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August/September 2010 Issue
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It Can
Begin With A Sandwich
by Carol Pipes
It's a cold, rainy Saturday in
New York City, and Vaughn McLamb ladles up steaming cups of chicken
soup for the homeless, addicts, immigrants, and urban poor gathered
at Tompkins Square Park on the Lower East Side.
Whether Puerto Rican, Chinese, Eastern European, or other ethnic
background, they've come for FLIP a free lunch in the park,
a ministry provided by East Seventh Baptist Church and Graffiti
Community Ministries. Graffiti Church, as it's commonly known,
has been serving the Lower East Side since 1974. At the helm is
North American Mission Board missionary and pastor Taylor Field.
Every weekend, Field and a group from Graffiti Church set up
in the park to feed the hungry.
"We believe God has called us to reach out to those who
have fallen through the cracks," Field says. Graffiti feeds
ten thousand people a year, with assistance from partner churches
and NAMB's Domestic Hunger Fund. The Domestic Hunger Fund represents
20 percent of gifts received to the Southern Baptist World Hunger
Fund; the remaining 80 percent is used in International Mission
Board hunger ministries.
"We feel like part of the Gospel is reaching out in a
physical way, and that's a very big need in our community,"
Field says. "It's not theoretical, it's not something to
argue about. It's something tangible that every person can do
and we can all come together on."
Field has seen a lot in the twenty-three years he's lived on
the Lower East Side with his wife Susan and their two sons. He
remembers when the park was a tent city filled with homeless people
living in makeshift shelters. He remembers when most of the blocks
in the neighborhood were lined with abandoned buildings and vacant
lots. Now the park is a clean green space and the buildings have
been refurbished into high-rent condominiums.
"It's a tale of two cities," Field says. "We
have people with six-digit incomes living right next to people
who have nothing. They don't even see each other sometimes."
In addition to changes in the neighborhood, Field has seen
changes in the individuals who have lived on the streets around
Graffiti. One of those individuals is Vaughn McLamb.
"I believe Vaughn is one of those people who is a resurrection
story where you see the resurrection power of God in him,"
Field says. "I think part of the fun of what I do is getting
to see these amazing things God does in people's lives."
McLamb's first encounter with Graffiti started with the free
lunch in the park more than ten years ago. At the time, McLamb
was on the other side of the table. He was a drug addict and living
on the streets.
As a young man, McLamb was able to manage his addiction and
hold a steady job. But as he became caught in the cycle of addiction
and denial, things got worse and no one wanted to hire him. He
shuffled from crack house to crack house and shelter to shelter.
Through decades of rough living and bad choices, McLamb knew God
wanted something better for him. He carried a worn Bible, which
he read during his darkest moments.
"I always wanted to be something useful in God's Kingdom,"
McLamb says. "But I had too many other gods distracting me."
McLamb kept reading his Bible, and God wouldn't let go of him.
"I read so much of the Bible that it was filling me and creating
in me something that eventually allowed me to pull up out of the
sewer. The power of God's Word can't be pushed out of a crack
house."
Slowly, McLamb began his crawl out of the sewer and into God's
will. That's when he found FLIP.
"It started with the sandwich and the individual giving
it to me like they wanted me to have it," McLamb recalls.
"I didn't have to beg, explain myself, or apologize for being
in line."
That day, McLamb got more than a sandwich to soothe his growling
stomach. The volunteers invited him to a Bible study across the
street. He took the bologna sandwich and sat through the Bible
study.
"It re-ignited that belief in Christ I was trying to stuff
down with the failures and the behaviors and the drugs and all
the excuses," McLamb recalls.
He started attending church at Graffiti. Week after week, he
listened to the sermons and things started to click. "When
Taylor asked me if I wanted to take the next step and be baptized,
I said yes, let's do it."
That was ten years ago. "Christ is working in me,"
McLamb says. "And He is putting distance between being real
messed up and not being messed up."
Today, McLamb is sober, saved, and baptized. And every Saturday
he heads up the church's feeding ministry.
"This ministry allows me to work with others and to work
with the church," McLamb says. "God has used my past
experience and chiseled me into someone who can work certain parts
of this ministry.
"It beats lying on that bench in the park saying, 'My
life is finished. I have no purpose. I've messed my life up so
bad that nothing can be done.'"
In addition to heading up the lunch program, McLamb runs Graffiti
Church's clothes closet, oversees the care of the building, and
leads a Bible study.
"Vaughn is one of the most anointed teachers I've ever
seen," Field says. "He prepares well and has a sense
of what God is doing in his life and other people's lives."
And it all started with a free lunch.
"When we reach out with a sandwich, it's a way to say
we believe in you as a person and we know this is an immediate
need you have," Field says. "It's a way of making contact
with people and being able to look them in the eye.
"When I see what God has done with Vaughn's life and I
see how Vaughn has drawn other people to the Lord, I can say from
experience there is no one who is too far gone."
Carol Pipes is a member of Mountain Lake
Church in Cumming, Georgia, and is a writer for the North American
Mission Board.
Haiti Disaster Relief
Southern Baptists are demonstrating compassion through their
disaster relief efforts in Haiti following the devastation wrought
by the earthquake of January 12, 2010. Southern Baptists can contribute
to "Haiti Earthquake Disaster Relief" through their
local church or directly to their state convention, the North
American Mission Board (www.namb.net) or the International Mission
Board (www.imb.org). The North American Mission Board has set
up a Haiti disaster relief fund that will direct money to state
conventions and other Southern Baptists who are doing relief work
in Haiti. Donations may be made online, www.NAMB.net, by phone,
1-866-407-6262, or by mail, North American Mission Board, P.O.
Box 116543, Atlanta, GA 30368-6543. Make checks payable to "Haiti
Disaster Relief Fund/NAMB." Initial funding for the relief
effort will come from the International Mission Board's disaster
relief fund. Contributions can be made online, www.imb.org, or
by mail, International Mission Board, P.O. Box 6767, Richmond,
VA 23230. Regardless of the SBC channel, all funds received for
this purpose will go to relief efforts; none will be used for
administrative costs.
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© 2010 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
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