Author: KATIE YODER ย FEB 11, 2021ย | Visit LifeNews.com
After Toyotaโs Super Bowl ad captured the touching life story of Paralympic swimmer Jessica Long, the media raced to report on the athlete. But many of them bypassed crucial details about the 28 year old โ including her Christian faith and pro-life position.
Toyota, a partner of Team USA, highlighted the 13-time Paralympic gold medalist on Sunday. Her story is one worth telling: She was adopted from a Russian orphanage as a baby and lost both of her legs as a toddler only to become the second-most decorated U.S. Paralympian in history. But thereโs more to the story. She centers her life on God, she says, and advocates for adoption in place of abortion. Thatโs because, for her, โI would rather know that the baby would have a better life than I could give him or her instead of just terminating the baby.โ
Theย minute-long adย doesnโt show all of that โ but it struck a pro-life tone. The camera follows the champion athlete as she โswimsโ through her life story, beginning with her adoptive mother receiving a phone call informing her that little Jessica is available for adoption.
โWe found a baby girl for your adoption,โ a womanโs voice tells her mother, โbut thereโs some things you need to know.โ
โSheโs in Siberia, and she was born with a rare condition,โ she continues. โHer legs will need to be amputated. I know this is difficult to hear. Her life, it wonโt be easy.โ
That didnโt deter Mrs. Long. โIt might not be easy, but itโll be amazing,โ she responds. โI canโt wait to meet her.โ
Steve and Beth Long โ a Christian, homeschooling family in Baltimore, Maryland โย adoptedย Jessica when she was just 13 months old. Her legs were amputated when she was 18 months old due to a condition called fibular hemimelia, which meant that she did not have fibulas, ankles, heels, and most of the other bones in her feet. In total, she has enduredย more thanย a dozen surgeries.
But that didnโt stop her from living life. God had a plan.
Instead of a phone call, her adoptive parents actually โwent to a church meeting and they saw a picture of me,โ she toldย I Am Secondย last year. โThey were told that this little Russian girl has leg deformities and really needed to be adopted. And my mom just said, โWe knew that you were the child that God wanted us to adopt.โ
Jessica loves both of her mothers.
โIโve definitely dealt with a lot of emotions and questions regarding my adoption, but I am so grateful she chose to give me life,โ she wrote of her birth mom in an Instagramย postย in 2019. And โMy mom who raised me is the most bubbly, fearless, incredible woman and Iโm honored to be her daughter.โ
In 2013, sheย traveledย with one of her five siblings to meet her birth parents.
โI want them to know that Iโm not angry with them,โ Long said in an NBC film, shortly before a tear-filled reunion. โI think that was really brave, and I donโt know what I would have done if I was in her situation, at 16 and having this disabled baby that they knew that they couldnโt take care of. I want to tell her that when I see her that, if anything, I have so much love for her, my mom, because she gave me life.โ
Jessica is pro-adoption and pro-life, according to aย Celebrate Life Magazineย (CLM) story published in 2014.
โIf you truly canโt care for the child and canโt give the child the life he or she deserves, I would give the child up for adoption, because there is going to be a family out there who will love that babyโno matter what the diagnosis is,โ Jessica said. โI know it can seem really discouraging, but in the end, I think that if you would abort the baby, you would definitely regret it. I think, for me, that I would rather know that the baby would have a better life than I could give him or her instead of just terminating the baby.โ
Jessica also believes in the power of prayer and faith, telling CLM that โIt gives me all of my strength.โ
But her faith journey is just that: a journey.
โI canโt think of a single childhood memory that we werenโt always at church or with our church community,โ she told I Am Second. โAnd what I heard a lot of is that, โGod made me this way.โโ
โI knew I didnโt want anything to do with this God that made me this way,โ she added. Among other things, she struggled with anger and feelings of being unwanted.
Years later at a Bible study, that changed.
ย โI just think, I just couldnโt do it alone anymore,โ she said, before walking over to a woman who prayed with her.
โI just said, โI want to give God my whole heart for once,โโ she remembered. โAnd as soon as I prayed, it was the first time in my entire life that I felt enough.โ
She stressed that itโs a process.
โI am constantly reminded every day that I need to give it to God,โ she urged. โEvery day when I put on these two prosthetic legs that are heavy and they still hurt me. My legs still cause me pain. And I think itโs honestly this really cool, beautiful reminder that I canโt do it on my own.โ
At the end of races, she pictures God swimming along with her.
โWhen practices get tough or races have been hard, I just call unto Him,โ she concluded. โGod, this is hard.โ
And she hears Him respond: โJust keep trying, Jess. Iโm here with you.