DLGP

Doctor of Leadership in Global Perspectives: Crafting Ministry in an Interconnected World

Poverty: People versus Projects

Written by: on November 6, 2025

The doorbell rang incessantly. I rushed out, calling to Cheick, the neighborhood trash collector, to stop leaning on the bell. I don’t know where Cheick lives—likely in a small shack without running water, maybe a wire of electricity jerry-rigged from a nearby pole. He comes faithfully, often asking us for an advance on his monthly salary. I wonder if we may be his only reliable and regularly paying clients.

A few hours later, my mechanic dropped off my car. I was reminded of our last conversation when he told me he does not read or write. Across the street lives Abdul, who sells vegetables from a half-built building. He’s resourceful, kind, and keeps an eye on my house. To the left of our house is a small area with about five tents or shacks, where people live. Did I mention the daily pleas we get from neighbors or beggars asking for charity? Poverty surrounds me every day. It is tangible.

For eleven years, I worked in a clinic in one of Nouakchott’s poorest neighborhoods. We provided good medical care, yet I began to see that we were offering a revolving Band-Aid. People came with needs, and we offered help, even attempting sustainable efforts such as health education, but little changed in the long term. In my final years as director, I sought to change that narrative by coaching and empowering our local staff. They grew in confidence and skill, but the deeper poverty of our community remained untouched.

These faces and stories are not just statistics to me; they mirror the reality faced by millions across Africa. Poverty is not just visible on my street corner; it is systemic. Across Africa, 67% of the world’s population living in extreme poverty resides here,[1] a figure projected to rise to 87% by 2030.[2] While I discuss the issue of poverty, my primary focus will be on Africa. Nonetheless, the concepts and philosophies I present apply to any poverty context.

What is causing this increase in poverty? Jeff Myers argues in Understanding the Culture: A Survey of Social Engagement that “bad thinking about poverty has led to bad solutions.”[3] This is a claim that echoes my observations in numerous well-meaning projects. Myers encourages Christians to view those living in poverty as bearing the image of God and to help them flourish and help others do the same.[4]

Steve Corbett and Brian Fikkert’s book When Helping Hurts: How to Alleviate Poverty Without Hurting the Poor and Youis a well-known resource for Christian development work. They address the root issue of poverty stemming from sin and broken relationships with God.[5] They identify the root of poverty as relational brokenness, first with God, then with others and with creation. In our human attempt to fix these broken relationships and resource disparities, the primary solution is to come and offer aid. How this is done is where great tension lies in addressing poverty.

Jeffrey Sachs is a leading economist who believes the solution to poverty lies in wealthy nations providing aid to developing nations. His solution is to focus on addressing issues of agriculture, healthcare, education, potable water and sanitation, and infrastructure.[6] Sachs’s model assumes that the root of poverty is structural and technical, solvable through financial input. Yet this approach risks treating people as problems to be managed rather than partners in transformation.

African economist Dambisa Moyo argues that aid from large international institutions has hindered the continent, entrenching corruption rather than promoting growth, as well-intentioned funds often line bureaucratic pockets instead of empowering people.[7] New leadership would be a solution, but Moyo claims that good leaders do not want to deal with the bureaucratic corruption currently in leadership.[8]

Bryant Myers, in Walking with the Poor: Principles and Practices for Transformational Development, suggests that a holistic approach be used in poverty alleviation.[9] Corbett and Fikkert take a similar approach: walking alongside those in poverty in a relationship, rather than doing it for them.[10] N.T. Wright and Michael F. Bird remind us that Christ confronted broken power structures not by domination but through self-giving love.[11]  This is the model Christian leaders are invited to embody: presence over power, relationship over rescue.

Since leaving the clinic, I have been developing coaching and leadership initiatives that emphasize empowerment and personal growth, aiming to transition individuals from a state of dependency to one of dignity. I aspire to model collaborative leadership and help local leaders identify their own solutions.

Whatever philosophy we hold, the universal tension is turning people into projects. When that happens, dignity erodes and progress stalls. The poor are not a category to be fixed, but rather people with stories, worries, and gifts. If poverty’s root lies in broken relationships, then transformation must begin in relationship—with God and with one another. Who has become a project for you? And where might God be inviting you into a relationship instead?


[1] “Poverty, Prosperity, and Planet Report 2024,” World Bank, accessed November 6, 2025, https://www.worldbank.org/en/publication/poverty-prosperity-and-planet.

[2] Progress Godfrey, “Africa May Host 87% of World’s Poorest Population by 2030– World Bank,” Business Day, December 5, 2024, https://businessday.ng/news/article/africa-may-host-87-of-worlds-poorest-population-by-2030-world-bank/?utm_source=chatgpt.com.

[3] Jeff Myers, Understanding the Culture: A Survey of Social Engagement (David C. Cook, 2017), 766.

[4] Myers, Understanding the Culture, 787.

[5] Steve Corbett and Brian Fikkert, When Helping Hurts: How to Alleviate Poverty Without Hurting the Poor… and Yourself (Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers, 2012), 58.

[6] Jeffrey D. Sachs, The End of Poverty: Economic Possibilities for Our Time (The Penguin Press, 2005), 233-234.

[7] Dambisa Moyo, “Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa,” interview by Joanne Myers, April 2, 2009, https://www.researchgate.net/publication/38091995.

[8] Ibid.

[9] Bryant L. Myers, Walking with the Poor: Principles and Practices of Transformational Development, Rev. and updated ed (Orbis Books, 2011).

[10] Corbett and Fikkert, When Helping Hurts, 100.

[11] N. T. Wright and Michael F. Bird, Jesus and the Powers: Christian Political Witness in an Age of Totalitarian Terror and Dysfunctional Democracies, Kindle ed. (Zondervan Reflective, 2024), 80.

About the Author

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Kari

Kari is a passionate follower of Jesus. Her journey with Him currently has her living in the Sahara in North Africa. With over a decade of experience as a family nurse practitioner and living cross-culturally, she enjoys being a champion for others. She combines her cross-cultural experience, her health care profession, and her skills in coaching to encourage holistic health and growth. She desires to see each person she encounters walk in fullness of joy, fulfilling their God-designed purpose. “Rejoice in hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer.” Romans 12:12 ESV

3 responses to “Poverty: People versus Projects”

  1. Adam Cheney says:

    Kari,
    Going back to Kenya I was prepared for the mulititude of “asks” again. They came with a vengeance yet their needs truly are significant. I remember thinking often about how I was the one whom everyone would come to with every single need when I was in our village and then I was the one asking for support when we returned to the US. It is an odd balance to navigate. I would often hear the statement, “give a man to fish or teach him to fish, etc” yet I learned after being overseas that there was so much more to it. Where would he get the fishing pole? Where would he get the bait? Where could he legally fish? Where could he sell the fish he catches? What happens when the pond runs dry? Etc. Etc. Keep up the good work of walking alongside people when it is hard to do.

  2. Elysse Burns says:

    Hey Kari,
    Thanks for this post. Your reflections really resonate, especially given how often we encounter these situations here. I’m curious—how do you discern when the Holy Spirit is prompting you to offer immediate help to someone in need? I know it can be difficult to distinguish between genuine compassion and the desire to fix things quickly, especially when the needs around us feel constant.

    It’s something I wrestle with often, trying to listen carefully for when the Spirit is nudging me to respond in the moment versus when wisdom might call for a different kind of help.

  3. Jeff Styer says:

    Kari,
    Thanks for the post. With the government shutdown and SNAP benefits being delayed we have seen a large increase in public and private donations to food banks. I believe that in many cases the American church is too comfortable and doesn’t extend itself in addressing poverty like it should. If Christ were to walk into the town where you live, where is the first place he would go and what would be his top priority and what impact do you feel that would make?

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