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Black History Month Reading

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It’s Black History Month all year round in the Oak Tree Library! We know that representation matters. Children being able to pick up a book and see characters that look like them can open their imaginations to countless possibilities, but unfortunately people of color are still greatly underrepresented in literature. (Click HERE if you’re interested in learning about statistics on diversity and representation in children’s books.) Because of this, we had to intentionally look at our library and search for Black representation to ensure that Oak Tree kids could walk in and find a book on a topic that interests them and that represents their culture in a positive way.

We often get asked for children’s book recommendations to help diversify home and classroom libraries, so we thought now would be a great time to share some titles with you for Black History Month!

You may have already seen these books on our social media accounts (be sure to follow us on Instagram and Facebook) but you may not have been able to see the books in the first image clearly, so here’s a list!

  • Who Was Jesse Owens? - Buckley

  • Who Is Michael Jordan? - Anderson

  • Who Was Was Martin Luther King Jr.? - Bader

  • Who Was Rosa Parks? - McDonough

  • Who Were the Tuskegee Airmen? - Smith

  • What Was the Underground Railroad? - McDonough

  • Little Legends: Exceptional Men in Black History - Harrison

  • From Slave to Soldier - Hopkinson/Floca

  • Gordon Parks - Christoph

  • Dave the Potter - Hill/Collier

  • A Dance Like Starlight - Cooper

  • Love Twelve Miles Long - Armand/Bootman

  • Libba: The Magnificent Musical Life of Elizabeth Cotten - Veirs/Fazlalizadeh

  • Art From Her Heart - Whitehead/Evans

  • Salt in His Shoes - Jordan/Nelson

  • Sit-In - Pinkney

  • Let the Children March - Clark-Robinson/Morrison

  • Hidden Figures: The True Story of Four Black Women and the Space Race - Shetterly/Freeman

  • Between the Lines - Wallace/Collier

  • Take a Picture of Me, James Vanderzee! - Loney/Mallett

  • Harlem’s Little Blackbird - Watson/Robinson

  • Sewing Stories: Harriet Powers’ Journey from Slave to Artist - Herkert/Brantley-Newton

  • Lift Your Light a Little Higher - Henson/Collier

  • I am Martin Luther King Jr. - Meltzer/Eliopoulos

  • The Hallelujah Flight - Bildner/Holyfield

  • Wind Flyers - Johnson/Long

  • Wilma Unlimited - Krull/Diaz

  • She Loved Baseball: The Effa Manley Story - Vernick/Tate

  • Long Shot - Paul/Morrison

  • Schomburg: The Man Who Built a Library - Weatherford/Velasquez

  • Counting on Katherine: How Katherine Johnson Saved Apollo 13 - Becker/Phumiruk

  • The Undefeated - Alexander/Nelson

We hope you enjoy celebrating Black History month by learning about some of these amazing men and women! What’s your favorite Black History book?

PS:

If you’d like to support our Reading Club, you can purchase books HERE. Making the change to virtual Reading Club has allowed us build each student’s own personal library! Every week Reading Club kids get a brand new book to read together over Zoom. You can keep checking this link to purchase books every month!

If you want to help us continue building a diverse library you can purchase from our library wishlist HERE.

THANK YOU for being a part of creating a culture where kids love to read!

Christmas in the Village 2020

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Christmas is usually full of hustle and bustle, big crowds and packed schedules… but the Lord had other plans for us this year! It would be easy to look at all of the suffering and change this year has held and be discouraged, and we’ve definitely experienced those moments, but by God’s grace, He’s taught us to shift our focus away from our “ruined” plans and ask Him what He’s doing in the midst of the struggles we face. Christmas in the Village has been a perfect example for us of the good that can come from holding our plans loosely and adjusting when the Lord redirects us.

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Instead of filling the Treehouse over a weekend with 100+ volunteers and 100+ families, we spread Christmas in the Village out over 6 days this year. No more than 2 families entered the store at one time and volunteers served from the outside this year, dropping off toys and treats to bless us from a safe distance. Slowing down to prioritize the safety of our community from further COVID-19 damage also allowed us to slow down and connect deeper with our neighbors. Oak Tree staff were able to help each parent shop intentionally for their children, offer prayer, and hear how God has been at work even through the difficulty of 2020. The Holy Spirit was at work offering mutual encouragement and joy as we reconnected with families in person after so many months distanced. Parents even started a “pay it forward” chain of blessing the next shopper with a surprise payment towards their gifts when they went under budget! Generosity and gratitude flowed through the Treehouse each day.

If you’re new around here and not familiar with what Christmas in the Village is, you can check our previous blog posts at the links below to learn more about our model!

2019

2018

2017

CITV Introduction

We are more convinced than ever before of the importance of changing the way we do charity and learning how we can better work towards justice, together. There are no simple answers, we don’t claim to be experts or believe Christmas in the Village is the final result, but it’s a start. We’re committed to learning and doing better each year!

Despite the financial hardships on so many this year, we had far more toys come in than we’ve ever had; but even with your generosity, a few times throughout the week we still ran out of toys! Each time God provided as supporters like you re-stocked us for the next families to come and shop! Whenever we were in doubt we paused to remember the abundant provision that has gotten us this far.

This year has definitely been different, in some bad ways but also in some very very good ways. We praise the Lord that He is always inviting us to grow in faith through our trials; and 2020 has had no lack of opportunity for us to be stretched and matured! As we enter a new year and the next season of ministry, we pray that we will never forget the lessons we’ve learned throughout the “longest year.”

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From the Oak Tree Family to You, Merry Christmas!
We cannot thank you enough for your continual support that makes all of our work possible! We pray each of you have a beautiful holiday season reflecting on the gift of our Lord stepping into our pain and offering us ultimate healing.

The Treehouse

In October of 2019 you may remember that we were the recipients of the very first One Hundred Shares Birmingham grant! The incredible ladies of OHSB awarded us with $75,000.

Well, we’re long over due, but here’s an update on how God enabled us to use this grant and other gifts!

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In January of this year we were also blessed by the Church at Brook Hills donating $50,000 through their Roots and Reach fund!

These incredible gifts allowed us to purchase the facilities (which we call the Treehouse) that we have been renting for the last few years. Owning the Treehouse not only helps us save from paying rent each month, but it ensures our proximity to Marks Village for years to come!

Thanks to the generosity of wonderful individuals, we were also able to do some renovations which were long over due! If you’ve hung out at the Treehouse during a summer thunderstorm you know we’ve had some major flooding issues, but not anymore! We were able to replace our roof, ceiling tiles and carpet to make things clean and safe for the children. We also repaved the basketball court and play area (goodbye twisted ankles and cracks ruining the perfect dribble), as well as put in a drain system and front porch to eliminate the danger of flash floods.

Before:

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After!

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Before:

After!

Before:

After!

(We’re still working on the playground area! More to come!)

Proximity is a priority for us at Oak Tree. When we say community based ministry, we mean it! The location of our building eliminates the barriers of transportation and feeling uncomfortable going somewhere new, anyone in our community can walk right up to our door and feel right at home.

As we come to the closing of this long year and celebrate Christmas, we’re reminded of the beauty of the incarnation. Christ stepped right into our broken world, into pain, danger and heartbreak. He came close and offered hope and healing to each person He encountered. Our heart is for the Treehouse to offer this same respite. We pray each person that enters here will find hope and rest from the brokenness around us and healing from the brokenness within us. We pray that we would grow in the love of Christ as we minister to one another. Being able to purchase the Treehouse and steward this gift well has been an answer to prayer. Our deepest thanks to everyone who has made this possible!

Welcome New Oak Tree Team Member!

Even through these long pandemic months, God is at work, growing the ministry and answering our prayers for more laborers. We are excited to officially welcome Randle Wright as the Adult Ministry Director at Oak Tree!

Because of your continued generosity we have been able to grow our team even in the midst of a challenging year. Families are facing new obstacles each day in our community and it is our joy to be able to expand support by adding a full time staff member focused on adults. Randle will be working with Mrs. Wanda, our Women’s Ministry Coordinator, to continue laboring with the families in Marks Village.

If you've been around the Treehouse much in the past few years the Wrights are probably no strangers to you. God has been using this faithful family to bless us since their first time volunteering. The Wrights quickly became part of the Oak Tree family and it was evident that God had tied their hearts to Marks Village. We look forward to seeing how God will continue to be glorified through them as Randle takes on this new role.

Please cover the Wright family in prayer and help us give a big Oak Tree welcome to Randle!


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Hello, my name is Randle Wright, I am married to my amazing wife Kenyonia Wright. We have three outstanding daughters, Kendle, Kourtni, and Kasey Wright. I first served at Oak Tree three years ago, during the summer of 2017. Being at Oak Tree brought back a lot of personal memories for my wife and I, as we grew up in very similar environments and faced some of the same challenges that we see in Marks Village. I’m looking forward to building relationships with the people of Marks Village and working with the the staff and volunteers at Oak Tree Ministries.

Listening to Love

I have been praying and seeking God, about whether I should write something about what has been going on in our world today. I had to first get my feelings and facts straight. Seeking the Lord in this time has been difficult for me, mainly because I have so many personal feelings on the subject. So, I looked to the Lord for what is true. Writing this is not meant to offend or stir up arguments, it is simply to show the steps I have taken on this journey of learning about the issue of racism in our country and world. 

Listen

You may be like I was, when the race conversation got awkward before in recent years, "I'll just stop reading here, and say I love all people." 

What has changed this for me?

I had to start by listening. Listening to understand, and not just assuming I already know and understand. Not to argue or defend my current point of view. This is harder than I ever thought it would be, to really love my neighbor, not just when it is comfortable for me. I always considered myself a great listener, but I was not when it came to listening to viewpoints that contradicted my world view. I have listened to people that have experienced racial profiling and police brutality for many years. This is a very uncomfortable journey to take. I have felt personally attacked, felt like there is no right way to go, felt unsafe in situations recently with people on both sides of the table, and conflicted because of my loved ones that are affected by this subject.

These are feelings you might relate to. I cannot ignore what I am feeling around this issue, I must interpret them; be self-aware that something else is driving the defensiveness. But I do know this, the last couple of years of learning the truth about racism in our country and world has not been easy. This is a journey that I must take in order to be a bridge for racial reconciliation so as not to make the same mistakes we see in history. If learning about racism is unconformable for me, then I cannot imagine how it feels to experience it first hand. 

For most of my life I have been influenced by many different types of people. People who use phrases such as, "He's black, but he is a good guy,” or, "I love black people, but they...."  In the past, even I made comments like this. Comments like these are not something some may see as "bad," but this widespread acceptance comes from a world view of our black brothers and sisters being seen through a negative social lens. This is a taught mentality that comes from stereotyping a particular group of people, also known as racism or an unconscious bias.  

Experiences will always help form our world views, but for me, coming from a place of white privilege, my world view is skewed. Yes, I  just used those words, white privilege. Even though I grew up within a low income community, this is still true for me. I do not have to jump hoops to prove I'm a good guy in a job interview, I do not feel people get uncomfortable when I walk past them or enter the room, nor have I had the police called on me just because of the color of my skin in the wrong neighborhood. 

I have listened to my friends of color, as they say how much these comments hurt them. After realizing the possible effects of this unconscious bias, I started watching myself in many different situations, my emotions and my reactions. I found that I often judged people and circumstances based on my unconscious bias.

I have seen what comments and pre-judgements like this can do to a belief system of a young boy. Often, it is understood that his identity as a black man means he will always be looked at with suspicion, will have to work twice as hard to prove himself, and feels like he cannot fully embrace his culture because of the image society portrays, all because he is black. 

Life from Another’s Eyes

This year, while I was taking a few boys to Tuscaloosa for a basketball game, I witnessed this first hand. As soon as we pulled up at a restaurant to meet a friend, the boys noticed something: all the people in the restaurant were white. I heard fear in one of the boy’s voices as he asked, "At the game will there be any black people, Mr. Aaron?" I replied, “Yes, buddy" while slightly taken back with his observation. Once we parked near the arena, one of our boys, again, saw all white people walking to the game. He suddenly said, “I am not going to the game, I do not belong here."

After reassuring him he could go, he did end up relenting and had a great time. But, this does not change the fact that he was fearful because of his skin color and the stereotypes that come with it. I have always said that we can never argue with how people feel and looking at the situation, I cannot argue that this boy was afraid of being at the game. 

Learn 

Learning is an important and necessary part of this process for me. We can always learn from our personal point of view and experience, but I have learned that this is not enough to understand the picture, fully. We must also see the view of history from other perspectives, rather than just the one that may be most comfortable for us. 

Here is a list of places that I have recently been learning from:

Websites:

 https://andcampaign.org/

https://bethebridge.com/

Take the implicit bias test HERE.

Books: 

A Sojourner’s Truth: Choosing Freedom and Courage in a Divided World by Natasha Sistrunk Robinson

The Color of Compromise by Jemar Tisby

The Myth of Equality: Uncovering the Roots of Injustice and Privilege by Ken Wytsma

Movies: 

Just Mercy - currently free to stream on many platforms

Love

My next step in this journey was putting my newly found knowledge and realizations to action. Each one of us has a different role to play in reconciliation and change of the racial stigma in our world. My wife and I have a verse referenced on our wall which says, “For you were called to freedom, brothers. Only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another.” (Galatians 5:13) This should not be understood as free in a physical sense, but free through the blood of Jesus Christ. Because we, as followers of Christ, are called to be an example of Him, we are called to serve one another in love. Through Christ’s example, our love should not be limited to people that look or think the same as we do, but rather to each and every person we come in contact with daily.

Love In Action

We can say that we love someone, but do we truly? This is something I had to ask myself while defining my role. My role may be different than yours, but we all have a similar calling. Biblical love can be defined as “unconditional partiality.” This means there are no limits. Living out this limitless love is difficult, but it is what we are called to do. Jesus said, “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and all your mind’. This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it, ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.” (Matthew 22:37-39)

‘Neighbor’ is not simply a friend in your social circles, or a colleague at work. Through the parable of the Good Samaritan, we see Jesus' definition of a neighbor. Luke 10:36-37 says: “Jesus asked, ‘Which of these three, do you think, proved to be a neighbor to the man who fell among the robbers?’ He said, ‘The one showed him mercy.” And Jesus said to him, ‘You go, and do likewise.” When I looked at this parable again recently, I felt convicted of what true love should look like. Love is a physical and unconditional action that comes when you decide to listen and walk alongside a person, no matter where they come from.

1 John 3:18 “... let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth.”

We are to make sure that we do not love from a distance and just in empty speech, but put action toward it. This does not simply mean serving in a community of predominantly black people or paying for the black persons’ meal at another table. This is a call to listen, to understand, to live life alongside others, and be in the trenches together. We are called to be the Church.

I urge you to prayerfully consider what your role will be in this path of racial reconciliation. Who are you called to walk beside? Who are you called to listen to?

We are all on a journey of understanding our thoughts and beliefs, but we must push forward to stand up for what is right, not for the sake of political correctness but for the sake of simply loving our neighbor.

Oaks of Righteousness

We don’t shy away from tough conversations at Oak Tree. We lean into the pain and give space for all of the hard emotions that come, then we walk towards healing together. We don’t come with all of the answers, adequate words or a quick fix, we know healing is a process and the journey takes time. 

Right now our city, our nation, and our world is hurting. It is difficult to grasp the amount of suffering that has taken place in just a few short months, much less for centuries. The divide is becoming more and more clear. Anger is on every side. People are confused, and maybe for the first time, no longer able to ignore the stories of injustice flooding their news cycle. 

We hope that in this moment we can help bridge the growing divide for any who are willing to come to the table with humility and a desire to learn together.

The Treehouse is a special place, if you’ve been here you can’t deny it. As people from different races, socio-economic status, and denominations come together God is at work. He begins to reveal our implicit biases, our blind spots and show us false narratives that we have always believed. Something happens when you know the name and story of someone different than you. Racism dehumanizes our brothers and sisters, but when you become neighbors, you learn complex stories and your simple categorization of people no longer works. The boxes we place people in and stereotypes are no longer sufficient.

As a ministry, we want to be clear, the only reason we exist is because of injustice. We are here because things are broken, we should not be needed in our community, yet the needs are more than any of us can comprehend. God has called us to do justice.

When we say that we are a trauma-informed ministry, this is not limited to the trauma of the present. We must include the trauma of our past. It is much easier to skip the work of becoming educated on how we got to this point, but we will always be dealing with the symptoms rather than the disease if we don’t take a closer look. We must acknowledge that this trauma has been passed down through our history and has impacted all of us. 

You see, Marks Village was originally created for white families, in fact, my own family lived there. I have heard the conversations that begin, “East Lake used to be such a nice place.” So what happened? The underlying message is clear, the blame is placed on black families moving in. What I don’t hear mentioned is the racial terrorism that took place across our city, the struggle of desegregation, the white flight to the suburbs draining the city of resources, the complex war on drugs, and how red-lining prevented black families from choosing where they wanted to live.

Friends, sin left unchecked only grows. True confession and repentance have never taken place in our city. We must acknowledge this, and so much more, if we are going to understand where we are today, and why we are still largely segregated. 

Oak Tree’s name comes from Isaiah 61. This passage is the foundation of who we are as a ministry and what we go back to to remind us why we exist and what we are called to do. 

1 The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord is on me,

    because the Lord has anointed me

    to proclaim good news to the poor.

He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted,

    to proclaim freedom for the captives

    and release from darkness for the prisoners,

2 to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor

    and the day of vengeance of our God,

to comfort all who mourn,

3  and provide for those who grieve in Zion—

to bestow on them a crown of beauty

    instead of ashes,

the oil of joy

    instead of mourning,

and a garment of praise

    instead of a spirit of despair.

They will be called oaks of righteousness,

    a planting of the Lord

    for the display of his splendor.

It’s a beautiful passage, isn’t it? Jesus preached this passage in a synagogue in Luke 4:16-30 announcing that He had come to finally fulfill this long awaited prophecy. The Scripture says the people were all amazed at His teaching. They loved the message! So how did things change so quickly from high praise for an excellent sermon to trying to throw Him off a cliff? Well, He highlighted their prejudices. He pointed out that God was for all people, that the Jews weren’t the only beneficiaries of His grace and, in fact, they were going to reject Him just as they had in the past. 

I can’t help but see the similarity in the reactions all across our nation at this moment. We love to read parts of Isaiah, but not necessarily the entire book. Let’s continue reading a few more verses,

4 They will rebuild the ancient ruins

    and restore the places long devastated;

they will renew the ruined cities

    that have been devastated for generations.

8  “For I, the Lord, love justice;

    I hate robbery and wrongdoing.

In my faithfulness I will reward my people

    and make an everlasting covenant with them.

Friends of Oak Tree, just like the people of Israel then, we are responsible for restoring the devastations of previous generations now. Not only are we responsible, but we are invited to take part in God’s redemptive plan. 

Things only get more uncomfortable when you begin to make the connection from Isaiah 1. God doesn’t sugar coat His message.

13 Stop bringing meaningless offerings!

    Your incense is detestable to me.

New Moons, Sabbaths and convocations—

    I cannot bear your worthless assemblies.

14 Your New Moon feasts and your appointed festivals

    I hate with all my being.

They have become a burden to me;

    I am weary of bearing them.

15 When you spread out your hands in prayer,

    I hide my eyes from you;

even when you offer many prayers,

    I am not listening.

Your hands are full of blood!

16 Wash and make yourselves clean.

    Take your evil deeds out of my sight;

    stop doing wrong.

17 Learn to do right; seek justice.

    Defend the oppressed.

Take up the cause of the fatherless;

    plead the case of the widow.

18 “Come now, let us settle the matter,”

    says the Lord.

“Though your sins are like scarlet,

    they shall be as white as snow;

though they are red as crimson,

    they shall be like wool.

19 If you are willing and obedient,

    you will eat the good things of the land;

20 but if you resist and rebel,

    you will be devoured by the sword.”

For the mouth of the Lord has spoken.

29 “You will be ashamed because of the sacred oaks

    in which you have delighted;

you will be disgraced because of the gardens

 that you have chosen.

30 You will be like an oak with fading leaves,

    like a garden without water.

Do you see the extreme contrast? In Isaiah 1 God’s people are looking out for their own self-interests, disobeying God’s command to do justice compared to when His Spirit leads the work in chapter 61. 

What sacred oaks are we delighting in? What are we unwilling to be challenged on? What are we trying to hold tightly to in one hand while lifting the other hand in praise to our God? Friends, it seems we are currently in a dying forest of our own idols. God is not pleased with our empty social media posts and our rush back to big worship gatherings if we are not willing to defend the oppressed in every area of our lives.

We cannot talk about cycles of poverty without talking about cycles of systemic racism that have perpetuated inequality since the founding of America. It is not by chance that 90% of our donors are white while 90% of the families we serve are black. Something is wrong. We must learn to listen and we must learn to fight for change together

Praise the Lord He does not leave us where we are! In the midst of clear judgement God reminds us of His grace. What a humbling and sobering picture. He tells us Isaiah 61 will come to pass and He will make us oaks of righteousness for His glory. But friends, don’t miss it. He holds His people accountable for whether or not they do justice as we wait on His final judgement. 

If we continue to ignore, or worse, silence, the cries of the oppressed, we cannot expect to be on God’s side of justice. If we only want to pass out food, but not have the discussion of why some of us have an abundance of food while others go hungry, we are bringing meaningless offerings. If we are not willing to recognize that we might have a limited perspective and need to learn from the voices of others, we cannot believe that we would have listened to the voice of Christ when He walked this earth. 

What we are facing in America is much more than a black/white issue, but it is not less than that. The protests are about much more than George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery and Breonna Taylor, but they are not less than that. The riots are about much more than police reform, but they are not less than that. We must not try to simplify this situation in order for us to have easy explanations. 

We cannot only talk about the murders of people of color and skip examining the reasons behind the disproportionate number of their deaths from COVID-19. We cannot talk about the sin of riots and looting without also talking about protestors with assault weapons. We cannot talk about being pro-life while demanding our right to choose not to wear a mask. If we are going to be concerned with protecting the vulnerable, we must be consistent. Christ calls us to lay down our lives and pick up our cross. Are we declaring our rights for our own comfort or for the good of the “least of these?” Are we judging the spec in our brother’s eye while ignoring our plank? 

As a ministry we want to be clear, we are committed to justice. We are committed to listening and learning. We lament where we are and where we have been. We will work to dismantle the white savior mentality that plagues our world. We will not be complacent and remain where we are. We will leverage our privilege and resources for the good of our neighbors. We are seeking the Kingdom of God above all else. We know that we do not wrestle against flesh and blood. The enemy is deceitful and strategic, we will not defeat him divided. We will not sit by and watch the world have this conversation and allow the Church to remain silent. 

To our black brothers and sisters, we see you, we are listening, we are with you, we are sorry, we will fight for you. To our white brothers and sisters, we welcome you and your questions, we need you at the table.

Perfect love drives out fear. We cannot be afraid of this conversation or of each other. We need each other and all of our differences. We will labor together until we see Christ’s prayer for unity in John 17 become a reality. 

We don’t know where this quote originated from, but we say it often around here, “You can’t solve a problem you don’t understand and you can’t understand from a distance.” So, let’s dive in, get close, and try to understand. Below are some resources to help you begin. 

Next Steps

Responding to COVID-19

Oak Tree Family,

Thank you. Your concern for the vulnerable during this seemingly chaotic time has offered us deep encouragement. While many are responding with panic or intense self preservation, you have responded by asking “How can I help?'“

For some, the idea of being quarantined at home is an unexpected gift, but that’s not the case for everyone. The reality is that many of our neighbors depend on two free meals a day for their children at school. Many of our neighbors don’t have the benefit of sick-leave or vacation days and are stressed thinking about losing a paycheck. On top of that, the majority of our neighbors do not have a computer at home for their kids to keep up with school work, which is truly unfortunate when many are already so far behind grade level. Not to mention, every home is not a happy home. It can be very difficult to receive the sudden news that school or work has been cancelled if it’s your one escape from suffering.

That’s a lot of bad news. But, we believe it is our job to show up when the world is hiding in fear. Not ignorantly or arrogantly, but out of love for our neighbors, humbly offering to be Good News. We plan to continue our ministry in Marks Village throughout this crisis to provide as much consistency as possible, offer safe space for kids, and help adults get the resources they need. We invite you to help us make this possible.

As of right now, we are moving forward with our normal ministry activities since we do not have any large gatherings planned and have no immediate signs of danger within our network or neighborhood. We will increase hand washing with the kiddos and do extra sanitizing when we’re together. Any staff or volunteers who show any signs of sickness or who think they may have been exposed to the virus will not join in activities. We want to be considerate of the fear that many are experiencing and protect those who are most at risk.

While the City of Birmingham is already doing a fantastic job responding to the crisis by considering the needs of all 99 neighborhoods, we know that the majority of our families are not in the loop about what resources are going to be available to them and will not have transportation to access those resources. The Oak Tree team is preparing to assist our neighbors by spreading the word about what is available to them and providing transportation for those in need. We are prepared to provide sack lunch meals if needed and deliver groceries to the elderly who may be fearful of leaving their homes. We are also discussing ways to provide educational time and tutoring for the children in small groups while school is closed.

As we know more details in the days to come, we will keep you up to date on our plans and how you can be involved via our social media pages. Be sure to follow us on Facebook and Instagram.

In the meantime, we invite you to make a donation to help cover the cost of this unexpected ministry situation. If you have time off work and are looking for ways to serve, either with meal prep, childcare, or you have another idea or skill set you’d like to share, please let us know by contacting Raquel. We’d love for you to join us! Please also reach out if you have any questions or resources you want our neighbors to know about.

We are truly grateful for how you choose to show up through your continued support, ready to bravely love like Jesus.

 

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Christmas in the Village 2019

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With your help, we completed our 3rd annual Christmas in the Village and it was our biggest one yet! More toys, more volunteers, more families, more partners, more cookies, more fun!

Saturday morning as I scrolled social media there were toy give aways happening all over Birmingham, and more than one happening right within our own community. Doubts filled my mind. Should we even be doing this? Are we duplicating efforts with other ministries? Will there be any lasting fruit from events like this? Will families want to shop when there are so many ways to get toys for free? Are we distracted by the materialism of Christmas? These are the honest questions that we wrestle through as we desire to see true change in our city and avoid causing more harm.

When we opened up the Treehouse to begin welcoming families the line was already down the street! Well, there was one doubt removed, our neighbors were eager to shop!

As the day went on, I was reminded of how I explained Christmas in the Village to one of our partnering church’s children’s ministry just a few weeks prior. Reflect on a time in your life that you were worried about something, maybe finances were tight, you had family issues, or work was stressful. Think about how you felt during that season of life and how the burden seemed to double during the holidays. Now, imagine that you live in a neighborhood with 500 houses packed into less than half a square mile, and all 500 families are worried about big problems all at the same time.

Welcome to life in the Village.

We are always sharing the good news of Jesus around Oak Tree, but the Bible tells us “if anyone has the world's goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him, how does God's love abide in him? Little children, let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth.” (1 John 3:16-18).

So, why do we have this Christmas store every year? Because we prove that we believe this gospel by backing up our words with our actions. We must show that we care. We want to be a people who declare, “your problems are my problems.” If our neighbors are stressed about the crazy price of toys and the lack of resources for their kids, that’s a problem we can easily do something about. We can begin to solve these problems together. We can share the abundance of resources around our city to do something different in an area that has suffered from the unjust drainage of resources.

Sure, we could give toys away for free, but each time a parent asked us why we didn’t we had the opportunity to tell them that their money would go straight to summer programs for their kids. Their faces would light up. They told us it was a great idea and they were happy to contribute! Parents thanked us for doing things differently. We weren’t the hero’s this Christmas, we were simply the stewards. Moms and dads could hold their heads up high as they doubly invested in their kids.

We talked and laughed and prayed together over cups of hot chocolate and cookies. Families had their picture taken with Santa (we LOVE getting to look back and see families grow each year through these photos). The gospel was shared while eating a burger and watching kids play basketball. Door prizes were won and loads of toys carried home. Neighbors who were nervous about coming into the Treehouse quickly warmed up and even came back for multiple visits. Relationships were strengthened and new friends made. More doubts were removed as we rejoiced in the Lord’s faithfulness to work even in our weaknesses.

Yesterday my pastor taught about the beauty of the gospel displayed in the Christmas story, how Christ came first to connect with us in our brokenness, then He corrected our sin problem on the cross. We talk about connecting before correcting all the time at Oak Tree as we interact with our kids using TBRI, but what a great reminder that this is the heart of ALL we do in the Village. Christ is our example. We aren’t here to pretend we have answers to correct all of the problems around us! But, as we connect with the people who are in pain caused by those problems, we begin to see correction happening as we heal together.

Christmas in the Village shows us when everyone gives just a little bit, we can do big things together!

THANK YOU for doing your part to change Christmas charity with us!

Jesus Saved It!

This is a guest post by one of our faithful volunteers, Nikki Symasek. If you’ve been wondering what it would look like to serve with your family at Oak Tree, we can’t promise it will be easy (Nikki would be first to attest to the difficulties), but we can tell you that special things will follow! We hope you will be encouraged by her story as we were!


Our family has been serving at Oak Tree for some time now. We go together on Sunday afternoons to work in Bible Club and serve during the summer at Rock the Village. Both the ministry and the Village hold a very special place in our hearts.

One thing that we try to focus on in the treehouse is the presentation of the gospel through the “three circles”. These circles represent God creating the word perfect and sinless and beautiful, then man running from God and sinning - thus destroying His world, and finally, Jesus coming to restore it so we can live together with Him for eternity. As an adult, I was trying to memorize it perfectly like our “fearless leaders” perform it there in Oak Tree, and I never could get it quite right.

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One day at home, we were outside with the kids and our 7 year old was playing with chalk working very intently. I walked over to her and asked her what she was doing. She said, “Look, Mom! The three circles! God made it, we broke it, Jesus saved it!” Y’all. I was slapped in the face with the simplicity of the gospel and how our kids pick it up often better than our complicated adult brains do.

Oak Tree has ministered to our family in so many ways... I could go on and on about how the kids in the Village accept my son who has a prosthetic often better than others; or how the kids did sweet cards of encouragement for one of my sons when he became seriously ill last year. But mostly, Jesus has used Oak Tree and the entire Village to remind me that when we pour ourselves out for Him - His rewards are innumerable.


If you’d like to serve with us, or have questions about how your family can plug in, let us know HERE!

Rock the Village 2019

Last week we Rocked the Village as we do every summer at Oak Tree, but this year was anything but routine. 

Sunday night, Megan and I found ourselves standing in the middle of Marks Village, watching the flashing lights and praying with neighbors for a 4 year old little girl who was shot in the head. On Wednesday morning, she passed away. We didn’t have the honor of knowing Jurnee Coleman, but we walk past her door almost daily. She hadn’t been old enough to join in our programs yet, and her life was taken before she would have the chance. 

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Just a few nights before Jurnee was shot, a young man, Deterius Matthews, was also killed. These are the first murders since the barriers have been placed in Marks Village this summer in hopes of deterring crime. These lives taken give us a sobering reality check - barriers, shot spotters, and surveillance cameras do not stop bullets. Something bigger has to change.

Marks Village has the highest crime rate of all Birmingham Public Housing communities. I don't share this with you to be an alarmist, but to give you a picture of reality. We aren’t ignorantly walking into this community believing things will change the moment we speak the magical name of Jesus. We know the enemy has deep strongholds here. We know that we must be constant in prayer. We also know we must do more than just pray. We believe this is a battle worth fighting and Jesus is the source of our power to continue fighting even when it seems impossible. 

I want you to see reality so that we can begin an honest conversation. In times like this it can be easy to respond in fear or judgement. Fear comes from the perspective given by the media - danger, drugs, guns, gangs - avoid the area at all cost. Judgement sneaks in when your mind has to do something with the information given, even though it is so far from your present reality that you don’t have a box to put it in. We repeat harmful stereotypes that we’ve heard in our culture like “if they’d just get a job,” “there’s no male leadership,” “living off our tax dollars,” etc. etc.

If you’ve never lived in a public housing community or been friends with people who do, you might not have a good frame-work to respond in any other way. If you don’t know the history of our city and how communities like ours came to be filled with crime and little economic opportunity, you might have simple answers and solutions when you hear these reports. You might not be familiar with the level of complex struggle here.

The problems we face on a daily basis in Marks Village are anything but simple and solutions will be anything but easy. While it won’t be easy, we do believe it’s possible to see change, but we must first change our perspective of our neighbors.

Years ago I heard the quote, “you can’t solve a problem you don’t understand, and you can’t understand from a distance.” This is one reason why proximity is a priority for us at Oak Tree. We must be present, in the brokenness with our neighbors, hearing their stories, bearing burdens with them, just like Jesus did. We will continue to show up to learn how this cycle of injustice was created, why it continues, and what we can do to better help our community. We believe it is going to take all of us working together if we want to see change come to our city. Our prayer is for His Kingdom to come in the Village as it is in heaven. 

Last week people were watching. Were we going to cancel Rock the Village? Was it getting too dangerous? Would we finally say it’s too much? Would any volunteers come? 

We showed up. We Rocked the Village and gave families a safe place to spend time together. We registered 113 kids at RTV last week, not including the 20+ kids that volunteers brought along to join the fun. We declared that we love this community, on the good and the bad days. We gave kids space to let out their fear and anger. We grieved with them. 

I had hard moments of breaking up fights that led to crying with kids and holding them as they said they were scared and it wasn't fair. I was able to talk with them about how their fights now will impact how they fight as adults and that they have the power to stop this cycle of violence. I was able to say how Jesus is the only one who ever had a right to fight back, but He didn't, He forgave and proved that love is more powerful. I don't know if they'll remember one word of our conversations, but I believe this is where it starts. We want them to learn to fight for what is good and just, not just for survival and to prove their toughness. 

Throughout the week we declared that death will not have the final say. Through tears, we reminded ourselves and our neighbors that Jesus has conquered even this and He will make it all right one day. 

Despite every effort of the enemy to silence us last week, volunteers showed up each day, loved big, and shared the truth of the gospel. God is at work and He is still in control. It can be easy on weeks like this to become overwhelmed and forget to have fun with the kids. God used a few kids to remind me of this as they forced me to laugh with their silliness. Their JOY is holy defiance. I have so much to learn from them. We had Taki eating contests, we danced, we played gaga ball, we made movies re-telling the Bible stories - we let kids have fun and just be kids!

We don't have easy answers in times like this, but we can be present to love. 

Thank you for stepping into a place that many refuse to go, to declare that Jesus has not forgotten His children, to love louder than the violence. 

To our neighbors and friends in the Village, we are here with you, we see you, we hear you, we love you deeply. 

We will press on together with heavy hope. 

Rejoice in hope; be patient in affliction; be persistent in prayer.
Romans 12:12