Faith communities — churches, mosques, temples, marae, and other religious groups — are some of New Zealand's most significant community organisations. They provide social services, community spaces, pastoral care, and significant philanthropy. Understanding how faith communities both give and access grants is important for both faith-based service providers and funders engaging with the faith sector.
Scale of faith-based social service delivery
Faith-based organisations deliver a substantial portion of New Zealand's community social services:
- Food banks and emergency food parcels (largely faith-run)
- Emergency accommodation and homelessness services
- Addiction recovery programmes (Salvation Army, Teen Challenge, and others)
- Aged care (Presbyterian Support, Methodist Mission, etc.)
- Family violence services
- Counselling and pastoral care
- Community centres and meeting spaces
Why faith communities are significant social service providers
Catholic Social Services
Catholic Social Services coordinates social welfare investment across the Catholic network — including some grant funding for aligned organisations.
Baptist Community Services
Baptist-affiliated social services — including food and community support — with some grant-funded community programmes.
Anglican Church trust funds
The Anglican Church has significant trust fund assets — some distributing grants for aligned community work:
- Wellington Diocese trust funds
- Auckland Diocese charitable funds
- Various parish and diocesan trusts
Presbyterian Church trust funds
Presbyterian Church NZ has charitable trusts that fund community and social welfare:
- Church property trusts with grant components
- Social welfare trusts
Salvation Army
The Salvation Army is one of NZ's largest faith-based social service providers — accessing substantial government contracts alongside charitable fundraising. Less of a grantmaker, more of a direct service provider.
Faith-based organisations access grants from the same sources as secular organisations:
- Gaming trusts: gambling harm and addiction services funded alongside broader community
- Lotteries Community: faith-based community services eligible
- Community foundations: faith-based community services fund through community foundations
- Government contracts: social service delivery through MSD, Health NZ, and others
Key distinction: organisations must have public benefit, not exclusively benefit to members of a religious group. A church soup kitchen serving all community members is philanthropically fundable; a church's internal ministry to its own members typically isn't.
Governance requirements: faith-based organisations must have appropriate governance — board of trustees or directors, not just a pastor or church leadership. This can be a barrier for smaller faith communities.
The inter-faith movement in New Zealand includes philanthropic dimensions:
- Inter-faith dialogue on shared values and social commitments
- Joint social service delivery across faith communities
- Shared advocacy on poverty, housing, and social issues
Caritas Aotearoa New Zealand
Caritas is the Catholic international development agency — funding overseas development work and some domestic social justice advocacy.
TEAR Fund New Zealand
TEAR Fund is an evangelical Christian development organisation — funding international development and some domestic poverty-related work.
ANGLICARE New Zealand
Anglican social welfare organisation — coordinating Anglican social service delivery and some grant activity.
For faith-based organisations seeking grants:
Separate the religious from the social
Grant applications should articulate the public benefit — the social service delivered, not the religious purpose. A faith-based food bank should apply for the food bank, not for the church.
Governance documentation
Ensure your organisation has appropriate governance documentation — trust deed or constitution, registered trustee structure, annual reporting. Gaming trusts and community foundations expect professional governance.
Demonstrate community access
Show that your services are accessible to the whole community, not just church members. Non-discriminatory service delivery (not excluding based on religion, sexuality, etc.) is expected by most funders.
Track record
Faith-based organisations with long community service histories have strong track records — document this.
For secular funders considering faith-based organisations:
Non-discrimination concerns: some funders have policies about funding organisations that discriminate in service delivery or employment based on religion, sexuality, or other characteristics. Understand your policies and apply them consistently.
Religious character and public benefit: faith motivation doesn't disqualify an organisation from charitable status or grants — but the grant should fund the public benefit activity, not religious activity.
Due diligence: faith-based organisations are subject to the same governance and financial due diligence as other organisations.
Tahua's grants management platform supports faith-based organisations managing grants alongside government contracts — with multi-funder coordination, service outcome tracking, governance compliance monitoring, and the tools that help faith-based social service providers manage complex funding portfolios alongside their mission-driven work.