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Rich Brown: Small Joplin church taking big strides

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  • Rich Brown: Small Joplin church taking big strides

    Joplin Globe, MO
    Jan 24 2009



    Rich Brown: Small Joplin church taking big strides


    Tommy Freeman may pastor a congregation small in numbers but the
    members are a group of people making a huge difference in a lot of
    lives.

    St. James United Methodist Church, 2501 E. 20th St., has an average
    attendance of 40 to 50 people with an annual budget of only $48,000
    but its plans to help other less fortunate souls have gone far beyond
    their church walls.

    The congregation's love and generosity began last year when their
    pastor proposed a project for Heifer International, a nonprofit
    Christian organization that specializes in providing livestock and
    related services to limited-resource families worldwide.

    Bill Ohler, a member of St. James, then suggested that the
    congregation fund a $5,000 Gift Ark, which gives money to buy a wide
    variety of animals, as well as beehives to help families in Armenia
    earn money through the sale of honey and beeswax.

    The wonderful St. James family responded in a big way. The
    fund-raising ended last November with a $5,240 Ark check, as well as
    other donations, presented to Heifer International.

    The Gift Ark was funded through onetime or monthly pledges. In
    addition, Freeman estimated that about $1,000 was raised by sending
    children into the congregation each Sunday to gather pocket change or
    whatever dollars they could.

    With barely enough time to catch their breaths from the 2008
    fund-raiser, members of St. James have taken on yet another
    humanitarian cause for the new year. You might call it their PET
    Project.

    PET is the acronym for Personal Energy Transportation. The
    three-wheeled PET units allow individuals in third-world countries who
    do not have use of their legs to become mobile.

    Each unit costs $250 and St. James' goal is to provide 20 of them,
    which translates into $5,000 that must be raised.

    `We already have funding for nine PETs,' Freeman said this week. `We
    are on target. In fact, it looks like we could go over 20 units.'

    St. James is working with PET of Southwest Missouri to get the units
    built and shipped overseas. The Southwest Missouri shop is located
    between Mount Vernon and Aurora. St. James volunteers, as well as
    those from other area churches, are helping in the building process.

    `We will probably take all the money over there at one time to do the
    building,' said Freeman, who is in his fifth year at St. James. He
    added that 100 percent of the work done on PET units is volunteer.

    Freeman said there are two of the units at his church for people to
    see and youngsters to ride.

    The PET idea actually originated in Missouri by two pastors, Larry
    Hills and Mel West. With the help of Earl Miner, Hills and West acted
    on the idea in response to the loss of mobility for people in Zaire
    due to landmine injuries and polio.

    With more than 40 individuals/groups across the United States building
    parts for the units and shipping them to Third-World countries, PETs
    are helping people in more than 40 countries.

    http://www.joplinglobe.com/weekend/loc al_story_023114100.html?keyword=topstory
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