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Small-Time Ministry, Big-Time Dreams (by Bart Campolo)

There are plenty of times I miss running a legitimate ministry organization like Mission Year. Like when I'm breaking down my "office" every night so my family can eat at the kitchen table, or hand-addressing the envelopes for our donation receipts. (Don't get me wrong; I love having to send out those receipts). Or when I'm desperately bribing Roman and his buddy with combo meals at Wendy's to help me move yet another apartment-load of stuff for yet another family in crisis, instead of simply assigning the job to some interns. Trust me, being small-time is hard on the ego.

But then there are those magical moments when being small-time means you get to make things up as you go along.

A few months ago I found myself sitting in the sparsely-furnished, HUD-subsidized apartment of our beloved Bobbie Williams, trying to figure out how such a tough and strong-minded woman got into such dire straights. I won't trouble you with the details, but suffice it to say that in her nearly 50 years, Bobbie has seen more than her share of bad breaks and worse men. Indeed, she feels quite certain she's better off hungry and alone in this little place than cared for and abused in half a dozen others. Still, she knows she could do better.

On that day I visited her, while Bobbie was wearily describing her latest attempt to land a minimum-wage job at a restaurant downtown, I noticed a brochure lying on her coffee table, advertising one of those big-rig truck driving schools. "Where did you get that?" I asked casually, hoping she wasn't back to entertaining men.

"Oh that," she said, her voice brightening as a big smile crossed her face. "That's my dream, which I've been dreaming from the time I was a child. All the other girls wanted to be singers or actresses, but all I've ever wanted is to be a long-haul trucker."

I laughed at first, and Bobbie laughed too, but before long we were deep in conversation about the hard life of a trucker, and about her father forbidding her to pursue it after high school, and about what kinds of resources it would take for her to pursue it now. She told me all about it, the way a lifelong sports fan tells you all about their team, but I didn't mind. In this kind of ministry, genuine dreams are few and far between.

Over the next few days, I kept thinking about Bobbie Williams and her dream of earning a secure living by driving a big rig all over the country. The more I thought about it, the more impossible it seemed.

Bobbie couldn't even pay her rent most months, let alone save $4,000 for tuition. When she wasn't taking care of her grandson, she was out hustling food for herself. She didn't even have a driver's license, for crying out loud.

You know where I'm going with this, don't you? You know Bobbie's in trucking school right now, almost ready to test for her CDL, and you know who loaned her the money (or gave it, if it turns out she can't pass the test). A ghetto grandmother with a GED and a sketchy past might not be a good enough risk for a legitimate ministry organization, and trucking school might be too expensive to build into an ongoing employment program. But none of that matters because we're just the small-time Walnut Hills Fellowship, and Bobbie's been with us since the beginning, and this feels like as good a time as any to take what any lifelong sports fan would recognize as a Hail Mary shot at giving a dear sister a much better life.

If you haven't yet stopped to ask whether or not Bobbie is a certified Christian, or to calculate the chances of us actually getting paid back even if she gets the job, then I think you're connected to the right little faith community. If what you're wondering about instead is how she felt about finally getting behind the wheel of an 18-wheeler ("Incredible!"), or whether everyone else in our fellowship is excited about her opportunity ("Hey, did you hear Bobbie got three out of four on her straight-line backing test?"), or if we're all feeling the pressure as the test day draws closer (Absolutely), well, maybe you should start thinking about moving to Walnut Hills yourself.

We don't have a real office yet. We're always having to move stuff. But we get to make things up as we go along, and take chances on people that nobody else would take chances on, and hold our breath together. And we get to do all that with the almost giddy confidence that all the love in the world is on our side.

Bart Campolo is a veteran urban minister and activist who speaks, writes, and blogs (www.bartcampolo.com) about grace, faith, loving relationships, and social justice. Bart is the leader of The Walnut Hills Fellowship (www.thewalnuthillsfellowship.org) in inner-city Cincinnati. He is also founder of Mission Year (www.missionyear.org), which recruits committed young adults to live and work among the poor in inner-city neighborhoods across the U.S., and executive director of EAPE, which develops and supports innovative, cost-effective mission projects around the world.

 

Comments

Bart,

I always enjoy reading your tales of hope that usually end in disappointment. You walk the walk better than anyone else posting on this site. Despite being disappointed time and time again, you just step right back into the fire hoping against hope that this time (please, just once) the person you're trying to help will make the right decisions to succeed.

To support your good works, I've taken my short arms and reached into my deep pockets to help, as I hope others will do. It's easy if you just go to: www.thewalnuthillsfellowship.org

Way to go. Thank you for enduring the discomfort of Christlike priorities: spending on people instead of office. I'm encouraged.

Would love even the smallest of updates in the near future as to how Bobbie's story turns out.

Cads is right, you seem to walk the walk better (or maybe more focused on the important stuff) than anyone else posting here. I love the fact that your stories have very little to do with you, yet lots to do with the love that God has placed in your heart for others.

Thank you, I needed to read this.

p

Payshun,

Do you remember I told you a couple of months ago about the young man that my daughter was mentoring in her coffee shop/gelato business and grooming for the assistant manager position? They found him a discounted apartment, helped him get his finances in order and he finally had a future. Well, disappointment happened when he quit showing up to work on time, was giving his friends free food and it was found out that he was taking a large portion of the tip money. It's just a shame that down and out people won't accept the help they are offered in so many cases. I guess, like Bart, we'll try again, but after a while, it gets old.

Cads
You're right, it does get old. Every time I get to feeling that way I go back to the story of the wilderness in Exodus. I try to imagine what it must have been like to be a member of one of the Hebrew tribes, how much damage from their generations of poverty and slavery had to be undone, how hard it was for them to not be short sighted and to remember just who God was; how Moses failed because he essentially lost his temper and his patience. Then I remember how it took centuries for the generations that followed to turn their back on idolatry, and what extreme measures God went through to get them to that place.
After all of that I finally remember that once the Jewish people had learned what not to worship, they still couldn't recognize God when He came in the flesh.
Then I just think of my own faults, how much "golden bull" I still worship. It is a humbling little walk down memory lane, but it helps.
Thanks Bart, love to hear the tales.

Thanks Wayne. You talk of it taking centuries and frankly, I may only have 20-25 good years if I'm lucky. After a while, when you see someone swinging that bat for your head, you're going to learn to duck. I think I'll just ante up and let the younger generation (like Bart) deal with the problems directly. I'm rooting for Bobbie to make it, but experience tells me to bet against any good coming out of that $4K gift.

I'm going to vent just one more thing - It's amazing how people can't seem to find the funds to ever pay me back (ahh, he's got plenty of money; he doesn't need it) but they always seem to have money for cigarettes, booze and lottery tickets. And people wonder why I'm fed up with welfare. OK, I'm done.

Cads
I hope you heard me say i understand your frustration. I go to the same place often, sometimes daily. It is great that you want to help guys like Bart, He needs it from what I have read he also struggles like you and I.
I think it is hard to remember that we are always to hope, (I Cor 13), but our expectations make it difficult and it is hard to know the difference. (by the way I do not think that means we continually role over in situations like the one you detailed.)

Go Bobbie! Live the dream. And I think you are living it, too, Bart. Blessings.

My two smallest children were born to mothers who were addicts, prostitutes, and uninterested in prenatal care.

Since the girls came to us first as foster children, we had a great deal of interaction with their birth families. We gave rides, actively involved them in the girls' lives, listened to their stories of anger, fear, and pain.

We lent money that was never repaid. We also knew that as soon as we disappeared around the corner after a visit, they were mocking us, laughing at our gullibility, hating us for thinking we had a right to expect them to care about us.

We also came to see that it didn't matter how much we helped or how much they cared; the gifts were given to God to use in His way. We had no idea what happened to efforts or money after we left -- except that conditions never improved and neither mother raised a protest when parental rights were terminated and we were able to complete the adoptions.

In the end, I guess, it doesn't matter what we give or how we act, as long as we stay accountable to the God who can "pay us back" in much more valuable currency. What happens in the lives of those mothers is beyond my control, too. I do my part, grateful that God does his.

It was such a blessed relief when I realized it wasn't my responsibility to see whether the accounts were balanced or gifts appreciated. There have been some moments of incredible joy, though, as if God winks to remind me he and I are on the same team.

I have been in a similar type of ministry for over 10 years now - 5 on a full-time basis.

It all comes back to what the Lord requires of us - to love God and love our neighbor. He never said get a good return for your money - instead he said feed the hungry, clothe the naked, visit those in prison, etc.

We are to sow the seeds and may never have the opportunity to see the plants grow. The seeds may fall on the hard ground and never produce. That is not our responsibility. Our responsibility is to lovingly share the hope of Christ to all. They, in turn, will be held accountable for their decisions - we won't.

Bart - you truly are living out what Christ called us all to do. May God bless you richly.

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