Ministry Focus

Orphan Care Ministries

Christian ministries serving vulnerable children worldwide — through family preservation and reunification, foster care and kinship support, adoption and aftercare — recognizing that every child belongs in a family and that the church's calling is to defend, support, and walk alongside the world's most vulnerable.

Verified Orphan Care Ministries

Christian nonprofits in this focus area that have been verified against The Most Trusted Standard.

278 nonprofits

The Work

What Orphan Care Ministries Do

Orphan care takes many forms — from preventing family breakdown to supporting kinship caregivers, from foster family training to residential care for those who genuinely have nowhere else. The best work meets vulnerable children wherever they are along the continuum of care.

Family Preservation & Reunification

Working to keep vulnerable children with their biological families when possible — through economic support, parenting training, addiction recovery, mental health services, and the practical help that addresses the crises that separate children from parents.

Foster Care & Kinship Support

Supporting foster families and kinship caregivers — grandparents, aunts, uncles, and other relatives raising children whose parents cannot. Includes training, respite care, financial assistance, and the church-based networks that surround caregivers with the community they need.

Adoption Support

Supporting families adopting children who cannot return to their biological families — domestic and international adoption assistance, financial grants, post-adoption support, and the trauma-informed care that adopted children and families need across years and decades.

Family-Style Residential Care

For children who cannot safely return to family, small family-style group homes with consistent caregivers — replacing the large institutional orphanages of the past with settings that mirror family structure as closely as possible.

Trauma-Informed Caregiver Training

Training adoptive parents, foster families, kinship caregivers, and orphanage staff in trauma-informed care — using frameworks like TBRI and attachment-based approaches that address the severe and lasting effects of early-life trauma on a child's nervous system.

Aging-Out Aftercare

Supporting young adults who have aged out of foster care, orphanages, or other systems — life skills, education, employment, housing, and the sustained relationships that fill the gap where family would normally provide ongoing support into adulthood.

Why It Matters

The Case for Supporting This Work

The biblical mandate to care for the orphan runs from one end of Scripture to the other. The God of the Old Testament defines himself as "a father to the fatherless" (Psalm 68:5). James names looking after orphans and widows as "religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless" (James 1:27). Few biblical commands are clearer. And few categories of Christian ministry generate more donor attention, emotional engagement, and well-intentioned giving.

The mature orphan care movement has also learned, often the hard way, that well-intentioned giving can cause real harm. Decades of research have shown that children raised in large institutional orphanages suffer measurable damage in attachment, cognitive development, and adult outcomes compared to children raised in family settings. Short-term orphanage volunteers attaching and detaching from already-traumatized children compound the wound. Some orphanages actively recruit children from intact families to fill beds that attract donor funding. The movement has had to grow up.

What has emerged is a deeper conviction: every child belongs in a family. The best orphan care today therefore prioritizes a continuum — preventing family breakdown first, supporting kinship caregivers, strengthening foster systems, facilitating adoption when reunification isn't possible, and using small family-style residential care only for children who genuinely have nowhere else. Globally, roughly 80% of children currently in orphanages have at least one living parent. They are there because of poverty, illness, disability, or family crisis — situations that often respond better to family support than to removing the child.

What the church brings to this work, at its best, is sustained presence. Not a week of volunteer time at a foreign orphanage, but the patient infrastructure that supports a foster family year after year. The trauma-informed training that helps an adoptive parent understand their child's nervous system. The kinship grandmother who has the resources she needs to keep her grandchildren together. The young adult aging out of care who has someone calling at Christmas. The biblical mandate to look after orphans was never about a single dramatic rescue. It was always about long, faithful love.

Donor Guidance

What to Look for in an Orphan Care Ministry

Beyond our standard verification framework, here are factors specific to orphan care ministries that thoughtful donors often weigh.

  • Family-based care over institutional models

    The mature orphan care movement has shifted decisively toward family-based care — preserving biological families when possible, supporting kinship and foster care, and using small family-style homes only when necessary. Excellent ministries prioritize this continuum. Beware of ministries primarily funding or expanding large traditional orphanages, particularly in countries where family-based alternatives exist.

  • Family preservation as primary, not last resort

    Most children in orphanages globally have living family who could care for them with the right support. Excellent ministries invest significantly in family preservation and reunification — economic support, parenting training, addiction recovery, mental health services — recognizing that the best place for most children is with the family they already have.

  • Refuses harmful "orphan tourism"

    Short-term volunteer trips to orphanages have been heavily critiqued for compounding attachment trauma in already-vulnerable children. Excellent ministries refuse volunteer placements that have visitors handling, holding, or bonding briefly with children, regardless of donor enthusiasm. Look for ministries with clear policies that protect children from short-term volunteer relationships.

  • Avoids funding orphanages that recruit from families

    In some countries, orphanages have been documented actively recruiting children from intact families — through deception, financial pressure, or false promises — to fill beds that attract donor funding. The Cambodia, Nepal, and Haiti contexts have particular concerns. Excellent ministries vet partner organizations carefully and refuse funding to those engaged in these practices.

  • Trauma-informed care across the continuum

    Orphan trauma is severe and persistent. Excellent ministries train all their caregivers — foster parents, adoptive families, kinship caregivers, residential staff — in trauma-informed approaches like TBRI. Look for ministries that take attachment, trauma, and neurodevelopmental realities seriously rather than assuming love alone is sufficient response to severe early childhood disruption.

  • Indigenous leadership and aging-out support

    The best international orphan care is led by indigenous leaders who understand local context, family systems, and culture — not parachuted-in Western models. Look for ministries that center indigenous leadership rather than imposing external assumptions. Additionally, look for ministries that invest in aging-out aftercare — supporting young adults who have aged out of care into the often disorienting transition to independent adulthood.

Take the Next Step

Find a Ministry to Support

Explore verified orphan care ministries above — or browse Christian ministries by other causes, locations, and award levels.