MarGivi 11-02-014 |
|
Giving Wisely Killing
with Kindness or Empowering Lasting Transformation? Jonathan
Martin Last
Chapter Publishing, 2008, 199 pp. ISBN
978-0-9816514-0-8 |
|
Martin worked ten years in
Asia and now oversees the Global Outreach Ministry at Good Shepherd Community
Church in Portland, OR. In this book
he gives numerous examples of how giving can cause harm. He says we must give and suggests four
principles for churches to give wisely for missions and compassion. American dollars were not
needed to spread the Gospel in the first century or in China in the 20th
century. "No one is poor just
because he lives simply." (39)
Generous Americans too often create dependency by modeling the kind of
ministry that requires outside dollars.
But the good news is spread by people in relationships. We need to be concerned about people who
cannot take care of themselves, the widows, orphans, refugees, and
oppressed. People are not poor just
because they don't have everything Americans have. "Perhaps the most dehumanizing thing
you can do to a person is take away his need to work." (52) Money spent on giving things to the poor
isn't nearly as well spent as money that empowers people to take care of
themselves and their households - with their dignity intact. The four foundational
principles of true generosity are Relationships, Accountability, Indigenous
Sustainability, and Equity (RAISE). A
working and viable relationship of mutual trust and respect is the foundation
for wise giving. Giving to an
individual usually isn't wise. Ask,
"Will the project I give to require ongoing and continual foreign funds
to keep it alive….?" (64) The gift should not set some people on a
lifestyle above others. It's better to give to a
relief organization with whom you have a personal
connection and relationship. Relationships
provide opportunity for reciprocity, accountability, transparency and
communication. Churches can respond
first through building a working relationship and then deploy money into the
proven relationships. This takes time,
work, and energy. It's more biblical
to send a few of your own missionaries than to support many you don't
know. If you support nationals,
support them through an organization with a reputation for fiscal
responsibility. Every believer must learn
to give, so don't destroy local ownership.
Money is better spent training locals to be self-sufficient. Help them build and manage their own
orphanages rather than rely long-term on foreign dollars. Supporting foreign national workers cuts the
legs out from the local church, setting up a model of ministry that leads to
paralysis. And it makes the worker a
foreigner to his own culture. Ask
yourself if this ministry will continue if the outside money dries up. "Money dropped on
someone never creates initiative in that person." (102) "When we partner with someone who's
already in motion, our money can serve to empower the already active
ministry." (103) We are better
off to come alongside of others
rather than come in place of
them. What would happen if Bill
Gates came to your church and began to tithe?
What would it do to the tithing and generosity of your
congregation? "If the early
missionaries in a culture are all full-time, paid evangelists, then that will
be the model they've learned." (115) If Americans take a trip to
Mexico and build a church or give away a load of clothes, will it do any
good? Yes - it will change the hearts
of the Americans. To do good in another
culture the church needs cultural expertise to bridge the two cultures, most
likely long-term missionaries on the ground who know both cultures. Someone who has made several mission trips
does not qualify. "We are
destined to make a mess--unless we are teachable and look to the counsel of a
cultural expert." (125) Take only
the love and the Gospel. Let the
expert distribute any money or gifts. Some childhood sponsorship
organizations and projects do a good job of building sustainability but many
don't. Ask questions about how it gets
children out of the cycle of dependency, how it encourages work, how it keeps
responsibility on the parents and society, and how it is working to get the
community on its own feet to care for their own. Many childhood sponsorship programs have
the same problems as the US welfare system.
They discourage active fathers and work. Relief and
Development. "What kind of
Christian would I be to feed someone their whole life long and yet never
present the gospel to him? Keep them
alive so they simply could experience an eternal death away from the presence
of their Creator? If the reason we're there is because of Jesus, we'd better be
honest and say so." (145)
"If an organization is ashamed to proclaim the name of Christ,
then I personally am ashamed to give to that organization. If I exist to bring glory to His name, then
I should give to an organization that does so." (145) Relief and development
should be done by working with local churches. We can help empower them and their presence
and impact will be there after we're gone.
But it needs to be done through an expert who understands a) the
different cultures and b) sustainable and empowering relief and development
work. (157) "Whenever we bring a
foreign student to the United States, we should look at it as 'immigration'
-- not as a step to equip him to minister to his own culture."
(163) Don't expect him to go back, and
if he does, don't expect him to fit in.
"If you want a person to
reach his or her own culture, don't take him out of it." (165) |
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