Archive for the ‘homeless’ Category

Reflections of a Middle Man

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

These are some reflections of a middle man.  I have as many friends now who would consider themselves outside of the church as in – or outside of the Christian world view in a sense.  It is strictly 50/50.  So, I can understand and in a sense, advocate for two sets of people.

I try to advocate for Jesus and the church.  I try to advocate for outsiders in the church.  I admit it is a tight rope.  It comes of the byproduct of the incarnation and incarnational living.

So I am always in a tight spot.  Consider this, regarding the homeless dilemma in the community – they perceive me as representing the church community – and they ask me to raise awareness for our friends on the streets.

Meanwhile, many in the church community don’t see me as representing the church community, and of course, because I don’t attend a church.  In some ways it makes sense and I understand it.  But look a little deeper and you will see that I partner with churches, and am creating a different kind of church (note, I did not say “better,” but different kind…)

It comes to fruition when I post on facebook.  I recently posted about potentially starting a new church (based on the APEST model) – decentralized leadership with a multiplicity of gifts and no clergy laity divisions to be brief – and the reactions were fascinating.  Some are saying well it is about time and some are saying that is the worst thing you could do Jeff…

But, here is the tricky truth – I don’t care – it isn’t for me – it isn’t for myself.  I started this journey for “outsiders” and to them I commit myself (the marginalized and the forgotten), and then I commit myself to my friends who have made a similar commitment (loving these friends)

For this reason alone, to support my friends, to sustain a movement, we are considering “church.”  But I will remain in the middle, with my ear to the ground and listening to how those people who hate church, don’t believe the gospel, feel forgotten and abandoned by God and His people, or just have questions about our culture – while also striving to walk with God and awkwardness with His people, sharing the good news, believing in world transformation here and the in the next…

I have come to terms with perhaps living in Exodus for the rest of my earthly existence, until reaching the promised land.

apostles, prophets, and underdogs

Friday, August 20th, 2010

I am going to go ahead and step into being an apostle and a prophet – for the good of the underdogs.  I don’t care what is on my business card, or how big the liquid movement is, or how this might be perceived anymore.  I see that the underdogs in the city need more apostles and prophets.

Yes, they need evangelists, pastors, and teachers as well… but it will be the apostles and prophets who find the underdogs and open the doors for their care.

This is not an ego thing, it is a Biblical thing.

The apostles go out, the prophets cry out about what they see.  And there is a lot to cry out about in our city.

I have gone out, now I am crying out.  Pregnant women on the streets.  First time homeless women in wheel chairs.  A slightly violent youth street culture lacking peace makers.  Mentally ill losing services.  And business owners who just want these friends moved to a different city – not the best solution.

Now we biblical scholars and practitioners should know how God feels about a city who may neglect the poor.  I would not go that far yet, because I know leaders and politicians in the city who do care, but I fear we are coming close to chaos.

So, the apostle and prophet live in this chaos, and invite the leaders of order in – those might be the other gifted ones in the church.  And so I invite, invite, and invite… this is maybe a bit more of a heated invitation.

Next month we celebrate the one year sobriety of a friend we know from the streets – who has worked his way from the streets to sober living to full time work, and we hope soon to an apartment.  He texted me this week that he wants to have a party to thank the support team who helped him along the way.  He was once suicidal and is now embracing his new destiny in life.  I know some at Pershing on the same journey, as well as those who may in fact die on the streets.

So, it is time for the church to officially begin hiring “apostles and prophets.”  It is time for us to embrace one another in all our strange giftedness.  Now I argue it is good for underdogs.  Consider this – the work of an apostolic organization (The Turner Foundation – The Village Apartments) has opened the door to the lower West Side more than any church I have witnessed.  And now what is there after five years – young life, man talk, girls Bible studies, swimming parties, a tutoring center, a library, west side kids camp, west side empowerment committees…. it was the work of the apostolic and prophetic.  It has morphed with church partnerships and a movement from Westmont – but it did not start out that way.

I also argue it will save the church, as denominations decline and more folks pass by the church without a desire to enter… it will be mission that brings life back to all of us.

it is apostolic small a and prophetic small p – but I am embracing it now and promoting it now and looking for it now and living in now

Our shalom community has shown me that it is possible to create church now around loving, incarnational, organic mission.  We need everyone and every gift mentioned.

We are free

Would Jesus Use Germ X?

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

***This is written by Kelly, who interned with us this year, spending most of her time with our friends on the streets.***

Would Jesus Germ-X?

Last Wednesday night when my sister and I got in the car after the meal sharing at Pershing Park, we had a little squabble. This is a pretty normal occurrence for us when we disagree about something.

Wednesday’s topic: hand sanitizer.

The source of our argument: would Jesus put hand sanitizer on his hands immediately following a visit to Pershing Park? (or) should modern conveniences like Germ-X be wisely used to kill germs on the hands of those who literally “reach out to the homeless?”

I was torn. Really. You see, I have this little thing that decided to sprout on the palm of my left hand a couple weeks ago. The thing is barely noticeable and is mostly gone now, but it is slightly red and has a circular indentation around it. I didn’t think much of it at the time.

When we started driving away, Sarah immediately offered me the hand sanitizer. “No thank you,” I replied, probably a little smugly. But then she began to describe something on the palm of her right hand identical to the thing I have.

Eww. At least we have the same friends.

At this point I was mostly still annoyed that she was so quick to pull out the sanitizer. It was literally the first thing she did. Mostly, it was the symbolic meaning behind immediately pulling out the Germ-X while driving out of the parking lot that eats at me. It is as if to say “I now cleanse myself of all things unclean, especially those homeless people over there.” I understand: Sarah is a future healthcare professional, and no one wants weird germs on their hands. But still.

Then I realized that internally, often unconsciously, I have been struggling though this way of thinking in my time here this summer. How often do I try to wipe my hands clean of those I am trying to minister to? Then I realized that for much of my life, I have tried to keep enough distance from those with “big” problems to feel safe from their mess. I have been pretty prideful and elitist for quite some time actually.

In public school, I steered clear of those who partied too much or didn’t seem like they were doing much with their lives. Then I went to Biola and was instantly surrounded with a bunch of Christians who met my criteria for friendship. At about the end of sophomore year and beginning of junior, things changed. God began working on the ugly pride in my heart. Different friends started wanting to have one-on-one conversations with me and talk. Really talk. I found that as others began to open up to me, I began to be open with others. Vulnerability, honesty, authenticity—some of the most painful and awkward things I aim toward in my relationships. Through this process I began the ongoing process of uncovering my sins, my doubts, my fears, my hopes, my struggles. I began to see that every person is very complex and beautiful.

On Sunday afternoons, between fifteen and thirty people meet in a loft on State Street to talk about God and be vulnerable with each other. We call it Holy Chaos—where the divine meets the raw mess we call reality. Though many in the group lack permanent housing or struggle through substance addictions, every week I leave with the knowledge of shared insufficiencies and shared grace. It is a place of holy ground, where all are equal before God and each other. I have been exceedingly blessed to experience the love of this group this summer.

One Sunday, one brother with a deep love for Scriptures and a faithful walk with the Lord shared about his experiences at another church on Sunday mornings. I wanted to cry as he shared that no one gives him a hug on Sunday because they know he lives out of his car. He said he didn’t understand, because he keeps himself really clean, but somehow everyone else gets hugs except him.

The next Sunday I gave this brother a hug.

He didn’t smell bad. He didn’t have lice. Even if he did, I would hug him anyway.

This and stories like it magnified an area that I long to see changed in the church—the need for love and authenticity. People are so afraid to share of themselves with others—whether that be through hugs, conversations, or meals.

Maybe we are scared that if others really knew our situation, they wouldn’t give us a hug either. We let God forgive our sins but not our brothers. Unfortunately when you are homeless, you don’t always get the luxury of hiding your shortcomings.

Then I began to ask myself if this desire to be safe manifests itself in how I have thought about ministry for so long. I am so grateful for those who work to provide services to those displaying need. However, I can’t help but wonder if serving sometimes gets in the way of loving. These things aren’t meant to be separated but somehow seem to have gotten that way. If serving is not understood in the context of relationship, then our deepest need for a sense of belonging does not get met. We each desire communion with one another, our communities, and with God. All this becomes slightly difficult though, because friendship can only happen between equals.

I realized the important difference between providing only services and offering friendship because of the marked difference between volunteering at Casa Esperanza and showing up at Pershing Park each week this summer. At Casa, the help was sometimes appreciated but impersonal nonetheless. In contrast, one week when I was leaving Pershing Park a friend deeply thanked me for just coming to hang out. I also find the time at Pershing more fulfilling because I have come to feel welcome, like I belong too. Every time I am given more than I give.

In friendship we begin to see how we are all alike and different. Its beautiful! At the beginning of this summer, I wasn’t quite sure how I would find much common ground with my new friends in need of homes. It wasn’t nearly as hard as I thought, though. The first couple weeks were a lot of fun! But as I am beginning to get to know these friends more and understand the reality of their situations, the problems begin to weigh on me. I think that this too is part of loving others, loving equals.

I’m slowly realizing that fear, not love, has been preventing me from engaging friendship with those who are too “messy” for me to understand. Fear that a person’s problems will weigh on me too heavily. Fear that being seen with that person will ruin my reputation. Fear that if someone opens up to me, then my secrets might come out too.

As I think about the looks of disgust and hate I have received this summer when I stop to talk with homeless friends, I wonder how much fear was really behind those glares. Fear of not enough for them, of an unattractive city, that “they” might move to their neighborhood next?

Then I wondered if this fear tries to run our churches too. I know it does. It is fear that creates an environment where pastors run away with their secretaries, where people quietly live out their secret hells with no one to talk to, where nothing gets addressed because no one wants to deal with it.

But where love is found in its wholeness, fear is so afraid that he bitterly skulks away.

Jesus doesn’t Germ-X away the messy, gross, unsightly chaos of existence, because he isn’t afraid of it. Instead, he enters into it, becomes it, redeems it. God, fully human, touched lepers and cripples. He ate with ugly prostitutes carrying STD’s. A man sit at his feet who was just running around graves filled with rotting corpses. God’s favor comes to those who are blind, lame, prisoners, poor, addicted, and homeless, because God is not afraid to come meet them in their mess.

This is the mystery of Incarnation.

Children and Homelessness

Friday, August 13th, 2010

In the midst of considering writing a book about Jesus leaving the mountain to go into the mess, came the opportunity to speak to children in Montecito about friends on the streets – to mediate between riches and rags.

Noah’s Camp at Montecito Covenant invited us to share about our friends on the streets.  We have been speaking to children, grades 1st through 6th, about our friends at Holy Chaos and Pershing Park.  Emily and I were a bit nervous about how to do this with children.  The outcome of the time has been tremendous.

Our starting point has been, that we do not call these friends “homeless,” but they are “Friends without Homes.”  (Thanks Ken Loyd of Portland!)  We use the term because to speak of them as being homeless focuses on what they lack, and what divides us, while considering them friends means they have something to offer and brings us together.  All the kids now consider them potentially friends…

They met one street friend this week, who shared a bit of his story, and now they ask about him all the time.  They now have a street friend.  Their journey has started…

We talked about Doctors without Walls – the kids are raising funds for their hospitality packs.  Each pack has socks, good soft food, water, and other needed items for our friends.  Of course the doctors do more than that – meeting physical and psychological needs directly as they get to know people on the streets.  You can google them and support them.

It is the first time a church has invited me to educated a group on local homelessness.  I am wondering who will invite me to educate their adults?  Hint hint…

Wednesday at Pershing I preached my first slightly angry sermon.  Sorry about that… it was because people in line were fighting.  They were fighting because they were seeing one another as Mexican or White or African American, and because people were cutting in line.  People were swearing at one another forgetting the children.  I had just spent a week encouraging children to come and here the crowd was threatening to frighten them away.  We were focusing on our differences and forgetting the opportunity to be friends.  I told everyone so… shalom.

What I love about children is their ability to become friends quickly, and make friends at parks and playgrounds.  What I hope we can do as adults is do the same thing.  Friendship is redemptive.  It is how God changes us and changes the world.  It is hard for us to forget, ignore, kill our friends.

So, things look as bad as they look good.  I see a great future ahead as we wake up.  There are several new interns coming to work with us this year and with friends on the streets.  There is a movement taking shape, even as over the past 15 months 45 people have passed on the streets.

May the children have the vision that we have not – may we as adults and families be willing to show them the way, allow them to be friends.

Top Ten Reasons for Hitting the Streets

Sunday, August 1st, 2010

There are times, like this Wednesday night, that I want to go full on Marvel or DC Comics style prophet.  I have had enough – heard enough stories, seen enough despair.  I don’t want to wait any more.  I don’t want to stall until I carry a harp, and I don’t want anyone else to stall in hopes of some heavenly choir.  I want to see hard work accomplished.  Shalom is hard work – not an ideal that comes easily, yet fully available as a part of God’s historic plan.

It would be easier if Santa Barbara did not have the resources – if I were somewhere in the world that did not have the numbers as far as church goers, or if it lacked finances.  We lack neither – maybe we lack vision and resolve.  Like Jesus who turned His face to Jerusalem knowing there is no turning back – this is what we need.  So, here are ten reasons for the church to hit the streets:

#1 – Following Jesus – In Mark, the first call of Christ is heard on the streets.  He has come directly to the streets to cry out the gospel and seek followers.  These followers would continue walking the streets with him during His years in ministry.  We are His followers, we are asked to do the same.

#2 – You will find your life again – The Christ centered community is actually built for the streets.  Eph 4:11 and on has both a sending out and gathering structure.  But, the sending out comes first – the mission outward keeps us feeling alive and close to Christ, as much as gathering.

#3 – You will become educated – Fox News, Oprah, CNN – maybe they are currently educating the masses, but nothing beats the real education on the streets.  Why are people really homeless?  You will find out?  Why does the East fight the West in Santa Barbara – come find out on the East Side or the West Side.  The streets can give you a new kind of diploma.

#4 – Shalom or Year of Jubilee will become real – Biblical concepts become real visionary possibilities.  Out of the head, into the heart, and through the hands and feet.  Are these deadened to be forgotten concepts, or God’s ideas that may in fact create a new way for United States survival and blessing?  Come join us and you can tell me.

#5 – The Church will grow again – ok, so the last I knew, there were 7 churches closing per each new one started.  Let’s just be real – perhaps we have lost contact with the culture that Jesus so stridently walked with in his time.  John 1:14 – He came to the neighborhood?  Have we?  Do we know the neighbors in our city.

#6 – People are perishing.  I am biased – I believe in a holistic gospel.  I believe Jesus does not want men and women on the streets to die.  I believe he does not want pregnant women on the streets to be on the streets – for the good of the woman and the child.  (do we know what street stress does to the unborn?)  What about the West Side orphaned?

#7 – You will smile at what God does.  I smile all the time (in the midst of the difficulties)  Carrillo kids swimming over at the pool at the Village, or using the library, or beginning to desire Jesus at Man Talk or Young Life.  Gator at Pershing telling me another joke or street kids trying to hide their smoke outs (so obvious friends)  Seeing some friends get off the streets…

#8 – My heart and brain are not big enough as I head toward 50 – Sometimes I can’t remember names I should know because I have interacted with them one hundred times – come on.  I have a vision capacity but we are well beyond that.  Sometimes I stop in conversations mid way because I have no idea of what to say or do next.  You may be the next key ingredient.  In fact, maybe God wants you to take my place :)

#9 – This is Your City – The more you hit the local streets, the more ownership you feel.  And, stewards we are (said this like Yoda!), so it should feel like our city.  This is what happened to me, the deeper I went in, the further in – the more I knew that God wanted me to declare the reality of the streets to you (lovely reader).

#10 – Want to know God more?  I just think that we grow in our love for God and our neighbors as they become our friends.  I am desperately close to God.  This has been a new thing for me.  It is impossible for me to do alone and without Him (and you).  My understanding and appreciation for our founder has increased exponentially.  My understanding of His love and power has increased as well.

Consider me a spy, seeing the land, and bringing back a good report.  Hear me saying that Jesus prospers in the mess – and He can do this.  We cross the rivers of culture in love this round – the love of God compels us – nothing more is needed.

The Homeless Bill of Rights

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

Well, so word has it more people died last year on the streets than reported…

Some word may be coming out about this soon.  And it is probably also true that some of those deaths may have been avoided.  I have no idea how many, and I guess it depends how you view the sovereignty of God.  I tend to believe that God is asking us to partner with Him to prevent senseless death.

So, I am a big believer in shalom and in an holistic health ideal.  I believe God is concerned with the whole person now and into eternity.  I think our love for people now is a sign of whether we really care about the soul or not… you can’t really just care about a soul on earth can you – don’t we have to work with flesh and blood?

A couple of us, representing the faith community, have been asked to get behind the homeless bill of rights, and rally the churches to awareness.  This is one of the ways I can do it, but publishing the bill of rights on my blog site.  It was put together by Ken Williams, and has the backing now of several local organizations.  I am hoping some local churches will officially back it.

I personally don’t think it is that radical, but of course these folks are my friends now – and I have witnessed first hand many of the street dangers they face.  Just today I was talking with some folks at the Santa Barbara Roasting Company about whether one of their friends was in the hospital or not…

So, I will paste the bill of rights in here.  You can comment on whether you are behind it or not, or if you want to help me get your church behind it :)

1. Right not to be murdered
2. Right not to be physically assaulted
3. Right not to be raped
4. Right to shelter when sick or injured
5. Right to medical care when sick or injured
6. Right to shelter, food and treatment for people with a mental illness
7. Right to shelter in severe rain, cold or heat that threatens health & welfare
8. Right not to be demonized by private or government entities & treated with respect by all
9. Right of women and men not to be hunted by sexual predators
10. Right of children for clothing, food, shelter & education

You can find the Homeless Bill of Rights on Facebook too, and “like” the group.  You can get involved and save lives with local organizations, or join us at Pershing Park or the community of Holy Chaos on Sunday mornings.

Rudolph’s Misfit Heaven

Friday, July 16th, 2010

I am around so many that have been abandoned and forgotten, or at least feel that way – either in the real world or through connections in cyber space.  These are people who wonder if the doors of heaven are still open to them, whether in heaven or on earth.  The theme of abandonment keeps resurfacing in my life, mind, heart, and ministry, as I am with people who just don’t seem to fit.

I recently posted on facebook that I believed heaven probably looked a bit like a long stint on Rudolph’s Island of Misfit Toys – everyone in need of some repair and some child who still wants to play with them…

I think I have learned that people are very fickle, including myself.  At one moment you can be a hero and famous and have the best seat at the table, and in the next moment the flame is blown out and you are asked to leave survivor island, pack up your items, and go home.  You didn’t get the million dollars.  (just look at what is happening to Mel Gibson heralded for his movie about Christ, but now that his sore are revealed… well, you know)  The same has and can happen to me and to you.

Is there a being that says “You are not Abandoned?”

I have to believe that is the idea behind the gospel, where the good news is that God is with us, that He is living in the midst, and that heaven is not cut off while there is still a brief in our lungs…

Pershing Park is a big mess – always has been.  A mix of illnesses and agonies -whether it is rich/poor; colored/white; religious/non-religious; hungry/filled; joyful/depressed… you get the picture.  It is beautiful in its own lack of sanitation.  It is a reputation of real life.  Despair leads to hope to despair to hope – finally to hope because at Pershing we want people to know that they are not abandoned.  Fickle humanity has a chance because the disguise of Jesus is found there.

Last Wednesday one man traveled all the way to the park to find me because I am the one in the city who will listen to him.  He is both mentally ill and addicted – dipping in and out of reality – so hard to converse to determine the underlying point. (There is no underlying point – heaven is probably the fact that we came together at all)  But, we committed to meet when he had not had a drink for a day, so we can find a way to better clarity.  I wonder what would happen if we made everyone who came to Pershing clean up their act before they got to the park?

I talk with athiests, the ex-communicated, the unclean – the question is – “is there room for me at the inn?”

The thing is – Heaven is a given, and a given under the authority of the Creator – the book will be opened by the One who created all and knows all.  I don’t get to open the book.  But I have a sense that there will be alot of misfits there when I think about the friends of Jesus.

I do have control of what doors I leave open in my life – who gets an opportunity to be loved here on earth.  For me, that is a wide door on earth, the people who deserve and get my love.  After all, this is supposed to go so far as including my enemies.

Pershing Park has a big door.  You can get to the park from all directions – south, north, east, west.  It does not have doors that can be locked.  We who have been shipwrecked in many ways together, have had our other vessels crash, have landed at the Park of Misfit People, all awaiting something better.

Why So Little Peace?

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

The door above is from the apartments neighboring the Village Apartments.  It represents one of the doors of invitation to the church in Santa Barbara.  I understand more and more the call that God has put upon my life, and how uncomfortable that call really is.

I get why there is so little peace as well – because peace-making is a difficult process and it is a narrow road – few willingly enter the process long term.

“Blessed are the Peacemakers…”  So many seem to put that on a bumper sticker and are done with it.

I am in continual tension as someone testing the waters of peacemaking.  This inner turmoil surely is one reason for the lack of help for friends in dire circumstances.  Today, to be honest – from a one to ten on the prophetic scale – I feel like a 7.

I cannot with good conscience say that we are caring for our poor.  I would like to get myself to say it, but I can’t.  Even in the midst of at least a growing awareness…. in the midst of a shalom community rising up for the city… in the midst of churches seeming to have a desire to get involved.  I can’t say it is enough.

I am a twisted man in a twisted world with a manic inward discussion.  It happens to me as I sit next to the mentally ill on benches.  It hits me when I walk by apartments with kids playing in the dirt.  It strikes me when I take sign ups for missional days in gatherings of hundreds and 3 people sign up.

I have been listening to “Eminence Front,” by the Who.  What the song could be about?  One idea is the face we put on ourselves to forget what lies underneath – “drinks flow, people forget, forget their hiding.”  And it seems to me, the pretty face of Santa Barbara is hiding from something.  It is why we have people now on the streets not allowed to speak, but only to hold signs.  It is why I have become a panhandler for the poor myself.  ”Signs disregarded, people forget, forget their hiding.”

I once bought a bozo the clown punching bag for a friend who was going through a tough time, and we punched him together back in the day.

The only way I will survive will be the creation of a shalom community, where we can share the tension together – because there is enough to go around.  I am working to develop a community based around peace-making, to increase the possibilities.  It may be completely selfish, so I don’t end up in a nut house with photos of Jesus in my rubber room.

When I graduated high school, I headed off to UCSD to double major in English and Writing.  I was going to write screenplays.  I was writing books.  Writing is my way of survival.  This blog is my authentic steam release.  You’ll have to know that to understand me.

There is a tremendous vision out there – in the heart and mind of God – and I plan on partnering in it through the good days and the bad.

That door up there is an invitation to enter the long term incarnational love way of Jesus – but count the cost…

Jesus and the Craps Table

Friday, June 4th, 2010

Just who would Jesus mix it up with?  How far would He go – I mean where does He draw the line in who He would associate with?

This is on my mind after a week of “mixing it up” with all kinds of people – church goers, friends without homes, meth addicts, the mentally ill, Westmont friends, the Mayor…

I had a conversation with new friends from the Santa Ynez Valley.  We met at a local breakfast hub.  The question posed – “Would Jesus go to the casino?”  If so, would He play the craps table?  Would He just hang out in the front or would He enter.  My answer is – yes.  If love compelled Him – and He would do so in Wisdom.

We discussed the coming legality of marijuana – that the day is just around the bend.  And, if it becomes “legal,” how will the church respond?  If it become “LEGAL,” can a 21 year old work with youth and also grow pot plants in the back yard?  Maybe it will not be necessarily in how we answer, but in how we “handle the question with others.”  Will we deal with this with wisdom, or by creating a law ourselves?

How do Ghettos happen?  The answer is complex, but surely part of it is that the “salt retreats from the area.”  This is what I have experienced in our three initiatives – on the West Side, Pershing Park, and Elsie’s Tavern.  The story is changing now as the risk takers of salt and light go back in, but surely we are returning from a vacation away.

I know that as casinos come in, another element of drugs and crime come with them – so the argument is not that you can take a realistic stand against those things which you may believe harm your community.  But, on the other hand, how does a criminal change?  How does someone who brings harm become someone who creates “shalom/peace?”

One answer is surely found in the gospels, as Jesus mixes it up with criminals.  Remember the one who recognized Him on the cross and now lives in Paradise.

The love of God compels us toward the criminal, crazy, sick, outsider, neighbor…

I sat next to a woman this week – she was obviously gripped in mental illness on State Street.  She was screaming at passers by in either anger and or a strange joy.  I was waiting for friends who never showed, but realized there was another reason for being there.  I witnessed a dog care for her better than myself or others.  The dog would let her pet him and just looked at her with that accepting “dog face.”  She said that the dog should run for president.  I just sat and prayed for her and asked for peace for her mind and soul.  But the dog had the knack.

That same day some of us met with the Mayor and others to talk about working together on the West Side – the potential of a new community center, and work at the Carrillo Apartments.

I am know learning that following Jesus means being willing to go from depths to heights – usually starting at depths.  You can’t get to the top of the mountain without starting in the mess, and you never get to stay at the top too far from the mess. (Mark 9)

A community of Shalom is being created – and our reputation is always at stake.  People will wonder why we associate with who we are friends with – we will be questioned and may in fact become questionable ourselves.

I witnessed a friend of mine at Pershing Park this Wednesday, surrounded by friends with homes – he said thanks to us for starting all this.  I knew that every Wednesday night, from 5:30-7:00pm at least, he experienced love.  It made me smile, in the midst of a week of madness.

Friday, May 21st, 2010

A new summer of love has begun – fitting that it starts over a Guinness at Elsie’s Tavern.

I am thinking what a strange scene this is, or perhaps it isn’t that strange after all.  A new friend interrupted the smaller discussions with a much larger one – “I have a question for you all – what is the gospel?”

Here we are – a grass root bunch of renegades, Westmont grads, and traveling friends seated at Elsie’s Tavern talking about Jesus.  Couldn’t really ask for anything better.  The conversation was incredible, authentic, and convicting.  A new initiative is in full swing here.

The new summer of love will be focused on Shalom – and an unlikely band of friends is pulling together to envision just what this might be.

Wednesday I went from 4am to 11pm – living within three local love initiatives on the West Side, Pershing Park and Santa Barbara Bars (Elsie’s Tavern and The Mercury Lounge).  I was going to leave Elsie’s and go home, when a friend called and wanted to hang out at the Lounge.  Seriously?  But it was a great time with him as well.

It started with Westmont students and grads and mentors at 6am in the morning at the Village.  This is where we meet to support each other, read about Shalom, and build these initiatives.  What a great time we had, despite the early morning occasional drowsy moments.  From there a few of us walking on the Wild West Side, praying and dreaming.

From there it was individual time with some of these shalomic dreamers.  Meeting on State Street and at random places.  Each person has a wonderful destiny within the larger picture.  I appreciate and love each person dedicated to this work!

Off to Pershing Park, where the stories are both wonderful and tragic.  After four years of relationship there, they know us and we know them well.  We learn from one another every night.  A new friend from Brooks comes to take photos of our friends.

I am struck most by the story of an a woman who is older, living in a car, not wanting to tell her family where she is to burden them.  She is soft spoken but strong.  But the story is complex and I try to work my mind around it.  But, tonight at Pershing, at least she is not alone.  We will walk with her to see how we might help her out of the car and into housing.

Then off to Elsies, where I meet new and old friends, and a sojourner in this state ends the evening with the discussion about the gospel and its relevance within 21st century culture.

It is exponential growth time.  It is exponential opportunity time.  I exist in the peaceful eye of the hurricane.  I get to see it every day – and I get to tell you about it.  I want to tell you so you can join in and not miss the story here in our city.

The Summer of Shalom kicked off this week – and it will grow into the year of Shalom – where we have big dreams of what the Lord can do.