Friday 2 September 2011

Poverty, Environment and Lifestyle

This is a blog post almost entirely written by other people. To explain - Carrie (who works at both CORASON and The Meeting Place) and I have recently re-started the once-a-week evening discussion group we used to run for volunteers and other English-speakers travelling through or living in Cusco. We have done a couple of sessions related to poverty and while preparing we have read such a lot of very interesting and challenging material. Parts of our discussions have been based on quotes and statements from some excellent books, and I thought I’d note some of them down on the blog as a follow-up to some other blog entries on poverty. Hope you find them interesting and challenging too, and that they inspire you to read the books referenced, study the Bible, do something about what you read and maybe lead your own discussions and studies! (If you would like a copy of the notes and handouts from our two evenings, I would be quite happy to send them to you, by the way.)

Below are the main books we have been reading and from which we have used material. I would 100% recommend getting hold of any of these to both read yourself and use with any type of home group/cell group if possible.


  • When Helping Hurts, Steve Corbett and Brian Fikkert, 2009 (How trying to help can lead to more harm than good! Especially useful for churches who send short term mission teams, but also excellent for anyone looking to help in their local area or beyond.)

  • Poor No More, Peter Grant (International Director of TEARFund UK), 2008 (Includes a self-assessment relating to how your life is currently impacting the poor, and practical ideas for making a difference. Good too for when you feel overwhelmed with the needs you see and don’t know where to start.)


  • The Cape Town Commitment 2011 (A booklet published after the Lausanne Conference in South Africa – see the web site for the full text: www.lausanne.org)

A few quotes you’ll see below where there is a name but no book referenced, or where a different book from the above four is referenced, come from three study booklets published by TEAR Australia and Scripture Union in 2000: Eyes Wide Open, Seeing Faith at Work, Awake to the World – All by Steve Bradbury (Director of TEAR Australia for 25 years and Chairman of the Micah Network for 10 years)


Any comments in italics are my additional notes. The questions in bold are some of the questions we have been discussing in our group.


What does it mean to be ‘poor’?


Poor people typically talk in terms of shame, inferiority, powerlessness, humiliation, fear, hopelessness, depression, social isolation and voicelessness. North American audiences tend to emphasize a lack of material things such as food, money, clean water, medicine, housing, etc. ...This mismatch between many outsiders’ perception of poverty and the perceptions of the poor themselves can have devastating consequences for poverty alleviation efforts.

(When Helping Hurts, 2009, p53)



We have seen that poverty reduction depends on economic growth, and effective governments. But these alone will not solve poverty. There is a missing dimension. Poor people need increased incomes to live a more fulfilled life, but they also need love, acceptance, respect, friendship and a sense of belonging. These are the things which a purely economic model cannot provide, and which the pursuit of materialism can often take away. (Poor No More, p60)



Poverty – What are the links with Environment and Lifestyle?


Rich countries are generally the polluters at present. People in India produce on average one tonne of carbon dioxide per person per year, while the Chinese produce 4 tonnes, Europeans 10 tonnes and Americans 20 tonnes each. ( Poor No More p45)




The melting of glaciers and changes in rainfall patterns worldwide threaten the water supply to hundreds of millions of people. (Poor No More p203)






Mahatma Gandhi said, ‘The earth has enough for every man's need, but not every man's greed’.


Destroying the environment is a major source of world famine. Since God calls us to be concerned about the poor and feed the hungry, we must save the environment for the sake of the poor and the sake of the hungry. (Tony Campolo)


In a world of limited resources our wealth is at the expense of the poor. To put it simply, if we have it, others cannot. (Richard Foster)













What can we learn from the Bible about Poverty?



'The effect of the Fall was that the desire for growth became obsessive and idolatrous, the scale of the growth became excessive for some at the expense of others, and the means of growth became filled with greed, exploitation and injustice.' (Christopher Wright)






... Jesus is relentless in his radical call to a 'wartime' life style ... I am wired by nature to love the same toys as the world loves. I start to fit in. I start to love what others love. I start to call earth 'home'. Before you know it, I am calling luxuries ' needs' and using my money just the way unbelievers do. I begin to forget the war. I don't think much about people perishing ... (Don't waste your life, p112)





‘We think of fellowship as biscuits and coffee ... but the New Testament fellowship is rooted in the idea of economic sharing, of financial participation, which works in relieving the pain and hunger of suffering brothers and sisters.' (George Malone)


Quote of Matthew 6:31-32, then:

‘If we look like our lives are devoted to getting and maintaining things, we will look like the world, and that will not make Christ look great. He will look like a religious side-interest that may be useful in escaping hell in the end, but doesn’t make much difference in what we love and love here. He will not look like an all-satisfying treasure. And that will not make others glad in God.’ (Don’t waste your life, p108.)


Some of the Bible passages we have looked at:


On poverty in general:

  • Old Testament: Law: Deuteronomy 15:7-11 (Be generous to the poor); Prophets: Isaiah 1:13-17 and Isaiah 58 Amos 2:6-8 and 8:4-7 (Justice not religion)
  • Jesus: Luke 12:13-21 (Parable of the Rich Fool); Matthew 6:19-24, 31-33 (Treasure in heaven, seek first his Kingdom); Mark 12:28-34 (The Greatest Commandment)
  • Early Church: 2 Corinthians 8:1-9, 13-15; Galatians 6:9-10; 1 Timothy 6:17-19; 1 John 3:17-18

Poverty, Environment and Lifestyle:

  • Old Testament: Genesis 1: 24-31; Leviticus 25:18-24; Psalm 104
  • Jesus: Matthew 6:25-34; Luke 12:13-21
  • New Testament: Acts 4:32-35; 1 Timothy 6:6-10,17-19

What is our Response to Poverty?


The Lord God says:

Share your food with the hungry,

Bring the homeless poor into your house,

Cover the naked.

Dear Lord God

We have got new carpets,

So this will not be possible.

(Steve Turner, 1992)


We are called to imitate Jesus in his passion for the lost, the sick and the suffering. The quality of the life of the church and the extent to which it demonstrates the character of God are much more important than whether we are popular or powerful. (Poor No More p171) (This is interesting in terms of the balance of how much money a Western church spends on evangelism where the aim is to reach people in the Western culture, and how much is spent on serving the poor in that culture or in the developing world.)


Our societies are obsessed with personal fulfilment, consumption and celebrity. Demonstrating a different way of life is perhaps the greatest gift that we can give to our society. We need to move our focus from:

  • Things to people
  • Self to others
  • Judgement to mercy
  • Consuming to sharing

(Poor No More p89)


Why don’t people ask about our hope? The answer is probably because we look as if we hope in the same things they do. (Don’t waste your life, p109.)


But even more significant (than giving or personal action) is the challenge that your life can be to others. ... Never underestimate the impact of your life on others, particularly when you seek to live differently from your prevailing culture. (Poor No More p20)


The biblical vision is not that everyone should have a European or North American standard of living, but that there should be enough for all, based on a generous redistribution of resources. Enough for everyone to have basic education and healthcare, and to enjoy safety and dignity in a community where people can share and celebrate together. Poverty denies people these basic elements of a fulfilled life. (Poor No More p21)








John Stott said in his last published sermon that the greatest hindrance to the advance of the gospel worldwide is the failure of God’s people to live like God’s people. We are to demonstrate godly lives before a watching world – caring for the underprivileged, the poor, those affected by pandemics, the broken-hearted. (The Cape Town Commitment 2011 p77)



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