Outreach to Street Kids
“There’s no such thing as a childhood on the streets,” U.S. Catholic, 58:93, 3/93.
Portland,
Oregon, is one of the places in the country which attracts lots of young people
who live on the streets. Some come
from families who live in the area. Most
come from far way. This is an odd
phenomenon because Portland’s weather and climate are not the most welcoming
for much of the year. It’s usually
raining. Nonetheless, on any given
day or night a walk downtown will demonstrate that Portland is popular with
street kids.
Some
are very young. “Spider” (that’s
his street name) is 14 and has been on the streets for at least a year and a
half. He was a gentle, seemingly
naive “typical” American preteen when he left his home. Much of that has changed by now.
When we last saw him, he was anxious and grieving because his best friend
(the same age) had just died of an overdose. Spider was scared.
“Matt” (about 19) and “Rachael” (around 15) have been together for almost two years now. They met on the streets. Matt has been in and out of jail a number of times. Among other things, he was charged with murder. He’s now on probation. Up until last Christmas, Matt and Rachael would move from shelter to shelter (the average stay allowed is two weeks). They now have an apartment and have found jobs. This couple’s story has a good ending. The anecdotes could go on and on.
How
Our Parish Got Involved
Our
parish got involved in Street Kid Ministry by chance, not by design.
(That’s the way things often happen here.)
About 18 months ago, I was at the local Orthodox Book Store and ran into
a young married couple who had just arrived from the Midwest to begin their
studies at an Evangelical Bible college in town.
They were looking for a church to attend and had bumped into Orthodox
Christianity. I gave them the addresses of
the various parishes in Portland and told them that I hoped that they
would come to St. Nicholas sometime.
Two
weeks later John and Jenny attended Liturgy.
They returned regularly, but they often weren’t alone.
I remember one time when they had brought with them a pretty rough- looking,
much younger couple: Matt and Rachael.
The four visitors stayed for our weekly parish lunch after Liturgy.
John and Jenny also began to participate in our Inquirers’ Class.
As
part of their college curriculum, John and Jenny were involved in a designated
“ministry.” They had chosen to
work two nights each week at a drop-in center for street kids. This center was funded through an Evangelical Covenant congregation
in the suburbs and housed in a Baptist church downtown -- in the midst of the
“action,” and staffed by people from a wide variety of churches.
The
drop-in center was a place where the street kids could go for some food, to
do art projects (that was Jenny’s specialty), or to just “hang out” and chat
(that was where John really shone).
As
John and Jenny became more active in the life of St. Nicholas, they attracted
a couple of other college-age parishioners to help out from time to time in
their ministry assignment. Occasionally
they brought some of their street kid buddies to Vespers or Liturgy.
Then
a series of major transitions took place.
John and Jenny had become catechumens and were preparing for chrismation
at Pascha. The school year (and
their ministry assignment) was coming to a close.
The drop-in center itself was undergoing significant administrative and
financial “perestroika.” It even
looked as though it would close down that summer.
Needless to say this all had a big effect on John and Jenny.
To
Stay In Touch With The Street Kids?
They
asked our parish to pray for the Lord’s will to be done regarding the drop-in
center. For a number of reasons,
John and Jenny didn’t feel that they could stay with it, but they didn’t feel
that the Lord wanted them to stop their outreach to the street kids either (especially
the ones who were now their friends).
So,
we put it to the parish. What to
do? Overwhelmingly the response
was that we should help John and Jenny.
O.K. But how?
Well, it seemed as if they could hit the streets occasionally with the
parish’s support, some food and maybe a Zine (more about that, later), they
could keep their outreach to the kids.
And wouldn’t it be better if there were three or four people out there
together, working the streets (safety, fellowship, encouragement, etc.)
Our
parishioners began to put together a collection of things like juice boxes,
small bags of pretzels, packets of cookies, etc., for distribution.
We have a couple of parishioners who work at a Subway Sandwich Shop.
They’re able to provide the makings for hosts of hoagies.
The church school kids have assembled little bags of things like toothbrushes,
toothpaste, wool gloves (in the winter), and fruit.
Sometimes this would be for us to hand out and other times these things
would be given to a local shelter run by the Salvation Army.
And then there’s the Zine.
A
“Zine”
A
Zine is a counterculture “magazine” which is meant to look “punk” and rough.
It has lots of cut-and-paste graphics and text.
Zines are popular with street kids and other “alternative” types. The usual subject matter of a Zine is music, lyrics, anger,
rebellion, underground counterculture, stories, etc. We had seen two Orthodox Zines from parishes in California:
Death to the World and Agia
Sophia, each having its own very different flavor -- the audience for which
they each were intended was different from the street kids in Portland.
Orthodox Zines deal with music, lyrics, anger, rebellion, underground
counter culture, but also include hymnographic texts, and true stories of hope,
conversion and commitment. And
after all, isn’t Christianity radically counter to “this world’s” culture anyway?
So we planned to come up with our own Zine. John, Jenny and another young couple -- Kevin (a journalist)
and Jemima (a graphic artist) -- all worked on Imago
Dei and produced it in time for Halloween.
Why
Halloween? Well, that date is the
darkest of the year and a time of real spiritual intensity.
Satan is alive and well on the streets: overtly and covertly.
Read the Gospel of John, chapter 1 (our Paschal Gospel) in order to see
just “why Halloween?” So the first
issue of Imago
Dei focused on unseen warfare and the Triumph of the Cross.
We
then went out as a group of five on Halloween to join another couple of groups
from other congregations. (The
Evangelical Protestants in town are active in this sort of thing.)
One of our parishioners, Anthony, chose to stay behind at the church.
He wanted to pray compline, one of the Akathists, and the psalms while
we were on the streets. We were
thankful for this support.
This
began our outreach. As things have
worked out, we’ve not been able to be as regular in heading out as we had wanted.
It’s been something short of once each month, and not on a fixed day
or night. It’s still pretty “small scale.”
Sometimes we’ll go out after Liturgy on a Sunday.
Other times it’ll be after
one of the weekday Vespers services. When
it’s raining hard, there are very few kids on the streets but lots of bums.
But they’re happy to take the sandwiches and juice boxes too.
Some
Observations From Our Experience
One
thing to emphasize is this: We’re
not out there to proselytize. We
do not go out there and offer food and then expect the street kids to sing hymns
or give their lives over to Jesus on the spot.
I’ve seen this type of outreach and it is far from what we are about.
We are there simply to give a bit of warmth, food, and a smile (and if
internally it is done in the Name of the Lord, then that’s our little secret).
We do want to share our faith with the kids. Evangelism can be done in love and respect, through building
trusting relationships. We are
definitely out there on the streets for the Gospel to shine forth, but we don’t
intend to force its light to be embraced.
The street kids are very much turned off from some “Christian” ministries
and are thankful for others. And
they are very astute at discerning if they are being “used” as an object of
outreach for outreach’s sake, and want very little to do with any “agenda.”
However, despite the occasional visits of some of the street kids to
our church, one attends regularly now.
He hasn’t expressed any interest in embracing Orthodox Christianity,
but he’s presently drawn to the worship and the community here.
Another
thing to emphasize: It is very difficult to get this kind of outreach going
if the “chemistry” is not just right.
John and Jenny knew a number of the street kids from their previous yearlong,
consistent work at the drop-in center.
So there was a certain level of trust (perhaps somewhat guarded) with
them. It takes time to develop
trusting relationships (on both sides) with these kids.
A “snap” kind of outreach is not going to work.
If you want to work in this area, my suggestion would be to locate an
already-established outreach ministry, crisis line, drop-in center, shelter,
etc., and become involved. One
Orthodox parish in California rents a store front and runs its own drop-in center/coffee
shop. But this works well now because
they’ve been doing it for a number of years.
They are a known entity in town.
Something
else: We can’t judge the kids’
behavior, appearance, language, lifestyle and diseases (yes, HIV and hepatitis
are rampant). It’s usually because
their families did judge them that
they have run away and are out on the streets in the first place.
And many of the kids are out there trying to “beat the system.”
This has been a factor that some of our parishioners have raised and
criticized about our outreach: we’re
not helping “rehabilitate” these young people.
Well, that’s right, we aren’t.
We’re just there. Period.
And
another: Our parish prays for the
street kids by name at each service. They
are added to our regular intercession list that is submitted from the candle
desk. We can’t take all their names
at each service, so we have the list divided up.
We were involved in this ministry of intercession long before the parish
actually gave its support and encouragement to this outreach.
Some parishioners have met occasionally in order to pray an Akathist
on behalf of the street kids (“Glory to God for All Things,” composed by Fr.
Gregory Petrov, killed in the gulag in the 1940s).
And
lastly: Interest will wax and wane.
You’ll not receive many (if any) immediate strokes or thanks.
You and your supporters won’t see any results.
It’s likely that you’ll get frustrated and be tempted to throw it all
in. But that’s just what Satan
wants. So don’t get discouraged.
Now,
if after having read all this, if you have any inclination to look into a ministry
with street kids, Bless you. Here
are some resources that might be of assistance.
Supplementary Article: "An Encounter With A Street Kid "
“Gutter
Punks,” Williamette Week, 21:4, 9/13/96,
(822 S.W. 10th, Portland, OR 97205).
“Running
Scared,” Time, 144:21, 11/21/94.
Video: Streetlife (503) 244-0511 (Portland, OR) @ $19.95
Taken from the OCA Resource Handbook for Lay Ministries
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Department
of Youth, Young Adult, and Campus Ministry |
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