over 143 million are orphaned children, most of them living in the worst conditions in the world. Children in the middle of Africa who are starving to death because their parents died of AIDS and they have no one to care for them. Children who are vulnerable to trafficking and who have nothing to prevent their death from common illnesses like diarrhea. This doesn’t have to remain reality.
This doesn’t have to remain the norm, because if the 7% of the 2 billion Christians in the world would show hope to a single orphan by bringing them into their family, there would be NO MORE ORPHANS. We can make a difference… and one by one, knowing that God has called us to care for them.
May we as the people of God’s family not let these numbers go by unheard.
Take Action
Pray about how God is asking you to personally be a part of a family for an orphan.
Written by Michael Monroe, from Adoptive Dads
Everybody wants to be normal. Not most everybody -EVERYBODY. At least that’s the conclusion I have come to, and, barring any abnormal definitions of ‘normal’ or ‘everybody,’ I am still looking for the exception to this rule.
Different Like Everybody Else
Now I know as soon as I make such a bold statement someone will pipe up and say, ‘Not me! I’m different and I’m proud of it. I am my own man – a maverick, a lone ranger. I don’t conform to anyone’s standard. I could care less about being normal.’ To which I would reply, ‘Oh really. What, do you ride a Harley or have holes in your jeans or have messy hair or like to sky dive or paint your torso blue and act crazy at football games – just like thousands of other guys?’ No matter how different, no matter how out of the ordinary, abnormal or nonconformist you think you are or try to be, the reality is that there are hundreds, maybe thousands of others, in solidarity with you. And the truth is that deep down we like that because it makes us feel, well, normal – even if in a weird sort of way.
So I stand by my statement: everybody wants to be normal.
At the same time I should be clear that I am not denying that people want to express their uniqueness at times and in various ways, or suggesting that everybody wants to be identical to those around them. Rather, it is simply my way of observing that we all want to fit in (with someone or some group); we all want to feel connected; we all want to identify with others and have them identify with us. Simply put, we don’t want to be an ‘oddball,’ ‘out of sync,’ ‘missing out’ or ‘out to lunch’ – especially on the things that matter most.
Is Adoption Normal?
So you may be wondering – what exactly does this have to do with adoption or foster care? I’m glad you asked. See, I think that one of the main reasons that people generally don’t (or don’t want to) adopt is because they don’t see it as ‘normal.’ I think this is particularly true of guys. It just doesn’t feel normal to them. It isn’t normal in their family, in their group of friends, among their co-workers, at their church or whatever. In other words, it isn’t familiar, it isn’t comfortable, and therefore it isn’t normal.
It all leaves me wondering just how many people never follow through or get very far in terms of adoption, even possibly resisting God’s clear call to pursue adoption, because it just doesn’t seem ‘normal.’ Maybe they are not connected to others that are doing it or, equally important, that have done it, and as a result they are (understandably) somewhat afraid that if they adopt that others will not be able to identify with them, nor they with others, in several important ways.
Discovering a Different Kind of Normal
If I am honest I can understand where folks are coming from in concluding that adoption is not ‘normal.’ After all, adoption does in many ways seem to rearrange the ‘natural’ order of things. It is by its nature a recognition that something has been broken somehow, somewhere; that something has gone awry. But on the other hand, adoption is tangible proof that hope, healing and redemption aren’t just ideas or fuzzy concepts, but that they are real.
I have come to realize that we generally view as ‘normal’ that with which we are familiar and comfortable. Therefore, relatively recent changes in adoption, not the least of which are the dramatic increases in international, transracial and open adoptions, are causing adoption and adoptive families to become more obvious and, as a result, more and more ‘normal.’
Seven years ago adoption was not normal to me. When we chose to adopt I was not close to a single person that had been adopted. I am not even sure that I knew anyone who had been adopted. I certainly had a favorable view of adoption, as most people do. But it was a conceptual view. After all, it seems rather hard to be negative about the concept of adoption.
But what I have come to discover, based on my own experience and in talking with countless other guys about adoption, is that the more time I spend around others who have adopted, the more ‘normal’ it all seems. The more I read about how others have dealt with the unique challenges that adoptive families face, the more comfortable I feel with the challenges that lie ahead for my kids and our family. With each passing day I realize more and more that, for the most part, my family and other adoptive families are simply like every other ‘normal’ family, with just a few differences here and there. I guess you could say that we are just a different kind of normal.