Community commentary -- Bill Gartner
After gearing up all week for the Sunday church service, I’m usually
pretty tired on Monday afternoons and like to go home early.
So, at 3 p.m. last Monday, when I was walking out of the church
office, my mind was fixed on going home and relaxing with a tall glass of
iced tea.
That’s when it happened: Two young boys in their school uniforms were
getting a drink from the church’s water fountain. I recognized them from
the neighborhood and stopped to say “hi” before leaving.
But leaving was not what they had in mind. They began to drill me with
questions about the church, such as “When does the church open?” and
“When does it close?” For a moment, I felt as if I were back working in a
fast-food restaurant like in my high school days.
So I asked them, “Why are you guys interested in that?” This was where
I really stepped into muddy waters because they answered, “We need a
quiet place to do our homework and we wanted to know if we could do it
here.”
Inquisitively, I asked myself the same question that I’ve been asking
for the last 10 years, “What can I do?”
In case you’re wondering, this story is 100% true, especially the part
about me just wanting to go home that day.
Tragically, this is not an isolated story. At least once a week,
children in the neighborhood ask me if my church is going to start an
after-school program for doing homework. At least that often, kids ask me
about opening a computer center at the church.
A recreational center is another high note on the neighborhood “wish
list.” These are just a few of the needs in my neighborhood. With
frustration I still ask, “What can I do?”
Most residents of Costa Mesa probably would agree that our city needs
some type of change. The different groups that have emerged in Costa Mesa
all believe that change is necessary. We just cannot agree on what type
of change needs to take place.
In his book “City Reaching,” Jack Dennison summarizes in this manner:
“Can anyone doubt the need for transformation in the cities of
America? The statistics are staggering. Today 36 million Americans (14%
of the population) live in poverty. Of those, the portion living in our
urban centers has increased from 30% in 1968 to about 47% today.”
Is Costa Mesa somehow immune to the issues and concerns that are
represented and suggested through these statistics? On the contrary, our
city is not immune. In fact, it has a gaping wound of hostility running
right down the middle of it.
Completely overwhelmed, I still ask, “What can I do?”
Last night, my church hosted its second community meeting in as many
months. The goal is simply to give community members an opportunity to
share what they perceive to be needs and concerns in Costa Mesa.
But we are not stopping there. We also are asking the simplest
question of all: “What can I do?” But now people are beginning to ask
this question with a different attitude: hope.
There are some community members who already have begun asking that
question of themselves. Still, many of us in Costa Mesa simply do not
believe that we can make a difference in transforming our city.
I say “us” and “we” because I still get overwhelmed and frustrated
from time to time. But in seeing people of different social and ethnic
backgrounds come together to ask the simple question, “What can I do?”
hope wins out every time.
* BILL GARTNER lives in Costa Mesa and has been pastor at Harbor
Christian Fellowship on the Westside for more than 40 years.
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