Friday, December 18, 2009

Do We Really Believe That God Changes People? A Volunteer's Thoughts on Grace:

(What follows are some thoughts that arise out of a relationship formed through the Advance Memphis family.)

“My friend was converted.” I could almost feel the skepticism from my audience as I described the new life my friend was experiencing. You see, my friend is black, poor, has spent time in jail, and a gang, and knows the demon of addiction firsthand. My audience is white, has lived a life of privilege and is conservative politically and religiously. The later two, being weaved so tight into their belief system, are indistinguishable.


There really is skepticism, in the church, toward the possibility of change. God bless us. We have spent too much time sitting through heady sermons meant more to squeeze out a compliment, better yet a raise, than real deep heart change. A resulting culture has been formed, bent more on seeming righteous than being righteous. This culture is much more passionate about discussing radical change than walking by faith toward it. James, Jesus’ brother, made it abundantly clear that the kind of religion God wants is centered on justice, mercy and compassion. True religion, so James tells us, looks after widows and orphans in their distress. Distressed about the weak, needy and cold, that is true religion that arises from a person that has been truly changed. Somehow we have moved off center. If the motto of North Carolina is “to be rather than to seem,” the church’s motto is more in line with, “to seem is to be.” The Word is failing to result in deed.


This friend called me last week and told me his heat was out all night. Temperatures that night dropped to 22. The walls of a housing project know more rodents than insulation. The windows are lucky to be pained at all, much less be double pained. Yet my friend called, not to complain, but to tell me what God told him. First, God impressed the little boy a few doors down upon his heart. The last time he saw the boy he had no socks. “I wanted to find him to make sure he was alright,” he told me. Second, he told me that God directed him to think about the homeless. “Richard, something I never told you is that I too was homeless for a time and this morning God told me to open a homeless shelter. I don’t want to charge for the shelter, not even $6, because God didn’t charge me anything for His grace and love, He just throws it on everybody.”


I came away skeptical too, not of my friend’s conversion, but my own. Has grace sunk that deep into my pores? Does my heart move toward others in the midst of personal distress? My friend is now my teacher. God’s work in him is getting all over me.


God taking on infant form? The Almighty wrapped in cloths and lying in a feed trough? That stuff, like the possibility of radical change, is hard to believe. Yet, from creation to incarnation to salvation, Christianity is about the real possibility of impossibilities. It may be more than that, but it is not less.


Richard Rieves

richard.rieves@gmail.com

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Advance Memphis Return on Investment

Please take a minute to read our full 2009 ROI Report. It contains many more details about our 2009 outcomes, as well as a full explanation of how we calculated these numbers.

2009 Jobs for Life Return on Investment
(Benefits realized in 2009/costs realized in 2009):
2.65/1 or 265%
This means that every $1 invested in the Advance Memphis Jobs for Life class yielded a return to society of $2.65 in the 2009 calendar year (as of December 7, 2009).

Friday, December 11, 2009

KTG Exec Shares His Impressions of Advance Staffing Employees


This week, the Advance Memphis Staffing Service employees made a great impression on the Strategic Development Manager for KTG, George Mapson. He took the time to tell us his thoughts concerning on our Staffing employees:

"On Tuesday morning I had a chance encounter with Craigen Harris [pictured above], one of your employees working at KTG USA, our tissue manufacturing plant in north Memphis. First, I don't believe it was a chance encounter. It was meant to happen. Craigen came into my office just after 7:00 am to advise me that his facial tissue team from Advance Memphis was going home as the machine was down and there was, unfortunately, no work for them today. I had never met him before. He explained what he was doing and what this opportunity to work meant to him and the rest of his team members and their families. I was both captivated and motivated by what Craigen had to say. What a breath of fresh air! Craigen then introduced me to other members of the Advance Memphis team. More breaths of fresh air! It was indeed unfortunate, especially at this time of year that the team was unable to work that day. Every day employed is a huge advancement forward in their lives. Our company also lost that day. We lost the opportunity of having respectful, highly motivated, hard working community members working in our plant to keep our customers happy....And not just "working." But working with a lot of desire and heart and very much aligned with what we are trying to do in our plant..."making everyday better." I wish I could have spent more time with Craigen and the Advance team. It would have been a precious learning experience. We look forward to strengthening our relationship with Advance Memphis."
George Mapson, Strategic Development Manager