Church ministers to needs in San Antonio’s poorest area

Volunteer Helen Adams prays with an individual Mayfield Park Baptist Church in San Antonio helped by providing food. (Photo courtesy of Mayfield Park Baptist Church)

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SAN ANTONIO—When Mike Sutton was young, he had no desire to become a minister.

Sutton was raised by his great-grandfather—a preacher—and was aware of the poverty and hardship some pastors face. He dreamed of becoming a counselor and a teacher.

However, by age 20, God called him into the ministry.

“It was then I realized that my great-grandfather was rich in everything that mattered,” Sutton said. “He was doing God’s work and he was a happy man.”

For the past 18 years, Sutton has been pastor of Mayfield Park Baptist Church in San Antonio, which he calls “a wonderful church filled with people who want to serve God and others.

“I’m like a fish in water,” he said. “And I couldn’t be happier.”

‘A heart to serve God and others’

Mayfield Park Baptist is a 70-year-old church located in the southeastern part of San Antonio. Membership is about 300 with an average pre-COVID-19 Sunday school attendance near 100.

The church aspires to live by its mission statement: “Connected to God, connected to each other, connected to the world.”

Mayfield Park seeks to minister to both the spiritual and physical needs of its community.


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For more than a decade and a half, Virginia Rhue has directed the church’s food pantry and clothes closet ministry.

“She has a heart to serve God and others. Her kindness and compassion are vital to this ministry,” Sutton said.

Rhue began looking for a meaningful ministry after her husband’s death in 2002.

“To get my mind off my loss, in 2004 I started volunteering and I became more involved with my church,” she said. “I’m 85-years-old, and I’ve been working with this ministry 16 years.

Rhue acknowledges the challenges the ministry has confronted and continues to face. Currently, the food pantry’s normal operations have paused due to the COVID-19 pandemic. A key volunteer in the clothes closet ministry is dealing with health issues. And the community ministry always needs additional funds.

In spite of the challenges, Rhue finds the ministries fulfilling.

“This ministry makes me feel I’m doing something to serve God and those in need,” she said. “Helping others gives me a feeling of satisfaction.”

Significant needs in the neighborhood

The needs in the community are great, Sutton said.

Pre-pandemic, people from throughout the surrounding community lined up outside Mayfield Park Baptist Church, waiting for the twice-a-month food pantry to open. (Photo courtesy of Mayfield Park Baptist Church)

“Our area is one of the poorest in San Antonio,” says Sutton. “In fact, our ZIP code is located in the lowest economic region. And yes, we serve some people who are homeless.

“But we also have families who are struggling to put food on the table or pay rent. Grandparents are raising grandchildren.”

The church eagerly awaits the time when the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic has passed and it can resume opening its food pantry and clothes closet twice a month.

The office phone rings daily, as people ask when the church will offer those ministries again.

People come to the pick-up station at Mayfield Park Baptist Church in San Antonio to receive food and clothing. (Photo courtesy of Mayfield Park Baptist Church)

Depending on the number of positive COVID-19 cases in the area, the church  hopes to start a once-a-month pickup in January. Before the virus started, 50 to 100 people came to the food and clothes pantry twice a month.

In the meantime, the church responds as best it can to urgent needs.

“People call in who need groceries … They are hungry,” Rhue said. “Grandparents who are raising grandchildren, a woman who has 10 people living in her small house, a man out-of-work due to COVID—we box up what is available, and they pick it up.”

Many of the individuals the church serves are elderly and at high risk of COVID-19. The volunteers and pastor seek to set a good example by wearing masks, maintaining social distancing and using hand sanitizer.

Need for more volunteers

Long-term, Sutton recognizes the church needs to expand its volunteer base.

“When I came as pastor 18 years ago, this was a younger congregation,” he said. “Today, many of our older workers have medical conditions that keep them from serving. We need workers to prepare food in advance, to help with those waiting in lines, and to prepare special packages for the homeless. And we need Christian men and women who can pray with the people.”

Volunteers from other churches in the area serve alongside members of Mayfield Park.

“We need workers who are compassionate and kind,” Sutton said. “We must remember that most of those who come are from the lowest economic group.”

Pastor Sutton is grateful for the support from the Texas Baptist Hunger Offering. With many families out of work due to COVID, more people need food.

Mayfield Park dedicates 1 percent of the church’s annual budget to the food ministry.

Quality clothes for job interviews

Other churches and individuals help by donating food and clothing.

Volunteer Sylvia Ledezma helps people find needed items in Mayfield Park Baptist Church’s clothes closet. Having the right clothes for a job interview often means employment, participants note. (Photo courtesy of Mayfield Park Baptist Church)

“Our people are so generous when it comes to keeping our clothes closet stocked,” Sutton said. “They donate ‘gently used clothing,’ and those who need these items are so grateful. These are usually high-quality and often the tags are still on.”

When people go in for a job interview, having the right clothing gives them a feeling of confidence, he noted.

The church also seeks to provide much-needed information to area residents, enlisting outside resource people to answer questions about Medicare, health insurance and prescription drugs and other health care issues.

Christian counseling also is making a difference in the lives of people in the Mayfield Park area. San Antonio is seeing more alcohol and drug abuse, domestic violence and unemployment during the pandemic, and mental health issues especially need attention in stressful times.

“God can turn around any situation,” Sutton said, citing Roman 8:28: “We know that all things work together for the good of those who love God … .”

Sharing God’s love

Some of those who seek counseling became acquainted with the church through its food pantry and clothes closet.

“Mayfield Park may be their only connection to a Christian environment.  We pray with them and share God’s love,” Sutton said.

Mayfield Park Baptist sponsors Celebrate Recovery, a Christ-centered recovery program consisting of a 12-step ministry dealing with “hurts, habits and hang-ups.” The group meets each Friday night, with childcare and a meal provided. Large-group and small-group sessions are planned for both men and women.
Each Monday evening, a men’s accountability group meets in Sutton’s office. Participants engage in confidential discussion of everyday issues in a supportive atmosphere.

In a real sense, Sutton is fulfilling his early desire to become a counselor and teacher, as well as following God’s call to the pastorate.

“I feel so blessed that God called me into the ministry,” he said.

Sutton added he hopes the example of Mayfield Park will inspire other churches to serve their communities—“to do something for Christ and his people.”

Carolyn Tomlin writes for the Christian market and teaches the Boot Camp for Christian Writers.

 


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