Posted: 3/31/06
Church sees school as
avenue to community ministry
By George Henson
Staff Writer
AMARILLO—Pleasant Valley Baptist Church is making a difference at a neighboring elementary school—inside and out.
Outside, the school’s marquee notes the sign was made possible by gifts from the church. Inside, numerous children’s hearts have been marked even more boldly.
The church’s ministry to Pleasant Valley Elementary School began more than four years ago, when the church held a car show to raise money to build a family life center, Pastor Dana Moore said.
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Missions Minister Julia Buckstead and Pastor Dana Moore stand before a school sign purchased in part with funds donated by Pleasant Valley Baptist Church. It stands as a symbol of cooperation between the church and school system. (Photo by Donnie Conger/Pleasant Valley Baptist Church) |
“After the car show, we kept saying, ‘We pushed this as a community event, so why are we keeping the money for ourselves?’” he recalled.
The solution: Don’t keep the money. Give it to the school.
The church has continued to hold the car show each year and give the school all the proceeds. The money not only has helped the school buy its marquee but also has paid for murals to be painted in the library, and it funded other projects.
The car show marked the beginning of extensive involvement of the church in the lives of the children and their families, such as the church’s program to buy school supplies for needy children throughout the school year.
“We don’t do the big push at the beginning of the school year. There are enough agencies who already do that in this area. We try to fill in after that initial time,” Moore said.
Each month, the church throws a party for children whose birthdays fall during that month.
“For a lot of these children, their birthday is just another day in their homes, so we try to do something to make it a little special,” Moore explained. Each child gets out of class for a short party, where they receive a cupcake and a balloon and play a game.
When mothers of children in the school have a baby, the church’s Baby Bulldog ministry kicks in.
“The mom comes to class and brings the baby so everybody can see, and we give them a blanket and other supplies,” Missions Minister and Church Administrator Julia Buckstead said.
The church also sponsors a “Little Bulldogs” program for students’ younger brothers and sisters. Every Wednesday, for the last 45 minutes of the school day, mothers can bring their 2- to 4-year-olds to school. Children work on color and shape recognition and motor and coordination skills, and they enjoy a story time—all led by church members.
“We can’t bring books in,” Moore explained, “but the money we give every year buys books, and so we read those books to them.”
The church also presents gifts to teachers and staff at Pleasant Valley Elementary—including maintenance workers—on an appreciation day each year.
None of the ministries developed overnight, Moore noted. Initially, school personnel seemed reluctant to move quickly in building the relationship, he said.
“It was almost as if they were waiting to see if we were really in it for the long haul,” he said.
The congregation proved its commitment, as evidenced by Amarillo Independent School District bestowing two of it most prestigious awards on the church—the America’s Promise Leadership Award for Businesses and Civic Organizations for Exemplary Leadership and the Warren Kincaid Award for championing mentoring and tutoring.
After school, students can walk across the street to the church’s Front Porch facility, which houses activities in what once was a strip shopping center. About 30 children are registered for help with homework, with about a dozen children attending faithfully.
More churches should have this type of ministry, Moore insisted, instead of complaining about the lack of prescribed prayer in public schools.
“If we cross the street over to the school, we don’t push Jesus. But when they come to the Front Porch for help with their homework, we pray with them,” he said. “We have a far greater impact on these kids than if they were across the street reciting a prayer.”
The afternoon program includes a time for the children to talk about their day with the volunteers, a snack and playtime, as well as help with homework.
Most of the children appreciate the help, but their behavior isn’t always perfect, “because there really are no perfect children,” Buckstead said. Sometimes, students have to be told that they can’t come back for a few days.
“When we tell them they can’t come back for the rest of the week, it really affects them because this is a place where they can get loved on,” she said.
For that reason, they are reluctant to tell children they can’t come for a time.
“So many of these children have been given up on, and we’re not going to do that. They have found out we’re tough, but no matter what, we still love them,” Buckstead said. “That’s what this program is for—those kids on the edge.”
And according to school administrators, several have been pulled back from the edge, and children who were once making failing grades are passing now.
Volunteers make the ministry possible, Buckstead said.
“There are a lot of people who volunteer to help with these children. Their heart is in the Front Porch ministry, and I could not do it without them,” she said.
Various volunteers devote their evenings to the Front Porch ministry. On Monday and Thursday evenings, the church sponsors a 12-step program for “people who have substance-abuse problems and the people who love them,” Buckstead said.
Front Porch offers English-as-a-Second-Language classes on Tuesday evenings, and a Saturday worship service welcomes “people who wouldn’t feel comfortable attending church in the larger building,” she said.
This month begins “Spaghetti 6 at 6,” aimed at the parents of children who attend the after-school program. Participants will eat and then listen to a short lesson in which six questions about the Bible will be answered, Buckstead said.
And while so far only one family has joined Pleasant Valley Baptist Church through the Front Porch ministry, it still has been fruitful, she said.
“Our goal is not to increase the kingdom of Pleasant Valley Baptist Church, but to increase the kingdom of God. Many times, we’re not going to see the fruit of our labors, but we know that if we are faithful, God will be faithful, even if we are not there to see it,” Buckstead said.
“The way God has grown this is incredible. I’ve been invited to go along on the fifth- grade field trip. How many churches get opportunities like this?”
What about the family life center?
“We still don’t have one, and it’s not even a priority anymore,” Moore said. “We have other ministry opportunities now.” News of religion, faith, missions, Bible study and Christian ministry among Texas Baptist churches, in the BGCT, the Southern Baptist Convention ( SBC ) and around the world.