A Quiet Courage That Carries the World 

“Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.” — Galatians 6:9 (NIV)

In this post...

By Paulo Lopes, President of ADRA International
Published July 2, 2026

Around the world, headlines tend to follow a familiar pattern, focusing on conflict, crisis, and the occasional act of heroism that breaks through the noise.

But I have spent much of my life in the spaces that headlines rarely reach. What I have found there is a different kind of story.

The Stories We Keep Missing

I think of a mother in a displaced community who, weeks after a flood destroyed everything she owned, is already organizing her neighbors, sharing resources, checking on the elderly, and helping hold her community together. No camera is pointed at her. No article will carry her name.

I think of a church elder who opens his congregation’s doors after a crisis, turning pews into beds and a kitchen into a place of refuge. He is not seeking recognition. He is simply living out his faith.

I think of a community leader who stays when others leave. She shows up again and again, not because she has all the answers, but because she knows that presence matters.

These are not secondary stories. They are the main story. The quiet, faithful work of rebuilding is what ultimately determines what a community becomes.

A Milestone Full of Perspective

I recently traveled to Peru for a milestone that reminded me of this quiet, faithful work.

Just over 20 years ago, in the aftermath of the December 2004 Asian tsunami, ADRA established its global emergency response team (ERT) program to unify, structure, and strengthen the way we respond in emergencies.

Long before I became the president of ADRA, I was part of that first team in training, learning alongside colleagues who would become lifelong partners in our ministry’s work.

During my trip to Peru this year, a new group of emergency response team members went through the same training. Before that, ADRA held a training in Serbia, and soon more ADRA staff will become ERT members in West Africa and Euro-Asia. 

All in all, more than 1,000 men and women are now equipped to serve communities in their most difficult moments in the two decades since this program began.

Those we’ve trained, like most emergency responders, are not known outside the places they serve. They did not enter this work for recognition. They show up because communities need them.

Something I have witnessed throughout my career, and that continues to move me, is that the most enduring courage rarely arrives with fanfare. It shows up quietly, stays long after the cameras have gone and the attention has faded, and steadily keeps going.

Courage Is More Than Determination

Galatians 6:9 has accompanied me through many seasons of this work: “Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.”

There is a weariness that comes with sustained compassion. Problems do not always resolve neatly. Need often persists longer than we hope. There are days when the distance between what is and what should be feels overwhelming.

Yet in those same places, I meet people who refuse to give up. Not because they possess extraordinary strength, but because something steadier than their own determination sustains them.

I believe it is God’s presence being active and near, working through ordinary people in quiet and often unseen ways.

I see it in a grandmother teaching displaced children their first letters. In a community leader who continues gathering neighbors when the damage feels too great. In every act of faithfulness that refuses to let hardship become abandonment.

The harvest Paul describes is not always visible from where we stand. But it is being planted every day: one meal shared, one door opened, one reminder that someone has not been forgotten.

An Invitation

You may never coordinate a disaster response or help rebuild a community after a crisis. But quiet courage is not reserved for extraordinary circumstances.

It looks like showing up consistently for someone who is struggling. It looks like giving when giving costs something. It looks like refusing, in a world that moves quickly and forgets easily, to stop caring for the people others have moved on from.

We are all invited into this story. And none of us has to carry it alone.

Because in God’s hands, faithful persistence, offered quietly and sustained over time, is never wasted, even when the harvest is a long time coming.

To learn more about ADRA’s work around the world, visit ADRA.org.

*Published by the Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA), the humanitarian arm of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Learn more about ADRA.

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