HOUSTON
CHRONICLE ARCHIVES
Paper:
HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Date: THU 08/17/95
Section: a
Page: 34
Edition: 3 STAR
Sanctuary for the
homeless/Methodist church offers breakfast, showers, medical care
By JAMES ROBINSON
Staff
Daybreak is the appropriate name for a new homeless service
because that is when the homeless make their way to the former
parsonage of St. John's United Methodist Church.
In the modest frame house, nestled between the Pierce Elevated
and the church itself on Crawford in downtown Houston, about 35
homeless people find breakfast, showers, laundry facilities and
medical care each day.
The program is run and funded by the church, whose membership
has grown in three years from nine members to 1,100, said
associate pastor Rudy Rasmus .
The program's patrons may have spent the previous night in a
shelter, but chances are they bedded on a sidewalk.
That was the case Wednesday, the program's official opening,
with Joel de la Garza, 29, who said he's been homeless for about
two months.
"I was supposed to be at the Star of Hope (shelter), but
they were full," he said.
Antonio Evans slept outside Star of Hope for two months, but
he's since found a place to live and a part-time job at Daybreak
in charge of the laundry and shower facilities.
Now he's going back to get his GED and is receiving tutoring
from the church.
Rasmus said his church's congregation dwindled because of the
suburbanizing force that caused downtown to decline.
But now the church has "embraced a vision to meet the
needs of the homeless without physical houses and the homeless
without church houses," he said.
About 20 percent of the congregation is or has been homeless,
Rasmus said, and others come from as far as Katy and The
Woodlands.
"They have a certain sensibility to urban life and find
themselves comfortable with this church and this
environment," he said.
The parsonage was repaired with a $30,000 donation from
Memorial Drive United Methodist Church.
Operations are funded by St. John's collection plate, Rasmus
said.