A Time for Men

July 6, 2010 in Adoption, Foster Care, International Orphan Care | Comments (4)

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A Time for Men

It sometimes seems Christian men are ten steps behind the women in responding to God’s call to care for orphans, whether via adoption, foster care or global orphan care.  There’d be a lot to say about reasons why.   But whatever the cause, one thing is clear:  men need to know that when we talk about reflecting God’s heart for the orphan, masculinity is every bit as needed as maternal love.

Yes, to meet an orphan’s needs does call for much nurture and caregiving.   (I might add that any loving father should join and relish these involvements, too.)  But there’s another side to the call as well, a fiercer side.

The word translated “care for” or “visit” in James 1:27 is a much more potent term than we often imagine.  It carries a hint of the same thought as in our colloquial saying “show up”—as in, “…then, the Marines showed up.”   In Luke 1:68 the term is set in the context of God’s mighty rescue His people:  “Blessed be the Lord God of Israel; for He hath visited and redeemed His people” (KJV).  We get a taste of this same call to masculine action in Isaiah’s mandate: “Defend the cause of the fatherless” (1:17).

Ultimately, the wellspring of all our actions on behalf of orphans is God’s action on our behalf:  His role as the rescuing and defending Father, His fierce pursuit and rescue of us.

This kind of active, pursuing, sacrificial, even aggressive “visiting” of orphans is a call to every man who claims the name of Christ.

The truth is, the fatherless child often faces the world without provider or protector; she lives on a precipice between poverty and predators.  Men are needed.  Real men.  As protectors and providers.  As adoptive fathers and mentors.  As defenders and champions.  The role demands struggle; we must grapple in prayer, in sacrifice, in wresting a young life from those that would use and abuse it.  This can be a bloody road, sometimes literally.  And it calls out for men to stand alongside their wives, sisters and daughters to truly “defend the cause of the fatherless.”

There is reason for hope.  Men are waking.  A small, hand-written note was left for me at Summit VI, unsigned.  It read simply, “I know of quite a few women in my hometown who would love to and have a desire to adopt or open their home for fostering children.  Sadly, none of their husbands are open to this in any way.  I’ve wondered, ‘Where are the men with a heart for the fatherless—a heart like my heavenly father.’  This is my first time at the Summit and I am blown away by the number of men here!!  And I am very encouraged.  Just wanted to pass that on.”

Comments (4)

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  1. Comment by Jessica Smith — July 6, 2010 @ 4:43 pm

    Great post! I recently finished reading a book by Jack Frost; “Experience Father’s Embrace” that touched on the stronghold of a fatherless generation.

    I believe that God is stirring up His warriors (men) and that through continual prayers, we will see the fruit of men truly defending the weak and standing up for the least of these!

    Thank you guys for being a voice that continually speaks up for God’s precious ones!

    May He continue to unite the Body to do what it was intended to…receive the Father’s love and then freely give it away!

  2. Comment by Whitney — July 6, 2010 @ 10:07 pm

    Thank you for this post. This is the story of many women I have been encountering. Let us pray for God to raise up men with the heart of our Heavenly Father! God is surely moving…

  3. Comment by Steve Osborn — July 7, 2010 @ 7:36 pm

    This is such a timely and Spirit led challenge. The fact that Men are not in the group of the “at risk” seems to have made us complacent. But any man who does not see tis need to help do not “Love God with all their heart and all their strength and all their mind”

    It is time…before it is too late.

    Wake up, you who sleep!!!

  4. Comment by Zac Canfield — July 10, 2010 @ 9:36 am

    I am a young male. I have a heart for the Fatherless and attended Summit 6. I agree that men are not stepping up but I feel like we have more hindrances then women. Because of our culture there is a lack of trust for men. I don’t know if there is a way to help this but I just thought I would put that out there.

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