Currently there are over 11,000 children
in foster care in Missouri.
Over 2,000 children are waiting for a forever family.

Friday, May 21, 2010

700 Club Controversial Commentary Removed, But Further Steps Would Be Even Better

700 Club Controversial Commentary Removed, But Further Steps Would Be Even Better

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But Further Steps Would Be Even BetterMay 21, 2010 in Adoption, Christian Alliance

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Tags: 700 Club, Adoption, orphans

Following a firestorm of response, the 700 Club has removed Pat Robertson’s commentary on adoption from the clip they’d initially posted. (For those who feel the need to review his remarks, both the news report on Summit VI and the commentary by Robertson that follows is still accessible—embedded video below—beginning at minute 14:00).

We appreciate the 700 Club’s decision to take this modest step to remove the commentary from news clip. However, we would encourage further steps to more directly correct the troubling comments and convey the deeper truth that Mr. Robertson missed as he mused on the “risks” of adoption. Five core truths need to come through loud and clear:
1) Many orphans do indeed carry deep wounds and real needs—emotional, physical, relational and spiritual. Any Christian contemplating adoption, foster care or other ministry to children from hard places should do so with a full sense of both the joys and the challenges that may lie ahead. We must “count the cost”—not just theoretically, but via serious reading, study and discussion.
2) The potential difficulty of caring for orphans, does not diminish God’s heart for the child that has no family, nor His call to His people to join Him in the sacrifice-requiring work of “defending the cause of the fatherless.”
3) What every child most needs is a loving, permanent family. Certainly, Christians should be at the forefront of every form of caring for orphans, and sometimes the vast expanse of need may call for larger-scale, institutional response, even orphanages. But to the fullest extent possible, the priority should always be to move toward the most family-like setting that can be achieved—the permanence of loving adoption whenever possible.
4) If God’s best for children is a loving family, then Christians must be willing to be that family. We must be challenged to confront the fears and take the “risks” associated with adoption. Certainly, not everyone is called to adopt, but we all have a role to play in supporting, encouraging and enabling it.
5) Finally, after we have weighed the costs, we can also know that God offers unparalleled blessings along the road of adoption. This is a discipleship journey; it will not leave us the same, thank God. Each adoption experience is different, of course, but, speaking for myself and countless others I know, this is what I’ve seen: alongside real difficulties, adoption brings some of the deepest joys life has to offer.

Pat Roberson's "Unfiltered" Comments on Adoption

Preview: Pat Robberson's "FIlterless" Comments on AdoptionAfter sitting down for a few moments of noise free time (everyone was in bed), I did some channel surfing. I landed on a report about Christian's Alliance for Orphans Conference in Minnesota. I was invited to go, but couldn't :(


After the wonderful report and interviews ended it went back to Pat Roberson and his co host. I sat astonished as I listened to Pat's comments. I have copied and pasted them below. I sit here with our foster son on my lap (helping me type ha ha), my adopted son playing in the room beside me etc and can't help but wonder how thoughtless comments like these sow discouragement among many prospective foster and/or adoptive families. Having 5 children and fostering several others I still have not found the "right" or "perfect" child. Each one is an individual with God's gifts and personalities to equip them for their call in life. These children will never fulfil their callings without someone to help them overcome the hurt, abuse and neglect they have endured.

FROM CHILDREN'S MATCHBOX

AdoptionMay 20, 2010 in Christian Alliance
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Tags: Adoption, Christian Alliance for Orphans, orphans, pat robertson, Summit

Alongside a compelling news report on Summit VI, commentary from Pat Robertson on why Christians would…or would not…adopt is likely to stir serious controversy. It’s worth watching the polite but highly-charged exchange between Robertson and co-host Terry Meeuwsen. (Embedded at bottom of post).

Many orphan advocates likely will wince as they hear Robertson express sentiments like, “It [adoption] can be a blessing, if you get the right child.” The troubling statements, however, offer a striking reminder of three important realities. First, that many people harbor deep and understandable fears about adoption that must be gently and honestly addressed. Second, that even many Christians still hold the mistaken view that a successful adoption is primarily about building a family by finding the right child, rather than a decision born of both obedience and love–both of which spring from response to God’s loving adoption of us. And third, that much has changed even in the past several years, as Christians have re-awoken to the biblical call to care for orphans in their distress–not merely by sending checks overseas, but by opening their hearts and homes.

Explicit in Robertson’s concerns is an important theme wise adoption advocates repeatedly sound as well: “Count the cost.” Yes, many adopted children come from very difficult places, and the journey to a full sense of belonging and permanent family often is rife with difficulty, sacrifice and even sorrow. But this is only one piece of the story, and not the most important.

A segment of Robertson’s exchange with his co-host Terry Meeuwsen, who powerfully defends a truly Christ-hearted view of adoption, captures the issue well.

Robertson expresses serious concerns about adoption, warning of serious emotional, developmental and spiritual problems, and worrying, “If they’ve been brain damaged as a child, what’s going to happen?”

Meeuwsen affirms Robertsons’ fears, but then challenges: “…I think all children who’ve been through any kind of trauma certainly have emotional needs, for sure, and as you’re saying, spiritual needs. On the other hand, I would say, ‘If not us, who? Who sets those children free? Who teaches the truth to them? Who loves them to wholeness? It ought to be Christians.”

Robertson: “Well, I think it’s all real lovely but…”

Meeuwsen: “Well, it’s not ‘real lovely.’ I mean I think that lady that talked at the end [Lisa Harding] said it all when she said, you know, ‘I have the privilege of being daily being delivered from my own selfishness, from my own irritations.’ And you are. I’ve always said that if there’s a flaw in your marriage, in your family, in your character, it is all going to rise to the top. But it’s a bigger picture and if you’re called for it, go for it with gusto!’”(I love what she said here!)

FROM CHILDREN'S MATCHBOX:

Terry Meeuwsen would know; she is a mother of seven, five by adoption

700 Club Controversy Over Christians and Adoption

Pat Roberson Video
Comments on Adoption

700 Club Controversy Over Christians and Adoption

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