The Power of Adoption in a Post-Roe World
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The Power of Adoption in a Post-Roe World
There is a crisis in our foster care system right now. Tens of thousands of kids are going without families. The church could fix this.
From The Christian Post. When you turn on your iPhone, MacBook, or iPad today, thank a courageous birth mom who didn’t abort the genius who would become the founder of Apple. Steve Jobs was adopted and loved.
Find out when your state prays.
When you listen to a country music superstar husband and wife duo sing a heart-melting ballad, thank the families who took them in. Tim McGraw and Faith Hill were both adopted and loved.
When you watch the most decorated Olympic gymnast in the world, thank the grandparents who opened their hearts and home to her. Simone Biles was adopted and loved.
When I think about growing up in a diverse family of 15 with two incredible parents, I thank my courageous birth mom. I was conceived in rape but adopted in love.
November is National Adoption Month. Adoption unleashes purpose. It’s an act of love, mercy, justice, and sacrifice. It’s not an easy decision, and it’s not an easy road for anyone involved. (Sidenote: raising your biological children is not an easy road, either.) In the natural and the supernatural, adoption helps to bring wholeness and healing to what is broken. I know because I’ve lived it.
It’s a journey marked by joy, sadness, faith, uncertainty, victories, trials, and lots of self-sacrificial love. There are those who demonize adoption and encourage others to fixate on perpetual trauma. I’d rather focus on ways to bring about personal triumphs. Trauma should become a reference point, not a resting place.
Since the Dobbs decision, the anti-adoption rhetoric has exponentially increased. Some claim abortion is a preemptive act that prevents someone from experiencing adversity. What a horrible social policy. You don’t eliminate the potential sufferer; you elevate the person who is suffering.
The true strength of our humanity is how we help those in their weakest moments. Vulnerable children need that strength. In 2020, there were an estimated 930,160 children aborted in our nation. The numbers have been increasing since 2017. That same year, there were only 79,161 total adoptions. This is a significant drop from 2019 where there were 94,743 adoptions. Pandemic fears increased avoidable deaths while decreasing alternatives to induced deaths.
In 2020, there were 57,881 children adopted out of foster care (part of that 79,161 figure). But there were still 63,815 children still waiting to be adopted out of that system. These numbers illuminate a tragic failure of our society to love. We must, and we can, do so much better.
If just one family in 33% of our nation’s nearly 200,000 evangelical and conservative Protestant congregations adopted, we could provide a home for every child waiting to be adopted. Or it would take 3-4 families in our nation’s 17,000 Catholic parishes to adopt to bring that 63,815 statistic down to zero.
This is achievable if our will is intentional.
My wife and I adopted when we had no full-time jobs and three kids; two were in diapers. There were all kinds of sacrifices. There were all kinds of miracles.
I recognize, though, there are obstacles (mostly legal) that prevent some amazing couples from adopting. Too often, activist judges fail to rule in the best interests of the child and see biological bonds as the only valid option. Several state governments, along with the ACLU and Lambda Legal, have been trying to shut down faith-based adoption agencies because of who they are (Christians) and whom they love (vulnerable children who need a married mom and dad).
Some child welfare providers (like woke Bethany Christian Services) and social workers wrongly focus on “race” and heavily discourage “transracial” adoptions. As someone from a family of white, black, Native American, Vietnamese, and mixed children I abhor the racist practice of pretending that parents and child must be the same color. In fact, the federal Multi-Ethnic Placement Act “prohibits child welfare agencies that receive federal funding from delaying or denying foster or adoptive placements because of a child or prospective foster or adoptive parent’s race.”
No one benefits from separating people into bogus racial categories (well except for “anti-racism” race hucksters selling their poison in New York Times bestselling books). Ask black and brown children languishing in foster care; they’re not lobbying to preserve their “culture”. They want to be rescued from dysfunction. They want permanence. They want to love and to be loved.
My nonprofit, The Radiance Foundation, is passionately pro-adoption. Our adoption portal, AdoptedAndLoved.com, contains informative articles, videos, graphics, and vetted adoption resources. Our new fund, the Henry & Andrea Bomberger Adopted and Loved Fund, provides grants to Christian families seeking to adopt. It’s named after my parents because they truly embodied what it means to be pro-life. My amazing mom, Andrea, is still alive unleashing purpose in others. My dad painfully passed away in 2021. He loved everyone so deeply and was loved so deeply by everyone. The father of 13 children, who adopted ten of us, died on the tragic anniversary of Roe v. Wade. His incredible legacy of faith and love redeems that day for me.
Each of us have irrevocable and equal worth. The famous individuals I mentioned earlier do not possess more value because of their achievements. Their lives, however, illustrate the profound and widespread impact of adoption. Last year, Simone Biles announced on Instagram that she is pro-abortion. “[Adoption’s] not that easy and coming from someone who was in the foster care system TRUST me,” she explained. “Foster care system is broken and it’s TOUGH. Especially on the kids and young adults who age out. And adoption is expensive … I’m just saying.” She claimed people “misconstrued her words”. They didn’t. She was advocating death as a better option than life.
Love and self-sacrifice are never easy. But they beautifully change the trajectory of people’s lives. Simone’s own adoption experience tangibly reflects this. Her grandparents rescued her out of that broken system and helped to unleash her God-given purpose. My adopted siblings and I know that feeling.
No one is better off dead. We’re all better off loved.
How are you praying against abortion and for the children in the foster care system? Share this article to encourage others to pray.
(Used with permission. By Ryan Bomberger from The Christian Post. Photo Credit: Sergiu Vălenaș on Unsplash)
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Comments
Lord I have prayed for children and foster parented until my husband died. Lord I am praying for my two lost credit cards to be found. ASAP I pray I can assist some of those children might stay with me especially Eliza and Carter AMEN
Perhaps we should explore the biological sciences for a useful tool against abortion. We need something that will persuade people that children being aborted experience pain and terror. If we can identify certain biochemicals or hormones as being produced only in response to fear and/or pain, (which may already have been done), and start identifying their presence, especially in high levels, in aborted children or pieces thereof, we may start getting somewhere. The first step in changing people’s thinking is to identify the assumptions they rest upon and remove them.
I was not humanly adopted but was raised by a loving grandmother. Dad abandoned mom, who without an education was forced to do hard manual labor to raise us four boys.
My adoption was spiritual into the kingdom of God.
Father, place Your love and blessing upon those adopted parents who loved beyond themselves. Who in many cases gave an unwanted a home. Bless them immensely.. amen
Through earthly adoption we see an example of a Heavenly Father adopting us into His family.. Such immense love fir His creation.
Thank you again adoptive parents for showing the Father’s love to the world. Bless you.
I love everything about your comment Rich. May God continue to bless you and I pray many (beyond counting) will know your adoption experience. Thank you Ryan Bomberger. Thank you Rich….from the bottom of my soul.
I’d better start out by pointing out I am a Christian and pro-life, and would probably have adopted had I succeeded in getting married. My maternal grandmother was abandoned after my mom was born and raised her as a single parent until she remarried. They had one child of their own but her husband repeatedly verbally told her he had adopted her daughter, (my mom). She died about six years before her husband and hand wrote a will that left him her whole estate because she trusted him. We found out otherwise in his will. And he was an estate lawyer so he knew exactly what he was doing. Adoption by loving, honest, Christian parents is a great thing. I’m all for it. But some people still need to be watched.
I praise God and thank every potential mother who chooses life.
And every family who takes in and gives love to a little one.
My dad adopted my mom’s 3 children, then my sister and I came along. My dad’s dad passed away in 1930 and my grandma remarried to the only grandpa I ever knew. So, my dad had a loving heart to accept someone as family and care for them like his own. He was about 3 years old when his dad passed.