Quiet sunlight falls across empty wooden pews in a modest church sanctuary
MISSION OF OREB FUND

The sound of a mission going quiet. That is what we prevent.

OUR APPROACH

Emergency relief is not charity. It is stewardship.

We deploy rapid-response grants to cover core operational expenses for ministries in critical deficit. Then we audit in the field to ensure every fund lands where it was meant to.

OUR OBJECTIVES

Two pillars, one purpose

Every grant we deploy is guided by a single question: does this keep vital spiritual and humanitarian work alive? Our mission originates from the Bible, "You shall drink from the brook, and I have commanded the ravens to feed you there." (1 Kings 17:4) Our calling is to be God-driven ravens.

A raven delivers bread to a seated man by a stream, with Hebrew and scripture.

Emergency relief, field-deployed

We deliver rapid-response grants to ministries facing operational termination due to financial deficit. — quick injections of capital to keep the doors open and the work moving.

Sustainability through transitional funding

One crisis grant buys time. We bridge acute financial deprivation with targeted funding that allows ministries to stabilize, restructure, and move toward long-term self-sufficiency.

OUR FIRST MISSION

Projects to be funded

Financial pipelines for missions under financial deficit in the two nations: Kenya, Africa; Tokyo, Japan.

Two young children in hooded coats sit on green grass eating rice and lentils.

Food Supply Ministry, Kenya.

Immediate capital for operational expenses for food supply

Students sitting in a classroom, focused on writing in notebooks held on their laps.

Youth & Children Ministry, Kenya.

Financial and material support for education

(Supporting NGO-SAM International, Kenya)

Men setting up a computer lab with Dell desktop towers and monitors on white desks.

Vocational School for Self-Reliance, Kenya.

Capital for operational expenses for TTC (Tigoni Technical Center)

Man in a pink blazer speaking at a wooden podium on a red carpet outdoors.

Building up Christian School

Fundraising to prevent the construction halt of a Christian school

Vintage group portrait of students and staff at Kyoritsu Women's Theological School outdoors.

Pipeline to TCU (Tokyo Christian University)

The purpose is to support TCU—an institution with a 140-year legacy—in navigating its financial crisis and ensuring its long-term stability as a Christian university.

Tall clock tower with a cross beside modern domed architecture under a clear blue sky.

Pipeline to TCU (Tokyo Christian University)

Transitional funding bridges acute crisis to long-term operational health.

MAIN DEPARTMENTS

The engine behind every grant we deploy

Transparent vetting, fundraising, and disciplined finance ensure donor capital reaches the field intact.

A raven delivers bread to a seated man by a stream, with Hebrew and scripture.

Field evaluation & emergency relief

We scout vulnerable ministries, vet their need, and deploy rapid grants within days — not weeks. On-site audits confirm every dollar lands.

Fundraising & donor relations

We cultivate sustained partnerships with institutional and individual donors, including Christian celebrities, high-net-worth individuals, and organizations. Every contribution is acknowledged, stewarded, and reported on with clarity.

From the director

What does it take to steward donor capital into survival?

It takes a governance-first structure that converts every dollar into field-audited relief. That is the bridge between spiritual mission and institutional excellence. And we need God's divine interventions and donors' invisible supports-prayers.

Sustaining the work

Give a predictable gift

Monthly contributions create a stable pipeline for rapid-response grants, so we can act the moment a ministry faces operational termination.

Volunteer in a neon vest hands a meal to a man sitting on the ground.

A check in the hand of a ministry director who had nothing left. That is the transaction that can make the mission alive.

One-time gifts and recurring pledges both convert directly into field-audited survival grants.