Trash People

I found this story via a couple of other blogs, and decided it needed to be told to as wide an audience as possible.  It was originally written by a guy named Sam and published HERE. You can find an amusing update from Sam on that comment string if you like.

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In November I heard Dino Rizzo speak in a workshop at the National Outreach Convention in San Diego. Dino talked about ways to serve the community. He said that if he were new in a city he would buy some garbage bags and volunteer at a community event to help do cleanup. If there was no community event, he said he would just go up and down the streets in his neighborhood and pick up trash.

I told this story to our little group that is trying to learn how to serve an inner city neighborhood in our city. We decided that we should try it the following Sunday morning, the second Sunday in December, and then do it every other Sunday morning. Our first Sunday out was a cold, windy day, but we met, prayed and then picked up trash in the neighborhood for about eighty to ninety minutes.

We skipped the fourth Sunday in December, since everyone in the group was out of town or occupied with visiting relatives. However, we resumed our trash pickup last Sunday, the second Sunday of January.

We met, prayed and started picking up trash. About two minutes after I started a car pulled up near me.

(Him) “What are you doing?”

(Me) “We’re picking up trash to make the neighborhood look nice”.

(Him) “Who are you people?”

(Me, while pointing to the yellow shirts we all wore that has our group’s name printed on it) “We’re a little group of Christians just trying to help out the neighborhood.”

(Him) “What church are you with?”

(Me) “We’re just a small group that meets here in the neighborhood.”

(Him) “I mean, where’s your church? The building?”

(Me) “We meet in cafes or the park. We don’t use a church building. We try to be out around people.”

(Him) “But are you part of some church, like the Catholic church, or something like that?”

(Me) “No. We’re just followers of Jesus, and every other Sunday morning this is how we do church. We go out in the neighborhood and pick up trash.”

Suddenly I was his good friend.

(Him) “My name is xxxxxxxx. I’m on the planning commission here, and I’ve never seen anything like this. I’m church way back, but I don’t go any more. (He gave me some reasons. He doesn’t think much of “religious people”.) Now this is real religion.”

He told me about the dislike the churches in the neighborhood and the people in the neighborhood have for each other, a story that I have heard several times from the neighborhood. (Most of the churches in the area are attended by people who drive into the neighborhood. The churches and their neighbors regularly complain to the city, the police and whomever will listen about each other.)

As we continued picking up trash, people watched. When cars drove by, I looked up. Several people smiled and waved. Some people came out of their houses and thanked us, after watching us from their windows. When we reached the end of our time, and turned around to go back to our cars, picking up a few bits of trash that we had missed on the first pass, more people came out of their houses and thanked us.

Several weeks earlier I walked these same streets trying to see what I could see, and prayed for the neighborhood. No one stopped to talk to me. No one smiled and waved as they drove by. No one came out of their house to talk to me. A couple of gang members asked me for money. That was it.

Oh yes, we do not hand out tracts or invite people to church. We’re just getting to know them and they’re getting to know us. They’re trying to figure out who we are. When they’ve got that figured out, perhaps, just perhaps, they’ll invite us into the spaces of their lives. That is where we will be allowed to hear each others stories. But for now, they’re just smiling, waving, coming out of their spaces to say hello or thank you or to ask who we are and what we’re doing.

After writing this, I thought about a group that is trying to start a new church. Twice they have walked through our neighborhood, hanging invitations to the new church on people’s doors. I watched them. No one smiled and waved at them as they drove by, no one stopped to talk to them, and no one came out of their house to talk to them. After the group had passed, I did see people open their doors to get the flyers, look at them a second or two and toss them in the trash. Hmmm!

February 4th, 2009 · 6 Comments

Categories: OA Stories

6 Comments so far »

  1. Alan Knox said

    am February 5 2009 @ 9:28 am

    Randy,

    Thank you for posting Sam’s story. I also think it is a wonderful story and a great example for all followers of Jesus. At the beginning of the year, I started posting one story per week as an encouragement to other believers to serve their communities. You can find those stories on my blog under the label “stories”.

    -Alan

  2. Pam Enderby said

    am February 8 2009 @ 8:18 pm

    What an awesome, genuine example of what real evangelism is all about. Thank you for sharing. Keep up the good work, Sam and other Jesus followers.

  3. Randy Siever said

    am February 8 2009 @ 10:18 pm

    I don’t think Sam understands what this little story is creating all over the world. I read it to a group of people in my home Saturday night as an example of what we were discussing. I suspect this kind of “church” will be happening very soon in Sparks, NV. Thanks Sam.

  4. Alan Knox said

    am February 11 2009 @ 12:22 pm

    Randy,
    I forwarded your comment to Sam. Thank you for sharing that with us. Hopefully, I will be able to talk Sam into share more of his story as the “Trash People” in the coming months.
    -Alan

  5. Amanda said

    am February 19 2009 @ 4:51 pm

    This is a great example of easy evangelism. Very doable. The only thing that bothers me is the lack of authority. I believe in having a pastor and elders. Not in being religious – but having a source of experiance and people God has placed to guide and direct your development. They also serve to be responsible for you and to go into spiritual warfare for your souls. But anyway I’m sure God appreciates this. I am looking for some ways to get out there. Thanks!

  6. April said

    am February 20 2009 @ 9:24 pm

    I think that this is what happens when we don’t let church become an obstacle to our ability to connect with others. I sometimes think that Christians are too preoccupied with getting folks into their building than with getting folks into the heart of faith in Jesus.

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