We are so excited to announce that Chris Sharber has joined the Media Change Team! Joshua and Chris have known each other a few years and we couldn’t be more excited about this addition to the Media Change family. So you can know Chris too, we’ve asked him to tell us a bit about himself. […]
Read MoreSince childhood, I’ve often puzzled over an element in Jesus’ Parable of the Talents. In the story, a rich man goes on a journey, but before he leaves he entrusts his property to his servants in varying degrees. Two of the three servants use the money as business investments and they add to their master’s wealth. […]
Read MoreWelcome 2012! Most of us are taking time to reflect on the old year and to decide what we want to accomplish in the new year. For a lighter post, we’ve put together a list of 8 things that anyone can do to help fight world poverty! So here we go: 1.) Find a ministry […]
Read MoreWhy We’re Here: Did you know that almost half of the world’s population lives on less than $2.50 a day? Compare that to the average American who spends $7 a day on entertainment. Last year we spent over a trillion dollars on entertainment, while about a third of that would annually solve world hunger and […]
Read MoreHere is a cause I’ve always wanted to feature at Christmas time—because gives someone a cool present alongside the donation that was made in the recipient’s honor. Did you know that $30 can give someone clean drinking water for life in Sudan? Watermelon Ministries (the parent of Media Change) created the media for the100 Wells […]
Read MoreThis was my second trip into Darfur. The war and genocide in this region has caused many shortages. There is a shortage of food. There is very little clean water. Medicine is extremely hard to come by. There is however one thing that is not in short supply: guns and ammunition. Soldiers walking around […]
Read MoreThis post originally was featured on InspireAFire.com and is used with their permission “We have much to be judged on when he comes, slums and battlefields and insane asylums, but these are the symptoms of our illness and the result of our failures in love.” – Madeleine L’Engle When my brother traveled to the Sudan he had […]
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