The Brightmoor Free Store!
During a brief talk about missions one Sunday morning, a young pastor shared about a ministry in two adjacent communities of southwest Detroit called the Redford Brightmoor Initiative. The pastor of two churches, one in Redford and one in Brightmoor, and also President of the nonprofit organization, RBI, his dream is to involve neighbors in “worship, breaking bread together and…working together for the betterment of our neighborhoods.”
The Free Store is just one of the services
offered by RBI and is held every Saturday at an old brick church in Brightmoor.
Run by volunteers, the store is stocked with toiletries, clothes, toys and
small appliances, all donated by churches and individuals. Everything is free for the shoppers; however
certain things like diapers are given out in limited numbers.
A friend from our new church home, Don
Sylvester, offered to take us to visit the Brightmoor church and store one
Saturday morning. Don drives a long distance from his house nearly every Saturday
to help with the running of the store. It was nice visiting with him on the
way, a good opportunity to get to know him better.
When
we arrived, helpers were putting out donated supplies in a large room on the
main floor of the church, now used exclusively for the ‘store.’ Others registered
people as they come in the door. Volunteers were downstairs in the kitchen
preparing coffee and lunch for the shoppers and helpers later that morning. Don
and another volunteer sat at a table near the “store’ to take registration
cards and check bags for certain limited items. It was a very organized
operation.
Al and I didn’t have a job assigned to us; so
we were able to visit with people and attend the short worship service before
lunch. Ernestine, lay leader and prayer warrior of that congregation, shared
the importance of our words and also of using scriptures from the Bible to
guide our prayers.
Then she asked us to join hands in a circle
and proceeded to walk around inside that ring of hands, praying for many
families and specific prayer needs. She prayed with authority, conviction and power.
We were amazed when she said that she was almost in her “nineties!”
Later, Al and I talked with her at length. Ernestine
shared that “God’s Word is “truth, peace, joy, protection (emphasized), love…
God’s Word is healing for the soul.” She told us that although she had gone to
church all of her life, she hadn’t known God. Her late husband’s love for God
and the Bible was what influenced her.
Now Ernestine spends much of her time
reading and memorizing the Bible. The words from Psalm 91:9-11 in particular
have changed her life: “Because thou hast made the Lord, which is my refuge, even the most High, thy habitation; there
shall no evil befall thee, neither shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling. For
he shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways.”( KJV)
Her passion for the Word of God was evident!
Not
including volunteers, there were about seventy-five people who participated in
the outreach that morning. One man had walked about six miles to get there. Pamela Griffin, the new program director for
the RBI, said that one of things she enjoys most about her job is making connections
and building relationships with the people who attend.
It was an inspiring day—seeing the love of
Christ in action. May the Lord continue to use His people to bring about
transformations in the world around them!
Looking over produce at the Brightmoor Free Store |
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