Putting friendship in a basket
“We are most fortunate to have neighbours like you.”
Pauline Levert
Special to Spur Ottawa
Public schools and religious institutions aren’t known for broad cross-collaboration. Gloucester Presbyterian Church and Roberta Bondar Public School, however, defy that trend. One initiative they work together on is to provide friendship baskets to needy families at the school.
“Everyone who comes in for a fellowship basket is just over the moon,” says Marnie Patterson, Principal at Roberta Bondar School.
This is the second year Gloucester Presbyterian has put the baskets together for the school. Patterson, who says she is deeply touched by the act of kindness, identifies families who are struggling and distributes them to the students’ parents.
“It brings tears of joy,” she says of the partnership. “These baskets make a huge impact on families, who are thrilled and very appreciative. The church minister came with a couple elders. It was wonderful to see the students say, ‘Thank you.’ Later, when parents come to pick up the baskets, I’m the one who gets the hugs from the parents. I’m the one who sees that impact.”
“My prayer is to break the barriers and to bridge the cross-culture so people know we care.”
Parents pick up the baskets because they are too big for students to bring home. The baskets contain fresh fruits and vegetables, cheese, biscuits, treats, and home baked goodies. They also include a note from the church and a gift certificate for Walmart.
“It’s an expression of God’s love for them,” explains Denise Allen-Macartney, Gloucester Presbyterian’s pastor. “My prayer is to break the barriers and to bridge the cross-culture so people know we care. As Jesus reminded us in the book of Matthew, ‘Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’”
Denise Allen-Macartney, Gloucester Presbyterian’s pastor, works very hard building bridges with the school. The church has a strong sense of mission to love and bless their neighbours in practical ways. The school is a special focus because it reaches families throughout the local community, but it is also Gloucester Presbyterian’s literal neighbour, right across the street.
“Our baskets remind families we care about them and that God cares.”
Geoff Matthews, a church elder, says, “It is both humbling and extremely satisfying to be able to make a difference, if only temporarily, in the lives of others, and to let them know of our support and of God’s love.”
Matthews led the friendship basket initiative.
“Obviously, our baskets cannot meet all their needs. But they can provide a time of happiness to the families that receive them and remind them we care about them and that God cares,” he says.
Patterson recently sent a thank you note to the church:
Dear Denise and Gloucester Church friends,
Four of our wonderful families started their Family Day long weekend with a gift of love today. Your generous friendship baskets not only create a sense of community and support for these families, but also a feeling that they are surrounded by a ‘circle of caring’ beyond Bondar.
I cannot thank you enough for your partnership and dedication to the wellbeing of families in our school community. Bondarians are most fortunate to have neighbours like you all.
Happy Family Day Weekend.
Proud Principal, Marnie Patterson
Similar Articles
Men’s ministries clean up nicely
Volunteers from Ottawa PointMen Ministry teamed up with members of Community Life Church to send two local neighbourhoods a message. The ministries coordinated a “soft entry” into what they hope will be an ongoing outreach into the community around […]
A noteworthy difference
Reaching into his backpack, Tom Affleck grabbed a pair of notebooks and pencils and gave them to the two girls in front of him. Little did he know this simple act of kindness would make attending school possible for them, for the first time. The […]
Feeling the burn
A new group is stoking the fires of worship and prayer in Ottawa, bringing believers together from across the city for extended “burns”. “We want to see God’s people on fire for Him and deeply in love with Him […]
Religious freedom summit inspires hope for Christians
Is the Gospel still welcome in Canada and how can the Church keep promoting the message of Jesus in the marketplace? Those are the questions being explored February 4, at a religious freedom summit hosted by the MET. “The Summit is an amazing opportunity to welcome […]
I was a stranger and you invited me in
When refugees come to Canada, they typically bring almost nothing with them. Various government and private sponsorship programs help provide housing and food security for the first year, but the process of integrating into society is challenging. Often refugees face dire poverty. That’s where […]
40 years of Bible study on Parliament Hill
Forty years ago, Christians started meeting weekly on Parliament Hill for prayer and biblical study. Today, called the Parliament Hill Christian Fellowship, it’s still going strong. “The people who first started meeting found […]