| From Welfare
to Wellness
May 2001 - By Gary Schneeberger
It’s not a happy story.
My father was horribly abusive. There were times I thought
he was going to kill me.
It’s especially sad, in fact, because you can guess
where it’s headed.
I had dedicated myself to a life of what we call sin. I
was really good at it. Broke every one of God’s commandments
and did so with relish.
It’s a story about living without morals.
Eventually I found myself in a relationship with a woman
who was married. Took her away from her husband and children.
Without love.
We had an argument on the way to work one morning. She kicked
me out of the car with $12 in my pocket.
Without hope.
I found myself a patch of woods off of Highway 70. Just
a tent. I dug a revetment, camouflaged my face and hands,
wore camouflage clothing. Did not ever want to see another
human being again.
It’s a story that usually hushes those who hear it.
I raided Dumpsters at night for food, and snuck into a construction
company to get water. I had to build small, hand-sized fires—like
I learned in the military so that you couldn’t see
them from far away—to stay warm. And that’s
how I lived for a little over a year.
So why is it that the guy telling the story never stops
smiling?
His name is Don Turner, a round, ruddy-faced man of 41,
and he’s smiling because it’s his story—and
he knows how it ends.
"One night I looked up into the sky, not believing
in a God, and asked Him a question," Turner recalls.
"I asked Him, ‘God, is this all there is?’
And I got this feeling like there was a voice speaking to
me. It just said, ‘No, you need to come out of these
woods.’ "
So that’s what he did, and in the little more than
five years since it’s become clear just how much more
there was for Don Turner—a relationship with the Lord,
a church family, a job, a home, some hope. What’s
equally clear is that he owes much of it to the Jobs Partnership.
Turner is not alone. More than a thousand men and women
have been helped in ways big and small by the program hailed
as a one-of-a-kind model of why faith-based welfare reform
works. Today, the Jobs Partnership is working in 20 cities,
and is about to be working in 13 more, introducing the lost
and the broken to the love—and the gospel—of
Jesus Christ.
"Work is a blessing—not a chore, not a duty,"
Turner says, explaining what the program has taught him.
"It’s not dragging yourself out of bed to pay
the bills. This is how God blesses us. It’s how we
worship Him."
The Jericho road
The Jobs Partnership is not unique, not by a long shot,
in drawing on biblical principles to help people find jobs.
If there weren’t other groups out there with similar
missions, President Bush wouldn’t have opened an Office
of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, a clearinghouse
to make it easier for religious nonprofits to get federal
grants to fund their social-service programs.
But that’s not to say the Jobs Partnership isn’t
distinctive. Welfare-policy scholars single it out for how
swiftly it’s spread across the country since its founding
just five years ago as a local outreach in Raleigh, N.C.
That growth—to big cities like Washington, Los Angeles
and Philadelphia as well as smaller communities like Buffalo,
N.Y., Knoxville, Tenn., and Peoria, Ill.—is a function
of success. Eighty-three percent of those who have completed
the program not only have landed jobs, they’ve held
on to them for at least a year. These numbers, in turn,
make it easier to attract companies willing to offer jobs,
including businesses not owned by Christians.
As impressive as the program’s reach and retention
are, those who run it say that’s not what makes it
unique. The Jobs Partnership is truly different, they say,
because its goal is to change a lot more than just a participant’s
employment status—hence the testimonies of graduates
like Don Turner.
"We’re not about welfare to work," says
Skip Long, who oversees the national program from a small
strip-mall office in Raleigh. "We’re about welfare
to wellness."
In fact, spend any time at all listening to Long discuss
the Jobs Partnership and it becomes clear that the name
doesn’t do it justice. It could just as easily be
the Literacy Partnership, the Marriage Partnership or the
Housing Partnership, since it equips those it serves to
excel in these areas, too.
It does so by combining the resources of local churches
and local businesses, using Jesus’ parable of the
Good Samaritan (from Luke 10) as a model of how the two
should work together.
The churches assume the role of the Samaritan, ministering
to neighbors who have been "beaten" and "robbed"
not only by unemployment, but also by drug and alcohol abuse,
lack of education, sexual promiscuity and all other sorts
of sin and hopelessness. It’s the church that refers
people to the program from its pews and surrounding neighborhoods;
the church that hosts the 12 weeks of classes on topics
like submitting to authority, preparing a resume, conflict
resolution at work and home, acing a job interview and responsible
stewardship of time and money; and the church that enlists
parishioners to offer encouragement and accountability to
students.
Businesses, in turn, take on the role of the innkeeper,
offering the Samaritans a haven where their mutual neighbors-in-need
can complete the healing process. No one is guaranteed a
job, but the program’s reputation has convinced companies
to hire even the hardest cases when those men and women
demonstrate a desire to change. What most business owners
discover is that the risk is well worth taking.
"What you’re getting out of it are reliable employees
who have a good attitude," says Rick Flammer, a horse-farm
owner in Brenham, Texas, who has hired graduates from that
city’s Jobs Partnership. "For a lot of them,
this is the first time in their life they have confidence
that they can do something, the first time in their life
they want to do something."
Government has a role to play as well, although the size
of that role varies. Federal and state grants aren’t
necessary to run the classes—the national office provides
the curriculum at no charge and all sites and instruction
time are donated. There are overhead and staff expenses,
but many partnerships pay for those with small monthly gifts
from member churches and businesses.
That hardly means Jobs Partnership programs can’t
benefit from Bush’s proposed expansion of grant opportunities
for religious groups, though. Some local partnerships already
have put government funds secured under the old, more restrictive
rules to good use—Raleigh started a computer lab for
students and Brenham applied the $8,000 it received to its
executive director’s salary. And in Orlando, the Jobs
Partnership of Florida, not yet two years old, continues
to operate solely on funds from a state grant.
"Now, our goal is to move toward private funding,"
Executive Director Marc Stanakis says. "But the opportunities
to team up with the government for things like job training,
child care, addiction treatment—those are things partnerships
can add to the core program."
As for the national office, its board of directors doesn’t
try to influence local boards to pursue or avoid government
money. Its function, Long says, is to help them understand
the pros and cons of either choice.
Besides, Long adds, the real key to making the Good Samaritan
model work has less to do with money—government or
otherwise—than developing the close relationships
needed to help a neighbor recover completely from physical
and spiritual poverty.
"Somehow, that Samaritan knew of an innkeeper who would
let him in," Long says. "He knew of a place to
go to get that man help. And for him to know that, the Samaritan
and the innkeeper had to have been in a relationship. Had
to have spent some time together long before that brother
ever got beat up on the Jericho road."
Paving the way
The Jobs Partnership exists today only because two very
different men pursued their own unlikely friendship so intentionally.
It was 1995 when the Rev. Donald McCoy, pastor of Pleasant
Hill United Church of Christ in Raleigh, needed his church’s
deteriorating parking lot fixed. He dialed up a local construction
company, C.C. Mangum Inc., hoping to talk to an engineer
who could give him an estimate for the repairs. He got patched
through to Chris Mangum, the company president, instead.
"Initially, I thought the call had been improperly
routed," Mangum says. "But I knew better pretty
quickly."
That’s because for months, Mangum said, God had been
convicting him about his isolation from his city’s
black community. Realizing he was talking to a black pastor,
he sensed the Holy Spirit again, urging him to pursue a
friendship with McCoy.
As the paving project progressed, so did the pair’s
camaraderie. Before long, they were meeting weekly for lunch—same
time, same restaurant, same table. It wasn’t always
easy—Mangum says his conservative evangelical sensibilities
were often challenged—but it proved to be fruitful.
"We hit it off at the heart level, and we were able
to be real with each other," Mangum says. "I think
that opened the door then for God to be able to do something
in the midst of our relationship."
That "something" came to light six months into
their friendship. Mangum casually mentioned he was losing
money because 10 of his company’s largest asphalt
trucks were parked for lack of drivers. McCoy responded
that many of his parishioners found themselves "parked,"
too, unable to find jobs.
"We looked at each other," Mangum says, "and
thought, ‘Hmmm. Maybe we can help each other out.’
"
The idea started small—the preacher’s flock
behind the wheel of the CEO’s trucks. But after two
weeks of prayer and fasting, both men sensed God was after
something bigger.
"He said he could get 12 businesses if I could get
12 churches together," McCoy recalls. "That’s
how it all began."
Today, more than 100 churches and 100 businesses support
the Raleigh Jobs Partnership. Since going national three
years ago, the program has sought to duplicate that success
by building new chapters the way McCoy and Mangum built
the first: Before a partnership hosts its first class, church
and business leaders meet for months, sometimes more than
a year, just to get to know each other, to get comfortable
with the notion that not all of them can be in charge, to
pray through the racial, ethnic, economic and theological
differences that often stifle meaningful cooperation.
"This model really demands that churches drop their
denominational and cultural barriers and work together,"
explains Stanakis of Orlando. "For us, it took a year
and a half of working it and finding pastors with a vision
beyond the barrier. "
The process paid personal spiritual dividends, too. As a
member of a conservative Presbyterian Church in America
congregation, Stanakis found it especially enlightening
to tackle a common goal with believers who don’t think
exactly like he does.
"I’ve not only been challenged," he says,
"but I think it’s really broadened my understanding
of who God is."
The emphasis on building relationships is evident once classes
start, too. Every participant is assigned a mentor to reinforce
the lessons. But the mentoring doesn’t end when the
classes do; volunteers make a two-year commitment, ensuring
ongoing spiritual and emotional support for graduates through
the challenges that inevitably arise in their daily lives.
That’s the only way to operate, Long says, when your
goal is more than "just get them a job—ding!—and
move on."
Johnny Crudup, executive director of the local Raleigh partnership,
says the friendships between mentors and the mentored are
the No. 1 reason the program changes lives. He describes
the first man he ever mentored as a "hoodlum"
at the outset, fresh from losing his fast-food job for pulling
a gun on his manager. By the time the hoodlum graduated,
three months later, he had given his life to Christ and
traded his weapon for God’s Word.
"David didn’t have a father," Crudup says.
"But he got to the point where he wasn’t just
looking at me as a friend, and not even as a father figure—but
as a big brother who he could tell anything to."
No belief required
The kind of connections Crudup describes are certainly not
rare in the Jobs Partnership, but they don’t come
cheap—and they can’t be forced.
Maybe that’s why none of the program’s leaders
seem too worried about the big guy with the thick neck and
the shaved head who spends most of a February class doing
little to conceal his disinterest in what Dwayne Mitchell
is saying.
Everyone else in the room—five other students and
a dozen or so mentors, business partners and friends of
the Jobs Partnership—listens intently as Mitchell
chronicles the emptiness of his life when he wasn’t
living for the Lord. But the big guy, hands clasped behind
his head, gaze fixed on the opposite wall, rarely even looks
in the teacher’s direction.
Does he hear Mitchell talk about his $500-a-day crack habit?
Does he hear him admit to beating his wife? Does he understand
what it all has to do with the theme of the evening’s
class, identified in his Jobs Partnership workbook as "God
and Relationships"?
"Once a man gets right with the Lord, gets a relationship
with God," Mitchell sums up, "that’s when
a man can love."
Although Mitchell, a Jobs Partnership alumnus himself, delivers
his lesson in a preacher’s cadence, Long is quick
to point out that these classes aren’t church. Students
are given Bibles, yes, because the Bible is the course textbook,
but they aren’t required to believe it. Whether or
not the big guy with the thick neck and the shaved head
ever comes to Christ, the program will help him find work.
"Our role is just to love up on them, give them skills,
help them get a job," Long explains. "Whether
you’re Muslim, atheist, Jewish—it’s still
unacceptable for you not to feed your family.
"Now, in my heart, do I want that the whole world would
know? Yes. We have a biblical Christian worldview. That’s
who we are in this partnership, and we don’t apologize
at all. But how I operate now is God is calling me to love,
period. And I’ve got to believe that the Word of God
won’t come back void."
Long’s faith has been rewarded time after time, in
story after story of lives, marriages and families transformed
through the program. Many of those stories end in salvation;
one of his favorites involves four Muslims who found out
"that Allah couldn’t meet their needs."
"That’s the way so many of our neighbors get
saved," Long says. "We don’t have to beat
them up. We just have to remember how to preach the gospel—and,
if necessary, use words.
"What shines through for them is that they’re
seeing God’s love in action. That’s what ultimately
draws them to the Lord."
‘I’ve got joy
today’
Don Turner’s life didn’t instantly get easy
the morning he walked out of the woods on the outskirts
of Raleigh. Yes, he gave his life to Christ, reconnected
with his family, began going to church. But the wounds that
forced him into the darkness—those wounds did not
heal quickly or painlessly.
"I was still pretty much a loner, very much afraid
of people, very much afraid to go back to work," he
says. "I didn’t trust in anything. I was afraid
to take the next step forward."
That’s when someone in his church recommended the
Jobs Partnership.
"As I went through the program, my fears diminished,"
Turner recalls. "I understood where I was supposed
to be, and what I was supposed to be doing. I learned who
I am in relationship to God, what Jesus purchased for me,
all those things that I can claim. And even before the 12
weeks were up, I got a job."
The job, which he still has, is a perfect fit—jack-of-all-trades
at an art gallery/supply center and framing shop. The boss
is so happy with Turner’s performance that he lets
him sell some of his own art from a storefront window. That
encouragement has motivated Turner to develop his natural
talent; he’s sold several pieces, won a couple of
awards and been commissioned by customers to do portraits.
"I’ve gone from homeless to entrepreneur,"
he says, cracking another satisfied smile.
It’s a journey, he admits, he never could have completed
without the Jobs Partnership.
"I’ve got joy today. Every day, being able to
take your work and turn it into worship for God, that makes
every moment enjoyable."
This article appeared in Citizen magazine. Copyright ©
2001 Focus on the Family.
All rights reserved. International copyright secured.
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