Chattanooga Times Free Press

FIXING HOUSES CHANGING LIVES

- BY PAUL LEACH STAFF WRITER

World Changers has reached the midpoint of its two-week summer home repair ministry in Chattanoog­a.

More than 170 student and adult volunteers of the Southern Baptist mission tackled 15 projects for needy, disabled and elderly families across the city last week. This week, a similar number of volunteers will tackle home improvemen­t tasks for another 20 projects. Typical work includes exterior painting, fencing, landscapin­g and building wheelchair ramps.

“This is awesome, having all these lovely young people helping us out,” Epiphany Turner said Thursday, mingling with volunteers in the front yard of her grandmothe­r’s home of 40 years in the Orchard Knob neighborho­od.

Turner, who takes interdisci­plinary studies with a sports emphasis online with the University of Memphis, said the 11-member team has transforme­d

the house, which she guessed to be at least 70 years old.

“It was all dingy, stuff was falling, wood was rotting,” Turner said. “Now it’s just much better.”

Dressed in jeans, T-shirts and ball caps, volunteers talked and laughed while they worked in the morning warmth. Some brushed white paint on the home’s siding or replaced paneling on the roof over the front porch. Others caulked windows or did yard work, then broke for a short devotional service before lunch.

Launched in 1990, the LifeWay Christian Resources initiative has sent volunteers to Chattanoog­a since 2004. The work is part of Chattanoog­a’s Summer Home Repair Program, in partnershi­p with the city’s Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t. The ministry provides the labor and the city provides paint, lumber and other supplies.

World Changers volunteer Taylor Martin, 19, of Saluda, S.C., said the ministry goes beyond fixing up people’s homes. This summer makes the third time she has participat­ed in the program, which requires volunteers to pay $340 for the opportunit­y to work in the heat for strangers in another city.

“We’re working on houses, but the most important thing is getting to share the gospel,” Martin said. “We come here to serve other people, but you know, going home looking back on the week, we get more out of it than they do. God changes our lives as we work for these people.”

This also makes the third year for Cory Henderson, 23, who echoed Martin’s comments. The work gives him the opportunit­y to spread the gospel and share his spiritual experience­s with others.

“I fell in love with it,” Henderson said of his first work trip with World Changers. “I enjoyed working, and I enjoyed helping people and serving people any way I could.”

Church groups from Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky, Maryland, South Carolina and Virginia filled the ranks of last week’s work crews, a World Changers news release said.

Neither Martin nor Henderson considered the summer heat, the manual labor or sleeping on an air mattress as challenges they face during the weeklong ministry.

“When you are actually going out into the neighborho­od and sharing with others, if someone doesn’t want to talk to you or rejects what you’re saying, it’s really hard,” Martin said. “It’s just hard to not get through to someone.”

The goodbyes can be tough, Henderson said. After a week, fellow volunteers aren’t strangers anymore and you’ve made new friends.

Both said they have kept in touch with friends they made on past ministry trips.

“Working in this city is a way to demonstrat­e that teens can get out of their comfort zone, work hard and help others,” said Jordie Skinner, World Changers’ missions and communicat­ions specialist.

Contact staff writer Paul Leach at 423-757-6481 or pleach@timesfreep­ress.com. Follow him on Twitter @pleach_tfp.

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? Katherine Martin, left, and Berkley Smith paint the exterior of a home Thursday on Oak Street. Volunteers with World Changers, a student-focused mission and ministry, are in Chattanoog­a performing volunteer work to help area community members.
STAFF PHOTOS BY DOUG STRICKLAND Katherine Martin, left, and Berkley Smith paint the exterior of a home Thursday on Oak Street. Volunteers with World Changers, a student-focused mission and ministry, are in Chattanoog­a performing volunteer work to help area community members.
 ??  ?? Volunteers bow their heads in prayer during a devotional between jobs.
Volunteers bow their heads in prayer during a devotional between jobs.
 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? Volunteers hold a devotional Thursday during a break from repairing a home on Oak Street.
STAFF PHOTOS BY DOUG STRICKLAND Volunteers hold a devotional Thursday during a break from repairing a home on Oak Street.
 ??  ?? Joe Ordile uses an ice cube to cool off.
Joe Ordile uses an ice cube to cool off.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States