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Your church members begin immediately
to meet their neighbors in a context that is natural and welcomed
by both the church member and the neighbor. Every church longs for their
members to really become connected to their neighbors. It will actually
start happening the first week.
“I tried this yesterday and am excited
to report that my son and I met more neighbors in one afternoon than
I had managed to meet in five years of owning this house” (from
Gainesville).
"I learned more about my neighborhood in three hours Saturday than
I had in my seven years living there” (from Charlotte).
God’s
blessing as you provide food for the hungry in an Isaiah 58 context
("Feed the hungry and help those in trouble. Then your light will
shine out from the darkness," Isaiah 58:10, NLT). Your church can
be both a witness (“your light will shine”) and a direct
catalyst in your community to reduce hunger needs without any major
new dollar investment.
This is an immediate and measurable result. With just 20 – 25
volunteers, your church can collect one ton of food next weekend, paid
for and donated by the neighbors, and the neighbors will thank your
members for doing it.
Deepening
of prayer for neighbors. Many of your people who occasionally
pray in general terms for neighbors, will find themselves seeing their
neighborhood and praying for neighbors in an entirely different way
the day after they start Neighborhood Connections Thru Canning Hunger.
Christians
Emerge In Neighborhoods. It is common in America for church members
not to know about other Christians living nearby. The Canning Hunger
approach seems naturally to draw other Christians in the neighborhood
to identify themselves. People discover neighbors who share their priorities,
find new prayer partners, even find partners for neighborhood ministry.
Drawing
unchurched neighbors into helping do Kingdom work. Instead of
first figuring out how to get them to visit church, then urging them
toward some spiritual decision, and only after that suggesting ways
to serve God, this strategy involves unchurched neighbors as upfront
willing partners in doing something that greatly pleases God, even while
relationships begin or deepen. It’s called withreach.
Longer Term (6 to 18 months, and beyond)
Once friendships have formed, once people begin to talk with neighbors
at a truly meaningful level about their dreams and needs, once Christians
are praying about what really matters to each neighbor (and some answers
to prayer appear), once enough time has elapsed that neighbors can tell
the interest is sincere and lasting rather than some quick outreach
campaign, then any number of doors can – and do – open wide.
Neighborhood Bible
studies form, or grow.
Mothers’ prayer
groups appear.
Neighborhood fellowship
groups proliferate.
Small group ministry
is empowered.
New neighborhood-based
small groups form.
Existing small groups
gain new members naturally.
Neighborhood-based
Angel Tree ministry can develop.
Neighborhood Christmas
gatherings become more widespread.
God-given dreams
for famliy and community begin to be fulfilled.
Neighborhood self-help
ministries emerge.
De-churched Christians
find connections.
Unchurched neighbors
know where to turn in a crisis.
Churches uncover
ministry opportunities previously unknown.
Church and community
support develops for specific needs.
Ministry becomes
driven by neighborhood-based Christians, instead of church staff.
Community and neighborhood
improvement projects evolve.
Cooperation, partnerships
among area churches develop.
City-reaching strategies
are empowered.
Community transformation
dreams begin to get legs.