Walking together in generosity.
EGCC began with a simple conviction: generosity grows best in a trusted community.
In this short video, Adam Wałach shares the story behind EGCC — how it started, why it matters, and why collaborative generosity is so important for Europe today.
The story of EGCC began more than a decade ago, when Adam and Grazyna Wałach experienced collaborative giving through an international givers community. They returned to Europe inspired by a simple but powerful idea: Christian givers are stronger when they learn, discern, and give together.
In 2013, a small group of couples started gathering in the Czech Republic for fellowship and learning. As trust grew, a natural question emerged: what if we explored meaningful local ministries and supported them together? This led to the first Czech “Marketplace” — a space where projects were presented openly and givers decided independently how to respond.
What started small soon spread. Similar communities began forming in other European countries, each shaped by local relationships, shared faith, and responsibility for their own nations.
Today, EGCC connects Christian entrepreneurs, investors, and givers across Europe through Giving Collaborations — trusted communities where generosity becomes wise, joyful, and shared.
We see generosity as a journey. Our mission is discipling in giving, not simply facilitating transactions. giving, not simply facilitating transactions.
EGCC is rooted in Europe and serves Europe, while engaging global givers who share responsibility for Kingdom work here.
EGCC was initiated and is operated by givers not by those seeking funding.
Our approach has been tested in practice. Giving Collaborations work, and they continue to grow across Europe.
We value trust-based relationships that grow over time, not short-term engagement.
They are not fundraising programs or formal institutions. They are relational spaces where people can ask honest questions, learn from one another, and discern together where God may be leading them to give.
Over time, this shared journey helps givers move from isolated generosity to intentional, Kingdom-focused stewardship.