Sweet Relief from Poverty
Anyone who has experienced financial poverty at any level will know that it makes life very difficult. Most of us reading this don’t have a clue what abject poverty is like if we’re honest. In western Europe food banks and government benefits provide some alleviation, but in poorer countries these are not available.
The pressure to borrow is enormous, often with high interest rates which keeps people in perpetual debt. This only adds to the mental pressure and feelings of hopelessness. Financial poverty can be utterly crushing. It can feel like one is in prison, unable to escape.
If we are the light of world, and God’s answer for broken communities, then what can we do?
Helping believers start up sustainable businesses creates jobs, and sustainable jobs helps people out of financial poverty.
Joseph Rowntree, a Christian, knew this. Leaving school at the age of 11 in 1852, he was apprenticed in his father’s grocery shop before joining his brother Henry Isaac’s struggling chocolate business in York in 1869. A visit from a French pastille maker persuaded Joseph to invest in confectionary for a UK market, and in 1881, the famous Rowntree gum pastilles were introduced to the British public with huge success.
Following his financial success, Joseph Rowntree provided radical social and welfare support for his growing workforce. He set up an employee library and created a pension scheme that predated the state pension by two years. He built a model village for some of his workers that improved living conditions for the working class, and also set up a charitable trust to pursue his underlying passion and calling to address the causes of systematic poverty; to this day it disperses over £10m each year for many great causes.