Monday, February 28, 2005

Tightening our downtown web

Ways we are becoming more connected here in the heart of Lexington:

Neighbor Mick Jeffries offers an invigorating new blog, Mingle Freely

Subscribe at thelexingtonproject@yahoo.com to the free downtown e-zine, The Lexington Project, and have your eyes pop open every other week when you see the astonishing array of things to do/be/have in our small city. Mostly do and be.

Redemptive neighborhoods

Radiant new neighbor comes over to pick up something she wants to work on for kids in the summer. A kids' community garden. She lives in one of perhaps six unusual households newly settled in our part of town, households with a mission that goes beyond the more typical, perfectly honorable (but not particularly lofty) missions the rest of us pursue: a combination of work/family/house/play/yard/help out others a little.

Those who have been here in Lexington's heart for a time (20 years in my case) distrust and dislike missions. But I like this new neighbor and I like what she tells me.

People are committing to being in a place for a long time, to living their lives among the people whom they would like to serve. Instead of scoping us out, doing a needs assessment, going back to some computer lab or a tight new house on a well-kept street to figure out what they can do for us -- they are settling in among us, listening to the people who have been here awhile, picking up the tasks that we know need to be done but don't seem to make happen.

She said a Ph.D. student at Asbury College some years ago issued a challenge and inspired a group of people to begin a new kind of ministry. "I guess we had a chip on our shoulders about the church," she said, lightly. The idea is to live among people, to be with, to share conditions, to live redemptively, in community. Instead of a standard holy text, she mentioned Wendell Berry as a wise guide. Yes!!!

So far, none of the new neighbors has issued an altar call or taken up an offering. Instead, we are seeing the first hints that old musty items may start disappearing off the to-do list of the Martin Luther King Neighborhood Association. More neighborliness is setting in. That's a kind of mission, a kind of redemption, that may well bless us all.

TSS Coffee at night

I walked in Third Street Stuff Coffee last Thursday night -- wow. I'm a daytime visitor - hadn't been there at night except for an occasional meeting. In the "sun" room, people sat at every table. Two guys bent over the orange and green chess set. The main room was standing room only -- a birthday party for someone named Mike. I ate a mozzarella/pesto salad at the tall table near the open coolers -- that was the single open spot. I watched as the sun room kaleidoscoped into a single meeting of perhaps 8 guys, using a little table top flip chart, no less. When I left the flip chart showed several items, including "People want their govt. back."

Pat Gerhard wanted a place for people to meet, and she got it. And we got it, too. Lucky us.