Help us advocate for John and other kids in foster care

Help us advocate for John and other kids in foster care

November 11th was National Orphan Sunday. Frankly, every Sunday should be Orphan Sunday.

Our church is advocating for John and other children in foster care. You can help John and other children find a forever family!

“John is a sweet 10 year old boy! He said, “I really, really want to be adopted!” He is described as being all boy. John loves playing outside and catching bugs. He is very sweet and fun to be around. John likes to make jokes, and his infectious laugh will spread to anyone around him! He is competitive, athletic and ambidextrous. John is artistic and loves to draw- especially Minions and Pikachu from Pokémon. He desires a family that will love him unconditionally and be patient as he works through his trauma.”

 

Challenges:

  • Nearly 7% of all orphans in the USA are in Texas
  • 17,000 children in Foster Care in Texas
  • 340 kids are currently in Tarrant County foster care waiting to be adopted
  • 20% of the children who were in foster care will become instantly homeless when they reach 21.
  • 7 out of 10 girls who age out of the foster care system will become pregnant before the age of 21.
  • 25% of children who age out of the foster care system still suffer from PTSD

Not everyone is called to adopt or become a foster parent. However, everyone can advocate for children in the foster care system.

Creative ways to help:

  • Pray for children in the foster care system and families who choose to step in.
  • Share the need on Social Media and with your community
  • Advocate for these children by becoming their voice in the family courts CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocate)
  • Advocate for these kids in your community group, your church or civic group
  • Support adoptive families by asking how you can help them
  • Create a meal calendar with your friends and family to bring a weekly meal to an adoptive/foster family
  • Get certified and trained to provide respite care for these families
  • Ask an adoptive family if you can mow their lawn or help with some chores
  • Do they have transportation challenges? or need a bigger car? Gather a community group to fund a vehicle
  • Do they have a child with physical challenges that require accommodations like wheel chair ramps, etc? Meet that need.
  • Go to the grocery store for them
  • Help them celebrate special events like birthdays and Thanksgiving
  • Adoption is expensive – are their ways you can help financially? Pay a water bill or mortgage for a month.
  • Give the parents a ‘Night Out’ by paying for a sitter and providing a gift card to a restaurant.
  • Offer to take the entire family to the zoo or a museum or just a park
  • Get creative or just ask a family what you can do to help!
  • Find out more here…

Get in the game!


A Message to the Church

“There are almost 17,000 kids in foster care in Texas. That seems like a crazy number until you hear there are almost 30,000 churches in Texas! There is more to Orphan Care than just fostering or adopting. If one Christian family from every church adopted and that church agreed to support and wrap around that family there would no no more orphans in Texas.

“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)


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Photoshop Culture: Can you really believe what you see?

Photoshop Culture: Can you really believe what you see?


(Note: I do not endorse globaldemoracy(dot)com… But, applaud their posting of this video)

I enjoy going to the grocery store with my wife and young children. I appreciate the opportunity of teaching them the value of a dollar.

I hate waiting in the check-out line. Not because I hate waiting. I hate the images on the magazines surrounding my family in the checkout isle. We live in what I call a ‘Photoshop Culture‘ where almost every image we see is airbrushed, manipulated and/or enhanced. When we’re waiting in the checkout line, my little daughter does not realize she is looking at a complete LIE.  Neither does my young son.

It begs the question; What kind of impact do these images have on the minds of our children?

(more…)

Being a Man: Lesser Sons of Greater Fathers?

The recent events at Sandy Hook Elementary in CT last week have compelled me to complete a post that I have been working on for a several weeks. There is a crisis occurring in our culture and I am going to attempt to engage the problem as I see it. Before I dive into to this topic, I warn you that I am not going to be ‘Politically Correct’ or coddle post-modern ideals. I am going to paint with a broad brush and speak to the overall culture in general. I’m going to give it to you straight as I see it. My goal is to get you thinking and end with a relevant call to action.

It goes without saying that there are some exceptions to what is occurring culturally.

The question put to our generation is this:
“Are we lesser sons of greater fathers in whose mighty company we are ashamed to stand?” (Bill Whittle paraphrasing a line from the Lord of The Rings)

The Greatest Generation gave birth to the most selfish narcissistic bunch of victims the world has ever seen. The Selfish Generation has enslaved their own grandchildren with their appetite for immediate self-gratification and the pursuit of materialism. A growing number of young adults suffer from a lack or purpose, depression and other disorders. That correlates with the fact that we have turned freedom into license and a man who once worked to provide for his family two generations ago no longer has to work. He has been replaced by the state or still lives with his parents and has developed a sense of entitlement. (more…)