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David Wiley Calls for Everyday Acts of Giving: “Sometimes It’s Just About Keeping the Lights On”.

Jackson, Georgia Oct 28, 2025 (Issuewire.com) - Georgia entrepreneur and nonprofit founder David Wiley is calling attention to an often overlooked groupindividuals and families who fall through the cracks of traditional assistance programs. Through his nonprofit, Cash In Time Ministries, Wiley has seen firsthand how a few hundred dollars can make the difference between stability and crisis.

These are people without a safety net, Wiley said. Sometimes its not about changing someones life foreverits about keeping their lights on so they can fight another day.

According to the Federal Reserves 2023 Economic Well-Being Report, nearly 37% of Americans say they would struggle to cover a $400 emergency expense. In Georgia alone, more than one in four households are considered ALICE (Asset-Limited, Income-Constrained, Employed)working families who earn too much to qualify for public aid but too little to handle financial shocks.

Wileys message is simple: you dont need a foundation or a large checkbook to help. If youve been blessed, its your job to pass that forward, he said. Start small. Buy groceries for a neighbor. Cover someones utility bill. Those moments matter more than we realize.

The idea grew from Wileys own experience with Cash In Time Ministries, which has quietly helped dozens of Georgia families stay housed, keep their utilities running, and put food on the table. He believes practical generositysmall, fast, and localcan fill the gaps where larger systems are too slow to act.

His call to action is rooted in lessons that trace back to his years as a football captain at Wofford College, where he learned that leadership is about consistency, not control. When youre part of a team, you learn to own your rolewin or lose, he said. That applies to life, too. We each have a role to play in taking care of the people around us.

Wileys approach mirrors his business philosophy at Belief Marketing Services, the company he founded in 2014 after years in the corporate supply industry. My business grew on relationships, not transactions, he explained. The same thing applies here. If we want stronger communities, we have to start investing in people, not just programs.

He encourages Georgians to think of giving as part of their daily rhythm, not an annual event. You dont have to start a nonprofit, Wiley said. Just be present. Notice whos struggling. Help quietly, directly, and with no expectation in return.

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For Wiley, the lesson is deeply personal. Faith, family, and perseverancethats the foundation, he said. Its not about how much you give. Its about showing up when it matters.

Wiley urges individuals to start their own Cash in Time Challenge: once a month, set aside a small amount$20, $50, or whatevers possibleand use it to meet a need in your local community. Help a neighbor, support a teacher, or pay forward a utility bill.

Big change starts small, Wiley said. If everyone helped one person a month, wed see fewer families in crisis and more people standing on their own two feet.

About David Wiley

David Wiley is the owner of Belief Marketing Services, a Georgia-based firm specializing in data-driven lead generation for law firms. A former two-time All-American football player and team captain at Wofford College, Wiley is also the founder of Cash In Time Ministries, a grassroots nonprofit that provides emergency assistance to families in need.

Source :David Wiley

This article was originally published by IssueWire. Read the original article here.

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