
12.11.2007
The Impact Learning Center is Expanding

12.06.2007
The ILC gets a visit from the queen!



12.05.2007
Making connections

Lately, I've been really excited to hear the kids make connections between the ILC and Bible Club. It first started with them using the SOS method to change their own behavior. One day someone was acting crazy and another student said, "Hey, SOS, remember?" The kids then reminded the student what it meant and that chosing to do what is right is like chosing to act like Jesus. It was cool to see them own it and apply it in a different situation outside of Bible Club Tuesday nights.
Last week, the kids were really into the Bible Club lesson. We've been talking about Christmas Schema during reading time and ever since last Wednesday all the kids have had daily connections to the books we were reading and with what they had done at Bible Club. I get so excited when the kids are excited about the lesson and able to use them in other contexts. I'm praying that the more they talk about them, the more natural it will become for them to use these ideas to make better choices and ultimately to give their lives to Jesus. What fun to be a part of this process with them!
11.29.2007
Meet Ashley Larson-Read room grades 4-5

This fall I came on staff as the Impact Learning Center’s 4th-5th grade R.E.A.L Room and Reading with Meaning Coordinator, in addition to leading the Jr. High Girls Teen Bible Club Classroom. I feel very humbled and fortunate to be working under such a great staff and for all that I have learned since coming on board at CI. My amazing husband, Mark, is a reading teacher and basketball coach at Lincoln High School and together we have loved seeing how God has intertwined our ministries over the past six months. I look forward to watching God transform more kids and families here in Lincoln as CI continues to reach out and strengthen our community.
11.26.2007
Becoming a Kingdom Kid

What does a Kingdom Kid look and sound like? This is the question that City Impact students have been exploring in their Bible Club classes. We have learned that Kingdom Kids say encouraging words to one another like “Please” and “Thank you” and they forgive one another. They also listen when someone else is talking, perform random acts of kindness for one another and participate in all the activities we do.
Being a part of both Bible Club and the ILC programming, I get to observe a few students in two different atmospheres. Although the expectations for the students are the same for both Bible Club and ILC reading program, I am seeing the biblical, Christ-like behavior we are teaching in Bible Club carry over into the ILC. I am getting the chance, when talking about a student’s behavior, to ask the question, “Are you acting like a Kingdom Kid?”
A Kingdom Kid is a part of God’s heavenly family, and these students who understand that are not only worried about following the rules that are in place at Bible Club or ILC, but they are also concerned about acting in a way that would please their heavenly father. I find it much easier to explain the purpose of rules when that purpose is to represent Christ. I am glad to see the students are not only choosing to represent Christ at Bible Club, but the ILC and hopefully school and home as well. That helps motivate me to continue my purpose of glorifying God by teaching and encouraging these kids.
11.13.2007
Meet Nathan Fries, Van Driver

My name is Nathan Fries. My hometown is Dannebrog, NE (a little town 25 minutes Northwest of Grand Island). I am a student at UNL and majoring in Mechanical Engineering and plan to graduate in December 2009. I accepted Christ in March of 2004and have been on a wonderful ride ever since. I am the Van Driver for the ILC and Bible Club on Tuesday Nights.
Meet Jennifer Harrington, Program Coordinator

I was raised on a cattle ranch in Montana, where I lived until I left for college at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. I graduated from UNL in August 2007 with a degree in psychology and a minor in education. I plan to attend graduate school next fall to obtain a Ph.D in clinical psychology. I would like to work with children who have been abused and neglected.
In my spare time I like reading, painting, running, going to movies, and spending time with family and friends. I am currently involved in post-graduate research for the pyschology department at UNL. I am also actively involved at my church; I volunteer as a leader for the high school youth group and have had the opportunity to participate in a mission trip to Haiti over the summer as part of our missions team.
Hopes & Dreams-A Place At The Table
In 2006, I was the featured speaker at City Impact’s annual Hopes & Dreams fundraising banquet. I spent over twenty minutes casting vision for the creation of a strengths-based after school program called the Impact Learning Center which we were hoping to unveil in early 2007. During my speech, I communicated a dream I had that City Impact students would be so engaged in their communities through the avenue of their strengths that they would one day both join me and even replace me at the podium. I didn’t want to just talk about the students in our programs; I wanted our students to speak for themselves.
This dream became a reality on Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007, when five City Impact students were the featured speakers for this year’s Hopes & Dreams banquet titled “A Place at The Table.” Over 400 people packed into the Cornhusker Hotel banquet hall to attend this wonderful event and they responded with a standing ovation at the conclusion of the student led presentation.
These students spoke about their experience this summer in City Impact’s Teen Job Club program developing a beautification painting project at Hartley Elementary School. The names of these students are—
Alejandro – 7th Grade
Takeela – 9th Grade
KaDijah – 8th Grade
Addison – 7th Grade
VaDoll – 8th Grade
As City Impact moves into the future, we remain committed to developing youth leadership in all of our activities in order to truly fulfill our calling of providing a place a table.


11.07.2007
The Lord has BIG plans for the kids at Bible Club

In October I went to St. Louis for the Annual CCDA conference. As a first timer I didn’t really know what to expect, but I was expectant. I found myself encouraged and affirmed in all the planning and thought that we have been taking for Bible Club. I was encouraged to sit in on speakers who passionately shared about God’s expectation for our young people. God has been in the habit of using young people to do amazing things- David, Josiah, Esther, Jeremiah – they were all teenagers when the Lord called them to insanely huge tasks for His kingdom. Does God still have amazing and huge things for teenagers to do? Does He have heroic works for our teenagers at Teen Bible Club? Do I believe it? Absolutely, one hundred percent, you bet your bibby He does!!! I am incredibly excited and expectant to be a part of what He intends to do as He reaches into the lives of our young people. These kids and teens have so much in them that God has wonderfully placed there. They have a power that He has given them, and we, if we allow it, have the chance to see it come to life. I am so excited for Bible Club to be a place where young people have a place to learn and use all that God has gifted them with.
10.29.2007
Bible Club starts up for the 2007-2008 year

The first week of Bible Club was super exciting, but also a bit nerve wrecking too. Could 14 preschoolers really last in the auditorium for an hour? Would they understand the new routines in class? It turned out to be a great night indeed. The kids were so excited to be back. The LOVED the worship and talked and talked about singing and dancing for Jesus with the big kids.
The best part, however, was dinner. The preschoolers were fascinated by the idea of a host table. The kids chosen took each of their jobs so seriously and were thrilled to have a job. Those being served were very polite as they went through the line. It was darling and inspiring all at the same time. How cool, that they can learn to serve and to eat in a way that is pleasing to God. They loved the dinner questions. We took lots of rabbit trails, but I think they just loved being heard and were willing to listen so others could be heard too.
We are so excited about this new year of growth and structure in Preschool-Kindergarten class. I know God has big plans for the hearts of these little friends.
10.25.2007
Kids' Enthusiasm Grows
As the Program Coordinator I had the unique opportunity to observe each student in the various aspects of the program. I hung out with the kids and played games with them when they first arrived and monitored them while they had snack. After the students were in their classrooms, I got to pop in and out and observe the lessons. At times I acted as a listener for the older students as they worked to master stories, while other times I was a reader for the younger students during free reading time. Often I observed the students as they interacted with adult volunteers from the community.
It was exciting to watch the students' enthusiasm for reading grow as the weeks wore on. As they learned new techniques for reading and comprehension, I could see their confidence increase. I feel certain that every kid at the ILC has been greatly benefited and that they have been set on the right path to achieve academic success, which will help them use the strengths God has given them to improve their world.
10.23.2007
Confidence and passion for learning

When I enter the Read rooms taught by Miss Jami and Miss Ashley, I begin to understand why the students would not want to leave. Both teachers have done a wonderful job of engaging their students in reading activities and instruction. I have enjoyed stopping in and observing their classrooms.
This past Friday was the last day of the first quarter, which both classes took time to celebrate their accomplishments. I snuck into the 4th and 5th grade classroom, where they were reading Halloween poems. Each student picked a poem, practiced it, and read it aloud to the rest of the class. Student after student proudly read their poem with excitement in their voice. Though part of the excitement was due to the fun poems, another part was the students’ growing love and improvement in reading. Students, who a month ago were apprehensive about reading, stood confident in front of their peers. This made me realize that this reading program was much more than literacy. Here reading is a life skill that evokes confidence and a passion for learning. That’s exciting!
10.19.2007
Reflections
Besides reading, I feel as though these kids have really grown in other areas too. For instance, we have really pushed putting others first in our classroom and it is amazing to see them respect one another by listening, complementing, and encouraging each other during program time. There have been much fewer conflicts these last couple weeks. Instead I’ve actually had more issues of kids wanting to talk and laugh with one another during class time! That is a problem I have taken some joy in dealing with. Overall, the first quarter of ILC has been very rewarding and I look forward to meeting with a new set of kids next session.
10.01.2007
Experience in the R.E.A.L. room

Initially I was a little afraid that some of the kids wouldn’t enjoy the tutoring experience; that they would think it was too much like school. Instead I found that the kids have really developed a love for reading. I think that in the kids with the achiever or competition strength this program works really well because the challenge of trying to master a new story and move up levels keeps them going. For others, it’s just fun and has become a normal part of their everyday afternoon activities.
9.27.2007
Appreciative Inquiry
The opportunity to dig deep came in the form of the International Appreciative Inquiry Conference. So this past week, I found myself in Orlando, Florida exploring a wide range of workshops about AI. One of my favorite breakout sessions was about Appreciative Intelligence. As I considered things like the ability to perceive the positive potential in situations, reframe stories, and appreciating the positive, I realized that many fellow saints of old have been experts so to speak in Appreciative Intelligence. Paul was able to see the good in the thorn the Lord had allowed in his flesh. It was God’s gift to him. 1 Peter 1:6-7 says, “In this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. These have come so that your faith–of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire-may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed." Corrie ten Boom, a survivor of a Nazi concentration camp, was able to see the good even in the fleas that occupied the straw mats they slept on (these fleas were the reason the guards would not come in their bunk houses). So, even though I was interested in all that was shared in the conference about Appreciative Intelligence, I have become even more encouraged by it as I have seen the spiritual side of it. I find myself now challenged to look for the good and hidden treasures in all the circumstances that the Lord allows in my life. I am learning to appreciate even the shadow.
9.24.2007
God made me and loves me

I was so encouraged this week to hear the younger kids talking with the older kids as they waited for their rides to come. Sometimes you wonder if they are really understanding the things we talk to them about, or even if it's making a difference in their world. I heard them saying things like, "We're talking about schema, it's what you know," and "Our schema is getting bigger and bigger. We're really smart." It's exciting to see them begin to apply what they are learning and to embrace the potential God created them with.
On Friday, we finished up our mental image week. We ended with a lesson on God's mental image. We read from Psalm 139 and then a poem by Jack Pretulsky. The kids were a bit restless as the Psalm has a lot of vocabulary in it, but as we started to talk about each word and what it meant the kids started getting into it. Daddiz blurted out, "God's mental image of us is good!" It was like he finally understood that God made him on purpose and is crazy about him. The kids used that comment to have a discussion about how they know God loves them. We then looked at the illustrations in the poem and talked about how God made them each different and unique. As we did the art project afterwards, it was fun to hear them saying things like,"God made me responsible, he made me caring, he made me creative...." When we came together to share our projects the kids made the connection that God made them and loves them. Milandra said, "We should add that to our schema and then when people are mean to us we don't have to get mad becasuse we know what God thinks about us is true." Mickela said, "We cause our schema and remember God's mental image of us and then we'll remember to act like him, like be kind and respectful to everyone." Madison talked a long time about how God made her special and how He will help her reach her dreams.
It was exciting for me to hear my students using the language of reading and to apply it to God and their everyday lives. How I pray it will take root in their hearts and help them to love Jesus and choose His truth over everything else in their lives.
9.21.2007
Seeing Progress
I have been blessed by my interactions with my coworkers. They are incredible, beautiful men and women who have welcomed me and helped me transition into the position. I can see their love for children in the gentle way they interact with the students, and I can see their desire to follow Christ in the love that flows freely from them.
I have been encouraged by the success that City Impact has seen in the past, and I firmly believe that we are making a difference in these children’s lives. I am excited about the progress that the students are making in their reading skills as well as the opportunity we are creating for them to have positive interactions with adults and with each other. The combination of these is setting the students on a path of success for the future.
9.20.2007
Working through it
Working in the Reroute room may not always be the most popular job, but I have found it rewarding and encouraging in my own life. For a few days in the past week, I have dealt with a couple students who seem to have a reoccurring issue. When they get upset or flustered about something, they tend to get angry. Many times we talk through their anger and brainstorm ways that they can deal with their anger in a way that doesn’t disrespect or distract others.
I enjoy working in Reroute because you can track the progress of a child and their growth. I am daily praying for these students because I know that their anger may not always be rooted from what happens at the ILC. Their anger may stem from other sources that they may have not let go of. Recently, I was discussing anger with one student. I asked her, “Does being angry help the situation? Does it make you feel better?” She knew that it didn’t.
More and more I am aware of the spiritual warfare we are in. Our human nature and the human nature of these students is to be angry and hold grudges. But because God forgave us and has accepted us for who we are, we can let go of our anger and learn to forgive others. I continue to pray and ask you to join me, that God will continue to soften the hearts of these students. Pray that they will learn how to give their fears, worries and anger over to God, and that they will learn how to love and forgive others the same way God did for them.
9.12.2007
We promise
9.10.2007
R.E.A.L. life changes
The students are eager as well when they enter the R.E.A.L. room. I see genuine excitement when I remind them who they will be reading with that specific day. If by chance a volunteer is gone, the kids are disappointed they won’t be able to read that day. The students still have their struggles and frustrations, but they are approaching reading with a different mindset than before. Confidence is growing, and along with it their confidence, a love for reading.
9.07.2007
Teen Job Club Community Project at Hartley

It is finished! With great joy the final touches were completed on Hartley Elementary’s playground, ending a summer long journey. Looking back to the first weeks of June when our process of creating a community project began, it really is amazing and wonderful to see possibilities become reality. It is encouraging to me as a facilitator of the process to know experientially that what I have always believed is in fact true; young people have amazing potential and fantastic ideas. They are capable of far more than I suspect most adults believe they are. Though this may sound silly to some, I am honored that I was a part of what Teen Job Club did this summer.
On a recent trip to a conference on service learning I was struck in the realization that what our young people did this summer was a truly unique experience. I realized that most service learning projects, while desiring to create youth voice, seem to fall short in genuinely allowing it. I realize that this is partially a byproduct of working within curriculums and schedules, but I believe our approach, one modeled on appreciative inquiry, truly gave opportunity for not only a voice to be heard, but gave the voice authority. These young people searched themselves for an idea, decided which idea they liked the most, and pursued the idea into a tangible and doable project. When it came right down to putting paint on the cement (and removing it when necessary), it was all them.
I am very excited that our young people, while greatly benefiting from the experience, were able to provide a greater blessing than they themselves received. Ultimately, the recipients of service learning projects should benefit the most from the experience and I feel certain that their labors did just that. There are many, many children and teachers who will, through this coming year and into the next, enjoy the beauty that the teens in Job Club created for them.





9.05.2007
Making reading fun

Wow! What an amazing first couple of weeks it has been. The kids have adjusted really well to the new format at the Impact Learning Center. They seem to be beginning to see value in what we do in the read room as well as in tutoring and are enjoying getting to know the staff and volunteers. Milandra came back from tutoring the first day and taught us the sign language word her tutor had showed her. Daddiz came back to report, "I love that place, my guy is so cool!"
Things have settled into a nice routine in the read room. It's interesting to see the kids relate the books we've read to their lives. They comment on everything from, "Wow, that picture looks like my little sister!" to "Oh, he was really mean to the new kid. That's not nice at all." The kids seem to enjoy the other activities we also do. They did great thinking about what respectful words sound like and had a blast trying to come up with 100 acts of kindness.
Yesterday we talked about their own dreams and what they want reading to help them do. Madison said, "I can't read the big Bible, but I can keep practicing and read a little kid Bible and then I'll know more about God." Many kids said they want reading to help them be a doctor. Some said they want to improve their reading to do better in school.
My prayer is that the kids will understand that God made them smart and that He will help them achieve all these goals if they'll only let Him. We've worked hard setting the foundation for the essentials at the ILC and re-affirming the importance of reading well. I'm so excited to get busy with our reading strategies and see how God grows us all this quarter.
Program Changes
In February of 2006 the Impact Learning Center opened its doors for the first time. Overall the quality of the work, activities, and programs which happened there each day after school was outstanding. To give you a visual framework, the Impact Learning Center focused primarily on three areas:Literacy, Leadership, & Fun.
There was, however, a fundamental problem with this program, which was transportation. Despite being creative with van routes, we were only able to pick-up and transport about thirty students to the ILC. This meant the majority of students involved in other City Impact programs would never have the opportunity to participate in this wonderful program.
The major way in which we decided to solve this dilemma was to move the Strengths-Based Leadership component from the ILC to our Tuesday night Bible Club program which currently involves between 100 – 150 students. Not only will all City Impact students now have the opportunity to learn how to use their God-given strengths to make a positive and powerful impact in their communities, but this Leadership piece also fits well within the Bible Club framework. While the Biblical teaching at Bible Club allows youth to grow in their knowledge of God, the Leadership component, with its emphasis on service, provides a framework within which youth can live out their faith.
In contrast, the Impact Learning Center is now exclusively a reading program designed to produce rapid reading gains. Between thirty and forty students from four different schools will enroll in the ILC for nine week sessions. Students will receive eighty minutes of reading instruction each day with the goal being that all first, second, and third grade students will receive one-on-one tutoring every day. To meet this one-on-one tutoring goal, we will need approximately one hundred volunteers to contribute forty minutes of time each week.
In the coming weeks and months, this blog will detail stories that happen in both Bible Club and the Impact Learning Center.
This is an exciting time at City Impact. God is moving powerfully in our organization and the curriculum and materials we’ve developed over the past year are just the tip of the iceberg. Thank you for your faithful reading of this blog and your investment in youth in Lincoln’s urban communities. I pray that each of you will not only continue to stay connected through stories, but will also consider joining us as a volunteer or a financial supporter.
8.08.2007
Check It Out!
http://journalstar.com/art
and
http://journalstar.com/media/view/?mid=M46b8f35ae25c7
8.02.2007
They've Gone Country!
Waiting for a bite, Deontrey sits by the pond while fishing today at
There have been many times this week that the counselors have stopped their campers in the woods or by the lake to have them admire God’s creation. God created everything, but there is something about the openness and quietness of the country that makes you stop and remember that.
Each day, the campers loaded up on bug spray, caught a dozen frogs, and I think that one boy had a pound of mud on his shoe when he came home. But each day this week, the campers have had an experience that I know they will be talking about for months to come.
8.01.2007
Ready, Set...Jump!
Today was another exciting day at
Today on the way home, one camper said, “I can’t wait until camp tomorrow. I don’t even know what we are doing, but I can’t wait!"
7.31.2007
It's All Smiles at Camp Sonshine!
Brothers Kerry and Deontrey pose with their counselor from
Continue to pray for GREAT weather. Besides a couple of rain showers, it has been wonderful. The kids are doing a great job of keeping good attitudes, even in the rain. That is what
7.25.2007
R-E-D, Jesus Died for Me!
A field trip starting with water balloons has to be good! As soon as the students of the elementary program unloaded the vans at
The highlight of the day, though, was the
They were split up into four teams: Red, Yellow, Blue and Green. Each team had a cheer that they would shout throughout the games. An example of one of the cheers was: R-E-D, Jesus died for me. With the most enthusiastic voices and jumping up and down, the kids were yelling their praising cheers!
Along with the cheers they played many relay and team games such as bowling pin relays and bean bag toss. They had a blast cheering on their team and the other teams as well. It is awesome to see kids having fun being kids and learning about Jesus as well.
I was thankful for such a great day for a field trip, even though it was hot! We also have great staff and volunteers that keep things fun and organized. The kids had a great time and will sleep good tonight…or at least I will!
7.24.2007
Just Being Nice
One incident that brought great pride and joy to my heart occurred several days into the week at Southwood Luthern Camp. As I entered her classroom, I immediately noticed a girl from our program sulking in the corner. At a moment we had to ourselves, I asked her what was wrong. She pointed to a little blonde girl wearing a sparkly pink t-shirt and stylish Gap cap.
"She don't like
I wasn't sure how to respond to this, being white, I can only imagine the pain of feeling that kind of discrimination, so I gave her the best advice I could give.
"You know what? Maybe you're right, maybe she doesn't have many black friends, but do you know that you could change that? All you have to do is show her how nice you can be." I was a bit surprised to see this girl looking at me sincerely, straight in the eye. She nodded as I continued. "If you think someone doesn't like you, just be nice to them, then you know that they have no reason to dislike you." I gave her a squeeze on the shoulder and sent her back in the classroom, hoping my elementary advice would have some impact on her. I said a quick prayer for her, that she would be able to use her strong personality to encourage rather than intimidate.
Later that afternoon I heard her talking to the little blonde girl, "Hey! Do you want to sit by me? Cute hat!" I sat back and watched the two engage in a positive conversation about the craft they'd made in class. In all honesty, I'd never seen her so outgoing and friendly to another student, much less someone who she thought didn't like her! I couldn't help but smile as the little girl looked taken aback by her compliments and the all important, female ritualistic invitation to the bathroom. Although the little girl didn't respond as positively as one would hope to her invitation, I couldn't wait to pull her aside and tell her how absolutely proud I was of her. As we stood in the hallway, I gave her a huge hug and held her hand. I asked her how it felt to "just be nice". She replied with a shy smile, as if she even surprised herself, and said "It feels good!” The rest of the week I noticed her efforts to befriend her classmate and I thanked the Lord for His loving-kindness, His love for this and how good it feels "just being nice".
7.19.2007
Update- Part I
Exactly three weeks ago today, while speaking at a banquet, I shared a story about two young men who had removed from City Impact’s summer Teen Job Club program as a result of poor behavior. However, I had a plan, and I encouraged those attending the banquet to check our blog in three weeks to see if my plan worked.
Unfortunately, my plan has not worked – at least not yet. But the seeds have been planted, the soil has been tilled, and I believe it is simply a matter of time before both of them not only return to City Impact, but return successfully.
While I’m not yet ready to share my idea for these two youth with the world, I will say that it involves creating a culture of caring in our youth programs. It involves young people showing kindness and sacrificial love to one another. For a glimpse into what this could look like, I encourage everyone to read the July 7th blog post entitled Sacrificial Love Among Teens by Erica Schmidt. It is a powerful and moving story about kids caring for kids.
Three weeks from today, I will be back with another update on the status of these two young men. I hope my news at that time is more positive.
7.18.2007
A Change in Tune
by Bethany Larson
This week the elementary summer program has not been in session because many of our kids are attending Southwood Lutheran’s Day Camp all week. They have been busy each day learning new songs, making fishing hats in arts and crafts, playing water games outside and so much more! Each day as I bring kids home, it is a quiet ride as one or two doze off from their fun-packed day.
It has also been encouraging to see City Impact kids get along with the other classmates in their group. Some are in groups where they did not know anybody else coming into the camp. They have adjusted very well and have come to make friends with the other kids.
Wednesday night, the campers and their parents were invited to a campfire at
7.16.2007
Teens Enjoy Heartland Festival

Hot temperatures, long van ride and the late night were all worth it last night as some the teens from job club ventured to
After

On the way home, one teen described the night. “That is the best time I’ve had in a long time!” Amen!
7.13.2007
Hearts Soften on Prayer Walk
Tuesday we took the Job Club girls on a prayer walk. To be honest, I was a bit skeptical about how they would react. My girls in my 6th grade Bible club are really uncomfortable praying out loud, and I assumed these girls would act the same way. However, I was greatly impressed by not only their willingness to pray, but their prayers as well. These girls are growing in their relationship with Christ. They are learning to talk to him and to care for other people, just like He calls us to.
One of our stops was the
“Is this not the fast which I choose, to loosen the bonds of wickedness, to undo the bands of the yoke, and to let the oppressed go free and break every yoke? Is it not to divide your bread with the hungry and bring the homeless poor into the house; when you see the naked, to cover him; and not hide yourself from your own flesh? Then your light will break out like the dawn, and your recovery will speedily spring forth; and your righteousness will go before you; the glory of the Lord will be your rear guard. Then you will call, and the Lord will answer; you will cry, and He will say, ‘Here I am.’ If you remove the yoke from your midst, the pointing of the finger and speaking wickedness, and if you give yourself to the hungry and satisfy the desire of the afflicted, then your light will rise in the darkness and your gloom will become like midday.”
As I was praying with my small group, I was reminded of these verses, and how John Piper and John Perkins both refer to the poor’s need for respect and dignity. I prayed that we would learn how to show respect and dignity to the homeless.
After we finished praying, my group asked how we are able to do that. “Aren’t all homeless people just lazy?” one of my girls asked. I was able to share with them some of the reasons people become homeless, like unemployment or mental illness. I also told her some short conversations my friends and I have had with some of the homeless in downtown
7.11.2007
Not I, But Christ
“I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.” (Galatians 2:20)
As discussed in my previous post, an impacter is one loves sacrificially, is others focused, and is one who serves.
The central question now is how can we as adults teach youth that we serve others not through our own efforts, but through dependence on God and His Holy Spirit living within us. One simple way is to change the language of our curriculum. For example, instead of a nametag saying –
I Am An Impacter –
it might be revised to read
– Impacted, Now Impacting
More important, however, than the language used on a nametag will be the discussions that happen every day between adults and youth regarding the process by which any person is truly able to sacrificially love others. These discussions will center around one of the greatest mysteries of Scripture – Not I, But Christ.
How many Christians will spend their entire lives never knowing what it means to live a life of submission and dependence on Christ? How many will never fully understand the reality they are a new creation as a result of Christ’s resurrection? This is difficult doctrine even for adults. But at the
Recently, during the fourth day of City Impact’s summer Teen Job Club program for 7th & 8th graders, I asked the students what percentage of the actions and talk among youth at their school reflected kindness. The answer was about 10%. When I asked them what percentage of the actions and talk among youth at their school reflected sacrificial love, the answer was less than 1%.
The need to help our nation’s young people become focused on caring for one another is great. The challenge in developing materials and programs to help accomplish this purpose is even greater. At City Impact, using our strengths to sacrificially love one another is slowly becoming a part of our DNA and an attitude that infects everything we do.
7.07.2007
Sacrificial Love Among Teens
One of the boys in Job Club is really struggling. He’s having a hard time adjusting to the structure and he doesn’t like the discipline system. He doesn’t like doing things he doesn’t want to do, and he doesn’t like being told what to do. Because of a previous episode, he had to spend one whole day in Reroute (2 hours and 15 minutes of program). Knowing that he was going to have a difficult time just sitting there, Mr. Todd asked if any of the other kids would want to sacrifice their time in the classroom to go sit in Reroute with him. The objective of this was that the kids would encourage their peer and let him know that they cared about him and wanted him to be a part of the group again.
So many willing hands shot up in the air! Nearly every student was willing to show kindness and sacrificial love to their classmate that day in Job Club- the very thing we’re challenging them to do. It was so awesome to see one student walk out of the room, return after 10-15 minutes, another student walk out, return, and so on. By the end of the day, many of the kids had spent a portion of the day lifting him up with their presence and minimal words. It was such a beautiful thing! These are the moments when I know we are making an impact and the Holy Spirit is penetrating hearts. May the Lord continue working in the hearts of the youth of City Impact!
7.03.2007
CI Youth Wins Award at KAA Camp

KAA camp was an incredible blessing for the youth and adults alike! My husband and I were in KAA 1 with the youngest group and we loved watching CI's youth interact with others their age from all across the nation. One of the most rewarding memories I bring home is watching
7.02.2007
Mentoring Program in the Works

by James Pruch
This summer I'm working on the development of the new mentoring program. As I have been making brochures, interest surveys, and looking for field trip ideas, I am getting more and more excited about this program. I see all of these things coming together and I know that a child's life will be changed when a mentor invests into his or her life. We will see youth's strengths being discovered and put into practice. The results will be seen long after I'm gone from City Impact, but knowing that what I'm creating will give a young person hope is so satisfying. Knowing that God is going to use this program to change lives is comforting, encouraging, and humbling.
6.27.2007
Taking the Plunge
The overcast clouds and cooler temperatures didn’t damper another field trip day. While the boys bowled strikes at Sun Valley Lanes, the girls dove into the pool.
Some of the girls really enjoyed swimming and could swim well, while others were a little more timid. First grader Amara did not know how to swim, but that did not stop her eagerness to slip down the slide or jump off the diving board. Most of the time she made sure to have a teacher to catch her as she plunged into the water. In the beginning, Amara would jump into Miss Ashley’s, plugging her nose. But as she got more comfortable she became less fearless. She would jump of the diving board and emerge from the water, gasping for breath. She then “swam” to nearby teacher that would pull her to the side. Even towards the end of our time, the other girls were cheering her on and helping her get to the sides of the pool after she jumped in. It was a day, even without the sun.