fbpx
Neighbors Near And Far: When you should or shouldn’t give to international missions

Why give to International Missions when there are people in need in our own backyard?

This is a legitimate question. Sometimes conflicting feelings can arise about where our money “should” go. After all, most of us are familiar with the old adage that “charity begins at home.” There are many diverse opinions when it comes to charitable giving, but when help comes from the heart, there is no one cause less important than another.  

To discover the answer to this important question, here are a few questions to consider:

1. What does the Bible have to say?

The Bible has set the precedent for helping those in need. All throughout the Scriptures the practice of giving and serving is demonstrated and actually commanded of the people of God. Moses instructed the children of Israel on providing for their fellow countrymen in need, as well as foreigners in their land. The apostle Paul set a perfect example of not only serving the poor in local communities but throughout regions of the ancient Middle East, as he consistently took up collections from a church in one area to aid a church in another.

Jesus brought this concept home best in His well-known parable about the Good Samaritan in the book of Luke, Chapter 10. One day while teaching, Jesus is asked by a man about how to inherit eternal life; part of Jesus’s reply is to love his neighbor as himself, to which the man replies, “And, who is my neighbor?” Jesus proceeds to tell a story of a Jew who was attacked on the road, robbed and left for dead. Three separate people come upon him lying there, two Israelis and a man from Samaria, but only one of them stops to help—the Samaritan, a despised foreigner by the Jews. Jesus made it clear that our “neighbor” isn’t necessarily someone we know or would consider a friend, someone from our hometown, or even someone from our own country.

2. What defines poverty?

Is poverty the same everywhere? Does it mean something different to be poor in a developing country versus a developed one?

The World Bank defines extreme poverty as living on less than $1.90 USD a day, and many families in other countries exist on far less. Living in poverty in the U.S. is defined, per person, as existing on or below $12,486 USD per year ($34.21 per day), and less than one in ten people meet that criterion. This isn’t to say that poverty in developed countries isn’t legitimate and real; each situation needs to be evaluated individually within its own context.

There are a few pertinent differences to consider, however. Countries in the developed world generally have more governmental resources, infrastructure, and services available to assist their people than those of the developing world. Children in developing countries are much more likely to die of malnutrition or easily preventable and treatable illnesses than those in developed countries.

Breaking the cycle of poverty in developing countries is also more difficult. All of Forward Edge’s ministries identify education as being one of the top three priorities for the children of their communities; they recognize that getting an education is a key component in escaping an impoverished mentality and lifestyle. For governments who do not provide schooling, tuition expenses are exorbitant for families living in poverty. For those that do, very often the costs for required uniforms, books and supplies are prohibitive for parents who barely earn enough to provide the essentials for their families. In both cases, too many children, ultimately, remain uneducated and the cycle continues.

It’s also important to remember that money from developed countries usually has a more far-reaching effect in an undeveloped country than it does at home. The cost for food, clean water, medicine, and even tuition in an undeveloped country would often be very affordable to those living in a more developed environment and economy. In some countries, $40.00 USD is equivalent to a full month’s wage. To put this into perspective, what we might spend on a nice meal out could provide a month or more of living expenses for those less fortunate.

3. What do you feel called to?

Jesus reminds us of the scope of this poverty crisis in the world when He says in Matt. 26:11a, “the poor you will always have with you…” The needs in this world are many, and we can’t respond to all of them but God has given each one of us the ability and the charge to make a difference where we can.

One of the verses that Forward Edge was founded on is Ephesians 2:10: “For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand so that we would walk in them.”

What is it that you are passionate about? What stirs your heart and motivates you to want to act? That image that comes to mind was put inside you by the Creator of your soul and makes you unique.

We’re each given different callings and equipped with different gifts and abilities. Perhaps your cause is right in your own community, your state, or even nationwide—that’s fantastic. It could be that you’re drawn to serve and minister to those in need in foreign lands—wonderful. Maybe you’ve got more than one cause that you’re passionate about and wondering how to contribute to each. While our time and resources aren’t endless, there are ways to accomplish this. You might choose to give financially to an international ministry or sponsor a child in another country, and at the same time volunteer at your church, or devote a day a week to serving in a local ministry in your community.

If you don’t know yet what the good works are that God has prepared for you, pray and ask Him to reveal His plan for you. It’s never a question of if we should help, but who we should help.

The problem of need is immense and it’s easy to feel like our small contribution is just a drop in a vast ocean. Whenever I start to think this way I am reminded of the story about the hundreds of starfish stranded on the beach at low tide. One caring person began going one by one and tossing them back into the surf. The person was challenged by an onlooker who observed that there was no way he’d get all of the starfish back in the water before they died, so what difference would it make to continue; his reply as he tossed one back in was, “it made a difference to that one”.

Is God calling you to live your mission with Forward Edge?

Learn more about child sponsorship, mission trips, helping disaster victims, or supporting our vulnerable children programs.

child sponsorship

New Uganda Children’s Program

We are so excited to be starting 2019 off with the addition of a brand new Forward Edge ministry location. Our newest Child Sponsorship program, Light A Candle, serves 400 children in some of the most difficult areas of Kampala, Uganda. Kampala comprises 3.5 million people within the city limits,

Go to Blog »
children's programs

Three Elements to Changing Futures

Two Lives Forever Changed  Adriana and Itzel both grew up with difficult home lives but everything changed for them when they joined Trigo y Miel, Forward Edge’s program in Oaxaca, Mexico. As children, they didn’t have many material possessions, but because of the program they were privileged to hear about

Go to Blog »
nicaragua

Discovering His Worth: Medardo’s Story

“If I look back and see what I was, I can see a nefarious, and even a little perverted, young man. I was someone aimless, without knowledge and without any foundation.” Medardo grew up in an open-air garbage dump called La Chureca in Managua, Nicaragua, and then later, in Villa

Go to Blog »
child sponsorship

How to Write a Letter to Your Sponsored Child

One of the greatest joys a child receives is a letter from his or her sponsor. Sponsored children usually save all of the letters they receive and read them over and over again, they are such a source of encouragement and love for them. Writing to your sponsored child is

Go to Blog »
Transform a Child's Life Through Sponsorship

Habari (hello), my name is Brian

  • location

    Kenya

  • 10 yrs. old

    09-16-2014

Entered the program: July 2021

Brian is the 2nd youngest of 7 children and lives with his mother and 6 his siblings in a rented wood house with a dirt floor and no electricity or running water. They fetch water from a neighbor’s borehole to boil for drinking. They use an out door latrine that is in poor condition.

Brian’s mother is a single parent after his father died. They used to live with his father’s family but eventually left that home due to a family disagreement. His mother works as a casual laborer to provide for her children.

Sponsorship Level What's this?

Three $38 sponsorships are needed to cover the complete holistic care of one child. Cover one, two, or three sponsorships.