Sam Adams was the first openly gay mayor in a major U.S. city. Kevin Palau is the son of evangelist Luis Palau. Their worldviews are miles apart yet Kevin Palau befriended Adams and they remain friends to this day. That might seem like an unlikely friendship but that's what Kevin Palau believes to be a symptom of a Christian simply following Jesus' command to love. And the love didn't stop there. Unlikely is the story of Kevin Palau's friendship with Sam Adams, and how Palau and thousands of other Christians around the Portland metropolitan area partnered (and continue to partner) with Portland political leaders, school officials, the LGBT community, and many others to "seek the welfare of the city" of Portland. (Jeremiah 29:4-7)
One of many examples Palau offers is the story of Roosevelt High School. After the Crips and Bloods moved into the neighborhood the school was impacted by shootings, drugs, and other gang associated problems. Most people simply moved away. By 2008 Roosevelt, a high school designed for 1,600, had a student population of 450. The facility was dilapidated. The football team lost every game they played--for five years in a row--by an average of 46 points. It was the last place anyone would want their kids to attend. Then Southlake church got involved. They mobilized more than 1,000 volunteers, and painters, and landscapers, and logistical support. In one weekend the congregation of Southlake performed a major makeover on the Roosevelt facility. But it didn't end there. The Christians from Southlake continued to invest in Roosevelt, and not just the facility, but they invest in the lives of the students too. The partnership became so strong that the principal of Roosevelt High School invited the Southlake church volunteer coordinator to set up an office there at the school and to serve as the Roosevelt High School on-site volunteer coordinator. One Southlake church member, Neil Lomax, happens to be a former NFL quarterback. And he decided to take a position as the football team's offensive coordinator (during a time when his own son played at another Portland area high school). Lomax and others turned the football team around: they even made the state playoffs. But it's not just the football team that turned around. The whole school is headed in a great direction as a result of the involvement of Southlake church and others.
What happened at Roosevelt turned out to be catching. As of 2014 there are more than 250 official church-school partnerships. And Palau writes of many other way's in which Christians are impacting the people of Portland including engagement in helping victims of the sex trade, engagement in the foster care system, medical clinics, prisoner reentry programs, and gang violence prevention.
I'm just touching on Palau's message. The book is filled with compelling stories. There's the story of the surprising unity among the churches of Portland. The story of the Seven project, an annual seven day period when Christians fast and pray for Portland. And the story of similar movements happening in other major cities around the world including New York, Houston, Sacramento, and Denver.
All this, according to Kevin Palau, is the result of taking the model of Jesus' life seriously:
“Jesus lived a life of radical inclusiveness, having ‘table fellowship’ with those far outside what would have been socially and religiously acceptable for a rabbi of his day. ...Mary Magdalene, a woman known to be loose, spending money on expensive perfume and pouring it on his feet? Enjoying parties with tax collectors and other collaborators with Rome? They were all way out of bounds in his day. And of course he heard about it from the religious establishment.
"What about the time he spent hours alone (in a visible public place) with a heretical woman who turned out to be a serial adulterer? Jesus later told an infuriating story in praise of this same heretical bunch. Most Americans know it as the story of the Good Samaritan." (Palau)
When Palau and other Christians reached out to Sam Adams and others in the spirit of Jesus Christ, an unlikely story resulted. It's a story that challenged me as a Christian--a Christian who, like many of us living in the information age, often attempts to impact the world from his keyboard. It's a story that inspired me to follow Christ differently, to follow him in a way that includes engaging people in my community at a deeper level. It's one of the most unlikely, uplifting, and fascinating stories I've read in years. And it's a story you'll want to read too.