The other day I went to a run-down motel to pick up the belongings of a homeless man named Dwayne who has been part of our Reunion community. He had been sharing a room there with a man who was living on meager disability checks. Dwayne paid him about $15 a day to share a room, money he earned selling The Contributor on street corners. Dwayne has been in the hospital for weeks and is now in the respite care program at Room In The Inn. The roommate is moving back to his home state, and Dwayne asked me to go get his belongings for him.
I took some boxes and plastic bags and gathered his stuff. Two small boxes of books and papers. A few large bags of clothes. An electric blanket. Some personal items. I carried it all down to my car and packed it tightly into my trunk. As I closed the lid, it suddenly occurred to me…I just loaded a man’s entire earthly belongings into the trunk of my car. The trunk of my car.
And this was not a nameless homeless person we might stop to help or serve in line at a mission. This was my friend Dwayne. I see him every week in our home. Most Wednesdays we grab a burger and talk about life. I had everything my friend owned in my trunk.
Something has changed in my ministry these last few years. I’ve been involved in some way in ministry to the poor in the city for many years—whether starting a tutoring program for inner city kids in Milwaukee, or serving on the advisory board of a Houston charity, or preaching for a church with a food and clothing pantry in Nashville. I have considered myself a compassionate person with some level of understanding of the issues faced by the poor. I guess I would have considered myself a friend to the poor.
But something has changed these last three years. It all seems more personal—which might be expected since I now work for an inner city ministry—but it’s more than just my job. And it seems more complicated—I’ve learned so much more, and realize how little I still know (my father always said that the value of an education is not what you know, but what you know that you don’t know)—but that’s not what I mean either. The change is something more than greater knowledge or deeper involvement.
What has changed is that I used to serve the poor—now they are my friends. I don’t mean I am friendly to them (I think I always was). I don’t mean that I know them by name. No, I mean we are actually friends.
They have been in our home, and Judy and I have been in theirs. We were invited to her son’s wedding. He has slept in our guest room. Her little girls call us Miss Judy and Papa. I was up in the middle of the night talking him out of suicide. He came to our home for Thanksgiving Dinner. We’re friends.
I’d feel better about that, but I keep wondering why I was near the poor for so long, but not close to them. Is it just that we moved into a transitional neighborhood? That’s surely a part of it. But I know it’s more than that. We’ve chosen to make friends with people who happen to be poor—not because they are poor, but also not because we have a lot in common (isn’t that the usual basis for choosing friends?). We have chosen to make friends with people in our neighborhood, and our neighborhood is diverse. We’ve chosen to make friends with people we are meeting in our ministry—and we’re ministering to people from more diverse backgrounds than ever before. We’ve chosen to make friends—not just to be friendly.
And I see poverty differently now. It’s not just about political issues or social causes. It’s not just about theological positions on social justice. It’s not just about feeling compassion or showing mercy.
No, now it’s about our friends.
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3 comments:
As you look back to the time when you "would have considered [yourself] a friend to the poor," do you shake your head at your former assumptions? I usually feel like a friend of the poor in the abstract, but my actual network of poor personal friends is thin. I want to learn to bridge this divide.
When you say you have a lot in common with people who happen to be poor, what do you mean? What kinds of things do you have in common?
Luke,
I probably didn't make myself clear enough in the blog. I really don't have much in common with most of these new friends. Our life experiences have been very different. I was trying to say that our friendship is not because of what we have in common. The normal basis on which we form friendships in church and elsewhere seems to be those in similar life situations with similar interests. That is generally not the case in these new relationships we have formed.
The basis of these new friendships has been the intentional seeking of friendship. It has come from spending time together, getting to know each other, and discovering some of the more important things we have in common as human beings living in this city--sharing life, joys, sorrows, needs, faith, service of others, etc.
And yes I am often amused (and sometimes ashamed) at what I once thought I knew. And I'm still learning. I think most of us have a lot to learn about poverty in America (Dave Ramsey included).
Neelley has a heart for Nashville's poor and the women of the Congo #allies
https://twitter.com/nneelley
https://www.linkedin.com/in/neelleyhicks/
http://www.umc.org/news-and-media/church-empowers-the-poor
https://www.tnumc.org/2017/02/17/61st-avenue-umc-to-close-its-doors-in-june/
From her Facebook postings:
When it was decided that 61st Avenue United Methodist Church would close at the end of June, several of the regulars (myself included) chose to stick together in finding a new church home. Our dream is to be able to continue the best of 61st – providing a church home that welcomes people from difficult social conditions and homelessness; provide a bridge between them and the partners we’ve had through the years; and continue the Last Minute Toy Store (LMTS).
LMTS will definitely continue, but is being handled as a separate ministry. News about that will come soon.
Finding a new church home isn’t easy, but gracious friends made it nice for us. On Saturday, May 6, we gathered to discuss and vote on where we will go, beginning July 1st. We’re happy to announce that Glencliff United Methodist Church is the place we chose.
Glencliff is a small membership church with mostly elderly congregants who decided recently to open their property to the Village at Glencliff. If you’ve not heard of it, the Village will be a micro-home community providing bridge housing to recently hospitalized individuals and who have no place to call home and some of our most vulnerable friends. They will stay at the Village until they can be moved into permanent housing. While it is on the Glencliff property, Open Table Nashville is the developer of this meaningful mission which strikes at the core of who Christians are called to be: serving the sick, and those in need. We plan to join with Glencliff, Open Table Nashville and our partners to continue strengthening ministries with those suffering from difficult intellectual, mental, economic and housing situations.
We see Christ at Glencliff – boldly taking a leap of faith to offer what they have to those who have not. One person from the West End area has started attending, due to their Christian witness. A lifelong member of the Church of Christ and neighbor of Glencliff, recently came to worship and thanked everyone for providing a ministry he can participate in, just across the street. And now, Glencliff has us too, the 61st Avenue Fellowship.
Until June 30, we will still be at 61st Avenue located at 6018 New York Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee. And until June 30, we will be blessed with Reverend Marie King as our pastor. This is sacred time, filled with joy at what we can do at Glencliff, but also sorrow in leaving what we’ve loved behind.
Details will continue to unfold, but for now, it feels good to know we have a home.
Rev. Neelley Hicks & Rev. Marie King, Pastor
https://neelleyhicks.com/
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