This blog post is written by Stillmeadow EFC's site leader, Ben Gehret.
During and before the week of BUMP, my working metaphor
for BUMP was that they were simply a temporary bridge, as the name would
suggest. They were in our community to serve as and create a bridge between our church and our neighborhood. As the
attendees of the church, we needed to make as much use of the bridge as we
could while we had it. The people, children and adults from our community got
to witness a very visible, very active, arm of the holistic church at work.
They saw people in maroon and grey BUMP shirts cleaning up the neighborhood,
loving their kids, serving them food, giving them food to take home and doing
everything within their power to show the love of Christ in a physical manner.
Over
the course of the week, the BUMP students had several individuals, who they had
no connection or direct interaction with, come up to them and thank them for
what they were doing for our community. That blows my mind. It means that the
work that was done in our community meant something. It means the 14 people
that came from Community EFC made an immediate impact on this community that
people recognized. It was over 100 degrees all this week and people from the
community saw a bunch of “crazy church people” outside working hard with smiles
on their faces, for no discernible reason other than because they wanted to.
This begged the question of why, and we were able to share the answer with
them. We were out there to show a physical act of God’s love to them by
actively serving our community.
The
impact that this service and the VBS had is perhaps best summed up in a pair of
stories. The first story demonstrates the impact of BUMP on the children who
attended our VBS. There has been a young man we will call "Charles,"
who has attended each VBS we have had for about four years. He doesn’t come to
our church any other week during the year, but every year, like clockwork, he
shows up for BUMP week and VBS. Charles is now 17 and we have a special teen
group for VBS at Stillmeadow because we have such a large teen presence at VBS
every year.
This year was no exception. We had 20 different teenagers attend
our VBS, however Charles is the particular student that I believe we
had the most impact on. Charles came to the block party on Monday and I
recognized him and began talking to him. He told me his uncle was in the
hospital, and I was able to pray with him for his uncle that night. He came
back the next night and during the teen group’s story time, he and his brother
asked a lot of deep questions about God that the BUMP group and our church
leaders were able to provide answers for.
The next day, Tuesday, he again came
back to VBS and in the middle of story time, he received a phone call. He
learned from this call that his uncle had been declared brain dead in the hospital.
His internal organs had shut down and he was only being kept alive via life
support. Needless to say Charles left that night. We all assumed that Charles
wouldn’t be back for the rest of the week because of the nature of what was
going on in his life, but the final two days he not only showed up, he was there
early, and had dinner with the BUMP group. He could have been anywhere doing
anything with his grief, but he chose to come to hang out with the BUMP kids
who had prayed with him, and he understood cared for him and loved him in a way
that he didn’t fully understand but desired and wanted deeply. Charles’ story
is a perfect example of the effect that BUMP can have on a community. A “street
kid” who understands the love of the church and Jesus because of a group of
white kids from Harrisburg.
The sad reality that really struck the BUMP students was that the children attending this VBS lived in a world where every loud boom and crack they heard over the 4th of July wasn’t a happy noise that lead to colors and awe in the sky, as they were used to. It was rather a noise so similar to one that brings sadness and death that a firework wasn’t a symbol of celebration and freedom, but was rather simple relief that they, or someone else, weren’t being shot at. This realization deeply moved many of the BUMP students. It was something completely foreign to them, but it was what people in this urban community face on a daily basis. It gave them a compassion and an understanding for the VBS students that I don’t think they otherwise would have had. It helped them see past some of the “tough guy” front that the VBS students put on and see the real people behind the act.
The
value of BUMP for me and our church is in those two things. First, the BUMP group
that came had their eyes opened to the situation and the people that live in an
urban atmosphere. When they go home and see something negative on the TV about
Baltimore, or Chicago, or New York, my hope is that they don’t just see thugs,
gangsters and delinquents, as the media likes to portray low income urban
residents, but they rather look back on this week and they remember that the
people on TV are more than just the labels that are put on them. They are
living breathing people who are deeply loved by God.
Secondly, that the kids in
our community know and understand that there are people who love them at
Stillmeadow Church. Every VBS student that was present on the last day of VBS
received a Bible and a few people from Stillmeadow wrote their personal cell
phone numbers in the Bibles that were handed out to the teen group with the
instruction if they ever needed anything ever at any time, or had any questions
about what they read in the Bible that they could call that number and the
person on the other end of the line would help them with whatever was going on
the the best of their ability.
This
week, God was honored, our community was showed His love, and the BUMP students
that arrived Sunday morning, were different than the ones that left us on
Saturday morning. Their perspective is different, and the lessons that they
learned they will be able to take back to their community and being to change
the mindsets of others there. Because of BUMP, not one, but two communities
will be changed, and impacted for the Kingdom of God, and to me, that is what
matters.












