The Mercury News

Donor gave folks $100 each, and good deeds resulted

Anonymous money came to a Baltimore church

- By Julie Zauzmer

On the first Sunday of December, the Rev. Ron Foster invited his congregant­s to step up to the altar to receive the bread and wine of Communion — and to receive a $100 bill.

“Listen to where the Holy Spirit’s leading you,” he said to the stunned congregati­on as he distribute­d a stack of money at Severna Park United Methodist Church, located in a Baltimore suburb. “Listen to the need that’s around you, that you find in the community. You may be in the right place at the right time to help somebody, because you have this in your hand.”

One hundred congregant­s walked out into the Advent season, with the money burning a hole in their pockets.

One stack of bills totaling $10,000, dropped off at the church by an anonymous donor, has turned into 100 good deeds in the Severna Park community this Christmas season.

Ginger ale and soup and warm socks for a cancer patient. Snow pants and gloves so a child with a brain tumor can play outside. Christmas presents for children who are homeless, for children whose parents are struggling with drug addiction, for children whose parents have suffered domestic abuse, for children in the hospital. Cash for dozens of grateful strangers, from waitresses to bus drivers to leaf collectors.

One hundred donations goes a long way.

“People have been so thoughtful. The money has just multiplied and blossomed and gone out,” Foster said. “There’s been so much joy and excitement just spilling over.”

The anonymous donor has been tickled pink to watch the fruit of her gift.

She doesn’t want her name published. Even her own daughter (who picked up one of the $100 bills at church and chose to send her donation to children in a foreign country) doesn’t know that she’s behind the big gift.

“I wanted to make it about the fun,” she said. “We want to make it about the excitement and the joy of giving, and to give people the experience of giving.”

She came up with the idea this summer, when she was distraught over the death of Heather Heyer, who was protesting against white supremacis­ts and neo-Nazis in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, who walked the streets with torches chanting, “Jews will not replace us.”

“I just had that heavy weight on my chest. I just felt bummed out and sad about our situation, about humanity in general,” she said. She found herself in a Starbucks, even though her husband makes coffee every day at home. Without really thinking about it, she bought a gift card, and gave it to the cashier. “I want you to use this for everybody who comes in after me, until it’s gone. I want you to treat everybody to a cup of coffee,” she said.

All of a sudden, her depression about Charlottes­ville lifted. “My mood completely changed,” she said. “It was that excitement, of being able to share with other people.”

That’s what she wanted for everyone at Severna Park United Methodist Church, the church she and her husband started attending when they moved to Severna Park recently. She had heard about other communitie­s, including her mother’s church in Texas, where everyone in the congregati­on was entrusted with money to distribute. She went to Foster and asked if she and her husband could give $10,000 to make it happen here.

Foster was enthusiast­ic. On the first Sunday of Advent, the bills were waiting. Everyone who wanted one at the church’s three services, which collective­ly host about 550 people each Sunday, was able to take one. Then the giving spree began.

One congregant took a needy fourth-grader on a shopping trip, where he picked out socks and underwear and shoes, plus a gift he could give each of his parents. The boy said it was the best day of his life.

Many congregant­s decided to add more money of their own, like the one who filled a cart to overflowin­g with $275 worth of pet food for the SPCA in Annapolis, and the couple who chipped in another $100 and paid off items on layaway at Kmart so strangers can take home their Christmas wishes.

One couple helped their 7-year-old daughter create bags of socks, hand warmers and McDonald’s gift cards. When a man approached their car to ask for change, the little girl opened the window and handed out the first of the gift bags, thrilled. Another congregant heard about a program that gives purses to homeless women, and decided to buy 100 items to put inside the purses — soap, shampoo, sanitary pads and more.

Many had co-workers they knew needed some financial help. Others waited for a stranger, searching for a serendipit­ous moment to pass on the $100 bill.

“What was the coolest to me was how I was on ‘high alert’ all week, looking for people or opportunit­ies to help. That was a great lesson, I think we should always be in that mode, always on the lookout for who God may place in our path, and for things He calls us to do. I am going to strive to be in that spirit more and more, to have eyes to see people’s needs more routinely, and to help in any way I can,” one congregant wrote on the church’s blog. That member ended up giving the $100 bill to a waitress, as did another congregant on another day. “I just trusted that God would put us at the right table, the one with the person He wanted me to give my envelope to,” the congregant wrote.

The donor behind it all said one of her favorite ideas was Dave Doss’. He and a friend ordered 10 pizzas and a case of Orange Crush to be delivered to the steps of a Baltimore church where they knew homeless men and women hang out. Then they spent the afternoon having a pizza party with them.

“When you have that $100 burning a hole in your pocket, you’re looking around. Should I fill that person’s gas tank? Should I buy that person’s groceries? What can I do? It’s exciting, to have that ability to do that,” the donor said.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY JILLIAN BEAM ?? With her $100 from Severna Park United Methodist Church, Jillian Beam took her daughters Hannah, 2, and Kennedy, 4, to get toys for children at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
PHOTO COURTESY JILLIAN BEAM With her $100 from Severna Park United Methodist Church, Jillian Beam took her daughters Hannah, 2, and Kennedy, 4, to get toys for children at Johns Hopkins Hospital.

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