GotQuestions.org:
What does the Bible say about adoption?
Giving children
up for adoption can be a loving alternative for parents who may, for various reasons,
be unable to care for their own children. It can also be an answer to prayer
for many couples who have not been able to have children of their own. Adoption
is, for some, a calling to multiply their impact as parents by expanding their
family with children who are not their own, biologically. Adoption is spoken of
favorably throughout Scripture.
The book of Exodus tells the story of a
Hebrew woman named Jochebed who bore a son during a time when Pharaoh had
ordered all Hebrew male infants to be put to death (Exodus 1:15-22). Jochebed
took a basket, waterproofed it, and placed the baby in the river in the basket
among the reeds. One of Pharaoh’s daughters spotted the basket and retrieved
the child. She eventually adopted him into the royal family and gave him the
name Moses. He went on to become a faithful and blessed servant of God (Exodus 2:1-10).
In the book of Esther, a beautiful girl
named Esther, who was adopted by her cousin after her parents' death, became a
queen, and God used her to bring deliverance to the Jewish people. In the New
Testament, Jesus Christ was conceived through the Holy Spirit instead of
through the seed of a man (Matthew 1:18).
He was “adopted” and raised by His mother’s husband, Joseph, who took Jesus as
his own child.
Once we give our hearts to Christ,
believing and trusting in Him alone for salvation, God says we become part of
His family—not through the natural process of human conception, but through
adoption. “For you did not receive a spirit that makes you a slave again to
fear, but you received the Spirit of sonship [adoption]. And by him we cry,
‘Abba, Father’” (Romans 8:15).
Similarly, bringing a person into a family by means of adoption is done by
choice and out of love. “His unchanging plan has always been to adopt us into
His own family by bringing us to Himself through Jesus Christ. And this gave
Him great pleasure” (Ephesians 1:5).
As God adopts those who receive Christ as Savior into His spiritual family, so
should we all prayerfully consider adopting children into our own physical
families.
Clearly adoption—both in the physical
sense and in the spiritual sense—is shown in a favorable light in Scripture.
Both those who adopt and those who are adopted are receiving a tremendous
blessing, a privilege exemplified by our adoption into God’s family.
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