Pubdate: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 Source: Palladium-Item (IN) Copyright: 2006 Palladium-Item Contact: http://www.pal-item.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.pal-item.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2624 Author: Craig Mauger CHURCH THINKS BIG FOR MEAL SMALL CONGREGATION REACHES OUT TO MAKE MARK IN NEIGHBORHOOD On Christmas Eve morning, Pastor Robert Mays sat alone in front of his church's piano and played a battle hymn. Although he didn't know it was a battle hymn at the time, he knew he was at war. "This church is in what I call a spiritual war zone," he said. "There are drugs, drug dealers and drug abusers all around me." Mays was ready to take another step in his plan to win back his community. His small 20-member church, Shiloh Missionary Baptist, located at 734 N. 15th St. on the north side of Richmond, had planned a meal that could serve 600 hungry local people on Christmas Eve. And on Sunday about 50 people were scattered around the church and its basement ready to celebrate the holiday with the meal. Although the serving of the meal started later than scheduled, people waited, watched the children open presents and listened to music. By 4 p.m., volunteers were serving turkey and ham. Mays told everyone in attendance to eat up and said his church would keep serving meals until the food ran out. The idea for the event came when Mays was looking for churches that would be serving meals on Christmas Eve. He realized that not many churches offered Christmas Eve meals and that the need in the community was there. "It's a small church with a big desire; big desire," Mays said. He also believes that you have to feed people before you can teach them anything about faith. "We have to take back the streets from the drug dealers; they've got to know that somebody cares and that somebody loves them," church board member Mildred Brown said. "God loves them; he just hates sin. "Once they know that they are loved and we don't care how they come back; they just need to come back into the church." Brown said Sunday's meal was the biggest project her church has ever undertaken. How could a church that small provide a meal that would end up costing thousands of dollars? "The questions were how are we going to do it and where are we are going to get the money from," Mays said. Mays said he found his answers in prayer, and everything just came together. When he wondered where the food would come from, a local chef, who asked to remain anonymous, came forward and volunteered to prepare the entire meal for the church. When he wondered if the church would have enough money, local people stepped up. One single woman donated $200. A few hours before the meal during mass, Mays asked his congregation, about 15 people, how they were going to feed the hungry with so few volunteers. Right when he asked that, a couple of volunteers walked in. "The nature of man is so cold-hearted sometimes," Mays said. "But when people step up and do this it re-instills your faith in God." Word of the meal spread in some part, thanks to Mays. About two weeks ago, he went door to door on the north side of Richmond talking to residents about his church and the Christmas Eve meal it would offer. "I was thinking maybe 100 or 150 people; now I am hearing 400 to 500 people," Mays said he told the chef a few days before the meal. Against the odds, the small, 60-year-old church accomplished its goal and served its meal on Sunday. Lisa Stephens and her daughter Christie Peters ate and helped serve the meal. Stephens said Mays helped bring her back to the church. "Nothing like this goes on in our neighborhood," Peters added. But the church's members stress that there is still more to be done. "The way to get this community back is to let this community know we have to battle against the things going on around us," Mays said. Church board member Jean Twine says the true meaning of Christmas was wrapped up in the church's mission. "It's about helping others," she said. In his sermon Sunday, Mays agreed and added that Christmas is also about love. He said that it was love that allowed God to give up his son for the world. And in love, the pastor sees something more. Something more that allows a small church to fight a big battle. "There's always hope," Mays said of his church's struggle. "There's always hope." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake