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by
REBECCA GRACE | AFA Journal Staff Writer
Of the approximate 295,000,000 people in the United States, 35.9
million are living below the official poverty thresholds as of 2003.
In addition, the nations official poverty rate rose
from 12.1% in 2002 to 12.5% in 2003 (www.census.gov).
Although the rate is lower than the averages of the past two decades,
the sad fact is that poverty still exists and always will as evident
from Scripture.
In Deuteronomy 15:11, the Lord instructs His people to remember,
There will always be poor people in the land. Therefore, I
command you to be openhanded toward your brothers and toward the
poor and needy in your land.
The mission
More than 25 years ago, a young lady named Dr. JoeAnn Ballard took
Gods commands to heart and became the executive director of
Neighborhood Christian Centers, Inc. (NCC), a ministry that presently
serves about 125,000 impoverished people in and around Memphis,
Tennessee.
Since the inception of the first Neighborhood Christian Center in
1978, the mission remains to provide compassionate, Christ
centered ministry to the practical and spiritual needs of the citys
poor. Now with nine full centers and 75 affiliate ministry
sites in the city of Memphis and neighboring cities, Ballard still
sees the ministrys mission as one that is simple and straightforward.
But actually executing the mission involves an annual budget in
excess of $1.5 million and 25 full-time employees, 20 part-time
employees, and approximately 1,000 volunteers. The ministry receives
no government money and is completely funded by grants and donations,
thus indicating a backbone of faith accompanied by giving and volunteerism.
In addition, Ballard finds success in actually going into the various
communities to meet needs rather than bringing those needs to a
central location.
Many of our clients do not have proper transportation nor
do they have jobs, Ballard explained. So you want to
put familiar people that they know and that they trust, who they
see all the time in their communities, to serve them and to meet
their needs, modeling responsible behavior in front of them, allowing
them to emerge more quickly as a whole person.
Members of the impoverished communities long to see such familiar
faces, especially around the Christmas season.
Christmas at NCC
Each Christmas, NCC provides for more than 50,000 impoverished people
through three aspects of ministry: Christmas baskets, Christmas
pairing and Christmas toy store.
Christmas baskets are baskets of food distributed to approximately
12,000 heads of households each year. The food in each basket feeds
about four people for three days.
The Christmas pairing program is an opportunity for low income
families to be matched with families of means during the Christmas
season, explained NCC Administrative Director Ephie B. Johnson.
The Christmas toy store project receives and distributes donated
toys to needy children December 18 each year.
Last year NCC served 400+ heads of households equaling to
1,500 children receiving toys for Christmas, Johnson said.
It is just this high-spirited [event], said Aubrey Houston,
20, NCC volunteer coordinator who came to his position through participation
in NCCs various programs.
While excitement is certainly a prevailing feeling around NCC during
the holidays, the purpose of the Christmas ministries is grounded
in something much deeper than an emotional high.
Where the Lord says the poor will be with us always
that is the group we are targeting, Johnson explained.
We dont seek to help just because its Christmas,
she continued. We [also] realize that during Christmas most
parents who are poor are unable to buy the items that their child(ren)
would need for returning to school in January.
We not only give them foods that are traditionally for Christmas
but foods that will carry them through the Christmas break,
Johnson added.
The ministry structure
However, the work of NCC extends far beyond Christmas as it provides
services on a daily basis through four departments that act as umbrellas
to approximately 20 different ministry programs:
1. Affiliate Ministries provide grass roots services such
as utility and rental assistance directly to the community, as well
as commissioning community missionaries to serve in specific areas.
2. Family and Church Enrichment Ministries approach families
and instill in them the purpose of healthy families and healthy
marriages by mentoring and counseling couples through a program
known as Love Builders; provide seminary-type training for pastors
and lay people through the Memphis Institute.
3. Department of Operations and Administrative Services tends
to the upkeep of the grounds and buildings and is responsible for
the distribution of over 60 million pounds of food, annually.
4. Youth Ministries minister to children of all ages through
Bible-based initiatives including after-school tutoring, after-school
Bible studies, overnight camps, hands-on multi-media production,
summer missions art programs and a college scholarship program.
These programs involve both adults and children in a variety of
capacities, often introducing Christ to some for the very first
time while spurring changes in others.
I used to be this loud-mouth, always-talking kid. Ive
learned theres a time to talk, and theres a time to
listen, Houston explained. Ive learned organization.
Ive learned to present myself in a very respectful way and
to hold up the respect you gain from people. Its taught me
to keep my morals polished and [to] shine all the time.
A glimpse of history
As evident from the various programs, carrying out the mission of
NCC is a monumental task, especially when realizing that it began
under the direction of one woman.
Now you know whats wrong with my back, Ballard
said with a smile.
But she was prepared for the persistence and dedication that must
accompany her compassion after being the last of 48 children to
be raised by her foster parents, DeLoach and Ora Mae Benjamin.
Although Ballard is thankful for the blessings of her family, she
had no intentions of continuing the trend of foster care prior to
taking in the first of what would become 78 foster children for
her and her husband.
Before the first foster child came into the picture, about 250 children
revolved around the Ballard home for nearly two years. The children
would come in on the weekends and over for dinner.
It evolved from a need
It was a natural process
.
Ballard explained. But God knew the pattern, the course that
He set.
So thats how we went from 1966 to 1978 doing foster
care without an organization or assistance from the government.
We found ways, and what we did was the work of the Neighborhood
Christian Center, but we did it in our homes, Ballard said.
It was the same principle.
In time, this principle converged with the efforts of Larry Lloyd
and John Abercrombie, who had founded NCC just six month earlier.
The match was perfect and so began the growing ministry of NCC,
grounded in the support of Second Presbyterian Church of Memphis.
So rather than making something, Im following a vision,
Ballard said.
The vision
The ongoing vision of NCC is two-fold. Phase I evolved out of Ballard's
foster care and the initial efforts of Lloyd and Abercrombie. It
involved establishing a staff and a presence in the targeted communities
through ministry.
With a presence established, NCC is in the beginning stages of Phase
II which is a phase of educating and training a generation
so that theyll be prepared for adulthood and all that accompanies
it, Johnson said.
The goal of Phase II is to change a generation by 2030 so
that the ministry continues through the indigenous leadership of
our present participants and those in our target groups ages 0 to
5 and 6 to 21, thus changing the cyclical effect of poverty into
a cyclical effect of ministry and personal growth, she added.
The future of NCC
As the cycle continues to change, NCC is expanding its horizons
with a new 24,000 square-foot Gateway facility for youth. The new
North Center will include a gymnasium, performing arts center, banquet
facility, chapel, and classrooms.
NCC will use the new facility to continue a ministry that was catapulted
by Ballard accepting Christ as her personal Savior.
Its that experience thats been the driving force
to make sure others know this Christ as I know Him, she said.
The driving force remains strong as Ballard eyes retirement and
her daughter, Johnson, plans to follow in her footsteps.
Ballard desires to spend the rest of her life researching and writing
on the importance of community as unified through the love of Christ
a vision God planted in her heart decades ago.
My parents have always reached out to others, as a result,
many people have responded to them and the message they have demonstrated
in love and deed, Johnson commented.
Over the years, God provided the means to add room to our
home and eventually a place for our family to minister to hundreds
of people.
Once again in great fashion, God is doing it again
providing more space for all who are in need to come.
CONTACT
INFORMATION FOR VOLUNTEERING AND DONATIONS:
Neighborhood Christian Centers, Inc.
223 Scott Street
Memphis, TN 38112
901-452-6701
www.ncclife.org
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