Five Things You Can do to Help an Adoptive/Foster Family Part II
Ever wonder what you can do to support adoption/foster care? Maybe you don’t feel as if you can take a child into your home. Maybe you already raised your children and you aren’t ready to start over. It may be that you have a heart for adoption,but it’s not time for you to walk the adoption road, a few more things may need to fall into place. The good news is, you don’t have to adopt/foster to support it. You can support those who do and it’s not terribly difficult.
*If you missed the first in the series, you can find it here.
External religious worship [[b]religion as it is expressed in outward acts] that is pure and unblemished in the sight of God the Father is this: to visit and help and care for the orphans and widows in their affliction and need, and to keep oneself unspotted anduncontaminated from the world.” James 1:27
2. Fill in for the family while they get acclimated.
If you haven’t adopted or fostered, you may be scratching your head right now, wondering what that even means. To put it in to some context, when a family brings home a newborn, they may need some meals delivered and if the infant is in PICU for some complications/health issues, they may not be able to fulfill some commitments for a while.
Adoptive/foster parents will disappear off the radar for a while. It’s not because they are not committed to their church body, work, homeschool co-op, school, sport or other activity they had once been active in.
The Bible commands us to visit orphans and widows, There is a reason for that, they may be at home. Maybe they are grieving a life lost, maybe they are stuck in survival mode and struggling with being around people.
The family with foster/adoptive children cocoons, trying with every fiber of their being to get these traumatized children to feel safe, leave survival mode and attach. It’s a tough job (with some children), there is no time or energy left for anything else for a season.
So, fill in for the family. Cover for them. Work the nursery their Sunday. Bring the book club or soccer snack. Don’t ask them to volunteer for anything for this season. Drop by with some dinner or strong coffee, but don’t be put off if you’re not invited to stay for hours and chat.
Don’t talk about them at church as if they have back-slidden. They are James one twenty seven-ing it all the way in their home mission field. Pretend adoptive/foster families are away in a foreign country if that helps you put it into perspective. Pray for the at-home missionaries just as fervently as you would those who are abroad!