ABBA Forum

At AABC we believe that adoption is a community project.  Our adoption ministry is not a segmented group of people who have the ‘adoption process’ in common.  All who are trusting in Christ alone have been adopted by God.  Therefore, we all have adoption in common. As a church body we must work together to rescue spiritual orphans, who have never heard and believed in Jesus, with the gospel. We must also work together to rescue the 145 million abandoned and vunerable children around the world through adoption.  This is why at AABC adoption and orphan care are both woven into our commitment to the Great Commission.

One of the ways we will be fleshing out this church centered vision for adoption in 2010 is through our ABBA Forum.   On January 15, 2010 we will have our first ABBA Forum beginning at 6:30p.m. ABBA Forum is for anyone who has questions about adoption. It is for families considering adoption but also for church members who simply want to encourage and support those families who have and will adopt.

ABBA Forum will be hosted on the 1st Friday of each month at David and Jessica Evan’s home.  The Evan’s recently brought their daughter Lilly home from China.  They cannot wait to share their story and help encourage our church family in the mission of adoption.  For more information you can call or email the church office (8594558244).

The World Mission and The Orphan Conference

Ashland Avenue Baptist Church’s 2010 World Impact Conference will be held September 23-26 at AABC in Lexington Kentucky.  Our guest preacher will be Dr. Russell Moore. Breakout sessions and small group discussion will be led by leading orphan care advocates from ABBA FundLifesong for Orphans, and Hope For Orphans (other groups and are still being added).

This unique World Mission Conference hopes to show how adoption and orphan care fit within the church’s responsibility to fulfill the Great Commission.  This conference is for anyone who has a heart for both the abandoned child and spiritual orphans living among the nations.  On top of mission related resources, there will also be resources for church leaders and who would like to know more about connecting orphan care to your church’s vision for the nations, families considering adoption, and Christians concerned about orphan care in general.

AABC Orphan Sunday Audio

Orphan Sunday at Ashland Avenue Baptist Church included one of the most powerful songs I have ever heard “Rescue Me” written and sung by Pastor Nate BeVier.  All of Pastor Nate’s songs are gloriously Christ-centered, but this one is my new favorite. On Sunday evening, Pastor David E. Prince and myself engaged in a practical conversation on adoption.  You can listen to the audio here or visit the AABC sermon page and download the following resources.

Rescue Me by Pastor Nate BeVier

A Practical Conversation on Adoption David E. Prince and Jeremy Haskins

The Local Church and The Orphan

The young man was as passionate about the gospel as anyone I have ever met. It seemed as if he was leading someone to faith in Christ on a weekly basis.  He was continually reproducing his life in others as he worked to disciple new believers. While he was primarily engaged in campus ministry, his family was also active in a local church. And yet, the ministry in which he was involved had no connection to his church.  It was almost like he was moonlighting for Jesus.

When personally confronted about this disconnect he responded, “I have been involved in churches for years and they just do not understand how evangelism and discipleship really works. For me I have to just keep them separate!”  He continued to remain perfectly content in keeping his ministry to college students disconnected from his life in the local church.

I am reminded of this young man’s words when I think of folks who have grown weary of trying to meet with their pastor to talk about orphan care.  Or when I talk with the pastor whose congregation decided against establishing an adoption fund because of pressing budget issues. Or the ministry director who is continually frustrated with all the ‘bureaucracy’ it takes to effectively partner with a local church.

I am thrilled to see how God is using so many from outside the church to step in the gap that has too long existed between the church and the orphan.  It’s amazing to see that finally so many are being awakened to the global orphan crisis.  Yet, in the back of my mind I continue to dread the day when I will sit across from the guy who waited for the church long enough and took his passion elsewhere.  I fear hearing the words, “The church just doesn’t know how orphan care is accomplished. For me its better to keep them separate!”

The pressing need of 145 million orphans and vulnerable children cannot bypass local churches.  If we want our ministry to orphans to bring glory to Christ we can in no way keep it separate from the church.

In Ephesians 1:23, Paul says the church is, “the fullness of Him who fills all in all.”  If this description of the church were not in the Bible, it would sound blasphemous! Yet, Paul is explaining that Christ is building the church and until He is done His plans for human history are incomplete.  In Ephesians 3:10, Paul says that its God’s purpose to declare His wisdom to the universe through the church.  In Ephesians 5:25-28, he explains that to make this happen Jesus is willing to give Himself for the church.

Therefore, whatever ministry we engage in must be designed to equip and build up the church.  If your ministry does not at some point assist the church in the purpose of declaring the glory of the gospel in the world it is in opposition to Jesus’ plans for your ministry. This also means that, like Jesus, we must be willing not only to suffer and sacrifice for the orphan, but first and foremost for the church.  Such a commitment to the church in general is to be displayed through accountability and service within specific local body.

I mention suffering and sacrifice for the sake of a local body because this sort of vision for orphan care will take patience.  It cannot be just another program being sold to churches. Our goal is to keep this ministry away from the church resource room presently stocked with the last two decades of faddish curriculum, videotapes included. If it is to be sustained, it has to be integrated into the life of the church, which could take some time.

It must first be driven by the preaching and connected to the church’s mission efforts.  In the last post, I spoke about how preaching is to drive adoption and orphan care in the context of the local church.  From the pulpit, the vision for such a ministry must flow into the church’s mission to reach the world with the gospel. This doesn’t happen overnight!

At Ashland Avenue Baptist Church, we believe that orphan care and missions are intimately connected within our commitment to obey the Great Commission. One way this will work itself out is by making international orphan care a component of our church’s mission work.  For example, one of our church’s ten-year mission goals is to personally engage in church planting within the 10-40 Window. Right now, we are looking for opportunities to begin this engagement through orphan care among the unreached.

The organizations that will eventually do the most for the orphan will be those who allow their ministry to be sucked into the ministries of local churches and melded with each church’s overall commitment to reach the world with the good news of Jesus Christ. They will even be willing to see their ideas transformed as they are connected and plugged into the current of each individual church’s ministry energy.

Three organizations who are great models in this way are Hope for Orphans, Abba Fund, and Lifesong for Orphans.  Each group is set up to mobilize the local church for the sake of the orphan.  They are designed to give each church as much ownership as possible and the ability to fulfill their own vision for ministering to the least of these.

The orphan needs more than scattered organizations doing great things in the name of Jesus.  The orphan needs the body of Christ mobilized into local outposts personally equipped for a rescue mission.  The way each church takes part in this mission will look different.  While there is a great need for para-church organizations to mobilize and assist churches and while each church will have its own issues to overcome, we should never think there is another group of folks on the planet who can care for orphans better. This includes those orphans who live in orphanages in Uganda, as well as, the spiritual orphans who live on college campuses in Kentucky.

This post is one in a series of post titled, “The Orphan Advocate, The Pastor, and The Local Church.  Check out PART ONE  The Orphan Advocate and The Pastor and PART TWO The Pastor and The Orphan

Adoption culture at AABC

Jason Kovacs has a great post on  Creating a Culture of Adoption in Your Church.  Establishing a culture of adoption is something we have been intentionally working on for the last year (2008-2009) at Ashland Avenue Baptist Church.  We believe that this is primarily done through the preaching ministry. It is from the pulpit that we seek to establish an entire congregation culture of adoption.

The message must constantly be sent that adoption and orphan care is not to be a ministry agenda of a select group of interested folks.  Rescuing orphans at AABC must be a part of our church’s overall vision to advance the kingdom of Christ in the world.

Jason Kovacs of the ABBA Fund helps to summarize what we are trying to do in establishing a culture of adoption rather than segmented adoption ministry in the following way:

  • Ministry tends be an optional program that a small group of interested individuals can take part in.
  • Culture is something that the whole church community takes part in by virtue of being part of the church.
  • Ministry does not necessitate the involvement or the vision casting of the church leadership.
  • Culture will be sustained by the preaching of the gospel and the particular ways it is worked out.
  • Ministry is not always clearly connected to the mission of the church.
  • Culture is a means to work out the mission of the church.

Since September 2008, we have had 7 new families begin the adoption process.  We have received four former orphans into our congregation over the last year.  We have also taken in $40,000.00 for adoption and orphan care. (AABC partners with ABBA fund)

We believe these things are a result of ‘culture’ not ‘ministry’.  Furthermore, they will only be sustained within a culture cultivated by our church’s mission vision.

Check out our adoption audio resources here.