Photographer yearns for lasting change

March 26, 2016 | By LYNDA STRINGER

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Photo by LYNDA STRINGER

 

Professional photographer Sam Guzman is surrounded by his collection of vintage cameras in his studio in downtown Mount Pleasant. 

The owner of Sam Guzman Photography in Mount Pleasant is preparing for his fifth mission trip to Guatemala this summer with a small team who will work through the organization Believe Guatemala.

Guzman recently held a unique event to raise funds for the trip — a gallery auction of his work on canvas that featured live music, refreshments and wine.

“People said they felt like they were at an art show in Dallas,” said Guzman, who was pleased with the turnout and the response to his photography collection that he shot at scenic sites around the country and images from his previous mission trip.

The event was held at Jo’s Downtown on March 18 and raised $1,900 that will cover his travel and personal expenses while he’s there in July. He is working on raising about $2,000 to fund the projects he’ll undertake while there.

He hasn’t nailed down those projects yet and says his experience there in 2015 has given him a new sense of God’s hand in the planning.

When he landed in Guatemala last summer he planned to buy mattresses for an orphanage. Frustratingly, that plan fell through because the orphanage had changed ownership and the new owners would not accept his help.

Guzman was in a cluster of communities that grew up around a massive trash dump and the living conditions are dire. He admits he was looking for a project elsewhere because finding something that would make that lasting difference, he felt at the time, was too overwhelming.

“I asked the team there, ‘What do you need?’ and it’s not just one thing. It’s a thousand things, so I put The Dump to the side. It seemed too impossible. I couldn’t even imagine making a change there,” he said.

Guzman shared that his idea of making a lifelong change in people’s lives on his one-week trip came out of an article he read that convicted him of his reason for going in the first place. He had been on medical mission trips before with his wife, Stephanie Guzman, a registered nurse, where he served as a translator, admitting that he only went because she wanted him to go.

“But, I was really heartbroken for these people and I wanted to do more. When you go on a mission trip it changes you,” he said.

The article chastised people who go on mission trips for their own personal reasons, to see firsthand the living conditions of the poorest of the poor. It questioned how much difference a week can actually make and criticized Christians for imposing their beliefs on people.

“I used to be a box checker. Go to church, check, go on a mission trip, check that off and never go again. What that article did for me was ‘Game on, challenge accepted,” said Guzman, who is a member of Center Church and claims no denominational ties. “I’m just someone who has felt called to do this and show God’s love and if they want to know why and that opens a door to the conversation about whether they know Jesus Christ, then that’s OK.”

Sharing his faith, however, seemed farthest from his mind when he was faced with doors closing on ministry projects. It took a pastor’s wife and congregation of Guatemalans praising God for him to realize his true purpose in the poverty-ravaged landscape so far from the beauty in the images at his auction. Digging deep to expose his inner demons during a conversation in his small studio, Guzman shared the shortcomings that haunt him.

“I’m a procrastinator, I didn’t finish my degree. It makes me feel irresponsible and less qualified. I’m right with God, but I feel intimidated to be the head of this and to organize a team,” he said.

Those feelings of inadequacy brewed into a storm of frustration, and he found himself mad at God as he walked into that Sunday service with just two days left to accomplish what he promised his donors he would.

With emotion welling up in sharing the intimate story, Guzman said he knelt down in the sanctuary of the dark church with familiar Hillsong worship songs surrounding him and spilled his guts out to God.

“I started complaining and telling God, ‘You need to get someone else, someone more qualified, someone smarter, someone that manages their time better. I don’t want to be here. I want to be home with my family, my kids. I don’t even know if they’re safe.’ I’m saying all of that and the pastor’s wife put her arms over me and she says, ‘God is telling me to tell you something right now,’” he said.

He felt uncomfortable with the gesture, but he listened to her soft voice anyway.

“She says, ‘God told me to tell you to stop being scared. Your family is safe and there’s no one else. Stop worrying whether you’re qualified or smart. God can do all things. He doesn’t call the qualified. He qualifies the called,” he said.

Her words stunned him.

“I’m losing it because I’ve never experienced anything like that before. You hear about God listening to your prayers, but having them answered right in that moment?” he said.

So, in that moment, he heard God’s answer and he went back to the team working with The Dump and in his last two days there provided desks for an after-school community center, bought backpacks and school supplies, painted walls and bought cubby holes to make the building more like a school setting.

“We started checking those boxes off,” he said laughing. “I had a newfound faith after that.”

He already knows some of the needs there for this trip, including bunk beds, raincoats, concrete floors and water filters, but he is trusting a higher power to work it all out.

“Yes, I am in a hurry to know what I am going to do this summer, but in the end, I know God is going to do it,” he said.

Lynda Stringer is a Mount Pleasant, TX-based freelance writer and owner of Stringer Media. Contact her at Lynda.Stringer@outlook.com.

Ministries partner to offer life skills

March 24, 2016 | By LYNDA STRINGER

canstock8273718A series of Thursday night classes that begins tonight at Titus County Cares seeks to give people facing economic challenges a boost.

Life STEP, which stands for Skills Training Empowering People, includes personal money management, job skills training, meal planning on a budget and health and wellness tips.

The first week’s session is on financial management taught by Danny Muskrat. Week two’s session on March 31, led by Jeffrey Crab, will teach students how to properly fill out a job application and how to conduct themselves in a job interview. The third session on April 7 will be taught by Tennison Memorial United Methodist Church Pastor Mike Cline.

“That class will teach you how to grocery shop and prepare a meal using a lot of the items at the TCC food pantry,” said Caroline Blackard, a member of Center Church which is partnering with TCC to launch the new program.

The final week’s class on healthy lifestyles will be taught by Leah Crabb and Stephanie Guzman, Center Church members and registered nurses.

“They will be teaching healthy eating and basic medicines that you should have on hand to keep your family healthy,” Blackard said.While the classes are going on, there will be games and activities for the kids. That part will be organized by Center Church member Sarah Muskrat.

Crabb, who serves on the Titus County Cares board is also a member of Center Church, but he stresses that while his church is launching the program, they are reaching out to other churches and organizations in the community to get involved with the new ministry outreach.

“Right now it’s mostly Center Church people leading it, but it’s not a Center Church thing. We expect that if it does well and grows, we will need help from the community,” he said. Titus County Cares volunteers and National Honor Society students will be involved when the classes kick off. Crabb said this type of outreach has been something Titus County Cares has talked about for years.

“Our vision is so much more than just feeding people. Yes, we’re an emergency food pantry, but beyond that, we yearn to help these families in trying situations get out of those situations,” he said. “We talk about how we can better equip them to find a job, to manage their money. That’s been a conversation for a long time.”

The classes are open to anyone in the community not just TCC customers and having the classes at the community organization’s facility rather than at a church, regardless of denomination, is a more neutral location for many people who might not attend church.

“The facility fit the need of empowering people with knowledge in a place where they may feel more comfortable and a place that is centrally located,” Crabb said.

Center Church Pastor Jeremy Thomas said the program aligns with his congregation’s vision “to be a light in our city and make our city a better place.”

“We are looking for where God is working and joining him. He’s working at Titus County Cares, so it is a great partnership,” Thomas said.

The classes begin at 6 p.m. at the Titus County Cares building at 301 N. Edwards Ave. in Mount Pleasant.

After the 45-minutes classes, Crabb said there will be a time of fellowship and a cookout.

“We want to love on them. We’re here to love these people; we want to come together in that way, eat a meal and serve each other in that way,” he said.

For more information about the Life STEP classes, call Titus County Cares at 903-575-9157.

Lynda Stringer is a Mount Pleasant, TX-based freelance writer and owner of Stringer Media. Contact her at Lynda.Stringer@outlook.com.

MP Holy Yoga business in transition

 March 4, 2016 | By LYNDA STRINGER

Holy Yoga

Photo by LYNDA STRINGER

 

Rachel Barkley and her business are both undergoing a transitional period as the new fitness venture seeks a permanent home.

Barkley launched Fresh Yoga & Wellness in September 2015 and held classes at 3rd Street Nutrition until recently. She decided to seek out a location that could offer her students more flexible class schedules and until she finalizes those plans, she’s holding classes, at least through March, in the former Lawler Vision Center building on Van Buren Avenue.

“It’s a smaller setting over there, so we will have smaller classes for now, but I added a 9 a.m. class to see if I could hit some new people,” Barkley said.

The class schedule includes a Tuesday and Thursday 5 p.m. class, an early bird Wednesday class that meets at 5:15 a.m. and the 9 a.m. class, which meets on Tuesdays. She also holds classes in the park on occasional Saturdays. That class will meet today at 8:30 a.m. at Dellwood Park.

“I have a community of people who have been coming to these classes and Kellye Cooper, one of my students, actually provided the space for us for March,” Barkley said. “It’s temporary right now.

I’m getting the word out to gyms and churches and chiropractors and counselors.”

Barkley has also started booking private sessions for clients.

“These sessions, which are one on one or a small group setting, are structured to meet specific needs, whether it’s emotional or spiritual or different physical modifications they need and don’t feel comfortable in a group setting,” she said. “It is more personally targeted with journaling and meditation.”

Barkley is a registered Holy Yoga Instructor and in May will earn certifications in Christian Yoga Therapy and Trauma Sensitive Yoga. She has been a personal trailer since 2008.

She said meditation is a big part of Holy Yoga. The difference in this Christian-based form of the art is that the students meditate on scripture.

“It provides that shift in perspective that this life is a process and we can release striving for perfection and pick up walking with the Holy Spirit and seeking the Lord for guidance and walking step by step in what he wants to stir in us today,” she said.

The group classes incorporate meditation, but not as in-depth.

“There is more journaling and discussion in the private and small group sessions,” she said.

Barkley said yoga is becoming more popular as a referral from the medical community because of its stress-relieving focus and scientific studies that have revealed the impact that stress has on overall health.

“People realize they are stressed, but they don’t realize how much stress affects them,” she said. “I love the study of it and seeing the people that are coming to my class and experiencing that they are able to work themselves out of that with breathing exercises. They are able to let go of it spiritually and give it to God.”

She said the reaction from the community has been extremely good since she opened for business, although she admits it raised some eyebrows.

“Some people have said, ‘Hmm, yoga and Jesus? I didn’t know those two could go together,’” she said, laughing. “But, they have been really supportive.”

The difference in her class is inserting Biblical scripture and connecting yoga’s concepts to the Christian faith.

“Yoga isn’t a religion. It’s a physical practice. Yoga means to yoke and in Holy Yoga we yoke the breath, movement and meditation. The meditation side is where you would insert a religion or thought process. We meditate on the Bible, on truth,” Barkely said. “A lot of the verbiage that is used in a holy yoga class you would find in other yoga classes, surrendering a pose, being rooted or grounded or fixing your gaze. Our verbiage is tied to the Gospel.”

Rather than practicing self-actualization or transcending oneself, Holy Yoga recognizes that “there is no real self-realization with knowing who you are in Jesus Christ,” Barkley said. 

Barkley, who has two kids and a husband – Drew Barkley, a teacher and coach at Mount Pleasant High School who fully supports her, –is finding herself in a transitional period as well.

“For me personally, I am in a process of letting go of my expectations for what the business should like and I’m letting God mold and lead,” she said.

Surprisingly, she has found that part of the molding process has come from some of her students.

“Every person that has come to the classes has brought something to the table. They’ve brought encouragement and support and love when I’ve needed it or Kellye providing the location or another friend saying they would help get the word out. You can’t do it alone and I’ve been overwhelmed by the people that he has put in those classes. He has them there for a reason,” she said.

Lynda Stringer is a Mount Pleasant, TX-based freelance writer and owner of Stringer Media. Contact her at Lynda.Stringer@outlook.com.

Gospel, People, Movement

March 1, 2016 | By LYNDA STRINGER

 

Center-Service

Contributed photo/CENTER CHURCH

 

Center Church celebrated its 1st anniversary with balloons during the worship service Sunday night. 

Tuesday marks one year since Center Church held its first worship service.

Led by Pastor Jeremy Thomas, the unique congregation has grown steadily over the past year and is only looking for that growth to continue.

Unlike most churches, the nondenominational flock doesn’t meet on Sunday mornings. Instead, members and visitors gather on comfy chairs, couches, and white-painted pews in the space above Jo’s Coffee Shop at 5 p.m. on Sunday evenings to soak in the contemporary music and Thomas’ message.

Baptisms are held on the patio behind the building; new believers are submerged in water in a horse trough colorfully airbrushed with the words, “Made New.” The public professions of faith are followed by a church-wide celebration with a meal they call “Community Night.”

“When we launched that first Sunday night, it was packed. It was a fun time and throughout this past year, we’ve seen close to 30 people come to know Christ,” said Thomas, who was part of Trinity Baptist Church’s ministry team and involved in Ark Ministries before the new church was planted.

Center Church and Jo’s Coffee Shop are both under the nonprofit umbrella of Ark Ministries, which hosts concerts and other events in the area.

“We had been doing Ark Ministries for a couple of years at that point and we realized that we weren’t great at getting people from this initial experience of God to being engaged and going further into a relationship with Christ,” Thomas said.

The Ark Ministries team purchased the building where Jo’s Antiques had stood on the corner of North Jefferson and 1st Street after its owner, Jo Campbell, passed away in 2013. Used as a meeting venue for the community on a limited schedule, the ministry then launched the coffee shop with Heather Kimball at the helm in early 2015, and then Thomas, Jeffery and Leah Crabb, Sara and Danny Muskrat, Kyle and Cheryl Shovan and Jesus Garcia decided to follow a calling to found the church.

“It was on my heart for sure and on their hearts, too, that we saw a need for it and thought that this could be an incredible thing,” Thomas said.

The partnership between Jo’s and the church makes it even more unusual, with proceeds from the coffee shop benefiting the church.

“We see it as an incredible way to be available to the city in more ways than an hour on Sunday,” Thomas said. “We can provide a place that is safe and fun that teens and college students and adults, too, can come and hang out. We’ve seen God do a lot of cool things through those times and, sometimes, even cooler than what we’ve seen on a Sunday night.”

 

Center-Baptism

Contributed photo/CENTER CHURCH

 

Pastor Jeremy Thomas finds a horse trough works fine for baptisms at Center Church, which meets on Sunday evenings above Jo’s Coffee Shop.

The mantra of the church is #gospelpeoplemovement, a hashtag you’ll find frequently on its social media posts on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and a philosophy that encourages members to take the church into the community.

With about 100 active members and 40 kids filling the small space, Thomas said eventually they will have to consider a different location or add another service. But even with that decision, they are looking at it from a nontraditional perspective.

“One of our founding things is we don’t necessarily want to put up a building that sits empty 90 percent of the week. Whenever we do something, we want it to be like Jo’s Coffee Shop, an incredible community place where people can gather, have meetings, study or whatever that looks like. So that’s in our planning, but we are still seeking God’s will in that area.”

As the church leadership team looks ahead to its second year, avenues of ministry are ever widening. Thomas said the church will launch a partnership with Titus County Cares on April 1 for a ministry they will call Life STEP, which stands for Skills Training Empowering People.

“We’ll offer weekly classes in different topics such as personal financial management, cooking, health and wellness, job skills, resumes, applications, things like that,” he said.

In conjunction with those classes, they will offer activities for the children of the parents involved in the classes. That vision also includes afterschool programs offering sports, tutoring and mentoring for kids.

“Life STEP will be a step for us to see what’s out there and to really begin to invest in our city,” Thomas said.  “One of our big goals for this year is to make inroads into uniting multiple organizations throughout our city to accomplish some very big goals.”

Titus County Cares was a natural avenue for starters, but they want to reach out to the school districts, the police department, and other organizations in the city to form partnerships for social initiatives, he said.

Several community groups meet for Bible study and fellowship during the week and they have recently started a college ministry called CenterCrew for young adults 18 to 25 that will begin having events on Friday nights. Part of that ministry is reaching out to students at Northeast Texas Community College.

“We go out to the college every Sunday and provide lunch. We saw a need there because there are students who don’t have transportation and there was a lack of food services on the weekends, so it’s been a cool thing,” Thomas said.

The ministry team feeds about 30 to 40 students Sunday lunch and plans to add activities for them.

“We don’t want it to just be a meal and move on. We really want to build those relationships because our thing is we really feel like we can change the world. It’s crazy. There are kids at the college from Ireland and South Africa and all over the United States,” he said.

Members of the church are providing rides to the students to get to Center’s Sunday night services and several have started to attend.

“It’s fun to help them have a better college experience, make friends and find people they know they can count on when they’ve had a tough day,” he said.

Thomas, a self-avowed introvert, says he felt the call to ministry when he was a senior in high school. He had taught Bible studies for years, but stepped onto the stage in front of an enthusiastic crowd one year ago, a little uncertain about his public speaking abilities.

But he forged ahead, faithful to God’s leading. And today, looking back, he says he is amazed at how God has used him to change people’s lives.

“It’s pretty much 100 percent consistent that on days I think I haven’t performed or didn’t have my stuff together, things came out wrong or didn’t come out at all, that I see God working most,” he said. “So for me, it’s this humbling, beautiful thing to know that God is in such control that he’s moving things forward with or without me and changing people lives.”

Still, he hopes he can help them change lives. “I want them to see where God is working and join him to bring justice to social and economic needs while bringing the light of Jesus into some dark parts of our city,” Thomas says.

He wants the next generation not to say they “went to church,” but instead to say, “we are the church.”

Lynda Stringer is a Mount Pleasant, TX-based freelance writer and owner of Stringer Media. Contact her at Lynda.Stringer@outlook.com.