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Archive for Orphanology

Mar
5

Tony Merida and David Platt Discuss Orphan Care in the Local Church

by newhope

Tony Merida and David Platt discuss orphan care in the local church. Merida advocates a 3-prong strategy for church leaders: leading with the Word, leading by example, and leading with a simple plan of engagement. The Father to the fatherless will empower the local church to succeed in this mission, says Platt.

Tony Merida is coauthor with Rick Morton of Orphanology: Awakening to Gospel-Centered Adoption and Orphan Care. Merida is also professor of preaching at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and lead pastor of Imago Dei Church in Raleigh, North Carolina. David Platt, pastor of the Church at Brook Hills, wrote the foreword to Orphanology. Merida, Morton, and Platt are all adoptive fathers.

There are a number of articles, videos, and podcasts addressing orphan care on NewHopeDigital.com. Here are just a few links:

  • “Adoption in Process”
  • “Stand for Orphans and Stand Against Human Trafficking”
  • “5 Questions to Ask Before Adopting”
  • “9 Ideas for Small Group Ministry to Widows and Orphans”
  • “Orphan Care Has Faces”
  • “A Father’s Adoption Story”
  • “Kingdom Economics and Orphans”
0 Categories : Articles, Videos
Feb
20

Rick Morton to Speak at kNOw More Orphans Conference

by newhope

(BIRMINGHAM, Ala.)—February 20, 2012—New Hope Publishers author Rick Morton will be among the featured speakers at Altar84’s kNOw More Orphans conference to be held March 10, 2012.

Morton is coauthor of Orphanology: Awakening to Gospel-Centered Adoption and Orphan Care. He and his wife, Denise, have adopted 3 children from the Ukraine and helped start Promise 139, an international orphan-hosting ministry.

The conference will be hosted by Hunter Street Baptist Church in Hoover, Alabama.

 

 

 

Other speakers at the event include: Shaun Groves, Russell Moore, David Nasser, and Maridel Sandberg.

Worship will be led by Shaun Groves, His Little Feet, and Rush of Fools.

For more details and/or to register, go to the event’s home page: http://knowmoreorphans.org/index.html.


About New Hope Publishers

Representing more than 80 authors and more than 130 individual works, the mission of New Hope® Publishers is to provide books that challenge readers to understand and be radically involved in the mission of God. New Hope Publishers is the general trade publishing imprint for WMU®, a missions auxiliary to the Southern Baptist Convention. New Hope Publishers is a member of the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA).

For more information about New Hope Publishers, visit www.NewHopeDigital.com.

1 Categories : News
Feb
20

Adoption in Process: A Prayerful Wait (Denise Morton)

by newhope

Watch as Denise Morton discusses how she handled the waiting process in the adoption of her children. Rick and Denise Morton have adopted 3 children from the Ukraine.

 

The Mortons played an integral role in the cofounding of Promise 139, an international orphan-hosting ministry. Rick, coauthor of Orphanology, is now associate pastor for discipleship and equipping at Faith Baptist Church in Bartlett, Tennessee.

Orphanology: Awakening to Gospel-Centered Adoption and Orphan Care by Tony Merida and Rick Morton is available as a paperback and an ebook.

 

0 Categories : Videos
Jan
9

New Hope Publishers Books Now Available for the Nook

by newhope

(BIRMINGHAM, Ala.)—January 9, 2012— Dozens of titles from New Hope Publishers are now available for the Nook. With free reading apps, you also can enjoy our Nook books on your Android, iPhone, iPad, Mac, or PC.

A sampling of our ebook list includes: Orphanology, Live a Praying Life!, Called and Accountable, Thirst No More, Soul Shaping, and all 6 current fiction titles from Kathi Macias. New titles will be added as available. A full current list is available here.  

For the latest resources from New Hope Publishers go to www.NewHopeDigital.com where you’ll find articles, podcasts, videos, book information, and more.

About New Hope Publishers

Representing more than 80 authors and more than 130 individual works, the mission of New Hope® Publishers is to provide books that challenge readers to understand and be radically involved in the mission of God. New Hope Publishers is the general trade publishing imprint for WMU®, a missions auxiliary to the Southern Baptist Convention. New Hope Publishers is a member of the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA).

For more information about New Hope Publishers, visit www.NewHopeDigital.com.

0 Categories : News
Oct
31

Visiting Orphans in an Age of Christian Celebrities

by newhope

by Tony Merida

It is easy for many American Christians today to be deceived about what it means to grow in Christlikeness.

A subtle deception can creep in when you begin to believe that because you’re aware of what’s going on in the Christian subculture, then you are growing as a disciple. But is spiritual growth about knowing the latest and greatest evangelical speakers along with the hottest topics and debates?

For example, we live in a day filled with conferences. You can find at least one per month on various issues in various places. You can go see all the Christian celebrities and have them sign your Bible. As in Paul’s day, you can go see “the brother who is famous among all the churches for his preaching of the gospel” (2 Corinthians 8:18 ESV).

Most of the same guys speak at most of the same conferences that I pay attention to, and you could probably follow them around as conference groupies. Some find it acceptable to do this conference jumping and podcasting instead of being involved in a local church.

Please, understand, I’m not opposed to conferences. And I love many of the big-name preachers today. I know some of them personally, and I thank God for their ministry.

But something is wrong if you think you’re growing spiritually because you can name 10 preachers while at the same time you can’t name 10 orphans. Or, 10 single mothers in need of care. Or, 10 refugees in need of help. Or, 10 of the world’s poor who live on less than a dollar a day.

Are we measuring spiritual growth according to the Bible?

If you want to know if you are living out your faith, here is a good test: “Religion that is pure and undefiled before God, the Father, is this: to visit orphans and widows in their affliction, and to keep oneself unstained from the world” (James 1:27 ESV).

Of course, this is only one verse. Right, but doesn’t the whole of Scripture testify that one trait of Christlikeness is caring for people the way Christ has cared for us?

And how has He cared for us? When we were spiritual paupers, He gave us great grace. When we were spiritual widows, He became our bridegroom. When we were spiritual sojourners, He welcomed us into His home. When we were orphans, He adopted us into His family.

True spiritual growth involves active love for actual people. Don’t grow content with the idea of love. Love a flesh and blood person in need of your risk-taking, cross-bearing love. This is exactly what James is getting at with the word visit.

This word is used throughout Scripture. It doesn’t mean to drop by for a donut and stay a minute. The root word is the word from which we get a word for pastor. James is urging believers to “shepherd” the orphan and widow.

This verb appears frequently in the Bible in reference to God visiting His people to redeem and encourage them, particularly during pivotal stages of history with the arrival of key redemptive leaders and culminating with the birth of Christ. (See Genesis 21:1, 50:24; Exodus 3:16, 4:31; Ruth 1:6; Matthew 25:36; Luke 1:68, 1:78, 7:16; Acts 7:23, 15:14.) When God visited his people, He was involved in their lives and displayed His grace in their need.

How can you shepherd the orphan and widow? Well, how does God shepherd you? He cares for you; He provides for you; He protects you; He instructs you by his Word; He’s involved in your life.

In regard to orphan care, there are a number of ways to visit orphans in their affliction. Adoption is only one way to address the global orphan crisis. Not all children are available for adoption.

We need believers to

  • develop funds
  • help with transitional assistance
  • build Christian facilities
  •  care for orphanage caregivers
  • adopt orphanages as a church
  • proclaim the gospel on missions trips
  • and foster children.

We need some who are willing to go plant their lives in a village filled with orphans, who can preach the gospel, and grow those children in the grace of God. And much, much more.

From the overflow of a heart enthralled by the fact that Christ visited us in our affliction, rescuing us from our situation, let’s care for those in affliction. Spiritual growth is not about being famous or knowing the famous—it’s about faithfulness to Jesus.


Tony Merida is the coauthor of Orphanology: Awakening to Gospel-Centered Adoption and Orphan Care. He serves as professor of preaching at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and is also the lead pastor of Imago Dei Church in Raleigh, North Carolina. He and his wife, Kimberly, are parents of 5 children. www.tonymerida.net

All Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a division of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

2 Categories : Articles, Columns, Tony Merida
Sep
21

Stand for Orphans and Stand Against Human Trafficking

by newhope

by Rick Morton

The world’s orphan and human trafficking crises are inextricably linked. Orphan ministry means being engaged in the fight against slavery and human trafficking.

Obviously, orphans are among the least powerful and most vulnerable people on earth. That is why I believe that God has been so direct in His call to care for them. They are defenseless, and God by His very nature is a defender. In His call to emulate His holiness, He wants us to be defenders as well.

From their lack of standing and significance in society, orphaned children are easy to exploit. Mostly, when they are taken, they are not missed. When they are abused, they are not heard. And sadly, there is a seemingly endless supply of orphans to be used and cast aside by a depraved system of abusers.

According to the US State Department, somewhere between 600,000 and 800,000 people are trafficked across international borders each year, and approximately 50 percent of those trafficked are children. Orphan children can find themselves in dire circumstances, serving in forced labor and even prostitution at the hands of a well organized and lucrative global criminal system bent on their exploitation for the gain of others.

  1. Some children are sold into slavery by their families or are given away by their families on the promise of a better life for the child, and thus they are rendered fatherless in the process.
  2. Others are abducted into slavery from the streets with no one to notice their absence or to come looking for them.
  3. Orphan graduates, those children who “age out” of an institutional situation, face great difficulty and can be easy targets for human traders and pimps. With nowhere to turn for the basic necessities of life, they give up the one commodity they possess—themselves—to pay the price for their subsistence.

As ambassadors of Christ, we must stand in the gap for these helpless children. They are our concern because they are God’s handiwork, and they are being treated unjustly. The presence of this kind of injustice is dishonoring to God.

To God’s glory from His example, we must look for practical ways to care for exploited orphans and to rescue them from their oppressors. How can we as individuals and as churches take part in making a difference for a vulnerable orphan? We have to be creative to make a real difference.

While we must look for little, personal ways to rescue exploited orphans, we also need to band together and use the collective voice of the church. We must stand up as citizens and voters to insist that our local, state, and national governments take action on orphans’ behalf. We must use our place in the world as a tool of pressure to make laws that fight back the slavery and oppression of these precious children.

—Adapted from Orphanology: Awakening to Gospel-Centered Adoption and Orphan Care © 2011 by Tony Merida and Rick Morton. All rights reserved. Published by New Hope Publishers®, Birmingham, AL.


Rick Morton, along with his wife, Denise, played an integral role in the cofounding of Promise 139, an international orphan-hosting ministry. He serves as discipleship pastor at Temple Baptist Church in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Rick and Denise have three children, all adopted.

2 Categories : Articles
Apr
30

5 Questions to Ask Before Adopting

by newhope

By Rick Morton

Adoption is a significant step for any family and can surface a number of important issues worthy of thinking through. When we consider the Father’s gracious adoption of us in Christ, however, I think many of the common questions and concerns—like “can I love a child that I did not birth like ‘my own’?” or “isn’t adoption just too costly?”—simply melt away. (The financial question is addressed at length in Orphanology.)

Rick and Denise with their children: Nastia, Erick (left), and Nicholas

Having said that, I do not believe that adoption is for every believer. There are certainly questions that all prospective adoptive parents should ask before launching into the adoption process.

1. Am I prepared spiritually for the adoption process?

Parenting is spiritual warfare, and the journey to become a parent through adoption is as well. Let’s be honest. Satan does not want children to be adopted into the homes of families who are committed to Jesus and who will raise these children under the influence of the gospel. It is in the devil’s interest for them to be left in places of darkness. Adoptive parents should be wholly committed to the adoption process and enter that process expecting difficulty and attack—before, during, and after. Adoption has a way of making us aware of our powerlessness and our desperate need for the Lord.  How do you prepare yourself for the journey? You deepen your pursuit of Jesus as His disciple. Pray, dive into the Scriptures, surround yourself with a community of brothers and sisters for growth and accountability, and be a part of building Jesus’ kingdom. Being actively involved in an adoption does not give you a pass to take a time-out on the body of Christ. On the contrary, in this time you need the body perhaps more than ever.

Examine yourself. Is your relationship with Christ growing? Are you sustained by it?  Your child will need all of you and all of the Spirit’s presence in you. Adoption is not a way for you to make up for deficiencies in your own spiritual life. There will be tough days and you will need to rely on a vibrant, healthy relationship with Christ, both during the adoption process and in your journey as a parent. In fact, there are some days that Christ will be all you can hold on to. If there are deep struggles or sins in your life that hinder your relationship and obedience to Christ, deal with them first. Then consider adoption. It will be better for all involved.

2. Am I relationally and emotionally prepared for the adoption process?

Adoption is not a way to fix problems in a family. Adopting a child into a family will stress every existing relationship in that family. Similar to the addition of a new baby to a household by birth, the addition of an adopted child forces the renegotiation of every relationship in the family. If the adopted child is older, the complexity of the task only increases. Unless you are starting from a healthy foundation, the road promises to be hard.

3. Am I financially prepared for an adoption?

For many people, the financial ramifications of adoption can be among the most off-putting aspects of this entire conversation. In truth, even the most expensive international adoptions are really not that expensive when you think about it. Many families will spend more for a family car than it costs to adopt. And that does not factor in tax credits or financial aid, which will offset the expense. The real hidden financial consideration for many families are the ongoing medical costs that may be involved with adopted children. Poor prenatal care or institutional life may result in physical or psychological deficits that will require medical treatment. Do you have adequate medical insurance, dental insurance, and income to provide these needed services?

4. Have I done my homework?

There are many types of adoption (foreign or domestic, infants or older children, healthy or special needs, open or closed, etc.), and families should try to become as educated as possible about all the issues surrounding their case. I would advise choosing an adoption agency that provides parent education/training as part of the adoption process. Along the way, you may hear health terms like fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS), reactive attachment disorder (RAD), pervasive development disorder (PDD), and many others thrown around in relation to adopted kids who have gotten off to a tough start. More and more, there are books, seminars, and conferences around the country especially designed to help adoptive parents and even those simply considering adoption. As an adoptive parent, you want to understand these types of diagnoses before you adopt and what to expect. I believe that God would have us adopt the difficult kids from the hard places. After all, he adopted us, and we were irrevocably broken in our sin. Also, we must remember that God’s grace is sufficient for us and for our children . . . even those who come from the hard places!

5. Am I socially ready?

Do you have a support network of brothers and sisters in Christ, friends, and family who will care for and pray for you and your family through this journey? Do you have people in your life who have adopted with whom you can compare notes and lean on for support? God has given us the gift of each other in the body of Christ, and we need the prayer, love, and support of others who will love us before, during, and after the adoption process.

Quite frankly, older adopted children sometimes can put their adoptive parents into socially awkward and embarrassing positions. I was talking to a pastor friend the other day. Members of his church have adopted into their families several teenage orphans from international institutions. He told me about one family offering up a praise report that their 16-year-old was “down to smoking half a pack a day!” Now, that is real. And if we are honest, a little uncomfortable.

None of us intend to write into our adoption “fairy tale” a child’s recovery from nicotine addiction or a sexually transmitted disease. We pray those are not things we will have to deal with, but part of bringing kids home from the hard places is dealing with the hard things. You can’t do that under the specter of shame and isolation. You need the support and prayer that is found only in genuine community in the body of Christ.

So ultimately the question you will find yourself asking over and over in the adoption process probably will be, “Am I ready?” The answer will likely be, “No.” The great news is that you do not have to be ready or capable, you just have to be available. Remember, if you’re a believer, God promises the resources for every good work in His name:

“And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that having all sufficiency in all things at all times, you may abound in every good work” (2 Corinthians 9:8 ESV).

All Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a division of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.


Rick Morton is the coauthor of Orphanology: Awakening to Gospel-Centered Adoption and Orphan Care. He, along with his wife, Denise, played an integral role in the cofounding of Promise 139, an international orphan-hosting ministry. He serves as discipleship pastor at Temple Baptist Church in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Rick and Denise have 3 children, all adopted from Ukraine. Contact Rick at www.rickmortononline.com; www.facebook.com/dr.rick.morton; www.twitter.com/#!/rick_morton.

2 Categories : Articles
Apr
19

Kimberly Sowell: A Heart for the World

by newhope

Kimberly Sowell talks about how her family has been changed by adopting a son from Guatemala.

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

0 Categories : Podcast
Apr
12

Rick Morton: International Adoption and Building a Family in Reverse

by newhope

Pastor Rick Morton shares facts and stories about international adoption. He and his wife, Denise, have adopted three children from Ukraine.

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

2 Categories : Podcast
Apr
10

Much More than a Brother

by newhope

By Dan Darling

I’ll never forget the day my parents picked me up early from my kindergarten class at Quentin Road Christian School. Leaving school early was always cool, but this trip had a special meaning. The countdown was over, and the day was finally here. We were going to pick up my new brother.

We got into our red Malibu sedan, pulled out of the church lot, and drove for about an hour. We parked the car and entered a white building with the letters ECFA on the front. I remember this stood for Evangelical Child and Family Agency.

A 5-year-old doesn’t know much about life. He doesn’t know about infertility, miscarriage, or adoption. He doesn’t know how babies are made, how brothers and sisters enter the world.

But one thing I did know, from the very moment we entered the office, turned a corner to the right, walked down a short hallway, and entered a room full of cribs—I knew God was bringing someone special into my life.

Dan Darling with his brother, Timothy. (Dan's son, Dan Jr., at left)

I remember the strong arms of my father reaching down into a particular crib, scooping up a tiny baby boy with dark hair and light skin. He held the little guy in his arms and said to my mom, “We’ll call him Timothy. Timothy George.” My dad was notorious for last-minute name decisions. He always felt like he had to see the face of the baby before assigning a name. This baby looked like a Tim, so Tim he would be.

After signing some papers, we put Tim in a brand-new car seat. Then we went to a pharmacy and purchased some diapers, some baby formula, and a few other items. As we rode home, I sat and looked down at this new member of our family. My mother said, “Dan, you’re the big brother and it’s your job to watch over him.”

Those were words I took seriously as a 5-year old boy. They are words I have taken seriously ever since. I’ve tried to be there for Tim through the many seasons of life. Now Tim is a grown man who loves the Lord and loves life. We’re more than brothers. We’re best friends.

Today the church is finding renewed interest in adoption and orphan care, as it should.

Families are adding needy children to their homes, giving of themselves sacrificially, and investing their time and money and effort. There are many little boys and girls out there like Tim who need a loving home, who need someone to demonstrate Christ’s love. And if my life is any evidence, when we give of ourselves to a needy child for Christ’s sake then we will receive much, wonderful and irreplaceable, in return.


Daniel Darling is the senior pastor of Gages Lake Bible Church in the northwest suburbs of Chicago.  His latest release is iFaith: Connecting with God in the 21st Century. He can be reached at www.facebook.com/danieldarling, www.twitter.com/dandarling,  www.danieldarling.com. For more on orphan care, visit www.orphanologybook.com.

0 Categories : Articles
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