As the snow began falling today, I couldn't help but think of how some of my friends will fare this winter.
Whether its Brenda who's padding her old van (home) with Styrofoam this week to prepare for winter, or the many farmworkers who will be holing up for winter without any income until spring...the change of weather definitely hits the poorest of the poor the hardest. We see more people during this time coming through our Family Support Center doors, seeking relief for rent payments, blankets & winter coats, and the never-ceasing utility bills.Today a white 40-something-yr-old lady came in asking for help with her water bill. Anything will help she tells me. I ask my usual questions, wondering if she has tried to set up a payment plan or gone to the largest community service agency in the valley to ask for help. We call to save her the trip, and I'm told, 'we're not doing water bills anymore'. Payment plan won't work she says, because her water has been turned off. We decide to help her with a portion of her $190 bill and call over to make a payment with our emergency funds. Unfortunately because this is her second time to get it turned off, they just tacked on an extra $190, and there was some other fee, to make a new total of $340.
She fights back tears after I tell her the news. How is someone who was unable to make her monthly payments, gets her water cutoff, now able to make a payment 3, 4, 5 times the usual amount to get her water reinstated? The battles against the poor seem insurmountable at times.
Our migrant seasonal worker friends, face even less prospects this year. Jobs are even scarcer to come by, and the winter projected to be even colder. For one Mixtec family I know in particular, entering the winter is clouded with the father's deportation last week. He was picked up for driving with a suspended license. Fortunately the mother has work, but her income will be far from enough to sustain herself and 12 others: her mother-in-law and her two young kids, her nephew and his wife and two kids, and her own 5 kids. Last week I brought 4 of the kids over to my house for the afternoon, per their request. We drank smoothies, ate grilled cheese sandwiches, and watched Mr. Bean...also per their request.
I am grateful to be in relationship with these friends. And yet long for more. For the poor to not be burdened, not knowing how they will pay the most basic of bills and eat the most basic of foods; for the homeless to be housed; for the unjustly accused to be set free. I am reminded of a favorite passage...
Is this not the fast that I choose:
to loose the bonds of injustice,
to undo the thongs of the yoke,
to let the oppressed go free,
and to break every yoke?
Is it not to share your bread with the hungry,
and bring the homeless poor into your house;
when you see the naked to cover them,
and not to hide yourself from your kin?
~isaiah 58:6-7
to loose the bonds of injustice,
to undo the thongs of the yoke,
to let the oppressed go free,
and to break every yoke?
Is it not to share your bread with the hungry,
and bring the homeless poor into your house;
when you see the naked to cover them,
and not to hide yourself from your kin?
~isaiah 58:6-7
And so I pray for wisdom...
...how to care, love, support, and advocate alongside those in need. We make small payments to utility and rent bills, pass out blankets and baby diaper coupons, fill out resumes, and job applications. We pray with people for healing, for miracles, for debt forgiveness.
We ask...
...and yet seek to be content and yearn for more at the same time.
These realities make me all the more thankFULL in this thanksGIVING week. As you join me in thanksgiving this week for bountiful blessings--small and large--will you join me in the cry for provision for those who have the least?
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