WEC and Social Action

After looking at our website, several enquirers over recent months felt there was no “natural fit” for them in WEC.  It turns out however, that these people were a good fit, but got the wrong impression through a curious omission.

I think, therefore I do...

Whether it’s running schools, medical clinics, sustainable farming, developing literacy programmes, providing relief and development or cattle for those who have lost all they had, WEC teams are sharing Christ’s love around the world.  It is tough and often thankless, but so relevant and necessary.  Some of the workers involved are highly trained professionals, others with hearts full of love do what they can – just like Mary did for Jesus (Mark 14:6-8).

Here’s a random mix of just some of what WECers think and do...

The Personal Side of Poverty

Recently I visited HIV/AIDS patients at the general hospital.  I met a young man and his mother who sat on his hospital bed.  The other patient in the room was a Cameroonian man who was unresponsive - it was obvious he was dying in front of this young man and his mother.


After praying for everyone in the room, I left with my heart in my stomach.  Dying in a foreign country with no family by your bedside would be a nightmare in itself.  What is worse is that the hospital doesn’t even provide needed medicine. 

Avatar and Motives for Mission

“We’ve built them a hospital, taught them English, given them medicine…..what more do they want?” The line in the movie Avatar goes something like that. If you’ve seen it recently you may have been struck by how possible it is for evil motives to fire social action. “We’ll do XYZ so that we can get what we want.” In Avatar it was access and possession of a precious mineral. In mission life it could be acceptance and trust in a community in order to be able to preach and find receptivity to the gospel.

Love Lived Loudly

My greatest memories of my mother are her strong work ethic and her passion for the poor, the suffering and the women of the young Liberian church. 

Church planting leads to 'doing justice'

WEC is focused on church-planting. Yet WEC workers are involved in many social projects:

    * Caring for children in crisis
    * Digging wells
    * Setting up schools
    * Helping people to get vocational training
    * Teaching adults to read and write.

Why does a church-planting mission do all this?