Wednesday, March 11, 2015

March 2015

Great breakfast this morning.  Welcome to Adriel and Emilee Robitaille and thanks for sharing your amazing story.  I couldn't stop thinking about passage in Luke in which Jesus invites people to follow him even at the cost of leaving house and family.  Man, ya'll taking that stuff literally.  Thanks for your presence as well as that of Rich, Jeff, John, Adam.

In all the fun of sharing we forgot to mention when and where we'll be meeting next.  So, how bout we meet on Wednesday, April 8th at 8:30 at _________.  Any volunteers?

Til Easter,
Ken

Also, here are the clean up dates:
Oak Tree Park
Saturday, March 21st 9:00-12:00 
at 78th and Pine 
(Contact: Albert Styers, 961-3145)

Wapato Hills Restoration
March 14th 9:00-12:00.  
2nd Saturday of the month 
at 56th and Tacoma Mall Blvd 
(Contact: Carol Munsey, 753-6417)

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

October

I've been remiss in my recaps of our meetings since June so here is the short update.

July - No meeting because everyone was enjoying vacation
August - Another skipped meeting for the same reasons
September- We met at Manitou for our annual school/prayer walk.  It was a great morning to walk and remind the leaders of the schools that they are not alone.
October - We met at Evangelical Reformed to catch up and pray with one another.  The last portion of our meeting was a good discussion of the potentially healthy and dangerous aspects of a "mid-life crisis".  Thanks for the good conversations friends.

Next Meeting:  Wednesday, November 12th at 8:30 at the Youth For Christ office on Center Street



Wednesday, June 11, 2014

June Breakfast

John, Ken, Rich and myself gathered from some WesternCo donuts, conversation and prayer this morning at Manitiou Park Presbyterian.  There was a lot of heart-talk going on and prayers for one another.  I think this may have had something to do with the amount of left over donuts.  Jeff, you remain in our prayers brother. It was good to be with y'all.

With John in Korea, me in Tennessee and others gallivanting around Washington we are going to skip the July meeting and gather again on Wednesday August 13th at 8:30 at the YFC office.  The gathering after that will be on Wednesday, September 10th at 8:30 at Manitou Park when we will eat some donuts and then proceed with the walk and blessing of the schools.

Enjoy the day,
Ken

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

March Breakfast

Thanks to John and Green Pastures for hosting this morning.  It was good to be together to share how well things are going with each of us.  My only regret from the morning is that we didn't close by singing It is Well with my soul...  Maybe next time.

Good conversation and enthusiasm regarding Point Break and Gray.  Thanks Ken for championing this endeavor.  You can now do so knowing you have the support of the South Tacoma Ministers.  We look forward to seeing how this all falls out.

Our next meeting will be on Wednesday, April 9th at 8:30 at Evangelical Reformed Church.  Until then, blessings on your Lenten journeys.   May all be well.


Thursday, February 6, 2014

February Breakfast

Big thanks to... well, me, for hosting our breakfast yesterday.  Actually, the thanks goes to my wife who made scones.  She's great and I know I don't tell her that often enough.  But enough of my confessions, let's jump into the recap.

After basking in the glow of great victory from Sunday (Jesus' victory that is, what did you think I was talking about?), we spent some time talking about the possibility of helping to bring the Pointbreak program to Gray Middle School. 

The purpose of Point Break is to improve the behaviors, values and attitudes of high school students on their campuses and in their communities, intervening before acts of hatred or violence occur. As a result, better learning environments are created, relationships are forged and reconciliation begins.
You can read more about it here.  Ken Schmidtke and Adam are familiar with the program as it is connected with YFC.  Both are fans and our group is still, let's say 'discerning.'  People seemed pretty interested in the shape of the one-day program, if still not sure exactly what it looks like.  In our conversation with the school district they seemed to be encouraging some large event for schools which none of us felt excited about.  However, this event seems more relational, more focused and more doable. With that being said, there are some questions that need to get fleshed out a bit which I'll go ahead and list here.
1.  What is the cost and who will pay it?
2.  What is a potential timeline?  If we started planning next month what's the soonest it could happen?
3.  What is the time commitment from volunteers?
4.  What does follow up after the event look like?  Small groups?  Campus Life?  Guidance counselors?

Ken, I'll direct these questions your way and perhaps you can come to our next meeting prepared to flesh some of these things out.  Speaking of the next meeting.  It will be on Wednesday, March 12th at 8:30 at Green Pastures Presbyterian.

Until then, enjoy the cold,
Ken

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

January 2014 Breakfast

Thanks to Ken and Adam for hosting us at the YFC office.  Coffee, donuts AND fruit!  Thanks guys (and yes Ken I did go back for some grapes.) 

The depth of our sharing in personal and pastoral situations is an encouraging indication of the trust we're building between one another.  Thank you for the prayers gentlemen. 

After prayer we spent some time discussing the meeting Rich, John and I had with Talana Penton at the Tacoma School District central office.  She had responded to a letter we dropped off at the schools during our prayer walk at the beginning of the school year.  We'd offered to help in any way we could.  She asked how we'd like to help.  What followed was a good discussion about where our strengths might match their needs.  The one area we agreed upon was to serve as emergency grief or tragedy counselors.  Other than that we agreed to explore the idea with the rest of the group.  This is what we explored at this morning's meeting.  How might we respond to the invitation of the school district to be more involved in the success of the South Tacoma schools?

The answer we landed upon was Point Break.  Click here to read more about it.  We're going to explore this possibility and discuss it at our next meeting.  Which is now on Wednesday, February 5th at 8:30 at Manitou Park Presbyterian. 

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

October Breakfast

Thanks to John at Green Pastures for hosting us this morning.  I always enjoy the coffee mix but I can't tell you how happy my taste buds were when I starting chomping that pumpkin muffin on the way to a meeting.  The only downside were my regrets for not taking one of the cranberry-orange muffins.  Those were really good, oh yes and the meeting was too.

It was good to catch up and hear how well things seem to be going with our respective churches/ministries.  Also thanks for the chance to discuss the question, "Do our churches tend to mostly attract the folks who already seem to fit?"  I can't speak for everyone else, but it was a helpful conversation for me.

Blessings on the rest of your Octobers and we'll meet again on November 13th at 8:30 at Zion's River.

Grace and Peace,
Ken

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

September: Back to School Prayer Walk

Well we couldn't have asked for a better day to have a prayer walk.  September really is one of the best months to live in Tacoma.  Jeff, John, Ken, Rich and myself gathered around 8:30 at Manitou for some sugar free donuts and coffee as well as conversation.  Our prayers are with Rich's church as they walk through the valley of the shadow of death with one of their families whose 18 year old son died last week.  Thanks to Rich for sharing the struggle with us.

Fueled up on sugar and caffeine we headed out to walk the "education triangle" that is Manitou-Gray-Mt. Tahoma.  We stopped at each school to offer prayers for the staff, students and family as well as to drop a not of encouragement off to the principal.   The note offered to be available to help in any way we could this school year.  Rich offered a healthy warning before we signed the letters that we should not be surprised to get a call next week to help chaperone a dance.

We finished at Mt. Tahoma having in one sense done very little, just whistling against the wind, when you consider the magnitude of challenges and struggles and possible even tragedy that each of these schools have and will face.   What difference does a little prayer and walk make?  Thank God that the answer is not in our hands.  Today we sowed, others water, but it is God that causes the growth.

Grace and Peace.

Next meeting, Wednesday, October 9th at8:30 at Green Pastures Presbyterian 
Next, next meeting: Wednesday, November 13th at Zion's River Church

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

August Breakfast

Jeff, Adam, Ken and Rich, it was nice breaking maple bars with y'all this morning.  Thanks for the chance to meet, eat and pray (there's your next book title Rich).  I really appreciate the chance to hear a few moments of reminder of God's grace; discovering a thirty year old confirmation letter from your father, standing in line as co-workers with a principal that expelled you, comforting a grieving new widow and holding a new-born baby on the same day, memories from Minagua and unexpected church growth.  Hearing y'all share reminded me of fishing for pink salmon yesterday and catching nothing (til much later in the day), I saw a kingfisher.  Since seeing them cruise through the Oostanalee Creek of my neighborhood, these have been my favorite bird.  Gerald Manley Hopkins wrote a poem that combines these two thoughts:

As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies dráw fláme;
As tumbled over rim in roundy wells
Stones ring; like each tucked string tells, each hung bell’s
Bow swung finds tongue to fling out broad its name;
Each mortal thing does one thing and the same:
Deals out that being indoors each one dwells;
Selves—goes itself; myself it speaks and spells,
Crying Whát I do is me: for that I came.
Í say móre: the just man justices;
Kéeps gráce: thát keeps all his goings graces;
Acts in God’s eye what in God’s eye he is—
Chríst—for Christ plays in ten thousand places,
Lovely in limbs, and lovely in eyes not his
To the Father through the features of men’s faces. 


The poetry connection comes at no extra charge today.

Community
Saturday August 17th 12-4, Zion's River Block Party
Saturday, August 24th, 10-3, Mt. Tahoma,  Convoy of Hope. Click here for details
Diego Wendt event at Ft. Steilacoom August 16-18
Welcome Pastor Bill Greaver and Tacoma First Congregational to South Tacoma
Oak Tree Park Stewards in the Park Hikes.  Tuesdays, 9:00-12:00 til September 3rd.  

Prayers
Prayers for YFC camp this Friday as well as the Manitou Arts Camp

Next Meeting
Wednesday, September 11th at 8:30.  School Prayer Walk. Once again, we'll meet at Manitou Park Presbyterian to begin our 3 school prayer walk from Manitou Elementary to Gray Middle and finishing at Mt. Tahoma.  Rich is going to reprise his letter from last year so that we can drop it off to let the staff know we're praying for them.  Though we may not know it, I received several comments from teachers that noticed us passing and were thankful for our prayers.  If you can think of ways we might additionally offer our assistance to the schools (PTA support, hosting teacher prayer breakfasts, etc.) feel free to send to Rich for him to include it in the letter.

In Christ,
Ken


Wednesday, March 13, 2013

March Breakfast

Jeff really puts on a nice breakfast.  This morning we had grapefruit and a low-carb (aka high meat) kiesh like concoction and stellar coffee.  I'm not sure I"m going to need lunch today.  Thanks again Jeff.

I feel that our conversation this morning was fruit born from our meeting faithfully over several years.  It was really nice to share a bit of a free-flowing conversation that ranged from the difference in Korean and American culture to children and worship to how we approach sabbath days.  There is a lot of talk about the benefits of being in conversation with folks who have differing views, but this morning I really felt the benefits.  Good conversations tend to find both ground that is common and foreign.  We draw close on the common which allows us to hear the foreign.   It was encouraging and challenging to do experience the fruit of those conversations this morning.  Thanks Jeff, Rich and John for coming to the table.

Even with all of the deep discussion we were still able to share some opportunities arising in the community.  Here they are in no specific order:

March 29th Good Friday  9:00-1:00  South Tacoma Cross Walk.
     Join us for a 5 mile walk around South Tacoma to the places where people have died as the result of violence over the past 6 years.  We will meet in the Starbucks parking lot at 56th and South Tacoma Way at 9:00 then walk to the site of 10 homicides where we will offer a brief remembrance and prayer.

April 18th 11:30-1:30  Love Inc Pastors Luncheon 
    Many of us are aware of the good work Love Inc has done over the last several years.  THey are in a process of reevaluating their ministry style and focus and would like the input of congregations.  Rich will pass along details as they become known.

Hosted at Tacoma Christian Reformed Community Church
Must RSVP at execdir@loveincpiercecounty.com

May 10th  8:30-3:30  Day Retreat at St. Placid's Priory in Olympia
     Jesus frequently removed himself from the crowds and disciples to talk and listen to the Father.  Over the last few years I have discovered the value of doing a similar thing for a whole day.  The priory is the home of a handful of Benedictine sisters but also a site of retreat where anyone can come and spend time alone.  To schedule a day or overnight retreat simply check out their website at www.stplacid.org or you can join me on May 10th when i go down for a day retreat.  Let me know if you would like to go so that I can reserve a room for you.

August 24th  Convoy of Hope
     A number of churches, businesses and agencies are partnering for this one day event at Mt. Tahoma High School during which groceries, prayer, health care, community services, entertainment, lunch, games and children's activities will be shared.  IF you are interested in learing more, contact Ryan Jordan at 479-799-1022 or RJordan@life-center.org.

Grace and Peace,
Ken

Next Breakfast:  Green Pastures Presbyterian Church (66th and Junett) 

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

December Breakfast

"How good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell together in unity..." (Psalm 133)  Brian, and the Psalmist's prayer captured the nature of our gathering this morning.  For the past year Brian, Tony and several other south end pastors have been doing what our cadre of South Tacoma pastors have been doing for several years; meeting, eating, sharing and praying for one another to build trust so that we might be better able to respond when God calls.  This morning we joined those two groups together and though there was no 'oil running down anyone's beard' it was good.  (A quick aside; the fact that our group is male dominated is unintentional, we look forward to welcoming some sisters some day as well.) 

Thanks to Rich for hosting, good luck finishing all of those donuts.  We also look forward to meeting again in January.  Keeping with the spirit of unity, the South Enders are going to return the favor and host our next meeting.  We'll meet on Thursday, January 10th for lunch at 12:00 at the church Brian pastors, Hope Community Church at 158 S. 46th Street, Tacoma, 98414.  Here is the link to their website.

Til then, Happy Advent and Merry Christmas!

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

November Breakfast Recap

Thanks to John and Green Pastures for hosting this morning.  John promised us that danishes are better for you than donuts though I think that may be like saying that 1/4 lb burger is better for you than 1/3 lb burger.

I continue to appreciate the growing depth of our conversations in which we are able to discuss everything from cancer to depression to sex offenders to universalism.  Perhaps what makes each of these conversations so rich is that: a) they arise from our situations of ministry or home rather than just from our minds and b) we've developed enough trust to share our struggles and things about which we might disagree.  As part of our mission is to develop trust, I left this morning encouraged.

Another thing about which i am encouraged is the work Brian Olsen has done to establish a similar ministerial group across the interstate in the South End.  Recently Brian and I talked about joining the groups for a meeting and it looks like there  is no better time than the present.  And so, next month we will meet on Wednesday, December 12th at 8:30 at Evangelical Reformed Church just off 74th street not far after you cross South Tacoma Way.    7435 South Madison Tacoma, WA. 98409is the exact address. 

Until then, have a great Thanksgiving,
Ken


Wednesday, October 10, 2012

October Breakfast - Joyful Pastors?

Thanks to Jeff and Adam for the incredible Ham, egg and mushroom muffins we had this morning.  Tasty.  I really appreciated our time of sharing and conversation.  It was and is an encouragement to me.  Here is  the link to an article by CJ Mahaney that Rich shared entitled "Happy Pastors."  It is both an encouragement and perhaps a gentle challenge to believe for ourselves the stuff we proclaim to others each week. 

Blessings on your month until we meet again on Wednesday, November 14th at 8:30 at Green Pastures Presbyterian on 66th and Junett.  Who knows we may even wade into the waters of a discussion about the elections.

Grace and Peace,
Ken

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

September Breakfast and Prayer Walk for the Schools

Friends,

What a great way to begin the Fall.  After getting fueled up on donuts and coffee, Rich, Ken, Jeff, John and myself went out (5x5 in this case instead of the 2x2 Jesus sent his disciples) to pray for Manitou Park Elementary, Gray Middle and Mt. Tahoma High.  After praying in front of each school we dropped off a letter to the respective principals letting them know who we are, that we'd prayed for their school and offering our help as it may be needed.

I appreciate the chance not only to pray for these schools but also to walk and talk with some co-laborers here in the community.  Walking and talking, it seems like I remember something about some folks doing that on the road to Emmaus at some point.  Hopefully our eyes were opened in some small or large manner.

The next gathering will be on Wednesday, October 10th at 8:30 at Zion's River where I think we might just get some biscuits and gravy (no pressure Jeff.)

Grace and Peace,
Ken

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

August Breakfast Recap

We gathered at Evangelical Reformed this morning and broke sweet bread and coffee together.  Thanks to Rich and John for the good conversation about sabbaticals, sending our kids to college, and what it means to keep the main thing the main thing.  Also, thanks for the prayer, which is a whole different kind of food and one that we know our brother Jeff has been receiving while recouping from 'the attack of the blocked gland.'  Our prayers are with you brother.

Our next meeting...
South Tacoma School Prayers
will be a special one as we will gather to specifically pray for and visit 3 neighborhood schools; Manitou Elementary, Gray Middle and Mt. Tahoma High School.  The simple plan is as follows:
1.  Meet at Manitou Park Presbyterian (6613 S. Cheyenne) briefly
2.  Walk to Manitou Elementary and pray
3.  Walk to Gray and pray
4.  Walk to Mt. Tahoma and pray
5.  Depart or depending on the time, go to lunch together at a local Korean joint of John Kim's choosing.

Rich is going to draft a letter that we might offer to the principals simply letting them know we offered some prayers, inviting them to let us know how we can pray for them in the future, and (this is important and a little risky) asking if there are any other ways our congregations might be of support.  Rich would like to include all of the names of the pastors and congregations who plan on attending, so please reply to this e-mail if you plan on joining us.  The date is:

Wednesday, September 12th at 8:30 

Please invite other ministers/churches to join us.  The more the better,

Grace and Peace, 
Ken

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

June Breakfast

Another South Tacoma Ministers breakfast has come and gone and thanks to Ken Schmidtke's health consciousness, we are none worse for the wear.  Thanks for the bananas, yogurt and strawberry's, our arteries are grateful.

Due to time constraints I will keep this recap short.  Once again it was good to catch up with one another's lives and pray for one another.  In the midst of that, YFC Ken asked the question, "Is this group doing what we'd hoped it would."

In the sense that it is helping each of us feel supported, connected and encouraged in our ministries then the answer was a strong yes.  Each of us remain glad to be a part of the group and feel it is worth continuing.  Our mission is "As ministers in South Tacoma, we desire to develop trust between one another so that when God presents us with an opportunity or challenge that is uniquely suited for us to collectively engage that we would be united enough to faithfully do so."  Our monthly breakfasts have helped us develop trust between one another to the point that we've collaborated on ministry at Gray, presentations from our churches and some marriage ministry stuff.  This has all been good.  On the other hand...


If the sense that this group is helping to connect the leaders of the 30 some churches in South Tacoma to develop trust that might lead to collaboration then the answer is no.   Despite our invitations, the group remains small (which is okay).  What to do.  Here is the plan for the next 3 months.


July 11 at 11:30 - Lunch at a Korean restaurant with John Kim.  Meet at Green Pastures at 11:30
August 15th at 8:30 - Monthly breakfast at Evangelical Reformed
September 11th at 8:30 - Prayer for the schools.  We will meet at Manitou at 8:30am for brief breakfast and then head out to pray for Gray, Manitou and Mt. Tahoma.  This is an event we want to invite as many ministers in the area to join us in as possible.  So we'll start working toward this now.  Please post any ideas you have regarding this in the comments section below.

Grace and Peace, 
Ken



Wednesday, May 9, 2012

May Breakfast

Ain't nuthin like a red bean pastry to get ya going in the morning.  Big thanks to John for hosting this morning.  I always look forward to the unique and tasty treats we'll find on the table.  I'm also already looking forward to lunch at HoSoonYi (or wherever we end up). 

We had a good conversation around the question, "What is the best way to parent PKs? (preacher's kids)"  You'll have to wait for the book to come out to hear our answers as I think we had some pretty good collective wisdom.  Thanks for the conversation.

Our next breakfast is set for Wednesday, June 13th at 8:30 at the Youth For Christ office on Center Street.  Ken, you can thank Adam for signing you up.  It was great to have Adam with us this morning as he moves deeper into his role of Campus Life/Chaplain at Gray Middle School.

Shaloma in South Tacoma,
Ken

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

April breakfast

Sorry I missed this one, but I heard things went well.  Apparently I missed biscuits/gravy and some conversation about politics and the church.  Hmm, too tasty things that have the potential for heartburn.  Glad to hear it went well.

Our next gathering is set for Wednesday, May 9th at 8:30 at Green Pastures Church.

See you then if not before,
Ken

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

March Breakfast - Church With

Friends,

Good breakfast.  I hope that the nutrition of the apples and bananas balances out the sugars of the fritters and maple bars.  Then again, the fritters were made with apples and the bars with maple syrup and those are both natural so they must be good, right?

It was good for John, Rich, Ken and myself to get together and check-in with one another.  If for no other reason than to just be reminded that we are not alone in this endeavor, then I still think the breakfasts are worth it.   As usual we did a little update with one another which ended up focusing most on our kids; health, growing up, daffodilium and the expense of college (may that bubble burst soon). 

We spent the second half of our time in a really good discussion on the Christianity Today article "Church-With: Small churches find their future in neighborhood renewal."   I really appreciated the questions, discussion and interest.  I agree with Rich that the Rosewood community does have a lot of similarities with South Tacoma; high rental rate, few gathering places, struggle with communal identity...  I also agree with YFC Ken that one of the hopes is for neighbors to get to know neighbors; to build healthy relationships.  South Tacoma is a big space to try and do that (13 square miles) unlike the hilltop or fircrest.  However, we do have smaller neighborhoods that compose that larger area; manitou, oakland/madrona, edison and arlington each of which used to have their own identity.  We concluded by discussing the STAR center and its potential role in building community.  The jury is still out on this one, let's hope it does. 

Though we didn't come to any conclusions or action steps (which was not really the goal), i feel like we raised some good questions that I'll try to list here:
1.  Are their resident leaders in the neighborhoods who could use a little encouragement?
2.  Does it take great anger or great hope to motivate resident leaders?  If so, what might be the source of that anger?  The object of that hope?
3.  Is there a role in community development for churches whose building is in South Tacoma but members aren't?
4.  Do we serve congregations that might be willing to invest (time, talents & treasures) in something that we would not own (like the Rosewood Cafe)? 
5.  Is there anything God is calling us, the South Tacoma Ministers, to do next?

Our next breakfast is set for Wednesday, April 11th at 8:30 at Celebration Christian Fellowship where a recently tanned Jeff will likely be fixing some  mean biscuits and gravy.  Yum. 

Peace, Ken

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Church With?

Here's an article from Christianity Today that sounds a bit like South Tacoma

http://www.christianitytoday.com/thisisourcity/portland/neighborhoodrenewal.html?paging=off

The Rosewood neighborhood isn't really a neighborhood at all," says Mike Vander Veen, "but some of us are working to change that."
Mike, a community development advocate in Portland, is absolutely right. You won't find Rosewood on the city's map. It is a metropolitan marginalia bereft of the conventional signs of place: no edge, no center, nothing much to walk to. The area is seared as the jagged welding line between Portland's eastern edge and its suburb Gresham's western flank. A glance at the area's planning map reveals a disjointed jigsaw of zones, jurisdictions, and municipalities.
Boring as those words may be to most Christians, their consequences spring into 3D in Rosewood. Planners and developers are unable to build desirable destinations, neighbor kids go to different high schools, and a cop's jurisdiction depends on which part of which side of the street she is driving on. "We're in a borderland," reflects Mike.
This borderland has recently moved to the center of attention for an unusual coalition of police officers, AmeriCorp, and several small nearby churches. Each had been taking their own steps toward enlivening Rosewood. Now they're working together with residents to take responsibility for Rosewood's legacy and future.
A Confluence of Ministry Streams
Mike met Chief Deputy Jason Gates, unknown to one another but both active members at Parklane Reformed Church, a long-established church in Rosewood, as the coalition was gearing up.
Mike, a deacon at Parklane, had been facilitating many of the 140-person church's experiments in collaborative neighborhood engagement. "Our denomination was encouraging us to become a 'church-with,' " Mike recalls. "Which is to say, be a church that participates in our neighborhood, not only do kind things to it."
Meanwhile, Deputy Gates's drug response team and Rosewood's two precincts were at their wit's end over how to turn the tide against Rosewood's reputation as a hotspot of drugs, sex trafficking, and gun violence. They were ready to try something new.
Parklane staff invited Gates to teach the church and interested neighbors about meth's challenges, tragedies, and telltale signs. "I've done dozens of these presentations, but that's the only time it has ever been to a church," says Gates. It gave members a clearer sense of how to take a healing responsibility for Rosewood's future.
Parklane Pastor Vance Hays has lived in the parsonage for 23 years, and was initially unsure of what Mike and the deputy were up to. "I always knew that gospel proclamation and gospel works go together. But, you know, I'm conservative enough that I didn't want to be labeled with the social gospel moniker," Hays said over a cup of decaf. Hays felt clearer about where the church was heading after reading The Externally-Focused Church, Rich Rusaw and Eric Swanson's evangelical summons to collaborative neighborhood service. "That book … gave me permission," says Hays. "It made it theologically safe."
Momentum slowly gathered after Deputy Gates's Meth Day, a defining moment for Parklane. The deputy's stories illumined Rosewood's darker ambiguities vividly. He exposed them to challenges that Mike had been equipping them to see uniquely through the lens of a holistic gospel and an asset-based ministry.
"We're trying to be an island of sanity and care and community," says Hays, "in a neighborhood that doesn't have any sense of community." As it turns out, the island of Parklane was part of a wider ecclesial archipelago waking up to their responsibility among Rosewood's stakeholders.
A Serendipitous Convergence
Discovering the brutalized body of 37-year-old Amatha Mendive behind neighboring Freedom Foursquare Church in November 2008 was a wakeup call to local pastors. They began meeting regularly to support each other and to strategize about responding to the neighborhood's tumult. They knew something needed to be done—but what? And how? How could they begin to address the neighborhood's needs when so few of their members were actual parishioners—actual residents of Rosewood? And when most pastors are trained more in preaching, study, and counseling instead of community development, local economics, and gang violence, how could area churches wisely respond to Rosewood's challenges?
The way forward opened up when Rosewood's Gresham and Portland precincts reached out to apartment managers and a half-dozen area churches. The concerned cops knew they could only do so much as law enforcement, particularly among residents harboring distrust toward them. The police knew they needed Rosewood's stakeholders to help break the cycles of fear, addiction, and violence that smother it.
Resulting from this outreach has been the Rosewood Initiative, an ad-hoc nonprofit meant to catalyze neighborhood renewal. It functions as something like a neighborhood association for this borderland, a voice for those without one. And it has brought police, apartment managers, churches, and interested residents together to take hold of Rosewood's future.
Revitalization began with listening to neighbors and understanding what life on the ground is really like. "True, meaningful, and lasting social change will come from the people closest to the situation," says Jenny Glass, the AmeriCorp volunteer behind much of the Rosewood Initiative.
She and others discovered that the collapse of social capital in Rosewood is tied to the apartment complex's individualistic culture and architecture. "When you have an area full of strangers, then no one cares what happens," says Lt. John Scruggs. "If you have an area full of connected folks who know one another, people care, and then they call or take action."
In a neighborhood whose architecture resists redemption, stakeholders found that healing begins with relationship and community.
Can a Café Turn Around a Neighborhood?
Listening to the neighborhood revealed a strong hunch that relationship and community might be possible if there were somewhere for it to happen. They yearn for a so-called "third-place" to gather that is neither home nor work. Presently Rosewood's only options are strip clubs, dive bars, and a greasy-spoon diner.
To get community going, Jenny has helped the Rosewood Initiative spearhead opening the Rosewood Café. "The café is an important piece of what we are doing, a great strategy to get people working together," she says. "It'll be a neighborhood hub of positive activity that will start a ripple effect throughout the community—we hope!"
Hope, indeed. Money is scarce out here. Launching the Rosewood Café isn't like a multisite church opening a coffee-shop campus. Nor is it comparable to well-connected artisans curating a MacBook-lit, gourmet espresso mecca. This café will be done by Rosewood, for Rosewood. Neighbors and members of nearby churches are all pitching in: carpenters and plumbers volunteering the heavy lifting and others donating the furniture and computers for the space. Hays's congregants have been among those getting this cafe going, dabbling in Vander Veen's hope for becoming "church-with."
To be sure, church-operated cafes are en vogue among American church planters and international missional movements, but this is a different situation altogether. Even the most progressive and out-of-the-box cafe-churches have some ownership of the space. That Rosewood Café will be operated by volunteers and owned by the nonprofit strongly breaks script for most crema-keen churches, where church control of the café can always carry the hint of colonialism to neighborhood stakeholders. Here, the café's future will be beyond the terms of any one church, because it isn't here strictly for any one of the churches.
In this way the future may be uncertain - how long will tightly budgeted small churches be able to sustain enthusiasm for such a partnership? Neighborhood renewal is a long journey, much longer and slower than the short shelf-life of banner-and-campaign ministry drives. "It's a lot to ask of an established [religious] organization to participate in secular community-based action, even though it is very much in line with what many of them believe," says Jenny.
In so many ways, Rosewood's future is open, unsettled. Her renewal will not come from any single one of these efforts—mercy ministries, addiction education, the cafe, or more vigorous apartment management. It's hard to feel certain about seeing God's hand in it by focusing on one of them. But as one observes the steady confluence of these focused efforts, a wider subsidiary field of God's serendipitous sovereignty begins to emerge. It doesn't take a semiotician to read the signs: Rosewood's abrupt constellation of do-gooders and stakeholders reveals the slow workings of the city-healing Spirit of Christ.
More hopeful still, for those with eyes to see, I have a hunch there are Rosewood stories everywhere waiting to be told.
Brandon Rhodes is the husband of Candice and a doctoral student at George Fox Evangelical Seminary, where he is studying the impacts of automobility on North American churches. Brandon is applying this research as a Grassroots Storyteller and Field Guide with the Parish Collective. He has written for This Is Our City about the Springwater community.