Blog

Check out the latest stuff happening in the Seed ministry

  • Hooping It Up In Shelby Park: How Sojourners Are Ministering To Kids In The Inner City

    2

    Hello Sojourners! My name is Jeremiah Taylor.  Several times a week Sojourners are building relationships with the kids in the neighborhood of Shelby Park after they get out of school. This is a recap of what happened this week:

    Monday afternoon I picked up Kenny (who is a Junior in Quest) and took him to Shelby park. We ran into about 12 young men. Some of them were in High School and some of them already graduated or dropped out. We hooped it up for about an hour and a half. During the course of the games, we learned everyone’s names and a little about their lives. We had a great time playing and got a great work out.

    Afterward, I was able to talk to a guy named John. He’s 18 years old and has his GED. He wants to go to college but doesn’t know how to apply in order to get accepted. In response, we’ll be getting together soon and working out that stuff (hopefully). I was able also to share with Him the gospel and he said he will be meeting me at Church this Sunday night! Praise God!

    On Wednesday, we went to the park again and played some ball with about 10 guys. No conversations really, but that’s ok… can’t force it. I am hoping by our consistent presence, we as the body of Christ will be able to build relationships with some of these young men and point them to Jesus Christ. These first two times weren’t as awkward as I thought they would be. The kids are pretty cool and are way better at Basketball than me!

    If anyone wants to come out to Shelby Park with us and get to know some of these kids/adults, I will be out there at the basketball courts every Monday and Wednesday afternoon from 3:15pm-5pm. You can reach me at Jchristsetmefree@aol.com if you have any questions.

    Godspeed,

    Jeremiah Taylor

    Tags: basketball, inner city, Shelby Park, youth
    Read More
  • A Church of the Culture by Robert Lupton

    0

    It had never been Wayne’s idea to start a church. He was a schoolteacher and coach, not a minister. The storefront that he rented just a few blocks from the inner-city Chicago high school where he taught made an ideal apartment for a single male, especially for one who felt called to work with urban young people. His Nautilus weight-lifting equipment was visible through the front street-level window. It was a great place for guys to hang out. Wayne was delighted when several boys on his wrestling team expressed an interest in being part of a Fellowship of Christian Athletes program he wanted to start. His apartment became the meeting place.The apartment proved to be less than ideal for Wayne’s young bride Ann, whom he introduced with manly pride into this tough urban neighborhood. The evening of their wedding day they unloaded their gifts in the apartment and left for a brief honeymoon. Upon their return they discovered that someone had broken into their place and stolen all their wedding gifts. Undaunted, the newlyweds set about preparing the storefront as a suitable home for a couple, keeping plenty of open space for young people to sit around. Wayne continued to pour time and attention into the young men while Ann forged friendships with neighborhood girls who were attracted to the apartment more by the male company than by the adult-led discussions.

    In time the seeds that Wayne and Ann planted in the lives of their young friends began to germinate and evidence of new spiritual life began to spring up. The weight-room-turned-living-room became a safe place to share troubles and hurts, and explore questions about values and faith. Friends invited friends and before long the apartment became so packed with kids that Wayne and Ann began scanning for a larger place to have their meetings. They also felt some concern that although the young people seemed genuine in their faith they showed no interest at all in attending church. This prompted a discussion and Bible study on the subject of church.

    For several weeks they read scriptures together and considered the purpose and function of church. The Biblical patterns of gathering for worship, of studying and applying scripture, of confessing faults and praying for one another – these were fresh insights for young believers. Church was a community that cared for each other, that reached out to those in need, that encouraged its members to live out their faith in visible and practical ways. These kids were getting it!

    When the subject had been thoroughly explored, it was time to decide what church(es) they should join. To Wayne and Ann’s consternation, the group arrived at a nearly unanimous conclusion: this was their church! No, they were not called a church nor were they connected to a denomination (which no one could find in scripture anyway), but they did have a Christian leader and in a lot of ways they were very much like some of the early churches that the Bible described. This was not where the discussion was supposed to lead!

    As I said, it had never been Wayne’s idea to start a church. But the sincerity and insistence of his eager friends was difficult to ignore. Certainly much more training would be needed if these youth were to become the founding members of a new congregation. And doubtless more space as well. Eventually and reluctantly Wayne acquiesced.

    The word traveled quickly from one friend to another, jocks inviting other jocks, girls chattering at their hall lockers. A church of their own – now that was something to talk about! A few moms even dropped by to see what was happening. Wayne got a lead on an abandoned building nearby that could be picked up for a song, an old car dealership that had plenty of space for meeting as well as all kinds of indoor activities. The roof was not quite high enough for basketball but the boys excitedly offered to dig out the floor to allow adequate height. The faded Lawndale Cadillac sign soon was replaced by a freshly painted Lawndale Community Church sign.

    Planning, organizing, electing leaders, deciding on programs, setting meeting times… the next few months were filled with hundreds of first-time decisions for the young congregation. Wayne was relieved to have the support of some his suburban friends and college students to assist in leadership. But as time went on a bit of tension arose over who was supposed to be making the decisions for the church. Some of the youth felt that the outsiders, who were older and had experience in leading worship and running programs, were taking over. And they didn’t like it.

    The teenage “elders”, who had been duly elected by their peers, called a closed-door meeting to discuss the situation. It was clear to them that these well-meaning outsiders were reshaping the culture of the church, changing the music, choosing the discussion topics – that sort of thing. If it were going to really be the youth’s church, the elders reasoned, they would have to stay in charge (perhaps with a little support from a few parents or other adults from the community). They then adopted a motion that would set the future direction of the church for decades to come. Their ruling by unanimous vote declared: only residents of the Lawndale neighborhood could belong to Lawndale Community Church.

    It could be argued that the motivation behind this momentous decision was less than noble. But one cannot deny that the decision of these naïve young leaders would solidly anchor the ownership and mission of the church in their community. Over time they would begin to understand just how significant their vote had been.

    As the church grew, so did the maturity and character of its young members. High schoolers became young adults. Discussions of career and marriage replaced those of sports and dating. Some found jobs in Chicago’s economic mainstream, employment that enabled them, should they choose, to move to better parts of the city. Others set their sights on college and were encouraged by the church to acquire skills needed for leadership in the community. A scholarship fund was established that paid for college tuition with the understanding that students would return each summer to serve as counselors in the church’s youth ministry. For many, the church had become the center of their social, spiritual and now family lives and they were not quick to leave, even as opportunities elsewhere beckoned to them. A vision for transforming their community had been planted within them and they had tasted some of the sweetness of its first fruits.

    Outsiders, too, wanted to become part of this now vibrant church, but the membership rule held. They could attend but if they wanted to join, they must move into the neighborhood. A few did. And as the impact of the church grew, more followed their lead. This brought neighbors with resources and connections into the community. A doctor moved in and started a health clinic in the church. Another soon joined him. A real estate developer moved in to help establish a community development corporation to begin fixing up the hundreds of vacant homes that blighted the neighborhood.

    With a focus on community transformation, the church spawned an amazing array of ministries, programs and businesses that not only brought new life to the neighborhood but created leadership and career opportunities for young people in the church. The church became the primary source of indigenous leadership for the neighborhood as well as the major catalyst for community revitalization. Today, nearly thirty years after the young “elders” issued their memorable membership edict, Lawndale Community Church through their 600 or so neighbor-members has created a Christian health center that provides nearly 100,000 patient-visits a year, a CDC that has built and refurbished hundreds of homes, recreational and educational ministries that involve hundreds of community youth, small businesses that train and provide jobs for difficult-to-employ young adults, and a growing list of other needed services. Few would deny that it is the Lawndale Community Church that sparked and fueled the dramatic rebirth that is now reclaiming every street and alley in the neighborhood.

    One has to wonder: what noticeable impact would have resulted had Wayne held to his original strategy of integrating youth into other established churches? And wonder, too, how different would be this church’s influence on its community had the young elders simply allowed the church to follow the normal pattern of commuter church growth?

    Robert D. Lupton is a pragmatic visionary. Nearly three decades of frontline urban work have produced in him a realistic understanding of what can and does work in the city. His “reneighboring” concept has been reality-tested in three inner-city neighborhoods. Dr. Lupton and his wife Peggy live in Grant Park, an inner-city neighborhood in Atlanta. He holds a Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Georgia and is the President of FCS Urban Ministries. His most recent book is “Compassion, Justice and the Christian Life: Rethinking Ministry to the Poor“, a regular resource for SEED training.

    Check out this site for more inner-city stories by Dr. Lupton

    http://www.fcsministries.org/up/index.html

    Tags: Atlanta, Bob Lupton, Chicago, church, FCS ministries
    Read More
  • Kids Say The Darndest Things

    0

    Below is a compilation of stories and snapshots of the friends (kids) I’ve spent time with in the past few years in Shelby Park (Louisville, KY). Some are funny. Some will make you wonder why you complain that your king-sized bed is a bit hard. Some will just make you think.

    LUCY – 11 years old.

    “It’s beautiful! So Beautiful!,” Lucy delights loudly as we walk through the clear glass doors. I have to hold onto her jacket to keep her from bumping into people as she gazes up at the ceiling and takes in all the smells and sights her 11 year old eyes have never seen before. “I smell something good.” she says with longing as dinner time grows nearer. She begs me to ‘look around’ a little longer. It’s like she is seeing the Grand Canyon for the first time. Maybe to her limited experiences, it is like the Grand Canyon. To me and the hundreds of other shoppers, it was just another trip to the Oxmoor Mall. Lucy talks about the time she went to the mall like I talk about my trip to Lake Tahoe.

    CARLA- 14 years old

    Carla is a freshman in high school. She lives with her mom in a rental house in our neighborhood. She told me how excited she was to move into a new house on another block. Why? Because she would finally have a room with a door.

    DARLENE- 9 years old

    Darlene is 9 years old. “Well, I lived with my daddy till he got in some trouble. Now I live with mam maw. This is the third time we’ve moved this year. I think I’ll be going back with my daddy after school lets out and he gets out of jail.” Darlene adds with a smile, “Oh, and his girlfriend is pregnant! I love babies.” Darlene also mentions to me that she and her 3 other sisters (6, 7, and 8 years old) are going to have their own room. There will be 2 to a bed she says. I ask if the beds are big. She says “they are huge.” I’ve come to learn that huge may mean a twin or full.

    JD – 4 years old.

    JD: Oh, what kind of bug is this?

    Me: It’s a lady bug.

    JD: Where does he come from?

    Me: God made him. Do you know God made everything, even you?

    JD: God made me?

    Me: Yep. He made the ladybugs, the grass, the sky, everything.

    JD: What kind of car does God drive?

    Me: ?

    Lindsay Eubanks is a longtime member of Sojourn, a wife, mother and Occupational Therapist. Lindsay and her husband live in the Shelby Park neighborhood in Louisville where they are trying to learn to be better neighbors and love God more.

    Tags: children, inner city, kids, Louisville, SEED
    Read More