Tuesday, February 08, 2011
Claiming Bread in the Freezing Rain
Because of an always limited supply of food and clothing, and because we want to build community, compassion for the individual need is seasoned with "tough love" rules to ensure equal access. Everyone can be incredibly selfish and, if not regulated, some homeless individuals (like all of us) will take more than what they actually need and a few will even sell or exchange those items for sex, alcohol or illegal drugs.
Satan plays all kinds of games and, on this day of freezing rain, people were particularly selfish. In distributing a limited supply of military-quality rain ponchos, some schemed to find ways of getting more. The same was true for our supply of fresh sox and underwear, as well as small candles intended to be used later that evening to keep warm. It seemed like everyone wanted more than his share, thus reducing our ability to give others what they really needed just to survive the night on a concrete "bed" underneath a city bridge.
Tough love also applies to food distribution. Donations from parked vehicles are brought in by designated volunteers. If the homeless men in front of the church were permitted to bring in supplies without supervision, little of it would make its way to our kitchen and we could not serve the needs of the entire church community.
But, again, this was not a "good day." Freezing rain meant fewer volunteers on hand, and desperate people began to "game the system". I grew annoyed by some calling me ugly names for questioning whether they had already received supplies. I grew impatient with a spirit of selfishness that clouded my aim on the social gospel.
A truck pulled up with fresh bread, and I saw several men helping themselves while just one volunteer frantically tried to get the load off the street and into our kitchen. I quickly found myself standing in the freezing rain, trying to take a loaf of bread from a homeless man. I pulled, and he yanked. I shouted "let go!" He claimed, "this is my loaf!" Others watched on.
The tug of war lasted only 10 seconds, but the damage was complete. The look on that man’s frozen face told me he had just learned something about Christian hypocrisy that would remain with him for a long time. Chilling expressions on other homeless men came from my own action, not just the weather. My God, I thought, want am I doing? Would Jesus take a loaf of bread out of the hands of a rain-soaked homeless man? Would He take it out of my own hands?
Tough love? Maybe on a good day, but not on a bad day. Not in the freezing rain when someone is seeking bread. I released my grip on that loaf and apologized. I ran into the sanctuary that offers temporary repose to homeless people sleeping in the seats and on the alter. The odor of dirty wet clothing and unclean humanity – the smell of social gospel yet to be fulfilled – was potent as I laid prostrate on that same alter and asked for God’s forgiveness for placing my own selfish emotions and man-made laws in the way of His simple rule of love and compassion. I prayed that I would never again forget the intimacy of imago Dei standing in the freezing rain claiming nothing but bread.
When it comes down to it, we all stand in that freezing rain. We grasp for bread. It might be better wages or a better job. Or, the "bread" might be better relations with family and friends. It could be better health and the promise of a future. Or, it may "simply" be real bread and the hope of having no hunger. Standing in that freezing rain, we seek compassion and mercy about our own human condition.
Other people watch our behavior, especially when we claim to be practicing Christians. There is always an audience judging our actions. But the ultimate audience is God. Our Lord hears the righteous cry out for that loaf of bread and delivers them out of that freezing rain (Psalms 34:17). He judges us for that which we do not do for the least of His flock (Matthew 25:45-46), whether that "least" is found in our workplace, within our family, or in strangers on the street.
The loaf of bread is the Body of Christ, broken for all. And the Body of Christ is you and I, bound together with cords that should not be breakable. Satan wants us to forget these two facts of faith. He wants us to believe that it is "simply" bread that can be taken away because the man in the freezing rain belongs not to "our" Body of Christ.
Satan wants us all to stand alone in that freezing rain.
After praying on the altar, I remain uncertain about when the spirit of the rule surpasses the letter of the law. Regulations are important, especially those concerned with equity and fair play. But Jesus reduced all mosaic laws to just two Commandments - love God and love the person standing in the freezing rain because he is you. Man-made rules are OK on "good days," but we must remember that bad days require the right arm of God and we must be His instrument.
The next time someone cries out, I hope to listen a bit more intimately – not just for his this-world need for "bread," but also for his eternal need for the Bread of Life. As part of the Body of Christ, I am obligated to stand with him in that freezing rain and share that Bread of Life we call Christ. The Bread of Life each one of us claims standing in the freezing rain.
James D. Slack, Ph.D.
Tuesday, February 01, 2011
Why Are We the Church of the Reconciler?
We are first and foremost a church. We are not a hand-out organization. We share what we have because that is what Jesus taught us God wants us to do. We are poor. We depend on the generosity of our companions in God, and we share the grace we receive with those in need. We all work together—poor, homeless, middle-class, wealthy—to spread the message that God loves us and wants us to love each other.
Reconciler
We follow the teachings of Jesus as the Reconciler. We work to reconcile the community of Birmingham with those who govern it. We pray for reconciliation among the warring nations of the world. We are actively reconciling our weak, erring selves with our companions in Christ. We also practice faith that we can reconcile ourselves with God. We recognize that we all fall short of the glory of God…regularly…daily. We each need mercy and forgiveness and grace. We must forgive ourselves and we must beg God’s forgiveness.
We at the Church of the Reconciler understand that reconciliation is an active noun. Reconcilation is accomplished when we actively care for the poor, when we feed the hungry, when we provide clothing for those in need. Reconciliation is an act of faith, an act of grace, an act of mercy.
We are the Church of the Reconciler.
Monday, January 31, 2011
Who we are at Church of the Reconciler
Wednesday, December 01, 2010
Helping High School Seniors and the Homeless
A workshop for high school seniors, "How to be Successful in a College Classroom," is scheduled for SUNDAY December 19, from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. on the UAB campus. The program, led by UAB professor Jim Slack, helps seniors prepare for college while serving as a fundraiser for the homeless who come to Church of the Reconciler for support.
Seniors from throughout the state attend this workshop; some plan to go to Ivy League and private schools, some to state universities and others to community colleges. Based on responses from students AND parents, the workshop is of great benefit in preparing for college AND increasing the GPA the final year in high school.
Seating is limited and based on a first-registered-first-reserved basis.
Pre-registration is $50, same-day registration is $75, and all the money goes to help the homeless through the Church of the Reconciler. (The previous workshop in August raised nearly $2,500 for the homeless!)
If you know a high school senior, or if you know the parents/grandparents of a high school senior, please forward this information.
Please also forward this to your pastor and youth minister.
Consider this a pre-Christmas "stocking stuffer" for both the high school senior AND the homeless in Birmingham.
Details below. For registration forms, contact Jim Slack.
James D. Slack, Ph.D., Professor office 205.934.9020
Department of Government fax 205.975.5712
The University of Alabama at Birmingham cell 205.908.4872
Birmingham, Al 35294
How to be Successful in a College Classroom:
Guidance from a Professor with 30 Years Experience in
Passing and Flunking Students
Two great myths: (1) “My daughter’s high school GPA means success at college.”
(2) “My son’s ACT score means success at college.”
What: A workshop designed for the high school senior planning on attending
college. The purpose is to provide the student with very useful tips on
how to be successful in the college classroom. (These tips can also
help improve performance in the senior year of high school!)
Format: Offered in an actual college classroom, consisting of four 50-minute
sessions. With ten-minute breaks between sessions, it replicates what
might be a typical day in the life of a college freshman.
Session 1: “The Classroom”
Session 2: “The Lecture”*
Session 3: “Preparation”
Session 4: “The Term Paper: using a PERT Strategy”
* Session 2 includes a college-level lecture. Students’ notes are reviewed/analyzed from
the perspective of success with college test-taking.
When: Three dates left with seats still available:
Sunday, DECEMBER 19, 2010 – 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Sunday, JANUARY 16, 2011 – 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Sunday, JUNE 5, 2011 – 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
LIMIT: 50 students per workshop date
(acceptance based on order of completed registrations received)
Monday, November 15, 2010
Housing the Homeless at Church of the Reconciler
Sunday, November 14 was Housing Sunday at Church of the Reconciler, and we celebrated the 60 formerly homeless people who have been placed in housing through the church this past year. We presented certificates to members of the Jefferson County Housing Authority who joined us in worship. “Y’all gave us keys to housing,” member Michael Brown told them in appreciation, “but we gave you the keys to our hearts.”
Richard Irving was one of six Housing Shepherds commissioned to help others travel the highway out of homelessness. The key to progress? Faith, he says. There are two parts to the faith equation: “The first part is to do something,” he explained. Fill out and submit the applications; get the necessary IDs. The second part of the equation is to “speak as if you have already received what you are seeking. I was already thanking God for the key before I got it. I prayed my way into that apartment.
“It wasn’t about me getting the apartment,” he continued. “It was about God using me to help get others off the street.”
Henry Spells, a veteran who was also commissioned during the service, agreed. “If someone reaches out and gives you a hand, reach back and give someone else a hand.”
While we took time to look back during this special service, it is clear that when it comes to housing the homeless, we are looking ahead to building the highway out of homelessness for more and more people in the future. This was a day of new beginnings for people who need housing.
Monday, November 08, 2010
Let the children come
Yesterday we had 22 children and youth at Church of the Reconciler. We were blessed to have several angels from Riverchase UMC who came to help shepherd the children during worship and Sunday school.
It’s a lot of work to manage 22 young people (plus 6 in the nursery) on a Sunday morning. Many of our children come from very challenging circumstances. Working with them can be difficult, to say the least. Sometimes, the work can seem like trying to herd cats, and we wonder if we are truly making a difference.
As I sat in church yesterday, I looked around at them. They seemed particularly restless, and at first, all I could see was a rambunctious group of kids. Then I looked closer. I saw the children who have started participating in the prayer circle before worship. I saw one of our youth who was working the computer screen in the absence of the adult who usually has that job. I saw a youth playing with the band. I saw the children who joyfully participated in the passing of the peace and welcoming people to worship, as well as the ones who hand out bookmarks to those who are visiting. I saw them singing during the praise portion of our service. I saw them enjoying the food we offered, even sleeping at times during the service, knowing they see our church truly as a place of sanctuary and rest. I saw the children who clamor to light the candle each week, and the girls who have learned to knit and make toboggans so the homeless can stay a little warmer this winter. I savored the hugs of the children who shared them with me as they left.
The truth is that working with these kids has relatively few warm and fuzzy moments. We struggle to meet their needs and maintain discipline. It’s hard to get them safely to church and home again with only one van and too few drivers/teachers/helpers. But we are faithful to the call to serve them, and occasionally, we see the fruits of our labors. Those rare pearls we find in the huge bed of oysters are what keep us going.
Sometimes we are called to ministry that is difficult and challenging. Can you answer the call to serve with our children? We need helpers, food, juice, yarn and other craft supplies. How can you help?
Friday, October 15, 2010
www.prayforthehomeless.org
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Homeless with Cancer article
http://www.crmagazine.org/archive/Fall2010/Pages/HomelessWithCancer.aspx
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Church of the Reconciler Wednesday Evening Prayer
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Summer needs for children and the homeless
Call the church office at 324-6402 if you have a donation. Thanks!
Sunday, April 04, 2010
Christ the Lord is Risen Today
Read Scripture: Luke 24: 1-12
Al- le-lu-ia!
Christ the Lord is Risen Today
Christ the Lord is risen today,
Earth and Heaven in chorus way,
Al- le-lu- lia!
Raise your joys and triumphs high,
Sing ye heavens and earth reply!
Al-le-lu-lia!
An Easter hymn reminds us all that Jesus Christ has risen
Let every heart sing forth with joy; Salvation has been given!
Jesus showed the world that love would conquor every situation!
Live in peace with God's own son
Allelulia, Christ is risen!
Church of the Reconciler United Methodist Church
Come for our Easter Service at 9:30
112 North 14th Street
Birmingham, Alabama
Don't look for a steeple! Look for a warehouse full of God's loving people!
Easter Baskets for all the Children!
Saturday, April 03, 2010
Restore the image of love in us.
Key Verse: Be merciful to me, O Lord, for I am in distress; (Verse 9)
Let Your face shine on your servant; Save me in your unfailing love. (Verse 6)
The psalmist is distressed indeed! His enemies are out to get him because they love political power and control more than truth and justice. His friends have abandoned him because their love failed in a time of testing. Surely we can all remember times when human love failed us and when our love failed someone else. “The human heart is deceitful above all things”. (Jeremiah 17:9) At one time or another all human love fails – yours does and mine does.
It is quite amazing that our love fails because we were created in the image of God – who is love. Where has this image of God gone? We have, as C. S. Lewis says, become bent”.
We are out of alignment. We are self centered rather than Christ centered.
How does this relate to Easter? On Good Friday, Jesus Christ was abandoned by his friends and crucified by his enemies. Human love failed that day but the love of God and Christ Jesus remained unchanged. Jesus was not angry, bitter, or filled with hatred. He did not call on God to send revenge upon those who murdered him without cause. Rather, He asked God to forgive them, to forgive us. That is redemptive love! What greater grace, unmerited favor, undeserved love, could there be?
PRAYER FOCUS: Restore the image of love in us.
PRAYER:
Lord God, I am so very thankful that Your love never fails. My love fails time and time again. I humbly bow before the cross and seek your forgiveness and mercy. I need the healing balm of grace that flows from the wounds of Your Son so I can begin to have your image imprinted upon me again. I look up . . . I see the risen Christ – Your manifest, living, transforming, unfailing love. Please transform me into His likeness.
Amen
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: If God’s love ever failed He would not be God.
Sharon Parsons
Friday, April 02, 2010
Who are You Looking For?
Key Verse: Verse 5 “ He (Jesus) said to the guards, “That’s me.” The Message
Who are You Looking For?
The guards were led by Judas, one of Jesus’ disciples. Jesus had gone into a garden that he frequently went to for quietness and prayer. Only the disciples knew where this garden was located.
When Jesus saw that the guards were coming, he went out to meet them. He asked them, “Who are you looking for?” He knew full well who they were after.
The guards said the were looking for Jesus, the Nazarene. That is when Jesus answered them, “That’s me.”
The guards were taken back. They had expected a confrontation. They did not think it was going to be so simple to find Jesus.
This story in John begins the final hours of Jesus life before the crucifixion.
In the hours coming up, Jesus is not only betrayed by Judas, one of his disciples, but Peter, probably his closest disciple, also betrays him, telling the woman in the market place that he does not even know Jesus.
As we close down the days of Lent we reread these episodes of Jesus’ life and realize how much Jesus suffered for our sins.
Why is this day called “Good Friday?” It seems like it should be called “Bad Friday.”
Many churches will have a service today where they cover the cross in black and have the seven last words of Jesus read, leaving the service in total darkness.
We rejoice in the knowledge that Easter is coming!
Prayer: Thank you, O God, for the coming resurrection. Amen
Thought for the Day: Just two more days till Easter.
Nancy Higgs
Thursday, April 01, 2010
A New Command
Key Verse: Verse 34 “Let me give you a new command: Love one another.” The Message
A New Command
Jesus gave his disciples a new command, to love one another. He was talking with the disciples after they had eaten together in the Upper Room. He told them to love each other and others the same way that he loved them. He said that everyone would recognize that they were followers of him by the way they loved one another.
Can everyone recognize that you are a follower of Jesus Christ? Are you showing the forgiving love of Jesus to everyone, even your enemies? This season of Lent is almost over. Have you grown in your relationship to Jesus and to following his command in the last 37 days? Easter is only three days away. The day of celebration of Jesus’ resurrection is almost upon us. Decide today to be recognized as a follower of Jesus Christ. Love one another.
Prayer: Thank you, Jesus, for giving us the new command. Help us to follow you and love as Jesus loved.
Thought for the Day: Jesus gave us a new command. Follow it!
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Jesus Doing Good
Jesus Doing Good
It is believed that for the last 40 days of Jesus’ life many good and bad things occurred. Although I would not attempt to account these many occurrences on a daily basis; yet I will begin with Matthew’s 10th chapter. Here Jesus summons his disciples and gives them power over unclean spirits. He gives them their mission to go to the lost sheep of Israel, telling them that the kingdom is at hand. Jesus warns his disciples of coming persecutions, “I’m sending you out as sheep among wolfs. Be wise as serpents and humble as doves. The only reward promised, “Whosoever receives you will also receive me. And whosoever receives me will also receive my Father who sent me.” John the Baptist hears of Jesus’ teaching, and sends a messenger from prison asking Jesus, “Are you the one promised to come by Moses?”
There was a time that they were hungry and Jesus allowed his disciples to pluck grain on the Sabbath day. Jesus also healed the withered hand of a man on this same Sabbath day. Jesus teaches that “a tree is known by its fruit.” There was a question of the resurrection when Jesus told the Pharisees of his death and resurrection. The Pharisees mocked him, saying, “You said you are going to die and rise again. No other prophet as made this declaration, therefore give us a sign.” Jesus said, “as Jonah was three days and three nights in the whale’s belly, so shall the Son of Man be three days and nights in the heart of the earth.” Jesus goes on and quiets a storm on the Sea of Galilee. He tells his disciples, “You need faith like a mustard seed, small but mighty.” Jesus feeds the multitudes. He asks the disciples, “Who do the people say that I am?” They replied, “Some say John the Baptist, some say Elijah.” Peter declared, “Though are the Christ, the Anointed One. Jesus tells his disciples to be known for mass amounts of forgiveness. Jesus teaches the importance of little children.
Prayer: Lord, teach us to pray: Our Father, who art in Heaven ….
Please pray the Lord’s Prayer.
Charles Young, new member of Church of the Reconciler
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Stations of the Cross, Good Friday
Justice for the poor
"Untax" Tuesday: What does it mean for me?
Here’s an easy way to explain what untaxing groceries will do for every Alabama household: It will give them two weeks’ worth of free groceries every year.
Here’s how it works: Removing the 4 percent state sales tax on groceries will lower everybody’s grocery bill by 4 percent, week after week, all year long. The savings add up to 4 percent of annual grocery costs, and 4 percent of a year is two weeks. That’s the amount of extra cash Alabamians will have in hand to make ends meet.
We estimate that the average Alabama family will save $100 per person every year, but no family is “average.” For some, that’s a high estimate, for others low. No matter what your family spends on groceries, two weeks’ worth every year will make a difference!
HB 1, the bill to “untax groceries,” is expected to move forward this week. Watch for a report on Wednesday’s committee action in the news.
God, In Whom I Trust
Psalm 91
He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High
will rest in the shadow of the Almighty.
I will say of the LORD, "He is my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust."
If you make the Most High your dwelling—even the LORD, who is my refuge-
then no harm will befall you, no disaster will come near your tent.
For he will command his angels concerning you to guard you in all your ways;
they will lift you up in their hands, so that you will not strike your foot against a stone.
You will tread upon the lion and the cobra; you will trample the great lion and the serpent.
"Because he loves me," says the LORD, "I will rescue him;
I will protect him, for he acknowledges my name.
He will call upon me, and I will answer him; I will be with him in trouble, I will deliver him and honor him.
With long life will I satisfy him and show him my salvation."
Key Verse: "I will say of the LORD, "He is my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust."
God, In Whom I Trust
There has been discussion lately about the "In God We Trust" on the US currency. It is a contentious topic with hot discussions of the issue of seperation of Church and State. I don't want to get into whether it SHOULD be printed on the money or not. However, I'd like for you to think about putting your trust in God every time money passes through your hand. Whether it is the change that you put in a vending machine for a drink or a snack or the money you pay your bills with each month.
"I will say of the LORD, "He is my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust."
Prayer: Lord, help us to remember to put our trust in you with everything.
Beth Ann Higgs, charter member and Church webmaster