Cinco de Mayo

Many Americans don’t really know much about Cinco de Mayo, me included. Most falsely believe it is Mexico’s Independence Day. No so. It is actually Mexico’s dependence day. Basically, it is a day to celebrate Mexico’s thwarting of a French invasion by the joining of forces from many Mexican states, including help from the United States. click here for more on Cinco de Mayo

Through this interdependence came freedom. Great lesson to remember. So today we celebrated our dependence and blending of two different cultures that we have come to call Cross And Crown Mission. We listened to ladies sing the Mexican anthem, ate pizza, drank margaritas (unleaded!), and visited with each other for hours. We think a pretty beautiful picture of unity.

Ron

Seasons Change


Just as the seasons are changing outside, the seasons are changing inside the mission. Next Sunday night, April 25th, will be our last worship night of the season. Many of our volunteers begin to be busy with their kid’s track, baseball, prom, and many other activities that make it difficult for groups to provide meals without feeling a little stressed.

To honor the year-long commitment each group has made, we like to provide a season of rest. God instituted a time of rest and called it Sabbath. He intended that we would take a time away from work and reflect on Him in worship. Out of this rest we are to begin the week. We are designed to work out of rest.

We are honoring this principle by giving our volunteers a time of rest. Our Sunday night worship will begin again in September.

Network Lunch Tuesday, March 2nd

We are excited to host the city-wide networking luncheon this Tuesday. Below are details from Ben Nockels, Cornerstone Assistance Network Director:

“We believe that Oklahoma City can be transformed by the Son of God, the Spirit of God, and the People of God. We are committed to encourage and challenge the Church to remember its mission to meet the needs of the community. Our role is to network and mobilize the Church to strategically partner together on behalf of the poor and forgotten among us.

A wonderful relational network is forming. I am excited by the prospect of strengthening this community of churches and kingdom leaders to make Oklahoma City a better place to live for all people in Jesus’ name.
We will be facilitating a monthly networking lunch on the first Tuesday of every month. We simply want to be consistent in creating space for friendships to take shape and partnerships to be strengthened.

We will be gathering for lunch at Cross & Crown Mission located at 1008 N. McKinley Ave – OKC, OK 73106 on Tuesday, March 2nd from 11:45am to 1:00pm.

The story of Cross & Crown Mission is the story of eight people in a small group surrounding a couple who were being called to the urban core of our City. Since 2001, Cross & Crown has been committed “To Proclaim The Love, Mercy and Hope of Jesus Christ through Service and Prayer.”

Ronald Rolheiser in his book The Holy Longing says, “When we pray through Christ we are praying through the body of Christ, which then includes Jesus, Communion, and the body of believers here on earth. Thus, not only God in Heaven is being petitioned and asked to act. We are also charging ourselves, as part of the Body of Christ, with some responsibility for answering the prayer. To pray as a Christian demands concrete involvement in trying to bring about what is pleaded for in the prayer.”

Please mark your calendars and make plans to participate with us on Tuesday, March 2nd. Reply to this email with the total number attending so that adequate food preparations can be made.”

For The Good of The City,
Ben Nockels

A Hope For The Future

A young man named “Brian” has been hanging out with us at Cross and Crown as of late. Brian is younger then most of the men we see in his situation. Most of the men that live a life similar to Brian’s, or that we are in relationship with, tend to be in their 40’s and 50’s. Brian is 23.

Personally, this is the first time I have been in relationship with someone, other than a jr. high or high school student, that has come seeking guidance, help and direction and has been younger than myself. This means two things: I am getting old (currently 26) and Brian is way too young to be in the situation that he is in.

I say that Brian is too young to be in the situation that he is in, but on the other hand, he shares the same struggle that countless other young men and women his age struggle with on a daily basis. He struggles with alcohol, he admits. He says that he got caught up with the wrong crowd early on and didn’t do much in school. He jumped schools a few times and ended up dropping out. Rich, poor and somewhere in the middle families each have their fair share of children that battle addictions but fail to address these issues head on. I can’t be sure of it, but Brian’s family appears to have addressed it head on.

Brian is homeless. He, unlike many of the older individuals who struggle with addictions, talks to his family relatively often. He stays at the Salvation Army most nights, he tells me, and he has acquired a locker at the Municipal gym as a place to keep his few possessions. He is very like-able. He is pretty quiet. He’s a kid.

He should be a senior in college or have just graduated. But he’s not. He is on the streets. He made adult decisions while he was still a kid and now, daily, he deals with the consequences.

I think that’s what scares me most. He is 3…4…5 years older than a lot of the kids I work with on a daily basis. Just thinking about some of the boys we have in our Rock Island group now and comparing tendencies they have to past mistakes Brian has made scares me.

I have hope for Brian. Honestly, a much greater hope for him than I do for a lot of the older men with his same problem. Is my increased hope for Brian fair? Maybe not. I guess it’s his youthfulness (which I get a glimpse of when he plays video games after hours with us). Maybe it’s because every time I am with Brian he is sober. He is able to suppress, to some extent, his addiction for certain amounts of time. Maybe it’s because I know there is some Biblical/spiritual foundation instilled in him from his family who I met last week.

Maybe it’s these things along with my belief in God’s power to restore life to brokenness that gives me hope.

“The thief comes only to steal, kill and destroy. I have come that they may have life, and it it to the full” – Jesus

Luke

2009 And Beyond!


We are constantly amazed by the provision of God here at the mission. One way we gauge the effectiveness of our programs is to look at who the programs serve and how many repeat relationships we build. Through relationship we are able to share the good news that changes lives!

This week, Paul shared with the staff and volunteers the numbers for 2009 as a way of showing the impact the mission has on our neighborhood. They are as follows:

6,286 boxes of food
12,552 adults served
11,868 children served
Total served = 24,420

This is a new record for the mission. The numbers tell us that the economy has affected our people dramatically. Our total number served has increased in 2009 by almost 20%. We are seeing new people come that never needed our services before, especially in our clinics. We expect this trend to continue throughout 2010.

We have a lot of people to thank for allowing us the privilege of praying with over 24,000 friends last year. The list would be too long to acknowledge each by name, most wouldn’t want that anyway. Thank you for your sacrifice of time and resources. You are making a lasting impact on OKC for the Kingdom.

If you are reading this and have not experienced a day at the mission, our invitation is simply to come and be a part of the Cross And Crown Family!

Those Poor, Poor People

A few weeks back I was talking with a man who comes regularly to Cross and Crown on Sunday evenings for a meal and the worship. I have known him for a few years but mostly in a superficial, friendly kind of way. He is generally pretty talkative but also a little rough around the edges. As he was eating and we were waiting for the worship to start he began to ask me about myself. He was curious how I was able to be up at Cross and Crown so often. He said it seemed like every time he was up there, I was too. I informed him the reason I seemed to always be around is because… I work at Cross and Crown. Funny how that works, right?

As we continue to chat another man from the neighborhood comes and sits in between us. He isn’t eating. He is there strictly for the message he tells us. The first man and I continue our conversation and he begins to ask me about why I decided to work at Cross and Crown, why I would be interested in helping with the youth, why I wouldn’t work somewhere else and has gone from a less inquisitive position and into more of a, somewhat, hostile questionaire.

While I experience the Spanish Inquisition with this man the worship begins. I do my best to motion to him that the worship is starting and we need to quiet down but he isn’t phased and only tries to talk over the song that has begun. I finally had to tell him we would have to finish the conversation in a few minutes and so he gradually fades out. Just as I had turned to face the front of the sanctuary, where the band was playing, the man who was sitting in between the first man and I said,

“You know why he left, right? He left because the worship started and his spirit couldn’t handle being around all the worship taking place.”

“Huh?”, I hesitantly responded.

He told me, “The man, the man you were talking to. He left because there was something evil in him. I heard him talking to you and trying to talk down to you. Once I heard the way he was talking to you, I started praying. I prayed he wouldn’t be able to be handle the Spirit of God if there was something evil in him”

Then I noticed the first man was gone, just as this man was explaining to me. Wow, I thought. I knew when the first man was talking to me there was something that just wasn’t right. Like I said, I have talked to him several times but mostly about the weather, sports, family….you know.

At the conclusion of the worship the second man and I talked for several minutes. I asked how many times he has been to the Sunday night meal and worship and he said he had been 3 or 4 times. I offered him a plate of food because he came a little late but he said he comes at that time intentionally because he comes for the “spiritual food” not the “physical food” (his words, not mine). He said he likes coming to Cross and Crown because the preacher (Paul) uses the Word. He teaches from scripture and opens the Bible and doesn’t just preach, he said.

I told him about how Cross and Crown is open 4 days a week to the public for food, clothing, medical clinic ect. and Bible study. He said he wasn’t in need of much of anything but he was always interested in a little Bible study. I told him when and where and he has been coming ever since.

The reason I tell this story is because we are in a neighborhood that lacks alot of physical things. The neighborhood and many of its’ people aren’t, for the most part, affluent enough to live without some help in one form or another. But, what this neighborhood doesn’t lack is spiritual awareness. Some of the people in this neighborhood are more in tune spiritually and with God than any upper-class, well off individual that I know.

See, our tendency is to think that if you have money, food, clothes or stuff then you are blessed…if you are blessed then you know God, because He is blessing you. So if that’s true, then if you don’t have money, clothes, food ect, you clearly aren’t blessed and therefore you don’t know God, otherwise you wouldn’t be without.

It’s like I heard a speaker say recently, “Just because something or someone is successful doesn’t automatically mean God’s hand is on it.” He was trying to communicate that just because a person is successful doesn’t necessarily mean God is blessing that person. Satan has a say about earthly matters that God allows, at times. Just look at Job. My point, just because someone is rich doesn’t mean it’s always a result of God blessing them. And, just because a person is poor doesn’t mean it’s because God is not blessing them.

I’ll end with something I read recently…

“Jesus, the King of kings, left behind every privilege, every honor, every trace of his glory and consented to be born in a cold, dank stable. He lived off the land, he was homeless, he may not have owned anything more than a change of clothing. If we shun the poor and claim to know Jesus, we are utterly deluded. He, himself, was one of them.”

It’s pretty incredible how much I have learned from these “poor” people.

Luke

Jesus Rides In On What?

Last week, as the staff and volunteers gathered together to ask God’s blessing on the day and give direction to where everyone would best be able to help, one of the women from the neighborhood asked if she could stay for the day and help. We said, “No, you need to go home there is no where for you to help.” Just kidding. Her name is Martha and she has been coming to Cross and Crown for 5-6 years.

Initially she came for food, now she comes for Bible study and her “Let’s Start Talking” class that uses the Bible as the main teaching tool. Ha ha, we got her. Just like ole Jesus did it back in the day…offer food or meet some other monetary need, then present the Good News and see what happens.

Anyway, following Martha’s introduction to everyone that had never met her, Paul asked Martha to do her best to describe why she comes and what she does while she is at Cross and Crown. Martha went on to describe, in English, how she comes every Tuesday morning for Bible class and every Monday for LST class. Once she was comfortable, she asked Paul if it would be ok if she shared a story that happened early on in her ESL class with her teacher. Paul agreed and so she began her story.

Martha explained how she and her teacher had been studying in Matthew of Jesus’ entrance into Jerusalem. She stressed to us that during this study she was still somewhat new to the English language. The teacher asked Martha to read the story and then do her best to re-tell the happenings back to him. She did and it went a little something like this…

Martha – “The people see Jesus coming and they lay palm branches down on the ground for Him. They worship Him and praise Him. Jesus comes riding in on a monkey.”

Teacher – “………….Jesus comes riding in on what?”

Martha – “Jesus comes riding in on a monkey.”

Teacher – “A donkey. Jesus rides in on a donkey.”

Martha – “Yes, Jesus rides in on a monkey.”

Teacher – “No, a donkey. Jesus rides in on a donkey. Donkey.”

Everyone had a good laugh, including Martha.

Luke