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Backyard Mission: The Homeless -- Rescued at the Rescue Mission

By Kelly Soifer | Veteran youth pastor with more than 25 years experience with Young Life and consultant with Youth Ministry Architects. | October 2009

They are so pleased that our kids want to be with them that mere attempts are more than enough. It has been a delight, and frankly, a huge surprise to me. Often as we visit afterward they tell us, "You are our favorite group! I just love seeing those kids up front. It gives me hope."

Getting Started

How did we get started? Our church has supported the Santa Barbara Rescue Mission (sbrm.org) for more than a decade because we like to support local ministries as much as international ones. At some point, two students asked if I could help them work at the mission to complete some community service hours. As I made inquiries, I found out that some of our church members were leading chapel once a month. I thought it would be fun for our youth group to do that sometime, too.
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Unexpectedly, we loved it! Students asked me to sign us up again. We ended up doing it two or three times that year, and soon I took the leap and committed us to monthly services. The high schoolers provide the majority of chapels, but three times a year I have the junior-high group do it, as well. A favorite mental image of mine is seeing three eighth-grade girls stand up in praise during a worship song, mostly to support their friends leading up front. Once they stood up, several mission visitors slowly rose around the chapel. A verse from Isaiah popped into my mind: "The wolf will live with the lamb, the leopard will lie down with the goat, the calf and the lion and the yearling together; and a little child will lead them" (Isa. 11:6).

Now not only do we lead chapel, but students prepare, serve and clean up dinner each time, too. A small Bible-study group volunteers each month to collect donations, which vary each month: toothbrushes and toothpaste, new socks, shoes, blankets and jackets all were gathered last year. We also slowly are learning how to come a half hour early in order to visit with people there. Our students have needed coaching on this; but again, it has been worth the time.

Who Is Rescuing Whom?

One does not need to look far in the Bible to find scriptural support for this ministry. However, the passage that best expresses our time there is found in Mark 5, when Jesus encounters the hemorrhaging woman on His way to heal Jairus' daughter.

Jesus is busy and pressured by a large crowd. Nevertheless, He stops to hear her story despite what would be viewed as the most urgent of agendas (a dying child). Keep in mind she probably told Him the whole story. If you think of how long it takes to recount one trip to the ER, imagine how long it would take to sit through 12 years of treatments, doctors, hopes dashed, etc. Jesus calls her "Daughter," extending intimacy and relationship to an outcast. Simply put, He doesn't write her off. She matters and is worth time and relationship.

The rescue mission has, in fact, rescued us—from our mistaken notions about who the homeless are. We have discovered they are real people who have something to offer us, as well. As Jesus says, "I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of Mine, you did for Me." Bring teachable hearts and God's heart for others. You'll never be the same.

Getting Involved

Towns big and small have services for the homeless. The Association of Gospel Rescue Missions (agrm.org) has 257 member organizations, but many local missions are independent organizations. Do some research or contact your local officials to learn about the needs in your community.

Photo by Paul Turner. Used with permission from Adventures in Missions.

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