What is the Effective Charity Movement?
Poverty is complex. It’s about more than money; it’s about relationships, skills, and opportunities. Handouts alone cannot address these deeper, long-term issues. Our model focuses on personal involvement, relationships, and empowerment—fostering true transformation.
POVERTY IS COMPLEX.
Poverty is more than a lack of money. Factors may include a traumatic past, a lack of skills, unjust exclusion from opportunity, or generational learned helplessness. Every situation is different. Some people need to reconnect with family, some need help with money management, and others may need childcare so they can pursue their education. Furthermore, human flourishing cannot be reduced to material needs alone. Strong families, meaningful work, a faith community, and a sense of purpose are all integral components of the good life. These ends can never be achieved by mere handouts.
IT REQUIRES PERSONAL INVOLVEMENT.
Scripture points to personal involvement as a moral duty. This is clearly noted in the apostle Paul’s letter to the Galatian church in which he writes that the whole of the law is summed up in the statement, “love your neighbor as yourself.” The response to this deeply personal call is to assist those we know, donate to charities, and volunteer time. These acts of compassion benefit both the giver and the receiver. Furthermore, this personal approach results in relationships that uplift everyone involved. Real relationships create accountability and inspire the action required to help people get ahead.
THE GOVERNMENT CAN’T DO IT.
A just government provides a framework for human interaction (e.g. enforcement of contracts, property rights, and protection from violence). Though the government has a crucial role as an enforcer, it cannot be a friend. Government programs are ill-equipped to dispense the relational help that poverty requires. Since the beginning of the War on Poverty in 1964, government spending on anti-poverty programs has increased to around one trillion dollars a year and the poverty rate hasn’t budged. Furthermore, key contributors to success like stable marriages, church attendance, and employment have declined among the poor. Local communities are best equipped to help their neighbors, but unfortunately, the government tends to crowd out this personal assistance and fails to replace it with anything that works.
GROWTH REQUIRES EFFORT.
Immediate relief is an effective solution for a temporary crisis. However, giveaways are a mere band-aid for chronic poverty. Incorporating goal setting, work requirements, and other forms of challenge into our charity acknowledges the worth and potential of individuals as moral agents created in the image of God. In so doing, we transform our view of the poor from passive recipients to neighbors with something to offer. Challenge that calls for effort promotes responsibility, builds agency, and leads to ownership required to flourish.
GO FOR RESULTS, NOT JUST ACTIVITY.
The goal is to see individuals move from poverty to prosperity to be productive and contributing in their communities . Accomplishing this requires that results are measured.. Instead of only measuring outputs, or how much is given away, outcomes should be measured like stable housing, employment, education, spiritual growth, and family reunifications.