Poverty is a harsh affliction that affects millions of people around the world. Each day, many are gripped with fear as they struggle to know where their next meal will come from, how they will provide for their families, where they will sleep tonight or whom they can turn to for help. Although it affects different communities in different ways, at its core poverty is the result of being denied access to life’s necessities—a violation of our human dignity.
In today’s hyper-connected world, global poverty has an impact on every country and community. By understanding how different types of poverty impact the lives of different people, we discover how to break the cycle of poverty, raise the standard of living and improve the quality of life for all.
Poverty is fundamentally about scarcity—a lack of life’s basic human needs, which can include food, shelter, clean water, social support, economic resources, education and an opportunity to grow and flourish.
We often reduce poverty to simplistic economic terms, but poverty encompasses more than just material wealth. No attempt to address the impact of poverty can succeed without a holistic sense of what makes a person, a family or a community thrive.
Pope Francis highlighted the imperative need to eradicate poverty when he said, “A way has to be found to enable everyone to benefit from the fruits of the earth, and not simply to close the gap between the affluent and those who must be satisfied with the crumbs falling from the table.”
The fruits of this earth are diverse and bountiful, but many people lack access to even the most basic resources. When we focus solely on the material and monetary aspects of those living in poverty, we may be forgetting about many vulnerable people who suffer from other types of poverty.
Poverty isn’t necessarily just about food security or shelter. There are other kinds of needs that can be just as damaging to a person’s life and dignity if they go without them. While the challenges often go hand-in-hand, not all impoverished people suffer from all three types of poverty. Let’s explore each type and how it harms the poorest people around the globe.
Perhaps the most commonly recognized type of poverty, lack of physical resources correlates most closely to one’s income level, economic status, employment outlook and ability to provide for the basic needs of one’s family. Not having stable and consistent access to food, water and shelter can foster feelings of fear and inadequacy, which makes it difficult for people to recognize their own worth and dignity.
When impoverished people lack the resources to improve their economic outlook, they are not afforded the tools or opportunity to move out of their debilitating situation. Material poverty can impair a person’s ability to flourish in society, which can lead to a crippling cycle that prevents future generations from building a better life.
Those suffering from poverty of persecution experience the intentional stripping or degradation of their human dignity at the hands of their oppressor. Poverty of persecution can be a result of oppressive governments, conflict zones, tribalism, social constructs and bigotry.
Denied access to education, loss of opportunity, physical violence and the threat to security are all forms of persecution that can impoverish and devastate individuals and communities. The victims of persecution may be minority groups, refugees, women and girls, members of a particular religion or the chronically ill. When these groups are cut off from vital access to resources they are prevented from fully participating in the community and are relegated to the fringes of society.
The poverty of loneliness can be as crippling as hunger. Many people who suffer from a lack of adequate resources and unjust persecution can also experience this intense loneliness due to isolation from society. However, one does not necessarily need to know material poverty or persecution to feel the pain of abandonment. It can equally affect both the materially poor and wealthy.
Many people suffer from loneliness: in particular, the elderly, the sick and the dying. To thrive, humans need community and companionship, and yet so often these people are left forgotten and alone. Loss of human connection can cause a rapid decline in a person’s physical and mental well-being and lead to detrimental outcomes. These can be prevented through the experience of love and human connection and relationship.
In the book of Genesis we are taught that every person is made in God's image and endowed with inherent dignity regardless of who they are, where they are born or what they accomplish. In the Gospels we are challenged to see Christ in those who are hungry or thirsty, in strangers, in the naked and in the imprisoned. As a collective society, we are called to care for everyone around us, especially the marginalized, and to treat them with respect, compassion and justice.
Care for populations living in extreme poverty is advanced by individual and community participation and through works of charity, the practice of virtue and the pursuit of justice in our own lives. We are called to be generous in sharing what we have with those in need and to promote justice through the choices we make in our families, schools and workplaces.
Divine Word Missionaries are working to serve the poor and provide for people’s basic needs by treating the impoverished and suffering with love. Our missionaries lift them out of poverty through education, support and opportunity. They put faith into action by feeding the hungry, sheltering the homeless, educating children, caring for the sick, welcoming the stranger, providing access for persons with disabilities and working for greater justice and peace.
Our food distribution programs, medical centers and homeless shelters help people get the basics they need to survive. We help families and communities to combat hunger and homelessness, overcome poverty and dependency, build housing, resist crime and seek greater justice. Additionally, our lessons in sustainable agriculture, microloan programs and educational opportunities attempt to help people break out of the crushing cycle of poverty and create a more promising future for their families.
In many of our mission locations, we also offer a place of safety and refuge for those in unstable communities. Our missionaries offer love, compassion and relationship to those who suffer from loneliness and abandonment. For many of the poor, the greatest gift you can offer them is kindness, respect and concern for their heart and soul—not just their physical well-being. Begin today by praying for them, and by looking to your community to take action.