Author: Raineer Chu
Date: 18.08.2010
Location: Manila | Philippines
Category: Urban Mission
Editor’s Note: This Cape Town 2010 Advance Paper has been written by Raineer Chu as an overview of the topic to be discussed at the Multiplex session on “Embracing God’s Global Urban Mission.” Responses to this paper through the Lausanne Global Conversation will be fed back to the author and others to help shape their final presentations at the Congress.
His intent was that now, through the church, the manifold wisdom of God should be made known to the rulers and authorities in the heavenly realms, according to his eternal purpose which he accomplished in Christ Jesus our Lord. In him and through faith in him we may approach God with freedom and confidence. Ephesians 3:10-12
A. Shalom House: A Theoretical Model
The Shalom model of community development below has been used as a theoretical model for an integrated urban poor development strategy. The house represents the church, the people of God. She is the catalyst for change in the slums. The church is founded on the Word of God, the Bible. Shalom is the roof – it is the goal of the church.
The columns of the house correspond to the four minimum basic needs of the urban poor, viz. health, livelihood, education and housing. The beam binding all the columns is community organizing (CO); it is what provides sustainability. CO creates synergy by combining resources that produce a momentum and power absent with unorganized individuals. An organized community with a corporate personality can access resources or funding not available to individuals or families.
See image attached. (Figure 1)
1. Evolution of sustainability
The evolution of the term sustainability culminates with shalom. Sustainability as Wall Street originally used the term was financial sustainability (a defense against dole-outs, where poor borrowers could pay their loans and thus shoulder the costs of money lent). It evolved into ecological sustainability to counter the destructive impact of unregulated business on nature–– carbon emission, deforestation, overuse of pesticides, etc. Then it evolved into social sustainability to give the poor direct access to capital—because often the microfinance service providers get wealthier each year but the borrowers remain perpetual borrowers. Political sustainability was brought about by the need to view the work from the big picture, realizing that there can be no prosperity without basic human rights––due process, suffrage, etc. Gender sustainability also followed because women perform more than half of the world’s labor. The trend is clear. The world seeks for what will work and what will last. The answers are found in the Bible: what will work and last is whatever is in accord with God’s will. The conclusion of an old book, In Search of Excellence, (1) made this clear years ago. What the 1,000 top corporations had in common were the virtues in Proverbs––pay your laborers just wages, work hard, be honest, save, etc. This is the picture of shalom where there is harmony with God, fellow human beings and nature.
2. Definition of success
The author is a founding member of Mission Ministries Philippines, Inc. (MMP).(2) MMP plants churches in the slums of Metro Manila. Peter Wagner taught that the most effective form of evangelism is planting small, new churches. With the present urban trends, urban poor church planting will be the most strategic mission focus for generations to come.
These churches act as catalysts for change in the slums. MMP’s definition of success is twofold. On the individual level, success means the poor cease to be just receivers but also become givers.(3) Giving is a good test that the person has been born again. On the corporate level, success means the community is organized to meet common needs.
MMP has tailored its strategy to follow the Shalom model. MMP follows a two year fast-track church planting strategy resulting in a church of about 50 adults, a BB (4) drugstore, grocery for the poor, and a preschool.
The house model is a simple theoretical model, proven through many years of work in the slums that can guide workers in undertaking community interventions.
3. Land and Housing
The greatest revolution in land and housing in the Philippines came about with the work of Gawad Kalinga.(5) Habitat for Humanity promoted low cost housing(6) for the poor at a rapid rate of several thousand a year. Habitat’s results were quickly overtaken (7) by GK beginning 2005. (8)
The two have a similar approach, but one likely reason for GK’s tremendous success is that GK doesn’t require the beneficiary to have title over the land where their house will be built. Both GK and Habitat build houses at very small cost—around P100,000 pesos (9) at a minimum of 32 sq. m. (maximum of 60 sq. m.). The beneficiary contributes labor and pays a low monthly amortization of around P300 pesos (10% of real (10) wages and only 3% of the legal minimum wage) just as with Habitat. The amortization is computed at not more than 20% of the family’s available income.
The problem with Habitat’s requirement of land ownership is that to get an affordable lot, the housing project often has to be offsite where the land is cheaper and more affordable. This means that development occurs in city outskirts where there are no roads, public transport, hospital or schools, and far from places of employment. GK has turned these lands into assets. (11) Instead of viewing their informal nature as unstable, GK, in a paradigm shift, treated them as positive features, thus promoting social harmony by uplifting the dignity of the squatters who, in turn, own up to their responsibility for protecting and preserving the peace and order of the community. A lot of social preparation is needed to make this program succeed and to prepare the people for the eventual accounts payable in their finances, when all of their funds are already committed to absolutely necessary items like food, water, transportation, etc.
4. Community Mortgage Program
Complementing the GK initiative is the Community Mortgage Program (CMP), a law passed during President Cory Aquino’s time, which provides for the purchase of land by squatters under certain conditions. The Philippines is one of the countries in the world with very good land laws for the poor. The features of the CMP include:
1. The purchase must be with the consent of the owner.
2. The price is not more than the fair market value.
3. The purchaser must be a community association or organization (not individuals or families).
4. The government will advance the purchase price to the owner. Once paid, the owner leaves the picture so the deal is simplified to one between the government and the community association.
5. The community association will pay amortization through government housing agencies like NHMFC (12) or Pag-Ibig at 6% interest per annum over a maximum period of 25 years.
The community association has self-regulating powers, such as the power to expel a recalcitrant member and substitute another family. The project is usually done with the help of Originators who act as middlemen, facilitators, and community organizers. The law grants them a lawful fee and accredits them based on certain qualifications.
The success of the CMP is undeniable. As observed by this author in Tatalon,(13) titling created a stabilizing element outweighing the impact of other forms of community interventions. In just a decade, shacks were replaced with concrete houses and businesses grew. The settlers were more confident to build and invest, because now they owned the land and had secure tenure. (14)
However, the matter of recalcitrant members has proven to be a heartache for urban poor community development workers. Usually 10% of the community becomes recalcitrants. No amount of social preparation can ensure against amortization failure, being declared recalcitrant, and ultimately eviction or replacement.(15) The usual candidates for these evictions are the widows, abandoned mothers, the sick, and the elderly—precisely the people the church was called to help and protect.
5. Political will and urban planning
Housing and land ownership remain a very controversial political issue.(16) The development and location of squatter communities are often the handiwork of unscrupulous politicians. Large squatter communities serve as convenient places for vote buying during elections. Squatter communities balloon when mayors also engage in selling illegal or informal occupancy rights to desperate families. A community can spring up in 24 hours, complete with roads and delineated lots. No industrial zone can survive without these sources of cheap labor, and neither can any politicians win without them.
Ultimately, only a strong political will exercised through wise urban planning will solve squatting. Many of the ultra modern and expensive overland trains running through Metro Manila today could have been built as provincial lines, and at lesser cost since the Philippine National Railroad already owns the land on which the tracks are built. Very few residents would opt to stay in the slums if they had a choice, especially if travel time and cost were the same. (17) A World Bank study has shown the horrendous cost of traffic congestion in Metro Manila in terms of loss of working hours and health costs.
Slum properties are also very expensive.(18) Fires (usually arson) can decimate entire communities overnight. Slum life also means epidemics, bad water, no electrical connection, and floods. Pilfering or electrical power theft is very rampant. The MERALCO(19) partly solved the problem long ago by allowing illegal settlers to legally connect by mass metering without land title or permits. In some slums however, even the minimum documentation cannot be secured, resulting in the filing of criminal charges. (20)
6. Livelihood
Only 10% of the total poor population needs capital for business (to go into livelihood) while 90% still need employment––which is hard to come by––causing many to seek employment abroad. There are more than 10 million Filipino Overseas Workers (OFW) mostly employed as domestic helpers and construction workers.(21) These OFWs remit a total of $14 billion U.S. dollars(22) annually to the Philippines, more wealth generated than the top 10 largest Philippine companies. (23)
When it comes to providing capital for the poor, the challenges are staggering. 90% of livelihood startups fail. Microfinance can only service less than 20% of the bankable poor. (24) What is clear is that microfinance can only do so much. It cannot reach the poorest of the poor (80% of the poor) because the first requirement for a loan is having a business. Still, MMP and other NGOs will engage in these starts up so that the survivors, the 10%, can move up into the microfinance sector, access the microfinance service, and grow. The poor are truly bankable. The microfinance industry standard of 97% repayment worldwide shows this. (25)
7. The national strategy for poverty alleviation
The national strategy for poverty alleviation works this way: startups are developed from the poorest of the poor who constitute 80% of total poor. These startups grow to become small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs). SMEs nationwide provide 70% of the jobs for the entire Philippines today. Once they become small or medium enterprises, they can now access the microfinance service. (26)
MMP operates a grocery for the poor, which gives a credit line for groceries for sale instead of cash. After a study(27) made on the cash flow of small sari-sari (convenience) stores in the slums, MMP links up these stores to Suy Sing, the largest distributor of grocery products in the Philippines. Suy Sing prices are lower than that of groceries and department stores, and at a minimum purchase of P25,000.00 Suy Sing will deliver anywhere in Metro Manila for free.
MMP charges 2% per month for the loan, adjusted to 1.5% when paid every 15 days. MMP also gets a rebate of 0.02% from Suy Sing credited to MMP directly; the rebate graduates when the purchase increases. The markup pays for overhead costs. The design dispenses with the need for warehouse, delivery vans and salesmen.(28) All the outlets’ books are done centrally in MMP, making it competitive with large businesses.(29) The goal of the grocery is to reduce the price of commodities in the slums (microfinance usually increases prices in the slums because of the high interest rates). Also, the program enhances the viability of the sari-sari store by linking it with a cheaper source of goods undergirded with professional and centralized bookkeeping.
8. Education
MMP has more than 400 preschools all over Metro Manila and a few in the nearby provinces. MMP believes that education is the best available way out of poverty because it broadens the horizon of opportunities for the poor, compared with microloans or employment.(30) Education means learning to speak English or becoming proficient in IT or computer. BPOs(31) are important developments in our economy and provide an alternative to overseas employment.
One of the threats to the BPO earnings in the Philippines is the constant lowering of the English proficiency among Filipinos. The need to improve the educational system cannot be overstated and could be the only hope for our country’s survival in the harsh and highly competitive environment of globalization.
9. Health
Due to health reasons, fifty percent of microfinance loans don’t get paid—not just because the borrower got sick but because someone in the extended family did.
The World Health Organization has already determined that providing tap water effectively eliminates more than half of the sickness in the community. (32) When people wash use a tap during washing, germs get carried away and are rinsed, unlike when people use a dipper or tabo. A tabo retains germs. A recent study also shows that more people die from drinking dirty water than from any other causes, like wars or other violence.(33)
Another health intervention is the training of volunteer community health workers. Ninety percent of patients in poor countries never see doctors but are helped by community health volunteers. There is much reason to promote primary health care more than the more prestigious (but largely useless) tertiary health care.
10. Botika Binhi
On the average, the poor in the Philippines spend less than 1% of their income for medical or health needs. Medicines are very expensive in the Philippines. This prompted Dr. Emma Palazo, a public health doctor from one of the best Philippine medical schools, to establish what is now a nationwide organization, Botika Binhi (BB) that provides cheap medicines. BB submitted a proposal to the German Embassy in the early 80s and won first place for most effective delivery of health services (Hamis Award). The Philippine government later copied and disseminated the BB to all parts of the country. The Department of Health awarded her foundation an initial P5 million pesos to promote the concept to all barangays (barrios). After 5 years, another P5 million was given under the auspices of Dr. Flavier as head of DOH and later, Senator of the Philippines.
Today, there are close to a thousand BBs all over the country. It orders more than P7 million worth of generic drugs from local manufacturers and can deliver to BB outlets anywhere in the country for free. The cost of the medicines to the outlets is the same as that of the factory price because BB is a non-profit organization. It acts as a federation, leveraging its size by buying in bulk for all the outlets.
The BBs are owned by the community. It begins with just 5 to 10 mothers, with as little as P500 pesos starting capital and quickly grows in a year to more than 50 mothers, with P10,000 pesos capital. All BBs are run by contributions of the members.(34) The outlets can markup as high as 150% or more, without exceeding the market average price. The government’s goal for the BB is to sell at 60% of the market price, but the BB average price is even lower despite the high mark up. This doubles their capital in just a few months time. The BB is also located inside the community, doing away with transportation costs. All the income is used for purchase of medicines and none goes to dividends, patronage or refunds. At the start, they purchase only medicines for the most common sicknesses (cough, fever, pain, infection and diarrhea). As their capital grows, they can also buy medicines for hypertension, tuberculosis(35) and diabetes. The bigger the capital, the more the BB can service the community.
Early in the life of the slum community organization, too much initial funding or responsibility can be damaging. Botika Binhi follows the principle of starting small, allowing management skills to catch up with the increased responsibility, gradually increasing the capabilities of the members.
B. Biblical framework: the centrality of the church
The model above must be understood within a biblical framework. This framework emphasizes the centrality of the church in development or transformation.
The church is at the center of God’s plan of redemption. The mission of the church is transformation, which is the institution of justice and righteousness in a fallen world. This transformation begins inside the church and is modeled by the church.
Today however, transformation is mainly being carried out by believers via parachurch organizations or NGOs. The call in today’s world is for the church to accomplish transformation or holistic ministry without requiring that this transformation be first implemented in or demonstrated by the church.(36) The sad conclusion is that Christians have given up on the church ever becoming a model for transformation.
1. Gospel good news to the poor (37)
The gospel is not merely receiving Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior.(38) We are saved not only to Christ but also to a family, a community––the church. It is in the church that one experiences the social, economic, and political dimensions of the gospel. These dimensions (39) are what make the gospel good news to the poor. (40)
The gospel is the people of God demonstrating the Kingdom. The center of the gospel is the reign of God. The message of God to the world is this: “Look at my people, they obey my commands, and I have blessed them. They share their wealth and the poor are cared for. They forgive each other and enjoy peace. If you want to be blessed in the same way, join the church by submitting yourselves to Jesus Christ.” The church thus is central both to the gospel and to transformation.
If transformation does not work in the church, we have no business exporting it to the outside world.(41) When the church is no longer central to redemption, mission has already failed. (42)
When the church is not leading transformation, Christians will struggle with making the gospel whole (holistic). When the church is living out the Kingdom within, social action need not be balanced by evangelism or evangelism balanced by social action. When transformation is done from within the church and spills over to society, it is naturally evangelistic, because the Kingdom is possible only among a people who are redeemed, indwelt with the Holy Spirit, who have given up their attachment to worldly treasures. Thus, the only way to experience the gospel is to be born again. The Kingdom is not possible without the rebirth. The Kingdom makes rebirth imperative. But today, Kingdom and rebirth are easily separated. One can stand without the other! The gospel of this generation says we can be born again without living out or experiencing Kingdom life.
Evangelism not supported by a church that lives out the Kingdom is a mockery of the gospel. The person saved will be at a lost to define the social dimensions of the gospel. We have passed from the period when the need was for a balance between social action and evangelism. The need today is for an authentic church living as the Messianic community where God reigns in their midst. The issue is no longer holism but authentic community life.
2. Church herself is good news
The church does not only preach the good news, she is good news herself. She, the church, was the greatest revolution in the history of mankind. When the church was formed, the distinction between male, female, Jew, gentile, poor, rich, alien, citizen, slave, free, etc., was removed.
In addition, the church also instituted economic equality. It was a relative, seasonal and voluntary equality. These social and economic equalities instituted in the church ultimately led to the dismantling of the Roman social caste and hierarchy.
3. Poverty is not the problem
Poverty is not the problem. Greed is. Deuteronomy 15 introduced the idea of sharing in order to eradicate poverty. Jesus did not quote from this Scripture to prove that poverty will never go away. In context, he was saying that poverty will not disappear because God’s own people will not share. The premise of the new social order in Deuteronomy 15 is found in verse 4: “there shall be no poor among you.” Despite a very extensive promise of blessings, sprinkled with some warnings, God’s people still refused to share. There is enough food to feed the whole world; people just simply don’t care.
When we define poverty as the problem, we are putting the pressure on the poor. (43) If greed is the problem then the pressure will be on the rich. God’s attitude to the poor is proof that poverty is not the problem: the poor are rich in faith and they are blessed, being heirs of the Kingdom. God however condemns the rich: “It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of God (Matt. 19:24).”
4. No bias for the poor
There is no bias for the poor in the Bible. God sees rich and poor alike, sinners needing salvation. The problem is simply that God will always find it difficult explaining the Kingdom to the outside world when in the church, the rich live with their wealth unmindful of many poor in their midst (not just among the Philippine churches but also the rich church in America in relation to the poor church in the Philippines or Africa). It is therefore imperative that the church has the rich and poor together.
It is the rich who need the poor. The rich must seek solidarity with the poor in order that their spirituality will be authentic. I John 3 says the spirituality of the rich is dependent on the way they treat the poor.(44)
Any focus on Christian discipleship which consistently neglects the needs of the poor is a defective form of discipleship. Any spirituality that misses the poor is inadequate, deficient, and needs correction. – Roberta Hestenes
C. Conclusion
1. A united church
Two things need to be attended to immediately. One is the unity of the church. The church worldwide has to become one as Jesus prayed. Globalization(45) is forcing us to work together and cooperate to solve problems only a united church can solve.
In addition, the church needs to be united by bringing the rich and the poor together. We have separated the poor from the rich Christians. This way we need not be bothered by the scathing accusations of James about discriminating against the poor. We also need not worry about economic equality advocated by Paul and John which needs to be instituted inside the church, where the poor are cared for.
2. A poor church
To have the rich and poor together, the church, as Thomas Merton urged, should give up her desire for wealth and power. With so much wealth and power, the church has lost her voice, no longer able to speak to the world about greed and injustice. Her wealth and power compels her to protect the status quo which allows her to be wealthy and powerful, the same status that also exploits and oppresses the poor.
The church must seek to be poor and preach the gospel to the poor (Luke 4.18). Paul gave the pattern for the church––by the grace of God, “Jesus who though he was rich, became poor in order to make others rich” (2 Corinthians 8:9). Without any vested interest in the present social order, the church can speak freely about world trade, minimum wage and migrant labor, pornography, war and other issues. But capitalism and materialism(46) have co-opted her gospel and she is now bad news to the poor.
The role of the church is not to help the poor, nor is the Kingdom a political agenda for solving poverty.(47) Her role is to showcase the Kingdom inside herself as a community where God reigns, as seen by the solidarity between the rich and the poor, a church that celebrates jubilee,(48) working ever onwards to shalom.
© The Lausanne Movement 2010
Keywords: Urban, poor, development, shalom, sustainability, Philippines, housing, community, recalcitrants, squatter, slum, microfinance, poverty, health, Bothika Binhi, church, Transformation, Kingdom, rich, greed
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United States
It is a shame we live in a world where there is so much poverty. The writer of this paper says poverty is not the problem, greed is. I agree with this, but the problem has grown to be so much more complex than just “poverty vs. greed.” Even in the area I live in – a small southern town, I’m not sure who the “greedy” person or persons would be. Even those who would be the “haves” don’t have much.
Our church is trying to have “give-aways” with food and clothes to help meet the needs of people. We try to have a biblical model of sharing, but we find it hard to come up with an exit strategy to help those in need to be able to help themselves. I don’t have answers – often just questions as to how to make it work.
Thanks for the paper, which gives some valuable insights to helping meet the needs of urban (as well as small-town) poor.
12.12.2011
Philippines
We appreciate the exchanges and this leads to further conversations towards expressing our concerns for urban mission. I know that Raineer’ paper would bring in a number of issues that are probably not yet confronted in societal context where one has not faced poverty and inequality persisting almost eternally. It would be good to see more definte statements as what exactly is not accpetable in papers to enable us to appreciate fully the comments and respond appropriately.
16.10.2010
United States
This is an excellent, well-written, well-researched paper. I disagree with some of your statements about the Gospel, the church, God, your generalizations of the poor, several countries, statistics, etc., but appreciate the paper very much.
Let me encourage you with the following, "Who is among you that fears the Lord, that obeys the voice of His servant, that walks in darkness and has no light? Let him TRUST in the name of the Lord and RELY on his God" (Isaiah 50:10, nasb).
Doug Nichols
13.10.2010
Philippines
@ Doug_Nichols:
any disagreement from Doug Nichols will be taken as an appreciation and an honor. I began my work with the poor through Action with street children while a staff of Navigators. After 6 yrs with street kids, i shifted to urban poor families, where 11 years was at the Payatas dumpsite. The fire for the poor was kindled by Viv Grigg in 1979 when he invited me to live in the slums with him. If you can send in your disagreements, it would make the paper richer.
13.10.2010
India
Thank you so much for responding. There are rich Christians in an age of hunger and some of them dont care about the poor at all. My heart aches when I see people suffering with poverty.
We do help poor girls towards their education. In India the girl child is neglected and I feel that they must be given opportunity to come up in life. Your paper helped to see the poor in God’s perspective. Thank you we will see you in CT.
Suman Aghamkar
09.10.2010
India
Dear brother Raineer,
Thank you so much for writing the paper on urban poor. The Shalom model is wonderful. We have hundreds and thousands of poor in our country. I am talking about India, where you find many in our own cities. They come to our cities hoping to improve their life but soon realize the harsh reality of urban life. The church has failed to provide hospitality to them and failed to make their life better. The church has lost and is loosing thousands of poor people every day. If the church would be sensative to their needs they would definately be won for Christ.
Suman Aghamkar
08.10.2010
Philippines
@ chikhali:
Dear Suman, thanks for the response. I had a semester in Chennai and Hyderabad in 2004. Was so overwhelmed with the need there. My thesis is that the church must have poor and rich together inside to become good news. i noticed lots of indian churches with aversion to the poor there. churches need lots of education about who the poor are, that it is the rich who needs the poor not vice versa. I JOhn 3 means our spirituality is authenticated by the way we treat the poor.
He who has a surplus of the world’s goods and finds a brother in need (a brother here means church member) and does not provide for him, does the love of Christ abide in him (not a question about salvation but about spirituality, authentic spirituality).
08.10.2010
Australia
Thanks Raineer, this looks brilliant and very workable--a great model based on solid theology ... I’ll forward it onto some friends working on the front line :)
28.09.2010
Philippines
@ David_Benson:
dear david, this is wonderful. so far we got two comments. two people actually read it! miracle. besides mel and glen who had to read it, this is really nice. you are inspiring man. there are tons of materials out there now and who would read stuff like this? i bet you are working among the poor, no?
29.09.2010
Philippines
@ raineer:
Dear Raineer,
Thank you for this well thought out paper.
Your visionary leadership, incarnational presence and humble ways have been serving as a significant inspiration to hundreds of urban poor missionaries in the Philippines.
It will also be helpful to share the Mission Ministries Philippines strategy on how MMP Church Planting teams develop urban poor leaders who commit to minister among the poorest of the poor for life without any guarantee of a salary. Urban leadership development is a significant component of successful community organizing.
Lorisa "Corrie" De Boer
30.09.2010
Australia
@ raineer:
hey mate, ... my pleasure ... obviously what you’re doing is many, many years in the making--both for you in formation, and journeying with this model. i’m not at all in the front lines ... in a fairly cushy middle/upper class, predominately white Brisbane suburb ... but part of a church (www.kbc.org.au) that is catching God’s heart for a hurting world. so we have quite a few connections with frontline work. mostly we’re connected with a church in Kota Kinabalu on Borneo (Malaysia), and then in a couple of African nations. my sister works for opportunity international, on transformational development (robyn robertson), so this may be of particular interest to her.
God bless :)
03.10.2010
Philippines
@ David_Benson:
David, thanks again for the encouragement. I work indirectly with Opportunity being lawyer of APPEND here in Manila.
03.10.2010
Philippines
Rainner,
Thank you for providing some concrete ways of dealing with urban development. Our faith and beliefs have to be translated into actions that can impact the people and communities. Both theology and actions need to come together as visible expression of our vision in urban mission.
05.09.2010
India
Raineer Chu is a great practitioner of incarnational transformation and his strategies are well presented
18.08.2010
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