Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Why An Urban Church Abandoned Traditional Charity
Why An Urban Church Abandoned Traditional Charity
Jan 11, 2026 10:17 AM

In the early 2000s, Broadway United Methodist Church had a series of outreach programs, including a food pantry, after-school program, clothing ministry, and a summer youth program that served up to 250 children per day.Today, these programs pletely absent, and it’s no accident.

“They’ve been killed off,” writes Robert King in a fascinating profile of the transformation for Faith and Leadership.“In many cases, they were buried with honors. But those ministries, staples of the urban church, are all gone from Broadway. Kaput.”

“One of the things we literally say around here is, ‘Stop helping people.’” says Rev. Mike Mather, the church’s pastor. “I’m serious.”

Although Mather was the first to initiate many of these programs, with some efforts going back as far as the late 1980s, after a series of circumstances, including a series munity tragedies, he began to believe that a new approach was needed. “I started paying attention to what they really cared about,” he says.

Rather than simply identifying and meeting immediate needs, the church has decided toemphasize, affirm, and elevatethe gifts and contributions of those in munity:

“The church, and me in particular,” Mather said, “has done a lot of work where we have treated the people around us as if, at worst, they are a different species and, at best, as if they are people to be pitied and helped by us.”

With that in mind,Broadwayhas — for more than a decade now — been reorienting itself. Rather than a bestower of blessings, the church is aiming to be something more humble. “The church decided its call was to be good neighbors. And that we should listen and see people as children of God,” said De’Amon Harges, a church member who sees Broadway’s transformation in terms not unlike Christ’s death, burial and resurrection.

Harges was eventually hired as a “roving listener” who “wound up spending hours sitting on people’s porches and hovering near them as they worked in their backyard gardens,” writes King. Yet unlikesimilar positions where the goal would be to uncover surface-level munity, Harges islistening instead for “hints about their gifts.” “I was curious about what was good in people,” Harges says, “and that was what I was going to find out.”

The approach has been called munity development,” a philosophy that professorJohn McKnightof Northwestern University helped conceive. McKnight has personally visited Broadway to observe the various goings on, and heacknowledges it as anastounding success:

“What [Harges] islistening for is their gifts — ‘What has God given you?’” McKnight said. He doesn’t advocate ignoring people’s needs and problems, but rather to look first for solutions within munity itself. Later, he said, institutions and services can help.

“John 15:15 tells us that, at the Last Supper, Jesus said to the disciples, ‘I no longer call you servants. … I call you friends.’ So the final way of defining what Christianity is based on is friendship, not service. … I think Mike and De’Amon are guided by that spiritual principle.”

The new approach has led to peoplerediscovering and harnessing their God-given gifts, sharing in various services and activities with those around them, uncovering arenewed sense of dignity and purpose, pursuing paths to new businesses or livelihoods, and discovering anoverall sense munityconnectedness and flourishing.

And indeed, it shouldn’t be a surprise. As Christians who believe in a God who fashioned uswith dignity, creativity, and capacity, freeing us unto love, service, and sacrificethrough the gift of his own Son, it’s an approach that we would do well to heed. As resourceslike PovertyCure and For the Life of the Worldcontinueto proclaim and affirm, we are created to be gift-givers and image bearers, not mere consumers or objects of pity. Ourstewardship, generosity, and exchanges with others ought to reflect that reality.

In Episode 1 of FLOW, Evan Koons puts the bigger Biblical story of all this in perspective, explaining how, despite our fallen natureand brokenness, God made a way to restore us to that original priesthood. “All is gift,” he reminds us.

God himself es a man, and the gift he offers to the Father is himself, and all of creation is in tow behind him. Once and for all he restores the way of our purpose. He restores our priesthood. We can once again offer to God our lives, our work, knowledge —everything. We join our gifts with Christ, to offer the world to the Father in love and for the life of the world. And that is the purpose of our salvation. That’s what it’s for — for the life of the world.

As we seek to alleviate injustice in the world — familial, social, economic, or otherwise — we can look to Broadway as a reminder of how we ought to approach our neighbors: not out of humanistic striving or materialistic shifting, but by affirming and stirring up the gifts of others for the glory of God and the good of the world.

As John Perkins says in Episode 4: “You don’t give people dignity. You affirm it.”

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Samuel Gregg: Tea Party a Force in 2012
Director of Research Samuel Gregg is among those reacting to last night’s CNN/Tea Party Debate on National Review Online. His first point is that “when CNN hosts a Tea Party–sponsored debate, you know we’re not in 2008 anymore.” Gregg’s take is that the debate was a lot more mainstream than the network wanted us to think, and that the economic questions raised and debated are going to be the central issues of the 2012 election: Almost all of the candidates...
Hunter Baker to Deliver Acton Institute’s Calihan Lecture
Mark your calendar! As announced earlier this year, Dr. Hunter Baker is the recipient of the 2011 Novak Award. Hunter will deliver the 11th annual Calihan Lecture and receive this year’s Novak Award on October 5, 2011 at Regent University in Virginia Beach, VA. Hunter’s presentation will conclude a day-long conference, “Whole Life Discipleship: Integrating Faith, Economics, & Work,” which will consist of two other lectures and a panel discussion. For more information or to register to attend, please see...
Government as Big as We Want
The folks over at Think Christian asked me to write up a response to President Obama’s jobs speech from last Thursday. That response is now up over at the TC site, “The misplaced faith of Obama’s job speech.” I took special note of President Obama’s invocation of a couple lines from JFK: “Our problems are man-made – therefore they can be solved by man. And man can be as big as he wants.” I found this quote, used in this...
Samuel Gregg: Pope’s Work Cut out for Him in Germany
Director of Research Samuel Gregg has written a special report for the American Spectator about Benedict XVI’s ing trip to Germany. The recent World Youth Day in Spain may have looked like a bigger challenge for Benedict, but Gregg says that Germany, while its economy looks good, is facing rough seas ahead. Germany finds itself propping up a political experiment (otherwise known as the euro) that’s tottering under the weight of its internal contradictions. As the German tabloid Bild put...
Jobs Act Usurps Liberty, Christian Charity
President Obama wants his American Jobs Act passed immediately. You know this already—he made sure he delivered that message in his speech: “Pass this jobs plan right away” was his refrain. President Obama has definitely not read the Federalist Papers in a while. If he had, he would not be encouraging Congress to pass half-a-trillion dollars of new spending at a moment’s notice. Congress is not a quick-strike team, and the Senate especially is not designed to be a rapidly...
Samuel Gregg: Welfare State Continues to Fail
Acton’s tireless director of research Samuel Gregg has a post up at NRO’s The Corner in reaction to yesterday’s bad poverty numbers (46.2 million Americans live below the poverty line now—2.6 million more than last year). Gregg is ultimately not surprised about the increase, because not only does the American welfare state producelong termdependence on governmental support, but the huge debt incurred by poverty programs tends to slow economic growth. It is now surely clear that the trillions of dollars...
VIDEO: Rev. Sirico on Dave Ramsey’s ‘Great Recovery’
Rev. Robert A. Sirico has lent his voice to Dave Ramsey’s new projectThe Great Recovery. The sound finance guru is leading a grassroots movement based on the principle that economic recovery cannot be a top-down, Washington-directed endeavor. Rather, our economy “will be restored one family at a time, as each of us takes a stand to return to God and grandma’s way of handling money.” Rev. Sirico has recorded a video for the “Top Leaders” section of the website and...
Rev. Sirico: ‘Jobs & deficits — the moral equation’
Writing in today’s Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, Rev. Robert A. Sirico, president and co-founder of the Acton Institute: Jobs & deficits — the moral equation By Rev. Robert A. Sirico Thursday, September 15, 2011 The Genesis account of creation tells us that from the beginning, humanity was created to work. God puts Adam in the garden to “work and watch over it.” The Scripture provides an insight into our nature: We are all, man and woman, called into this life to find...
Commentary: Time to End Clergy Tax Breaks?
In this week’s Acton News & Commentary, Rev. Gregory Jensen observes that munities on both the left and the right can agree that government budgets are “moral documents.” He then offers a novel suggestion for closing budget gaps while offering clergy an opportunity to show solidarity with the poor. Subscribe to the free weekly ANC and other Acton publications here. Time to End Clergy Tax Breaks? By Rev. Gregory Jensen Unless you are a member of the clergy or involved...
Samuel Gregg: Looking Back on Benedict’s Regensburg Speech
Five years ago today, Pope Benedict XVI delivered a talk titled “Faith, Reason and the University” at the University of Regensburg in Germany. The lecture set off a firestorm of controversy concerning Christian-Muslim relations. On National Review Online, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg reflects, noting that calling it “one of this century’s pivotal speeches is probably an understatement.” Gregg says that the reaction to the pope’s speech “underscored most Western intellectuals’ sheer ineptness when writing about religion.” More seriously: …...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved