Refine Search
Viewing 31-40 of 49
Building resilience
Youth in Ghana face many harsh realities including poverty, violence, and trafficking. Let's work to give them every opportunity to build resiliency to the things that can make life harder.
Safe, loved, and—most of all—connected
Parenting in the best of times can be stressful, and raising children without a community of support is harder still. For parents feeling isolated and overwhelmed, the ways they do or don't cope with stress may put their children in harm’s way. Key to ensuring the children are OK is making sure their parents are OK.
Preserve a family, not rescue a child
Our calling to keep children safe with their families, not from their families, is motivated by our faith in who God is and the radical love he calls us to.
What the system taught me
From her first days as a Child Protective Services investigator to Bethany senior vice president, what Cheri Williams has learned over her social services career has changed her thinking about what’s best for children. Today she’s in a position to do something about that.
Love like Jesus in your community
Safe Families volunteers use their homes to love their neighbors
Play"I felt safe with people I knew"
Amy entered foster care at 15 after disclosing years of abuse at home. But family would also play a key role in her healing.
Play"It's a no brainer: You're there for family"
Two parallel phone calls changed everything. One call was from the school counselor, saying Bobbi’s daughter had disclosed years of sexual abuse. The second call was from Bethany, asking Bobbi’s sister if she could provide kinship care.
PlayA safe place for women to heal
Bethany Recovery Center is a rehab center that helps women struggling with drug or alcohol abuse and addiction.
PlayReNew was hope for a different life
Because of her substance use, Keri had already lost one child to the foster care system. So when her addiction led her to prison, and she learned she was pregnant again, she had to find a different path.
PlayChange begins at home
When Mia’s behaviors escalated, she was hospitalized for months because local residential care facilities would not admit her. Intensive, home-based intervention made it possible for her to come home again.