Broken Bricks and Jesus….by Sam

Once again, we were back at Living Hope Church this morning to work on the renovation of the building. If you haven’t checked out the pictures in the previous post, do so, because they’re awesome. The drywall is beginning to go up and you can really see the progress in the building. Having been involved in renovation of old buildings (and otherwise seeing buildings constructed), I know that the moment the drywall goes up is the moment that the building begins to look like a structure instead of simply a framework.

One thing that we have to get done in order for the drywall to go up is create room for the workers to actually put it in! We often simply lean stuff against walls to get it out of the way – but when it’s time for the drywall, you actually have to get to the wall. This leads to a situation in which you have to move things – so you can move more things – so you can move yet more things – so you can put up the drywall. It’s basically musical chairs, except with construction materials. This was one of our tasks today.

One of the things we had to move was a pile of bricks. The bricks were in a room that had to be drywalled, and they had to go into the next room, in which the walls will stay the original brick. We had to move the bricks and then stack them in a wall-like structure – not so much a wall as a “structurally-sound pile of bricks,” in the words of young Wyn. It wasn’t a particularly onerous task or physically demanding. But there were very few intact bricks in the pile. Many of the bricks were broken; perhaps it was a minor thing, like a chipped brick. Some of the bricks, however, were broken seemingly beyond repair, to the point that it was half-size or smaller and maybe had only one smooth side.

Our instructions were to stack the whole bricks and maybe the bricks that were basically intact. The half bricks were basically useless, fit for the trash. As we started to stack these bricks, however, we began to realize the proportion of bricks in the pile. We would be throwing out a lot of bricks. We made a group decision to stack up some half bricks if they were particularly good-looking, if we found a niche appropriate to the half brick’s shape in the stack. We stacked up some half bricks and set aside others. And then it was lunch time, and we left the back of the church for tasty fried chicken from Harold’s across the street.

After lunch, the people I was stacking bricks with went upstairs to paint, another thing on our agenda list, but I stayed behind with the bricks. I thought to myself, ‘I want to go through all these bricks and make sure that we don’t waste any useful bricks.’ And as I kept stacking brick by brick, the bricks just kept fitting together. I began to think of these imperfect bricks not as useless, but simply differently shaped. With a touch of mortar in the right place, it’ll fit together in a wall just right.

And as I stacked these special bricks, I started thinking about how these bricks point me to Christ. I realized that there are so many different ways that they did! The first thing I thought of is the wall of bricks as the body of Christ. We all have different roles to play in the body of Christ. As Paul wrote to the Corinthians, “God arranged the members in the body, each one of them, as he chose. If all were a single member, where would the body be? As it is, there are many parts, yet one body. The eye cannot say to the hand, ‘I have no need of you,’ nor again the head to the feet, ‘I have no need of you.’ On the contrary, the parts of the body that seem to be weaker are indispensable.” Paul goes on to declare that we all have different giftings and roles in the collective body by asking if rhetorically if we are all teachers, healers, interpreters, miracle-workers? Of course we are not. Each brick – even those that were weak, broken and shattered – had a role to play in this wall, analogous to our roles within the body of Christ.

I then thought about Paul’s second letter to the Corinthians, when Paul discusses his thorn in the flesh. Paul discussed how he had pled with God, begged God, to remove this weakness of his, but his relation of God’s response is simply mindblowing: “But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me. For the sake of Christ, then, I am content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions, and calamities. For when I am weak, then I am strong.” Power made perfect in weakness? That throws our cultural paradigm completely upside-down. God chooses to work through the weak among us, not the strong. As Paul wrote in another place, “Has God not made foolish the wisdom of the world? … God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong. God chose what is low and despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are.” We had thought about simply dumping the broken bricks. They were, quite literally, despised. But they were useful and integral to the wall.

I thought of how the broken bricks remind me of our broken selves. “All we like sheep have gone astray,” and we are all broken with sin. We come born into this world with a sin nature. We’re broken people, but we still get used by God in amazing ways.

Finally, I thought of that famous first Palm Sunday in Jerusalem, when Jesus rebuked the Pharisees: “I tell you, if [my disciples] were silent, the very stones would cry out!” The stones were actually crying out this afternoon in Living Hope Church. The stones themselves were pointing me to Christ.

 

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Living Hope Update.

 

We have insulation! We have drywall!

The renovation of Living Hope church marches on! This week the crew from Washington&Lee RUF worked on installing some more drywall and painting one of the upstairs apartments. Living Hope is looking forward to having service there soon! We are excited for the possibility of housing some of our 2012 summer groups there!

To get in touch with Pastor Brad Beier, look him or Living Hope up on Facebook or email him at BradBeier@gmail.com

Keep Living Hope Church and Pastor Brad and his family in your prayers as they look forward in hopeful anticipation to the completion of their new church home.

 

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“You wouldn’t last a week on the streets” ……. By Wyn Boerckel (Washington&Lee RUF)

We found James Bunts sitting in a wheelchair under the el track. He wore a military jacket and desert camo bandana from his days as a soldier in the 5th infantry in the Gulf War. I asked if we could ask him about his life, and after we convinced him we had no problem with him, just curiosity, he began. James grew up in the Englewood projects, which he said was just as much a war zone as Baghdad was in 1991. He says that people walk by him every day, looking down on him like he ain’t nobody, as if he did not serve his country. A gas attack, probably Sarin nerve gas from Saddam’s chemical weapons cache, left him without the use of his legs. He doesn’t let that slow him down, and refuses to get an electric wheelchair. “I am the motor,” he says. He doesn’t suffer from flashbacks, but understands the mental scars warfare leaves. One of his friends, a veteran from Vietnam, wanders Chicago’s downtown talking to himself. “He’s crazy,” James says. But hardship and life in today’s society, he says, can turn you just as crazy as any war.

In past winters, he turned to a nursing home to escape the cold, his disability checks paying the bills. He forms a fist around an invisible table knife and demonstrates how people at the home were liable to get upset and try to stab you. War, the projects, the home, you always have to be watching, he says, or you won’t last. He takes a look at my skinny frame and American Eagle button down and issues a verdict: you wouldn’t last a week on the streets. You got to know the rules. Quite true. Holding an invisible syringe, he shows how security had to immediately calm the patients at the home who got out of control. Life on the streets is tough he says, but beats the restrictions on freedom one faces at the home. I signed myself out, he says gleefully, they couldn’t keep me there.

We offer him a lunch, and he gratefully accepts. Wheeling into traffic, se shows us his panhandling methods. Some days he is given almost nothing, a good day will net 60-70 dollars. He doesn’t always stay on the streets; he can go to his sister’s house in Englewood.

Like James Bunts, everyone has a story. The crowded streets of Chicago are teeming with stories, and Christ knows them all. At the end of the hour, we thank James for his time and for serving his country. James encouraged us to go and find other people in the streets, and find out about their stories. As he bid us a very warm goodbye, I think I began to understand the power of listening to someone. Listening shows that you care. It is a greater gift than any sack lunch—listening is a demonstration of love, and feeds the soul. Matthew writes in chapter 25 that when Jesus comes back in his glory, he will judge the nations. Jesus will say to the righteous:

34 “Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. 35 For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, 36 I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.”

The righteous, confused, ask when they did these things for Jesus.

Mathew writes, “The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’

So much of our efforts for ‘the least of these,’ are centered on food for the hungry and clothes for the needy, but we must not forget to visit those in need. The Apostle Paul’s proclamation of Christ crucified for sinners was always accompanied by a genuine love for his hearers. He compared his love to the love of a father to his son (1 Thess. 2:11.) As a loving father listens intently to his son, so we should listen to those who need to hear the Gospel.

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Heaven Does Not Have These Barriers by Tommy

Today, the second day of the Sunshine Gospel Ministries mission week, was a day full of observation.  Sometimes I feel that we just need to open our eyes.  Spending time in the Southside of Chicago has been eye-opening to say the least.  The El Experience (not related to the Spanish particle), a social journey on the elevated train, was particularly enlightening.  We had to talk to strangers and engage them in conversation all the way to the end of the red line.  Through this experience I have seen how the simple act of talking has a certain power to open hearts and open minds and to show how we are all created in God’s image by God.  One person I talked to was unable to speak English, however, I persisted and used my limited Spanish to hear some things about his life.  When he heard me using Spanish he immediately became more cheerful and when we he had to exit the train it seemed to me that we had established a good relationship that had potential to grow.  I imagine that any sort of talking between strangers has the potential to grow into something more.  One conversation can change the course of someone’s day.

            A city is a sea of people, all with the ability to talk and to share their own story.  Everyone has a need to tell his or her story and everyone has a story.  The act of listening demonstrates to the speaker that he/she has value.   Talking to strangers in a positive way helps to spread God’s love.  I imagine the surprise that strangers on the el train feel when someone attempts to engage in conversation can function as a gateway to his/her more positive view on others.  To break the norm, to talk and not just stare out the window hidden behind the walls of earphones, sunglasses, or i-phones, leads to an increased appreciation for humanity and at the most fundamental level, an acknowledgment of humanity.  How can we feel love for strangers in our hearts?  I believe it starts with practice.  By practicing talking to strangers we will begin to understand how everyone has value and the ways in which we can love.  Practice not only makes perfect but also makes “less awkward”.  The thoughts in my head should be: How can I help you?  What questions can I ask to understand more about your life?  What can I learn from everything that you know?  You are unique.  You have been through hardship.  You need love and communication.  You need to feel that people care.  You deserve my open ears.  If I show that you deserve me own ears perhaps you will see that I deserve yours.  Jesus can enter into your heart.  Talking to you brings Jesus into my own heart. 

            Though this experience, in some ways, felt like an assignment, it also served as a stimulating, practical, and condensed example of how the act of talking to strangers can occur on the street, in our own neighborhoods, and elsewhere.  Talking crosses cultures, ethnicity, and defeats barriers that we have created.  Heaven does not have these barriers.  I believe that God wants us to show love in this way.  I have often felt dislike for others and even disgust.  I have often felt no desire to interact with strangers.  But what is strange?  Strange is the divide we have created between us, strange is lack of communication, and strange is a train full of silent, self-absorbed people.  Strange is my tendency to ignore those that I can help and that God wants me to help.  When we keep our mouths closed, we also help to further close our hearts. 

 

            -Tommy Kent 

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Fiberglass missiles, Lehman brothers, and a swan of a church…by Justin

This week we welcome Washington and Lee University RUF from Virginia! We are excited to have them here with us all week. Here is the first blog entry from them for the week. Check back later today for work project updates from the spring season of Bridge Builders!!

 

I never would have believed that avoiding tiny fiberglass missiles equipped with powerful eye-seeking technology and then spending my afternoon amongst the homeless would be more memorable and enjoyable than walking the ‘best’ streets in downtown Chicago. But, today, Monday April 15, 2012, my first ‘work’ day with Sunshine Gospel Ministries, opened my eyes. I am a college sophomore from Washington and Lee University and I have never seen God at work like I saw today at Living Hope Church, but especially at Pacific Garden Missionary.

 

Our work at Live Hope to renovate the broken-down, former pool hall into a church worthy of God’s glory was split amongst about five different teams. I had the fun task of insulating areas of the building that the previous workers had mistakenly left bare. The task was challenging and keeping the itchy fiberglass particles out of your eyes, mouth, hair, and skin was a constant battle.  Despite the difficult work, the vision of our leader, Brad, was inspiring. Here was a run-down building in an impoverished neighborhood that had not been lived in for five years and had a ceiling as ineffective at keeping rain out as Lehman Brothers is at staying in business, yet Brad saw greatness. His undying determination to transform this ugliest of ugly duckling buildings into a swan of a church was inspiring. Everything, from financial woes, to contractor and inspector disagreements, to break-in robberies, was set against him. Brad’s faith in God is keeping him charging and I was honored to help him carry his cross.

 

As impressive as Living Hope Church was, Pacific Garden Missionary is something that changed my life. A privately funded homeless rescue mission in a $30 million facility that has never turned away a man, woman, or child seeking God’s salvation in 134 years is mind-blowing for me. I have seen shelters, food banks, and rescue missions before, but never before have I seen such a large-scale, effective, and remarkably efficient illustration of God’s grace. Sure as I am the sun will rise, I am sure this remarkable organization will continue to improve the lives of millions of homeless people around Chicago for decades to come. I have never seen such an enormous display of God’s work in our world before, and I am forever changed because of it.

 

As a Business Administration and Economics dual-major, my classmates are almost entirely focused on becoming the tycoon on Michigan Street in downtown Chicago. If there is anything I can take away from my experiences today, it is that the life of an individual like Brad or the great workers at PGM who devote their work to God will be infinitely more rewarding than the money-worshipping tycoon on Michigan Street. I truly thank Sunshine Gospel Ministries for allowing me to experience these wonders today, and I look forward to ‘working’ for the remainder of my week in Chicago.

 

Justin Meyers

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Work projects this week with Pastor Brooks.

Watch this week’s BridgeBuilders on the news.

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It will move you….Kayla Roth, UNL RUF

Kayla Roth – University of Nebraska-Lincoln

This is the third time I’ve been around Sunshine and each visit I have had the gospel presented to me in a way that re-shapes the way I relate to people. This week after visiting Pacific Garden Mission we debriefed by forming a list of the positive things the mission does. We finished with a decent list of positives, and then were challenged to make a list of the things we would do differently . It started out with a few things and as we discussed the list grew longer than we probably expected it would. Hashing it out caused us to realize that there really are a lot more ways to look at a situation than just “good” or “bad” necessarily.

In fact, it’s dangerous to do that because in everything we see there is a combination of the glory of God and the brokenness of man. For me too often all I can focus on is the brokenness of man in the things I am seeing – the dilapidated neighborhood, the messed up public school system and the people milling around the streets. The reminder that God’s glory is also in all of those things – even if you have to look a little harder – is a beautiful one. Once you start looking for it, you’re able to see it. Once you see it, it will move you.

The idea that God’s glory is in everything is a pretty basic idea, but I forget it too often. For the rest of the week before I get overwhelmed by the brokenness in what I see and how I could “fix” it, I’m going to ask God to help me recognize and focus on his glory instead.

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