Saturday, March 27, 2010

THE CHURCH: AUTHENTICITY


 

return to religion-online

The Call to Prison Ministry

by Kenneth L. Carder

Kenneth L. Carder is a bishop in the United Methodist church in Nashville, TN. This article appeared in The Christian Century, October 3, 2006, pp. 25-29. Copyright by the Christian Century Foundation; used by permission. Current articles and subscriptions information can be found at www.christiancentury.org.This material was prepared for Religion Online by Ted and Winnie Brock.


 

When I was a newly ordained pastor in 1966, I heard a speech by a federal judge that significantly shaped my life and ministry. The judge said that he kept in contact with every person he sentenced to prison. His rationale for writing or visiting inmates was simple: he didn't want his only impact on an individual to be the act of denying his or her freedom.

This highly regarded jurist then said, "Pastors should be as familiar with the inside of the local jails and prisons as they are the local hospitals." He observed that most people who are hospitalized have a strong support system and are surrounded by people devoted to their healing and well-being. By contrast, people housed in jails and prisons receive minimal support, and the people around them are mostly committed to confining and punishing them.

Though as a pastor I had visited hospitals almost daily, I had never been inside a jail. Within a few weeks of hearing that judge's challenge. I made my first visit to the county jail. I reluctantly and anxiously entered a world often hidden from and ignored by congregations and pastors. There I met more than law enforcement officers and inmates. I met the One who said, "I was in prison and you visited me.

The incarcerated are among the fastest-growing populations in the U.S. Approximately 4,500 are added to the prison population each month. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics for 2004, there are more than 2.2 million inmates in the nation's jails. The 2004 figures reflect a record 32-year continuous rise in the number of inmates. The U.S. incarceration rate of 724 per 100,000 residents is the highest in the world. The rate of incarceration has quintupled since 1971. Prisons and jails are grossly overcrowded, with no relief in sight.

Prison ministries are usually relegated to specialized groups such as Prison Fellowship or Kairos. Inmates are seldom on the regular visitation schedules of pastors. Government-funded prison chaplains are relied upon to provide pastoral care and religious services to inmates. Very few local jails have chaplains. While many dedicated chaplains serve in prisons, they are often seen as hired hands of the department of corrections, and they often lack the trust of inmates.

For pastors, finding the time to add prisoners to the list of those to be visited is a challenge. Personal fear and lack of confidence in relating to the criminal-justice system creates understandable hesitation and resistance. Entering the unfamiliar world of inmates entails moving outside comfort zones, and those who desire to do so will receive little encouragement.

Hostility and prejudice toward the incarcerated are impediments to ministry. The criminal justice system is dominated by notions of retribution, vengeance, punishment and isolation. The core values of the Christian gospel -- forgiveness, compassion, redemption, reconciliation, restorative justice -- run counter to prevailing sentiments in the justice system.

Pastors and congregations engaged in prison ministry often meet bureaucratic resistance. Prison staffs are overworked, underpaid and undervalued, and they work in a high-stress environment. They are among those who need the ministry of the church. Building trust among the staff is essential for access and effectiveness in any prison ministry.

Though the obstacles are formidable, the potential benefits to pastors and congregations are substantial. And much is at stake: faithfulness to Christ's mandate and mission, renewal of the church's witness and ministry, the theological integrity of the church's proclamation, the spiritual vitality of pastors, and the well-being of more than 2 million inmates and their families.

Prisons and jails present in microcosm the challenges confronting the church and the world -- racial polarization, economic disparity and poverty, terror and violence, drug and alcohol abuse, personal and family brokenness, isolation and loneliness, anger and meaninglessness and guilt. Behind the walls of every prison and jail are fathers and mothers, sons and daughters, husbands and wives, friends and neighbors -- all persons made in the divine image who, like the rest of us, have distorted that image and who long for love, reconciliation and purpose. Ministry in such contexts of intense needs and opportunities can energize and shape ministry in the broader society where the same realities exist in less concentrated form.

Inmates and their families have shaped my own experience and understanding of the gospel. During my first jail visit a young man asked to speak with me privately. Ed was a muscular man whose arms were covered with tattoos. On his left arm was inscribed Born to Lose, and on his other arm, Born to Raise Hell. He immediately blurted out, "How do I get God in my life?"

"Why,", I asked, "do you want God in your life? What difference do you think that would make?"

For the next several minutes he shared his life's story of abuse, foster homes, repeated incarcerations for drunkenness, theft and larceny. He then added sorrowfully, "I've obviously made a mess of my life. I want to amount to something. I've hurt a lot of people and I ain't worth shit."

I responded, "Ed, you don't have to get God in your life. God is already present in you. Your guilt and regret, the longing to make something of your life, the desire for a sense of worth -- that is God's presence with you. We can begin by thanking God for being present in those feelings and desires and then open your whole life to that Presence."

What theologians call prevenient grace took on new meaning in that conversation. I learned that we never take God anywhere; we find God already present.

Ed helped me learn early on that the Christian gospel must be more than a theological abstraction; it must be embodied. How was Ed to know the meaning of love when all he had known was rejection? How was he to understand forgiveness when vengeance and retribution had dominated his experience? How was he to experience the worth and dignity rooted in grace when he felt worthless?

After several visits, Ed asked, "Can you introduce me to a man in your church who can show me what it's like to be a Christian?" That opened the door for congregational involvement. I introduced him to a person in the congregation who subsequently involved others in baking cookies and providing reading material for inmates and organizing occasional worship services.

Some of my most profound theological insights, transforming experiences and enduring friendships have come out of my relationships with incarcerated persons. Inmates have plenty of free time, and artwork can be a popular pastime. Several men who occupied the same cellblock in one county jail were particularly adept at creating cartoons. I provided them copies of the New Testament in a modem translation and asked them to read the parables and sayings of Jesus and identify those that lent themselves to cartoon portrayal. The result was a collection of insightful portrayals of the blind leading the blind, a rich man trying to go through the eye of a needle, a man removing the speck from another's eye while a log was protruding from his own, and the laying up of treasures where moth and rust destroy and thieves steal. The cartoons led to long hours of discussion of the teachings of Jesus that would rival most seminary classes for passion and depth of insight.

Involvement with prison and jail ministries keeps the pastor focused on life-and-death matters. Leaving the "free world" and entering the world behind prison walls tends to strip one of pretense and superficial preoccupations.

No place confronts us with life-and-death challenges like death row. Relationships with the condemned and those whose job is to guard them and execute them are among the most intense and transformative pastoral relationships. Capital punishment ceases to be an abstract political, ethical and theological issue. Being present with persons who are awaiting execution, along with their families and the families of the victims of violence, pushes the pastor to the edges of faith and stability.

Bill has been a friend since I met him on death row more than 20 years ago. We have shared many experiences -- his retrial and resentencing (to life in prison) and my changes in pastoral assignments. When I was elected bishop he called me from prison to say, "Finally, an American election that turned out right."

Bill is always forthright, insightful and compassionate. When I asked him if any pastors or people from local churches ever visited his prison, which houses approximately 3,000 people, he said, "I've been in this prison six years and I haven't seen a preacher yet, and I'm not aware of any churches that are involved here." I had passed several churches of various denominations along the rural west Tennessee road that leads to the sprawling prison complex.

Since I now help to educate and form pastors in seminary, I asked Bill, "What do you consider to be the most important qualities of a pastor?"

He replied, "Integrity, consistency and dependability." By integrity he meant that there should be congruity between the pastor's proclamation of the gospel and the pastor's life. Consistency, for Bill, involves treating people consistently with respect, compassion and dignity regardless of their status or condition. Dependability is "doing what you say you will do." He added that over his more than 25 years of incarceration he had seen many pastors and church people promise, with good intentions, to visit, but "only a handful can be depended on to stick around very long." Such unfulfilled promises add to the cynicism and disillusionment of inmates.

Unless it is involved with the people in jails and prisons, the church will surely lack integrity, consistency and dependability.

Bill and Pam Ziering

26033 Mesa Drive

Carmel, CA

  


 

Friday, March 26, 2010

NO WAY THIS CAN HAPPEN TO YOU?






FOR THE LEAST OF US
Restoring Families and Challenging Churches 





Invisible prison


Inmates' families face many challenges

Ann Edenfield Sweet never expected to be the wife of a prison inmate.

The former cheerleading captain and college homecoming queen married a commercial airline captain who seemed to share her Christian faith. They and their four children lived in a spacious home in suburban Albuquerque, N.M., and actively participated in a local church.

But on Aug. 5, 1986, Sweet received a phone call that changed her life. Her husband had been arrested, taken to jail and charged with drug trafficking. Unaware he had ever engaged in illegal activities, the news stunned Sweet.

"The old me really died that day," she says. "In many ways, I became a different person."

Unfortunately, Sweet took on a new identity in the eyes of others as well. As news of the arrest spread, friends and neighbors avoided her. Parents no longer allowed their children to play with her young sons. She was asked to resign as a Cub Scout leader. She says even members of the church she and her husband had attended for 12 years kept their distance.

"Unless you've lived through it, you don't know what it's like to have people turn the other way and not return your wave when you pull into the cul-de-sac," Sweet says. "As far as other people were concerned, my children and I were the guilty ones."

With four boys between the ages of 6 months and 7 years, Sweet's troubles had just begun. Within hours of her husband's arrest, the family's assets were seized. Sweet discovered while trying to buy groceries that she no longer had access even to her checking account.

"I literally became penniless overnight," she says.

Sweet took a low-paying position working with youth at a large, downtown church. There she encouraged other women and children dealing with the stigma of a family member's incarceration.

"My faith was the only thing that kept me going, and I tried to share that with others," Sweet says.

Six years into her husband's prison sentence, Sweet learned he had been approved for early parole and could be released in five months.

When Sweet told the new senior pastor her family soon would be reunited, she thought he would be happy for her. Instead, she says, he told her he could no longer be her pastor.

"I started sobbing," she says. "I felt like this was the second church that didn't want me. I knew God wasn't kicking me out, but when a pastor rejects you and you no longer feel welcome in church, you're tempted to think that way."

Sweet left the church and took a job with an audiobook publishing company. She also launched a new ministry to help families such as hers make positive connections with local churches. Wings for LIFE hosts parties for inmates' families and provides Christmas gifts, school supplies and other items for their children.

Sweet has written a book, Family Arrested: How to Survive the Incarceration of a Loved One, to help others navigate the penal system and the challenges of having a family member behind bars.

"It took me more than 13 years to be able to talk about my husband's incarceration and the impact it's had on my family without crying," Sweet says. "My greatest freedom was in finally letting go of that pain and giving it to God."

Though Sweet and her husband remained together four years after his release, the union eventually failed.

Studies have shown incarceration takes a heavy toll on marriage. Marriages that survive a prison sentence often dissolve after the spouse's release.

Scott Jett, director of Shapes Mentoring Program, an Assemblies of God outreach for inmates' children in southwest Missouri, says families of the incarcerated are a largely unreached mission field.

"Unfortunately, many people in the church are afraid to open themselves up to vulnerability," Jett says. "They're worried someone might steal from them or take advantage of them. But many times, what these families need most is to feel accepted and valued."

Jett says families of inmates face "invisible bars" that can dramatically affect their quality of life. Most live below the poverty line, and studies indicate children of inmates may be at increased risk of being incarcerated during their lifetimes.

"They feel isolated and abandoned," Jett says. "There are financial and emotional issues. And there is intense shame. To be the spouse or child of an inmate is to wear a label no one wants."

Manuel Cordero, a Colora, Md.-based national correctional ministries representative for Assemblies of God U.S. Missions, agrees.

"They're treated like they are also inmates, as if they are bad by association," Cordero says. "They're marginalized and ostracized. The greatest tragedy is when that happens in the church."

Amelia Velazquez says discipleship is crucial in helping inmates' families get past obstacles society and circumstances may place in their paths. She says her relationship with Christ provided an anchor when her husband went to prison on a drug conviction shortly after she became a Christian.

"What makes it difficult for women who don't have a relationship with God is not having a purpose for the future or knowing what the future holds," she says. "With God, you have hope and you can have the courage to continue."

Velazquez says becoming involved in ministry herself also helped her cope. Throughout her husband's incarceration, she led a ministry at a women's prison.

"You really are serving time with the person inside," she says. "But you can't wait for that person to get out of prison to begin your life. You have to get involved with something that will bring fulfillment and help shift your focus from your problems to the needs of others."

Velazquez and her husband, Alex Velazquez Jr., beat the odds by keeping their marriage intact. Alex Velazquez accepted Christ as Savior during his four years in prison. The two now serve as pastors at Oasis City Church, an AG congregation in Philadelphia.

"I know what it's like to go to Christmas parties and be the only person there without a spouse," Amelia Velazquez says.

Yet she says God's presence was enough for her during that time. She tells other women she mentors that just as God was with the biblical patriarch Joseph during his imprisonment, He wants to help families of prisoners break through every barrier that stands in their way.  

"A relationship with God is the starting point for true freedom," she says.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

COME, LET US REASON TOGETHER




                
FOR THE LEAST OF US
  Challenging Churches and restoring families
                             RUMINATIONS



America's criminal justice system



Misguided

Crime is considered more an act upon the State than upon a victim, a violation justifying punishment

Victims are used more as witnesses for the State rather than assisted for their loss

Deprived of their careers, offenders are unlikely to find a suitable job. Payment of their restitution takes precedence over repayment to the victim



Ever escalating costs of present system

One in 32 adult currently under supervision

13 million incarcerated

Almost 1 million inmates released each year

$25,000 cost to imprison each inmate each year

$50,000 cost to imprison each inmate on death row each year

$600,000,000 cost of building another new prison



It's been a poor investment

A 70% recidivism rate is a failure rate

Taxpayer beware, the present system becomes more wasteful each year

Alternative models must be pursued in the interests of public safety, and the restoration of our communities, families and the human condition



Restorative Justice model

Based on accountability, competency development, and community safety

Requires admission of guilt, willingness to participate, ability to make reparation

Focus on



  • Restoration not retribution
  • Offender responsibility not guilt
  • Repentance and redirection
  • The debt to the victim not the state
  • The future not the past
  • Repair - not life-time punishment


Calls all parties—victims, offenders, communities and the government—to recognize the importance of repairing the harm caused by crime

Victim-offender mediation. Calls upon professions to facilitate restorative encounters

Reintegration. Provide means and opportunity to rejoin their communities as contributing members



 COME LET US REASON TOGETHER" (ISAIAH 2)


Bill and Pam Ziering

26033 Mesa Drive
Carmel, CA 93923
831-250-7921

    

Saturday, March 20, 2010

LINKS TO WEBSITES

MARCH 20, 2010
                        FAVORITE BLOGS AND WEBSITES


To view, please "copy", then "paste" to search window

www.MissionWaco.org
Larry James' Urban Daily
Think Outside The Cage
Prison Talk
Restorative Justice Online
The Innocence Project
Church Under The Bridge.org
Breakpoint
Prison Fellowship
Overlawyered
MichaelSantos.net
Kariosprisonministry.org
Exposed
AZAuthors's Blog




                                        In His Service
                                                            Bill and Pam Ziering
                                                            831-250-7921
                                                            ziering@pacbell.net
                                    

Monday, March 15, 2010

Newsletter, Spring 2010, FOR the Least of US

OUTREACH The economic down turn is affecting us all. The challenges are there and the opportunities to display our Christian character seldom have been greater.

Jesus replied: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’(Matt 22)


Our ministry, For the Least Of Us, is blessed. Charitable giving in the form of financial and material contributions from the Church and from stewards of the needy continue to be faithful and our outreach undiminished.

As a consequence of our last Board meeting, Pam and I contacted several non- profit and County-wide agencies to learn how allied service agencies are fulfilling client needs. Feeding one’s family with healthy selections looms heavily in these days of austerity. Last week we went bulk shopping, stopping mainly at COSTCO, perhaps America’s most recognizable convenience store. Listed are the main items we picked up and delivered to several of our families. They’re listed under the categories of food preferences, household supplies, and hygiene provisions.

Fresh vegetables Toilet paper Dish washer soap


Eggs Soap/soap pads Laundry detergent


Milk Tooth brush Paper towels


Peanut Butter Tooth paste


Chicken/turkey Diapers


Hamburger Hairbrushes, combs


Tuna Furniture polish


Rice/beans/pasta


Cheese


Potatoes


Frozen foods


Bread/Butter


Rice/beans/pasta


Mayonnaise


Salt/sugar

Making house calls was eye opening, one young mom with two children under 3, had but a few dollars available to carry her family through the next 3 weeks. Our petty cash fund consequently came in handy.

MEETINGS Parolees, those inmates with good behavior records, conditionally released from prison before their sentence is complete, must attend the monthly PACT meeting held at Salinas Valley Community Church. Upwards of 120 men and women listen to approximately 20 service groups – non profits, such as the Salvation Army, Second Chance Youth Project, Turning Point, Celebrate Recovery, One Stop, The Bridge Restoration, VA, AA, Housing Resources Center, Mobile Clinic, Shelter Outreach, Serenity House, Sun Street, Victory Mission, and Monterey County Legal Aid. Each tells about their resources dedicated to ease the parolees back into their community. Their provisions include food, clothing, shelter, job training, rehab (alcohol, drugs), counseling, literacy, bus tokens, and a lot more.

Pam and I were invited. I detailed the mission of For the Least of Us.

To identify, actively nurture, and support families of an incarcerated member


To link with active prison ministries and organizations towards:


Reconciling families


Transforming hearts


Assisting in the provision of skills and services sufficient to help break the revolving door of recidivism


Welcoming the whole family, as members back into our community and church

I spoke of peace, prosperity, and the promise, afforded by a relation with Christ. Pam and I encouraged the brothers and sisters to find refuge in a welcoming church hopefully one with an active prison fellowship and one with bible study. Their attention was piqued when I described my own fall from the illusionary treasures of the world to the real treasures of His kingdom.

Afterwards, 3 young men approached our station - each a Christian who were eager to reestablish connections with a church. One regretted that a recent letter to his pastor had at yet been answered. At his request I pledged to contact the pastor directly to share our good impressions about this earnest father of 9 year old twin boys. Another of the 3 visitors shared his concern of being unable to support his mate and their small child. Each desperately wanted a job, any job, as a means to function as an important financial contributor.

We are most impressed with the non-profit agencies, so directly and compassionately active in reaching out to restore those caught up in the criminal justice system: youth with broken families, the weak, reaching out for support in all the wrong places, the heavily burdened families left behind, and those coming out on reentry with small prospects of making it back – without Christ and a transformed heart, and meaningful support from the foundational base, the church.

In His service Bill and Pam Ziering Ziering@pacbell.net 831-250-7921

“For The Least Of Us, Inc.” is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profits Faith- Based, Christ-centered prison ministry (EIN 26-1361229, DLN 17053351309017). It is guided by the precepts of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability. Website: http//www.fortheleastofus.com , Blog: fortheleastofus.blogspot.com

Contributions are fully tax deductible and may be sent to For The Least Of Us, Inc, 26033 Mesa Drive, Carmel, CA. 93923


Friday, March 12, 2010

AN INVITATION TO THE PASTORS


The Church is the largest company in our city with 500 branch offices.  It is the only group that has everything it needs to change a community.  (Alan Doswald) The local church is the hope of the world."  (Bill Hybels)



There are 355 biblical references in scripture to "prison" and "captivity", two of which are:

"Remember those in prison as if you were their fellow prisoners (Hebrews 13:3) Carry each other's burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ." (Galatians 6:2)

11 million men and women will be leaving "correctional" institutions this year. Close to 70% will be back, mostly within several months, unable to make the adjustment. Who are they, and where do the come from? We might be surprised how many hail from our own church membership. In days gone by, the church played a dominant role in safeguarding it members. Nowadays the government has been involved in this relationship, not always to the benefit of all. The church had its mission:

"I was hungry, and you gave me something to eat. I was thirsty, and you gave me something to drink. I was a stranger, and you took me into your home. I needed clothes, and you gave me something to wear. I was in prison, and ye came unto me and you took care of me. (Matthew 25:25-35)

Crime has been redefined as "breaking a law, superseding perpetrating an event causing "injury to a victim". Consequently, our correctional institutions are vastly overcrowded resulting in out of control human and financial costs. Further without rehabilitative programs, prisons are sometimes considered postgraduate institutions for crime.

In mid October Carmel Presbyterian Church plans to convene a non-denominational half day forum for the pastoral leadership of Monterey County to provide models of successful prison ministries, their missions, and the fruits there from.

The program is in formation. Please know, you are invited to suggest content or be an active participant. Would you please indicate your interest in attending?

YES ___     NO___       ANOTHER TIME__        Bill Ziering Ziering@pacbell.net


Publish Post
831-250-7921
26033 Mesa Drive
Carmel, CA 93923
In His service

Monday, December 28, 2009

ANGEL TREE CHRISTMAS PARTY at Carmel Presbyterian Church


                    
                    FOR THE LEAST  US 
          Challenging churches and restoring families 
    


Christmas 2009        

                           TESTIMONIALS
                         Host Families
    Angel Tree Christmas Festival    

 I want to thank your ministry for giving our church the opportunity to share the joy of Christmas giving with these hurting families. Anthony was the most alert, wide-eyed child I have ever seen, taking in everything including four pieces of pizza, two ice creams, and a box of raisins! He carried and guarded his gifts all the way home!  I suspect that Rudy will be open to Men's Fellowship and church. I'll be in touch with the family. Chuck
                    
                           *************





Wade and I had a wonderful time at the party(wow) and with our precious new friends Alejandra and Angel(after they got on the bus, Angel blew kisses back to me as we waved through the window!). I took a turkey to the family today and Alejandra was very excited to be able to cook it along with her sister-in-law for all the family. They are so grateful and we pray God's blessing on them and all the "little ones". Merry Christmas, Sheryl and Wade

                                                                                  *************
  
The party was grand.  The kids seemed to enjoy themselves, the adults seemed comfortable and happy. I enjoyed chatting with the 9th grader in your family, C.J.  He was friendly, and liked to talk about sports.Our family was very lovely.  We will stay in touch.  The older daughter is developmentally disabled, so Ann wants to see that she is getting the medical support she needs.  Ann might be able to get the mom hooked into Easter Seals. Ron    
                                                                                 *************




What a beautiful event.  I am so sorry that I wasn't able to participate, but I will be part of it next year. Maria
                                                         

                                                                                 ************

 What a great party! What a fabulous afternoon! You blessed so many, my family included, by orchestrating this grand event. I have a CD with all the photos. Christina. 


                                                                                ************

Yesterday I was at a boy's group home making Christmas cookies with about 7 wonderful boys and we had such a wonderful time of just sharing the afternoon and singing Christmas songs. Our hearts are on similar paths to reveal the Father's love to those sometimes forgotten and set aside through lives circumstances, BUT GOD He sees each one and knows their heart so he sends his assistants, US..We love you and bless you so much. Dan and Vicki
                                                                                ************

The smiles on the faces say it all!!! A wonderful evening. Thank you for all your ministry does to enrich the lives of these families. Doyle

                                                                                  *************


Thank you for your tireless work "for the least of these" as representatives of our Lord and Savior, Jesus!! I pray you have a wonderful Christmas! Your brother and fellow servant. Mike

_______________________________________________________________

For The Least Of Us
Bill and PamZiering
ziering@pacbell.net
831-250-7921
26033 Mesa Drive
Carmel, CA 93923

"For The Least Of Us, Inc." is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit faith-based prison ministry (EIN 26-1361229) Donations are entirely tax-deductible and may be mailed to the above address in care of For The Least Of Us













ANGEL TREE Christmas 2009


                                      


                                


                    
FOR THE LEAST OF US
NEWSLETTER 15
December 25, 2009


Our Angel Tree Christmas festival is over, but the treasures of Jesus Christ has just begun. This week, the Children's Ministry of Carmel Presbyterian Church hosted the families of our greater community suffering the absence of a missing parent this Christmas, with a joyous event celebrating the birth of our Lord, Jesus Christ and the promise of an everlasting relation with Him in His Kingdom to come that will have no end


HIGHLIGHTS. The Holy Spirit was evident from the first to the last

Families flocked to the Church by bus, car, van, and on foot
The classic Pacific Monarch bus arrived filled with families from our neighborhood many of whom never had traveled so regally or who had ever visited our beloved Carmel.

Lines of welcoming CPC families greeted our guests as they descended the bus with a police escort through the bustle of Carmel's shopping season
More than 250 participants unabashedly expressed their love for Jesus and to one another. Pastor Greg, in Spirit, rained God's love down equally to one and all

Our children recited God's word with strength and conviction

The thunder of Christian hymns sung by families echoed the halls as we melted together proving that the colors of black, brown, yellow, and white turn to gold




Tons of pizza, cookies, fruit, lemonade and ice cream disappeared in record time.No child or family was left behind


Equally tasteful and needy gifts were thoughtfully and generously distributed by our host families to our own and Angel Tree children


Evolving friendships were rooted with pledges of continued relations throughout the year


The bus ride home was filled with chatter of the joy of new beginnings
                


Pam and Bill Ziering
26033 Mesa Drive
Carmel CA 93923
250-7921
William_ziering@comcast.net



ForThe Least Of Us", Inc. is a 501(c) (3) not-for-profit faith-based Christ centered prison ministry (EIN 26-1361229




Monday, June 8, 2009

Newsletter #10, June 08, 2009

Summer 2009


JUNE 2009 9th edition

One of our brothers in coming home!

Jeff Wells, husband of Laura, father of Connor (6) and Evan (3) is seven weeks from rejoining his beautiful family and our church community. To announce his homecoming, our Saturday morning Men’s Fellowship is busy assembling a welcome home celebration after worship services in August.

Jeff has gifts: accounting, bookkeeping, finance, taxation, formation and management of trusts, web marketing, bank and credit card reconciliation, QuickBooks expertise, blog and social networking, and still more.
His overriding interest is finding a job, being a breadwinner and the man in his home. Our interest is assisting him through Christian counseling, and mentorship on a continuous basis. Please let Pam or me know what your thoughts are and how you might explore using his services.

                                                       ********************

SNAPSHOTS

Ladonna called back today. She was more intact than the desperate, tearful woman of 6 weeks ago. Then, she had exhausted her options and was about to be turned back to the streets. She, 47, a college graduate, now “clean” for months, had appealed, without success, to multiple service agencies for a roof over her head in a fit environment .Either she didn’t qualify or the meager facilities were full. One shelter gave her our name and number. There was one bed open and we were said to be her last hope. But it would take a dollar or two to pay for her care, life skill training, and counseling. LaDonna prevailed. Without our assistance, she’d be forced back into the streets to do what she didn’t want to do to make it through her day.

Today’s call was to notify us that the shelter was closing its’ doors in 2 days. They had not received their funding. LaDonna had worked odd jobs the past weeks, anything legitimate, to share in the costs, but jobs were scarce and discontinuous. I got on the horn and reached the Monterey Reinvestment Board and Loyanne Flinn who commiserated with us on the lack of beds for women, abused or down on their luck. She did suggest the Resource Housing Center which I promptly called and spoke with Elisa Hupt, who volunteered to take the case. She mentioning a shelter in Salinas with 2 emergency beds, and if that failed, to provide resources for a 3 month period!

I’ll call LaDonna tomorrow to check how it's working out 

                                                      ******************
                                              
S.S., one of our Angel Tree families, adopted by the Clayton small group two Christmas’s ago, was about to be homeless 3 months ago. Well, the Lord pointed us to Craig’s list, where an Angel lay. Just the day before this Good Samaritan had placed a notice that her gorgeous home would be vacant for 2 months and was being offered free of charge to a needy family. We were able to bring the parties together and this Christian family of 5 moved in to the home in an exclusive neighborhood in Carmel.

But, all stories don’t have a continuously happy course. The 2 month stay has ended. Dad, didn’t find a job and now has relapsed and is back behind bars. Mom, a great mom, now, alone once again, raises her 3 lovely children, ages 6, 8, and 13, with her job as a home health aide. Once again, God to the rescue! His angel in Carmel has located another home, Carmel of course, where the family can stay, rent free, for perhaps 4 months, enough time, hopefully for things to simmer down and for S.S. to secure a richer job more consistent with her gifts and talents.

Meanwhile the Men’s group is scurrying about to provide furnishings (beds, chairs, sofa, tables, lamps) in this lovely but bare home.

Bill Ziering Ziering@pacbell.net 831-250-7921 In His service

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Be careful, you might be in the company of Angels





Sunday, April 19, 2009

Don't rely on appearances!

By now I bet you've seen Susan Boyle's performance on Britans Got Talent last Saturday evening.


The judges, the audience, everyone was literally blown away by this Scottish woman's vocal ability.

Why?

Everyone pre-judged her based on her appearance. No one expected anything from her. Everyone dismissed her with laughs and cat-calls.

We do it all the time, don't we?

We do it on the basis of class, race, looks, body size. . .the list goes on and on.

Shame on us all for not assuming the very best of each other and everyone we meet.

Thanks, Susan Boyle. We all needed what you delivered. Forgive us.

Forgive us, Lord for not believing in those things you've placed in us all.

Watch Susan again right here.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

DALLAS TEXAS: A Saga of one city's attempt to shelter the homeless.


Update on the plan to redevelop and renew the Plaza Inn at I-30 and S. Akard Street on the southeast edge of Downtown Dallas:

It turns out to be quite a saga, maybe closer to an epic!

Chapter One: The Central Dallas Community Development Corporation places the property under contract and writes a Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LITHC) application to the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA). The first round scoring on the application places it at the very top of such applications in the entire state of Texas. We're feeling really very good about the prospects of the plan.

Chapter Two: We begin to explain our plans to the neighbors who live, work and own property around the project site. Lots of honest conversation ensues. After two large, well-attended public meetings and numerous, smaller private meetings, we continue to feel positive about the project. We adjust our plans to include everything over which we have control that the neighborhood association and various voices from the community suggest. Included in the changes are 72 units of new construction, market rate, multi-family homes.
The only part of our plan we did not alter were the homes we intended to set aside for 50 formerly homeless individuals and families. At last, when the neighbors vote on our plan, we are turned back and voted down. This means that we cannot hope to receive the backing we need from Council Member Pauline Medrano and her colleagues on the Dallas City Council.

Chapter Three: We exit the process, but turn over our position to Hamilton Properties, the owners of the Plaza Inn. They adjust the plan to make it more economically feasible and to further suit the wishes of the neighbors. Translation: The new plan eliminates all units of permanent supportive housing designed for formerly homeless persons. The plan goes forward with neighborhood support now that CDM and the homeless are out of the picture. No homeless housing will be provided, but high-quality, affordable housing will be developed.

Chapter Four: The TDHCA objects to the revised proposal, citing 33 reasons why the plan, as presented, is not worthy of funding. Many of the problems are technical and based on inaccurate information and details lost in the translation during the revision process from the original proposal. At the end of the day, it becomes clear that the only way to advance the proposal on appeal is to put the permanent supportive housing units back into the plan. The appeal is submitted with this provision for the homeless included once more. A subsequent meeting with the neighborhood association results in a final rejection of the revised plan. As a result, the tax credit application is withdrawn and the deal is dead.

Takeaways:

1) People in all parts of Dallas fear and do not understand the chronically homeless. As a result of the fear and lack of understanding, they will resist the development of housing for this subset of the population almost automatically and in every part of the city. Further, many people do not want to hear the facts about the homeless who receive the benefit of permanent housing. No amount of national, empirical evidence convinces most people. Clearly, we must work harder, start earlier and do a better job of presenting the truth about "housing first" and permanent supportive housing as a viable, community solution to chronic homelessness. At the same time, we must find ways to legitimately earn the trust of neighborhood groups. We continue to hope that the success of our project at 511 N. Akard in the heart of Downtown will help with community education and understanding.

2) Funding for the development of permanent housing for the homeless must come from public sources with great capacity. These deals are complicated and expensive. Because of neighborhood opposition, and short of significant breakthroughs in community understanding, Downtown areas remain the best and possibly only location for such developments. A logical source of funding will continue to be the LITHC funds from the TDHCA.

3) Having funds available does not guarantee success. We may need to face the fact that funding is easier to solve than location for these projects, due largely to neighborhood opposition.



4) Currently, site selection for these developments may need to be limited to locations where no neighborhood organization exists. This limits development to very weak communities, not a good choice for several reasons, or Downtown locations that tend to be the most expensive sites.

5) Providing lots of information and/or being responsive to community ideas and suggestions is no guarantee that development plans will be supported or accepted. Unfortunately, this is simply a fact of life in this sector of the housing development industry at this point. Again, building trust is key. The Plaza Inn project taught me that I need to exhibit more patience, kindness and respect for those who disagree, while at the same time providing useful information needed to change attitudes toward our homeless neighbors.

6) The current political process serves property owners before the larger good of the entire community. Property rights trump human or community needs/rights.






7) The need and the relief that certainly can be provided for the clear need make continuing the effort more than worth the struggle and the frustrations. At the same time, developers and city leaders must face the fact that these developments will take more time, effort and funding than other sorts of housing endeavors.