Finding a way to feed the hungry
KNOCKING ON DOORS
As Armendariz pulls his truck into the parking lot of the Newport
Harbor Inn, a group of five children descend on his truck with smiles
splashed across their faces.
The Scott family met Armendariz about a year ago when they began
living in Costa Mesa motels. Brian, 4, goes straight for the Apple Jacks
-- his favorite cereal. Christine, the oldest of the children, makes sure
to get toothbrushes for all her siblings.
Meanwhile, 7-year-old Diana is making puppy dog eyes at Armendariz,
asking in her sweetest voice, “Can I have this?” as she snuggles a
stuffed bunny rabbit in her arms.
“Good things always happen when they come by,” said the children’s
mother, Pam Scott.
The Scott family, seven in all, live in one room at the motel. They
pay more than $1,400 a month to stay there.
“To try to save money when you’re paying as much as we do is
impossible,” Pam Scott said.
In a two-hour route, Armendariz contacts about 20 people who leave his
truck with bags of groceries, clothing and hygiene supplies. On
Saturdays, when Armendariz makes a stop at the Costa Mesa Motor Inn, he
supplies about 40 families.
Armendariz’s children, now 9 and 8, usually help him knock on doors
and carry bags of groceries. Michelle spends most of her time chatting
and socializing while Avanti lugs baskets and carries bags for the people
who need them. The boy is his father’s constant companion and enjoys
showing off the muscles he’s developed on the job.
“I want them to see there’s another face to life,” Armendariz said.
At one stop, Armendariz sees an old friend known only as “Lorraine.”
The woman, who’s in her 70s and suffers from Parkinson’s disease, hugs
Armendariz as soon as he walks into the parking lot.
“I’m much happier now than I’ve ever been,” he said. “The hugs and
thank yous are a lot more rewarding than the money and the contracts I
used to sign with people.”
REACHING OUT WITH LOVE
Armendariz is also compelled to do the work he does for spiritual
reasons.
Before the people at the motels walk away with their arms full of
groceries, Armendariz asks them if they would like to share in a prayer.
“The food we bring here is good,” Armendariz tells them. “But it’s
only good for three to four days. But the food of Jesus Christ is good
forever.”
If anyone can minister to those in need, it’s Armendariz, friends
said.
“I think he’s doing wonderful work,” said La Vina Pastor Jose
Coronado, the minister for the Latino branch of the Vineyard church.
“It’s something that not very many people are doing. It takes a heart of
compassion and passion for those people.”
Many of the donations come out of Vineyard Church, but Armendariz also
pays for supplies out of his own pocketbook, said Vineyard Pastor Bill
Faris.
“Luis has not had a perfect past, and he’s also a widower, and he’s
had some rough times in life,” Faris said. “But he’s a living testimony
of what God can do.”
Armendariz does not judge the people who come to him for help. His
openness has people telling him their life stories within minutes of
meeting him.
Susan Osburn, who met Armendariz for the first time Wednesday, was
quickly telling him about how alone she feels and how much pain she’s
been in since being in a car accident that nearly killed her and left her
severely scarred.
“Do you need prayers?” Armendariz asked her.
“That’s an understatement,” Osburn said as she joined hands with him.
“I definitely do.”
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