Wednesday

Atlanta's Public Housing


Atlanta has played a leading role in the changes nationwide in the public housing arena. Atlanta was the first city to tear down all of its public housing and replace it with mixed income housing. There has been a lot of debate about how effective these changes have been. Here is a link to an interesting article on Atlanta's Housing Authority, and the ways they are hoping to transform the culture of public housing in Atlanta. http://city-journal.org/2010/20_4_atlanta-public-housing.html.
~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

Shared Economics

Joyce Hollyday comments: “I have tried, in this stage of my life as in every other, to ask this one question: What does being faithful to Jesus and the demands of the Gospel require of me in this moment? Of all the aspects of life this question entails, none is more confusing than my relationship with money."

I asked the Dwellers to reflect on how money has played a role in the Dwell community. Our Dwell houses share a common grocery budget and many are on a very tight personal budget. Shared economics, especially when scarcity is a concern, brings challenges and opportunities to life in community. Below is a reflection by Sonia, one of our Capitol View community members.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

"Living in community this year has forced me to be aware of nearly every cent I spend and I am encouraged to save money via avenues I have never ventured on before living in this year's Dwell Community. I moved into the Capitol View Dwell Community to a house with all the fixings! I brought my bedding and clothes, but everything else here is for me to use during the year. Having the house furnished relieved me from the burden of finding and purchasing furniture and cookware.


Currently, the six of us each contribute a monthly amount of $80 into the “money pot” for our food budget. Before community living, I remember paying nearly $80 a week to feed myself when I lived alone in an apartment! We spend $120 dollars per week which mainly goes to prepare the dinners that we cook for each other. Sometimes we have gone over the $120 limit in a week of shopping, but this week, for instance, we were $30 below the limit giving us extra money to splurge on ice cream!


Funds toward house maintenance is another area we address in the community. Today, for instance, the HVAC maintenance came and noticed that our filters needed to be changed. So, at our Dwell night tonight, I will propose that we purchase new air filters. We, as a community, will then agree upon where the money will come from—either our food budget, our retreat money, or straight out of our pockets as an extra financial contribution to the house. So far, during this Dwell year, we have decided to use our food budget to purchase cleaning supplies and toilet paper.


We plan to go on three retreats during the Dwell year and there is a separate budget that is alloted to us for such expenses. However, by planning to be very cost efficient on the retreats, we have had enough money to get chickens—yes urban chickens! We are building a chicken coop in our back yard and will hopefully see fresh eggs by April. Planning to purchase chickens was a extensive process, but by the time we have eggs, we will not only be able to self-sustain ourselves, but also provide eggs to our friends and neighbors (and maybe even for a small fee, so that we can make some money for the Dwell Community).


When it comes to expenses, living in the community is sometimes no different than living in an apartment. Our utilities, trash pick-up, house alarm system, and extermination expenses are all taken care of by DOOR. We all pay monthly rent, but the sources and amounts of income do vary from community dweller to community dweller.


We always use the discount card at the grocery store. We tend to steer away from the brand name products and look for the discounted food items on the “manager's special”shelf—things I rarely did when I lived alone and bought food for myself. Within the community, I have not felt hindered to stay faithful to the gospel with the issue of money. And, when others in my community need financial assistance, we as a community agree to make sure that everyone is comfortable and not financially suffering. Personally, living in a community with a shared expenses has opened my eyes more fully to the understanding of hospitality and sharing. "

~Sonya, Dwell community member in Capitol View house

The Chickens are coming...

The chickens are coming to the Capitol View Dwell house. This week 26 chickens will arrive by the United States Postal Service to begin their new life in intentional Christian community. The Capitol View Dwellers have been busy preparing a new room for the chickens. It is a spacious coop in the backyard, with plenty of open space for the chickens to frolic. The yard is a perfect place for the new members of the community. It is filled with small rocks and is rather shaded, so no pesky grass or vegetables can grow in that area. It is just wide open play space for the chicks. These chickens are not just for show; they are contributing members of the household. They will provide local, sustainably produced eggs for the house to eat and even some extra to sell or give away to neighbors. They will provide organic fertilizer for the community garden plots the house maintains, further allowing the members who are on a tight budget to stretch their food budgets by growing their own vegetables. We are so excited to welcome these new residents of our Dwell community and look forward to the learning opportunities they will provide. Welcome Chickens…we’re so glad you’re part of the community.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

Kickball!



This past weekend, the Dwell houses hosted a Kickball game in Grant Park. Beautiful weather, friends, and competition made for a fun filled day.

Friday

DOOR Atlanta is featured in the magazine "The Mennonite"

Community connection is key to service
By Melanie Hess

When Joel and Leslie Gerber said they were thinking about a service term, they got some funny looks. They weren’t typical service workers; they were a young married couple with a child and full-time jobs in rural Kansas—not young adults fresh out of college or retirees with time on their hands.

But the strange looks were few and far between compared to the outpouring of community support for their plan. When the Gerbers decided to serve with Dwell, a joint program of Mennonite Mission Network and Presbyterian Church USA, their congregation, Pleasant View Mennonite Church, was full of encouragement.

“Some fellow church members have been critical in encouraging me in this direction and I would not [have applied] if it wasn't for them,” said Joel Gerber.

Dwell is a part of DOOR, a program that began in Denver and came out of a desire to “see the face of God in the city” by helping people to see how God is at work in urban areas around the country.

There are two ways to enter the Dwell program: one is to come to the city for a year or two of service and life in community. But Dwell also encourages local young adults, who often have more traditional jobs, to come live with the service workers in intentional Christian community as “tentmakers” in their own backyards. Residents of Atlanta, Chicago, Denver, Hollywood, Miami and San Antonio have the opportunity to live in community through Dwell.

Coming to the city
Joel and Leslie Gerber and their 11-month-old daughter, Cora, moved into Dwell’s Capitol View house and began their term of service in early September.

Joel and Leslie were both teachers in Harper, Kan., but the desire for a change prompted Joel to think seriously about service, something he’d been considering for years. He convinced Leslie to apply to international and U.S. service programs, even as they looked for other job opportunities. In the end, the fact that they had a small daughter and a second child on the way narrowed their possibilities considerably. But the Capitol View house in Atlanta had room for a family.

“It was a good time for us—we had already missed our opportunity to do service straight out of college, but it was something that Joel had always wanted to do,” said Leslie. “We said ‘Cora’s not in school yet, so let’s take this opportunity to go now before we need to stay in one place.’ ”

The community made a difference for the Gerbers—it was their church family who helped make service seem like a real possibility.

“A lot of people from our church have done service for many, many years, most of Joel’s family has done service, and there were three others my age who are doing international or U.S. service for multiple years. It’s just something that they do,” said Leslie. “When we mentioned making a job change, people came to us and said ‘why don’t you think about doing service.’ I think that’s maybe what put the bug in our ear to apply. There are so many people that have done it and have had great experiences.”

The Gerbers continue to get support from the members of Pleasant View—in the form of encouraging emails and financial gifts, since Dwell program members raise part of their own support.

As for their service placements, Leslie works for Neighbors’ Abbey, a church in their neighborhood, where she does administrative work and works with a mentoring program at a local middle school. She helps with a life skills class for middle school girls and also helps match them with mentors from their own community.

Joel works at homeless men’s shelter and as a “gardener in residence” at a charter school. His farming background allows him to share his knowledge about growing food and composting with children who haven’t had experience with agriculture. Recently he spent an afternoon pulling weeds with kindergarten-age boys.

Their new community living situation is a change for the Gerbers, who’ve spent the past three years living in a farmhouse in “the middle of nowhere.” But the practical aspects of their community living—not having to cook every night, not having an entire house to clean, and readily available baby-sitters—are a benefit, said Leslie.

They’re also taking advantage of life in the city, an adjustment that hasn’t been as difficult as they expected. “Living right in the middle of the neighborhood is a great way to meet people,” said Leslie. And being within walking distance of some of Atlanta’s many parks helps them find inexpensive and fun things to do with their daughter.

Finding life in community
Tommy Flynn represents the other way to serve through Dwell. He is a long-term resident of Atlanta and a nurse who has lived in the Grant Park house for the past two years.

“The local young adults are the anchors,” aid Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta’s city director. “They’re here for multiple years and they’re able to really build relationships and provide consistency.”

After a few years in more formal church ministry, Flynn was looking for a way to live his faith in a different way. He was interested in the community and connection that Dwell could provide.

“I really felt a lack of fulfillment in the strict Christian ‘systems’ we have offered to us from the church,” said Flynn. “There are small groups, Sunday school, and service opportunities, but barring certain extremes like long-term mission, you don’t really get many opportunities to live your faith day in and day out and struggle through some of the really hard questions that come along with it.”

For Dwell house members in Atlanta, living together intentionally is an important part of their spiritual and intellectual growth.

“We meet every week for dinner and discussion, whatever falls on that night,” Flynn explained. “We also have nights for celebrating things like Advent, exploring different Christian practices and learning about social issues like gentrification, racism, the sex trade, poverty, hunger and our response to them.”

When Flynn first joined the house in 2008, community questions revolved around chores and logistics—the basics of setting up a household. As time went on, Flynn says, they had to deal with more intense conflicts and questions.

“Conflict is one of the key elements of living in community—it’s easy to avoid unless you’re actually living together,” said Flynn. “You either stop talking to each other or deal with it somehow. It’s pushed everyone in the community to work with others in love and understand others better.”

Every year there are new Dwell participants. “Turnover every year changes the feel of the house, because everyone brings their own contribution, personality and vision,” said Flynn. “Every year we take a different direction and get new energy.”

The community also serves as support as members go out to their jobs or service placements, giving encouragement and strengthening each other.

“The communities serve as families, even though they’re not biologically related,” said Thomas. “It’s amazing to see just how supportive they are of one another and how they can be brothers and sisters in Christ to one another.”

In Atlanta, those who come for a service term are placed through connections with the Presbyterian Church, but there’s also a strong connection with Atlanta Mennonite Fellowship, who owns the Dwell house in Grant Park. Dwell members were living in the Grant Park house with others when the house was known simply as AMF’s hospitality house. When AMF began to revisit the mission of the house, they saw that the Dwell vision fit their hopes for what the house would be, said Thomas, and Dwell and AMF decided to partner together.

“We’re part of the ministry that AMF has in the city, through their house,” Thomas said. “So we like for the church to be involved in things that happen in the house—game nights and music nights—informal connections that we try to keep open.” In addition to inviting AMF members to be a part of their hospitality nights, some of the Dwellers go work on the farm connected with the church.

Flynn said the lessons he’s learned from living in community are going to remain with him for the rest of his life: communication skills, leadership, and care for others.

“I’m going to take with me a more profound ability to love more people, perhaps all people, because we’re put in this house together—we don’t pick each other,” he said. “God picks us and we just end up together. We have to learn how to love people we don’t normally have to relate to.”

Monday


Another reflection on the topic of "Neighboring" by Megan Warley, a member of our Grant Park house.



"At our house retreat last weekend, my housemates and I discussed our status as neighbors in Grant Park. We came to the realization that, besides the occasional wave or small talk with our neighbors immediately to the left and the right, we have minimal relationships with our Grant Park community. It is so easy amidst our hectic schedules to stay focused on our relationships with our families, friends, churches, and coworkers, and forget about the people who live only a few feet away from us.



We decided at our retreat this weekend that we wanted to be intentional about building relationships with our neighbors- to show them that we value their presence in our neighborhood and in our lives. As my housemates and I began to discuss the concept of being better neighbors, we noticed several ways in which we could be doing a better job. Some ideas included inviting our neighbors over for meals, making our front yard more aesthetically appealing, and hosting events like pumpkin carving for our neighbors with children. We left the retreat with plans to be more intentional about building relationships with our neighbors.



Ironically enough, when we returned to our house after the retreat, we were greeted with a card and a sack of apples from our next door neighbors. They had gone apple picking that weekend and wanted to share with us the “fruits” of their labor. It was such a simple gesture, but we were all touched by our neighbors’ thoughtfulness. And while we hope to continue and reciprocate such kind gestures, we hope to share so much more than kind gestures. 1 Thessalonians 2:8 comes to mind as I consider what it means to love your neighbor (or anyone for that matter).



"We loved you so much that we were delighted to share with you not only the gospel of God but our lives as well, because you had become so dear to us."


~Megan, Grant Park Dwell Member

Friday

It can be hard to be a neighbor in a neighborhood like this


I asked two of our Dwell participants to reflect on the question "How do we be a good Neighbor?" Steve Andrews, who is a second year Dweller, and a chaplain at Grady Hospital, wrote this piece on his time in the Capitol View Neighborhood. To learn more about our Dwell program, please feel free to contact me at jannan@doornetwork.org.


~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director


"I have lived in the Dwell house in the Capitol View neighborhood for a year and a four months. A little over a year ago, I met a local minister who was interested in starting a GED prep program, to help people pass their high school equivalency exam. As luck and providence would have it, I was a professional GED prep teacher for two years. We soon became partners and started an educational ministry together.



I had the educational expertise to get the program off the ground--to choose the right resources, to lead classroom activities, and so on. She provided strong leadership and funding. Much as I know about the GED test, there's no way I could lead this ministry in this neighborhood on my own. I don't have her rapport with the people who come to us for help; I don't have her ability to set and enforce clear boundaries. Most importantly, I don't yet have her ability to pray, but I am learning more and more about prayer. The minister down the road is helping me learn to pray like I mean it.



It can be hard to be a neighbor in a neighborhood like this.



I'm white, and many of the people around me are black. I'm college-educated, and many of the people around me are not. No matter how hard I try, there will always be some distance between me--as a person with resources--and those among my neighbors who don't have the same level of access. But we can try to level the playing field a little bit. We can try to be partners with the people around us, and not simply helpers giving them something. It's easy to see how that dynamic works with the minister, but my hope is that I bring this attitude of partnership to the classroom, as well--that I am working to empower our students to go forth on their own and do what they are capable of.



It's not as simple as 'giving a hand up rather than a hand out,' because in that metaphor, I'm still the sole giver and the other person in the exchange is the sole receiver. Ideally, the students and I, and my neighbors and I, can reach a point where we are both giving and receiving with each other."


~Steve Andrews

Wednesday

Meet Myra Miller...


Myra has joined the Grant Park Dwell house and is part of the Young Adult Volunteer (YAV) program of the Presbyterian Church (USA). Myra is not new to our ministries at DOOR; she served on our summer staff last summer and lived in our Capitol View Dwell house. This past year she worked at Calvin Center, the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta’s Camp and Conference Center. One of Myra’s favorite ministries while on summer staff was The Friendship Center at Holy Comforter Episcopal Church. She is now serving at that ministry for the next year through our Dwell program. Myra says that “throughout my life I want to serve because I believe it is one’s responsibility as a human on earth to give back and help other fellow human beings. The only way to feel alive is to spread compassion and kindness where there is suffering and pain in the world. There is a common unity that forms around healing and helping others.”

Meet Sarah Bellacicco...


Sarah has joined the Grant Park Dwell house and is part of the Young Adult Volunteer (YAV) program of the Presbyterian Church (USA). Sarah just graduated from Presbyterian College where she served as the Student Volunteer Services Intern. Sarah has traveled both to Germany and Africa; trips that have had an impact on her faith journey. Sarah says that “Looking back on my month in Malawi, I can see what a large role God played in my time there. Through the people I met in Malawi, God showed me what it means to live with few earthly attachments, loving and caring for all those I came into contact with, and trusting fully in God for protection and sustenance – a lesson I will spend my life trying to fully understand and replicate.” This year Sarah will be serving at the Central Outreach and Advocacy Center working with those who are homeless and the working poor.

Meet Megan Warley...


Megan has joined the Grant Park Dwell house and is part of the Young Adult Volunteer (YAV) program of the Presbyterian Church (USA). Megan is from Erie, Pennsylvania and just graduated from Penn State. Megan says that she is interested in living in intentional Christian community for several reasons. “Living in community allows you to grow as an individual. When living with other people you are often forced to examine aspects of yourself that are selfish or unloving. Whether this examination occurs as part of a disagreement or differing opinions, you are given the opportunity to see another perspective and learn more about that person. Living in intentional Christian community also provides a supportive environment in which to go through a new experience. It is comforting to know that as I live in a new city and start a new job, I would share that experience with other people in the same situation. By living in intentional Christian community we would be able to encourage one another and share insights so as to enrich one another’s experience." Megan will be serving with DOOR as the coordinator of our Spring and Summer Mission Trip program.

Tuesday

DOOR Opens for Intergenerational Fun!

The following article was in the Calvin Court newsletter, The Messenger. We are looking forward to continuing our partnership with Calvin Court in the future.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

It's hard to tell who had more fun this summer - the seniors or the youth - when teens from DOOR Atlanta visited Calvin Court each Tuesday to interact with and enjoy the company of residents.


A faith based network in six U.S. cities, DOOR (Discovering Opportunities for Outreach and Reflection) provides youth with opportunities for service, learning and leadership development within an urban context, explained Sally Stephenson, Assistant Coordinator, DOOR Atlanta. Volunteers can participate from a weekend to a week or longer. They stay at Central Presbyterian Church in downtown Atlanta and take part during the day in a variety of service opportunities. At the end of the day, we ask participants, where did you see the face of God in the city today?" she said.


This summer was the first time DOOR and Calvin Court teamed up, giving two generations of people who normally wouldn't have the opportunity to interact a chance to get to know one another. Both sides found the partnership inspired and inspiring. Every Tuesday, a group of youngsters, ages 12 - 19, and young adult leaders visited Calvin Court residents to play Wii bowling, join together in exercise classes, participate in pool tournaments and more. Some youth even judged a best T-shirt contest.


"Of all our stops, Calvin Court is my favorite," said Charlayna Braxton, a DOOR youth leader and student at Mercer University. "I'm an athlete, and I loved walking into the exercise classes and seeing 84 year old residents exercising, lifting weights and keeping fit. I know people 20 or 30 years younger who don't have the energy of the Calvin Court residents! They truly embody the saying you are only as old as you feel."


The youth also asked residents to share their life stories, asking questions about faith and family and inquirng about the best and most trying times of the seniors' lives. Resident Willard Odenwelder enjoyed the time with the teens. "It was refreshing having the kids participate in our activities," he said. "They visited with us and got a little of our stories and we, in turn, asked questions about their lives. It has been a great experience. I hope they can come back next summer."


"The interaction is so natural, so genuine between the generations," Charlayna said. "The seniors might see in the young people's faces the faces of their own children when they were young, or maybe the faces of their grandchildren or even great-grandchildren."


In the faces of the seniors, Sally added, the young can often discern the face of God. Drawing from a number of biblical passages, including the Good Samaritan story, the ministry's theme this summer was Welcoming the Stranger. "This was truly the experience between the generations at Calvin Court," she said. "For both the younger and the older generation, the partnership was a living example of offering hospitality to a stranger and leaving not as strangers but as good friends."

Monday

Meet Sonya Chelliah...


Sonya just joined our Capitol View Dwell house after moving to Atlanta from Miami, Florida. Sonya just finished a Masters program in Biomedical Science and is preparing to apply to medical school. Sonya is excited about living in the Dwell intentional Christian community because she wants to “grow in her walk with Christ. In Ephesians 4: 11-13, Paul talks about how the different talents that we all have prepare us to do God’s work, serve others, and grow in faith in unity as One Body in Christ. I want to learn how to contribute my talents to a community so that God is glorified.” Sonya is one of our tentmaker local Dwellers.

Meet Joel Gerber...


Joel and his wife Leslie, and their daughter Cora, just moved into our Capitol View Dwell house. Joel and his family moved from Harper, Kansas where he was a health and 9th grade PE teacher. Joel and Leslie are members of Pleasant Valley Mennonite Church. The Gerbers were encouraged by members of their church to consider a year of service. Joel says: “My home church has always had a strong connection with mission work outside of the home community. This connection has made me more aware of people in need and how good I do have it. Some fellow church members have been critical in encouraging me in this direction and I would not [have applied] if it wasn't for them.” Joel will be serving with Clifton Sanctuary Ministries, which is a homeless men’s shelter. He will also be serving as “Gardener in Residence” at Imagine Wesley Charter School.

Thursday

Meet our Dwellers!


Meet Cassie Ford...


Cassie just arrived from Burlington Vermont. The past few years she worked at Howard Center Baird School. She worked one on one with students with emotional, social and behavioral disorders. This is not Cassie’s first experience of Atlanta. A few years ago she served as an intern at Rescue Atlanta Ministries and couldn’t wait to come back to Atlanta. Cassie is excited to join the Dwell intentional Christian community “because I am excited about the friendships that could be formed from living with people who are like minded and doing ministry work also. With those friendships would also come a sense of accountability to each other and to God. I find, at least in my own experience, that when I live or interact with other Christians and do Bible studies or outreach with them my relationship with God strengthens. I am also just excited to know that I would have a place to go home to where I could share my experiences of the day and be supported in areas of ministry that might not be easy.” Cassie is living in the Capitol View Dwell house and will be serving with Street Grace, which works to eliminate the sexual exploitation of children in Atlanta.

Sunday

Meet our Dwellers!


Over the next week, I'll be introducing you to our Dwellers. These 12 folks have come together to live in intentional Christian community over the next year. If you or someone you know is interested in our Dwell program, please feel free to contact me for more information. We accept both local Atlanta folks interested in living in community, as well as, folks interested in coming to do volunteer work for a year or more in Atlanta.


~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director
Meet Leslie Gerber...
Leslie and her husband Joel, and their daughter Cora, just moved into our Capitol View Dwell house. Leslie and her family moved from Harper, Kansas where she was teaching secondary math. The Gerbers were encouraged by members of their church to consider a year of service. Leslie says: “I grew up in a church where voluntary service was not something many people did unless they were going to be a preacher. Since then, having gone to Hesston College and now attending Pleasant Valley Mennonite Church, I know many people that serve and use it as a positive learning and growing experience. My Christian community now has played a major role in my decision to serve, talking to those who have served and those who had the chance but did not.” Leslie will be serving with Neighbors Abbey where she will be doing community organizing in the neighborhood where our Dwell house is located.


Friday

D-Lite or Dwell Neighborhood Addition

I had the privelege of meeting last night with folks from both our Capitol View Dwell house and Grant Park Dwell house, as well as folks who live in the neighborhood of Capitol View who are invested in what we are doing. The purpose of getting together to eat good desserts was to talk about how people who are interested in what we are doing, but who do not live in our Dwell house, can be a part of Dwell. What seems to be brewing is something we are calling D-lite (Dwell Lite) or Dwell Neighborhood Addition. Our Dwell house would remain the core of our ministry in Capitol View, but we would begin to have a bigger family of Dwell in the 'hood. The foundation of which would be relationships. I don't know how this will develop over the next few months, but I am really excited to be having these conversations. And in reality, I also recognize that we are just putting a name and developing some structure for something that already exists. Our Dwell houses can't be who they are without the greater community. And we hope that the houses are also able to be a support and sense of joy for those in the community. The challenge moving ahead will be around staying intentional about these relationships, but also allowing things to develop organically, as they have before.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

Thursday

Creativity and Service

A reflection from Edrick, one of our Discern summer staff:

"The word of the week for this week was creativity. Looking back at the summer, I realize that creativity is necessary for the work in which we are taking part in this summer. Creativity is defined as the ability to transcend traditional ideas, rules, patterns, relationships, or the like, and to create meaningful new ideas, forms, methods, and interpretations. Throughout this summer, the staff has used creativity to the utmost effect. Being able to think quickly and provide solutions when things don’t happen the way they’re supposed are essential to being able to survive in a ministry of this magnitude. This summer I learned that creativity can come in many forms. And that this creativity, this ability to think on your feet is a skill that you must have that you must continue to hone and master in order to serve God. To be open to creativity is to be open to the many things and plans that God has for each and every one of us, to be open to the will of God. This summer especially asked me to be creative. Not only in the confines of Central Presbyterian Church, but at every worksite I visited this summer in Atlanta. Being creative is not only a gift to be used sparingly, but a tool necessary in the service of our Lord."

Wednesday

DOOR Atlanta Volunteers in "Grow: The Movie"


Our friends at Oak Leaf Mennonite Farm, one of our partner ministries for the summer, are being highlighted in a documentary film about small farmers in Georgia. Because of the work our Discover Mission Trip participants have done on the farm this summer, they were also included in some of the filming at the farm. Here's a link for more information about this film. http://growmovie.blogspot.com/. The picture above came from the filmmakers, Christine and Owen.

Well Done Good and Faithful Servant

This week we are focusing on "Persistence" as our leadership word of the week with our summer staff. Persistence is something that God often asks of God's followers. In my mind, persistence means trusting and following God, even when we're not sure how things will turn out or when it is difficult to follow God. When the Israelites were wandering in the desert for many years, God asked them to trust and follow. God asked them to follow even when it was hard and the promised land seemed to be only a dream. And eventually God's people reached the land of milk and honey. When the early Christians were being persecuted, it would have been easy to give up their faith. But the early Christians were persistent in their faith and eventually Christianity was spread far and wide. Although not as drastic as these biblical accounts, working at DOOR sometimes requires persistence as well. Our staff and participants see injustice, need, and sometimes disrespect all around them. At times it is tempting to believe that what we do doesn't make a difference; doesn't make a positive impact. We ask groups to weed in community gardens, to sort clothes at thrift stores, to prepare meals for soup kitchens, and play games with children who are homeless. But at the end of the week or summer, there will still be folks who need a meal, weeds will continue to grow in the garden and there will still be children who are living in homeless shelters. And so we must turn to God and persist in our belief that God can use our humble offerings to bring about God's mission in the world. That God can take the seed of what we do this week or this summer and grow it into something amazing. Sometimes I don't know how God will accomplish this, but I am persistent in my belief that if we try to be faithful, God will find a way to use our humble offerings and will ultimatately be pleased by our desire to glorify God through our service.

Now, here are the reflections of one of our summer Discern staff on "Persistence".

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

"Persistence is, in the end, what separates the winners from the losers; but it also does not come naturally. This past week, we reflected on this word and how we can start applying it to the rest of our summer as staff. My first thoughts were to keep persisting in the way I show hospitality to our middle-schoolers and high-schoolers week by week: greeting them with a smile and a “how are you?”, willingly helping them when they’ve asked me a question, and giving them my best if I have to help lead an activity one night.

God also calls us to persistence when He sees that we’re losing speed in our lives. A perfect example is found in Matthew 7:7 when Jesus says “Keep on asking, and you will receive what you ask for. Keep on seeking, and you will find. Keep on knocking, and the door will be opened to you”. The Lord says that if we keep on praying, we keep on having faith, and we keep believing in Him, there is no doubt we will find Him! In the context of this summer, if we, as staff, keep persisting in the way we facilitate different groups’ experiences week by week, we will also earn a reward. Not only will we learn more about serving young people and our community, or about a hard summer’s work. But at the end of our summer, God will smile down at us and say “well done, good and faithful servant”."

Betty, Discern Summer Staff

Tuesday

Presenting is an aspect of Hospitality

This summer DOOR Atlanta is focusing on welcome and hospitality during our mission trip programs. We are asking folks to explore the ways Christ calls us to offer hospitality to those around us. At the same time, the summer staff are exploring different leadership traits each week during the summer. So far this summer we have studied and practiced initiative, motivation and problem solving, among others. This week, Charlayna, one of our summer staff explores the intersection between our leadership trait of the week and our theme of hospitality. Her insights make all of us think about how even something we do all the time, like presenting, can be hospitable to those around us.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

"Presenting is an aspect of hospitality. Here at DOOR Atlanta, we, the staff members make certain of presenting ourselves to the new groups that arrive each week. Each week we meticulously make sure to do an outstanding job in presenting their living space, the agendas for the week, their freshly cooked meals, and expectations through the philosophy of ministry. We can also attest to the significance of presentation from the different staff members of the agencies we visit throughout the week. The manner in which staff introduce their agencies and treat their clients has a strong effect on the perception and work attitude of the DOOR groups. And lastly, an essential aspect to how the groups return home to tell of their trip and lessons of hospitality is through their presentation of the trip. It is very important that we avoid complacency to present our ideas and other things in the best possible condition. "

Charlayna, DOOR Atlanta Discern Summer Staff

Friday

Make a Joyful Noise

Today's blog reflection comes from Alisha, one of our Discern Summer Staff. One of the ministries she has been working with this summer is the Friendship Center at Holy Comforter Episcopal Church. At DOOR Atlanta, we believe that service always includes both giving and receiving. Alisha's reflection points out one way we receive abundantly through service.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

""Who would like to lead us in a song?" asked Robby." I would, I would!" replied Marty. Marty proceeded to stand before the congregation to lead us in song. Everyone was ready to join in with Marty but no one could quite follow him because he mumbled the words and rushed through the song. But after his selection everyone cheerfully applauded. Several other guests led songs that the congregation joined in with, everyone singing to their own beat and own key. The whole experience reminded me of my days in middle school band when everyone would warm up their instruments independently, unaware of each other. As I sat in the congregation trying to sing along I could not help but wonder how this sounded to God. And by looking at the smiling faces I knew God was pleased.

What you do not know is those gathered here at the Friendship Center for noon day prayer are all dealing with some form of mental disability, ranging from severe to minor disabilities. The Friendship Center offers a safe haven for this population of people in Atlanta, Ga who are often ignored, shunned, forgotten about and abandoned. But today they are reminded that God has not abandoned them. When everyone else left them or mistreated them God was still there with open arms. Because of God's unfailing love, they sing praises. Their praise is not dependent upon a mass choir, or vocally trained soloists, or pianists. But their praise comes straight from their heart. Some of the guests at Friendship Center are musically inclined and they offer their gifts, like Ms. Mary who recieved no formal training but one day when she was a child hopped on the piano and started playing, fulfilling a need that was unmet in her local congregation. Those who are not as gifted in music and singing also lift up their voices unashamed, creating a sound that to a trained ear may sound like discord but to an ear that hears beyond the notes sounds like sincerity of worship. I can truly say my understanding of a joyful noise has been changed. God just doesn't delight in the melodies made by our voices and our instruments but God delights in the music that flows from our hearts as a communitiy of believers." *Names have been changed.

~Alisha, Discern Summer Staff

Tuesday

My Motivation to Serve

We are continuing to highlight the reflections of our summer Discern staff on our blog. DOOR Atlanta provides a leadership program (named Discern) that teaches, models, and provides experiences that develop Christian leaders. This week our blog post comes from Edrick, who is returning for his second year on DOOR Atlanta's staff. We have been talking about Motivation and Edrick reflected on who is our motivation for service.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director


"The word of the week this week was motivation. Motivation, or the reason why we do things, can take many different forms. Whether it is the motivation to wake up in the morning, or the motivation to wash your clothes, our reason for doing the things we do are incredibly important. And the reason why we serve is just as important. Our motivation to serve here at DOOR comes from our Christian faith, as well as our commitment to help our fellow man. In order to do God’s work, our reasons for doing so must be in order. Our reason must not come from personal gain, glory, or greed. Our motivation for spending an entire summer in the service of Jesus Christ must come from love. Because God calls us to love our neighbor, our service this summer is not done out of pity or recognition, but out of the love of our fellow man and a sense of justice that everyone is entitled to the little things that we take for granted every day such as conversation or human contact. Because our motivation is out of love, it makes it easier for us to spend a summer on mattresses, living off of peanut butter sandwiches and filled with middle schoolers who never seem to tire. Although I might not always show it, my motivation to serve comes from the love I have for God and the love I have for my neighbor. My motivation to serve is to put the words of the Bible into action, and maybe be worthy enough to become the hands and feet of Christ. "

Edrick, DOOR Atlanta Summer Discern Staff

Sunday

A give and take experience

This summer our Discern summer staff are writing our blog entries. Our summer staff come and live in Atlanta for the summer and learn about urban ministry and Christian leadership by helping our mission trip participants serve, pray and learn. This week's reflection is from Liz and she is reflecting on what she has learned about leadership so far this summer.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director


“ Leadership is the art of getting someone else to do something you want done because he wants to do it”. –Dwight Eisenhower. This summer’s theme is centered around leadership and President Eisenhower’s words of wisdom shed light on a very important point about leadership. A leader needs to have the power to not only lead people in a certain direction but to help them to want to go in that direction. The point of a mission trip and part of DOOR’s philosophy is that mission is a give and take experience. I learned that being a good leader was not to make the kids do the work but help them to realize why they were doing the work so they could want to do it. The kids could give their service but also take back a better knowledge of what it means to help others. Being a leader is not manipulation, but guidance and patience. If you want to know how to guide and be a good leader you just have to look to our trusty friend Jesus, he seems to have all the answers and a very large number of followers. If you lead with love and understanding you can influence the lives of many.


~Liz Evans, Summer staff

Thursday

Summer Staff Learn about "Responsibility" in Leadership

Our blog post today is from Betty, one of DOOR Atlanta Summer Discern Staff. This week our staff has been exploring the Leadership trait of "Responsibility". Here are Betty's reflections:

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director


"The team building word this week was responsibility. Responsibility is defined by WordNet as the "social force that binds us to the courses of action demanded by that force". This week was our first week carrying out the Discover program - with that came the need for responsibility not only from the summer staff, but also from our leaders, the youth groups and their leaders.

At the beginning of the week, we were given detailed schedules for the week; by the end of the week, I realized just how important being a responsible summer staffer is! This was our first time leading groups this summer and therefore some things were a little rough around the edges. However, it was up to us to be aware of which agencies we were to visit, what activities we were to lead and what chores we were to oversee. In reference to the WordNet definition used previously, the social force was the Discover program, and the courses of action were our jobs as summer staffers. If any one of us ever chose to neglect our duties, that could have had a bad effect on the agencies, the youth groups and the other summer staffers.

In order for a team to be successful, the individual players need to be responsible, not only for themselves but for each other. If someone in the team is having a hard time, or not doing something right, it is the team's responsibility to offer a helping hand. I have seen numerous cases of that this past week, ranging from offering a ride home to someone to just listening to what someone had to say. I hope to see more of it this summer!"

~Betty, DOOR Atlanta Summer Discern Staff

Sunday

DOOR Atlanta's Summer Staff Explore "Teamwork"


For the rest of the summer, the Atlanta blog will be filled with reflections by the summer staff and summer mission trip participants. This will give you a great chance to hear first hand the impact of our programs and the ways it makes our participants think about our world and community. This week, Alisha, one of our summer staff, reflected on our leadership word of the week: "Teamwork".


~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director


"This week the summer D.O.O.R staff was given several activities and opportunities to work together as a team. We have done scavenger hunts, team building activities, shopping extravaganzas, and a mini-documentary on hospitality. During all these activities we had to operate as a team in order to accomplish the task or to get to our destination. The word that kept popping up throughout these activities was trust. One of my teammates would reiterate the need for us to trust one another. We had to trust our teammates as we were led blindfold through an obstacle. We had to trust that our teammates knew where they were going on the MARTA public transit system. And we had to trust the skills and knowledge of each other as we created our mini-documentary. I believe that throughout the summer as we continue to discover the gifts, skills, talents and knowledge that each team member possesses, we will build up our trust in each other and the gifts we bring to the table. We will begin to recognize that we all have something to offer and contribute to making this summer a success."


Alisha, DOOR Atlanta Summer Discern Staff

Monday

Welcome DOOR Atlanta Summer Staff!!!

We welcomed the DOOR Atlanta summer staff last night. Joining us this summer are Alisha, Betty, Sally, Charlayna, Liz, and Edrick. Each week our staff will explore and practice a different leadership trait. Our leadership word of the week for staff training week is "Teambuilding". We're working on getting to know one another and learning to work as a team this summer and support one another through the celebrations and the hard times. We're learning how to work together to lead the youth in exploring "The Stranger in our Midst: Welcome and Hospitality". Check out our facebook fan page for pictures from each day of staff training. Today we had a great time with Jessica, one of our board members, who led us in lots of great teambuilding activities. She helped us anticipate how we might better work together all summer long and how to support one another as we made grids without being able to speak, created cubes that balance on small circles and transported ourselves through small spaces while blindfolded. Check back soon to hear how our week is going!

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

Thursday

Hospitality vs. Safety

Last night I went to a meeting at Central Presbyterian Church, one of our partner churches and the home of our summer mission trip program, regarding our homeless neighbors who are living around the church. Central Presbyterian had gathered all of the ministries housed in their building as well as other neighbors around the area to “discuss and wonder” how we could live out the gospel in the midst of the realities of providing hospitality to the homeless in Atlanta. I was so proud that our ministry is partnered with such a thoughtful church who takes seriously their call as a church in the downtown area that provides hospitality to folks who are homeless. But at the same time takes seriously the safety of its staff, the children in the child development center, the youth who come to serve through DOOR, and congregation members. It is a tricky balance to find and if there were easy answers, the faithful people in this church would have answered them already. But there are no easy answers. There are certain risks and trade-offs with living out a gospel of hospitality. How do you provide a place to sleep outside the building without that area also serving as a bathroom since the public restrooms close at 7 p.m.? Do you provide a portable bathroom if that also means having inappropriate behavior happening in that same space? How can churches join together and demand enough shelter or transitional housing for everyone who needs it? Even if we get shelter for everyone who needs it how do we reach out to those who struggle with mental illness and won’t voluntarily enter into any type of housing? The questions seem to never end. And these same questions surrounding hospitality and welcome are the focus of our summer program this year. With the closing of the Peachtree and Pine shelter (to read more, check out this article http://www.11alive.com/rss/rss_story.aspx?storyid=143774) there will probably be even more people who are homeless on the streets of Atlanta this year. And so these questions that Central Presbyterian Church is asking are timely and essential. We’ll let you know how you might be able to join in with this advocacy work as we move forward from “discussing and wondering” to action.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

Wednesday

“Leveling the Path to Participation”

The Corporation for National and Community Service says that youth who participate in service are more likely to be successful in school and to avoid risky behaviors such as drug and alcohol use, promiscuity and crime. In March 2005, the corporation, in partnership with the U.S. Census Bureau conducted a study around teenagers and volunteering. Here is a link to the complete study (http://www.nationalservice.gov/pdf/07_0328_disadvantaged_youth.pdf), but some interesting data that emerged includes:

· A "class gap" exists in teenage volunteering. The volunteer rate of youth from disadvantaged circumstances (DAC) is 16 percentage points lower than the rate for other youth (43% and 59%, respectively). Similarly, youth from DAC are less likely to indicate that they engage in positive civic behaviors or hold positive civic attitudes.


· Although youth from DAC are less likely to volunteer than other youth, when they
do volunteer, they do so with the same level of intensity. Among all youth volunteers, 38% devote at least 52 hours a year to volunteer activities.


· 76% of youth from DAC who volunteer are nearly 50% more likely than youth from DAC who do not volunteer (51%) to say they are very likely to graduate from a four-year college.


· Religious organizations and spiritual beliefs play a key role in volunteering among youth from DAC.
*48% of youth from DAC say they volunteer because of their religious or spiritual beliefs, compared to 36% of other youth volunteers.
*39% of youth from disadvantaged circumstances who volunteer do so through religious congregations, compared to 33% of other youth.
*Among youth from DAC, volunteers are nearly 60% more likely to attend religious services about once a week than are non-volunteers (63% vs. 40%, respectively).


As City Director of DOOR Atlanta I believe that our service learning programs should be available to all young people regardless of income level. DOOR Atlanta is exploring how we can make our current programs more accessible to young people regardless of income. Not just because of the reasons cited in this study, but because I believe we are compelled by our faith in Jesus Christ to do this. I feel the Spirit is already moving us in this direction through the work of our Dwellers in a program called GOAL. GOAL is a girls’ mentoring program through one of our partner churches (Neighbors Abbey) and Sylvan Hills Middle School (the middle school closest to our Capitol View Dwell house). We will also be placing a Dweller to serve specifically with this program next year. I have also been in conversation with three diverse Atlanta youth groups that are interested in building bridges between various races and socio-economic groups through service. If you are interested in joining us in this mission, through your time or talents, please contact me at jannan@doornetwork.org.

Thursday

"A job should keep you out of poverty, not in it"

This summer DOOR Atlanta will not only provide great hands on service and educational opportunities for the churches who participate in our Discover program, but we will add advocacy to our plate as well. We have partnered with the Georgia Minimum Wage Coalition to help educate people of faith about the difficulties of feeding and housing a family while working a minimum wage job. As part of this educational effort our participants will have the opportunity to write a letter to their representative in Washington and mail it during their week in Atlanta. My hope is that those in power will be inundated with letters from young people who are concerned about justice for low wage workers. Although this topic might seem controversial during an economic downturn, I am hopeful that the conversation will open participants' eyes to the struggles low wage workers are experiencing and be called to work for justice on their behalf.

I'd like to start the conversation by sharing an essay by my friend Chris Henry. He is a local Presbyterian pastor here in Atlanta and has been active in the Georgia Minimum Wage Coalition for several years.

"While I was a student at Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur, I had the opportunity to serve two nights a week as the Overnight Host at a men’s homeless shelter operated by Clifton Sanctuary Ministries, a former Presbyterian Church that now opens its doors nightly to thirty men who have nowhere else to turn for a warm meal and a place to sleep. I had taken the job because it would provide me with a little extra income as a student; what I received was an education in the realities of life for many who live and work in our communities. One of the most shocking discoveries for me was the number of men who worked full-time and still found themselves homeless and without enough income to provide the basic necessities. These men were security guards, retail store employees, custodians, and food service workers. They provided services on which we all rely and worked hard at their jobs. And yet, their hourly wages were not sufficient to secure adequate housing and food.


As a person of religious faith, I believe that we as a community have a God-given responsibility to provide fair wages to those who are doing their part by working hard everyday to make ends meet. It was the Old Testament prophet Jeremiah who reminded his community of their call to treat their workers with justice and fairness with these words: “Woe to him who builds his house by unrighteousness, and his upper rooms by injustice; who makes his neighbors work for nothing, and does not give them their wages” (Jeremiah 22:13). In our own time and place, people of faith must again stand together to call for just wages.


That is why I am proud to say that over 130 clergy supporters have signed a letter urging the Georgia General Assembly to act on raising the state minimum wage. We have given presentations and preached sermons at churches. We have spoken out on the steps of the Capitol. We have sought to stand in the long line of prophets who have come before us to declare that the end of injustice and greed is coming, and, with great faith, we believe it to be so.


For people of faith all over the state, the issue of minimum wage is not primarily a political or economic matter. Rather, it is an issue of morality. We who believe that God has created a world of abundant goodness, also believe that God intends that abundance to be shared with justice and compassion. When we see families in our state suffering due to unjust wages, our faith calls us to hear their stories. When we watch the prices of almost everything rise dramatically and the minimum wage become a poverty wage, our faith calls us to respond. Working for fair wages is an issue of morality because it is an issue that affects real people—members of our families, our neighborhoods, our congregations and our faith communities. These are real people, just like those men at Clifton Sanctuary Ministries, whose only request from us is the opportunity to succeed.


Together let us pray for the day when justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream. Till then, let us give feet and voice to our prayers as we take action on behalf of those left behind in the state of Georgia."

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

Happy Earth Day!

Happy Earth Day!

Today I’d like to share a little bit about the things we do at DOOR Atlanta to try and love Mother Earth a little bit more. Since the summer of 2008, DOOR Atlanta along with the other DOOR cities stopped using plastic water bottles in our Discover mission trip program. Instead we bought Nalgene water bottles that we check out to each participant for the entire week. We then wash and sterilize the water bottles at the end of the week and use them again for the next group. We’ve been using the same water bottles for the past three years and have substantially reduced the amount of recycling we generate during a Discover mission trip week. That same year we also bought cloth re-usable lunch bags, in cooperation with DOOR San Antonio, from a sewing coop. Each week we recycle glass, cardboard, aluminum and plastic, in an effort to keep our trash as limited as possible. Lastly, this past summer we made the switch from using plastic grocery bags to reusable grocery bags. Not only does this help us re-use our bags instead of using them once and recycling them, but it sends a strong message to our Discover mission trip groups that we value earth sustainability as part of our ministry. It is quite a site to see us unload 60 bags of groceries from reusable bags. We still have ways we can grow in our care for creation in our Discover program, but I'd like to believe we have a firm foundation on which to build.


Our Discover program is not our only program that is stretching itself in regards to creation care. Our Dwell houses have taken some unique steps towards Earth Care as well. Both of our houses are avid recyclers and composters. In addition, the houses are very interested in eating more locally grown food. And by locally grown, I mean in their backyard. The Grant Park house got chickens this year and has just recently stopped buying eggs from the grocery store and is able to sustain its egg usage entirely by their chickens. The Capitol View house has spent most of this year researching how to turn their backyard which was filled with rocks and trash, into a garden. It is a true resurrection project. They are just now planting their first seeds and are excited and hopeful about supplementing their food budget in the future with produce from their backyard. There has always been a tension in our Dwell houses between the desire to eat organic, locally grown food and the limits of their budget, but I am excited to see the creative ways they have approached these issues and tried to eat faithfully. Both houses have explored being part of a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) and I am hopeful they will figure out a way to make this work within their food budgets.


Finally, I got word from Presbyterians for Earth Care (PEC) about their bottled water campaign. I share it with you in the hopes you might pledge to stop using plastic water bottles as well. PEC writes:

“Annie Leonard, who previously brought us the online "The Story of Stuff" has made a new fast-paced online film that tackles bottled water. "The Story of Bottled Water" outlines how consumption of bottled water went from something considered laughable (as it costs as much as 2000 times the amount of tap water) to such a high-demand product that the US consumes a half a billion bottles of water each week. The film is a great primer in many issues related to bottled water, including the justice aspect of where our bottles are sent to be recycled. (Leonard found that some of these bottles that we stick in our recycling bins are actually shipped to India, and instead of being recycled, they end up becoming a waste problem for India to deal with.) Watch "The Story of Bottled Water" and learn more about issues surrounding bottled water from the Presbyterians for Earth Care's bottled water campaign. PEC also has a bottled water pledge that you can sign. Pledge not to drink bottled water unless the tap water in your area is truly unsafe, and share your knowledge with friends and family, who may not realize that producing bottles for bottled water for US consumption uses enough oil each year to fuel one million cars.”


Happy Earth Day!

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

Young Adults struggle to find their place in the Church

The past couple of days I have been looking for articles exploring the impact of doing a year of service on young adults’ faith and vocational discernment. It was surprising to me to find there has not been a lot of study done on this topic. Although I wasn’t able to find exactly what I was looking for, I did find some interesting data on young adults and their connection with the church. According to USA Today, “Seven in 10 Protestants ages 18-30, both evangelical and mainline, who went to church regularly in high school said they quit attending by age 23. And 34% of those said they had not returned by age 30. That means that about one in four Protestant young people have left the church.” As coordinator of the Young Adult Volunteer program of the Presbyterian Church in Atlanta and Director of Dwell, our intentional Christian communities for young adults, I have the privilege of walking with young adults as they explore their faith at this pivotal point in their lives. I see firsthand the struggles that young adults have finding their place in congregations. At the same time I see young adults who are highly interested in God, highly interested in participating in vital mission, and many times in need of guidance and support. Unfortunately many young adults are also largely uninspired by what churches are currently doing. Many of the folks in our Dwell program find the Christian community experienced in the Dwell houses as closer to what they are searching for in a church then what they find in traditional congregations.


The Barna group, in their study titled “Twenty-something’s struggle to find their place in the church” believes that lack of leadership opportunities may be one of the reasons that young adults struggle to find their place in the church. The study showed that “just 4% of young adults currently serve as a lay leader at their church; only 12% have been a leader at any time in the past two years. Older adults are three to four times more likely to serve as church leaders.” In fact, the age group with the greatest number of church leaders is those in their 50’s. Is it lack of leadership ability or desire to serve as leaders that prevent young adults from serving? Surprisingly no. The Barna study reports that “people in their 20’s and early 30’s are actually more likely than older adults to think of themselves as leaders – and they are much more likely than mature generations to want additional training to become better leaders.” Perhaps one of the reasons that our Dwell communities are attractive to young adults is our practice of having the participants shape the communities. It is the gifts, passions, struggles and leadership of all of the Dwell community members that make the communities what they are. As Director of the program I try to serve as a mentor and pastoral support to the houses, but it is the folks in our houses that lead our weekly Dwell nights and develop their service work in the neighborhood. My hope is that our program plays a small role in helping young adults find their place in the church. Many of our community members make big life-shaping decisions while they live in our communities. It is my desire that our Dwell communities provide a space for the Dwellers to take seriously the biblical perspective in making those decisions, both while in the community and in the future.

Wednesday

Cultural Baggage: What we bring with us as we engage in Mission

This Friday I have the privilege of being one of the panelists for a Presbyterian Church webinar focusing on “Cultural Baggage: What we bring with us as we engage in Mission.” You may be asking yourself: “What exactly IS cultural baggage?” If you google it, the following definition appears on Wikipedia.


"The term cultural baggage refers to the tendency for one's culture to pervade thinking, speech, and behavior without one being aware of this pervasion. Cultural baggage becomes a factor when a person from one culture encounters a person from another, and unconscious assumptions or behaviors can interfere with interaction. The "baggage" imagery implies that cultural baggage is something that one carries at all times and that it can be burdensome, hindering freedom of movement (i.e. hinders intercultural dialog)."


Exploring cultural baggage is something that happens a lot at DOOR. When we engage in mission we are given great opportunities to experience other cultures while building relationships with brothers and sisters in Christ. This is certainly our hope for all our participants in Atlanta, whether they come for a week or a year. But what happens when our own cultural baggage gets in the way of building relationships? Are there ways we can minimize our cultural baggage? Is all cultural baggage bad? What can/should I bring on my mission experiences? If these questions interest you, please join us for the webinar on Friday, April 9 at 1 p.m. (EST). To sign up please follow this link: https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/291887578. One of the best ways to address cultural baggage is by being aware of our own culture and the cultures with which we engage in mission. To learn more about how to do this, please join us on Friday. If you are unable to join us this Friday, the webinar will be taped and available online. I’ll post a link once it is available.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

New Transmission Fluid and the Life of Faith

Today I spent most of my day at the KIA dealership with the DOOR van. I have to admit, of the things I get to do in my job, maintaining vehicles and property is not at the top of my excitement list. Thinking about the new books we’ll read in the Dwell houses next year is exciting; getting to talk with and meet the new Dwellers is exciting; interviewing potential summer staff is exciting; getting a new tail light for the DOOR van and an oil change…not quite as exciting. It was not long after I got to the dealership that Dexter pulled me back to the car repair area to show me the transmission fluid. The fluid was supposed to be a light pink/red color. Our transmission fluid looked like sludge. Dexter said it looked like it had not been changed since the car was new (five years ago). He then stressed to me the importance of preventive car maintenance. Preventive car maintenance is the necessary work that keeps your vehicle in good running condition. Preventive maintenance reduces the chance that your car will break down and prolongs the life of the engine, cooling system, brakes and, yes, the transmission. As I sat in the dealership waiting for the van to be finished, I realized that there were a lot of similarities between car preventive maintenance and the life of faith. Our life of faith is filled with the necessary work that keeps our relationship with God and our neighbor in good running condition. Things like prayer, service, shared meals together, forgiveness, and worship. When viewed as single episodes, maybe they don’t seem so exciting or spectacular, but these Christian practices are the essential routine that helps us live the lives God is calling us to live. I believe it is much more our preventive maintenance or spiritual practices, rather than our mountain top experiences that sustain us as Christ’s hands and feet in the world. And so in celebration of my new appreciation of the role of preventive maintenance, I’d like to share some of the small but exciting work our Dwellers have been doing this week. These may not seem like huge events, but it is spiritual routines, like these, that are the foundation of our Dwell Intentional Christian communities.


· Katie, one of the Capitol View Dwellers, was a face painter at the first annual Perkerson Park Spring Forward Festival in the neighborhood.

· Alison helps tutor in the GED program in the Capitol View Neighborhood and the house prayed for one of the men she works with who is taking his test today.

· The Grant Park Dwellers spent Saturday morning eating hot dogs and watching movies with the residents of a senior high rise in their neighborhood.

· The potential Dwellers who were in Atlanta for an informational weekend spent Saturday morning cutting down bamboo for the Oakleaf Mennonite Garden, a ministry of Berea Mennonite Church.

· Both houses spent time praying for one another, eating together and supporting one another in both their celebrations and disappointments.


Just a few of the many spiritual routines lived out in our Dwell program each week. Thanks be to God.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

A Testament to the Presence of God

This week our reflection comes from Tommy, one of our Grant Park Dwell community members. Atlanta's Dwell program seeds intentional Christian communities which focus on practicing Christian disciplines, serving the neighborhood and nurturing Christian community. Our Dwellers are mostly local folks who have a desire to live in Christian community and become the family of God to one another. Tommy is nursing student at Emory with a heart for children and justice. He also is the house leader for the Grant Park community. This is his second year in our community.

~Jannan Thomas - DOOR Atlanta City Director

"I chose to live in community because of the way I understand my call as a follower of Christ. That call includes loving my neighbors as brothers and sisters, sharing my life and my possessions, and intentionally pursuing alignment with Christ. This (Dwell community) has been the closest thing to the biblical image of a church that I’ve ever been a part of. Regardless of our struggles, this experience has taught me more about love than anything else. By putting myself in the position of vulnerability, where people around me become aware of my true self, it has become increasingly harder for me to avoid the refining nature of truth. For example, I've learned how to do simple tasks, like clean out the refridgerator, even when I know that it is not fair. ButI know that it is good for me to serve others in this way. I've also learned to be content or satisfied or grateful in serving others even when it is not fair. The concept of always coming back to the table regardless of feeling like you want to is an example of Christ’s reconciliation. As a community, we’re not able to avoid the relationships we have in this house. Therefore, we’re forced to deal with them. And because of our mission and vision, we have to deal with them in a way that honors Christ. In that process, in those situations that often seem hopeless, the success and the feeling that we’ve experienced is a testament to the presence of God."

~Tommy, Grant Park Dwell community member

Monday

Thank you Concordia University & UNC - Wilmington!


This past week we had the pleasure of hosting college students from Concordia University and University of North Carolina at Wilmington. A big thank you to everyone who served with such enthusiasm and a heart for God. I wanted to share one of the reflections from the groups last week about how she saw the Face of God while serving in Atlanta.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director

"I have seen God personally two times this past week. The first one includes some of my future goals and includes some history of myself. I haven't had the easiest life and in fact I had once started down a wrong path. When I was 13 or 14 years old, I was able to turn my life around. I had help from a number of individuals who helped me realize that I could actually do something with my life. Ever since then, I have had a dream of having a shelter for teens who were like me. I want to be able to guide them in the right direction in their lives. My plan is to be able to provide a place to stay and eat until they are able to get on their feet, and transportation to and from places such as school, work, church, etc. Basically a place where they can go to better themselves. For a while now I have been thinking of other services I could provide for young people but haven't been able to decide on what would be best. This past week my group went to a place called Genesis. And as we were given a walk through the building, we learned about the different services that they provide. As the Genesis worker was discussing what went on, a light bulb went off in my mind. I believe that it was God telling me that I should provide counseling, clinical, and day care services in my shelter, in addition to the other services I was planning for. I also believe that, without a doubt, this is something God wants me to do with my life and by visiting places like Genesis, HE is giving me opportunities to learn how I can help benefit the lives of many teens.


The second time I saw God was during one of the times we were doing the prayer stations. I walked over to the scrabble session and read the directions. I sat down and prayed, asking God to give me a word to add to the board. I thought of the word acceptance and picked up the letters E, A, P, E and nothing more. I was looking at the board for a place to begin spelling the word but could not find a place. So I gave the words on the board a look over and prayed once more. When I opened my eyes, they landed on a single "E" on the board and when I looked back at the letters I was holding, I realized that with what I was holding, plus the "E", it spelt "PEACE". So, I layed the letters on the board, said a thank you prayer to God for leading me to the word and went back to my seat."

~Latressa

Tuesday

Interest Weekend for Young Adult Volunteer Program


Are you interested in diving into a year of service and living in Intentional Christian community? Come and learn about the Young Adult Volunteer program at Atlanta's Interest weekend on March 26 and 27. On Friday night we will have dinner together and hear from current Young Adult Volunteer's and alumni of the program. They will inspire you to pursue a year of service as they share their learnings and God moments of their year. On Saturday morning we will do a service project together in the city and then tour the Young Adult Volunteer houses and neighborhoods in Atlanta. You don't have to just be interested in serving in Atlanta to participate. Come and learn about ANY of the Young Adult Volunteer sites. The weekend is free, but it is important to RSVP by March 19 to Jannan Thomas, jannan@doornetwork.org. Come and see how a year of service will create a lifetime of change for you.

Monday

How Did You See the Face of God?"


Right before I went on vacation (Sorry for the delay in posting...I was enjoying the Florida sun) we had the pleasure of hosting high school youth and their sponsors from South Acton Congregational Church, Acton, MA and First Presbyterian Church, Douglasville, GA. Below is a reflection from one of the youth on her time in Atlanta and what she learned during her mission trip to Atlanta.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director


"Reds, yellows and blues leap from the canvas, layered one upon the other. This is not
merely a picture but a sculpture with texture. It’s called “The Orchestra” and, despite its
abstract nature, we can almost hear the music. This is the work of Bob, a quiet man with a
Master of Fine Arts and a debilitating mental illness. Every Tuesday and Thursday, Bob
travels two hours by bus to the Friendship Center, sketching what he sees as he goes. When
he arrives, he can create his masterpieces.


The Friendship Center is an organization that provides many services to the poor and
mentally ill of Atlanta. It is facilitated by a small Episcopal church, whose membership consists
largely of people with mental illnesses. My group visited the Friendship Center on
Tuesday, our second day working with DOOR (Discovering Opportunities for Outreach
and Reflection).


Many of the people who attend the Friendship Center live in group homes that don’t
provide enough activities or a community; many cannot work. As such, it is hard for them
to afford to leave the group home. The Friendship Center provides free meals, activities
and the opportunity to be part of a community.


We visited the art center housed in a Baptist church that partners with the Episcopal
church. Members of the Friendship Center can paint, make ceramics or participate in
woodworking. Bob showed us his paintings; as did Clifford and Gwen, other members of
the center. Clifford’s realist painting of a squirrel was amazing, as was the pride Gwen took
in the bust of Martin Luther King that she had painted.


Later, we attended a meeting that gave the members an opportunity to discuss the rules
of the center and have a say in how it was run. The meeting showed how much respect the
members have for each other and for the volunteers and staff who work there.
We also toured the organic garden and green house which employ members of the center.
These members learn valuable skills and develop self-esteem as they care for their flowers
and vegetables.


Aside from Bob, Clifford and Gwen, we met a woman named Theresa. She was somewhat
belligerent and hard to talk to. Apparently, she was in nursing school when she was
diagnosed with schizophrenia. It is hard to imagine the confusion and anger these people
must feel when they reflect on the lives they used to have and the things they accomplished.
We can easily assume that they have nothing now but they have not lost their identities.
They still create beautiful art, form beautiful friendships, and experience beautiful
love. They are still beautiful people. The DOOR program leaders asked us every night,
“How did you see the face of God today?” I saw the face of God in Gwen, Bob, Theresa,
Clifford, all the staff and all the volunteers.


So much good has come out of the Friendship Center. It led to the partnership between
the Episcopal and Baptists churches and the friendships between staff and members. As
the staff and volunteers teach the members of the center how to garden or make pots, they
in turn learn from the members. From my one-day visit, I learned the power of community
to strengthen and support its members and that a mental illness does not inhibit one’s ability
to love."

~ Meghan, DOOR Discover Participant

Wednesday

Difficult and Yet Hopeful Work of Being Community

I am continuing my blog series on the folks in our Dwell program. To learn more about our Dwell program or to apply to be one of our residents, please visit our website (www.doornetwork.org/atlanta). Today I introduce you to Alan, one of our second year Dwell community members. Alan was involved in the creation of Earth Covenant Ministry, a ministry of the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta and lives in our Grant Park house.

~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director


“I choose to live at Dwell because I recognize my neediness. Regardless of how tempted we are to think that we can live independently of community the Gospel shows us that we are in need of one another. It is the gospel that breaks down those walls that make community possible. Our neediness becomes our strength.


Midway through the first year I lived in the Dwell house we experienced conflict within the house where one member said “I’m finishing up this year and then I am leaving”. And another said “Reconciliation with another community member is impossible”. In the first case, that person by the end of the year felt called to stay on; in the second case, the reconciliation has happened. I see that as evidence of movement of the Holy Spirit and evidence of the difficult and yet hopeful work of being community.


I see a direct connection with my ministry at the level of the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta regarding caring for creation and my life here at Dwell. I see this connection through seeking to share resources, meals, and living as simply as we can. Some example of that are trying to increase energy conservation, cultivating a garden, and having chickens. Not everybody always sees it the same way that I do, and so I pray for them. Just kidding!"


~Alan, Grant Park Dwell House Community Member

God opened our eyes because we wanted them to be open...

Over the next couple of weeks I’d like to take some time to introduce you to the folks who are participating in our year long program, Dwell. Our Dwell program seeds intentional Christian communities where young adults can put their faith into practice by living together, serving the neighborhood in which they live and creating a routine of spiritual disciplines. The majority of our Dwellers are local folks who are either working or are in school and are creating the space in their lives for exploring their faith, developing deep relationships and being a neighbor as described in the Bible.
Maribeth is a member of the Grant Park Dwell community house. She works at a school that is down the street from our house. Here are some of her reflections on living in community.
~Jannan Thomas, DOOR Atlanta City Director


“I wanted to live in intentional Christian and the Dwell house because it just made sense. I had lived in big groups of people, missionally, before, and that is when life made the most sense to me. It was when I was living in community that I felt the church was being the church. When we, as Christians, struggled and worked through our lives together.
There is a lot of maturity in our house. There is not a lot of drama. When I lived in India, I lived with people who were all younger than me and I had to play the mother figure a lot. They didn’t know how to handle conflict and it was a very high school drama situation. In the Grant Park Dwell house it seems like a whole new ballgame with adults. Sometimes it is hard for me to live in community because I am a people pleaser. But the reality is that people are different and they have different opinions sometimes. So, just working through how to disagree with people has been hard for me. One of the things I feel like I have learned so far this year is that the Lord does not have to prove himself. The Lord is who he is. I don’t have to debate that or argue that or try to prove that. God has definitely taught me that. God’s word, God’s sword, is enough. We don’t have to cut people ourselves. The Lord does that through his Word if that needs to happen.


Sometimes it is hard to do as much in the community as we really want to do. But, I live with people who really care about their neighbors and it is nice. Chief crazy hair is our neighbor (he introduced himself to us as that). He is a 96 year old man who lives in a beat up house down the street. We made muffins to take to neighbors and we met him. He doesn’t have any family; he can’t hear, can’t see, and his house is falling apart. I think that meeting him is God’s way of opening up a door for service for our house. People that come home and don’t know their neighbors would not have the chance to meet someone like that. But because we want to meet our neighbors, we have. More opportunities will come up to love him and to serve him. So, far we’ve just brought him muffins, thanksgiving dinner plate and invited him to our Christmas party. But I feel like if I weren’t in this Christian community that connection would not have been made. But because we are intentionally trying to love our neighbors, we have stumbled upon this opportunity. God opened our eyes because we wanted them to be open.”


~Maribeth, Grant Park Dwell House community member