Tomorrow morning, I’ll receive back the minivan I’ve loaned out for several days to a church family without a car. We’ll discuss ways to help the under-employment in their family. Where can they find better jobs, higher paying jobs with more dependable hours?
Later tomorrow morning, I’ll meet with someone else who’s been struggling with multiple health problems, joblessness, and a temptation to return to Addiction. I’ll brainstorm with this person how they can find a job with their current health problems. Until they find work, they want to help around our church building.
Pastor Work
It’s hard to adequately explain the work I do most days. It’s definitely not the traditional “pastor” work I imagined years ago. Our church serves many who struggle to make ends meet, who don’t have good health, or healthy bank accounts, degrees to their name, or proper transportation. And many don’t even attend our church’s Sunday service. In fact, the Sunday service is just a tiny part of Renovation Community.
During a church service a couple weeks ago, I told our church family how vital Generosity is for one’s spiritual health. But I also repeated a phrase I’ve said often…”we don’t need your money because God will provide all we need.”
Not sustainable
It’s not unusual for well-meaning people to warn me such a ministry is not sustainable if we don’t change our funding model. “We need to seek grants, request support, and build a donor base.”
But God can sustain what He chooses, in whatever ways He chooses, for however long He chooses. If I heard God correctly (there’s always a chance I didn’t), I heard Him call us down a different path. He wasn’t calling us to financial sustainability, but to faithfulness.
$2000 in the mail today from dear friends I haven’t seen in a long time.
“Cast your cares on the Lord and he will sustain you” Psalm 55:22
He is faithful.