Monday, December 24, 2012

Week 4 of the ADVENT-ure

Week 4 (December 23 - Fourth Sunday of Advent – Christmas, December 25)
An Advent Reflection:
The Mustard Seed in Edmonton calls a 100 year old church its home. Originally home to the congregation of Central Baptist Church, later becoming home to a country and western bar, and most recently home to the Mustard Seed, the building has seen many different types of community happen under its roof over the past 100 years.
Today we see anywhere between 200 and 400 people every day coming through our doors looking for ways to meet their needs. Perhaps they have physical need like food, shelter, warmth, or clothing. They may have emotional need too, perhaps they are lonely, lost, or hopeless and they have arrived to see if they can find the care they need for their hearts. We see all kinds of poverty here. We see physical poverty, spiritual poverty, economic poverty, bodily poverty, mental poverty, cultural poverty, political poverty, and societal poverty. Though we don’t hold a formal church service here anymore, I often say that I think we do “church” here every day, sometimes even kind of like it describes in Acts 42-47.
Advent is drawing to a conclusion this week. Tomorrow, Christmas will be here. For many of our community members, they are wrapped up so deeply in poverty, that this great occasion of celebration that we have spent the last four weeks preparing for, will simply go by unnoticed; just another day. For others will be one of the most painful days of the year; a day of feeling the pain of having no place to call home and no people to call their own.
Today we invite you to have the eyes to see people in poverty in your life. People who are experiencing some type of poverty; physical or otherwise, and invite them into a place where they can belong.
Author and advocate Chris Heuertz shares a beautiful and touching story about seeing Christ here on earth in the clip Remembering Mary and Joseph, check it out:  http://vimeo.com/33829623
An Advent Invitation: (an idea for getting active during the advent season)
Help us continue to be a place that provides a place for people to belong. By supporting the Mustard Seed, you are helping us to provide homes for people who need them, and fostering community for those seeking a place to belong. Visit our website for more information:  http://www.theseed.ca/christmas.html
Have you had an advent reflection of your own to share? Write a blog for us and submit it to: JenniferFast@theseed.ca to be posted on our blog.
Prayers for Advent:
This week please pray for all the people in our community who struggle with the holiday season. That the love of God would bring peace and comfort to them in difficult times.
Please pray that we would be able to provide a community that everyone who walks through our doors would feel appreciated and accepted in, and that the love of God would be present in our work.
Jesus you are the Prince of Peace, you are the Justice of the Father. Grant us the courage to emulate your ministry by bringing healing to all our relationships. Grant us the wisdom to know what is pleasing to your Father.
A Prayer Excerpt from Common Book of Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary Radicals:
Christ is coming. Christ has come. Christ will come again.
Psalm 104:32-37 Isaiah 10:20-27 Luke 1:26-38
Christ is coming. Christ has come. Christ will come again.
Thank you Lord that your promises are not for some distant future but are to be claimed right now, today. Teach us what we must do and say in our local communities and in our larger world to participate in your promise. Amen.

A big Merry Christmas from all of us at the Mustard Seed, check it out here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cKZcvICpzS4&feature=share

The advent season has come to a close, but follow our twitter feed (@mustardseedyeg) and our blog for more thought provoking reflections throughout the year----- Subscribe to The Mustard Seed Blog via RSS

Monday, December 17, 2012

Systems and Stories



Working in the Employment Department at The Mustard Seed necessitates walking a fine line between systems that we implement in order to help people find work, and entering into their stories.  As a society, we are very focused on systems.  It is the way that we garner information and the source upon which we base our successes and failures.  In our line of work, it is often very tempting for us to fall into the same mode of seeing things around us and only looking at how many people landed jobs or how many companies in our city have offered to work with us in a given week.  Granted, these things are important.  We need to have tangible data in order for us to see what is working and what isn’t, what needs to be jettisoned in our program and what should stay.  The great danger comes when only numbers matter.   

In my opinion, I think that having a “system only” focus keeps us safe.  Because society has laid out the “system” for us already, we, as members of that community need only to “buy in”.   It shelters us.  It protects us from leaning into discomfort.  The system tells us that everyone should have a job and that if they don’t, they are “lazy bums”.  It says that addiction only happens to people who are weak and if they would only try harder, they would have success in beating their demons.  It labels success by monetary means and failure as anything less than the ideal.  Unfortunately, when we begin to buy into this way of reasoning or adopt a way of seeing life that keeps us sheltered and protected, we do ourselves a great disservice. As our belief in success vs. failure, rich vs. poor and addict vs. clean begins to widen the gap between us and those around us, I feel that we lose touch with our own story.
           
 As humans, we are born for community.  We see it everyday in our shelter in South East Calgary.  People who have lived for a long time “on the mats” can sometimes have a problem leaving the confines of those walls, not because the beds are particularly comfortable, but because of the people that they have grown to know and love that share that space.  The “problem” with true community is that in order for it to work right, it necessitates vulnerability.  Most often that vulnerability presents itself in story.  As I have worked in the Employment Program over the past year, coaching many people to move past barriers and find sustainable, long term employment, I have realized one thing over and over again: we are ALL the same.  There is no one “better” or “worse”.   I have heard story upon story upon story, some filled with great tragedy, others filled with incredible joy and victory.  And as I have had to listen to those tales about divorce, addiction, insecurity, and pain, I have been forced to look into my own heart to deal with my divorce, my addictions, my insecurities and my pain.
            To see one of my guests beam because he has been two weeks clean and hasn’t exploded at his boss yet.  To hear about the pain of Christmas from another who won’t see his children this year.  To sit with someone as the arthritis in their knees has forced them, yet again, to leave a job that they loved.  To laugh and cry, many times in the same conversation with a man who was forced to carry a gun through jungles at the young age of 12.  These are the moments that carry weight.  And in these moments, I have realized that for whatever time, I have gained some incredible friends that have helped me see my own flaws and failures, my incredible strengths and telling successes. 

            This week, I will be leaving The Mustard Seed and even now I feel the tears welling up in my eyes as I think about those I will be leaving behind.  It is not the numbers and targets, the paperwork and the administrative tasks that I will take with me from here.  For the rest of my life, I will carry those stories in my heart.  I will see their faces etched in my memory.  And I will remember that while the system only ever gives us data, it is the stories of those around us that help us to face ourselves.

            I ask that next time you see that panhandler sitting on the corner, the drunk man stumbling into McDonalds to use the washroom, or the high powered businessman rushing past you to make a meeting, realize that there is a story behind every one of us.  It’s a story that weaves us together and perhaps in that realization, it will begin to help us help each other.

- Jay Brazeau, Employment Coach, The Mustard Seed

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Friday, December 14, 2012

ADVENT Week 3

Week 3 (December 16 - Third Sunday of Advent – December 22)

An Advent Reflection:
Last week we reflected on the waiting we do in advent, but also the waiting we experience here at the Mustard Seed as we wait for the kingdom of God to come here on earth. But in other ways, we also see that not only are we waiting for the coming King, we also have some beautiful opportunities to witness that the kingdom has also already arrived. In a world marked by violence, starvation, over consumption, and poverty, how can we still become a community of joy? Matthew 3:2 says, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." So we are waiting for the kingdom to come in fullness and glory here on earth, but we are also bearing witness to the many ways the kingdom is showing itself here joyfully on earth every day. This is where we draw our joy and also our hope from; seeing the face of Jesus in our community. In the people who come through our doors for dinner, in the faces of our staff as they comfort one another during a difficult shift, in the hands of our volunteers as they prepare meals and serve our community each night, in the acts of kindness and generosity that we see even amongst our community members. Beautiful acts of love and generosity, the Holy Spirit at work through us each day.
Follow the link for a short clip from Pastor Rudy Rasmus about his view on Advent. It’s called: A Resurrected Christmas and I think you’ll like it.
An Advent Invitation: (an idea for getting active during the advent season)
Gift giving is a big part of the holiday season. I was discussing Christmas with a friend of mine the other day and she was telling me about how every Christmas she spends hours preparing to get her family the perfect gifts. She takes great joy from watching her family open carefully chosen and wrapped gifts on Christmas day. It is in a sense, a gift to her to be able to see the joy in her family as they open their present from her. She lamented to me the fact that each year one member of her family would not accept a gift from her. She would take extra care to find something she thought they would like, but they would never accept the gift saying, “oh no, I couldn’t, I don’t have any need right now.” Each year she would make a second trip to the store to return the unaccepted gift. “It makes me feel terrible. It’s like she is too good for the gift I have to offer her.” There was so much hurt in her voice as she described the feeling of her gift rejection!
One thing I’ve learned through working at the Mustard Seed is of the beauty of gift giving. The other day one of our community members came up to me and said, “How are you? You look tired! Can I get you a cold drink?” At first I was a little taken aback, I was tired. I had been working all day and it was now well into the evening. I accepted his offer, expecting him to return with a mug of cold water from the kitchen, but he returned with a can of juice he had purchased from the pop machine in our building. I was shocked. Emptied by humility. Filled with gratitude. In a job where we are constantly trying to meet the needs of people who go without, this man had seen a need (perhaps one that I didn’t even recognize in myself), and filled that need with a dollar and tremendous generosity. It was solidarity in action, the kingdom coming to earth, while I was working to make sure his needs were met, he was doing the same for me. It was Christian community at its finest, each of us bringing our gifts and talents and potential together to create community as the hands and feet of Christ.
This Advent Season, I want to invite you to see gift giving in a new light. There is something special about being able to give someone a gift, and perhaps there is something special about receiving a gift too. In a way, when we receive a gift with graciousness and gratitude, we are returning a gift of joy to the person who showing the spirit of giving to us.
May we be conscious of both the gifts we give, but also the not-so-obvious one’s we receive too! Perhaps this is one way we can see Christ in our neighbor this season.
Want to get active in gift giving? We have plenty of opportunities: http://www.theseed.ca/christmas.html
Have you had an advent reflection of your own to share? Write a blog for us and submit it to: JenniferFast@theseed.ca to be posted on our blog.
Prayers for Advent:
This week, please pray for the people in our city who will go without this holiday season.
For those who have no family to share the holidays with.
For the strength of our staff, and all inner city workers, that we would have patience and compassion always.
For all Christians, that each day we would have the eyes to see the signs that the Kingdom of God is at hand, and that our joy and hope from the resurrected Christ would spread His kingdom through fascination instead of fear.
A Prayer Excerpt from Common Book of Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary Radicals:
Fourth Century poet Ephrem the Syrian wrote, “The word of God is a tree of life that offers us blessed fruit from each of its branches. It is like that rock that was struck open in the wilderness, from which all were offered spiritual drink. Be glad then that you are overwhelmed, and do not be saddened because he has overcome you. A thirsty person is happy when drinking, and not depressed, because the spring is inexhaustible. You can satisfy your thirst without exhausting the spring; then when you thirst again, you can drink from it once more.”
God of abundance, help us live today trusting that there will be enough for tomorrow. Your sources have no end. Teach us to share our resources, believing that the more we give, the more you will provide for all.


Sign up for our advent email list (paulacornell@theseed.ca) or follow our twitter feed (@mustardseedyeg) and our blog to receive a weekly Advent reflection focused on Justice, Poverty, and the reason for the season; Christ.
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Monday, December 10, 2012

What Being Homeless for a Week Taught Me

As a little kid, I had an unusually large fear of becoming homeless. Maybe it had to do with overhearing conversations between the adults in my life about paying the bills, and making ends meet; perhaps it stemmed from the nervous anxiety I felt every time I walked or drove past a person on the street who was panhandling for change or pushing a shopping cart full of empty bottles.

Regardless, I resolved at a very early age to never let myself wind up in that position. By the age of six, I was meticulously saving my paper route money, declining to go with my friends and spend my hard-earned cash on Beanie Babies or candy.

This pattern (and my somewhat irrational fear) continued throughout my childhood and teenage years; in high school, I worked for straight As so that I could earn scholarships to help pay for my university tuition, and took part-time jobs so I could pay my other expenses and save for a car.

When I started working at The Mustard Seed, an organization that partners with individuals experiencing homelessness and poverty, a little less than two years ago, my ignorant fear of those on the streets quickly disappeared and, I'm grateful to say, was replaced by love and compassion for those without fixed addresses. However, my cautious lifestyle of saving and budgeting continued. I would consider myself a fairly responsible person, and I think many of my co-workers and friends would agree.

So you can imagine the shock I felt when one week very recently, I found myself homeless.

I returned home one evening after a fun day out with friends to find that I needed to leave the place where I was living due to circumstances beyond my control. I had less than one hour to throw my clothes, textbooks, important documents, special photographs -- in other words, the contents of my life -- into suitcases and duffel bags, unsure if I'd be able to return, and worried about leaving anything irreplaceable behind.

When I walked out my front door and put my belongings in my car, it was close to midnight. I was fortunate to get in touch with one friend who told me that he was not allowed to have people staying in his apartment as part of his rental agreement, but that he could offer me his couch for one night. I gratefully accepted.

I don't think I'll ever forget the emotions I experienced as I was driving to work at The Mustard Seed the next morning. I had gotten a combined total of about 45 minutes of sleep throughout that first night and finally got up with the sunrise. I threw on my staff shirt and got in my car to head to the shelter for a 12-hour shift.

I hadn't eaten since the previous afternoon (my friend, God bless him, is one of those bachelors who survives on fast food, and whose fridge usually contains pop, stale take-out containers, and that random jar of mayonnaise that has long since expired), and I had no money in my pocket to buy breakfast somewhere on the way.

I sobbed tears of frustration and exhaustion on the drive across the city, asking God to give me strength to make it through the day. I knew I had to pull myself together, because a lot of times, our jobs at The Mustard Seed are all about holding it together for other people, whose lives are falling apart in front of them and who are often just looking for some stability in the midst of chaos.

I wiped my eyes and walked in the door with a smile on my face, all the while wondering where I was going to sleep that evening. I eventually resigned myself to the fact that I would be couch-surfing and, if necessary, spending a few nights in my car when it was 15 degrees below zero outside.

The hardest part of that week was trying to maintain some semblance of normality in every other aspect of my life. I had exams to write for school, homework to complete, volunteer commitments to fulfill, and most of all, I had my job at The Mustard Seed.

Throughout the whole experience I told only two of my co-workers, who are also close friends; the rest never had any idea (though if they're reading this, I guess they do now!), not because they are not caring and understanding people, but because I simply couldn't get past the shame of my situation to confide in them that I was in desperate need of support.

I am thankful to have many teammates who would have reached out to me without a second thought, but my own self-esteem simply didn't know how to handle the blow. I have such great joy when I lend a helping hand to other people -- and conversely, I have great difficulty being on the receiving end. I was afraid that it would change how my co-workers saw me or related to me (kind of a ridiculous and ironic fear for me to have, when you consider that the very nature of our work involves being compassionate and non-judgmental).

I tell this story for one reason: to highlight the incredible resilience of those living on the streets. I was fortunate. My experience was fleeting, and yet, that brief stint of not having a place to call home impacted me greatly. Had it lasted much longer, I don't think I would have been able to maintain my daily routine, making it to work each day and keeping up with my schooling.

I also had friends' couches to sleep on, and a car for transportation. Many of the people I know have been experiencing homelessness for months or years, without any of the resources I had to fall back on. And yet, a vast number of them still manage to wake up every morning and head out the doors of our emergency shelter to get on a bus to work.

Whether their job is bottle-picking, manual labour, retail, customer service, or any number of other possibilities, they'll spend as many as 10 or 12 hours a day working before getting on another bus and coming back to the shelter, kicking off their shoes, and collapsing on their mat to get a few hours of sleep before doing it all over again the next morning.

There's this myth that homeless people must simply be irresponsible slackers, and that's why they don't have housing of their own. Some people have the notion in their heads that we live in a meritocracy, where you will succeed if you have talent, ability and a drive to work hard -- if you don't succeed, then you must incompetent or lazy.

Addictions and mental health issues play a critical role in the lives of many who find themselves on the streets, but for countless others -- those categorized as "the working poor" -- living in a shelter was once as unlikely and unimaginable as it is for you who may be reading this. The reality, however, is that a single life event -- the loss of a job, an unexpected hike in monthly rent, a serious injury requiring costly medical care -- can be enough to turn someone's world upside down, and leave that individual in a position which they never expected to be.

My experience has brought me a new perspective at work. I have more patience than I used to, and I take extra time to speak with first-time guests as I guide them through the intake process. Newcomers are often scared, intimidated, and stunned that their circumstances have led them to a homeless shelter. If we can offer them a little bit of comfort, reassurance, and support to ease the blow, then it allows them the opportunity to open up to staff and to process their situation internally.

My ultimate goal is that one day, The Mustard Seed and shelters like it would be merely a stopover in each guest's journey, and that individuals would need to access our services for no more than one or two nights before finding a place to call home. There is a great deal of discussion that needs to take place as an organization, a city, and a country to make that day come. In the meantime, it's back to work.

- Taj Hall, Support Worker at The Mustard Seed, Twitter: @therealtajhall
 
Originally Posted on Huffington Post Blog, Dec 9 2012:
 http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/taj-hall/homeless_b_2248291.html

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Friday, December 07, 2012

ADVENT Week 2

Week 2 (December 9 - Second Sunday of Advent – December 15)

An Advent Reflection:

Feasts and Fasts:
“Advent is marked by a spirit of expectation, of anticipation, of preparation, of longing. There is a yearning for deliverance from the evils of the world, first expressed by Israelite slaves in Egypt as they cried out from their bitter oppression. It is the cry of those who have experienced the tyranny of injustice in a world under the curse of sin, and yet who have hope of deliverance by a God who has heard the cries of oppressed slaves and brought deliverance! It is that hope, however faint at times, and that God, however distant He sometimes seems, which brings to the world the anticipation of a King who will rule with truth and justice and righteousness over His people and in His creation. It is that hope that once anticipated, and now anticipates anew, the reign of an Anointed One, a Messiah, who will bring peace and justice and righteousness to the world.” - Dennis Bratcher

We see oppression and injustice here are the Mustard Seed every day. We see the members of our community struggle to get enough hours at their jobs, to save enough money to get an apartment, to resist addiction, to make ends meet, to find food and shelter, to find a place where they feel like they belong. We often see cycles that echo the waiting of advent; there is a spirit of expectation and anticipation as our friends wait to hear back from a job interview or a rental application, there is a longing for a change for the better, a yearning for a new opportunity. Sometimes the employer or the landlord phones back, a bed opens up, a spot on the waitlist becomes available. But sometimes, too often it seems, the employer doesn’t phone back, the landlord chooses another tenant, and the waitlist stays full. And so we continue to wait. We wait for new opportunities each day, for doors to open, and lives to be changed, but more than that, we wait for The Kingdom to come here on Earth as it is in Heaven.   We wait for the day when no one will go hungry, when everyone will have a home and a place where they feel like they belong.

In the Eastern Orthodox Church, Advent has been a season of celebration, but also a season of fasting. The Coming of the Messiah throughout the Old Testament and Judaism was often in connection with themes of oppression and injustice, the longing for redemption from the systemic evils of the world (Rom 8:18-25). Of course, there is the problem of longing for vindication from an evil world when we are contributors to that evil; we long for freedom from oppression but we so easily buy into the consumerism of the holiday season, a systemic form of oppression that contributes to economic injustice all over the world. This is the power of the images of Amos when he warns about longing for the "Day of the Lord" that will really be a day of darkness (Amos 5:18-20). Still, even with Amos’ warning the time of Advent is one of expectation and anticipation, a longing for God's actions to restore all things. Advent becomes a season of both joyous expectancy but also perhaps a time for fasting as well.
Excerpts and Ideas from Dennis Bratcher, read more here: http://www.cresourcei.org/cyadvent.html

An Advent Invitation: (an idea for getting active during the advent season)
We invite you to join the hungry in solidarity and spend some time this advent season fasting to remember those who continue to hunger while we sit down for our holiday feasts. Maybe it’s fasting from one meal a day for a week and spending the meal hour praying instead, or maybe its fasting from buying fast food for the advent season, and spending the money on meals for the less fortunate instead. Whatever it is for you, we invite you to fast with us this advent season in anticipation for a day when the Kingdom will come here on Earth, and all will have enough according to their need.
Perhaps you will have thoughts about fasting that you would like to share? Write a blog for us and submit it to: JenniferFast@theseed.ca to be posted on our blog.

Prayers for Advent:
This week, please pray for those that are hungry, that they would have enough to eat not only today, but every day.
Please pray for our meal program at the Mustard Seed, that our meals would be tasty, healthy, and good for our community, that our volunteers and the people coming to eat dinner would experience the joy of community through the experience of dinner at the Mustard Seed.

A Prayer Excerpt from Common Book of Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary Radicals:
Praise to you who lift up the poor: and fill the hungry with good things.
Read Psalm 22:22-25
Lord, when we strive after healing in the world and nourishment for those who hunger, we find you at our side. Whenever we long to see your face, help us not to avoid the corners of our communities where you most often dwell. Stir our hearts that we might seek and find you today in those places where you have promised to be. Amen.
Looking for an advent calendar this year? Have a look at this one:

a little holiday tune to kick things off!

Sign up for our advent email list (paulacornell@theseed.ca) or follow our twitter feed (@mustardseedyeg) and our blog to receive a weekly Advent reflection focused on Justice, Poverty, and the reason for the season; Christ.
 
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Wednesday, December 05, 2012

An Invitation to Shine


Ah, the Christmas season: a time intended to bring us to a point of reflection on what matters most. Somehow though, amidst the shuffle of shopping bags and wrapping paper, glitzy cocktail parties and baking duties, it becomes all too easy to forget to reflect on anything but your to-do list. And so, it is with this in mind that we bring you the 11th Annual Shine-a-Thon!

You are invited to flood your ears with the important things of the season through stories and music filled with hope, and ways to help those who need more of it. On Wednesday, December 12, 88.9 Shine FM will be broadcasting live from Bankers Hall in downtown Calgary from 6:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. for our largest single-day fundraiser of the year and we hope that you will tune in and be a part of it.

If a full day of carols and caring isn't enough to restore you, there will also be a morning and afternoon raffle for two different weekend getaways to use when you really need a break from it all. All the more reason to tune in!

You'll find a link on our website to listen and donate online or even volunteer, all of which will help to put you back into the true spirit of what Christmas is all about.


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Friday, November 30, 2012

ADVENT Week 1

Welcome to the ADVENT-ure 2012:
We will be posting an Advent Reflection each week of Advent in December. If you want to learn more, visit: http://theseed.ca/advent  

Week 1 (December 2 - First Sunday of Advent – December 8)

An Advent Reflection:
Preparing the way:
One of my favorite verses is Isaiah 40:3-5 (NIV)
A voice of one calling:
“In the wilderness prepare
    the way for the Lord[
a];
make straight in the desert
    a highway for our God.[
b]
Every valley shall be raised up,
    every mountain and hill made low;
the rough ground shall become level,
    the rugged places a plain.
And the glory of the Lord will be revealed,
    and all people will see it together.
For the mouth of the Lord has spoken.”
The season of Advent is all about taking intentional time to remember the God who was, and is, and will come again. It’s about remembering his work and words on Earth, encountering His Spirit and presence here in our lives today, and it’s about preparing a way for Him while we wait on His return.
I love the verse from Isaiah, because it has so much imagery. It speaks of the wilderness. I often go through seasons in my faith where I feel lost in the wilderness, and in this verse a voice is calling out to me in that lost place and shouting, “prepare the way of the LORD” he is coming for you! The next image is of the mountains and the valleys, an image that resonates deeply with me through my work at the Mustard Seed. At the Mustard Seed we walk alongside the valley dwellers, and in Isaiah, I hear the promise that the valleys will be raised up and the mountains will be lowered all will be equal when the Lord returns. This imagery encourages me in my work as I attempt to create opportunities for mountain dwellers and valley dwellers to meet one another and from a relationship of solidarity, justice, and equality as we work to prepare the way for the Kingdom to come more fully here on Earth. The last part of this verse speaks of the glory of the Lord being revealed to all of us together. The glory of his Kingdom will be revealed to all. This image comforts me and gives me tremendous hope that one day, all of us will come to know his amazing love and justice!
May this advent season be one of preparing the way of the Lord in your own life. May you take the time to examine where there are valleys and mountains in your life and make them equal.  If you are wandering lost in the desert or the wilderness, above the din of the holiday season, may you hear the voice of the Lord calling for you!
The winter can be a dark season. At times it might seem that our spirits even mimic the season, we may go through a tough “winter” season, and find rebirth as the “spring” reawakens our spirit in faithfulness. I will leave you with a final video, one of Bringing Light and finding renewal in dark times. http://vimeo.com/33949006
An Advent Invitation: (an idea for getting active during the advent season)
Where can you see Valleys and Mountains in your community? Can you work this advent season to level that bumpy area?
How can you be a light to others in the darkness? Think of people in your community that you can be a light to through a random act of kindness today.
The Mustard Seed has many opportunities for you to get involved today and throughout the season. http://www.theseed.ca/christmas.html - Check out the opportunities in your city to be involved with bringing the light of Christmas to the inner city.
Have you had an advent reflection of your own to share? Write a blog for us and submit it to: JenniferFast@theseed.ca to be posted on our blog.
Prayers for Advent:
This week, please pray for people in our community who are wandering in the wilderness, or lost in a desert. Pray that they would see a light this Christmas and hear the Lord calling out for them.
Please pray for all of our community members who sleep outside in the literal wilderness. Pray that they would be blanketed in safety and protection, and that one day soon the opportunity for a real home would become a reality for them.
A Prayer Excerpt from Common Book of Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary Radicals:
O Lord, let my soul rise up to meet you as the day rises to meet the sun.
Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, as it was in the beginning, is now, and will be forever. Amen.
Come, let us sing to the LORD: let us shout for joy to the Rock of our salvation.
May your justice be a light to guide us: and your mercy a help on the way.
Readings: Psalm 101:1-4 Isaiah 10:5-19 Luke 1:5-25
May your justice be a light to guide us: and your mercy a help on the way.

Sign up for our advent email list (paulacornell@theseed.ca) or follow our twitter feed (@mustardseedyeg) and our blog to receive a weekly Advent reflection focused on Justice, Poverty, and the reason for the season; Christ.

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Home is Where The Heart Is

Elvis Presley used to sing a song… 
I'll be home for Christmas   
You can plan on me
Please have snow
And mistletoe
And presents 'neath the tree
Christmas eve will find me
Where the love light gleams
I'll be home for Christmas
If only in my dreams


Unfortunately a home for Christmas is just that - a dream, for the over 3500 homeless in this city, over 200 whom are children. Christmas looks quite different when you’re homeless.

If you live far from home, some years you will travel far to be home for Christmas. You'll even suffer the indignities that traveling by air or bus presents this time of year to be home at Christmas. You'll gladly sleep on a fold-out sofa.

Every day of the year we long to belong, but at no time is that more true than Christmas. You want to go to some place where everybody knows your name. Your home is where they understand you. As Robert Frost put it, "Home is the place where, when you go there, they have to take you in."

I think Jesus understood the homeless…

Jesus, whose birth we celebrate at this time of year, knew what it was to be homeless. He once said, "Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay his head." (Luke 9:58) When he began his earthly ministry, he really had no place to call home for very long. He wandered throughout Galilee and Judea. He had some friends who gave him a place to stay. There were Martha, Mary and Lazarus in Bethany. But a place of his own he did not have. He was homeless.

In fact he was kind of homeless at birth if you think about it, in that he was born away from his home. And when he got to Bethlehem there was no room at the inn – so he was born in a stable.

The homeless that I know are amazing people, with amazing stories, and often amazing gifts. Life has happened to them in ways we can sometimes not even comprehend, but they have become my friends, and in some cases, part of my extended family.

They are those who we choose to reconcile ourselves with and to provide a home. And it is in that relationship, in that partnership, that we discover that change is possible, and the greatest motivator for that change is a home - a place to belong.

A home is a place where the first steps for the homeless are taken. A move away from whatever symptoms have overwhelmed their lives, where they can find hope and be whole.

- Bill Nixon,  Director of Public Education, The Mustard Seed
@billbytheminute 


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Friday, November 23, 2012

Blogger Challenge - Rylan - Eating Limitations

I like eating.

Anyone who knows me, knows how true this statement is. Whether they’ve made the mistake of looking away from their dinner for more than two seconds, or accidentally tell me they’ve ordered pizza, one of my best skills is making food disappear.

So,  when The Mustard Seed put out a challenge for Hunger and Homelessness Awareness Week, I thought the most difficult of all the Awareness Adventures would be to cut down on how much I eat everyday. By a lot. So for the last week:

1 - I haven’t eaten breakfast.
2 - I haven’t snacked.
3 - I have eaten lunch and dinner at specific times. No eating outside those two meal windows.
4 - Meals I do eat are smaller portions than normal. No food comas allowed. 
5
- All the meals have been inexpensive, high calorie, and accessible to the inner city community.

I’ve tried to adopt the routine that directs life on the street: organizing your day around when you can eat. If you aren’t at an inner city community agency when food is served, it means you’ve missed a meal, or maybe even having food that entire day. This danger causes a lot of stress, and put limits on health, well-being, and happiness.

Aside from my 5 point eating plan, I tried to keep everything else in my schedule the same. This meant working full-time, exercising 1 to 2 hours a day, and going to the social events I’d promised Facebook I’d be attending. At first, it was kind of fun not to eat any vegetables, but after a few days I was actually craving broccoli. And carrots. When all of a sudden the foods you’re used to having when you’re hungry (or just feel like eating because you’re bored), are out of reach, it changes your daily frame of mind.

Food becomes the main priority. Going to bed with your stomach grumbling becomes the new norm. After a few days, my energy levels dropped, exercising became harder, and it took my body longer to recover. Sleeping more seemed like a sneaky way of countering this, but since homeless people don’t have that option, I instead started sleeping less every night – from 7-8 hours to 5-6. Focusing on tasks was more difficult, and articulating ideas was harder than usual.

Then, 5 days in, I started getting a sore throat, which soon turned into a harsh cough. Normally, when I get run-down and feeling sick, I eat lots of good food, and get lots of rest. Unfortunately, homeless folks don’t have that option either, and so I stuck to my diet plan. There’s vitamin C in cheap bologna, right?

On the last day of the fasting challenge, an awful feeling in my stomach was added to my symptoms. My body was starting to get really mad at me. It was my final indication of what it’s like to be homeless everyday. To set your routine around eating. To be worried about going hungry. To be tired. To have your body feeling sore. To get sick, and not have an easy way of getting better.  And then, while facing these problems on a daily basis, the homeless have to confront other issues, like finding work, shelter, and staying warm.

Good food goes a long way to giving folks a foundation to take on these other problems. To contrast a week of eating meals people in the inner city have access to, for the next week I’m going to do the reverse: eat balanced, healthy meals which are unavailable to the homeless.  It’ll be more expensive, but I’m guessing the benefits will outweigh the monetary cost.

- Rylan Kafara

You can visit Ryaln's blog at: http://thepastisunwritten.wordpress.com/
Follow Rylan on Twitter: @pastisunwritten


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Thursday, November 15, 2012

A New Narrative

I started work at The Mustard Seed in January of 2012 and met with Jim the very first week. He sat across from me and told me that one year prior he had a full-time job, allowing him to move into his own apartment. With all his bills paid for that month, he was under no financial strain for the first time in a long time. Better yet, he was clean from alcohol after an almost lifelong battle with it. Sober, financially secure, and housed independently, Jim had achieved a level of stability. Jim sat back, looked around at his furnished apartment and then asked himself, “Now what? Is this all there is to life?” He proceeded to buy some alcohol, drink it, get drunk, and slide back into alcoholism and eventually homelessness.

Jim has been in and out of treatment for years, and since I first started working with him, he has gone from sober to being completely dependent on alcohol several times. I have met with him consistently over the past 9 months and have at times hit a wall in my ability to hope for him. Our goal was to find him permanent, sustainable employment, but we were always thwarted by his dependency on alcohol. I never stopped caring about Jim or wanting to see him succeed, but there were moments in which I wondered if he could succeed.

I have thought about and tried to understand Jim’s story often. What was lacking in this story? What might have kept him from throwing it all away? I do not know the answer to that question. The causes of addiction are complex, as are the impulses that sometimes cause us to choose that which hurts rather than helps us.

We seek to support our guests and to provide resources that will enable those guests to change for the better. However, that change does not always occur on a clear, linear trajectory that makes sense to us. One of the major challenges in doing the kind of work we do at The Mustard Seed is to keep a positive, hopeful outlook when faced with so many setbacks and daily obstacles. This challenge is faced by everyone doing this sort of work. 

The question for us as front line workers remains: how can we have hope for those who appear destined to fail?

In Matthew 11:28-30, we read, “Come to me, all you that are weary and carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light”.

Jesus tells us to come to Him and let Him lighten our heavy load. Without shedding that load at His feet, our backs get so tired that we can barely walk, and so we can barely walk alongside those who need us to lend an arm and help them on their way. We have to hear a new narrative, a new story, in order to keep ourselves from losing hope.  We find that new narrative in the life, death and resurrection of Christ. He overcame the grave and put death under His feet, effectively making null and void death’s power. If that same power lives in us, what do we have to fear? We do not have to fear the worst outcome for our guests; we can rest assured that though we have trouble in this life, Christ has overcome the world.”

We do not always see physical evidence to demonstrate that the redeeming power of Christ is at work around us, but by faith we can rest in the Truth, which is that nothing can separate us from Him, “neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons…” We carry this hope and share it with everyone we meet, and though we cannot carry all the brokenness we see around us, Christ can.

--Laura U, Employment Coach, The Mustard Seed

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The Mustard Seed's Calgary Employment Centre is currently in need of work boots, especially men's sizes 10-12. If you would like to donate, items can be dropped off at:
  
102 11 Ave. SE
Hours: 7am-7pm

The Mustard Seed Shelter
7025 44 St. SE
Hours: 7am-9pm

The Mustard Seed Resource Sorting Centre
Bay 27, 4216, 54 Ave. SE
Hours: Monday-Friday 9am-5pm

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Blogger Challenge - Michelle - Panhandling



I'm trying to put my thoughts into words, but my thoughts are literally everywhere. Bear with me.

The Mustard Seed is running a blogger challenge for Hunger and Homelessness Awareness Week. You choose from 7 different challenges relating to these issues, complete the challenge, write about your experience, and send it to them to post on their blog. Here is the list of challenges.

The challenge I chose was to panhandle for 2 hours. All money collected must be given to a local agency or used to buy another panhandler a meal. I wasn't allowed to say why I was panhandling.

I want to be honest about this challenge, and about how much I struggled with this.

Actual time spent panhandling: 1.5 hours
Actual money collected: $0

I chose to spend my day off work on the streets appearing as if I were homeless. I guess a lot of people might think I am out of my mind. Going into this challenge, I wasn't sure what to expect. For this challenge I dressed in old/oversized sweaters, sweats, shoes with holes in them, old toque etc. I also applied eye shadow under my eyes and on various parts of my face to appear dirty and tired. I figured nobody would think I'm actually homeless unless I went all out.

Even as I started my journey on the LRT I felt like an outcast. As soon as I got on, I didn't want to see anybody so I literally stood facing the wall. I felt disgusting. Once I arrived in central downtown, I headed towards Chinatown (where a lot of Edmonton's homeless individuals spend time). I roamed the streets for a while, wondering what people would do as I walked past them. After about half an hour of walking, I chose to sit on a step outside of a closed-down store in Chinatown, as shown in the picture. Here are some things I've observed:

  • People either completely ignored eye contact with me, or stared right at me as they walked by. Nobody offered to help. I'm a fairly small girl, so I'm assuming I didn't look too harmful. Maybe they felt sorry for me? I'm not sure.
  • Two homeless men (one who appeared to be in his 40's and another in his 20's) said "hi" to me as they walked by, so I said "hi" back. Mutual understanding of the situation I was in, maybe.
  •  I witnessed some kind of alcohol exchange happen in front of me. A homeless couple pulled out a couple bottles of booze from under their jackets and handed it to another homeless guy that approached them at a cross walk.
  • Nobody threatened me in any way. Also, nobody helped me in anyway. (Well, the homeless people who briefly talked to me made me smile.)

So here I am, left with a mix of emotions. This was emotionally draining. I felt extremely alone and uncomfortable, and I didn't know what to do with myself. I know my challenge was to 'panhandle', but I really just couldn't do it. Part of it was because I was embarrassed of who I was and I just didn't have the nerve to ask people for money. I'm usually on the under end of this relationship (aka the one being asked for money), and I know I (like others) respond by ignoring panhandlers. The other part was that I couldn't always tell who was homeless or not. I think I'd feel bad if I asked someone to give me money, if they were also struggling with finances.

Eventually, I built up the courage to ask someone for money. He was was a business man who walked  past me while I sat on the steps. The only thing I said was, "excuse me, sir". In return, I was straight-up ignored. I should have expected it. This was sort of the 'breaking-point' for me. After being ignored, I felt hopeless and cut the challenge half an hour short.

So did I fail at this challenge? Yes and no. I didn't last the full 2 hours and I also didn't receive any money. However, this did allow me to get a bit of a better understanding of how it feels to be homeless. I can't comprehend all of my thoughts, but I'm definitely encouraged (and encourage you!) to learn more about hunger and homelessness. My 1.5 hours of struggling is just a mere glimpse of how thousands of others feel on a day to day basis.

As a result of this challenge, I'm going to scrimmage through my pantry at home and find some non-perishable foods to donate to my local food bank.

In addition, I've also recently started a project called Three Six Five (threesixfive.ca). For 365 days, I'm going to be completing an act of kindness each day, taking a photo of it, and posting it on my website. I would really appreciate if you checked it out, because this project is what has prompted me to The Mustard Seed's blogger challenge. Please check it out!

- Michelle Lam, www.threesixfive.ca
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