Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Who I Am...
This video takes you from the voices of the 6,000 single mothers living in poverty throughout Knox County into the story of one single mother who doesn't let her circumstances define her!
Thank you to Streamline Pictures for helping us make this story come to life.
Saturday, September 06, 2008
The Salt & Light is Coming...
I am so excited to let you all know that the 3rd Edition of the Salt & Light Guidebook is coming very, very soon. This edition of this very tremendous resource, put out by the Compassion Coalition in Knoxville, is totally new front to back and will also have a powerful web site companion product as well. This resource will help you really get a sense of the history of Knoxville, how God is working, who is joining Him, where are the needs, how to get involved, stats, stories, actions steps, resources, mapping, and so much more.
As I right this I am reading through the draft guidebook to help the editors with any last minute changes before it is sent off of publication. Make sure you get your hands on this for yourself and your church as soon as it is made available. I am guessing sometime in late October. The guidebook and web site should be released at the same time.
You can view the 2nd edition online by clicking here.
Friday, August 01, 2008
A Family’s Journey toward Restoration…
This article is being published in this issues of the Chalmer's Center: Mandate. I have posted it here for your enjoyment!_______________________________________________________
Rebekah and her daughter, Averie, represent one of 6,000 low-income families headed by single mothers in Knoxville, TN. Rebekah is a motivated young mother who tried her best to provide for her newborn daughter, but lacked the support needed to make the next step toward self-sufficiency. Before coming to The Restoration House of East Tennessee (www.therestorationhouse.net), she was homeless, living in a shelter in order to leave an abusive relationship, only to find herself alone, without an income, a home, an education, or any dreams for the future.
The Restoration House is a faith-based organization helping to restore single mothers and their children back to God’s good intent for their lives through supportive transitional housing, team mentoring, and service planning that focuses on the family’s relationship with God, self, others, and the rest of creation.
In November of 2007, Rebekah began her journey toward restoration by moving into one of TRH’s supportive housing units and meeting her team of seven mentors for the first time. Six months later, Rebekah recorded these thoughts about that experience:
I came into The Restoration House not knowing exactly what to expect, just hoping to get some help & support in making a life for myself and my daughter. I came with my mind as open as possible, considering the not- so-great past I’ve had. I didn’t grow up feeling like life had too much of a support system to offer. I have to say, meeting all of my mentors was quite overwhelming. I mean what do you expect when you meet a bunch of strangers that are supposed to love, help, support, and to form a bond with you? Now that I know them, they are a lot like family and I love them as if they are. And as the months have gone by so quickly, amongst all the issues I’ve been trying to overcome, I slowly feel as though life is changing for the better. Doors are opening and I am growing mentally and spiritually. Who would have thought???
When a family like Rebekah’s comes to TRH, a lot of time is spent in the first few weeks both listening to and getting to know the family. Although every family at TRH pays an adjusted rent for a supportive housing unit and has a mentor team, almost every other aspect of the program is unique to that particular family’s situation. Hence, instead of having a one-size-fits-all blueprint for each family, TRH tries to journey alongside a single mother and her children, believing that the family’s unique strengths, history, and future goals need to be understood and appreciated. The mother meets weekly with a Family Advocate, who helps her begin to explore the areas of her family’s life that are in need of restoration. While the Family Advocate facilitates the process, each single mother participates in the process by working to envision the family’s future and setting goals and initiating the action steps necessary to achieve them. The Family Advocate is then able to help hold the mother accountable, as well as contribute to the family’s long-term plan through resource development. Another crucial element is the team of mentors who simultaneously provides the relational and practical support the family needs to stay motivated and encouraged and to achieve personal success.
Throughout their relationship with the family, both the Family Advocate and the mentors must minimize their own thoughts and assumptions about what the family needs in order to appropriately focus on the question: “What is God’s good intent for the family?” which often is not obvious. However, failure to maintain such a focus can cause frustration for the participating family due to the pressure of trying to live up to the Family Advocate and mentors’ personal expectations of “success” and “wholeness”.
A family is able to stay at TRH for up to two years. Every six months each mother participates in a feedback session where the TRH staff and mentors encourage the family in the progress made while also sharing observations around particular areas of improvement. Within this time, the mother is also given the opportunity to share her own insights that might improve the TRH program as a whole as well evaluate her personal experience with her mentors.
The TRH program is driven by a Five-Way Partnership model, where:
- STAFF: provide support, training, accountability, and collaboration
- MENTORS: provide support and friendship
- COMMUNITY PARTNERS: provide support and direct services, such as counseling, job training, financial education, fitness opportunities, etc.
- THE FAMILY: is a proactive partner working toward restoration in their relationships with God, self, others, and the rest of creation
- GOD: directs and holds together the process
The Restoration House aids in linking the assets of the broader community with the assets found within the participating family in order to encourage transformation. The gifts and abilities of each family are affirmed and leveraged in the journey towards restoration. TRH families live as a community, in close proximity, as they utilize their strengths to help propel one another toward wholeness.
Although a family often has numerous assets upon which to build, the families with whom TRH work almost always lack educational and housing assets. Many of these women were deprived of the opportunity to dream for themselves and their children.
Individual Development Accounts (IDA), savings programs in which external funds are used to match each dollar the family saves, are one way TRH can build upon the assets a family already possesses. By leveraging assets such as hard work and determination and a consistent pattern of saving, a family is able to grow their dreams into reality. Those who match a family’s IDA are investing in the family’s own investment for their future. This kind of investment can change a person, a family, and even a whole community. The Restoration House is now partnering with Covenant Community Capital (www.covenantcapital.org) of Houston, Texas and the Chalmers Center to bring the possibilities that come with IDAs to low-income single mothers in East Tennessee.
As a single mother, Rebekah never thought it would be possible to go to college or to own a home. But with IDAs and support from TRH and her team of mentors, she not only is dreaming like she never has before, but she is actually experiencing the fulfillment of these dreams.
Rebekah’s journey toward restoration has just begun, and although there is a long road yet to travel, she has renewed hope for her family’s future. In her own words,
I want to be able to look back 5 years from now, in my house with a white picket fence (husband or not) and see how much I've overcome. I want to see in my daughter’s eyes that I have done for her the best I can. I want to know that with all the help I was given, that I did the best I can.
For Rebekah and her daughter, along with the other four families currently journeying with The Restoration House, the future is promising and full of possibilities. It is their hard work and determination that is paving the way.
Thursday, July 17, 2008
It's Hard to Escape...
Have you ever felt completely trapped?
Was is it because you were in a tight space or maybe you just didn't know where to go next? Maybe it was because you were still paying the consequences of something you did many years earlier. A friend mine feels trapped because of that kind of experience. He has paid the legal consequence for his actions but is still finding himself having to constantly make decisions based upon what was done in the past. There are places he can't go, employers who would never hire him, people who wouldn't trust him if they only knew... He is continually being restored but the process can be painful and at times seem very unforgiving. His head is up and he is moving in the right direction but the question remains will he ever really be restored here and now.
I pray for him...that he might find peace...and acceptance wherever he goes. It is a hard burden to carry but he carries it well and he doesn't carry it alone...
Monday, June 16, 2008
My Most Important Question...
Many of you know that I go to Crossings. It is a new church plant that has been around for about a year and half. Friends of Mandy and I, Mark and Monica Nelson, knew God was calling them to plant a church with its sole mission of "Helping People Find Their Way Back to God".
What I love about this community is that we don't presume that any of us are there yet, but instead we are all finding our way back to God.
We are in the middle of four weeks where we are having a different person share their "most important question" of faith as the main teaching element. We want people to know that everyone has questions and doubts and the important thing is to not just dismiss them but to wrestle through them. So far two people have shared; Mark - Can we trust the Bible? ,Bill - Who is right? Calvinism vs. Armeniaism.
These may not be your bag but for these two guys these have been the most important questions of faith they have wrestled with. In a couple of weeks my wife is sharing hers. It will be great to see her take others through her journey. If you would like to listen to any of these Crossings does have a free podcast on Itunes.
I know my "most important question" has been, "What is the full gospel (good news)". Is it simply that Christ died so that we have the chance of new life and a ticket to heaven or is it more than that. What I have discovered through wrestling with that question over the past 4 years has changed everything about my life. With out struggling through that question The Restoration House would not even exist.
Has that been your most important question? I can tell you the answer I have come to has everything to do with the Kingdom of God but that is subject for another time.
So what is your "most important question"? Do you have any? Are your wrestling? Are you at a place of contentment? Or is God pulling at you?
I'd love to hear...
Friday, May 16, 2008
My First Published Article...
I have been involved with the Compassion Coalition since 2004 and have absolutely loved its vision and the people invested in it. They have produced the Salt & Light Guidebook since their start in 1999 and now in August of 2008 the third edition, along with a state of the art web site is due to be released. I had the honor of assisting with some of the preliminary research for this edition of the guidebook and was also given the opportunity to write an article for the "Windows of Knoxville" section on Nonprofit Knoxville. I'm sure the article will differ from the original in its published form but I thought it was something I would share. My prayer is that as the church of Knoxville continues to grow into the church God desires it to be that beautiful partnerships would be an even more regular occurrence between the church and the nonprofit community.
Knoxville’s nonprofit sector is extremely diverse with well over 2,000 nonprofit organizations according to Guidestar.org; that is one nonprofit for every 86 people! These nonprofits are active in almost every area of Knoxville’s society, including: arts, education, human services, social action, philanthropy, health, environment, religion, sports, and others. With this kind of sweeping impact, it is hard to imagine Knoxville without such distinctive nonprofits as Bijou Theatre, Dogwood Arts Festival, Knox Area Rescue Ministries, Baptist Hospital, Hope Resource Center, Habitat for Humanity, Community Action Committee, or its 90+ private foundations, amongst thousands of others.
With hundreds of types of nonprofits, it is often hard to recognize that which is or is not a nonprofit organization. Generally, all nonprofits, “exist to serve a mission, to respond to a situation or opportunity that has not been addressed,”[1] without profiting monetarily.
Over the course of Knoxville’s history, when there was a need to be addressed or an opportunity to be taken advantage of, the creation of a new nonprofit soon followed. For example, following the Civil War there was an urgent need to educate the South’s newly freed slaves. In response, Presbyterian missionaries established Knoxville College. Knoxville College has now been providing quality education to African Americans for over 130 years. Or consider Emerald Youth Foundation (EYF). EYF is a faith-based urban youth organization, located in the heart of Knoxville. The foundation grew out of a vision of Emerald Avenue United Methodist Church in 1988 to serve children and youth in its low to moderate income Oakwood/Lincoln Park community. Twenty years later, EYF works annually with over 850 inner city preschool through high school age youth.
Along with communities of faith and government, nonprofits are often viewed as one of three spokes in the wheel of human service. With over 300 nonprofit human service organizations in Knoxville, extensive duplication of services is not uncommon. Unfortunately, such duplication has at times, lead to confusion and frustration from within the community. When considering the vast landscape of faith and community-based organizations in the Knoxville area, there are many respectable organizations working for noble causes. However, in order to more effectively address the deep and systemic community challenges Knoxville faces, there must be an increased emphasis on cooperation and collaboration amongst these organizations in order to bring about holistic impact.
Knoxville Leadership Foundation is one nonprofit that is helping to lead the way and unite organizations through its Center for Communities (CFC) program. Over the past three years, over 52 nonprofit organizations participated in CFC’s capacity building training and consultation. With a strong emphasis on collaboration and partnership to achieve greater community good, the CFC program helps encourage numerous organizations to join forces in strategic partnerships such as Destination Hope. Destination Hope is a partnership among 5 local nonprofits to help move women from street-life and addiction into lives of self- worth & self-sufficiency. Operating alone, these organizations could never accomplish what they are now capable of accomplishing together.
At times the church has demonstrated a view of the nonprofit world that suggests that the two are in competition with one another; as if the nonprofit is doing the work to which God exclusively called the church. However, if and when the two entities can begin to view themselves as potential and essential partners in Kingdom work, then will there be resources shared, more lives changed, and communities restored.
[1] Zdenek, Robert. "Organizational Culture and Nonprofits." SPAEF: Public Administration and Management: An Interactive Journal. http://www.pamij.com/zdenek.html (accessed April 15, 2008).
Monday, May 05, 2008
So, I'm curious...
Where have you seen God restoring lately? It could be as simple as a mother and child at Kroger or something in your life or something you've seen around the world. I'm serious, I really want to know...
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Restoring our Relationship with Creation...
At the Restoration House we deeply believe that at the Fall not only was our relationships broken with God but it was also broken, with self, others, and the rest of the creation. Today is Earth Day and my guess there are a lot of Christians out there that don't get it or they just think of tree hugging hippies. Well to catch me in a tree hugging video below is one for you viewing pleasure.
But regardless of what you think about hippies, tree hugging, or Earth Day, God calls us to care of and to be good stewards of his creation. I know I am continually wrestling with the practical realities of that. This has been a twist in my journey that I never expected but I know God is pleased when he sees us taking care of His creation.
Recently, I have been able to participate in and help teach a four week workshop called God is GREEN. We have been recording each session for pod-cast and all four will be posted next week. Also there is a great book by Matthew Sleeth, MD entitled Serve God Save the Planet.
Check back then and I will included a link from the blog. In the meantime go plant a tree or something...
Friday, April 18, 2008
The Joy of Work...
Have you ever known someone who always complains about work? Not their job, but work in general. Have you ever seen good hearted people consistently prevent those they're helping from work because they end up doing it for them? Have you ever known someone who is just completely lazy and does everything they can to get out of work?
Well I've definitely known a person or two like that, but as a follower of Jesus I must remember that work is not a curse. God always intended that we work. In Genesis before the Fall ever occurred, Adam had a purpose; a job. It was only after the Fall that work became toilsome.
Today I had the pleasure of dropping and picking up our second mother at The Restoration House for her first day of work at her new job. She has only had a job one month out of her life and that was more than six months ago. Her new job is at a local kids consignment shop where you spend the whole day on your feet sorting clothes and putting things into its proper place.
You should have seen her incredibly joyous smile when I picked her after seven hours of being on her feet with nothing to drink or nothing to eat (by her own choice). She loved it. She felt needed and that she was able to provide for herself and her daughter. Don't get me wrong, its not the job she wants forever but she finds a new sense of dignity and worth in the work.
Now that is the way God intended it to be!!!
Saturday, April 05, 2008
LUNAFEST is coming to Knoxville...
LUNAFEST is coming to Knoxville April 29, 2008, a national traveling film festival of short films made for, by, and about women. Award-winning films are pulled from the top festivals across the nation, and range from quirky animation to touching documentaries. All the films celebrate women in our local and global communities. LUNAFEST is a fun and inspiring way to connect with other women, raise awareness for women’s issues, and nationally support The Breast Cancer Fund. Stroller Strides, Knoxville is hosting the local LUNAFEST film screening to raise funds for The Restoration House of East Tennessee in addition to The Breast Cancer Fund. LUNAFEST will take place at the beautiful Two Rivers Pavilion in Louisville, TN. Tickets are $20 before the event and $25 at the door. Tickets may be purchased at all Stroller Strides classes, or online by visiting www.therestorationhouse.net. We are so excited about Stroller Strides and The Restoration House working together to help restore single mothers and their children. See you there!
Lights, camera, action!
Thursday, April 03, 2008
A Day at DHS...
Today I had the privilege of spending two hours at the Depart of Human Services (this is where people go to get food stamps and such) with one of our mother's at The Restoration House.
When you first enter it is a larger room with probably 80 to 100 chairs where people wait to be called (sometimes up to 3 hours, so I've heard). There is a very small unsupervised play area for smaller kids to play while their parents wait. Then there are clerical workers lining both sides to help check people in for their appointments and to answer basic questions. Once you are called back by your case manager you enter cubical world. They are very small and extremely packed it. There is enough room for the case manager, a computer, and the client. Because there was no room, I had to sit outside of the cubical in the hall. There are a few dirty toys lining the walls to help distract young kids.
It was amazing to sit there with her, her daughter, and two different case managers. The first one concerning food stamps didn't take any time. The second case manager handles her Families First (TANF) case. This was a whole other story.
As I chased her daughter up and down the hall (she is only one and this is to be expected) I was able to interject into the conversation and help unscramble some of the coded language being used.
I have to trust that the case manager's heart is good about what she does but it just seems that every explanation and every answer was so canned. There were times where there were grouse misunderstandings happening all because the case manager wasn't taking the time to really listen and process what the mother was saying to her. It really was all very sad.
I know the case manager sees all kinds of people come through there and has probably been working there for years. When she was hired she probably had incredible visions of helping to rescue people from their negative choices and desperate situations. Over time it seems she has lost most of that original passion and desire.
So here's my question, "How do we protect ourselves from that?" I mean Mandy and I currently have that original passion, drive, and vision for our families, but how do we keep it over the next year, five years, ten years???
I don't want to wake up one day and find that though I'm still doing the job, I really don't have the relationship...
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Getting here...
I often look at where I am today and think how in the world did I get here. There are so many reasons that my life shouldn't be as good as it is. I could have easily been some statistic somewhere feeling stuck and trapped with no one.
There are some people in my past who are just there. I can't remember or see any real difference they made on my future but then there are others who influenced the direction of my life in ways that can't adequately be explained. Elwood, Tina, Eli, Evie, and Mary Lou McAllister are some of those people in my life. I truly could not imagine where I would be today without them stepping into my life as a very impressionable 15 year old over 14 years ago. They have now known me for almost have my life but I have had very little contact with them (except for Eli) over the past six years. Elwood and Tina have lived in Florida for a while now and we just don't get down there and Evie and her husband lived in northern VA for much of the past six years. Not since Eli's wedding, seven years ago have we all been in the same room together until this weekend.
This weekend we all converged on Evie's house in Johnson City on the campus of Emanuel School of Religion. It was only 24 hours but it was like we had never been apart. All of the same personality traits were present and all of the good feelings abounded. It was the first time that Elwood and Tina had met our kids. It was so cool to experience them bonding.
After my junior year of high school the McAllister's opened up their home to me in a way that is hard to imagine. I lived there my whole senior year of high school and whenever I came home for the holidays in college I stayed at their house. They were there for me at very rough time in my life and their love and guidance helped encourage me toward a better future.
In the end they helped me believe that I had value and worth and I had something to give back.
Thank you...Thank you...I can never repay you...
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
You Can't Hide...
I learned this past week that you can't hide from the flu. You know in 29 years I don't think I've ever had it until now, but when it catches you it just doesn't let go. It put me down for a solid five days; even with the $8 per pill medication my doctor had me on. There were too many symptoms to list but the worst symptom was having to watch me wife take care of the kids all week while I just lay there hopeless and dying.
It really reminded me just how much my wife does. She is an incredible family advocate for the families of The Restoration House but more than that she is a terrific mother and a caring wife. Don't get me wrong; she wasn't all smiles when she heard me say I had the flu right after being away for two days in Chicago with friends. But she did take care of us and she did it in a way that displayed her love for our family.
How beautiful?
Sunday, March 09, 2008
Mancation
This is what my wife called the trip she sent me on to Chicago this past weekend. Actually she joined up with two of her friends who also sent their husbands as well. We had an incredible time.
When I travel I usually have my laptop but this time it stayed home. This was definitely the right move on my part. I'm so thankful I didn't find myself in front of the computer screen in Chicago. If I had I probably wouldn't have found, free bratwurst, deep dish Chicago style pizza at Gino's East, ESPN zone, the view from the John Hancock building, U2 3D, the Jimmy Johnson band at the B.L.U.E.S. bar (the oldest blues bar in Chicago), the free Lincoln Park Zoo, the many samples of chocolate, the Chicago hotdog, The Mix (cheese and caramel popcorn mix at Garretts), Ed Debevic's Diner, and much much more.
Its hard to say what I enjoyed the most but high up there was Chico Banks of the Jimmy Johnson Band. This guy was completely amazing on the guitar.
In my life I have been exposed to very little of the blues. What I've heard I've liked but have never really understood why. After listening to Chico and the rest of the Jimmy Johnson band for an hour or so I think I know the draw. There is a repetition to the music and
As you listen the thing that becomes evident is that the song never really ends no matter which blues song is being played. Not only does it never end but hope never enters. The sun never comes out. This is where the blues leaves me short. I hope to be able to lament like the blues but eventually I want the song to end.
If we learn to despair with the blues where can we go to learn joy?
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Families First?
Some of you may realize this already but the former welfare system is now called Families First in Tennessee. Great name, isn't it? Trouble is families aren't always first. Let me explain.
You see in the new welfare system there is a time limit on the services you receive. A person benefiting from the system can not use services for more than 5 total years in a lifetime. This was the big change when the old system was overhauled. That part I love. It encourages people to move toward self-sufficiency if they have the capacity.
Another piece of this new puzzle is that now, if a person is capable, he or she has to be working, looking for work through a program provide by ETSU, or be doing community service at least 30 hours per week.
Now don't get me wrong, I understand why this is in place. If people are capable they should be working. God always intended us to work. It wasn't a part of the curse it was a part of the plan from the beginning.
My problem is that if a mother is working toward self-sufficiency with The Restoration House but is not yet working full-time, participating in ETSU's 4 week full time job search program, or doing 30 hours of community service assigned by the state then they can't receive benefits. And the benefits are substantial.
The greatest benefit for single mother's is the childcare subsidy. This subsidy provides the means for a mother to get childcare while she is getting back on her feet.
Our mother is working to be self-sufficient. She has a part-time job, has received a scholarship to a CNA training program she is starting in May, is applying for a second part-time job, and is now stuck because her Families First runs out in March and she won't have access to a child care subsidy to take advantage of the opportunities mentioned above.
Tell me how that is putting "Families First"?
Thursday, February 21, 2008
Gettin' on a Jet Plane...
Have you just ever needed to rest? Rest is one of the things that escapes most of us and at the same time is something most needed by all of us. God designed it that way. For us to truly rest is to take Sabbath and Sabbath leads to restoration. How can we ever fully be restored if we're killing ourselves trying?
My wife knows this and that is what makes her the greatest wife ever. That and she bought me a plane ticket to go to Chicago on an overnight trip with two of my friends. All that just 'cus she loves me and know that if she doesn't help me with Sabbath, I may not take it.
Honey, you're the greatest!!!
Saturday, February 02, 2008
Incarnational...
So I've really been struggling with something. Since about October of 2006 we have been searching for an apartment complex to purchase in order to expand our capacity and to have place to build a sense of community among the single mother families we work with. In December of '07 a good friend of mine made us aware of the building in the center of the map below.
The address is 2510 E. 5th Ave and it is located in the historic Parkridge Community right outside of downtown. The neighborhood has a tremendous association with a lot of renewed interest in the community. The property is just what we have been looking for. It is 8 units for $119,000 with around another $300,000 to rehab. It's history is rich and was originally used as rental property for women who's husbands had died in the war during the '40s. It is 5 feet from 5th Avenue Baptist Church which has a 3 star state recognized childcare rate for 60 kids. This would be a huge asset for our family's. Also the same friend who told us about the property is putting an offer in on the house right beside it and a friend of their's just purchased the house right across the street. So you may be asking, "What's the problem?"
Well, although Parkridge is on the upswing, the southeastern corner of the neighborhood (where this building is located) is way behind. It has the most criminal activity including drugs and prostitution. Also this district has the worst schools in the whole county.
So here's my issue. Even though I could make the decision for my family to live their can I really make that decision for the single mother families we work with? When we say God is restoring all things we really believe that. He is restoring us, the families we work with, our schools, our communities, our world, everything. So we know he is at work in that community and we would love to join him there, BUT how is it ok for us to expect the families of The Restoration House to be working toward their own restoration in that environment? Is this an opportunity to be incarnational or is this when you say this is for someone else at another time? I'm not scared but I want to do what's best for our families on their journey of restoration. What would you do???
Creative Ways to Give...#3
Just the other day, I heard about this exciting new way to support your favorite cause. It is called Giveness.com. By shopping your favorite online stores like Amazon, Ebay, Itunes, and many others you can have a portion of the purchase price donated back to your favorite charity. For instance every time you buy a song at Itunes for $0.99 they will donate $0.05 to The Restoration House. Or let's say you buy a new Mac at Apple.com for $1,000 they will donate $10 to The Restoration House. Get start by going to www.giveness.com or by shopping below. Have fun!
Saturday, January 19, 2008
Creative Ways to Give...#2
Do you like to read? Or do you buy books as gifts for others? You can make a difference by making your book purchases count. Abunga.com will donate 5% of all revenue from your purchases to you pre-selected FAN (Favored Affiliate Nonprofit) on the Abunga site. Choose The Restoration House as your FAN and you will be supporting single mothers and their children. The donation comes from the low pricing you receive from Abunga. There is no up-charge, ever! With Abunga you know what you’re getting.
Friday, January 11, 2008
Creative Ways to Give...#1
Many of us are interested in supporting good work but often aren't able to directly give to every cause we value. Starting with this post I will be sharing some ways that you can creatively give to the causes you believe in including supporting single mother's and their children through the Restoration House.
Every time you use GoodSearch to search the internet, you can be raising money to for your favorite cause. The site is powered by Yahoo!, so you'll get the same quality search results that you're used to. Each search generates 1.3 cents which really adds up over time. By using GoodShop to buy things on the internet you can also be supporting your favorite cause because up to 37% of your purchase will be donated back to the cause of your choice, including the work of The Restoration House. Click one of the two graphics above to get started today. Once there you can download the GoodSearch toolbar for your internet browser and starting giving back with every search.
Happy searching and Happy shopping!
Wednesday, January 02, 2008
Lack of Separation...
Well the holidays have been great; celebrating Christ, seeing family, sharing laughs, the food, and all the rest. But as I'm sitting here writing this I can't tell whether to be sad or overjoyed that the lines of separation in my life have blurred so much that I can no long compartmentalize my life into family, church, work, worldly, spiritual, etc. Since my last post on December 21st, I've spent time with Mandy, the kids, Mandy's mom, sisters, brother-in-law, soon to be brother-in-law, her granny, aunt, uncle, three cousins, father, step-mom, my sister, her new husband from Morocco, my niece, my nephew, my mom, her new boyfriend, my older brother, my younger brother, and my cousin, and all this took place over many different visits within three different cities in two states. Over this time I've worked on different things for the Restoration House at various times which led me to travel differently than Mandy and the kids both to and from Virginia. Mandy and I also provided childcare for a two month old for one of our Restoration moms for two nights and three days as she was in the hospital for a gall bladder which included multiple hospital visits and phone calls, while we also started caring for two horses from some friends while they're out of town. (this overlapped my sister's family and then my mother's family staying at our house over New Years).
Through all of this I've experienced joy and laughter, as well as sadness. I've made my wife happy at times and disappointed her multiple times. We all need rest from our rest but I know all of these experiences have been valuable. I'm so thankful our life is an adventure and it isn't easy, but it's worth it. Jesus really holds all this together and we would be lost without him.