Thursday, February 27, 2020
Why This Adoption Provider in New York May Have to Shut Its Doors
There are more than 400,000 children in the foster care system nationwide. This includes over 25,000 children in the state of New York alone.
You would think that government agencies would want as many adoption providers as possible working to find homes for these children. Yet, in some states, government officials are cutting ties with—and in some cases, outright attempting to shut down—adoption providers because of their religious beliefs about the best home for a child.
The apostle James urged Christians “to look after the orphans and widows in their distress.” Christians throughout history have always taken care of children in need of a home. In America, one of the first orphanages was founded before the Revolutionary War by a Christian preacher.
New Hope Family Services has continued this tradition for over 50 years.
New Hope is an “arm-around-the-shoulder” ministry committed to meeting the needs of every life touched by adoption. This adoption agency provides adoption planning and placement while remaining committed to helping prepare adoptive parents for their unique responsibilities. New Hope is also a pregnancy center that offers pregnancy tests, medical referrals, and counseling. New Hope provides all these services through the generosity of donors; the organization does not receive any public funding.
New Hope is committed to walking with adoptive families and birth parents alike to place children with adoptive families. And it has done so with excellence.
In the fall of 2018, the New York Office of Children and Family Services (OCFS) recognized this in a review, writing in a letter that the organization “had a number of strengths in providing adoption services.”
But then something changed.
Just months after the OCFS gave New Hope Family Services a positive review, the agency changed course, calling one of the organization’s policies “discriminatory and impermissible.”
Had New Hope changed any of its policies since the favorable review? No. But as a Christian non-profit, New Hope believes that the best environment for children is in a home with a married mom and dad. For that reason, New Hope does not place children for adoption with same-sex couples or unmarried opposite-sex couples. Instead, New Hope kindly refers them to one of the other approximately 130 adoption providers in New York—the vast majority of which will place children with any individual who qualifies.
New Hope’s decision to live out its faith in its polices was too much for the OCFS. Despite its previous favorable review of the organization, the agency issued an ultimatum to New Hope: violate its religious beliefs or close its adoption services. The OCFS took this position even though New Hope receives no public funding.
Faith-based adoption providers should not be punished for their religious beliefs. And children should not be deprived of forever homes because government bureaucrats disfavor religious organizations that believe children benefit from having a married mom and dad. For both of these reasons, New Hope is asking a federal court to protect it from being singled out, punished, and disfavored because of its Christian beliefs.
New Hope filed a complaint against the OCFS in federal district court on December 6, 2018. Unfortunately, the district court dismissed the case on May 16, 2019. Now, New Hope’s case is before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
And on November 4, the Second Circuit issued an emergency order, so that New Hope could keep its doors open and continue serving families and children while its appeal is being considered. The Second Circuit heard oral arguments in New Hope’s case on November 13, 2019. The court will ultimately decide whether to reverse the district court’s decision to dismiss the case entirely.
New Hope Family Service’s Christian faith is central to its mission. It should be able to operate according to its religious beliefs in a pluralistic society such as ours. There is no reason to single out and punish those who hold the belief that the best home for a child includes a mother and a father.
The Bottom Line:
Adoption providers who help children find a loving home with a mother and father should be protected, not shut down for their faith. And children should not be punished by government bureaucrats who do not share (or who outright condemn) the religious beliefs of such providers.
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