International Missions Partnerships

focus:Churchplanting

BGAV churches want to make a positive difference against poverty and other issues that make communities vulnerable, both at home and together with our international friends. Typically we understand poverty as a lack of material possessions, and there are indeed many communities around the world that are not able to provide sufficient food and other necessities for themselves. We want to help communities graduate from extreme poverty in a way that is sustainable and effective, but that also addresses the broken relationships that lead to vulnerability.

Ghana tree

Food for the Hungry works with indigenous partners to help communities graduate from extreme poverty.

New Work in Guatemala

“My grandparents and parents were poor. I am poor, so my children will also be poor.” According to Juan Pablo Belmonte, field liaison manager for Food for the Hungry (FH), this often characterizes the worldview in communities which have experienced poverty over several generations. FH is helping communities in many countries depart from that kind of fatalistic thinking. Turning instead to the way God can heal broken relationships, as well as bless us with resources for change, they develop a customized, result oriented roadmap for graduating a community from extreme poverty. This is the case in Guatemala, where FH’s indigenous team engages in long term, asset based community development. The process includes church-to-community partnerships (C2C) in which congregations outside Guatemala can join one-on-one with communities there during a typically 8-12 year development plan. These partnerships are based on developing long term relationships, they include financial support, and most importantly, they emphasize the mutual transformation of together growing in faith in a resourceful God.

BGAV churches have always wanted to make a positive difference against poverty and other issues that make communities vulnerable, both at home and together with our international friends. Many of FH’s priorities align with the values of the BGAV, and Impact Missions has been exploring ways to connect churches with C2C partnerships in the region of Verapaz. In April, 2025, BGAV sent several church leaders to Guatemala with the purpose of becoming acquainted with the local FH team, and observing partner communities at various stages of their development plans. 

Providing a safe and healthy environment for  children, as well as the opportunity for a bright future, is a priority that we all share. That is one reason child sponsorship is such a good way to connect people with a community. As the church in a C2C partnership embraces a specific community, individual families in that church may also embrace a specific child’s family in that very community. This is a way to be connected to the community in a way that transforms families on both sides of the partnership: It makes the mission personal, spreading the sense in the church that everyone is working on this partnership together, and helps the community’s members to be supportive of their concerted development efforts. Children are also a main focus of the work because their welfare says a lot about the community’s health. In other words, how well the children are doing is usually a good indicator of how vulnerable a community is. Moving toward being able to provide sustainably for its children is a good way to build a resilient community.

Churches that enter into a C2C partnership commit to regularly praying for and regularly visiting their partner community. However the goal is not for the church to design or do the projects for the community. As the relationship develops there is opportunity to work alongside the community on a project, but the church is clearly “the back-up singer” in the sense that the community is implementing its own vision. This can be something of a paradigm shift for churches that are used to going on mission trips in which they perform the work for someone else. The church also commits to match FH’s development contribution of $12,500 each year. The resulting $25,000 goes toward food security, clean water, economic sustainability, education, or whatever phase of the its development plan the community finds itself in. Depending on the church’s preference, this amount can also come partly or entirely from the child sponsorships in that church.

If your church is interested in a long-term relationship that is Christ centered and result oriented, contact us!

Pathways of involvement:

Prayer

Prayer keeps us centered in God’s leadership and helps us rise in faith to the task at hand. You can pray for the communities in Verapaz, as well as for this partnership. Pray that we would soon have at least 100 BGAV churches participating at some level!

Church-to-community partnership

Your church can assist a specific community as they work toward graduating from extreme poverty. FH can facilitate mutually transformative service trips or visits for you to engage with your community, in which you can engage with community members as they work toward building a sustainable future.

Child sponsorship

Host a Child Sponsor Sunday for children from the region we partner with. The welfare of its children is a good indicator of a community’s health, and everyone is served when a community is able to care for its most vulnerable members. That’s why Food for the Hungry does much of its work through child sponsorships.

Invest in sustainable change

You can donate toward a specific development project in our partner region in Guatemala. Currently FH Guatemala is emphasizing food security for all the school districts. We are currently identifying food security projects that a church might support in the context of the overall partnership, even if that church is not partnering with a specific community.