Evangelical Christian groups are calling on Congress to reinstate foreign aid programs shuttered by the Trump administration, arguing the government’s actions will hurt millions of people around the world.
Addressing a crowd of around three dozen largely evangelical Christians assembled at Capitol Hill Presbyterian Church on March 11 for a “Prayer Vigil for Foreign Aid,” Eugene Cho, president and CEO of the group Bread for the World, denounced the “broad, untargeted cuts” recently implemented at the U.S. Agency for International Development as an assault on vulnerable populations all over the globe.
“These indiscriminate cuts are not just a policy failure,” said Cho, standing in a sanctuary dotted with candles. “For us, especially, as followers of Christ, as uncomfortable as it may be, we must clearly … but prophetically, say: it is also a moral failure.”
The vigil, featuring an array of evangelical organizations such as World Relief and the Accord Network, came a day after Secretary of State Marco Rubio declared on social media that the government will cancel 83% of programs at USAID. The announcement followed weeks of chaos at the agency involving work stoppages, ongoing legal battles and mass layoffs led by billionaire Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency.
Matthew Soerens, vice president of advocacy and policy at World Relief, the humanitarian arm of the National Association of Evangelicals, told Religion News Service the group’s contracts were among those canceled. Although he celebrated the fact that four of World Relief’s grants in Sudan, South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo were unexpectedly reinstated, he noted two of those grants are “scheduled to be completed this month” and the organization has not received “any information on proposals for renewal.”
A representative for Catholic Relief Services, the single largest recipient of USAID funds in recent years, according to Forbes, confirmed to RNS their contracts were also among those canceled, although they were unable to clarify precisely how many.
During the vigil, several speakers highlighted the human toll of the cuts. Kombo Choga, senior director for program design at Compassion International, pointed out that his organization currently does not receive government funds, but said they “are witnessing how the withdraw of aid is devastating” populations they work with — including children.
“It’s causing harm now and into the future,” he told the crowd, which included evangelical Christian USAID staffers who were laid off. Several held signs with slogans such as “Hunger won’t wait” and “Aid strengthens American national security.”
Choga argued that while the government has a responsibility to assess the proper use of taxpayer funds, the Bible offers “very clear guidance.”
“Whoever is kind to the poor lends to the Lord,” he said, citing Proverbs 19:17.
Carol Bremer-Bennett, executive director of World Renew, expressed a similar sentiment during her prayer at the event.
“We lament the choices of those in power who have turned away from the suffering of your children,” she said, adding that funding “has been withdrawn from clinics where babies take their first breaths, from hospitals where mothers fight to survive childbirth, from communities where clean water and medicine once flowed.”
The cuts, Bremer-Bennett said, are “not just numbers on a page,” but “real lives lost.”
In a separate interview with RNS, Cho said he was aware of “conversations that are happening behind the scenes” in the halls of Congress regarding aid, but that he and others feel compelled by their faith to publicly voice their concerns with the Trump administration and lawmakers.
“We pray for the administration, but we also are urging our elected members of Congress to do their responsibility — and to do their duty — to follow through on the allocation of those resources,” he said.
Cho was echoed by Lanre Williams-Ayedun, a senior vice president of international programs at World Relief. Speaking at the vigil, she insisted that when leaders “neglect the vulnerable,” including those who benefit from foreign aid, it amounts to “turning away from God.”
In addition, James Standish of ADRA, the global humanitarian arm of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, was one of many speakers who noted that foreign aid makes up less than 1% of the federal budget.
“We sing that song: ‘God bless America.’ Well, folks, God has blessed America,” Standish said, arguing the Bible instructs believers to share their blessings with others.
Multiple speakers made clear that while they believed the foreign aid system has issues, drastically reducing programs was not the answer. Randy Tift, senior adviser at the Accord Network, raised concerns that a cycle of grievance was driving many of the Trump administration’s actions.
“People involved in these recent decisions on all sides, some in current leadership, were grievously mistreated in the past,” Tift said. “I fear grievance is driving a lot of the new team’s decisions; dedicated and faithful USAID staff, including former staff — some of whom are here today — have now been treated with cruelty by some who were aggrieved in the past.”
After the vigil, Cho told RNS the event was originally planned to be held in front of Congress but had to be moved for scheduling reasons. The hope, he said, was to dispute the idea that Christians, “including those that come from more conservative or evangelical leanings,” are in support of USAID’s cuts.
Cho acknowledged that it may take time to turn hearts in Congress but said that his group was prepared for a long fight.
“We’re not interested in putting on one-time events,” he said.
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