Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is
Pure and undefiled religion before God and the Father is this: to visit orphans and widow in their trouble, and to keep oneself unspotted from the world. - James 1:27-
This morning I went to the abortion clinic for the first time in a while. (Side note: one of many perks of becoming recently unemployed - Saturdays open!) I chose my favorite little sign: Do Not Commit Murder - We Will Adopt YOUR CHILD.
We weren't the only ones with signs today. I noticed, behind the pile of things the three pink-vested volunteer clinic escorts collected at the corner of the building, a handwritten sign. Upside down, it said adoption at the bottom. Why, I wondered, would they have a sign that said that?
After we prayed, grabbed signs, and began walking the sidewalk, one of the escorts held up the sign. She continued to as they talked and laughed, mostly ignoring us. The sign was written clearly in bright colors.
Lucas County Children's Services
has lots of children
waiting for adoption.
When the woman flipped it over, I saw the other side.
Put your money where your mouth is, it read.
Anger and defenses rose immediately. What do they know? Many in our group have adopted both internationally and in the US as well as become foster parents. Surely our money and our actions are where our mouths are.
But then conviction rose. The sign is right, if not its attitude; we should have our money where our mouth is. I thought of 1 Peter 3:16. "Keep a good conscience so that in the thing in which you are slandered, those who revile your good behavior in Christ will be put to shame."
Is this the case? Are we so active that the mouths of those who rise against us are shut?
Praise God for the families who are adopting. But are not many of us resting on their laurels?
I wonder, should every family feel that the burden of adopting is on them unless God clearly shows the otherwise? I remember a statistic I heard: if one family from every THREE churches adopted an eligible child from foster care, and the rest of the families supported that one family, there would be NO CHILDREN in the American foster care system left waiting to be adopted. None. Surely there is at least one family out of every three churches that should adopt!
Not everyone can adopt. But we know that, and how quick we are to make excuses! And how many ways there are to help. Are we giving to families who are adopting? Are we praying? Are we babysitting, bringing meals, or providing emotional support? Are we being especially careful to assist in the training and raising of adopted children?
Are we judging others' methods? As Dwight L. Moody put it so beautifully, I like my way of doing it better than your way of not doing it. With high costs and the issues that always come with adoption, even of babies, it is easy to criticize how families overcome this obstacles to adoption and how many they adopt.
Are we supporting women who decide not to abort their children? Are we supporting ministries that do?
The brassness of the women who volunteer at the clinic is provoking. The women going in almost never respond to the counselors from our group that call out to them. Once, one of the escorts blocked the face of a woman going in from our view with her sign. After escorting one woman in, two of them gave a high-five. It was sad and creepy, highlighting how they deceive the women going in.
We wanted to silence them. I wanted to bring every child that has been adopted in our church and stand them on that corner with a sign, a great big sign. These children were given life in a new home. Your child can be too. Choose adoption.
Parker asked me a few weeks ago, "If someone going in said to me, "If you, you personally, will adopt my child, we won't abort it," should I do it?"
"Of course," I replied. It doesn't matter that we're less than 10 weeks away from the birth of our first child, nor that we're not rich, nor that we live in a small apartment. I wish it would happen, rather than add to the mass of unmarked murders.
Sometimes, though, it's easier to submit in the big things. In a sense, it's easier to decide to adopt a baby and love them as your own than to love the annoying kid your friend adopted, easier to give up thousands of dollars to go to another country to rescue an orphaned child than to give up a few pizza nights to give so someone else can.
Do not give God's enemies occasion to blaspheme. May the church so love the orphans, not in words but in deed, that the mouths of the world are stopped.


