Showing posts with label Allen Temple Baptist Church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allen Temple Baptist Church. Show all posts

Saturday, September 8, 2012

PRE and Streets Disciples Power Brunch

Registration for Power Brunch


Rev Williams and Mother Brown

Abolitionist Nicholas Sensley

Liberty Bradford Mitchell

Rev Williams, Cesar Cruz and Homies Empowered

Melissa Farley of Prostitution Research and Education with Nicholas Sensley

Rev Harry Williams and the Youth of Re-Generation Church in Oakland




Silent Auction



Rev Williams autographs his book "Straight Outta East Oakland" on Human Trafficking

Rev Williams and Cesar Cruz

Streets Disciples at the book table

Nicholas Sensley of Humanity United






Large turnout

Rev Williams delivers a powerful speech

Streets Disciples

Delicious food










Friday, July 27, 2012

Allen Temple's Pulpit is Getting a Facelift!!

Allen Temple Baptist Church in Oakland Ca.  We're almost finished with the upgrade to the sanctuary pulpit.  It has been expanded with steps all around and a much larger stage area.  It's looking good so far, but the true test will be when everything is cleaned and finished!  I'll bring more photos at that time.  Blessings!


Wheelchair accessible!  Woohoo!

It's so beautiful!

Sister Mattie getting ready to work!

Dedicated members working hard

The brothers hard at work

cleaning the doors to the sanctuary

Saturday, July 21, 2012

July 21 2012 For Sisters Only

Strategizing For Sisters Only Outreach?

Our Streets Disciples are dedicated to helping our community

Creating the gift bags filled with toiletries for the Sisters

Ladies in Action


We come together from all over the Bay Area to make this For Sisters Only event successful





Posing till closing!  Always so helpful and sweet spirited!

Our clothing donations



Rev Harry Williams with our sister Elaine of Re-Generation church

Monday, June 18, 2012

Our Sisters Only Gathering

a.t. streets disciples oakland ca allen temple baptist church
A.T. Streets Disciples getting the Word out!  Hood Internet in action
The Gathering was held in our J. Alfred Smith Fellowship Hall, and there was a full house of beautiful Sisters attending.  God smiled beautiful sunshine down on us, and the ladies' spirits were high and smiling sunshine back up at God.  The minute I stepped through the doors I could feel the warmth and beauty of the Sisters.

I went right to work at the clothing table setting it up, and our sister organization and co-laborers, Love Never Fails lived up to their name and came in with bag after bag of clothing and shoes for the ladies.  I dug into the huge pile of goodies trying to sort and fold and organize.  The Sisters came and started buzzing busily around me, looking through and choosing from the large assortment of shoes, baby clothes, T-Shirts, jeans, skirts and other clothing.  It was beautiful for me to listen to the ladies as they sorting through the things and asked each other if so-and so would like this one or that one.

Then our ministers Anne and Barbara started the gathering off in prayer and with the Biblical story of Tamar.  Even though Tamar had a tough life, and was negatively used by men, God used her for a higher purpose.  And we all, no matter what our circumstances, are valuable to God and are made according to His plan and purpose.  Sister Barbara reminded us that even the so-called prostitute is of value to God.  After all, Tamar became a part of the lineage of our Lord Jesus Christ.  The story of Tamar teaches us that no matter what we have done in the past, we are redeemable by God.  We simply put our life in God's hands and watch Him bring forth beauty out of ashes.

We served the food, and the sisters ate as they listened to the sermon.  Then sister Barbara blessed the ladies. She told them about the situation the Streets Disciples endured, where the toiletries we gathered for them were stolen right from the church itself.  A fews gasps went up from the ladies when they heard this, but they were reminded of how much the community loved them.  Within a short notice, calls were made and more toiletries gifts poured in.  Praise God!  It's a shame that someone was moved to steal the gifts dedicated to those in dire need, but it happens. 

As we were talking about these things, I watched as a few women remained focused like hawks on the clothing.  One or two of them remained at the table sorting through on the fly, even as Minister Barbara asked them to take their seats because, "the clothing would be there".  I didn't try to stop those sisters.  I understand that kind of focus, and could only smile inside my heart.  If those sisters' circumstances were different, they'd be the CEO's of top earning businesses!  Laser focus on the bottom line! 
A.T. Streets Disciples and Love Never Fails

God creates beauty out of ashes.  Our Sisters are an example of it.  They come to get a free meal, free clothing and shoes and toiletries.  But they also get love and upliftment, caring, comeraderie and fellowship.  As Sister Barbara J made the alter call, and the call for prayer, the sisters came forth.  They got up and acknowledged their need for Jesus' love in their lives.  The Sisters came and formed a circle and held hands.  We Streets Disciples formed a second circle of prayer and love behind and around them.  We had their backs in love.  Sister B. J. prayed love and protection and peace and help from on high, blessing and touching each sister's head.   And then tears of healing started flowing.  The living waters of God's healing flowed in the tears of the women, and it was a beautiful sight in my eyes. 

As women, we often are beaten down emotionally, mentally, and even spiritually.  The hardships of life are right out there, and often people will heap their hatred, fear or disdain upon us.  The black woman is the mule of the world as "Janie" of Zora Neale Hurston's great novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God has said.  And it's true.  Often, the pain, burden, disdain, neglect and hatred of the world is heaped upon our shoulders.  We try to stand up under the weight and pretend that it's not there and we are OK.   But we are not OK.   In despair, we try to deal with it.  We might get a little help from alcohol, or cigarettes.  We may overeat or do drugs or jump from bed to bed.   Sometimes what we use as a crutch ends up being a trap in our lives.  We all make mistakes.  But God is there for us.  He is able to break down the pain and refashion it into a beautiful testimony that is filled with His healing Balm.  God does this, but only if we allow him to do it.  If we take the first step towards God and His healing, He meets us the rest of the way. 
The tears flowed.  They flowed, tracing healing paths down beautiful cheeks.  They flowed down long fluffy lash extensions, gently sliding to the tips and falling.  The tears flowed and puddled on the sunlit floor, reflecting love into my own heart for our Sisters.  We laid on hands of healing. We called on the name of Jesus, We stood in the presence of the Lord's blessed Spirit of healing.  Then we sang!  We sang songs of freedom, redemption and love.

The Spirit was high!  Sister Anne called on the ladies to bring forth their testimonies, and they did.  They spoke of how God's grace saved them from drug addiction, from the streets, from the track, that's still out there, not even 3 blocks away.  God did it!  And the Sisters praised Him for it.  They praised and sang the house down and lifted up beautiful praises to our most high God.  Jesus!

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Sister Barbara Jim-George's Girls Rite of Passage Certificate Ceremony


Rev Barbara Jim-George

Saturday, May 26, 2012 was the Girls Rite of Passage Ceremony.  The girls have passed the class and have reached a new level of self esteem and understanding in their young lives.  They have been taught the perils of the human sexual trafficking industry and how important it is to be careful of those who would try to victimize them.  Unfortunately this world is very dangerous for young girls.

Human trafficking holds horrors for its victims that the average person cannot begin to imagine. It is likely the average American citizen has the perception that human trafficking is a circumstance which prevails in economically depressed, backwater areas of third world countries, among the most abjectly impoverished who reside on the lowest rungs of indigenous caste systems. Sadly, many also labor under the false assumption that prostitution is a choice that is consciously made for economic reasons; however nothing could be further from the truth. No one awkens on a particular day with the determination to become a victim of human trafficking. The fact of the matter is that there are several sets of circumstances that render a girl vulnerable for being victimized by trafickers, which include:
  • Earlier childhood sexual abuse
  • Homelessness
  • Running Away
  • Inadequate supervision or care
  • Inadequate food, clothing and shelter
  • Family and/or community history of exploitation
  • Exposure to domestic violence in the home
Julie Posadas Guzman of H.E.A.T Watch

The Girls Rite of Passage Program (GROPP) provides Primary Prevention against the CSEC. Carefully planned interactive courses help to mitigate the risks to vulnerable teens for being victimized. It is our contention that a faith based foundation of pedagogy can provide strong preventive measures that can help not only at risk girls, but all teen girls to avoid victimization. The importance we place on primary prevention is based upon our belief that this horrific type of abuse can forever change how girls view themselves and approach relationships.

The commercial sexual exploitation of children has no color, no economic, no ethnic, and no gender boundaries. Predators are indiscriminate about whom they entrap, as long as they think money can be made by controlling a minor child and selling them for commercial sex. Parents may feel that because of their economic status their children are somehow be immune to this issue. Please be advised that this is not the case. Many children who are victimized come from very good, 2-parent homes in economically affluent areas.

One of the best ways to protect children is to combine lessons and values learned in the home with a comprehensive program that can enable them to avoid victimization by commercial sex predators.

We accept girls from all faith traditions and backgrounds, all ethnicities, and all Bay Area communities. We invite congregations, community based organizations, schools, and youth programs to partner with us in helping to stop this terrible trend in our communities.

The Rev. Barbara Jim-George is on a mission to stop a parasitic trend in her Oakland community.

Vulnerable teens are being lured into a life of human trafficking and prostitution - and she wants them to recognize the danger so they can avoid the trap and understand they are worth more than what predators might think.

"We cannot continue to put our heads in the sand," Jim-George said. "We have a responsibility, an obligation."

Jim-George feels it's her calling. An administrative assistant at UC's headquarters in downtown Oakland since 2000, Jim-George is also an ordained minister who made finding a faith-based approach to stopping human trafficking the subject of her thesis for her Master in Divinity degree and the focus of her research as a doctoral candidate at American Baptist Seminary of the West.

In 2009, she launched the Girls Rite of Passage Program at Allen Temple Baptist Church in East Oakland for girls ages 11 to 16. The nine-course program spanning five months uses documentaries, guest speakers, skits and group discussions to teach girls about the dangers of human trafficking, and to empower them with a strong sense of self and the ability to make responsible decisions.

While government agencies and nonprofit groups help victims recover, Jim-George believes the faith community should provide prevention programs to stop girls from ever becoming victims.

"It is modern day slavery. Our program is designed to mitigate their risk of getting caught in human trafficking," Jim-George said.

Human trafficking is a lucrative $9 billion global industry, the fastest-growing organized crime in the world, according to the FBI.

Sexual exploitation and prostitution are the most common form, followed by forced labor. Victims are frequently snatched by predators or lured by attention, compliments, presents and promises of a better life that never materialize. They frequently work for little or no pay, are beaten or raped, and threatened with deportation or harm to them or their families.

About 2.5 million people are trafficked internationally each year, according to the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime. Of those, the FBI estimates 15,000 to 18,000 are in the United States.

The average age of a girl caught in trafficking is 12 years old, Jim-George said; some are as young as nine.

Jim-George is reaching out to teenage girls who are most at-risk: young girls growing up in single-parent and/or low-income households living in cities where criminal behavior and violence have become part of the fabric of the community.

Her program is just in its infancy, drawing a dozen or so students primarily through word of mouth.

Jim-George has noticed changes in the girls that participate: a shy girl who could not make eye contact with anyone, until she gained confidence through the program. She is now performing better in school. Another girl, a repeat runaway, returned home under Jim-George's advice.

Girls Rite of Passage is admittedly small now, but Jim-George envisions an expanded curriculum with workshops and field trips. A component geared toward boys could be added in the future.

It operates on a shoestring budget financed through Jim-George's limited pocketbook and the help of parents who take turns supplying snacks. Local ministries have pitched in to supply food for an end-of-the-year celebration.

She hopes to eventually find a grant writer who can secure consistent funding to grow the program.

"I hope organizations will identify kids at risk and refer them to us so we can help," she said. "I'd like to expand the number of participants and the workshops to create a comprehensive umbrella under which the girls can see a better outlook for their lives, that they are worthy of making plans for what they want to do."