Inasmuch Plays in Peoria!

The following article appeared August 12, 2012 on the CINewsNow web site, serving Peoria, Illinois:

Glen Oak Church helps community in Operation Inasmuch

PEORIA, Ill. — Homes on Peoria’s East Bluff have a little more curb-appeal. This after members of one local church is lending a helping hand, or dozens of them to residents in need.

Painting, yard work, and home up-keep. Some of the general things a homeowner is familiar with, but when funds and health aren’t there, Glen Oak Church is happy to help.

“It’s great that we can do that and we have the time, and the privilege, and the resources to get this done. All of the extra help that people put in for this ya know months in advance. It’s amazing, and you go home feeling tired but really good,” said volunteer Jacob Williams.

The 10th annual Operation Inasmuch provided help to 30 less fortunate homes in Peoria. About 120 volunteers put there handiness to good use by building porches and painting houses. For some residents, yard work just isn’t possible.

“I’m not able to get out and do some of the yard work because I have real bad allergies and I break out just by the slightest touch of grass so it’s really wonderful that they’re able to come out and help when i especially need it around this time,” said local resident Bonita Harris.

Others like Rodney Farlow applied for for the work because injuries have disabled them from working.

“With me not working and not being able to work, the funds aren’t there. Ya know and that’s why I said to have a little piece at a time. By the time winter would come around I still wouldn’t have got the work done,” said Farlow.

The church got two grants to help pay for supplies from the East Bluff Neighborhood Housing Association and the Central Illinois Community Foundation. Residents in need can apply for the help each year.

Two Churches Serve Suffolk, VA

The following article was published on August 4, 2012, in the Suffolk (Virginia) News-Herald:

Church Members Reach Out

by Tracy Agnew

Dozens of members of two downtown churches spread out across the city Saturday on a mission of hope.

It was the second year of Operation Inasmuch for West End Baptist Church and Suffolk Presbyterian Church. They started doing the ministries last year in lieu of conducting vacation Bible school.

“We really are enjoying this more than VBS,” said Lou Ventura, one of the organizers of the event. “At VBS, we were just ministering to ourselves. We felt we needed to really help the community.”

Jack Leach, left, and Jack Stoughton help repair Peggy Luter’s front porch on First Avenue on Saturday. The project was part of Operation Inasmuch, done by two downtown churches.

The weekend-long event began Friday, when the two churches met at West End and the Rev. Rebecca Lesley of Suffolk Presbyterian delivered the message. Teams ironed out final details for the next day over a potluck dinner.

On Saturday, six teams went off on their missions of compassion.

A hygiene kit team assembled hygiene kits and donated them to the Western Tidewater Free Clinic. A sewing team delivered pillows, walker bags and lap blankets they had handmade to a nursing home. A yard sale team sold donated items for 25 cents each at Suffolk Presbyterian Church. A construction team completed a three-day project to repair and paint a front porch on First Avenue. A cemetery team began mapping the graves at Oak Lawn Cemetery, the long-neglected resting place of some of Suffolk’s most prominent black citizens from the late 1800s.

And finally, a prayer team visited each of the other sites to pray with volunteers.

“It’s a way for us to get into the community,” Ventura said. “This was a successful thing last year, so we decided to do it again.”

At the yard sale, anyone who needed items they couldn’t afford was allowed to just take them.

On First Avenue, Peggy Luter watched as a team of volunteers repaired her front porch.

“These people are wonderful,” said Luter, a member of West End who also contributed as part of the sewing team. “I appreciate these people. I told them I would like to be up there hammering.”

Part of the wood on her porch had been rotting, she said. The team decided the best course of action was to replace the entire porch. They also offered to come back and stain the wood, she said.

“This is just a very small way that our churches can express our ministry into the community,” church member Jack Stoughton said during a break from repairing the porch. “It’s a great ministry.”

On Sunday, the two churches planned to meet for worship at Suffolk Presbyterian, with Dr. Chester Brown, interim pastor of West End, delivering the message.

Another Warren, Ohio Inasmuch!

The following article from Youngston, Ohio’s Vindy.com was published on August  6, 2012, announcing Central Christian Church’s upcoming Inasmuch Day:

Warren church has community-service day Saturday

WARREN — Central Christian Church, 2051 E. Market St., sponsors its fifth annual Operation Inasmuch service day Saturday. The day begins with a breakfast at 7 a.m. and worship service at 7:45. Groups will embark on their projects at 9.

The church’s youth group painted boards that will cover six abandoned homes. The group will partner with Warren’s Weed & Seed Program by boarding up these homes as part of the project.

The church also has joined forces with Trumbull Neighborhood Partnership to paint a house located on the city’s southwest side.

The church also will have groups braiding lap blankets for nursing-home residents, assembling care packages for Armed Forces, and coordinating a food drive.