Good Works
serves as an agent of God's grace to the poor and homeless. We
are one agent. One fallible, inadequate and broken agent whom God
has decided to use for his purpose. We are not the only agent. We
can not be effective in our work unless God's other agents do
their work. We can only do our part. Because we are so often at
the point of our limitations, I try to encourage the staff to
remember that we are not the savior. Jesus is the savior. We are
his body. In John 20:24-28 Thomas came to the other disciples
after the resurrection of Christ and said Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put
my finger where the nails were and put my hands into his side, I
will not believe.
As the body of
Christ, we are the ones whom God has given the grace for the
'Thomases' of this world to place their hands in our side and
believe. Will you allow those who doubt to test you as Thomas
tested Jesus? Will you permit them to put their finger and hands
into the side of the body of Christ in your community? In doing
so, what will they find? Will they feel the nail prints and the
wound of Jesus? Is there enough there for them to stop doubting
and believe? In touching you, will they have faith to trust HIM?
May I
suggest that the real maturity of a local church is reflected in
how the poor are treated in a given city. Are you part of a local
congregation which responds to the needs of the poor in your
community? Then let me suggest that the most practical response
the church can make to the changes in `welfare as we knew it' is
to create jobs for the poor. I suggest that we should direct some
of the money in our mission budget towards the creation of jobs.
Better yet, lets each seek to create one job for one poor person
and not only employ them but share our lives with them in the
process. Is it possible that the highest and most successful
efforts of any given church community are revealed in how we
respond to (or prepare to respond to) the needs of those whom
Jesus called the harassed and helpless? And if the
poor have good quality care from people who love and serve them
and who demonstrate the gospel by their lives, this reflects the
maturity of the church. But what if the poor are neglected,
excluded, rejected and are constantly crying out in need? This
too reflects the maturity of the church.
Isn't it time
we considered what we are doing to assist the poor in our
community? In terms of our strategy, our ministry has two
purposes 1) to love our neighbors who are the harassed and
helpless by laying down our lives and 2) to provide an avenue
though which others can love their neighbors. Therefore, we
direct a great deal of our time and energy towards organizing
those who want to help but don't know where to start. May I
suggest that we must serve in order to grow, that this service IS
one form of worship. Furthermore, if you are not serving, you are
not worshipping and therefore, you are not growing. As much as
the poor and homeless need our help, equally so, we need to help
them.
Like a city whose walls are broken down is a man who lacks self control. (Proverbs 25:28)
Our annual
FAST FROM SHELTER revealed again the hunger in many people lives
to understand God's heart for the poor. Our theme, taken from
Isaiah 58, reveals that true fasting begins when we share our
food with the hungry and provide the poor wanderer with shelter.
The result of a true fast is that God makes us into a people who
will `rebuild the ancient ruins.' We understand this to mean not
only the ruins of a society, but also the ruins of people's
lives. You will be called Repairer of
Broken Walls, Restorer of Streets with Dwellings
(Isaiah 58:12). This is our vision: to help those whom Jesus
calls the `harassed and helpless' rebuild the walls of self
control and discipline in their lives which have caved in. So
much of our ministry with the homeless is directed towards
helping them to rebuild a new identity seeing themselves made in
the image of God to establish healthy habits which result in the
confidence to rebuild their education, employment and
relationship base.
DEVELOPING A THEOLOGY OF LOVE
We are
focused these days on training others to love. Development,
development, development- my heart in these days is directed
towards training and equipping our staff and volunteers to
riskingly touch the lives of those whom God sends to Good Works,
to touch them with love, God's. The emergency shelter, the
transitional house and our Friday Night outreach opportunities
serve as avenues through which we, together with others, can
learn how to love. When I consider what is ultimately important
in this life, I put 'learning how to love' as my top goal. The
more I learn, the more I learn how much I need to learn.
WHO. NOT WHAT
I always
present our ministry to others as something that emerges from who
we are. What we do emerges from who we are. This being the case,
who are we? LIVING STONES being built into a spiritual house to
offer up holy sacrifices acceptable to God (I Peter 2:5). I
propose that we can not fully understand our own identity apart
from first understanding something of WHO God is. Said another
way, we can not fully love or understand ourselves or our
neighbor unless we first grasp something of the Love from the ONE
who made us. We can love only because we are loved. We can share
only because HE shared. We can sacrifice ONLY because He
sacrificed. Shall I go on? What we are to others is ultimately an
reflection of what (or who) we worship. And if you worship
"things", what you are is a reflection of the
"things" you worship. If you worship the ONE who gave
himself in sacrificial love for your sins, this is reflected in
what you do. What we do them emerges from who we are.
HOSPITALITY
Don't forget to entertain strangers, for by doing so, some have entertained angels without knowing it. (Hebrews 13:2)
There are
days that the Lord sends people to Good Works and I respond,
Lord, why have you sent them to us, I can not help
them. I often sense God answering me I know, I have
sent them to help you. If I listen carefully to the
voice of the voiceless, the powerless (those on the margins of
society) I can often hear the voice of God. I once heard someone
say the front door of your home is the side door of the
church. At Good Works, we offer hospitality to strangers
and in doing so, we mystically welcome Jesus further into our
lives. Could there be a connection between opening our lives and
homes to strangers and drawing near to God? Test me.
WORSHIP
In John 4,
Jesus answers for us the question of where worship should take
place. He teaches us that worship is not locational but
spiritual. Then He tells us that the Father seeks worshippers who
will worship Him in Spirit and in truth. May I suggest that
worship (which is reflected in both adoration and service) is the
doorway through which we can see the multitudes with compassion.
It is through worshipbeing naked before God, seeing
ourselves as we really are and being reminded of his
gracethat we gain the hope of transmitting his love to
others. If I fail to enter ministry with the harassed and
helpless through the door of worship, I will be destined to see
the poor from a "human" point of view. When I find
myself cornered into a human or worldly point of view of the poor
(James 1:26), I am powerless to truly love them with more than my
own strength.
May I suggest
that this may be the real problem with welfare as we knew it? For
too long the body of Christ has failed to enter into the
suffering of those who are in the pain of separation between
themselves and Christ. But through the door of worship, we are
lifted up to a place where we can see those beaten up on the side
of life's roads with the eyes of Jesus, with compassion. In
seeing with compassion, we learn to act out of love rather than
control. Here lies the secret of the Holy Spirit: the gifts of
the Spirit are not just for the worship place but are also for
the market place. Through worship (both corporate and private),
the gifts of the Spirit are unleashed and we are empowered to
bind up the broken hearted. In the end, ALL that we
do for those who come to Good Works, ALL that we do...is an act
of worship.
LOVE AS PAIN
One of the
things we do daily is attempt to stop the destructive cycles in
the lives of those whom God sends to Good Works. Our daily agenda
involves prayer and discussion about the needs and issues of
those staying with us. From drug abuse to the addiction of sick
relationships we seek God's wisdom about the timing of placing
our foot in to the revolving door of someone's life. The first
reaction we experience when we stop the cycle is their anger.
Only yesterday we could not even get their attention. Now, they
are very angry at us and have begun to make accusations and even
threats. Have you tried to help someone caught in a destructive
cycle who is very angry and who implies YOU are the reason for
their intense feeling? Do you let their expression of anger
smoke-screen you into an excuse to stop reaching out? I have. It
is here that I understood that this kind of ministry, loving
enough to stop the cycle of destruction MUST be done in
community. It is in community that we can support one another in
our efforts at loving with balance. Without the body of Christ I
lose perspective and I am unable to carry on with God's love.
With my brothers and sisters I have courage to keep loving in the
face of my own personal discomfort and insecurity. My co-laborers
encourage me when I have lost perspective. When I choose to love
someone who has hurt me even though I experienced the pain of
their anger, I choose to enter the suffering of Christ. When you
choose to love enough to stop the cycle and thus endure their
reaction of anger, accusation and even threats, you enter the
place where Jesus reveals not only the power of his resurrection
but also the fellowship of his suffering. Enter the Kingdom of
God.
REVELATION
I find it
rather shocking that Jesus chose to directly reveal himself to a
poor, outcast (Samaritan), female who was well known for her
social and sexual sins. In fact He is so direct with this woman
near the end of their conversation at Jacob's well that I have
not found anything quite like this anywhere among his disciples
or others interested followers. At one point in John 4:1-42, this
poor women stated that when Messiah comes, he will reveal
everything. Jesus responded abruptly: I
who speak to you am HE. Have you considered that God
reveals himself to the outcasts of our community in ways he does
not reveal himself to the rest of us? The evidence in John 4:26
is quite a revelation.
THANKSGIVING
As we enter
the season of thanksgiving, let me encourage you to discover how
good our loving father has been to you through the door of
gratitude. I truly believe we can not fully understand how good
God is except though the daily discipline of giving thanks! As
you realize how enriched your life has become, I want to
encourage you to share something with the poor. Do it as an
offering of worship in order that God might be honored and
glorified. We pledge to be good stewards of your gifts to the
poor. Thanks in advance for your kindness to Good Works, Inc., A
COMMUNITY of HOPE.
p.s. Looking for a good gift for the homeless? Send us some pre-paid phone cards!
JESUS' ENCOUNTER WITH AN OUTCAST
(Read John 4:1-42 before your read this article)
Our story
begins with Jesus, physically tired from his journey and thirsty
stopping in a small village where the people were considered
"outcasts" by the dominant Jewish culture. There, He
crosses the line several times and speaks to a woman who was a
Samaritan and quite a well known sinner. He approaches her and
asks her for a drink. Jesus uses his physical need, indeed a
physical need as an entry point to begin a relationship with a
person vastly different from him. The fact that He speaks to a
woman (who in that culture is an outcast sinner) is a wonderful
illustration of how far God has gone to reach those who have been
despised and rejected by most people.
Her response
to Jesus is simply to dissuade him through antagonism. Her reply
is first an attempt to clarify that she is socially and
religiously different from him and that it is not culturally
acceptable for her to help him. But God is not dissuaded by the
antagonism of those who are on the margins of society and Jesus
persists. He tells her that if she really knew WHO was speaking
to her and what the gift of God really was, she would ask him for
a drink. I really believe that this is true: When people know who
He really is, they will ask him to give them that which will
satisfied their deepest longings. Many times, these people don't
ask HIM because they don't yet know WHO He is. The gospel then
becomes declaring and demonstrating WHO Jesus is.
She attempts
to dissuade him a second time and states that the well is deep
and he has brought nothing to get water with. Many times, persons
who have experienced oppression either personally or as a social
group react with anger towards those trying to help them. I
suspect that something emotional was happening in her which
caused the next put-off. She asks what she thinks is a rhetorical
question about Jesus being greater than Jacob who gave the well
to her people. Notice what happens next: Jesus doesn't answer her
question about being greater than Jacob or bite on her
antagonism. In contrast to how he answered the Pharisees when
they asked if he was greater than Abraham, He side-steps her
question and lays down his right to answer her as the God who
made both Jacob and the well. He chooses not to use position or
power to reach this woman. Instead, he returns her to the matter
of living water and tells her that the water He gives will cause
her to never thirst again. She responds as you might expect an
unspiritual (natural) person would and displays curiosity and
spiritual ignorance in her statement "give me this water so
that I won't be thirsty and need to come here to draw
water."
Now, Jesus
appears to put some distance of time between the offering and
giving of his by asking her to call her husband. This is
illustrative of God's way of testing us for our own good so that
when we ask to receive HIS gift, we both understand and
appreciate the sacred nature of what we are being offered. She
responds with a statement about "not having a husband"
and Jesus affirms her for telling him the truth as she in her
alienated and rejected state defines it. Later, He will use
"truth" as a lesson about worship. We too must learn to
affirm people for their efforts at telling the truth as they see
it.
Jesus
acceptance of her at this point was critical. He didn't minimize
her sin nor did He imply she was deceiving him. His response to
this 'outcast' was powerful enough for her to feel uncomfortable
enough to change the subject. What interests me is that Jesus
didn't pursue the matters of her personal/private sins but
instead used whatever subject she wanted to discuss as a vehicle
to convey truth. She turns the subject to the a historical debate
between the Jews and Samaritans about the proper location for
worship and He continues to impact her on her terms of
conversation. Here Jesus introduces the truth that worship is no
longer location but spiritual. He identifies the one to be
worshipped as "Father" in a culture where fathers were
highly respected. He links worship to truth and implies that God
is seeking those who come to him with a hunger for truth. I
suspect he is affirming her for the steps she has already taken.
Near the end
of their visit, she attempts to bring closure to his penetrating
words about worship by saying something about her hope (and her
peoples' hope) for the coming of the Messiah. Jesus then chooses
this poor, outcast, well known sinner to declare what He very
rarely told the ruling class or his disciples : "I who speak to you, am He." I am
struck here by WHO God chooses to reveal himself to. Here, we see
a marvelous illustration of God's love for the "least of
these."
Later in the
story the disciples return and find the fact that Jesus crossed
the cultural and religious lines (talking to a woman) very
disturbing. The woman, impacted by Jesus, leaves her jug (a
statement she will be back) and returns to the city to tell
others how impacted she was by Jesus and how she herself is
asking the question "Could he be the Messiah?" The
woman brings her Samaritan friends back to the Jacob's well and
they persuade Jesus to stay two days with them. At the end of two
days, they conclude that Jesus is the Savior of the world (vs
42). I find it very powerful that Jesus invests himself in those
whom the dominant Jewish culture thought of as untouchable and
defiled. Not only does he cross the lines but also breaks the
barriers with this woman. In crossing those lines, Jesus risks
totally discrediting himself in the eyes of the Jews by spending
two days with the Samaritan people who would later say "we
not only believe because of the woman's testimony but now we know
you are the savior of the world." IN THE END, this story
illustrates how great a love that Father has bestowed upon those
who stand outside of mainstream society. Jesus illustrates
through his actions who far the Creator of the world is willing
to go in order to touch those who are despised by the dominant
culture. Does he ask less of us?
"...and he said to them, follow me."
And they
left their nets and followed him. I wonder when we decided to
follow him whether we considered that Jesus asks us to lay down
and give him our social lives. I wonder whether how much we truly
impact the poor apart from laying down our social
livesthose parts of lives which we "reserve" for
ourselves. I wonder.
Let me
share that I believe JOY is the mark of Gods presence in our
lives. I have been asking the Lord to help me not be determined
by my emotions or my circumstances. I am not saying I should not
listen or learn from them, only that I should not be determined
by them. As we continue to work daily with those who demand more
than we can humanly give, join with us in asking God to give his
more grace so that we can learn from our emotions and
circumstances but not be determined by them. Instead, we want to
be determined by righteousness, peace and the JOY which comes
from the Holy Spirit. Thy Kingdom come on earth through the
broken vessels (or as some have said 'cracked pots' ) who serve
here.
In Jesus name.
Keith Wasserman