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Take The St. Roch Market Survey

http://fluidsurveys.com/s/StRochMarket/

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This survey was created by St. Roch CDC (strochcdc.org), in partnership with the Faubourg St. Roch Improvement Association (www.fsria.org), to help get a fresh look at the St. Roch market and generate ideas for its use. We helped to put together a very similar survey a few years ago. We recognize that an online survey naturally leaves out a number of people who are not computer savvy, who don’t have access to the needed technology or just simply never see this survey. Feel free to pass this along to others and help a neighbor fill it out. With the $3.7 million dollar renovation nearing its end, the City of New Orleans is using the New Orleans Building Corporation (http://www.nola.gov/boards/new-orleans-building-corporation/) to find a tenant for the space. It’s a white box renovation that will still require significant build out for the new tenant(s). The tenant will be responsible for rent, utilities, build out, trash and maintenance and they are looking for someone with a proven track record. You can get a little more of the story at nola.curbed.com/tags/st-roch-market. Thank you for taking the time to fill out the survey. This survey will remain open until Monday November 18, 2013 at 5:00 pm.

http://fluidsurveys.com/s/StRochMarket/

Reroof Mr. Joe’s House

http://www.crowdrise.com/reroofmrjoesroof

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For the past 2 years St. Roch Community Church (www.StRochCC.org) and St. Roch CDC (StRochCDC.org) have been working to repair Mr. Joe’s Hurricane Katrina damaged house. Thousands of volunteer hours have gone into this project and hundreds have donated money for supplies. As we are nearing the end of the project we learned that some minor roof leaks are due to a major roof problem. Just after the storm Mr. Joe paid a roofer to reroof his house. However, not only did he not remove the bad roof, he improperly installed the new one. This means we need to tear it off and replace it.
The bad news is that the total cost is $12,000. The good news is that God provides. The solar panel company (PosiGen Green Grants, www.PosiGen.com) that recently installed panels on his roof has graciously offered to remove, store and replace the panels for free! This normally costs $2,500. Thank you very much PosiGen Green Grants! The biggest piece came in a phone call 6 weeks ago when Micah Repke of MR Roofing volunteered to provide his services for free. All that’s left is to raise $5,000 for the needed materials.

Mr. Joe is a godly man whose tenacity was formed in overcoming many roadblocks throughout his life. His faith, perseverance and determination is exemplarily. He is on a fixed income and is disabled but once we are able to restore the other two units in his 3-plex (he lives in the downstairs unit), he will be able to benefit from the rents and better be able to provide for his basic needs. This roof is a major roadblock but Mr. Joe is confident that God will provide. I’m hopeful that you will be a part of answering that prayer. Donate today at http://www.crowdrise.com/reroofmrjoesroof

In Faith,

Ben McLeish
Deacon, St. Roch Community Church
Executive Director, St. Roch CDC

 

Clearing Lots in St. Roch

All summer long volunteer teams will be helping to clear overgrown lots in St. Roch.  We are documenting the lots & working with the city to ensure that negligent property owners remain in blighted properties pipeline. Interested in volunteering or donating to keep the lawn equipement going?  Contact St. Roch CDC at  [email protected] or call 504.564.7777 or donate online.

Lot Clean up summer 2013

Champions/Mentors Needed

mentorChampion/Mentor Training
Sat., June 1, 2013, Noon-2 pm
St. Roch Community Church
1738 St. Roch Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70117

Lunch will be provided.

If you are 100% sure you want to serve as a Champion or still have questions, please come.

RSVP to [email protected], (504) 564-7777

The Jobs for Life classes will be held on Tuesdays & Thursdays starting June 11 & finishing on July 25, 2013.

Download a flyer here.

St. Roch CDC (community development corporation) has partnered with Jobs for Life to provide jobs training for our community. The JfL class consists of 16 sessions and teaches timeless biblical principles concerning work and the ways those principles are applied in the marketplace.  Through this training, men and women further develop character and become connected to a community of support to help them obtain far more than just a job.  They experience life, a life filled with confidence, coaching, learning, and faith. 

The class takes the students on a journey – a journey to discover who they are, their unique value, and the principles they need to overcome roadblocks in their lives.  Centered on the Bible, the course covers lessons learned from the lives of characters such as Joseph, David, and Ruth, the teachings of Jesus’ parables, and examples of real world heroes.  In addition, the class equips the students with core work readiness skills such as presenting their 60 second commercial, developing a vocational plan, building a resume, learning effective interviewing skills, and many others.

Along with the training, every JfL student has a JfL champion – a mentor or a group of mentors – who provides the student friendship and support both during the training and once the student is employed.  95% of finding and keeping a job is “who you know.”  Many JfL students do not have a “who you know network” that can advocate for them and provide support to help them overcome barriers in their lives keeping them from success.

With this training and support system,we are working to transform lives and provide a reliable, trustworthy workforce to meet the pressing employment needs of companies in their area.

Will you join us?

Support Young Entrepreneurs on Lemonade Day, May 4th

We are sponsoring 4 lemonade stands on May 4th for National Lemonade Day. Stands will be at the New Orleans Area Habitat for Humanity ReStore (2900 Elysian Fields Ave), Walgreens (1100 Elysian Fields Ave), Auto Zone (1531 Elysian Field Av) and 4th location TBD. Stop by from 11-3 for some fresh cold lemonade and to support tomorrow’s entrepreneurs.

Jobs for Life classes starting June 11, 2013

Jobs for Life Flyer

Rethinking Compassion Ministry: God’s Precedent, Paradigm and Prescriptions

The following article was written by Ben McLeish for the second issue of Exchange: The Journal of Mission and Markets.

———

Allow me to set a very common scenario: The church office phone rings and the person on the other line asks “Do y’all help pay peoples’ rent?” or “Do y’all pay water bills?” to which I always say no.  Others stop by the office seeking similar assistance.  Inviting them into my office, I work through a questionnaire that quickly paints a picture of brokenness.

In their book When Helping Hurts: How To Alleviate Poverty Without Hurting The Poor And Yourself, Corbett and Fikkert describe poverty as a broken relationship between God, self, others, and the rest of creation which has negative effects on how one navigates social, religious, political, and economic systems. poverty model imageWith each person who is asking something of us or from us, this definition of poverty is clearly at work. However, the truth be told, all we really have to do is look in the mirror, to see this paradigm of poverty.  We are all broken at one level or another.  In light of this, God, through His Word and Son, has provided a precedent, paradigm and prescription for us, His Church, to enter into the work He is doing in redeeming and restoring all things; a work that ultimately produces joy.

Biblical Precedent

The foundation of a changed life is coming to faith in Christ.  After all, it is He who is at work reconciling all things to Himself (Colossians 1:19). However, we see all throughout redemptive history God’s care and concern not just for the spiritual but the physical as well.  The law is full of commands to live a holy life and part of that is to care for the orphan, widow, fatherless, materially poor and stranger.  When describing the use of righteousness in the Proverbs, Old Testament Scholar Bruce Waltke says “The wicked disadvantage others to advantage themselves, but the righteous disadvantage themselves to advantage others.” This truth is ultimately lived out in the life, ministry, death and resurrection of Christ Jesus.  As stated in 2 Corinthians 8:9, “For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that you by his poverty might become rich.”  The Bible is full of examples, accounts and commands about loving God and our neighbor.

As a people who have undeservedly received the riches of Christ such as eternal life, mercy and grace, this should move us to a life of compassion and mercy towards others, particularly the materially poor.   In a recent sermon, New York pastor, Tim Keller said,

A deep social conscious and a life poured out in deeds of service to others, and especially the poor, is the inevitable sign of real faith and real connection with God.  If you think, God says, that you have a real connections with me, you have humbled yourself and you have found me and yet you don’t care about the poor then you haven’t. This is a real index of your heart. Justice is the grand symptom of real faith. It’s the great symptom of a real relationship with God. And it will be there, maybe slowly, but it will develop. But if it never develops then you really don’t have the relationship with God that you think you have…Do you understand that this is at the heart of Biblical faith?

Why was Sodom judged? We often point to their lewd behavior but that only tells part of the story. In Ezekiel 16:49 the prophet proclaims “Behold, this was the guilt of your sister Sodom: she and her daughters had pride, excess of food, and prosperous ease, but did not aid the poor and needy.” This could easily be attributed to the American Church and those who fill the pews. The Church & her people are guilty of the same sin of Sodom, but guilt alone will not solve the problem. It will not move the materially non-poor from apathy to action for very long. A lack of appreciation along with no quick fixes will fast turn guilt into bitterness and resentment toward the materially poor making things just feel more hopeless for all who are involved. As Corbett and Fikkert comment, this only reinforces the God complex in the materially non-poor and the marred identity of the materially poor.

Paradigm

However, if Christ is redeeming all things, this means work too. When we look to the scriptures the very first thing we read about is God working: “In the beginning God created…”  Soon after, God assigns Adam to work caring for His creation as a botanist, agriculturalist and zoologist. All of this happens before the Fall ever occurs.  So in our original, pre-Fall condition work was good and a part of the original design to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever. When sin entered, it was not just our relationship with God and each other that broke, but even work:

Cursed is the ground because of you; in pain you shall eat of it all the days of  your life; thorns and thistles it shall bring forth for you; and you shall eat the plants of the field. By the sweat of your face you shall eat bread, till you return to the ground, for out of it you were taken; for you are dust, and to dust you shall return. Genesis 3:17b-19.

The effects of the fall were all inclusive and utterly devastating so we find ourselves in Romans 8:22 with “the whole creation…groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time.”

It is also interesting to note John the Baptist’s commissioning.  We often associate him with a call to repentance, but Luke tells us that he was also called to “turn the hearts of the fathers to the children.” This is quoted from Malachi 4:6 where it reads “And he will turn the hearts of fathers to their children and the hearts of children to their fathers, lest I come and strike the land with a decree of utter destruction.” The lack of fathers whose hearts are turned to their child is alarming in my community.  Many children have not even met their dads.  It can often seem like my neighborhood has been struck “with a decree of utter destruction” as a result.  As a father of three young children, it is unfathomable to me for my heart not to be turned towards my children.  However, for a myriad of reasons this seems not to be the case in my community. Is it because these fathers really do not care about their progeny?  I have never met such an individual.  Instead I witness an overwhelming sense of shame that is due in part to being unemployed or underemployed and all the effects of powerlessness, hopelessness, self-loathing, embarrassment, rejection, desperation and insignificance that follow and often lead to negative behaviors.  This leaves the two of the greatest repellents to poverty, work and intact families, busted.

Dr. Carl Ellis comments that for discipleship efforts among at-risk, minority populations, there is a pronounced need for the church to address dignity, identity and significance if we are to have any hope of seeing conversions, reversing generational poverty and “turning the hearts of fathers to their children.” Yet most churches and Christian non-profits rarely see this central to Gospel ministry.

Prescription One: Penicillin for Paternalism

We must all start with a look in the mirror.  As practitioners, pastors, church members or  middle or upper class laity, we easily run the risk of thinking of ourselves more highly than we ought. We would do good to take heed of the apostle Paul’s admonition to the Church at Philippi,

Therefore if you have any encouragement from being united with Christ, if any comfort from his love, if any common sharing in the Spirit, if any tenderness and compassion, then make my joy complete by being like-minded, having the same love, being one in spirit and of one mind. Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests of the others. Philippians 2:1-4

Paternalism is deadly to the work among the materially poor and an anti-apologetic to the Gospel.  It only perpetuates the God complex in us and reinforces the marred identity of the materially poor. The work of sifting through our paternalism, racism or classism in our own stories is tedious and is often worked out over time but accelerated when we enter into authentic friendships with people different from us, particularly the materially poor, and allow them to graciously point out our deficits.  Proverbs 27:6 declares, “Faithful are the wounds of a friend; profuse are the kisses of an enemy.”

Prescription Two: A Dose of Dignity

Many Christian community development practitioners, such as Bob Lupton (author of Toxic Charity), have brought light to the fact that many of our models of compassion or mercy are broken, often leaving people inappropriately dependent on our programs to survive and stripping them of any remaining dignity.  The reality, though, is that handouts are much easier than entering into authentic relationships with the materially poor; relationships that can often by marked by long-suffering, let down and hopelessness though certainly joy, generosity, courage, and faith too.

Jobs for Life (JFL), describes the common scenario for most churches in their promotional video. They describe how churches often lead with food, housing and shelter when caring for the materially poor and rarely include work in their paradigm of assistance.  JFL offers a 8 week, 16 class curriculum to help equip people to enter into or improve their position in the marketplace.  With topics including conflict resolution, resume writing, skills assessment, interview skills and more, this program equips participants for success in the workforce.  The linchpin, though, is the mentor component.  JFL uses mentors, known as champions, to serve as a coach, encourager, reference and a network for participants.

A similar approach is taken with the Chalmers Institute’s Faith and Finances curriculum and Launch Chattanooga’s small business development curriculum.  With both programs, the core subject matter is taught through a biblically based curriculum and participants are matched with mentors to walk alongside them.  Together, these three programs offer the Church excellent tools to affirm the dignity, identity and significance of the materially poor while encouraging mentoring relationships that are marked by mutual indebtedness.

These are just a sample of best practices that are being implemented to provide a dignified solution to help alleviate and irradiate poverty. Others have launched businesses or hired at-risk teens or ex-offenders. The point is the old methods of clothes closets, Thanksgiving turkey giveaways, food pantries and Christmas toy giveaways are lacking, and often hurting those they intended to help.  New models of development must be implemented.

Joy

In Isaiah 58 the Lord instructs Israel,

Is not this the fast that I choose:  to loose the bonds of wickedness, to undo the straps of the yoke, to let the oppressed go free, and to break every yoke? Is it not to share your bread with the hungry and bring the homeless poor into your house; when you see the naked, to cover him.

Listen, though, to the promises God offers if we partake in such a fast:

  • your light shall break forth like the dawn
  • your healing shall spring up speedily
  • your righteousness shall go before you
  • the glory of the Lord shall be your rear guard
  • you shall call, and the Lord will answer
  • you shall cry, and he will say, ‘Here I am.’
  • your light shall rise in the darkness
  • your gloom will be as the noonday
  • the Lord will guide you continually
  • He will satisfy your desire in scorched places and make your bones strong;
  • you shall be like a watered garden, like a spring of water, whose waters do not fail.

I urge you to not settle for a mediocre, lukewarm, Christian life. Do not internalize the Christian radio station mentality of “safe for the whole family.” There is no joy to be found there. C.S. Lewis remarked,

If we consider the unblushing promises of reward and the staggering nature of the rewards promised in the Gospels, it would seem that Our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered to us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.

There is also no Biblical mandate for our good works, which God has prepared for us, to be efficient, clean, tidy and safe. The Psalmist declares that a “Father of the fatherless and protector of widows is God in his holy habitation.” Together let us find ourselves in the margins, the place empire has abandoned, the place of God’s holy habitation.

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