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BY
REBECCA GRACE | AFA Journal Staff Writer
In the small town of Brenham, Texas, its not uncommon to
see Kazakhstani children in cowboy boots, eating Blue Bell ice cream.
Why? A local church began living out Gods Word. How? By establishing
an orphan-care ministry, as advocated by FamilyLifes Hope
for Orphans.
"Hope for Orphans is an educating and exhorting ministry dedicated
to supporting and helping the fatherless and connecting those children
with loving, Bible-believing families," as stated in His
Heart, Our Hands, one of the ministrys adoption resource
publications.
It is headquartered in Little Rock, Arkansas, and is a three-year-old
facet of FamilyLife, a division of Campus Crusade for Christ, that
functions as a national marriage and family ministry under the leadership
of Dennis and Barbara Rainey.
The Raineys have a passion for adoption as do Paul and Robin Pennington,
whose experiences are the foundation of Hope for Orphans. While
adopting three children from Korea, the Penningtons recognized the
need for Biblical resources on adoption and sought to involve their
church by sharing pictures of Korean orphans.
"That led to our belief that there needed to be resources
and workshops
to help Christian families understand a Biblical
view of adoption
," Pennington explained. "Adoption
agencies, Christian ones included, host informational meetings but
some people always feel a little apprehensive
[as if the
agencies] have a vested interest."
Therefore, Hope for Orphans (not an adoption agency) joined FamilyLife
as an objective third party with no vested interest, but with the
vision to educate and inform Christians of their responsibility
to care for orphans as set forth in Scripture.
Today, Pennington, who is the director of FamilyLifes Hope
for Orphans, and his wife have five adopted children and one biological
child and are very passionate about ministering to orphans.
Ministry
foundation
"I believe its very important to approach ministry from
a Biblical perspective," Pennington said. "So the basis
of this ministry is
not about infertility
[and] its
a lot more than being about adoption.
"Its about Gods heart and [how] His Word reveals
His character
, and if we want to be conformed into His image,
we cant ignore this area."
According to James 1:27a (NIV), "Religion that God our Father
accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and
widows in their distress.
"
"FamilyLifes Hope for Orphans is really about being
a connecting resource and an encourager to the church for Gods
heart for the orphan," Pennington explained, "and there
are three main ways that we seek to be involved in that."
These ways, as described by Pennington, are through:
Your Heart "We
seek to proclaim and illuminate what the Bible says about Gods
heart for the fatherless and how He asks us, the Church, to join
Him where He is working."
Your Head "We
provide
Biblical and practical information about adoption
and how the local church can be involved in sustained adoption or
orphan ministries."
Your Hands "We
introduce
how God is working to use believers in North America
to meet the [physical, emotional, social, developmental and spiritual]
needs of the orphans around the world."
While a variety of resources are available on the ministrys
Web site (www.family
life.com/hopefororphans) this tri-fold mission is specifically
carried out through "If You Were Mine" adoption workshops,
strategic partnerships, and local church orphans ministries.
"We fundamentally believe
that ministry flows through
the local church," Pennington said.
"Almost all churches in America now have a mens ministry
and a womens ministry. Most have a prison and a singles ministry,"
Pennington explained. "I even [know] one church that has a
Cooking with Jesus ministry, which is great.
But how many churches have an orphan or adoption ministry?"
Local
church initiative
Such spurred Pennington and his staff to establish a
church-based adoption initiative in which they are aiming to launch
1,000 orphan-care and/or adoption ministries in local churches across
America over the next four years.
Pennington said there are more than 500,000 children in U. S. foster
care and somewhere between 50 and 70 million orphans worldwide.
Of those millions, Pennington estimated that more than 25,000 orphans
will be adopted internationally by Americans in 2005, with no more
than 10,000 to 12,000 going to live in Bible-believing homes. By
2010, Pennington explained, the worldwide orphan population is expected
to rise to 110 million.
"We [as the Church] have the opportunity to introduce them
[orphans]
to the Father of the fatherless," Pennington
explained. "We really believe that orphan/adoption ministry
in the church is a tremendous opportunity to be obedient to God
and [to] bring revival to the church and homes to the fatherless."
Pennington echoed a Southern Baptist pastor when he said that five
days of orphan ministry can be a better lesson in authentic Christianity
than five years of preaching.
"So one of the things that I would argue is in a consumer-driven,
relativistic, humanistic-growing America Christians need orphans
almost as much as orphans need them.
," Pennington explained.
Over the last year and a half, nearly 20 churches recognized such
needs and established orphan-care and adoption ministries in their
churches.
"And the wonderful thing is that
God has led them to
do very different things," Pennington said.
From
Romania
For example, Scott Dewey, cross-cultural training director
for Mile High Ministries, organized an orphan-care missions team
in Anchor of Hope Church in Denver, Colorado.
He and his family attend this approximately 200-member inner-city
church which is usually thought to be on the receiving end when
it comes to missions, but such is not the case due to the prompting
of the Holy Spirit in Deweys life.
His life was changed after walking into a Romanian orphanage where
20 children were tied down to chain-link cribs that resembled cages
in a small attic-like room deafened by silence.
"That was one of the most sobering experiences Ive
ever had," Dewey admitted. "Afterwards, I had nightmares
for months."
Although Dewey and others were allowed to untie, hold, sing to,
and feed the children, that wasnt enough for Dewey or the
children.
"I had such a helpless feeling
," he said. "All
that I could do was pray.
[After all] helping those in need
is not a social work, it is a spiritual work."
The Lord began to work through Dewey, and in 1999, he formed the
Loving Arms Team, now made up of representatives from various churches
in the community. Each year, the team travels to Romanian and hosts
two seven-day camps for orphan boys who are abused and exploited.
And every year, the Lord supernaturally provides the approximate
$60,000 needed to cover the cost of the trip.
"We are allowed to take them for seven days
and love
them," Dewey said.
Various team members also helped start a local orphan-care foundation
in Romania.
"We provide both finances and volunteers, and [we] work in
partnership with local Romanians," Dewey added. "People
who have been involved in the orphan-care ministries in our church,
[its] totally changed their lives" as it has the
lives of Jay and Suzanne Faske and their fellow church members in
Brenham, Texas home to the famous Blue Bell ice cream.
To
Texas
and beyond
The Faskes are parents to 14 children, 12 of whom are
adopted.
"God placed a desire in our hearts to adopt before we were
even married," Suzanne Faske explained. "The Holy Spirit
has convicted us each time we have traveled to adopt our children
that we are to continue to seek families for orphans, pray for them
daily and do whatever we can to meet their spiritual, physical and
emotional needs."
Their convictions led to action, and they began taking small steps
within First Baptist Church of Brenham to raise awareness about
adoption, and in the summer of 2003, a miracle took place.
"Our goal was to find families for six children," Faske
explained. "Within 48 hours, God had provided families for
30 and the funds to bring them to the U.S. [from Kazakhstan] for
a summer camp program."
Several families hosted the children with no intentions of adopting
them, but before it was over, 35 young Kazakhstanis became Texans.
The couple has also founded Here I Am Orphan Ministries, designed
to provide resources "for families to pray, be involved in
mission work, and be advocates for orphans," as well as Forever
Families, an adoption support group within the ministry that hosts
regularly scheduled events and fellowships for adoptive families.
"We first worried that we could not have enough families
participating, but now the challenge has changed to finding facilities
that will accommodate so many children and their families,"
Faske explained a prime reason churches should not see small
size, limited resources or other obstacles as a discouragement to
orphan ministry.
"Every church should become involved in orphan ministry, whether
it is an entire church or a few individuals," Faske advocated.
"We have found that it only takes one or two passionate people,
who have a heart for orphans, to motivate a church body."
Couple this passion and motivation with the educational resources
provided by Family Lifes Hope for Orphans, and Kazakhstanis
in cowboys boots are only the beginning to a future of forever families.
More
resources
www.familylife.com/hopefororphans
or 1-800-FL-TODAY
www.orphanministries.com
www.foreverfamilies.org
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