Wednesday, October 14, 2015

From The Lord's Rain: ch-ch-changes!

We are approaching a huge milestone at The Lord’s Rain: shower #10,000!

It is now eight years since I came back to Vancouver from New York, absolutely buzzing at the way God had led me on this two-week train trip, which included planting the germ of an idea to set up showers for people on the Downtown East Side. It’s obvious now, looking back at the way the project unfolded over the next seven months (it opened in April, 2008), that the idea had been around for long before I ever heard about it – long before I was born, in fact – and the Lord was just pulling the elements together, bringing it to fruition exactly in His way and in His time.

One of the intriguing things about the project – something worth remembering if the Lord puts something on your heart that appears to be too expensive or too big or beyond your personal abilities – is that the resources we needed were already there, lined-up years in advance, in some cases. It’s like the Israelites, building the tabernacle in the wilderness. God specifies some very elaborate and expensive elements for the building – gold and silver and fine linen and jewels – and one might wonder where they came from. But those resources were obtained from the Egyptians in the time leading up to their escape from Egypt: God instructs the Israelites to “ask of their neighbours gold and silver and precious stones”. He just didn’t tell them why those resources would be required later.

And so it was with The Lord’s Rain: connections made years before came together to make it happen.

Many of you probably aren’t aware of this, but Amelia and I moved to East Sooke, on Vancouver Island, about a year ago. It was a decision that was taken with a lot of prayer: in fact, we put a number of “barriers” in front of the deal, saying that if the deal was God’s will, those barriers would come down. It was kind of like the fleeces Gideon put out, so he could be doggone sure it was God who was telling him to send his outnumbered army against the Midianites.

At any rate, we left Vancouver, although I’m still on the Board of Gospel Mission Society.
That’s only one of the changes around the Mission and The Lord’s Rain in the past year, especially the arrival of Wesley Chadwick as General Director and Lead Pastor. Wesley is definitely the one the Lord had in mind for the position, to take the Mission to a new level: the excitement we had at the beginning has just grown.

The excitement of the changes is tempered somewhat by other changes, like the departure of Janet and Kim Mogensen, who were married this past May in a ceremony steeped in love and victory. Janet was Assistant Pastor for many years, responsible for Ladies’ Day at The Lord’s Rain and for the entire shower ministry since fall of 2012. Kim’s story is also one of overcoming setbacks – some of them, self-inflicted – and relying on Jesus to carry him through.

There are others who were part of the Mission for a long time, who are moving on to other things; and yet as some depart, others step up. Gary Stephenson has taken on more responsibility in the early mornings, and Joe, a longtime friend of Ken Franklin, who died almost a year ago, stepped in to volunteer at The Lord’s Rain, as well. “It’s my way of paying tribute to Ken,” he told me once, “picking up where he left off.”

Denise, whom I’ve mentioned before, told me recently she would be volunteering during Ladies’ Day, with Janet gone – another way of helping women in situations like the one she came out of.
Eight years on, The Lord’s Rain is in need of structural work, and thanks to the funds raised through the matching challenge from The R. Howard Webster Foundation – over $26,000.00 – we’ll be able to do that. Between that, and ongoing support from the 625 Powell Street Foundation, which stepped in when we had the funding crisis two and a half years ago, The Lord’s Rain will keep serving the people who really need it, in ways that go way beyond a shower and a coffee.

Most importantly, though, as we reach that important milestone, this is something you can look at and say that, in whatever form your support takes, you’re making it happen.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

From The Lord's Rain: the Moccasin Telegraph

I keep cudgelling my brains over whether that term is politically incorrect, and the answer that keeps coming back is, No. I (over-)explained this previously, but to recap, the term was coined -- or used a lot -- by the late Paul St Pierre in his stories about life in the Chilcotin region of BC. In his world of Smith and Ol' Antoine, people were united by a trust of the governments in Victoria or Ottawa (especially the former) and a desire to be left alone to live their lives peaceably. Whites and Native Indians lived together and interacted and accepted one another ... and the principal way of getting a message to someone was by word-of-mouth: eventually, by someone telling somebody else and that somebody else passing it along, the message would reach its intended recipient. So "Moccasin Telegraph" was actually a reflection of reality.
 
In this day and age of texting, instant messages, Facebook and Twitter (not Google Plus -- that's like putting a message in a bottle and throwing it off a ship ... into a whirlpool), moccasin telegraph is still the main way of finding out about people on the Downtown East Side. This, for example, was pasted up on some hoardings next to Gospel Mission (I blotted out the names):
 
 
This shows you how desperate people can get to find someone who's disappeared into the maelstrom of Hastings Central. Someone will see that and might have seen J----e L----- C-----n and will tell her about it.

Maybe.
 
Denise complained the other day about the lack of contact. "I've lost two friends in the past six months," she said, "so I just stayed in my room for two weeks. And you know what? Nobody called. No one came over. It's not like they don't have my number or know where I live."

I've written about Denise before. She has definitely had a hard life, having been handed over to Child and Family Services, then losing contact, one way or another, with her own children, and losing her husband a few years ago. For all that, she inspires others (including me) by overcoming that and working to help people individually and as a volunteer. It seems, though, that she complains about things to remind us that, despite her "tough cookie" exterior, she still needs caring, too. It's something we could all stand to remember: someone who reaches out to help others often needs to be reminded that he or she is making a difference and is a blessing to others.
 
But her point about people not calling her is illustrative. Tracking down someone in the DTES -- as the people with the poster are -- is one thing: the time delay in realizing something's not right with someone is another. Richard Johnson was in hospital for three weeks with a life-threatening blood infection before word got to us that he was sick. People tend to disappear for a while and then re-surface, so they could be gone for a couple of weeks before someone says, "Say, has anyone seen Bob lately?" Often, it's assumed that they've "just gone somewhere" and will turn up again. Or not. Much has been said about the missing and murdered people from the area (more often women, but quite a few men, too, disappear -- as Denise has been quick to point out), and I'm sure one factor in many of those cases has been the tragic truth that, often, it takes a little longer for people to realize that someone's missing at all.
 
===
 
Barbara is one of the ones who isn't seen much in the area these days -- and for good reason. She's moved out of the DTES. She still comes back to the area, usually for medical appointments, but she finally managed to get a BC Housing apartment in the Commercial & Venables area -- a considerable distance away from the DTES. As others have pointed out, getting out of the DTES is a major step forward, and even though Barb has to come back for some services, the fact that now, she doesn't actually have to stay there is a great step forward.
I introduced Barb to you last year, when she and another woman, Lorraine, came to me, upset that a third woman was trash-talking me and they wanted me to know they wouldn't stand for it. I pointed 0ut that the third woman has "issues" and we needed to cut her slack (although people who would trash-talk me don't necessarily have "issues"!), but it was a moment when three wildly different people came together as "family" -- a sign of what relations can be like on the DTES.
 
Barb gets around on a walker or sometimes a scooter and has multiple physical ailments -- many, the result of drug abuse in years past. She would often talk about her husband, Dennis, who also has health problems and would be still in bed when Barb would go out to the methadone clinic a block from us and then over to The Lord's Rain to say hello. As I was leaving The Lord's Rain the other day, she was arriving -- with Dennis at her side. Dennis is 60-something, stocky, jovial, and you can tell there's a mutual caring between them that's carrying them through some pretty tough times. We chat, we pray -- especially over a blood clot that is "somewhere" in Barb's system and the doctors can't quite pinpoint it. That has Barb very worried, as you can imagine ... although one can also tell that having the new digs is lifting the spirits of both of them.
 
===
 
A debate that sometimes comes up when people have nothing else to argue about is the practice of making people sit through a sermon before giving them dinner at a Mission. I won't go into the argument here, but in an interview for the "In His Image, Too ..." project, Kim Mogensen talks about it in relation to his own "journey" that led him to the DTES for several years. Kim and Janet got married in May, and I wrote to you about it at the time, describing it as a miracle -- which it is, for both of them. But during his years as a drug addict/alcoholic/street person, Kim truly resented having to have his ears bashed in order to get a free meal. "How dare they interrupt my eating time with this Jesus stuff?"
 
Kim often talks about being "that guy who came (into the Mission) between the 'Amen' and 'Pass the food'", but also freely gives credit to the Lord for healing him of those addictions, so something must have been getting through. As my friend, Cal Weber, head of campus ministry at BCIT, says, "water flowing over a rock has the same effect as a hammer: it just takes longer." It also does a more complete job. When the interview with Kim is ready, I'll send you the YouTube link: I think you'll find what Kim has to say very inspiring.
 
===
 
To close, a follow-up on our fundraising campaign for The Lord's Rain: through 2013 and the early part of 2014, we responded to a fund-matching challenge from the R. Howard Webster Foundation, which funds a variety of uplifting projects across Canada. The Foundation had provided a grant of $10,000.00 and then pledged to match up to $10,000 in further funds that we raised. Individuals, churches and other groups contributed just over $8400.00 in that challenge, and the Foundation has now rounded that up to $8500, so the total raised through that campaign is $26,900 and change. It goes without saying that we're grateful to the Webster Foundation for the contribution -- and to everyone who responded to the challenge. This is also on top of the ongoing contribution from The 625 Powell Street Foundation.
 
Of course, foundations like those two wouldn't contribute to something that wasn't having a positive effect, and The Lord's Rain has been doing that. It's been the support from all of you -- in whatever form that support has taken -- that's put The Lord's Rain in that position, and we're most grateful to all of you.
 
If you live or work in Vancouver, please consider stepping up as a volunteer at The Lord's Rain: we have some really dedicated people carrying the load, and any help will be welcome. Please post a comment here and I'll put you in touch with Janet.

Sunday, July 5, 2015

The Importance of the Gospel

About a year and a half ago, I wrote a post about the real antidote to poverty, namely, having the Gospel preached to the poor. Today, I got some reinforcement for that point.

For You, O God, have tested us;
You had refined us as silver is refined.
You brought us into the net;
You laid affliction on our backs.
You have caused men to ride over our heads;
We went through fire and through water;
But You brought us out to rich fulfillment.
-- Psalm 68:10-12

The Psalm tells is that it's God who brings us into trials: even the deepest muck, the worst disasters, are His doing, in order to test us; and then He brings us out the other side better than before, coming closer to the greatness that God wants for us.

All of us.

The thing is, people in places like the Downtown East Side are dogged by a wonky theology: that somehow, they deserve to be in a place of poverty and despair and that God is punishing them for something they've done in the past.

Not according to the Psalm. God sends us into the fire and the net, lays affliction on us and allows us to be subdued by others in order to refine us. The Gospel supports that message, telling us about the infinite Love and Grace that is God and the sacrifice of His Son. When people even begin to grasp that, they start to see hope, and hope (as I've said I don't know how many times before) is the rarest commodity in the area.

Sadly, the best the world can offer is programs and experiments in "reducing harm", continuing the oppression and despair that holds people down. About God, all they hear is, "You brought us into the net; You laid affliction on our backs," and they don't catch the rest of it.

Let's hope this knowledge and wisdom encourages all in ministry, particularly when dealing wit the poor.

 

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

THE LORD'S RAIN -- a review

Every so often, it's a good idea to take a step back and review where one is and how one got there. (About a year ago, I preached a sermon called, "It Seemed Like A Bad Idea At The Time," which involved reviewing the things that have "gone wrong" in one's life and realizing that "good" stuff that has happened was actually a result of the "bad" stuff.) With The Lord's Rain, it's important to look back over its history to remind ourselves how God has mandated the project and brought it through all sorts of challenges.

The Lord's Rain is a project we undertook at Gospel Mission in the Fall of 2007, to provide showers to people on Vancouver's Downtown East Side. The whole project has truly been a move of God, with beginnings in a prophecy spoken over our senior Pastor, Barry Babcook, some years back and another spoken over me in September 2007. The word spoken over Barry was that Gospel Mission would expand its influence, reaching out to people on the street; the word over me was that God would start providing me with new ways of reaching people -- and that He would send me on a journey.

The man who spoke the prophecy, Lee Grady, had no earthly way of knowing that I was about to leave on a trip to New York 2 weeks later. That certainly got my attention and opened my mind to these "new ways" while on the trip. I looked in at the Bowery Mission and saw that they have a program to provide showers to people, and I'd been thinking about how the street people could get clean. But we had no place to build showers at the Mission, so it seemed to be just A Neat Idea.

Then we learned that the group which had occupied one of the two ground-floor spaces in our building (Gospel Mission is on the second floor of an old 2-storey walkup) had moved out because they couldn't afford the rent. So Barry asked the landlord if he could give us two weeks to come up with a plan for building and funding the project. He said "yes".

That was really the first sign that God wanted this to go ahead. The landlord is a businessman, and apparently he had at least one prospective renter. But he was willing to put that on hold to give us a chance.

We had $0.00 in the bank for this, so I had to start from square one with the fundraising. I wrote to a prominent Christian businessman, asking if he'd underwrite the project. We were turned down flat. I sent an email to anyone I could think of in my Christian circle of friends and acquaintances. Nada. My home church sent an email to its members.

Two days before the deadline, we had maybe $150 per month in pledges. We estimated that we needed $1500. Then came two phone calls, totalling $4000 in cash. We met the landlord the Saturday, and picked up the keys.

Then the media found out about it and started giving the project exposure. More people started contributing and others stepped forward with offers of help. My former church in Duncan, which has a lot of tradespeople in its congregation, put together a work party, which made three trips to Vancouver to build the sub-floor and frames. As Barry and I discussed where we'd actually get the showers, the Lord spoke to me, "Andrew Sheret".

Andrew Sheret is a bath and plumbing supply company, and in 1992, I MC'd their 100th anniversary dinner at the Empress Hotel in Victoria. I hadn't had any contact with them since, but it was worth a shot. I emailed the president, asking if they could give us a discount on the supplies we needed. He emailed back, saying, essentially "we'll give them to you".

Another sign that the Lord was going to see this through no matter what: the miracle that happened when I made a costly mistake. I thought I'd locked the door to the jobsite, but it turned out I hadn't, and someone walked in and helped himself to some plumbing tools. After beating myself up for a few hours, the Lord told me to do what I do best: write a news release. "People who put their money and time into this have to know that this isn't going to stop it," He said.

Two TV stations picked up on the news release -- which was an upbeat release, stating that we're still going ahead, despite the setback. One of the reporters, CTV's Peter Grainger, very carefully did not turn it into a "whine" festival. Rather, he focused on the vision of the showers project, and only mentioned the theft as almost an afterthought. Then, Pamela Martin picked up on the theft and suggested it'd be nice if people could help replace the tools.

The next day, the phone rang at my home. It was a businessman who didn't want his name used, and whom the Lord had told to help out. I met him at his office and he planked down a roll of bills. "You think $8000 would help?"

There's a passage in the Book of Isaiah, which says, "the Lord of Hosts hath purposed it, and who shall disannul it?" In other words, if God decides something is going to happen, nothing will stop it. The success of The Lord's Rain begins with God's determination that it's what the area needs. It's also due to the fact that it's been conceived, funded, built and supplied by a variety of people bringing their own gifts to the table. It's not the work of a large organization or a single contributor: it's people who care about what's going on in their own city, and want to help in whatever way they can.

The project finally opened its doors April 30, 2008, and to this date, some 9,000 showers have been taken. The place is open 5 early mornings a week (one of those mornings is for women only), plus one midday, and on Sundays, people with disabilities can take part in the Gospel Mission services upstairs via closed-circuit TV.  

The Lord's Rain has been about more than hot water, soap and towels, too. It quickly became a place where people could come for fellowship, free coffee, and a place to escape from the street where they can talk with people who don't judge them. We soft-pedalled the connection with the church upstairs for a while, but it was clear that you couldn't hide that Light under a bushel. People who would never come into a church, would come in and start asking about the Bible, or asking for prayer. Some have started coming to the Gospel Mission services. 

One thing that's become apparent is that people "on the outside" want to support The Lord's Rain. There's so much negative publicity about the Downtown East Side: people see that there's poverty and despair, but they also see and hear activists making wild demands, protesting, occupying private property and essentially trying to shame governments into action -- pointing out there's a problem but demanding that someone else fix it -- with little tangible result. Over and over again, though, we've seen that when people hear about The Lord's Rain and see a project that is more of a hand-up than a hand-out, they get behind it.

We really saw that in the spring of 2013, when funds dried up and it was becoming likely that we'd have to close The Lord's Rain. A reporter with Metro Newspaper -- the free daily paper handed out on the public transit system -- wrote a story, and within a week, enough funds came in to keep the place open for the foreseeable future. Two Foundations stepped up -- one, The 625 Powell Street Foundation -- guaranteed the budget for at least a year (and still hasn't stopped with the support), and the other, The R. Howard Webster Foundation, issued a fund-matching challenge, which led to over $27,000.00 coming in.

I believe it's all an indication that God wants more for His people than feeding programs and emergency shelters: Hope. If they don't have Hope, why should they take the steps needed to get treatment and turn away from the street life?

Where do they find that Hope?  

Jesus tells us that the signs of His presence are: the blind see, the deaf hear, the lame walk, and the poor have the Gospel preached to them. (Matthew 11:5, Luke 7:22) And that's more important than "the world" might say: so many people come into The Lord's Rain -- even though it's not an overtly evangelical operation -- asking for prayer, or asking questions about God and the Bible, and we've realized that we've been providing another Basic Human Need. That's the need to know that God still loves them.

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Got Water?

 
 
And whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of cold water only in the name of a disciple, verily I say unto you, he shall in no wise lose his reward. -- Matt. 10:24

It's hot in Vancouver. I know it sounded silly to the lady from Mississippi whom I met last week - back home, for her, it's up around 100 F with 80% humidity - but here on the left coast, when the temperature hits 30 (upper 80s Fahrenheit), we start to seek out stores with air conditioning.

It's going to be a concern for the homeless and otherwise street people on the Downtown East Side. They don't have as many options for staying hydrated. So this is an appeal to you today: if you could pick up a case of bottled water (London Drugs has them on for $3.99 for a case of 24) and bring it to Gospel Mission, 327 & 331 Carrall Street - (not to be confused with Union Gospel - and they're giving out water, too), we can hand them out both at The Lord's Rain and upstairs.

You probably won't find anyone at The Lord's Rain this afternoon, but come to the church upstairs on Sunday after 12 noon.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

When Cigarettes Saved Lives


Let me preface this by saying that I don’t smoke. I grew up in a time when kids who smoked were considered juvenile delinquents, children with whom “good children” (like me) didn’t associate. I pestered my parents until they quit smoking. A relationship fell apart because she smoked and I tried to get her to quit. (She did try, but then, looking for a replacement for the hand-mouth motion associated with smoking, decided to have coffee, instead. She complained of hyperventilating by 11am. This may give some insight into the relationship as a whole.)
(I should point out that I have no use for the current social battle against tobacco use. No, I don’t want people smoking in my air-space, but I’d rather give a smoker the opportunity to be courteous and give myself the option to be gracious, than have some law forcing the issue.)
Anyway, the headline there is not Orwellian newspeak, like many other attempts at justifying the unjustifiable. But a few years ago, I wrote about a Vietnam veteran and his face-to-face encounter with “Charlie Cong” – an enemy soldier – just after the rest of his unit had been wiped out in an ambush. After staring at each other for what seemed like ages, the VC soldier held up two fingers to his mouth. Rudy – the American – realized he was asking for a cigarette. Rudy had some, so they sat together, had a smoke, and communicated as best they could with sign language. The VC soldier showed Rudy photos of his family. They went separate ways, and when Rudy got back to camp, he told his CO he couldn’t kill North Vietnamese anymore.
So I got thinking the other day: what if Rudy and “Charlie” didn’t smoke? What shared social experience would they have had, that would have led to that turning point in their lives? A drink? I doubt either would have had a hip flask or a canteen of water, and would they have shared? What if one was a mean drunk? How about marijuana – the smokable weed that’s apparently exempt from the social convention against smoking? Again, I doubt they would have had any handy.
Also, consider the circumstances: Rudy had just seen his entire unit wiped out. Who knows how many VC were killed in that exchange, but “Charlie” was all alone when it was over, just like Rudy. Smoking would have calmed their nerves, and smoking together broke through the barrier that war imposes, turning the Invading Imperialist American and the Ruthless Jungle Guerrilla into two men, sitting together, chatting.
Rudy was medical’d out within a week after telling his CO that he couldn’t kill “those people”. “Charlie” disappeared into the jungle – who knows what happened to him? Maybe he was killed the next day; maybe he, too, realized he couldn’t kill people and got out of the war and back to his family. We probably couldn’t count the number of people whose lives were saved, because Rudy had a couple of cigarettes that day.

Sunday, May 24, 2015

Gospel Mission and the 3 P's

In one of his sermons on Living Truth, Charles Price talked about the three items in the Ark of the Covenant: the stone tablets containing God's Law, a jar of manna and Aaron's staff. Each represents a different aspect of our relationship with God. The tablets represent God's purpose, the manna represents His provision; Aaron's staff represents His power: this is the staff that blossomed and bore almonds while the staves of the representatives of the other 11 tribes of Israel remained sticks; Aaron's staff manifested God's power and life through Him.

Does that not apply to Gospel Mission? God's purpose has been playing out pretty much since the Mission was founded in 1929, in the Mission's principle of "God's food first" and its emphasis on being a place of Worship, ministry of the Gospel and demonstration of the love of Christ.

God's provision is represented in numerous ways, particularly in The Lord's Rain. It provides a place to meet a Basic Human Need, which is to be clean; but the fact that the facility has always met its rent and utility bills, often through miracles (OK: consistently through miracles), shows how God has made sure the ministry's worldly needs are being met.

And now we come to God's power. From what I've been hearing and reading on the Gospel Mission Society Facebook page, that has been descending, big-time, on the Mission. I'm getting reports of healings, people receiving the Holy Spirit, and other demonstrations of God's love and grace. It bruises my ego to say it, but it's happened since I was moved out (by God, I should point out) and Wesley Chadwick was moved in. (God has His way of moving us around like chess pieces: we usually have no idea what He's doing at the time, but He eventually shows us when we need to know it.)

This is exactly what God has shown me the Mission would be doing, and exactly what the Downtown East Side needs. It doesn`t need more money, more programs or more handouts: it needs a dose of the Holy Spirit and the Gospel, straight-no-chaser, to bring the hope people need to keep moving forward and turn their lives around -- for His name's sake.

Gospel Mission is an Ark in another way: like Noah's Ark. Years ago, God showed me that there would be Revival on the Downtown East Side with the Holy Spirit coming in like a flood, rising up and catching people unawares in its tide. The Cross would be the Ark for people to grab onto to avoid being swept away and drowned, and so long as Gospel Mission puts the Cross and all It represents first -- God, Jesus, Redemption, Forgiveness, Grace -- people will find the refuge and the hope they need there. With the manifestation now of God's power, going with His provision and purpose, we're seeing the two types of "ark" melding into one.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

From The Lord's Rain: The Wedding Miracle

On the face of it, this miracle has nothing to do with water and wine, and everything to do with the fact that the wedding happened at all. This past Saturday (May 9), Janet Klassen, the Assistant Pastor at Gospel Mission with responsibility for The Lord’s Rain, married Kim Mogenson, who has been around the Mission in one way or another for at least as long as I’ve been there – 8 years, now.

I’ve written about Janet before, the struggles she’s gone through and her victories. Just before Barry Babcook passed away unexpectedly, we learned that she and Kim had become an “item”. General reaction: "al-RIGHT!" (and various other cheers and unbroken Hallelujahs).

Yes: what did happen to that guy?
Kim has often asked the rhetorical question, “Whatever happened to the man who used to wait outside and then come in between ‘Amen’ and ‘Pass the food’?” 

Actually, it’s a pretty good question. I first met Kim in 2004 at Rainbow Mission: drunk, sometimes spaced-out on something else, obnoxious – the kind that would make you cringe. And indeed, because we didn’t lock the door at Rainbow once the service started, people would arrive just in time to miss the message and get to the “important part”.

But a few weeks after John, Danilo, Amelia and I moved to Gospel Mission, Kim showed up, flashed a grin, and said, “You tried to get away from me, eh?” And something was different. He started bringing a Bible to the Saturday night services. He started asking questions about the Bible before, after – and sometimes, during – the sermon. One night, he stood in the doorway of the kitchen and told Amelia, “I’m going to turn my life around.”

We learned that he had been a chef, working at a restaurant in Port Renfrew. For whatever reason – and they are usually legion – his life fell apart: chronic health issues, drugs, booze, all lined up against him and he wound up on the Downtown East Side.

Pastor David Brown, Kim and best man Justin, awaiting the grand entrance
As I write this, I’m hearing Brian Houston of Hillsong Church, telling us that God has a special purpose for every one of us. I get the feeling that Kim was able to regain that sense, not quite sure how it would manifest itself, but it was there, and would become apparent, so long as he kept turning towards the Lord.

Kim would sometimes get up and share something he’d read or observed. One day, he came up to me before a service and said, “I think I’m ready to give the sermon.” The next Saturday night, he took the mike and spoke about the need for us to be salt and light in the world, illustrating it with his own experience as a chef.

While this was going on, he took courses at FreeGeek, which provides IT training for people on the Downtown East Side; he joined a guitar class at the Carnegie Centre; he got more and more involved with the Mission. When Janet was shattered by Barry’s unexpected passing, Kim became her support and also her buffer, the initial point of contact when the rest of us had questions about the running of the Ministry. Others, like Pastor David Brown and Liane Hyatt, the Mission’s treasurer, took on a lot of the load, and Kim was the rock Janet needed to lean on.

So this past Saturday, there was a sense of the climactic ending to one chapter and the bright, hopeful beginning of a promising new one. Watching Janet walk down the aisle on her dad’s arm, in her magnificent white dress, it suddenly struck a lot of us how huge this occasion was. She read her personalized vow to Kim, and there was not a dry eye in the house. Tears, laughter, love, and you knew that God was watching over it all, seeing this raw, obvious example of how He had made it all happen.



In fact, you don't have to stretch too far to see that this is a "water-into-wine" miracle, do you?

**

The seventh anniversary of the opening of The Lord’s Rain came and went with little fanfare, but it’s important to note that we have now passed the 8500-mark in the number of showers taken since we opened. On Tuesday, 25 people came in to get cleaned up, and one has to wonder where they would have gone and what they would have done if The Lord’s Rain hadn't been there. I've been reviewing the history of the building of The Lord’s Rain, and have a hard time believing that we took the dilapidated, rat-infested space and, beginning with a vision but no money, built this facility that meets a basic, and vital, human need.


But we did -- and not by any strength of our own. The people, the finances, the supplies, all came together exactly as and when they were needed, as God made it clear that the project was going to go ahead, no matter what the worldly evidence might say. If you ever want a “wow!” experience, consider the fact that you've been involved with this in one way or another. There are more people than I could count, who are grateful for your support.

(If you would like to contribute to The Lord's Rain, you can send your cheque or money order to Gospel Mission Society, PO Box 98802, The W PO, Vancouver, BC V6B 0G0. The Lord's Rain can always use more volunteer help, too: please contact me through the "contact/comment" box for more information.)

Sunday, April 12, 2015

"I could be in Pittsburgh!" (special from Hawai'i)

One of the more prominent features of Lahaina, the historic Royal Capital of the Kingdom of Hawai’i, is a spreading banyan tree outside the old court house. From a single trunk, its aerial root system spreads over 2/3 of an acre: the roots, which appear to be branches, dive down into the ground and take root, themselves; others spread outward and up.

The ficus benghalensis, which was planted in 1873, is a favorite spot for tourists to take photos, and people of all ages mill about, posing, snapping pictures, and gazing in wonder at the this tree. And nearly invisible are the half-dozen or so people who actually live there.

By “live there”, I don’t mean in Lahaina: I mean “live under the tree”. These are some of the homeless on Maui.

I know what some might be thinking: "So you're homeless - you're on Maui! Sleep on the beach ... under the stars ... must be nice!" Yeah - right.

One man is hunched over in a wheelchair, with what looks like a plate lunch in a Styrofoam container in his lap. He seems unwilling or unable to brush away the flies that seem to be enjoying the lunch more than he. A friend is sitting next to him and doesn't seem bothered by the flies, either. On a bench nearby, a man with a grey beard is lying on his back, a few shopping bags with belongings and cans on the ground beside him; a grey-haired, tanned woman is sitting beside him, reading a book to him.

Another fellow is sitting on a bench next to them with a dog beside him. Clean-shaven, tanned, and clear-eyed, he tells me the dog isn’t his: “I’m just watching her for her mom,” he says.
“Him,” I say, noting the obvious.

The man tells me his name is Mike and that he had been a casting director in Hollywood. “It was a lot of work: I’d go twenty straight days without a break, and I’d be just about to take some time off when they’d call me and I’d have to go to another set and work there. When I had my last heart attack, my doctor said I had to retire.”

“Your ‘last’ heart attack?”

“I had a mild one, then I had a serious one, and that’s when the doctor told me to get out of the business.”

But the Hollywood glamor did not come with a decent retirement plan, so with a Social Security income of $509.00 a month, Mike headed for Maui. “You can’t buy much on $509 a month,” he said, “and you can’t afford rent.”

“At least you don’t have to worry about heating bills,” I offered.

“My brother in Pittsburgh spends more in a month on heating than I get in Social Security,” he says. “If it gets ‘cold’,” he said, making “quotation” signs with his fingers, “you might need to use one sheet or a blanket. So, you know: I could be in Pittsburgh!”

At another point, he told me about working for his brother, who’s a lawyer. “I had a job going around to the pharmacies and picking up medication just before they were going to expire, then taking it to the homeless people.”

“What kind of medication?” I asked. “Prescriptions? Methadone?”

He shook his head. “Antibiotics. People on the streets – “ he looked around him “—they don’t take care of themselves. They get sick … they need antibiotics.” Around Lahaina, there are no facilities like The Lord’s Rain. Mike manages to get to the public swimming pool from time to time to wash up, but for the most part, it’s a basic human need that’s still unmet.

I thought those who support The Lord’s Rain would like to know that: that it's provided -- and continues to provide – something not readily available in other parts of the world. When I see some of the infections suffered by binners on Vancouver’s Downtown East Side – like the time, a few years ago, when Ron nearly lost an arm because a “nick” from a dumpster got infected (doctors had to open up Ron’s entire forearm to treat the infection) – I think how much worse things could be if The Lord’s Rain weren't there to at least provide an option. 


**

SROs, Maui-style
The next day, I learn that there are some individual efforts around Maui to help people get clean. I got the opportunity to ride along with “A Cup of Cold Water”, a mobile ministry set up by St Joseph’s Episcopal (Anglican) Church in Wailuku. (And whoever gives one of these little ones only a cup of cold water in the name of a disciple, assuredly, I say to you, he shall by no means lose his reward. – Matthew 10:42) Maui doesn't have a skid row area per se, so the trick in ministering to homeless people is to know where to look. 

ACCW is a white-and-blue van, which carries a stock of “basic” food items, and “on request” items like underwear, socks, t-shirts, dog food and hygiene products. In the van are Lawrence, his mother Juanita, and Dutch. All three are Hawai’ians by ancestry; Lawrence and another man, Keku, who organized this “ride-along” for me, are retired police officers. We go first to Kahului, leave the main road and hit a badly-maintained dirt road near the shore.  I had just explained what an SRO is (single-room occupancy hotel) is when Lawrence said, “Here are our SROs.” He pointed to a row of derelict cars and trucks along the dirt road.

Each vehicle had at least one person living in it. I was reminded of the "rubber tramps" that Rudy, a fellow I knew at Rainbow Mission, told me about after he'd finished his hitch in the Vietnam war.

We were first greeted by a small dog, leashed to a tent that had been made out of the back of a pickup truck. Presently a young woman squirmed out of the tent, pulling on a dress. We hand her a “single person” bag – one can each of cocktail sausages and Spam (As the late John Pinette said, “I love Hawai’i: there, Spam is a vegetable.”) – two bottles of water, a pudding cup, fruit cup, granola bar and Rice Krispie square.

There was a familiar pong in the air. Dutch motioned towards the buildings at the end of the dirt road – the sewage pumping station.

Lucy, a petite woman about my age, emerges from another truck. “How’re ya doing?” I ask. “Hanging in,” she says. “Hangin’ in.” She then reaches out to me and gives me a huge hug and clings to me for a long time.

“The owner of my place suddenly decided to sell,” she says. “We got 30 days’ notice and nowhere to go. I went to get a camping permit but you know what? They (the County) wanted $45 a day! I can’t pay $45 a day! So I’m here.”

We pray together, then she goes and gets her bag. As we drive away, Lawrence explains that the County inspectors had gone to the place where Lucy had been living and found that no one really knew who owned it. When they finally found out who the owners were, the owners decided to sell rather than upgrade. And Lucy and others were out on their collective ear.

We move on. There’s a little shack in a parking area behind the pumping station and we pull up and honk the horn. A reddish dog bounds out to say hello and in the doorway we see a large woman hurriedly putting on a robe. She comes out to us with one hand on her cheek.

“How are you?” Dutch asks.

“Got a bad toothache,” she says. “You don’t have any Tylenol, do you?” We don’t. We hand her the bag and a couple of tins of dog food and move on.

Dutch explains that there are some areas where they don’t always go – areas inhabited by known criminals and drug dealers. “We especially don’t let the women go in alone,” he says. “If it’s me and Keku,” Lawrence puts in, “we might, ‘cause we can take care of ourselves; but if it’s just ma and some of the other women, they don’t go.”

“We also don’t want to be ‘enablers’,” Dutch adds. “If we go to these guys, they’ll barge in and take whatever and then sell it.” He motioned to a group of tents across the river from our next stop. “But if they come across the river to us while we’re here, we’ll give them something. If they cross the river, they’re exposed, so if they're making that effort, we figure they really need it.”

I ask them about options for cleaning up. In Lahaina, they point out that there are hoses on the docks used for washing down the boats (wonderful! Let’s bathe in tepid sea-water!) and the Family Life Center in Kahului offers showers. Lawrence’s brother, a lifeguard at the public swimming pool in Kihei, has arranged to allow homeless people to shower at certain times of the day. Even that was a tough sell, but he was able to make it happen.

We drive on … to a spot where two men are living in a makeshift shack in a location where other shelters had been destroyed by the storms this past winter (yes, Maui gets winter storms, and they can be nasty). We had gone to see if anyone was left. As we left, we saw a County park inspector drive by – possibly to “encourage” them to move on.

We hit Kalama Beach Park, where a lot of un-housed people set up their homes. Because it was Wednesday, most of them had moved their vehicles out onto the road so the County could clean the park, which is done every week. “They call it ‘resting the park’,” Dutch explains. 

We come across one man – probably in his 60s – who’s installed solar panels on an old pickup truck and uses that to power his truck radio, a TV (with satellite dish) and a few other things. 

A young woman emerges from a minivan, carrying a little girl – maybe 18 months old. It’s not clear where the woman’s husband is, although it’s possible he’s at work, and doesn't make enough to afford a place to live. But where you might think there would be despair, there is love in the mother’s eyes, and joy in the baby’s: the little girl is still blowing kisses to us as we climb back into the van.

At our next stop in the park, we find three generations all together.

“There are actually three or four clans here,” Lawrence says, as Juanita and I throw together “family” bags.

“Why aren't you in school?” Dutch asks one little boy.

I'm sick today,” he says.

Back into Kahului, we wind our way through the industrial area, past the warehouses and big-box stores, finding one or two people in various places. Lawrence has a keen eye: “There’s some (people) there,” he says, as we pull up at a traffic light. He’s spotted a shopping cart off to the side of the road, with four or five guys huddled around it. We hand out single bags and chat for a bit, then head on.

We then pull up near the Family Life Center, but Lawrence makes sure he parks on County property. The Family Life Center, which is run by another church organization, has made it clear it doesn’t want ACCW parking on its property. Whether it’s jealousy among ministries, a sense that one’s turf has to be protected, or a misunderstanding, it’s something I've noticed in Vancouver, too. A few couples come over for bags; one fellow pulls up on a bike laden with bags. As we drive off, Lawrence mentions the fellow with the bike.

“He was a great athlete,” he says, “but just couldn't handle it all. They get all that money, and then the drugs and something goes wrong …” Lawrence doesn't mention his name or what sport he played: right now, that doesn't make much difference.

Families … drug addicts … the mentally ill … but for the most part, Just Plain Poor – people who work but still can’t afford a house … others, too old to work but for whom the “social safety net” has holes a humpback whale could jump through … A Cup of Cold Water, like The Lord’s Rain, is “Jesus With The Skin On,” a reminder that they haven’t been forgotten, they are loved by people who hardly know them – and especially, that they are still precious to God.

That may not seem like much, but neither does a seed, until it’s planted.



Thursday, March 19, 2015

You Just Never Know ...

One of the recurring -- and possibly overworked -- points I make when I talk about the Downtown East Side is that anyone is just one misstep away from winding up in a situation similar to the "street people". It might be something obvious or it might be something seemingly minor, that sets off a cascade of events.

I've known Mike since I started at Gospel Mission eight years ago. Nice-looking, pleasant, polite, 40-something, he would sit at or near the back and sing lustily during Worship. He loved singing, and had been in his school's choir in Prince Rupert, which had won awards in festivals.

But as the years went by, one could see changes in him. He'd be prone to outbursts of anger -- not directed at us, but he would come in and bend our ears about the way some of the advocacy groups he was involved with, like VANDU (the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users) would treat him. He was angry that they would ask him to leave meetings for being disruptive. How he was disruptive was never clear.

Certainly, Mike could be candid and maybe less than judicious in the things he said. When supporters of InSite -- the supervised injection facility -- turned out en masse for a court ruling regarding federal health-care funding, Mike was a no-show. "I missed out on thirty-five bucks," he said, explaining that had been promised to those who came for the demonstration. He then told me that he and others were given box lunches and a trip to Victoria for a demonstration at the Legislature.

Aside from exacerbating Mike's anger issues, the drug use has savaged his physical state, with ghastly open sores appearing on his face. I found it very easy to judge him, saying to myself, "so how are those 'drug users' rights' working out for you?"

Then, a couple of weeks ago, he shared a piece of information.

"My mother died 35 years ago this month," he said. "She, my auntie, my grandma, my sister and brother -- all killed in a car accident. It was just outside Edmonton on Highway 16 and they hit a tanker truck."

That was a jolt. I remembered that crash well. It was one of a number of fatal crashes in 1980 along what the papers were calling "Death Highway". Shortly after that, I had to drive that highway en route to my first radio job, in Lloydminster.

And now, here was someone directly affected by that string of disasters.

He went on. "My grandpa said, 'I got a bad feeling about Mikey going with you.' He didn't want me to go. 'I got a bad feeling,' he said."

"Wow," I said. "So you stayed home."

"Oh, no," Mike replied. "I went. I was the only survivor."

Suddenly, a lot of things fell into place.

So now, it becomes understandable that Mike would turn to drugs as the solution to his pain and his lingering grief ("survivor's remorse" is probably a part of that). Personally, I'm no more in favor of people doing drugs for any reason -- and certainly not in favor of making them "safer" to take. But Mike's experience reminds me that there are so many deep-seated issues that need to be dealt with and frankly, only God can reveal and only Jesus can heal. Anything else is a damned lie.

==

"My mother. Did. What she thought. Was right."

Denise spoke very deliberately, as if she was forcing the thought out of her mouth and into the light. Her mother had handed her over to a children’s aid agency when she was a baby, and her point was that she couldn't hold any anger against her. Mind you, her determined way of saying it suggested she had had a long and difficult time to get to that stage.

Ironically, Denise, herself, parted ways with her children. She talks with them from time to time, and then they go about their lives; but there's still a sense that there are still a lot of gaps in their relationship.

Denise is the one who said, "I'd have to kill you all!" when I asked if she'd share her life story for my "In His Image, Too ..." video project, so this was a remarkably candid revelation. She's in her mid-fifties, petite, still attractive with grey threads through her black hair and has definitely “seen it all”. But she refuses to play the victim and blame the myriad people who could be and are regularly blamed for what happens to our Native brothers and sisters. Instead, she’s what I'd call an actionist – someone who just gets in there and does what she can to help. In her case, it’s serving at the women’s centre on the Downtown East Side, helping other women – particularly the young ones – cope with the situation.

“Just show me a Native woman who hasn't sold her body at some point,” she said recently. Someone had had the face to ask her if she'd ever been a prostitute and she was her usual direct self. But with the annual Memorial March for Missing and Murdered Women about to happen, Denise was equally emphatic that it would have to go ahead without her.

“Nothing changes,” she said, meaning the impact of the marches. “But more than that: I'd like to see a march for missing and murdered men. You never hear about that, but that’s what happened to my husband and I wish someone would talk about that.” But almost immediately, she added, “Not me, though: I'm not goin’ on that crusade!”

Denise believes that handing her over to a child protection agency (ironically, the same one that was under the microscope last year in connection with the death of a little boy in Ontario) was not the right thing to do. And yet, it's clear that the experiences Denise went through as a result have led to this calling on her to help others. Who knows how many people she's blessed, just by being there for them?

I would say Denise has a calling of God on her life: I don't know if she'd see it that way, but I'm reminded of Romans 8:28 "All things work together for good, for those who love God and are called according to His purpose."

==

When we went to Australia in December, we walked around Circular Quay in Sydney (I love the Aussies' directness in many things in their language: it's a quay; it's shaped like a circle; therefore, it's named "Circular Quay") and one of its features is "Writers' Walk". This is a series of plaques, in tribute to the writers from Australia and around the world who have, in one way or another, had a connection with Australia. Alongside Nevil Shute, Jack London, Rudyard Kipling and James Michener, there is this plaque from Kath Walker, an Aborigine who took the name Oodgeroo Noonuccal -- the name of her tribe.
I could tell you of heartbreak, hatred blind,
I could tell of crimes that shame mankind,
Of brutal wrong and deeds malign,
Of rape and murder, son of mine.

But I'll tell instead of brave and fine,
When lives of black and white entwine,
And men in brotherhood combine -- 
This would I tell you, son of mine.

Note that this poem was written in 1964, at about the same time Martin Luther King was delivering his speech, in which he said, in part, "I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia, the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood ... that ... one day right there in Alabama little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers."

Eloquence from two different parts of the world, at the same time, with the same thought towards brotherhood, equality and, yes, integration. For what it's worth, it's my own prayer for our First Nations in Canada, because the current situation, I believe, is geared to keep them oppressed -- just in a different way. But it's one thing for whitey, here, to talk about integration and brotherhood: hearing it from the oppressed people themselves, gives it credibility.

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

NEWS RELEASE - New General Director for Gospel Mission

NEWS RELEASE                                                                                                      FOR RELEASE: NOW
Contact: Drew Snider, Media Pastor, 604-353-4423

A NEW “AROMA” FOR THE DOWNTOWN EAST SIDE
Former “black sheep” to guide Gospel Mission Society

People living on Vancouver’s Downtown East Side – newly-arrived condo-dwellers and “street people” alike – can expect a new reason to be attracted to the area around Hastings and Carrall Streets.

The newly-hired General Director of Gospel Mission envisions a spirit of welcome and love to draw people into the building and into a new relationship with God. Wesley Chadwick has been chosen to take over Western Canada’s oldest continuously-operating Mission, filling the position left vacant by the unexpected death last year of Rev. Barry Babcook. Rev. Babcook had been in charge of the Mission for 17 years. 

A native of South Africa, the 38-year-old Chadwick was, for a time, the black sheep of a family dedicated to serving God. His father and mother planted churches in Rhodesia (as it then was – now Zimbabwe), Zaire (now Democratic Republic of Congo) and the United Kingdom. But in his late teens, Wesley fell into drug addiction. He used crack cocaine, among other substances, before he and the woman who is now his wife were miraculously set free.

“It happened overnight,” he says. “We said to each other, ‘we’ve got to stop this.’ God decided it was time for me to get out of that and serve Him better.” This testimony of hope, mercy and grace will encourage people on the Downtown East Side and show how it is God’s will for people to be set free from the things that oppress them. 

At the same time, Chadwick sees a new role for the Mission, expanding its reach and its scope, likening it baking bread, with different ingredients coming together that tastes and smells delicious to all.

“You know how, when you walk past a bakery, the smell of baking bread just draws you in?” says Chadwick. “That’s how our Mission – our church – should be: where people are drawn in by the goodness of God. If that means newcomers are sitting beside ‘street people’, so be it.”

Founded in 1929, Gospel Mission offers hope to people on the Downtown East Side in a variety of ways, all through the Gospel of Jesus Christ. There is a Sunday Believers’ service, church-style services throughout the week, Bible study, prayer night and even a movie night. Meals are offered at some of these services. Since 2008, it has operated The Lord’s Rain, a facility that provides showers five mornings a week. It receives no government funding, and is supported by volunteer help, in-kind donations and finances from churches, individuals and foundations.


-30-

Friday, March 6, 2015

"Normal -- except in a bad place"

"Normal"? Well ... 
My friend, Murray Scott, who was one of the builders working on The Lord's Rain, made that observation as he sat in his van, watching the passing scene in and around Pigeon Park. You can hear Murray's observations -- as well as those of Rachel McKinley, Jeff Ridley, John Sharp and Kathy Kinahan -- here. It's been one of the "takeaways" that I have from the project: the fact that, in spite of the obvious differences between the people who live on the Downtown East Side and those who don't, there are a lot of similarities -- perhaps more than one would imagine.

It's that takeaway that's made me less fearful of "gentrification" on the Downtown East Side. It's a wonderful opportunity for integration of what's become Vancouver's version of the "two solitudes". The "good folk" of the city, buying condominia amid the squalor and depression of Hastings Central. If each group could just see and interact with the other, rather than put up barriers of fear and loathing, people might be more inclined to help, encourage and in their way, minister to one another. The "haves" might start to see the "have-nots" as people who do have something to offer them; the "have-nots" might be less inclined to see the "haves" as starlings, waiting for a chance to push them out of their nests.

At least, that's the pipe-dream. The real picture is starting to look more like two solitudes living side by side and barely acknowledging the other -- kind of like the woman who told a Vancouver reporter recently that she went for years without saying more than two words at a time to her neighbors on her floor.

Case in point: ultra-high-end lighting boutique, right across the street from Pigeon Park.

In the background, you can see where some people are camping in one of the openings cut into the hoarding around the old building. (That's the building where two concrete cornices crashed to the ground last fall, leading the city and the owners to say, "Yeah ... I guess it's time to get that fixed!) Somehow, I don't think they'll be buying their lighting from the place across the street.

At the same time, two young men walk a white labradoodle along Carrall Street, but passing by on the other side from Pigeon Park. There's a metaphor for you!

And inside, a young couple finally finds a place to crash after what was apparently a sleepless night.

Even though it's not exactly manifesting right now, I still believe in this "integration" thing. Let patience have her perfect work ... (James 1:4) They're in the same neighborhood, and that's a start.


(Yogi Berra might say, "as long as there's proximity, people will be close.")

Yes, anyway ... how do we get to there from here? This is one case where I will use the word "evolution". The divide is too great to be paved-over by a free barbecue at Oppenheimer Park or a street party in Gastown: you won't get people to mingle at either. A commenter on John Fischer's blog a couple of years ago wrote, "Nothing positive happens until we either allow someone into our sphere or we are invited to enter someone else's. Maybe having one's bubble burst isn't such a bad thing after all." 

The barrier of fear, loathing and suspicion has to come down, and that will only come through time and a conscious effort by both sectors to stop and say "hi". When that happens, each side will recognize that the other is, as Murray put it, "normal" -- and as the contact progresses into better understanding, the "place" will be less "bad".