The Orphan Report
By Joe Knittig
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The Orphan Report - Joe Knittig
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SECTION 1
Great Pressure
Kids aren’t causes.
CHAPTER 1
End Poverty
Jesus said the poor will always be among us. But we don’t believe Him. With noble intentions, our world has charted its own approach to poverty. Our world’s operating systems designed to end poverty have the net effect of commoditizing kids, making them causes, with the world’s most vulnerable children cut out of care. We’ve locked them into an acute pressure zone, as a bunch of losses to be cut in a quest for a perceived greater global good.
Our approach to the poor marks the starting point of The Orphan Report.
Let’s begin with a golf analogy. Ask a golfer about driving the golf ball. He’ll tell you he can stand over the ball such that he looks like he’s aiming right down the middle of the fairway. He can swing really hard and hit the ball impressively far. But whether the ball goes straight into the fairway, where he thought he was pointed, or out of bounds depends on whether the face of his driver is square with the ball at the point of impact. If the club face is just slightly – ever so slightly – turned one way or the other at impact, the ball will go either left or right. And the more twisted the impact, the more crooked the consequences.
God’s way is the square-at-impact approach to the poor. The Lord commanded His people to serve the poor. Ours is to give ourselves over to others, particularly the poor, the infirm, the oppressed. Not involuntarily because of a New World Order government mandate designed to force a global middle class. But as a voluntary outpouring of Christ’s love within us, with the gospel of Jesus Christ – in word and deed – as the non-negotiable fountainhead. It’s an inside out love process, not an outcome. And it’s a process built on the paradoxical premise that in the rich-poor exchange, the poor have great power to offer in the spiritual realm.
The world’s approach is slightly but critically twisted. Our world’s dominant global goal is not to serve the poor in Christ (a heart centered process), with outcomes belonging to the Lord. Rather, the goal is to end poverty (a head centered outcome), with success defined and controlled by us.
Do you see the twist? The former is trust and process based, understanding that the Lord will do whatever He wants from impact, even if we do not instantaneously see or understand what He’s doing. The latter is control and outcomes based, making our own linear expectations – a desire to immediately end suffering and impose our own notions of cosmic fairness
– god of the strike. In one, we subjugate ourselves to God. In the other, we try and subjugate God to us.
We often break down our outcome objective into smaller chunks. We want to end poverty in a given continent. In a given country. In a given city. In a given village. In a given family. In a given person. We keep score, again according to our own notions of poverty’s resolution.
End poverty
has become the dominant goal among many global humanitarian and Christian organizations, alike. This motivational mantra aligns secular and Christian organizations in their approach to world change. We act as if we can undo the corruption of our souls, of our world, by exercising intellectual dominion over corruption’s consequences. This mainstream alignment feels good, alluring, rational. To get in this mainstream, Christian folk need only drop Jesus and that Bible stuff from their equation. The elite secular humanitarian world need only tolerate the ignorant Christian rubes (who are willing to drop Jesus) to pursue a perceived greater global good. And, voila, we’re aligned in common ground.
The heart in this end poverty
movement isn’t Christ. It’s the United Nations (UN
), along with the network of global governments and organizations – secular and faith based – who coalesce with the UN. The secular New World Order, led by the UN, has set eight laudable goals aimed to solve poverty. They’re called the UN’s Millennium Development Goals (MDGs
). They are the embodiment of the secular end poverty
movement.
The first goal in the MDGs is as follows: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger.
The first target towards this goal is to halve the number of people, relative to total population, who suffer from extreme poverty and hunger. I’ll refer to this as the 50% Target and use it as a touchstone to discuss the currents cutting against kids all the way at the end of the line.
The starting question for us is not whether we or others think that the world’s poverty elimination goals are noble. Or inspiring. Or so audacious and universal that they must be of God. The question is simply this: are we (don’t worry about everyone else) square at impact? The answer with the modern end poverty
approach is, no.
Am I saying that those who adopt the end poverty
approach are malicious? That the MDGs are evil? That it’s wrong to hate poverty and take radical action in our lives to step into that scourge? No. Of course not. I am making three factual observations as a necessary start to The Orphan Report, unpopular though they may be.
First, our Lord gave us a love based, serve the poor,
process marching order. He did not give us the end poverty
outcome marching order. We adopted that all on our own.
Second, the difference between our Lord’s serve the poor
marching order, and our self-imposed global end poverty
marching order is a huge one. They drive very different expectations, operating systems, and decisions.
Third, the UN-centered end poverty
approach has become the powerful mainstream approach for secular and Christian organizations alike (including much of the Church) and is, in fact, more than a twist at impact. It’s a complete paradigm shift with a global government centered operating system.
God’s approach for us and our world’s approach for ourselves may look like they’re both aligned in the same direction. They’re not. If we’ll open our eyes to look all the way to the end of the line of humankind, we’ll see the twisted consequences. We’ll see that, in execution, our seemingly noble quest to end poverty
locks the most vulnerable children on earth, kids fiercely close to God’s heart, into a brutal pressure zone, as collateral damage of our secular, one-world war against poverty.
We have unintentionally rewritten James 1:27 to state that pure and faultless religion is not to look after widows and orphans in their distress, but rather to lock them into their distress. And we’ve joined the world in the process of doing so. In this first section of the Report, we’ll look at the macro-forces that have the net effect of locking our most vulnerable children out of care.
CHAPTER 2
The 40 Year Stretch
The world’s mainline end poverty
approach generates enormous numbers pressure. We’re living right now in a unique and critical juncture of human history. The 40 year stretch of time from the years 2010 to 2050 exposes unfathomable tragedy; a lethal production and distribution crisis among the poor that requires supernatural intervention. At the same time, we live in an intellectually arrogant world that trumpets money, science, and government as gods. Poverty and suffering have become an intellectual riddle for people to solve this side of heaven. With the right combination of money, government, and intellect, we can end all the pain. Or so the theory goes.
Let’s stop a minute and ask... How’s this working?
Let’s begin with 6.8 billion. When I started thinking about this book in 2010 that was the global population.¹ (It ratcheted up to 7 billion by the time of publication.) On the one side of the 6.8 billion, roughly 1 billion live in extreme economic prosperity. That’s us here in the U.S. even on our worst days. On the other side, roughly 2 billion live in extreme economic poverty.
An estimated 1 billion children live among the poor.² Among that 1 billion, scores of millions are de facto parentless, Orphans. They’re the most endangered species on the planet.
There’s enough food production capacity in the world today to feed every man, woman and child 2,700 calories per day.³ However, even as we’re throwing around more global aid than ever, engaging more secular brainpower to eliminate poverty than ever, and entrenched deeper than ever in the UN’s Millennium Development Goals to eliminate poverty, guess what? Many experts say that world hunger is going in the wrong direction. According to a global food summit hosted by the United Nations, world hunger is trending up.⁴
The richest nations can produce. But there exists no secular grassroots distribution network to the most vulnerable among the poor. Until recently, helping the poor produce for themselves had little cache among global policy-makers who favor global government controlled centralized systems of aid and development.
Guess who gets hit the hardest by this crisis? The poorest of the poor. More specifically, adults who don’t own land and women head of households.⁵ Beneath them – the ones getting absolutely crushed beneath the weight of the world – lie the millions of children in extreme poverty. At the very bottom of that heap, in the dregs, languish the many millions of children with no adult champion in life: true Orphans.
Even as the UN declares that the world’s health and wealth efforts are working, such that incomes among the poor are increasing, hunger among the most vulnerable continues in its deplorable state.⁶ In other words, the notion that the world can spend billions and billions to help people as a whole get more money, and improve their health and wealth, does NOT translate to those people caring for the most hurting kids. The UN just cannot seem to understand why not, because sin and spiritual depravity have no place in their end poverty
formulae.
What is poverty’s net impact on kids? Around 21,000 children under the age of five die per day from preventable causes. That’s more than 7.5 million per year. Roughly 6 million children per year under the age of five die from hunger.⁷ That’s one every 5 seconds. We don’t have accurate data on how many more million five and older die per year, turn to the streets, sell their bodies, or scrape by in slavery.
The most despicable post-term abortion pandemic among our children rages on not someday, but today.
And when it rains, it pours. In the 40 years from 2010 to 2050, demographers conservatively expect world population to soar to 9.1 billion.⁸ Very little of that growth will occur in economically rich countries.⁹ In Europe, the United States, and other developed
countries, population will pretty well flat line. The growth explosion will continue in the poorest countries of the world. Developing
countries’ population is expected to increase by more than 2 billion.¹⁰
In order to feed the 9.1 billion, global food production will have to increase by 70% from today.¹¹ The world’s food production experts argue that maybe, maybe this can be done, with certain drastic investment and social change contingencies. Here is a quote from the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) of the UN about its optimism looking at 2050:
It is obvious that the positive vision presented here contrasts strongly with the reality of recent trends. The number of chronically undernourished and malnourished people in the world has been rising, not falling.¹²
Let’s say drastic production increase does occur. What about grassroots distribution? Heck, distribution is today’s obvious failure among 6.8 billion people. The world’s secular experts have no plan for how a theoretical 70% food production increase will result in food actually getting into the