From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Grant helps community center open in former church


From NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG>
Date 04 Sep 1998 14:07:22

Sept. 4, 1998	Contact: Joretta Purdue*(202)546-8722*Washington
{518}

By Michael Wacht*

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (UMNS) - Ten children, ages 5 to 13, gathered around
the table for grilled cheese sandwiches. With three adult leaders, they
held hands while one girl prayed.

She thanked God for the food and the community center. She asked God to
remember people she knew who had died, including a 10-year-old friend
with an undiagnosed heart condition and an uncle who committed suicide.

The children, from low-income neighborhoods in Daytona Beach,
participated in a summer program at the new Madison Avenue Community
Center, housed in the now-defunct Livingston Memorial United Methodist
Church. 

"The district gave us the facilities for one year to see if we could get
something started," said Debbie Halcomb, the center's executive
director. "Our vision is to have this be the place where people turn to
for their needs, both physically and spiritually." 

A $10,000 grant from the Florida Annual (regional) Conference's program
to implement the Council of Bishops' Initiative on Children and Poverty
is helping the center reach that goal. Bishop Cornelius L. Henderson had
urged Florida churches to get behind the worldwide initiative. The
congregations responded by raising more than $250,000.

The bishops' initiative is designed to help churches provide ministries
that meet the physical and spiritual needs of children and families in
poverty. 

The money pays for utilities and operating expenses, said Don Hughes,
executive director of Halifax Urban Ministries and applicant for the
grant. The funds are keeping the center open and giving the board of
directors time to find other sources of support, he said.

Just weeks after Livingston Memorial closed, a series of barbecues was
held at the building to invite the community to make its wants known and
to involve residents in planning.

With money and volunteers from five local United Methodist churches, the
community center already offers a number of programs. It serves as a
meeting place for a neighborhood watch organization and has several
12-step recovery programs, a transition group helping prisoners adjust
to life in the community, a Thursday night Bible study, a Sunday night
praise service and the children's summer program.

The services are badly needed, according to Hughes. The neighborhood
around the center was "in transition downward," he said, with adult
entertainment and bookstores just blocks away, and prostitutes and drug
dealers conducting business in the parking lot. Playgrounds and
recreation programs for children didn't exist.

The summer program, which ended Aug. 21, helped keep 17 of the
community's children active during their vacations. Each day included
lunch, Bible study, one-on-one coaching in reading, recreation and
encouragement.

"You get to have some fun, and you have to read and do Bible study. If
you do well, you get a reward," said participant Krystal Freeland, a
fifth-grader. 

Third-grader Shanice Mitchell enjoyed studying "the Fruits of the
Spirit."  She said her favorite fruit was strawberries: "They stand for
joy, and joy makes me happy."

Many of the children will return for the center's after-school program,
which begins Sept. 14 and includes tutoring and one-on-one time with
volunteers.

# # #

*Wacht is the assistant editor of the Florida Conference's edition of
the United Methodist Review. This story first appeared in that
publication.

United Methodist News Service
(615)742-5470
Releases and photos also available at
http://www.umc.org/umns/


Browse month . . . Browse month (sort by Source) . . . Advanced Search & Browse . . . WFN Home