To say that Simone Biles is a gymnast is like saying Michael Jordan played basketball. Gymnastics legend Mary Lou Retton says she is "as dominant as Michael Jordan was when he was on the top of his game." A commentator this morning calls her "the most dominating gymnast the sport has ever seen."
Simone is a three-time world all-around champion, four-time US national
all-around champion, three-time world floor champion, and two-time world
balance beam champion. Yesterday she was part of the US team that won
gold in the women's all-around competition at the Rio Olympics.
Simone has been in the news for more than her stupendous gymnastic
achievements, however. Earlier this week, NBC announcer Al Trautwig referred to
her adoptive parents as her "grandparents." An adoption advocate
reached out to correct Trautwig, but he stood firm: "They may be mom and
dad but they are NOT her parents." Her coach then tweeted the
announcer, "Actually they are her parents." Trautwig finally admitted
his mistake and agreed that "Ron and Nellie are Simone's parents."
Here's the rest of her story.
Simone and her three siblings were born to drug-addicted parents who
struggled to care for them. Her father abandoned her mother and was
never present in Simone's life. She bounced back and forth between state
and foster care. When she was six years old, her grandparents
officially adopted her and her sister.
They introduced her to gymnastics and to their Christian faith. She
attends mass with her family every Sunday, prays regularly, and carries a
rosary her mother gave her. Now she is poised to make history.
In an eternal sense, however, she already has.
Simone Biles will be in heaven because two godly parents adopted her on
earth. She is an inspiration to millions because they are an inspiration
to her. It's hard to think of a way we can impact a life more directly
than when we adopt a child. Simone's children and their children and
their children will forever be different because her adoptive parents
shared God's love with her.
The bad news
is that too few children eligible for adoption get adopted. There are
107,918 foster children waiting to be adopted in the US. Every year,
about 23,000 children age out of foster care without finding a permanent
family. Tragically, only 2 percent of them will get a college
education. Eighty percent of the prison population comprises adults who
were in the foster care system at some point in their childhood.
The good news is that organizations like #StandForLife
are here to help. They share "stories of grace and redemption that
demonstrate the beauty surrounding every human being given the
opportunity to live." Their stories about adoption are life-changing and God-glorifying.
Each of us was a spiritual orphan until our Father adopted us as his
children (Ephesians 1:5; Galatians 4:5–7). Now he wants us to share his
inclusive love with those who need it most.
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