Pastor: Japan Quake Victims Need ‘Amateur’ Relief

japanquake2
Share:

japanquake2In the wake of Japan’s earthquake and tsunami, opinions of how best to help the disaster-stricken nation recover are now emerging.

As Pastor Eric Foley sees it, those opinions all have one thing in common: the mistaken belief that amateurs need not apply.

“Donate money and leave the work to us: That’s the mantra disaster relief agencies chant in the media in their quest to raise funds,” says Foley, who is also a non-profit consultant. “But contrast the revolution of common people in Egypt with several failures by professional relief agencies in addressing recent disasters: It’s time to take seriously the peerless contributions that can be made by ordinary people.”

Foley warns of what he calls the “non-profit/donor complex”—the insistence on the part of non-profits that real ministry work should be left to those who have received professional training while “amateur” donors are relegated to the silent and passive role of providing ample, unquestioning financial support.

“If we are to believe what non-profits say in the media, average people have no active role,” says Foley. “But little publicized is the reality that most disaster relief efforts end up relying on amateurs anyway. That’s why in Haiti the Red Cross implemented what they called an ‘Innovative Text Cash Transfer Program’ that essentially gave cash to locals recognizing that there really are disaster relief functions best left to amateurs.”

Foley is not denying the importance of professionals but rather recognizing a new role for them: training ordinary people to provide valuable help when disaster strikes. His new book, The Whole Life Offering: Christianity as Philanthropy, serves as a comprehensive training manual through which ordinary Christians can learn to do what he calls the “heavy lifting of ministry” that is often ceded to professionals.

“Amateurs indeed do—and should—apply. They’re capable of creating change in ways that non-profits can’t imagine,” Foley says. “The same thing that happened in Egypt can happen in big and small ways around the world—and in Japan—if non-profits will change their focus from being professional providers of social services to equipping and enabling ordinary individuals to do extraordinary things.”

Photo courtesy Samaritan’s Purse.

+ posts
Share:

Related topics:

See an error in this article?

Send us a correction

To contact us or to submit an article

Click and play our featured shows

Bishop Describes Injuries After Stabbing

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hl5YvkTSRHs The world was shocked when an extremist carried out an attack on Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel at the Assyrian Christ the Good Shepherd church in Wakeley, a suburb of Sydney, Australia, which was caught on the church’s livestream. Following...

Jesse Duplantis: ‘Poverty Is a Curse’

There is a wide range of opinions and emotions within the Christian community when it comes to blessing, prosperity and poverty. Interpretations of various verses in the Bible as well as analyzing the words of Jesus and how He lived...

Cahn Talks Mental Health Amid MacArthur Backlash

Pastor John Macarthur is facing backlash from the Christian community after his statements that PTSD is nothing more than grief. “If you understand, take PTSD, for example, what that really is, is grief. You are fighting a war you lost....

1 2 3 4 5 97 98 99 100
Scroll to Top