Give Away More

Join BFJN’s director, Ryan Scott McDonnell, as he blogs about his travels throughout India. During this trip, Ryan will be reflecting upon the four themes of Lazarus at the Gate in light of his experiences throughout the country.

I’m seated on a crowded Indian night train surrounded by students enjoying the five day holiday of Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights. The train car is full with boisterous laughter in India’s many languages and the whir of fans, scented by the closely packed bodies and chai, served in plastic cups from a gleaming steel canteen.

I’ve just spent the last few days in the western state of Gujarat, five hours north of Mumbai.  This has been by far the most rural part of this trip. My companions for this part of the journey have been a group of church planters working among among the tribal people in the remote villages.

Originally from the villages that they now serve, these courageous men and women have dedicated their lives to spreading the good news of Christ and to humbly serving those around them. They are accepted because they understand the language and culture of the people. God is blessing the work in this area they are seeing new churches planted and villages changed for the better.

Although the industrialized cities of Gujarat have nearly twice the Gross Domestic Product of the rest of the country, the rural areas are extremely poor. Most of the rural people I met engage in very small scale farming of rice and sugar cane and grow some vegetables for their family. Illiteracy is high, as most of the rural tribal areas lack schools. Increased water shortages in parts of the state are an ever growing challenge for farmers, and often result in poor sanitation. These are some of the world’s poor who live on less than $2 per day.

Despite this poverty, the Christians I have met are deeply inspiring because of their generosity. Their willingness to share with each other and to respond to the needs of their community has resulted in the Church living out the love of Christ in a way that is holistic and practical.   As we traveled, I heard testimony after testimony from villagers who shared how they first became interested in Christianity because the followers of Jesus cared for one another. In the West we often struggle to follow the early Church  model of sharing what we have with the needy. And yet our Indian brothers and sisters are living our their faith in a way that care for those around them.

As exciting as that is, I found the commitment of these rural believers to support indigenous missionaries in other parts of India even more profound.  The Indian organization that I was traveling with raises the majority of their support from within India. Most of the people I met in the villages of Gujarat have never traveled beyond the next village, let alone to another region of the country. Yet these villagers – “the world’s poor” – are living sacrificially to spread the Gospel in other parts of their country. Practically, that may translate into giving up a meal, or going without shoes. Christ offers a hope – a hope that the many gods of Hinduism cannot offer – and these people have responded faithfully.

Those who we think of as poor, those whose annual income might be less than $1,000 USD – are giving to advance the Good News to Judea, Samaria and beyond. As we live in the prosperous West, it should make us think differently about what we can give.

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Living on Less

Join BFJN’s director, Ryan Scott McDonnell, as he blogs about his travels throughout India. During this trip, Ryan will be reflecting upon the four themes of Lazarus at the Gate in light of his experiences throughout the country.

For many reading this blog, living on less is a conscious choice you have made because the cultural expectations for lifestyle are unsustainable, either for your wallet, for the environment or because they happen at the expense of the poor. Lazarus at the Gate helps participants examine their finances and identify one or more ways that they can change their spending habits to live on less.  As my wife and I have made even small shifts in our consumption patterns, we’ve felt the blessing of increased ability to live generously towards those in need around us – both near and far away.

For the world’s poor, including much of India’s population, there isn’t a choice of living on less. It’s the only option.  Poverty takes many forms (spiritual, economic, educational, social) but the lack of even basic education is leaving a generation behind.

I’ve spent my first few days in India  with a Christian organization that, among other things, supports literacy training in various parts of the nation.  I’ve seen first hand the abject poverty that is still the norm in India, despite huge strides forward for the nation economically.

India has the world’s largest illiterate population. At least 50-60% of the country’s rural population  is illiterate. Possessing even basic literacy has the ability to exponentially advance the poor’s opportunities with this transitioning economy. When asked how the literacy program had benefited her, one of the recent graduates said that she could now read the bus schedule and travel to neighborhoods where she could earn more cleaning houses, thus doubling her income. Even small advances can have big results and result in increased choices.

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Traveling to India

Join BFJN’s director, Ryan Scott McDonnell, as he blogs about his travels throughout India. During this trip, Ryan will be reflecting upon the four themes of Lazarus at the Gate in light of his experiences throughout the country.

IndiaIt’s 3:45 am and I am wide awake. As I sit in Amsterdam (my layover stop), I think about something my wife said to me in the airport. “Look around you. All of these people (waiting for lost luggage, proudly clutching their duty-free items, booking their flights, catching cabs to their hotels) they are part of a very privileged minority. Most of the world’s population never gets on a plane, let alone travel halfway around the world.”

She’s right of course. (She usually is.) The opportunity to accompany family on a ten day trip throughout India makes me one of the elite few. In the midst of the world’s great need, it seems hard to justify this great extravagance. That realization has prompted me to reflect about why I travel and to identify specific reasons why this trip is important.

We’ll be spending time in the cities of Delhi, Hyderabad, Surat (north of Mumbai) and Varanasi. We will be visiting several Christian non-profit organizations working to share the Gospel, plant churches and care for the poor and the sick. Some of the ministries have governing boards in the United States while others have 100% indigenous leadership. We will experience an interesting cross-section of cultures, language and organizational structures during the trip.

Although my background is in international development and I have lived in developing counties, I have never traveled to India. I’m looking forward to learning more about this large and incredibly diverse democracy that is rapidly modernizing  despite many of its citizens remaining in abject poverty. As a Christian, I’m fascinated to learn how the Church operates in a context that is so different from the West. Much of my work with the Boston Faith & Justice Network is to encourage, connect and mobilize Christians in Boston to care for the poor and oppressed in a world where distance no longer determines who is your neighbor. I believe strongly that I can do that more effectively as I see things with my own eyes.

If I am called to love my neighbor, then I need to do so thoughtfully, prayerfully and with a significant understanding of the culture and history I am engaging with. Travel helps us understand more about the world through the process of discovery and relationship. It is my hope to connect with others though this trip in order to better understand a place that is, at this time, almost completely unknown to me.

As I think and write about this trip  to India, I’ll be drawing upon the themes discussed in Lazarus at the Gate, a resource familiar to many reading this post. This 12-session Bible study discusses global poverty through Old and New Testament teachings about money. Rather than impose a “one-size fits all” approach to following Jesus with our money, Lazarus leads participants through four simple (but powerful) Biblical principles with practical application. They are:

1. Spend less: Make one lifestyle change in order to buy less for personal consumption.
2. Give more: Make a substantial gift to fight global poverty.
3. Spend justly: Make one lifestyle change to consume more justly.
4. Spend joyfully: Regularly give thanks for the blessing of wealth.

Over the next several posts I’ll be sharing perspectives on these principles from my travels in India.

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