Introduction
Pratima was only six years
old when her parents died in North India. An aunt took her in but soon realized she
could not afford to care for her. In desperation,
and based on her Hindu beliefs, she made plans to send Pratima on to the next
life by drowning her in the Ganges
River.
In our world today, tens of millions of lives, like Pratima’s, are
hanging in the balance. As Christians in
America,
we have before us a responsibility and an opportunity that is unprecedented.
The
Condition of the World
Every day
30,000 children die from preventable poverty-related causes,1 852
million people go to bed hungry,2 121 million children have no
opportunity for education,3 there are 143 million orphans,4
and an estimated 246 million children suffer in the bonds of child labor.5
In the
face of such staggering need, what can be done? We can save millions of lives! God has commanded us to do it and given us
the resources we need. Imagine the joy, excitement and adventure of
joining a movement of God to radically change the world. Consider also the eternal reward that will be
waiting at the end of this life: “Sell
your possessions and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven…”
(Matthew 19:21, emphasis mine).
The Word of God
Depart from me… into
the eternal fire… for I was hungry
and you gave me nothing to eat…
Jesus (Matthew 25:41-42)
If Jesus is going to send people to
eternal fire for not feeding the hungry, He must take feeding the hungry very
seriously. Considering the fact that tens
of thousands die every day from hunger-related causes,6 maybe we are
not taking it as seriously as Jesus intended.
Our Resources
Experts estimate that for
$13 billion a year we could provide basic nutrition for every starving person
in the world.7 American Christians spend $21 billion a year on cable
TV.8
For $6 billion a year we could
educate every child currently not in school.9 American Christians spend $11 billion a year
on coffee.10
For $9 billion a year we
could provide safe drinking water for the millions who die without it.11
American Christians spend $21 billion a year on soft drinks.12
These statistics are both
disturbing and encouraging. They are disturbing because they reveal missed
opportunities to save millions of people who have needlessly died, but they are
encouraging because they demonstrate that if we change our
spending habits, we will have the resources to save
millions who will otherwise die in the next few years.
Purchasing soft drinks,
coffee, cable TV and similar things may seem like small matters, but the phrase
we long to hear from Jesus, “Well done my good and faithful servant,” is
reserved only for those who are trustworthy in “very small matters.”
"Well
done, my good servant!” his master replied. “Because you have been trustworthy in a very small matter, take charge of ten cities.”
Luke 19:17
(emphasis mine)
And considering that these
choices make the difference between life and death for millions of people,
perhaps they are not so small after all.
Fortunately, Pratima’s story
has a happy ending. A Christian ministry
intervened and kept her aunt from carrying out the plan to drown her. They gave her a home, an education and a
chance at life. Today she is a beautiful
young woman who loves the Lord and hopes to serve her people as a nurse.
But for 11 million children
a year the story has a tragic ending.
Every day that goes by, another 30,000 children die from malnutrition,
contaminated water, infections, malaria, and other preventable causes. I challenge
you to finish reading this booklet today. If you put it off for a week, another 210,000
children will have died. God loves each
one of them as much as He loves you.
Think about the sorrow you felt the last time you lost a loved one. God feels it at least 30,000 times a day.
American Christians face a
choice: will we rise up and save millions of lives or continue to let 11
million children a year needlessly die? Will we be known as the
“great generation” that virtually eliminated world poverty? Or will we go down in history as one of the most
selfish generations of all time -- the generation that loved its coffee, soft
drinks, cable TV, golfing, movies, and other non-essentials more than God's
children?
Just A
Little More
Approximately 160 million
adults in America claim to be Christian.
If each one of us would increase our giving by just $15 per month to ministries who are
effectively serving the poor, we could feed every
starving person in the world, educate every child currently not in school, and
provide safe drinking water for the millions who die from lack of it.
There are more than 25,000
Christian service organizations, and they all have one thing in common: they
could reach more people if they had more resources.
Radically changing the
world would not even require that much sacrifice. We can exchange a few minutes
of pleasure from a cup of coffee or a soft drink for the eternal pleasure of
saving the lives of those God loves. It
would be a wise investment.
God himself will reward our
generosity. “But when you give to the needy, do not let
your left hand know what your right hand is doing…. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you” (Matthew 6:3-4 emphasis mine).
This eternal reward will be
in direct proportion to how much we do here on earth. “Give and it will be
given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over,
will be poured into your lap. For with the measure you use, it will be measured
to you" (Luke 6:38). If storing up
treasure in heaven was not appropriate, Jesus would not have encouraged us to
do it.
The condition of the world,
the commands of God, and the resources He has blessed us with lead to
responsibilities and opportunities that are staggering in their scope and
significance.
Read Chapter One