An artful solution to hunger
Many churches stock food pantries with donated goods from parishioners to help meet community needs, especially during the holidays. Sustaining a food bank long-term can be a challenge, but First Baptist Church in Oklahoma City has found an inventive and amusing way to motivate its congregation to keep its shelves full: a canned food sculpture contest.
Cathy Manuel, First Baptist’s director of community ministry, said the church’s Good Shepherd Ministries, which reaches out to the urban population surrounding the downtown church, serves 500 families a month with its food bank, and during the holidays it distributes 200 baskets containing traditional meal supplies.
In 2009, the church needed to make sure it had enough items to stock Good Shepherd’s shelves, so it launched a new effort: Sunday school classes and other church groups would compete for a “Best Sculpture” award by combining products such as canned goods, non-perishable food items, and clothing into “art.”
“When I first heard the suggestion, I thought it was silly,” confessed Manuel, who is now in charge of competition. “But it just took off. Now in our third year, the entire congregation looks forward to it. It helps them feel connected to the food pantry and take ownership of it.”
The youth group won the first year with its “Charlie Brown Christmas Tree.” Cans of green beans made up the tree, with yellow and red cans (peaches and olives) representing ornaments. Atop the tree sat an angel: a bottle of Aunt Jemima pancake syrup with wings made of gloves. Hanging nearby on a string were stockings made from sports socks. The youth won again in 2010 with a 10-foot high iPod.
Other entries over the years have included an American flag, a clock tower and steeple, a reindeer, a baseball diamond, and a grand piano, where the white keys were made from tubes of toothpaste and its black ones from miniature Hershey bars.
This year’s competition was held the first weekend in November, but late Saturday night, a 5.6-magnitude earthquake hit just 44 miles northeast of town. Manuel said the sculpture made by the “Chapel Class” adult Sunday school group crashed to the floor—cans everywhere. Early Sunday morning, the creators of the “I CAN Lend a Helping Hand” sculpture scrambled before services to rebuild it, and their efforts paid off as they were named the winners.
“This is an easy and fun way for a congregation to raise food to help meet critical needs in its community,” said Senior Pastor Tom Ogburn. “[It] reminds us a bit of the story of the feeding of the 5,000. God used a small idea to help feed many. I can only imagine the impact it could have if hundreds or even thousands of congregations choose to do something similar.”

















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back to top27 Comments to “An artful solution to hunger”
Love it! Although from those making Christmas trees, they probably get far more green beans than anyone cares to receive. Canned green beans are the worst. {Shudder}. I liked the piano keys made from toothpaste tubes (white keys) and chocolate (black keys). Very creative idea.
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Great idea. I just hope they aren’t over stocking some less desirable food items to fit the sculpture requirements. Making a poor family eat nothing but canned peas is a harsh act just because you needed a consistent green backdrop!
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Yep, I thought of that too (points 1 and 2). But one would hope that if someone is truly hungry, they’d be happy for food, even food that isn’t their first choice. And ideally some classes are keeping in mind which food and toiletries might be the most useful choices.
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Yeah, like chocolate!
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I’d use any color for the cans — think of them as ornaments.
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I happen to know (this is my home church) that the people who come in for food from the pantry are given the opportunity to ’shop’ for what they need and will use. It is something that makes the Good Shepherd Ministries unique–the people who come in are not forced to take a bag of pinto beans, rice, green beans and corn. They are given a limit of what they can take depending on household size, but then they can choose what they wish from what is available. Cathy Manuel keeps the congregation informed of what the needs are from week to week, whether it’s packs of peanut butter crackers and juice boxes for those without a place to prepare food or canned goods or funds to purchase frozen meats or dairy products.
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Are people hungry in America? Yes, of course. Does anyone need to be hungry in America? That is the question.
Giving away food gives Christian folks warm fuzzies down in their hearts, but I would like to see a few churches begin to address the real issues.
I spent years wandering America without a penny in my pocket, lived with the homeless, rode trains with hobos, and so on. None of them were hungry. So where are all of the hungry people? Obviously, a lot of people are going to food banks and help kitchens, the question is why?
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if a church really began to get to know these people and determine why they were coming to get food? Perhaps they need financial counselling to help them decide whether a cell phone and cable bill are more important than food. Perhaps they need to deal with debt or maybe their living situation is just not affordable.
A great teaching series by some of the World contributors is called Seek Social Justice which explains that poverty is not about money, but about being destitute in some other way, like spiritually or mentally or physically etc, that leads to poverty.
Warm fuzzies are nice, but Christians should try to meet people where they are at and get to know them and deal with the real issues. Jesus gave a few people lunch on a couple of occasions, but what he taught them was food such that they would never hunger again. Let us be more like Christ.
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Yeah, Xion, but having particpated in a recent food drive and seeing who is going to our food pantry, now it is people who are on unemployment or can’t make ends meet. I wouldn’t single them out for a lecture. They’re hungry. You sound a tad self-righteous.
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I am not saying to lecture them. I am saying to get to know them.
Lot’s of people don’t make ends meet, but that does not mean that it cannot be done. I am not condemning or being self-righteous. What I am saying is to figure out ways to help that actually solve the real problem.
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Jesus fed 9000 men, plus women and children, without inquiring into the nature of their finances. If people are hungry, they can’t hear lessons on financial planning or even spiritual counsel.
What better way to find out people’s real needs than to sit down at a meal with them. Because food is a basic necessity, it is also common ground between diverse people and can open up new conversations. I usually find that I learn more than I can teach at such meals.
‘When thou makest a dinner or a supper, call not thy friends, nor thy brethren, neither thy kinsmen, nor thy rich neighbours; lest they also bid thee again, and a recompence be made thee.
But when thou makest a feast, call the poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind: and thou shalt be blessed; for they cannot recompense thee: for thou shalt be recompensed at the resurrection of the just.’ Luke 14:12-14
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Get ‘em a job, Xion. That’s what they need.
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Get ‘em a job, Xion. That’s what they need.
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My husband has been running a Kid’s Korner for the children of the folks coming to our food pantry bi-weekly. What started as a six week pilot project has blossomed into an easy, fun ministry that takes about 90 minutes on alternate Saturdays. Our daughter-in-law often comes with the adorable grandchildren and they join the other children (ranging in numbers from 12 to 30 on any given week), in singing songs, doing a craft, hearing a Bible story and having a snack.
We’ve seen a difference in the people coming to the food pantry–they’re more generous, chat more between themselves, beam with pleasure at the kids and are more interested in our church. Some have come to VBS, though none have actually joined the church yet. It’s about building relationships and food and kids are the touch points.
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Jesus provided lunch on a couple of occasions. Feeding people is a good thing, but it isn’t the most important thing.
Feeding people is fine. My question is how we can go beyond this.
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Zion, if you truly pursue what you are talking about I think you will find a few people who will see the light that their cell phone bill is taking necessary funds out of their food budget or who would benefit from instruction on how to pursue child support for their kids. But you will also find people (my experience tells me it would be more than half) who will hide from you the fact that they have a cell phone and the fact that they are going to keep paying that outrageous bill with their meager resources while getting their food from the good people at First Baptist Church. It’s a well ingrained lifestyle. Getting to know these people won’t change that lifestyle. Then what is your next move?
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“Perhaps they need financial counselling to help them decide whether a cell phone and cable bill are more important than food. Perhaps they need to deal with debt or maybe their living situation is just not affordable.”
Yes, poor people are poor because they are too stupid to know that they can’t eat their cell phones! People who say others should “get to know” the people who need services and address their “real problems” often follow it up with idiotic statements like these that show how little time they spend around disadvantaged people and how little of their “real problems” they understand.
Most of the people who come to our food bank (not the one in the story mind you) are there because they can’t find a job no matter how hard they look or no matter how hard they work they have been put on the ropes by medical bills. Some are on disability. Some have mental health issues they can’t get treatment for. A small minority are drug addicts.
Bad personal choices alone don’t explain why people need help.
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People, this is 2012 (practically). A cellphone is not a luxury item anymore; it’s a real need. There aren’t any payphones. People can get by with a bare bones talk/text plan, but not having a phone is not an option for people who want to get a job, run their lives, and be in control.
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Zion, et al,
I am Tom Ogburn, pastor of the church mentioned in the article. You need to know that this effort is one part of a much larger effort to impact our community with the word and deed of the Gospel. We operate a clothes closet, food pantry, medical clinic, dental clinic, denture clinic, and furniture bank. In addition we create opportunities to engage with those on the economic and social edges of our culture face-to-face. We are also home to four immigrant and refugee congregations. Intentionally some of the ministires/events are held onsite at the church and others in the midst of the community. Our goal is to to be the presence of Christ in the midst of our community. When you look at the list of what we are doing, do not instantly jump to a believe that we are a huge church, with our community ministries being done by our staff and a handful of others. We are a mid-sized church where over 80% of the congregation will be involved hands-on sometime over the course of the year. Our heart is to serve people in a way that we have the opportunity to build real relationships and then in turn introduce them to Jesus that they might find hope, forgiveness, and redemption.
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Thanks, Tom. Sounds like you are living to show Christ to the people. Good stewardship and good discipleship. May God continue to work through you and your fellows to bring His Truth to the people.
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Redwal #17 – people looking for work and trying to stay in the game certainly need a contact phone, one way or another, but people trying to live on disability and teen moms who get shelter from their parents but are trying to take care of their kids’ needs on their own resources don’t need to be paying $70 plus a month to text their friends and play angry birds. I guess these are the kinds of decisions that helping agencies see sometimes. It isn’t that the helping agencies aren’t befriending enough or building relationships, it’s that some people feel entitled to perks while letting others take care of their basic needs.
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“An artful solution to hunger”
Thanks for that response Tom #18. Sounds like a good hands on church. Operating a clothes closet, food pantry, medical clinic, dental clinic, denture clinic, and furniture bank is fantastic! And I would assume that churches would seek to be the presence of Christ in the midst of the community.
I am not trying to be critical at all, so please forgive me. However all of those things involve handing out goods and services. Once again, fantastic job, but I am trying to ask a question without getting hammered for it.
Christians hand out a lot of fish, but do we teach people to fish? The church is an educational institution. Is there anything the church can do in terms of teaching work skills or financial skills from a biblical point of view? I am not saying these are the only reasons for being in dire straits, but food only endures one day whereas knowledge can last for a lifetime.
Jesus continually put knowledge over physical needs. Remember the story of Mary and Martha? Churches are good Marthas, because that is the easy part. Should churches be more learning centers or kitchens? I don’t know, just asking.
I was inspired by the free DVD series Seek Social Justice, which Marvin Olasky and Anthony Bradley had a hand in. I have been trying to find ways to use my experience in the workforce to teach others. I haven’t found a church yet that likes these ideas. Usually I just get ridiculed.
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PHOS at #10 wrote: “Jesus fed 9000 men, plus women and children, without inquiring into the nature of their finances.”
Maybe he did so inquire and the text does not give all the detail. Are you implying that we should not ever make such inquiries??? To inquire in earnest about the nature of their finances or to give counsel is a high act of love that does NOTHING to diminish them or the call of compassion.
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PHOS at #10 wrote: “If people are hungry, they can’t hear lessons on financial planning or even spiritual counsel.”
They can’t? How do you know? Some won’t but some certainly can. Doesn’t this presumption unfairly dehumanize hungry people? They have spiritual and behavioral needs too you know. If you want to feed anyone, fine. Do it. But there is no need to presume that any other human being has lost their need or capacityy for spiritual cousel or make progress toward wisdom. Why disparage or minimize the need to try to touch other types of hunger (spiritual hunger especially) and need too? Use your best judgment and strategy on a case-by-case basis but why make sweeping reductionist presumptions about real human beings? A holistic apporach is legit!
PHOS, I liked most of what you said after the above statement with which I generally disagreed.
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Joel Mark – #23: The physical symptoms of hunger, weakness, inability to concentrate, hunger pains, etc., do prevent people from being able to listen and learn. Jesus understood the effects of hunger on the human body: “I have compassion on the multitude, because they have now been with me three days, and have nothing to eat: and if I send them away fasting to their own houses, they will faint by the way: for divers of them came from far:” Mark 8:2-3
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PHOS.
The physical factors of hunger and weakness are powerful, but NOT necessarily so powerful as to prevent us from being real human beings WITH the capacity to perceive and concentrate on spiritual concerns. I just don’t understand any believer who would constuct the notion that physical aspects NECESSARILY trump the spiritual. We do not need a mindset that necessarily forces us to choose between addressing physical and spiritual needs. You ARE free to address one or the other as you see fit and as each case may call for in terms of strategy. Practical aspects should not be ignored. Mut I reject the mindset that says the spiritual aspects of the human being cannot be touched until physical aspects are covered. We can take them both on in a hand-in-hand fashion.
The ability to listen and learn always applies for human beings, all the way to the point of death. But that is no reason to ignore physical needs.
When Jesus fed the multitudes (accounts that support my point well), it seems they were enormously focused on the spiritual food he was offering and would have kept that focus in view for much longer. The fact that they were hungry did NOT prevent them from being spiritually focused as well.
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25: Joel Mark – You are making a mountain out of a molehill. I made a general statement about the distracting features of hunger and you interpret it to mean that I am stating that physical needs are more important than spiritual needs. I never intended to say such a thing, and that should be apparent from the rest of my comment at #10.
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PHOS, if I am making a mountain out of a molehill by disagreeing with your statement that hungry people “can’t hear lessons on financial planning or even spiritual counsel”, then I disagree with you further than before. They can! Some won’t but they can. I affirm the full holistic humanity (including their capacity for spiritual hunger) of poor and hungry people. I did interpret you to be putting physical needs ahead of spiritual needs. If that is not what you meant, then fine and we agree but I am left honestly confused by your words.
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