Lifesong Blog
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Read about the children we serve and receive important updates from our team, partners, and supporters.
Read about the children we serve and receive important updates from our team, partners, and supporters.
Students in Uganda are learning how to grow their own food. They plant, tend, harvest, and prepare crops to be eaten.
When Tesfanesh's mother passed away, Tesfanesh—just an eighth grader at the time—suddenly found herself alone.
Yet she was not abandoned.
Zoe's arrival was unexpected. Her family wasn't financially prepared for another adoption, yet God was already at work, orchestrating every detail.
“I bought my outfit with my own money,” a young lady we serve in Haiti, proudly announced one day. Josna participated in a program designed to prepare youth for adulthood by engaging them in structured work experiences.
Leomane’s husband left her and her five young children to fend for themselves. As a single mother in Haiti, she struggled to provide for her children’s basic needs, including food, shelter, and education.
A growing movement of in-country adoption is changing the future for countless orphans, giving them the stability of a home, the tenderness of a family's love, and the hope of a living faith in the child's home country.
Abraham and his six siblings entered the child protection system when he was a baby. Since then, he has faced a variety of medical diagnoses, affecting his eyes and mobility. Still, the Lord has been gracious.
12 orphans we serve in Liberia are now university students at four universities. After spending the past 16 years providing shelter, nutritious meals, protection, health care, spiritual care, and education, our team is proud to see them embark on their journeys to becoming leaders in their communities.
What if this vulnerable, faith-stretching season of asking and trusting isn't just something to get through—but something God intends to use? Not just to bring a child home, but to transform the hearts of those waiting.
Lily’s journey began with her parents’ divorce. Soon after, her mother took her to live with her grandmother, but her grandmother didn’t have the resources to provide for her basic needs. Lily often went without food and comfort. But above all, Lily grieved the opportunity to attend school.