Bethany Christian Services, long described as the country’s largest Protestant adoption and foster care agency, will no longer allow LGBTQ couples to foster or adopt.
In a press release posted Wednesday, the Michigan-based agency announced that its board voted to “clarify and reinforce” its Christian faith commitments. Those changes require staff and board members to “personally agree and adhere to” a belief statement that includes the Apostles’ Creed, recognizes the authority of the Christian Bible, and affirms the image of God in every person. The belief statement also defines God’s design for marriage as “a covenant between one man and one woman.”
In an email, a spokesperson confirmed that these changes will also impact the selection of foster and adoptive parents.
“Beginning June 2027, Bethany will only license and re-license foster families whose Christian faith and beliefs align with our Statement of Faith and Belief,” they said.
The spokesperson added that senior leaders on staff and others who have “certain roles” with “significant responsibility and oversight” were expected to agree with the belief statement by June 1; all other staff must align by next year, June 1, 2027. Bethany declined to share specific staff impact numbers.
When asked if these changes were due to concerns about funding or based on input from donors, a spokesperson said the decisions were not due to external pressure but “reflect a decision to reinforce our Christian identity by our Board and Executive Leadership following prayer and discernment.”
The policy change does not appear to prevent the group from serving LGBTQ children or vulnerable LGBTQ-affirming families. “The organization will continue to serve all children and families who seek its help, regardless of their individual circumstances, beliefs, or background,” the press release said.
Given Bethany’s size—the faith-based nonprofit serves in over 25 states and has more than 1,000 staff members worldwide—the changes will be far-reaching.
The change is a significant about-face. Five years ago, in March 2021, the organization began placing children with LGBTQ parents in the 32 states where it then operated, after a lawsuit in Michigan and a contract suspension in Philadelphia forced it to begin serving same-sex couples in those areas.
Bethany’s new changes come amid broader political shifts. For years, civil liberties groups have pushed for state and federal LGBTQ nondiscrimination policies and argued that groups receiving government funding shouldn’t exclude anyone. But under the Trump administration, federal LGBTQ nondiscrimination protections in health care, education, and housing have been significantly rolled back, decisions celebrated by conservative Christians.
Bethany’s policies haven’t always been in sync with the Trump administration’s priorities. The nonprofit has been critical of the administration’s severe restrictions on refugee resettlement, a key element of the nonprofit’s programming.
“The temporary suspension of refugee resettlement efforts will cause significant impact to vulnerable men, women, and children legally seeking safety and hope in our nation,” Bethany said in January 2025.
Even before Trump’s second term, Bethany Christian adopted more restrictive hiring policies. In 2024, local Michigan news outlet WOOD TV8 reported that Bethany’s CEO, Keith Cureton, who was hired in July 2023, enforced a policy requiring all hires to be Christian.
“These actions continue the work already underway to ensure alignment across our organization,” a spokesperson said.
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