When you partner with Amazi Water, you help provide safe, clean water and access to the Gospel for every community in Burundi. As the primary Burundi…
Christian ministries responding to global poverty, disaster, displacement, and injustice — through emergency relief and long-term community development, refugee resettlement and water projects, microfinance and agriculture, hunger response and the patient work of building flourishing where flourishing has been hard to find.
Christian nonprofits in this focus area that have been verified against The Most Trusted Standard.
When you partner with Amazi Water, you help provide safe, clean water and access to the Gospel for every community in Burundi. As the primary Burundi…
Asha Partners is a Christian 501(c)(3) non-profit organization on a mission to bring holistic, self-sustaining solutions to poverty with the love and…
Avenue of Life's mission is to mobilize their community to equip and empower low-income individuals and families to be self-sustained and…
The Bethania Foundation, also known as Bethania Kids, is a Christian mission that is bringing wholeness and hope to orphaned, abandoned, disabled and…
Beyond the Bricks mission is to build a better world and to do good; assisting those in need and the misfortunate of the world in the name of Jesus…
The purpose of Bibles for the World is to propagate the Gospel through the printing and distribution of Bibles throughout the world, to support and…
Both Hands' mission is to fulfill James 1:27 by serving orphans, widows, and Christian adoptive families. Studies show that the #1 reason families…
Children of Grace's mission is to demonstrate the love of Jesus Christ by offering hope to Ugandan orphans and other children affected by poverty and…
Chosen Children Ministries exists to share God's love and the Gospel of Jesus Christ with the people of Nicaragua, serving their spiritual and…
Christian Blind Mission (CBM) is an international Christian development organization, committed to improving the quality of life of persons with…
In the name of Jesus Christ, Christian Community Action ministers to those in need by providing food, rental assistance and utility assistance. In…
As Christians, Christian Friends of Israel-America has received from God a love for Israel and the Jewish people. They want to bless them in the name…
335 nonprofits
Christian relief and development work spans the full range of human need — from emergency response after disasters to multi-decade community development, from refugee resettlement to clean water projects, from food distribution to economic empowerment. The best work meets people across the continuum from crisis to flourishing.
Rapid response to earthquakes, floods, hurricanes, war, and other disasters — providing food, water, shelter, medical care, and immediate support during the critical hours and weeks when survival depends on outside help arriving quickly.
Sustained work in poor communities across years and decades — economic development, agriculture, infrastructure, education, healthcare — building the capacity and systems that allow communities to flourish on their own rather than depending indefinitely on outside aid.
Supporting refugees and internally displaced people — emergency aid in camps and conflict zones, refugee resettlement in new countries, language and employment support, and the long work of rebuilding life after being uprooted from home.
Providing access to clean drinking water through wells, water purification systems, and sanitation infrastructure — addressing one of the most basic human needs and one of the most consequential investments in public health, child survival, and community flourishing.
Addressing the staggering global hunger crisis through emergency food distribution, sustainable agriculture, livestock programs, school feeding, and nutrition education — recognizing that hunger is both an immediate emergency and a long-term development challenge.
Small loans, savings groups, business training, and economic development that help families build sustainable livelihoods — providing dignified pathways out of poverty rather than perpetual dependency on outside aid.
Roughly 700 million people live in extreme poverty worldwide. About 110 million have been forcibly displaced from their homes — the highest number ever recorded. Around 333 million face acute food insecurity. Behind every one of these numbers is a person — a mother walking miles for water, a refugee family in a tent that wasn't meant for winter, a child who has known hunger longer than he has known fullness. The scale of human need is staggering, and Christian relief and development work exists in this gap between what is and what could be.
The mature movement has also learned, often painfully, that good intentions are not enough. Decades of well-meaning Western aid have at times created dependency, undermined local capacity, and treated poor communities as objects of charity rather than agents of their own flourishing. The 2009 book When Helping Hurts, by Steve Corbett and Brian Fikkert, has shaped how thoughtful Christian donors and ministries now think about this work. Its core insight: different situations require different responses. Relief meets immediate emergencies. Rehabilitation restores what was lost. Development builds long-term flourishing. Applying the wrong response to a situation can cause real harm.
The best work today therefore moves across this continuum with care. Mature ministries respond rapidly to disasters but plan their exit from the start. They invest in long-term presence with communities, building on what those communities already have rather than centering what they lack. They prioritize indigenous leadership and partner-led work over parachuted-in Western models. They measure their impact not by photos taken or supplies delivered but by the long arc of community flourishing across years and generations.
What distinguishes Christian relief and development from secular humanitarian work is not better food or different water. The aid is largely the same aid. What differs is the foundation — the conviction that every person facing poverty, hunger, displacement, or disaster bears the image of God; that material provision matters but cannot fully address the spiritual, relational, and systemic dimensions of poverty; that the work participates in something Jesus framed as central to his ministry — bringing good news to the poor, freeing the oppressed, declaring the year of the Lord's favor.
Beyond our standard verification framework, here are factors specific to Christian relief and development ministries that thoughtful donors often weigh.
Excellent ministries apply the right response to each situation — emergency relief when lives are at risk, rehabilitation as communities recover, and long-term development for sustainable flourishing. Beware of ministries that apply relief models indefinitely (creating dependency) or that respond to acute crises with slow development programming. Look for ministries that articulate their approach clearly.
The mature movement has shifted decisively toward indigenous leadership — recognizing that local Christians, community leaders, and national staff understand context, culture, and effective solutions better than outsiders. Excellent ministries invest in national staff, partner with local churches, and follow indigenous leadership rather than imposing Western models. Look for ministries where most of the leadership and staff come from the communities they serve.
Short-term mission trips have been heavily critiqued for creating dependency, undermining local economies, and prioritizing donor experience over recipient flourishing. Excellent ministries build long-term presence with communities and use short-term trips carefully if at all — as supplements to sustained work, not as the primary intervention. Look for ministries committed to multi-year and multi-decade community presence.
The strongest development work begins with what communities already have — their gifts, skills, leaders, networks, and assets — rather than centering what they lack. Excellent ministries practice asset-based community development, treating poor communities as agents with real capacity rather than aid objects defined by their deficits. Beware of ministries whose marketing presents only need and never agency.
The mature consensus across Christian humanitarian work is that aid should be offered freely regardless of recipient faith — never conditioned on religious response or used as evangelism leverage. Spiritual conversation can be offered as invitation rather than requirement. Look for ministries that maintain this ethic clearly, and beware of those whose aid feels transactional.
Disaster fundraising has sometimes been criticized for using dramatic imagery, raising more than can be effectively spent, or focusing on visible crises while chronic poverty receives less attention. Excellent ministries publish honest data about how funds are used, communicate realistically about what relief and development actually achieve, and refuse to manipulate emotional response for fundraising. Look for ministries that report both successes and limitations honestly.
Explore verified Christian relief and development ministries above — or browse Christian ministries by other causes, locations, and award levels.