Monday, August 30, 2010

County's NFL connection help feed the children




By TIMOTHY R. WOLFRUM
twolfrum@bradenton.com
Timothy R. Wolfrum, Herald staff, can be reached at 745-7015.





PALMETTO — Manatee County's three NFL cornerbacks spent Wednesday morning at IMG Academies, putting themselves through the rigors of an offseason training regimen.

So it was probably a good thing that most of the heavy lifting had been done by the time Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, Fabian Washington and Mike Jenkins arrived at a Feed the Children event their charitable foundations put together.

Organizers said people began arriving at the Manatee County Fairgrounds to receive boxes of nonperishable food and personal care items at about 8:30 a.m., 90 minutes before the event was scheduled to begin.


Despite the heat, volunteers in white T-shirts scurried about, helping recipients carry boxes to their cars as inspirational music blared. The majority of three tractor trailers’ worth of goods was gone when the players arrived at about 11:30 a.m. with more than two hours to go, a testament to the need they are trying to meet.

“Beautiful,” said Betty Blue, 72, of Sarasota, who came with her daughter, Gloria Madison and 15-month-old great-grandson Laxavone Parker. “I admire them for what they’re doing. Because you know why? They’re giving back to the community. That’s more important than anything else in the world. Don’t ever forget where you come from.”

About 1,200 area families received vouchers from churches and social service agencies that enabled them to pick up three boxes of goods. The boxes contained oatmeal, pasta, crackers and rice, along with toilet paper, facial tissue and cleaning supplies. The boxes are designed to meet a family’s needs for a week, according to Feed the Children, an Oklahoma-based Christian relief organization.

“It means a lot to me because it's providing for me and my kids,” said Alis Peterson, of Bradenton, who brought her daughter, 2-year-old Vanessa Wortham and eight-month-old Jeremih Louis. “Yeah, that’ll help a lot right now.”

The NFL players — they call themselves Cornerback Connection — organized the event, along with help from Rodgers-Cromartie's church, Shining Light Church of God in Christ in Rubonia. About 70 volunteers, including some from Best Buy and the Florida Sheriffs Youth Ranch, turned out to help.

All three players said they spend most of their offseason in Manatee County. They plan to host a free football clinic Friday morning at the new 13th Av Dream Center and the Celebrity Basketball Slam Jam featuring other NFL stars at 5 p.m. Saturday at Manatee Convention Center. Jenkins and Washington have teamed up to create the Franchise Kids Foundation, and Rodgers-Cromartie is the founder of the DRC Foundation.

“Coming up, we had guys like (former NFL player) Peter Warrick do the same thing. We’re just trying to carry it on,” said Jenkins, a 25-year-old Southeast High graduate who plays for the Dallas Cowboys.

“It’s just a blessing to be able to give back to the community and feed people at this time,” said Rodgers-Cromartie, a 24-year-old Lakewood Ranch High graduate, who made the Pro Bowl last season in his second year as an Arizona Cardinal. “For a lot of people, it’s their time of need. Just to be able to come out here and have a crowd like this, it feels good.”

The three players, all first-round draft picks, organized a similar Feed the Children event before Thanksgiving last year at DeSoto Square mall.

But Wednesday’s event was three times larger and came at a time far removed from the holidays, when needs often go unmet.

“This is exceptional because it’s in the middle of the year, when most people aren’t thinking about it. You’ve gotta eat all year,” said the Rev. Roosevelt Watkins of Shining Light Church of God in Christ.

“We just try to do as much as we can,” said Washington, a 27-year-old Bayshore High graduate who plays for the Baltimore Ravens. “Our parents get together and see what we can do in the community. My mom called me and said they set up a Feed the Children thing, and I said I’ll be there.”


There will always be poor people in the land. Therefore I command you to be openhanded toward your brothers and toward the poor and needy in your land. Deuteronomy 15:11 NIV

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

With big arms and Bibles, the Skate Church scoops up kids feeling lost


At West Seattle's Skate Church, ex-rebels take up the cause of saving kids
By Michele Matassa Flores

JESUS WAS born in Bellingham.
If you hang around long enough with the kids of West Seattle's Skate Church, eavesdropping on this loosely formed group of pre-teens, teens and 20-somethings, you might hear a biblical slip or two. That one came from a 14-year-old boy who mixed up his three-syllable cities starting with "B," and though he couldn't come up with "Bethlehem," he demonstrated a better grasp of the more meaningful points he's been learning about Jesus:

"He died for our sins, so we can live in heaven. If you accept God, it really affects your life."

That's just what the founders of this unorthodox, youth-led church had in mind when they started Skate Church three years ago. They hoped to improve the lives of kids who might be struggling: drinking, doing drugs, committing punk crimes, missing something in their home life — or missing a home life entirely.

The youth pastors, some of whom had gotten into their own share of trouble as high schoolers, wanted to relate to kids on the kids' terms. So they opened a storefront in The Junction, West Seattle's business district, where they sold skateboarding gear and energy drinks, and gave away religion.

They now draw dozens of people at a time to worship services and youth-group meetings. Senior pastor Serena Wastman, a West Seattleite who started Skate Church with her husband, Rob, estimates that hundreds, maybe even thousands, of people are involved, if you count kids' families and neighborhood supporters.

"You're looking at this incredible, growing radius," says Wastman, a hip-dressing, high-energy former Microsoft business manager. At 50 she seems more den mother than reverend. "We're really taking hold. I think people understand compassion. Across faiths . . . people get that. It's about caring, and making a difference."

THE SKATE-CHURCH approach to getting — and giving — religion has actually been around for a long time, almost as long as a similar movement that started among Australian surfers in the 1970s.

The more contemporary, skate version began with a single group in Portland, in 1987, and organizers say it's caught on big — not only throughout the United States with an estimated 1,000 churches but in some 90 countries, including New Zealand, Switzerland, Scotland and Sweden.

In some cities, skate churches are all about building ramps and full-on skate parks and competing in the sport, with some preaching tossed in between kick flips. In others, groups use borrowed church space for meetings but run highly popular skating groups that gather wherever they can.

In West Seattle, many of the original young leaders working with the Wastmans were heavily into skating. Not so much any more. Except for the shop, and the occasional stray skater on the sidewalk outside, there aren't too many signs of skating.

The shop, called TORN, is tucked between Sweetie, a ladies boutique, and the West Seattle Senior Center on California Avenue Southwest, The Junction's main drag. A sliver of a store, it serves as the hub of the Skate Church youth ministry, but on any given day the group can be found elsewhere around West Seattle: playing games in the basement of West Seattle Baptist Church, running a food bank at the senior center, washing cars at Alki Beach to raise money for a mission to Nicaragua.

While they spend a lot of time playing, these young people are serious about their religion. They devote hours every week to Bible study. They set aside every Sunday evening for worship. And even while playing Ping-Pong or grilling burgers, they frequently quote scripture or slip in references to Jesus.

Youth groups meet Wednesday evenings at the Baptist church, and every week about 10 elders from the nearby Hope Lutheran Church take over the Baptists' kitchen to cook dinner for the kids. Their motivation: "Youth groups are languishing everywhere," says Gwen Fraser, who came one night straight from her job as a staffer for U.S. Rep. Dave Reichert.

The Wastmans and their troop of young pastors also lead a regular worship service called Journey of Faith, a branch of the evangelical Foursquare Church. "Regular" is relative, though; in this case, though Sunday-evening worship includes some preaching and praying, it mostly involves dancing to loud, live Christian rock music — two guitars, an electric bass and drums — in an empty room above the senior citizens' thrift shop. Instead of Sunday best, these followers wear shorts, jeans, tank tops, whatever. Some are barefoot.

"We're not about sitting your butt in a pew on Sunday morning," says Rob Wastman, a broad-shouldered, buzz-cut 57-year-old who could pass for a Marine. "We're just trying to help these kids. We meet so many kids who are just on the wrong path."

BRENNAN MCDANIEL says he was 11 years old when his stepfather first offered him some pot. By age 12, he was smoking it regularly. He lived in Bend, Ore., and spent years hanging out with guys like himself, creating mischief, getting tickets for drinking in public.

"Everyone around me was getting into trouble," the 19-year-old says now, recalling the moment not long ago when he realized, "I don't want to be around this anymore. I'm better than this."

So in January he moved to West Seattle to live with his aunt. During his second week, while walking The Junction applying for jobs, he discovered TORN and the Skate Church crowd. He started attending gatherings and was offered an internship to learn to be a youth pastor. He's been sober since February, volunteers 16 hours a week at TORN and works the graveyard shift at Home Depot.

Recently, he and one of Skate Church's youth pastors, 21-year-old Colin Frazer, moved into a newly rented "discipleship house" opened by the Skate Church with money from an anonymous contributor. The "Christian frat house," as McDaniel calls it, can house four or five guys ages 18 and older who are learning to live independently and responsibly. A similar house for young women is opening this fall.

McDaniel, who credits his aunt and the church for helping him, feels inspired to help others. "I want to reach out to these kids. I want to be the one they can talk to," he says. "I'm perfect because I'm just as rowdy." But different, too: "Satan no longer has a stronghold on me."

The 14-year-old who confused Bellingham with Bethlehem doesn't talk of being saved, but of being accepted:

"It kind of helps me because I don't really have that many friends," he says. "I immediately thought this felt like my home. It kind of fits for me. It's pretty cool because it's, like, all about coming into God's life."

It can be a little jarring to hear teens and 20-somethings so heavily into Jesus that they seem to talk about nothing else.

Frazer, the young pastor, has an easy smile and a smooth charm that oozes follow-me confidence. When he talks of walking with Jesus and wearing God's armor, the younger kids stop and listen. Frazer says he lived for Jesus until eighth grade, then "fell away," partying and carrying on until his parents sent him to boarding school. A Mercer Island boy — "I was privileged" — he met Natalie Wastman, Rob and Serena's daughter, a year and a half ago and became involved with Skate Church.

"Look at what God has provided me," he said during a housewarming at the discipleship house, where he grilled gourmet burgers for dozens of people. "This family. This house. These kids! I now have responsibility for them. We're not about converting people. We're about loving people."

Asked what he and his friends talk about besides God, his eyes wander up to the ceiling and he gets a puzzled look.

What about girls? Is it difficult for these young adults to live up to Christian ideals — including no sex outside of marriage?

He explains that he's been dating Natalie for a year and a half. "We don't even kiss," he says. "No! It just leads to temptation."

PORTLAND'S PAUL Anderson, a onetime sponsored-amateur skater who started what is believed to be the first-ever skate church in 1987, has a theory about the seemingly obsessive manner of some of these young people. It has to do with the makeup of skaters, of people into extreme sports, and often of people who become troublemakers, he says.

"They have personality characteristics," Anderson says. "They're individualistic, they express themselves in art. A lot them are really bold, and they believe in what they do. They're proud of what they do. So they become Christians, and they're like that as Christians."

That also helps explain how the "skate church ministry," as leaders describe it, has taken hold around the world and, like any bonafide movement, now comes with websites, DVDs, T-shirts and annual conferences. Anderson will be among the speakers at a four-day international conference scheduled for October in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Yet, despite that commercialization, Anderson chafes when skeptics say he and others are cynically using skateboarding to "trick" kids into becoming Christians.

He says that as a skater in San Luis Obispo, Calif., in the late 1970s and early '80s, he was "a punk rebel kid with a smart mouth" — drinking, taking drugs and stealing wood to build ramps. Then, over many months, he and a friend were won over by some preachers at the beach. Eventually, he and the friend moved to Portland to attend Bible college, and Anderson started preaching to kids who gathered around him whenever he skated. Within two months, he had 250 kids in his circle.

"I wasn't sitting around wondering how to get kids to be able to become Christians," says Anderson, now 46. "I already had the big mouth, the following, the lifestyle. These are kids who are on drugs, sleeping around, their parents are getting divorced, they question authority, they feel like they don't belong. It's like (God) saved me on purpose. He picked me and he told me, 'Go get those kids.' "

SERENA WASTMAN wasn't a skater, but she and Rob were into the partying life. She landed in jail at age 21. She won't say why, "but I will say Rob bailed me out with drug money. We know what kids get into because we used to do it."

She later "found Jesus" through some other people and called Rob, who went to rescue her from what he expected to be a cult. Instead, he became a convert, too, at age 30.

Now the couple pour their energy into the Skate Church, which often means smoothing rough spots with people in the community. Some have complained that the kids are too rowdy — climbing young trees outside the Baptist church, skateboarding down crowded walkways, screaming and carrying on.

One long thread of gripes on the West Seattle Blog earlier this year prompted the Wastmans to weigh in, apologizing, inviting further criticism and offering to address any problems. That approach has gained them credibility, and in follow-up comments on the blog, some people have said they were impressed how quickly problems had been addressed.

But on a more fundamental level, some question the church's message.

"I know that it has traditional beliefs about marriage and families," says Matt Munson, who until June was a youth-development specialist with Planned Parenthood of the Greater Northwest. "So, of course, my concern is if a student doesn't come from one of those families, or if they're struggling with their own sexuality or sexual identity, what is Skate Church saying?"

Serena Wastman says sexual identity is a "hot topic right now," but Skate Church does not take a stand. "What we say is, 'We're going to love your kids.' We try to keep it simple."

They're dealing with teenagers, she emphasizes. "We encourage them not to be involved sexually. They need to develop themselves as a person. . . . When you're a kid, be a kid. There's time enough later for that stuff."

Munson says Serena Wastman has offered to talk with him: "I do appreciate that Skate Church has opened the door for those questions to be asked."

Right next door to TORN, the folks at the senior center say they aren't shy about speaking up when little problems arise — maybe a skateboarder startles an elderly woman with a walker — and church leaders respond quickly.

"It's not without its little problems at times," says Carol Johnston, the center's activities coordinator. "But . . . you bring it up and work it out."

As she spoke, she looked over at a middle-schooler hugging a grandma type as they cleaned up after a food bank. That scene, she says, speaks volumes.

"The old folks can tell their same old stories to someone new. It's like, all of us — we need someone to talk to."
"Come, follow me," Jesus said, "and I will make you fishers of men." Matthew 4:19 NIV

Safe Haven program winning over skeptics

Rex W. Huppke contributed to this report.
Becky Schlikerman, Lolly Bowean and William Lee
August 3rd, 2010 at 6:53 pm
Chicago Tribune Breaking News


When Keonta Calimee, 13, realized he’d be spending his summer inside a church, he was wary.

“I thought, ‘What is this?’” he said. “I thought the only thing we were going to do was read Bibles.”

Instead, Keonta has been playing outside, exercising, learning about nutrition and talking about violence prevention and conflict resolution. He’s one of more than 800 Chicago children taking part in a $250,000 citywide Chicago Public Schools program called Safe Haven, aimed at keeping kids out of harm’s way in the summer months, and teaching them lessons that can keep them safe far beyond that.

The monthlong program, which ends Friday, is an outgrowth of similar efforts the district tested over winter and spring breaks, in which it partnered with churches in higher-crime areas to provide students a place to go — and learn — when school wasn’t in session.

On a recent weekday, four Tribune reporters fanned out across Chicago to visit more than a quarter of the city’s 40 Safe Haven locations. What they found were well-organized programs that seemed to be meeting their charge of engaging kids in conversations about violence, while also giving them room to have fun and enjoy a summer away from the dangers of surrounding streets.

Kids at the various sites were taking dance and Spanish lessons, writing essays about their communities, pairing up for self-esteem-building exercises and even going on field trips.

Keonta was at Bronzeville’s Bright Star Church of God in Christ, joining about 150 children who show up each day alongside nearly 30 staff members and volunteers.

In one group session inside the church’s dark, cool sanctuary, a counselor posed a scenario: What would you do if someone started a nasty rumor about you?

“I would go to that person and ask them why?” one child said.

Another said he would tell his mom, a comment that drew giggles from the crowd — and a lesson.

“You don’t want to be the person who tells, but you also don’t want to be on the 6 o’clock news,” youth program director Keyontay Humphries told the kids, explaining that she understood their dilemma. She ultimately said that, if the situation were serious enough, they should tell an adult.

School district spokeswoman Monique Bond said all the Safe Haven programs are incorporating a theme of “Stop the Silence, Stop the Violence” into their daily activities with students. She said the district has been monitoring the summer sessions and is pleased with the results.

“Churches have always been safe havens for youth in many of these communities,” Bond said. “These programs have become a very popular and known type of refuge for students when school’s not in place.”

At a West Side site, Gospel Truth Life Changing Ministries Church, about 50 children piled onto folding chairs and stood along the wall, their eyes fixed on Felicia Oliver.

They were about to attend a career fair that included a doctor, personal trainer, banker and a performer. But first they had to listen to a stern lecture.

“You all have to start dreaming again,” Oliver said. “Come out of your box. You have to not be afraid of people who know more than you. These are people you want to get with.”

She later explained the importance of teaching children to trust adults in their lives: “If we could save just one or two, by teaching them to walk away, we have done our job.”

Lamon Phillips, 12, said he wanted to be a part of the summer program mainly because he heard they served a free lunch and there were other kids there. But he said he’s learning along the way.

“Violence is not the answer,” he said. “If you end up fighting on the streets or in school, you could go to (juvenile prison) or get shot.”

Not far from the Altgeld Gardens housing complex on the city’s Far South Side, more than 130 children registered for the Safe Haven program at the Promise Center.

The center isn’t far from where high school student Derrion Albert was beaten to death in an after-school melee last fall.

Pastor Margaret White said part of her job is to counter the violent experiences the children are exposed to with messages of mutual respect and heightened expectations.

“I can’t correct their home life,” White said. “But I can send them home with a new mindset.”


I myself will guarantee his safety; you can hold me personally responsible for him. If I do not bring him back to you and set him here before you, I will bear the blame before you all my life. Genesis 43:9 NIV

Monday, August 23, 2010

At Sturgis motorcycle rally, some bikers spread gospel


Tim Pratt (contact)
August 21, 2010 5:51:00 PM
http://www.cdispatch.com/


STURGIS -- As Charles Dube walked past the thousands of motorcycles lining Main Street in Sturgis on Saturday, one bike in particular caught his eye.

Sitting there among the chrome and custom paint jobs was a motorcycle with a 4-by-4-inch wood frame, a 12-horsepower lawnmower motor, and other makeshift parts.

"Now that is a redneck bike right there," the Union resident said with a laugh, then posed on the motorcycle with a helmet provided by Mike Myers, director of Beautiful Feet Ministries in Fort Worth, Texas.

Beautiful Feet Ministries was one of dozens of church groups and Christian motorcycle clubs that packed Sturgis this weekend for the Sturgis South Motorcycle Rally. Representatives from Sturgis Baptist Church and other organizations handed out water and literature, while bikers from throughout the country walked up and down Main Street, wandered through tents full of T-shirts and motorcycle accessories, and bought barbecue and funnel cakes from local vendors.

"Everything is going pretty smooth," Sturgis South Motorcycle Rally Board President Donny Hanson said just before sound check for the night's musical acts -- Willy Waggs, Crossin Dixon and Diamond Rio. "People are moving around pretty good. It's hot, but everything is going good. It's looking to be a good turnout."

Hanson had no estimates on the number of people who attended the rally this year, but said about 700 had registered as of Aug. 1, and plenty more registered throughout Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Still, Hanson and fellow Rally Board member Rodney Lincoln estimated crowds are down slightly this year.

"If I had to guess, I'd say it's because of the temperature (which hit the mid-90s Saturday) and the economy," said Lincoln, who organized the Dinner Ride Friday afternoon from Sturgis to Starkville to Louisville and back.

Despite the low estimates, the streets and sidewalks still were packed with bikers throughout the weekend.

I love it," Dube said. "I just like looking at the bikes. I mean, it's great seeing this many people in one spot having a good time."

The atmosphere at Sturgis -- it's touted as a family friendly motorcycle rally -- is what has brought Myers back for the past three years.

"I come back for a couple of reasons," Myers said. "My love for sharing the gospel and I'm originally from Kosciusko, so it's kind of like coming back home. And, also, we brought about 25 people from Texas and Alabama and places like that, so we kind of build on our club every year and come and do outreach."

One of the people who came with Myers from Texas was Tommy Walker, who said he was living in a crack house in Fort Worth at this time last year. With the help of Beautiful Feet Ministries, Walker has turned his life around and now helps feed the homeless with Beautiful Feet in Fort Worth.

This was the first Sturgis rally Walker has attended and he plans to make it an annual trip.

"I love it," he said. "I'm out here looking at bikes and spreading the gospel."

While the rally featured live music, bike shows and competitions, it also featured carnival rides, helicopter rides and other activities.

The rally is scheduled to end Sunday with the Blessing of the Bikes at 9 a.m.
And the gospel must first be preached to all nations. Mark 13:10 NIV

Blessings delivered in bags as volunteers prepare 4,000 sacks of potatoes for the needy


By MARK MORRIS
The Kansas City Star
http://www.kansascity.com

Anita Foertsch chose to spend part of her 39th anniversary Saturday helping off-load 21 tons of potatoes from a truck that had hauled them from Wisconsin.

But she didn’t see it as much of a sacrifice. Foertsch and dozens of other volunteers who worked at Prairie Baptist Church in Prairie Village were answering a biblical call to use the gleanings from harvested fields as offerings to the poor and needy.

“We have a lot of fortunate people and a lot of hungry people,” Foertsch said. “And you can’t turn down the gift of free potatoes.”

After volunteers pulled more than 4,000 bags of potatoes off the truck and put them into waiting pickups and trailers, they drove them to 20 community kitchens, pantries and service centers throughout the metropolitan area.

That contribution is desperately needed, said Donetta Shaner, who helped organize the event for St. Andrew Christian Church of Olathe, Hillcrest Christian Church in Overland Park and Prairie Baptist.

“You hear all the time that more and more people are going to pantries and food kitchens because they can’t make it from payday to payday,” Shaner said.

Ellen Feldhausen, director of communications for the Harvesters food bank, confirmed Shaner’s perception. Requests for food assistance from the 620 nonprofits that Harvesters serves have increased 40 percent since the summer of 2008.

Harvesters’ agencies, which cover 26 Missouri and Kansas counties, serve about 66,000 people a week, she said.

“As a result of the economic downturn, many families are walking into a food pantry for the first time, and our agencies are seeing an increase in the number of people in need,” Feldhausen said.

The Society of St. Andrew contributed the spuds to Saturday’s event and takes its biblical mandate seriously. The group “rescues” still-nutritious fruits and vegetables from harvested farm fields and from packing plants where excess produce would otherwise go to landfills, said Lisa Ousley, director of the society’s western headquarters in Kansas City.

The group had two other initiatives going Saturday. Volunteers were scouring fields for watermelon and cantaloupe in Rich Hill, Mo., and gleaning trees for pears in Conception Junction, Mo.

The society has only two paid workers in Kansas City, Ousley said, so it depends heavily on volunteers, like those who cleaned out the potato truck.

“This give folks at these three churches the opportunity to have a role in feeding hungry people,” Ousley said.

That wasn’t news to Foertsch.

“You get more out of it than you give,” she said, before hopping into a red pickup to distribute her potatoes.

Please accept the present that was brought to you, for God has been gracious to me and I have all I need." Genesis 33:11a NIV
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MORE INFORMATION
The Society of St. Andrew has an office in Kansas City. Go to endhunger.org/sosawest or call 816-921-0856.

Hope Gospel spreads its blessings


Church helps parents cut expenses

BY NADINE WILSON
Sunday Observer staff reporter
wilsonn@jamaicaobserver.com
Sunday, August 22, 2010


REVEREND Peter Garth has one very simple philosophy: "The blessedness in being blessed is to bless others".

It is this philosophy that guides the manner in which he pastors Hope Gospel Assembly off Old Hope Road in Kingston. For the past 28 years, Garth has worked on creating a number of social outreach projects that allow him to bless as many people as possible who come to him for help. The programmes include a weekly soup kitchen, a monthly clinic, an annual health and back-to-school fair, in addition to counselling -- all free of cost.

"Once you begin to collect money, people begin to say look at the crowd, it is a money-making business," Garth told the Sunday Observer. "We do things free of cost, no charge. When we have the health fair (for example), people come and they take out money believing that there is a registration fee, but it is totally free."

The health fair, which gives people the opportunity to be tested for various illnesses and to receive medication, is hosted each year on the grounds of Jamaica College. It is sponsored by Samaritans First, an international relief agency led by Franklyn Graham, who is the son of prominent television evangelist Billy Graham, and a few local sponsors.

"The really interesting feature of the fair is that on the spot we set up a pharmacy -- of course, with the permission of the Pharmaceutical Society in Jamaica -- and we fill prescriptions on the spot," Garth said. "Just the medication aspect of that alone would run to $1 million and some of it is like for generics."

The fair usually draws people from all over Jamaica and is done under the patronage of the Governor General.

"You find that people are out there from 5:30 in the mornings and we might start registration from as early as 7:00. We have helped persons from as far as Montego Bay because the health fair is advertised," the pastor said.

To ensure that people can access medical help year round, the church has also been operating a monthly clinic for residents living in surrounding areas for the past 20 years. The clinic is operated in a small room on the church ground, which is utilised for other activities when clinic is not in session.

"Because we are strapped for space, we improvise. We put in dividers for the doctors and people come for registration in one room and then they go over to see the doctor," Garth said, adding that the clinic sees between 30 and 50 people when it opens every third Saturday.

In addition to operating the clinic, the church helps people to fill their prescriptions. Those with prescriptions usually take it to the church where it is stamped and dated by the pastor. The prescriptions are then taken to the Liguanea Drug and Garden Centre where they are filled and the church is billed.

Then there is the feeding programme that sees the church distributing grocery baskets to shut-ins weekly. The food is bought by the church and then packaged for distribution.

"One of the things about our feeding programme is that we don't have people walking off the streets. We identify persons in the community and we try to look after children and the elderly," the pastor said.

And while the feeding programme only benefits a select number of people, this is not the case for the church's annual back-to-school fair. The most recent fair was held on August 14 and saw more than 1,000 people flocking the church ground to collect used books, stationery, bags, uniform, and vouchers. The church also gave 40 scholarships to students and plans to give out another 20 in the coming weeks. All this was done with the help of local corporate and international sponsors.

"They get books, bags, pencil, socks and things like that and him (Pastor Garth) give me money for the bigger ones them that I can help to get textbooks," noted a parent who identified herself only as Ms May.

"Him keep VBS (Vocational Bible School) for the children them and any little thing you need, he will give you a helping hand. Him will give you like little zinc or any little thing him have," she added.

The pastor also helps to pay the fees for students who cannot afford to pay for their Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate exams.

"I remember one particular person who couldn't pay... We paid for all eight subjects for that young lady. She got all eight of them and she is now in the States; she became a lawyer. She sent me a photograph and on the back of it, it said, 'As a result of your kindness, you have changed my life forever'," Garth said, adding that those words have served to further inspire him to help others.
This is a faithful saying, and these things I will that thou affirm constantly, that they which have believed in God might be careful to maintain good works. These things are good and profitable unto men. Titus 3:8 KJV

Church's community service project draws more than 700 volunteers

By Michael Buettner (Staff Writer)
Published: August 22, 2010
http://progress-index.com/


COLONIAL HEIGHTS (VA) - It may be true that many hands make light work, but the hundreds of volunteers who showed up for a local church's community-service project yesterday weren't looking for an easy job.

More than 700 people showed up Saturday to help with Colonial Heights Baptist Church's 2010 "Chrestos" service project, which sent teams of volunteers out to spruce up the landscaping at 19 schools across the Tri-Cities region.

The church on Jefferson Davis Highway at Harrowgate Road has been doing Chrestos events for about three years, said the Rev. Wes Rose, missions, college and singles pastor. The name of the program comes from an ancient Greek word that means, among other things, "kindness" and "usefulness."

Rose, who was leading a team of about 20 members of the church's singles Bible fellowship as they worked on cleaning up the landscaping at the Colonial Heights Technical Center, said community service is a big part of Colonial Heights Baptist's mission.

"People see the big church and think it's all inside there," he said. "But the church was built to go out from."

Down the road a couple of miles, another group gathered Saturday morning for a prayer around the flagpole at Colonial Heights Middle School before spreading out to prune bushes, pull weeds, rake mulch and whatever else they could find to make the school look nicer ahead of the start of classes.

Ron Kimberlin, leader of the roughly 30 people on the team at the middle school, said previous Chrestos projects have included "going up and down the Boulevard cleaning up trash from the old church (on Chesterfield Avenue) to the new one." The school-beautification project was chosen this year because church members wanted to help make up for any neglect caused by cuts to the state's education budget, he said.

While the Chrestos teams concentrated on schools in the church's current locality, Chesterfield County, and its former home, Colonial Heights, they also went to work on campuses as far away as Prince George County. The schools they targeted Saturday were:

- Chesterfield County: Lloyd C. Bird High School, Matoaca High School, Community High School, Carver Middle School, Matoaca Middle School, Matoaca East Middle School, Margarite Christian Elementary School, Matoaca Elementary School, Ettrick Elementary School, Harrowgate Elementary School and Curtis Elementary School.

- Colonial Heights: Colonial Heights High School Technical Center, Colonial Heights Middle School, Lakeview Elementary School and Tussing Elementary School.

- Dinwiddie County, Dinwiddie High School.

- Hopewell: Carter G. Woodson Middle School.

- Petersburg: Petersburg High School

- Prince George County: Prince George High School and North Elementary School.

Likewise, the volunteers for Saturday's project also came from across the region. Fay Donahue and her mother, Ruth Taylor, traveled from their homes in Dinwiddie to help at Colonial Heights Middle School.

"I think the whole concept is to get out in our neighborhoods and live what we believe in," Donahue said. "It's really critical to give back to the community."

But they went out and spread the news about him all over that region. Matthew 9:31 NIV

First Baptist Church of Fort Worth members distribute food, toiletries to needy

http://www.star-telegram.com/
Posted Sunday, Aug. 22, 2010
By Susan McFarland
Special to the Star-Telegram



HALTOM CITY -- Wearing blue church T-shirts and smiles, an assembly line of about 50 volunteers in Haltom City distributed food, water and toiletries to 400 families in need.

The volunteers braving the heat Sunday were members of First Baptist Church of Fort Worth, in partnership with Feed the Children.

Feed the Children, founded in 1979, is a Christian, international, nonprofit relief organization headquartered in Oklahoma City.

"We want to give back to the community and touch lives in a more practical way," Pastor Don Wills said. "The Lord has blessed us, both financially and with those giving of themselves, to make this happen."

Some families came two or three hours early to get in line at John Spicer Elementary School. Church members loaded the vehicles drive-through-style.

The church paid $8,300 for a Feed the Children driver and tractor-trailer stocked with enough food to feed the families for a week.

Families also received a case of water and a box filled with toilet paper, paper towels, toothpaste and other household items.

Church members advertised on a local Christian radio station and passed out information at area schools and the Haltom City Senior Center.

Wills said no proof of income was required.

"If they have a sense they need it, they can come," Wills said.

Jo Ann Williams and her husband, John Williams, of Haltom City were one of the first families in line. The couple heard about the event at their senior citizen center.

"The money we get from Social Security just doesn't stretch," Jo Ann Williams said. "By the time we pay utilities, car payments, insurance and everything else, there is no money left."

Church member Melissa Carrell said that each time church members hold such an event, they learn ways to make delivery go more smoothly.

"We learned last year the assembly line works so much better," Carrell said.

Executive Pastor Dave Rutherford said that the church has access to forklifts but that it would rather more people get involved.

"The assembly line builds camaraderie," he said. "It's a fellowship for us as we serve our community."

Rutherford said that Sunday was the third time that the church has partnered with Feed the Children for such an event.

In the future, the church hopes to reach more people by distributing two or three truckloads of goods at a time, he said.


Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven. Matthew 5:16 NIV

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Local church distributes school supplies, hosts Gospel concert

By Lena Price, Staff Writer
Published: Tuesday, August 17, 2010 3:56 PM CDT
www.lewisvilleleader.com

Piles of notebooks, pencils, markers and construction paper covered the floor of an office inside the Grace Missionary Baptist Church on Saturday.

By the end of the church’s fourth annual Back to School Gospel Explosion, volunteers had distributed almost all of the supplies to local students.

In addition to offering free school supplies, the Lewisville Police and Fire Departments, Christian Community Action and several other organizations set up booths at the event. They provided the students with information about everything from Internet safety to life after high school.

The Back to School Gospel Explosion ended with concert featuring the DFW Mass Youth Choir as well as praise dancers and Christian rappers.

Kim Teamer, the event’s organizer, said she came up with the idea about four years ago to help provide children and their parents with useful information about community services available to them.

“Before students can get their supplies, they need to stop at each of the stations and listen to the presentations,” Teamer said.

About 65 kindergarten through 12th grade students registered for the program and received school supplies. The information seminar included activates for children of all ages.

“This year, we weren’t really equipped to handle more than the number of students that we had,” Teamer said. “But next year, I really want to make it a city-wide event and invite upwards of 2,000 kids.”

The Lewisville Police Department has participated in the event for three out of the past four year. On Saturday, LISD resource officers Howard Clark and Vince Stewart gave a presentation about what to do when someone is being bullied and how much personal information is safe to post online.

“We’re here to teach you that your actions have long term consequences,” Clark said. “Even if you make a mistake when you’re still young, it could keep you from getting a job or into college in the future.”

Representatives from Christian Community Action hosted a life after high school seminar that encouraged students to write their goals out on paper and develop a plan to follow them.

Charlotte Thomas said the seminar, along with the rest of the event, benefited her 10th grade son.

“My son really needed to hear a voice other than my own tell him that there are things to think about beyond high school,” Thomas said. “And I think this event really provided that.”

Eighth-grader Alexus Garrett said the life after high school seminar made her realize how hard she would have to get into UCLA, her dream school.

“I think this made us think about more than just being kids,” Garrett said.

Friday, August 6, 2010

33rd Women’s Convention/Crusade working to provide necessities for those in need

Arthur Foulkes
The Tribune-Star
August 5, 2010


TERRE HAUTE — Despite scorching heat, members of the Church of God in Christ gathered in Fairbanks Park on Wednesday to lend help to local families.

Working with Terre Haute-based social service organizations, dozens of members of the worldwide Pentecostal church provided school supplies, clothing, food and other items to people in need.

“We felt led to do a giveaway,” said Darlene Bartlett-Stone, supervisor of women for the 33rd Women’s Convention/Crusade of the Indiana First Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of the Church of God in Christ.

The convention is taking place all this week at Saints Home Church of God in Christ at 2210 N. 13th St. in Terre Haute. Up to 200 members of the church from around the state are in town for the event, Bartlett-Stone said.

At Wednesday’s outreach event, dozens of young women with their young children looked over the new and slightly used items in and around one of the picnic shelters on the edge of the Wabash River at Fairbanks Park. Many took away bags of clothing, food, shoes and school supplies, including backpacks.

At the same time, church volunteers provided free meals of hot dogs, hamburgers, chips, desserts and drinks.

“It’s the continuing work of Christ,” said Virginia Kersey, director of public relations for the Women’s Convention/Crusade, which will wrap up tonight with an address from local bishop Mark H. Blade at the church.

The public is welcome to attend the church service, which begins at about 7:45 p.m., Bartlett-Stone said. “Whosoever will, let them come,” she said. “All are invited.”

Volunteers from the local Saints Home Church of God in Christ have worked for months preparing for the local outreach effort, said Cedric Blade, a local church member who was one of two volunteers grilling hamburgers and hot dogs Wednesday at Fairbanks Park. It has been a lot of work for the members, “but it’s worth it,” he said.

The Saints Home Church of God in Christ outreach effort Wednesday was done in cooperation with several local social service organizations, including the Conners Center, a shelter for women and children operated by the Light House Mission, Crossroad Connections, a safe house for teen girls and Club Soda, an addiction recovery club in Terre Haute.

Any leftover items after the giveaway will be donated to the Light House Mission, said Bartlett-Stone, who is from Indianapolis. “There are truckloads and we don’t want to take anything back,” said Steven Stone, her husband.

In 2007, the First Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of Indiana Church of God in Christ conducted a similar giveaway at Terre Haute’s Thompson Park. At that time, more than 300 people received free food, clothing and other items.

“The people [of Terre Haute] have been so kind,” as preparations for the outreach activity got under way, Bartlett-Stone said. Walmart and Logan’s Ribeye made donations and the Terre Haute Fire Department provided small fire hats and bracelets for the children and even sprayed water for the kids to run through at the park, she added.

The First Jurisdiction of the Church of God in Christ includes about 70 churches in Indiana. The 102-year-old church, with headquarters in Memphis, Tenn., has an estimated 6 million members worldwide, Bishop Blade said.

Conducting a giveaway is important, but “our main focus is souls for Christ,” Bartlett-Stone said. The goal is to help people — no matter what their circumstances — find hope, she said.

“We want to reach people,” Bartlett-Stone said. “We are ambassadors for Christ.”

Arthur Foulkes can be reached at (812) 231-4232 or arthur.foulkes@tribstar.com.


Is it not to share your food with the hungry and to provide the poor wanderer with shelter— when you see the naked, to clothe him, and not to turn away from your own flesh and blood? Isaiah 58:7 NIV