How Kids Can Donate to Charity without Spending a Dime

How can parents and grandparents bring up their children to understand the importance of helping others?

There are many ways for children to contribute to charities without giving money. Children can earn money from a allowance or by earning points that represent money by doing certain chores, favors, or behaviors for which they are rewarded.

Once they have a reasonable amount saved, have them strategize on how they can give it away to the less fortunate. Search for a local charity that can accept gently-used clothing, toys, furniture or non-perishable food items. Once a charity is chosen, find a box and plan to fill it with appropriate items that the children collect and have parental permission to give away. Two broad categories are:

Used clothing/toys

Needs of charities are not all financial. Some collect blankets or clothing for sheltered or injured animals, and others accept stocking caps and lap blankets for people with medical issues, or toys and blankets for toddlers. Clothing that is used, but not worn out, can be donated to homeless shelters. T-shirts, sweaters and sweatpants that are taking up space on a shelf, in a drawer, or on a hanger in the back of the closet are of great value to someone who has nothing.

Let the kids research and choose the charity and be involved in every step of laundering, shopping, or boxing the chosen items. After delivery, have them write a short letter to the charity staff about what they learned and felt.

Food items

One in six people in the U.S.A. go hungry everyday, and many of them are children. Have your kids or grandkids decide to donate a non-refrigerated item that they love, such as their favorite cookie, cereal, cake, or candy bar.

Take them to the store, let them use their allowance or reward money to buy their favorite food, then deliver it to a pantry, food bank, or soup kitchen.

Both of these “kid-friendly” ideas will leave a lasting memory of the feeling that humans get when they genuinely help others with intention. It can prepare them to be generous adults, and perhaps tomorrow, great philanthropists.

Life Begins—The Belo Project

Belo watercupsA handful of religious groups including the United Church of Christ and the two largest American Jewish movements, Reform and Conservative, all favor a woman’s right to have an abortion with few or no exceptions. (Pew Research) One artist, Belo, to raise awareness about the clean water crisis, created an image made from 66,000 cups of colored rainwater simulating levels of impurities found in water from all over the planet. His goal may have been to dramatically inform us of the consequences of a lack of drinkable water, but he’s also touched the hearts of many who oppose abortion for any reason.

Created almost four years ago, Belo’s amazing artwork is again making the rounds on social media to speak out against abortion. We hope that it moves you as much as it does us at the Stewardship Foundation. Watch the video on the Belo page or on YouTube.

After experiencing the video, remember this…

“For You created my inmost being; You knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise You because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; Your works are wonderful, I know that full well. My frame was not hidden from You when I was made in the secret place. When I was woven together in the depths of the earth, Your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in Your book before one of them came to be.” (Psalm 139:13-16)

And from Jeremiah 14:5, “The word of the Lord came to me, saying, ‘Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart; I appointed you as a prophet to the nations.’”

Abortion Scenarios Under Trump

babyThe president’s chair was barely warmed up before newly-inaugurated President Donald J. Trump reinstated former President Reagan’s rule for foreign (think Mexico) nonprofits: stop providing abortions and any information about abortions or lose U.S. funds. The family-planning groups gasped and pro-lifers cheered. It’s nothing new—the rule has gone back and forth under several presidents. But under Trump and a newly-appointed Justice, there is a likelihood that the Supreme Court could question the validity of abortion in the U.S. in general, with sweeping changes a possibility. Howard Katz from The Catholic Thing presents several possible scenarios