"I'm Feeding the World Tonight": The Impact of Moral Identity Standards on Mobile Loaves and Fishes Homeless Outreach Ministry

Authors

  • Megan Robinson Southwestern University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15273/jue.v3i2.8240

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to examine what factors motivate volunteers who work at a religiously affiliated homeless outreach organization in Texas. Specifically, the research examines the extent to which Mobile Loaves & Fishes‘ (MLF) framework influences volunteers‘ decisions to participate in the organization‘s mobile food distribution program. Analysis of three different qualitative data sources collected in fall 2012, including organizational materials, semi-structured interviews, and ethnographic field notes, suggests that MLF‘s use of framing conveys a moral identity that encourages volunteers to continue their participation in homeless outreach. This paper adds to the existing social movement literature on faith-based community development organizations (FBCDOs) by examining how religious ideology is used in tandem with elaborated framing and condensing symbols to reflect moral identity standards which induce people to volunteer.

Downloads

Issue

Section

Articles