by Matt DeMateo
26. February 2010 07:49
Over the last 6 months we have had over 50 shootings and 15 murders in Little Village. Things are rough, but the work goes on! On March 1st, we will be taking the Urban Life Skills Program to Sydney Australia! We have a great friend there who is getting married. A group of 4 of us (Matt and Sarah DeMateo, Art Guerrero, and Vince Torres) will be going to Sydney for 2 weeks. However, the wedding is only the grand finale of our trip. We are going to speak at a variety of different churches, missions groups, and also meeting with high end donors who may be interested in supporting the ULS work in Chicago. This trip is to push the vision and mission of ULS to many donors who have already given thousands of dollars to ULS! By meeting with them in person we are hoping to expand our relationship and see a strong prayer and financial support team built! We need YOU to help get us there. We have had over $4000 donated to make this trip happen. We need to raise $2000 to get the whole team there. We will all be sharing testimonies, pictures, and casting the vision for what God is doing in Chicago. We are asking for 80 people to give $25 to help us get there...would you join us? By signing up as an attender, you are saying you are willing to donate $25. We will send you the link on how to donate the money. For more info on the program go to
www.urbanlifeskills.org
by Elizabeth Galik
26. February 2010 07:32
I have never before witnessed a party like this. Just before Christmas, I was invited to attend the celebration at New Life Centers - Little Village. At a time of year when gatherings abound, this party was set apart by its guest list. This party was for members of the Urban Life Skills program: youth involved in the Latin Kings street gang, placed on probation and court-ordered to attend this gang-intervention program. Each ULS youth was invited to bring their family. Mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, cousins, brothers, sisters, babies--all were welcomed free of charge. Over 200 ULS youth and their families attended that beautiful night. The party was fit for kings. Catered meals, served to your table. Professional family photographs for all. 200-person BINGO. Desserts galore. Food left over. A gift for each youth. A gift for each family. A gift for each child sibling and cousin. Food for each family. Another gift for each family. More gifts for each youth. Toasts and blessings, and then turkeys for each family and a brand-new bed for one grand prize winner. By the end of the evening, families taking the bus would have had trouble getting it all home. The grace of it was staggering. Gang-involved youth--those who had turned their lives around and those who hadn't--heaped up with gift after gift. Surrounded with friends, family, mentors, and the vicarious good wishes of dozens of donors. In a city plagued with youth violence, these young offenders were for a moment simply loved. Blessed. Appreciated. Gifted. In a world where each of us is valued by our merit--our work quality, our timeliness, our social skills, our follow-through--it is a welcome glimpse of God to witness pure, unadulterated grace. As I left, I could think of only two things: a background song playing that evening-- "He is jealous for me, Loves like a hurricane... O! How He loves us!" --and a single, grateful prayer: "Lord, as you welcome these Kings who come to You, welcome me."
by Elizabeth Galik
26. February 2010 07:30
The fancy name for them is non-reciprocal transactions: gifts given to a nonprofit where the giver receives nothing in return. It is astounding to me how many generous ones bless us with non-reciprocal transactions: time, finances, supplies. On behalf of our children, our families, our staff, our future participants, thank you. Thank you to the organizations who supported our organization when it was so small that if you blinked, you'd miss it. Thank you to the givers who increase their generosity when the economy turns sour. Thank you to everyone who provides Spanish tutoring for kids' bilingual homework. Thank you to the youth groups that give us one week to change their outlook on life forever. Thank you to the schools that bring us into their classrooms to help our kids. Thank you to every college student who recruits his friends to come help. Thank you to the partners who load their dogs into their cars every week to come read to our kids. Thank you to the grantors who maximize their allowable amounts to bless us as generously as possible. Thank you to the staff who forego benefits and higher salaries to become "family" to our kids. Thank you to the church that lifts us to a higher level. To all those dear ones who make it possible for a child to call her after-school teacher "mama," thank you.
by Elizabeth Galik
26. February 2010 07:27
One of our wonderful ministry partners provides us with donations to give away: bags of food, blankets, hygiene products. The donations are to be given with listening conversation, humble kindness, and open sharing about the Christian faith. The vision is that the gift will open a relationship with the recipient, and that relationship might lead to the recipient to fullness of life. There is a hotel near New Life-Humboldt Park, which also happens to be near my home. The hotel is a home for transients, frequently-homeless folk, persons with disabilities, and recovering addicts. The corner near this hotel is so fraught with prostitution that any woman simply crossing the street there is frequently thought to be "working." We know dear ones with disabilities who have chosen to live in an abandoned house rather than stay in this hotel. That said, the hotel looks like a Jesus-place to me: the place where Christ would have eaten and preached and perhaps stayed the night. It looked like a perfect place to serve a warm breakfast, deliver gifts of warmth and hygiene, and meet people who could become new friends. Tonight, my neighbor approached the innkeeper for me to inquire about renting a hall to fix breakfast and deliver gifts to her residents. She turned us down on all counts, asserting that she limited donations or giveaways as "dehumanizing." She wanted to have her residents keep their dignity. The Christian Community Development Association espouses this same principle, which I believe holds merit. CCDA states: "All people have inherited dignity by being created in the image of God. Oftentimes, charity demeans a person and strips him or her of dignity. The last principle of empowerment affirms a person's God-given dignity" (
http://www.ccda.org/philosophy). Relief, CCDA asserts, is overused. What is needed is development: equipping individuals to provide for and lead themselves. While I believe this concept at a CCDA conference, applying it to this particular hotel is giving me pause. What is more dehumanizing than prostitution? What is more humanizing than sitting down to have breakfast alongside another person? How could a breakfast full of love and giving possibly make life as a hotel resident worse? Can't a kind breakfast be the start of a life of empowerment? I leave you with www.ccda.org, the book When Helping Hurts, and your own experiences. When you come to an answer, don't keep it to yourself.
by Dwayne Eslick
23. February 2010 08:59
Wow! As I type this blog we are exactly 32 days and 23 hours away from
the grand opening of New Life's 15th location in the Portage Park
neighborhood of Chicago. It is hard to believe that this Sunday, a team
of people will be prayed for at New Life Jefferson Park and we will be
sent out and the following Sunday on March 7th preview services will
begin.
THIS IS REALLY HAPPENING. REPEAT. THIS IS REALLY HAPPENING.
It is hard for me to believe as from October to January I visited over
45 schools, churches, park district field houses, and banquet halls
looking for a place to rent an auditorium for the birth of a new
location of New Life Community Church. Jefferson Park's second service
is overflowing with people and literally bursting at the seams. Another
service had already been added. Room needed to be made for more people
and the best way to that was to multiply into a new neighborhood and
begin creating room for more people. For 4 long months I drove from as
far east as Lake Shore Drive all the way to Harlem Ave looking for the
best scenario for a new location. After over 40 closed doors, through
an amazing series of events, Luther North High School was discovered and
it was if they were rolling out the red carpet to welcome us to rent
space for worship services on Sunday mornings.
With over 50 ministry volunteers needed we are getting close to our goal
and are excited about what God is doing. What is even more exciting
is that either by the fall or next spring a 16th location will be born
and we are already praying for God's direction as a church as to where
that may be. It is exciting to be a part of a movement where God is at
work.
One way anyone can help make a difference is to come to the "Prayer and
Worship Summit" to help consecrate this location to the Lord. On March
21st, people from most of New Life's locations will gather on a Sunday
evening and through praying to the God of heaven make a difference on
earth. The event is free and will be powerful and is one of the most
crucial parts of preparing to launch a new church location of New Life.
Thanks for your prayers,
Pastor Dwayne
by Dwayne Eslick
11. February 2010 17:57
Dear New Life Family,
We know that the prayers of a righteous person can make a big difference.
Please pray for:
1) Laborers for the harvest on the northwest side.
2) Lives to be changed through this new location.
3) The Grand Opening on March 28th to be a Grand Success.
Also, by watching the following video, you can agree with me in prayer for 30 seconds:
VIDEO LINK
Thanks,
Pastor Dwayne
by John Palmieri
8. February 2010 14:51
There isn’t an easy or pat answer to maintaining balance
in your life. Sometimes I think that Christians overate “balance”.
It’s not so much about balance as it is about boundaries…living
your life in such a way that the Holy Spirit is un- quenched and
un-grieved in all your relationships/endeavors.
Practice life and ministry out of the intimacy of your
relationship with the Trinity –just like Jesus did. In reading the
gospels it often looked like Jesus life was out of balance…yet he only
did what the Father told him to…he lived his life out of the overflow of
his relationship with the Father.
- JP
www.johnpalmieri.com
by John Palmieri
1. February 2010 10:06
Relationships: A
small group gives you the opportunity to get to know people at a more intimate
level. Sunday mornings are an awesome
time to worship with the whole family of God, hear a sermon, engage in
corporate vision, but a small group gives you a chance to build deeper
friendships.
Learning
the Word of God: Sunday’s sermon is a great time to get a
broad teaching of the Word of God. However, small groups provide time for one
on one discussion. Your group can provide a time to clarify answers to
questions from Sunday’s sermon.
Opportunity
to Serve Others: One of the greatest joys of being in a small
group is the chance to bear others burdens, serve their needs, and step out
beyond your own issues.
Place
to invite friends: A small group is a natural place to invite
friends and family. Sometimes people are more comfortable going to a small
group then attending a Sunday morning service.
Place
to Pray and Share your needs: A gathering of a few people
is a natural environment for prayer. A big part of prayer is conservation with
God and small groups provide the perfect environment for communing with God.
Engage
in worship: Gathering in a small group allows you to
experience worship at a very intimate level.
Follow
the New Testament pattern: Acts 2:42-47 gives us a blueprint of
what the early church was passionately committed to. The early Christ Followers
gathered in homes, shared meals, read the Word, prayed, and worshipped. When
you participate in a small group you are following the New Testament pattern.