Category Archives: Jackets for Jesus

Serving the heart of Los Angeles since January 1, 1988. Our work with the urban poor and homeless. Weekly we provide hundreds of meals, jackets and time together every Sunday night on skidrow.

“A Message from The Lord”

man-who-got-ajs-shirt“I looked for a man among them who would build up the wall and stand before me in the gap on behalf of the land so I would not have to destroy it, but I found none.”                              Ezekiel 22:30

“It will not be how it was: the lowly will be exalted and the exalted will be brought low.”                                                     Ezekiel 21:26b

“What is thine occupation.”                                  Jonah 1:8

Sunday night on the streets, as we prepared to begin our work, a man approached and said God had sent him with a message for me.

I don’t like my routine being interrupted, people were waiting, I was obviously about other things – but here stood this nice looking man in his 30’s – clean – didn’t appear to be hungry or homeless and carrying a message from The Lord.

I hate being dismissive with people on the streets – so many already ignore them – plus this guy was dressed in what appeared to be a brand new gunny sack (I suspect a modern version of sackcloth) and had two beautiful Shofars (real rams horns used as horns to assemble God’s people in ancient times) hanging around his neck.

He caught my attention and I stopped to give him a moment.

He said I’d been violating the 4th commandment and God was unhappy with me. I confess, 10pm on a Sunday night I was thinking – 4th commandment… 4th commandment? – “Remember the Sabbath and keep it holy.”

Continuing, he told in as normal a way as a guy with sackcloth and rams horns on can be normal in the heart of Los Angeles, in the middle of the night, that he wasn’t a 7th Day Adventist or anything, God just had this message for me.

I listened as a long line of people patiently waited to be fed. I thanked him for sharing with me and invited him to eat. He said “I didn’t come to eat!” Now quite unhappy, but polite, “I came with a message for you from The Lord!” He implored me to read again Ezekiel 22 – I did – it talks some about the Sabbath. It was good to read again but probably not for the reasons he may have been hoping.

Needing to get the line started, I turned my back on him as I returned to my work and I did the single thing that’s stuck with me. I was dismissive.

It’s such an arrogant thing to do – no clue if he even heard me or caught it – simply said “Nice Shofars.” And got the line going with prayer.

Didn’t see him the rest of the evening. Don’t know that I ever will again. No clue if he just stumbled on our line, dressed for a Halloween party, and was an amazing actor or if he actually felt as if he was carrying a message from God for me.

We see so many unique and different people that I try not to let the moments keep me up.

But my comment “Nice Shofars,” maybe no problem as good natured ribbing between friends but just too dismissive with a total stranger, has stuck with me. It’s my attitude, more than any other message, that’s impacted me.

The Biblical prophets were easy people to dismiss as crackpots. They did and said some crazy stuff. But when we open our hearts to learn, to receive, God has lessons in the most chaotic of their words that can lift us even still.

Jonah was asked a simple questionWhat is thine occupation?” It’s a question we answer with our lives each day in our actions and behaviors.

The night ended with rain – a man came up to me wanting shoes – he had socks and sandals on – I suddenly regretted having worn my much loved desert boots and then thanked God when they were too small.

Another man had no shirt or shoes – he was wearing only Levis against the coming rain – I had an old Harbor Surf Shop jacket on that would have been perfect for him – but the kids got it for me at a garage sale… I hated to lose it. And while I was fretting over letting go of one of many jackets, AJ, one of our youngest workers had given him the shirt off his back – when he could have just ignored his great need.

We left the city with people sleeping on the sidewalk in the rain. I said to anyone who would listen in my car the same thing I always say “sleeping on the sidewalk, nowhere else to go, and nobody will even think to call 911.”

If it were my son or daughter on the street, in desperate need, with a storm coming I pray someone would see it as the emergency it is – the emergency we should all see when a brother or sister is down – and do whatever we could to help. At the very least be a society who calls 911 when someone is broken, cold, hungry and cast aside.

But it’s so much easier to be dismissive and walk on by…

I don’t have a word from The Lord for you, just a confession – I too know what it’s like to walk on by when what I really want to be is that one who would “stand in the gap.” To know and live my occupation in love.

The holidays are upon us. Let’s embrace our best selves, take an extra minute for someone in need and use these weeks to focus our lives on the blessings that are yet to happen in and through us instead of yesterday’s all too human failings. The ones we all share far too often.

We don’t have to wear sackcloth or carry big funny looking horns to be kind and loving. Kind and loving… that’s the kind of behavior God wants, that we were created for, and makes the world a warmer more wonderful place. You’re Invited!

Jackets for Jesus Christmas Party on the streets – the backpack party – is scheduled for Sunday night, December 18th. No money for backpacks yet. Trusting God to provide between now and Thanksgiving. Praying He uses you. I can’t wait to see what happens!

Jackets for Jesus – Thanksgiving 2001

November 24, 2001

He stood across the street – maybe fifty yards from where we were talking – waving his arm, calling her back.  She stood with us, I’ll call her Suzy, and in five minutes or less began to tell us her story.

The first time Suzy came through line was summer.  One warm evening, in the midst of our “regular” crowd came a group of young people that appeared to have fallen out of a punk rock concert gone horribly wrong.  Bodies covered with odd tattoos, faces lit up with smiles that reflected thousands of dollars of dental work as kids, they waited, some laughing, some, like Suzy, in dark silence, for a meal.  In her silence, Suzy stood out.  She wears her tattoos on her head and face.  They’re hard to miss.  When I talked to her, she had little to say, but the visual impact touched each of us.  She became more than a topic of conversation, we made it a point to keep an eye out for Suzy.  Counting the nights she was not in line – sharing bits of information gathered from those she was.  Something about Suzy, in the middle of the poverty we see weekly, touched us uniquely.

Now Suzy stood in front of us, short of breath, asking for a meal, a jacket, anything.  She was too late, everything was gone.  Another five minutes and she would have discovered an empty corner, under a street lamp that works sometimes, in front of a cathedral that’s been closed for years, windows missing, door’s boarded up, next to an empty lot with a deep hole in the ground where the original Union Rescue Mission once stood.  A corner that’s little more than a lonely spot of concrete in the darkness of the heart of LA.  Long since abandoned by traditional commerce and Christianity, Home to Jackets for Jesus every Sunday night for 13 years.  A corner of Hope to the tens of thousands of men and women living in poverty we have served in Jesus Name.  Suzy may have been hungry, she couldn’t weigh more than 90 pounds.  She had to have been cold, fog rolling through the high rises and into the city, she wearing only a threadbare t-shirt and cheap pair of jeans that fit poorly.  Now she was too late and about to face rejection, again.

Suzy, in her poverty, is unforgettable, a question waiting to be asked.  The hard question on the final of life we would all rather avoid.  With nothing left to offer I reached out and told her how much we cared- how we were concerned for her and kept her in our thoughts and prayers.  She lowered her proud eyes, shadowing her tattooed face, put her hand in her hair and whispered, “thanks.”  I didn’t need much of an opening, so when she spoke, I jumped right in and asked her to tell us her story.  What a bold question!  What audacity!  Imagine, a stranger you’ve only met several times embraces you then asks you to summarize your life in five minutes or less.  Who could do it?  Suzy did.  No time to think.  No outlines or notes to go by- thinking on the fly, she jumped right in.  We soon learned that her tattoos reflected a heart that cried out for God.  We were family, prodigals all, some just a little closer to the warmth and fellowship of society, all of us longing to be secure in the Healing Arms of The Father.

Suzy ran away from home at the age of eleven.  Now twenty, she has spent nine years on the streets of other states.  Skid row has been home for just three months.  She has no room, she sleeps in a parking lot, against a building, several blocks from our corner.  When she was fifteen she had her face tattooed with the marks of a warrior, to show that she is fearless.  Last year she found Christ.  She had a crown of thorns, tattooed on her brow, covering her upper face and encircling her head and upper neck.  She wanted God to know that she was ready to be a martyr for Jesus whenever He needed her.  She was obviously crying out to belong.

Looking into her eyes, no longer repelled or curious about the tattoos, I asked her if she was still serving Christ.  Tears stood on the brink of her eyelids, not hesitating to answer, still fearless as a warrior, she was direct and honest, “I still believe, but I’m not following Him.  There’s so much I need to repent for…”  My heart was breaking.  Her “boyfriend,” not skinny and emaciated, but apparently strong and well fed now began to wave his arm, to call

for her.  I shudder to think who he earns his money from.  Knowing our time was short, I reminded her that she could still call home, (not knowing if this were true or not), that God still loved her, (I’m certain about that), and that there was not better time than today, with Thanksgiving just days away.

Seemingly stunned for a moment, she hesitated to answer, than looking directly at our small group she asked, “What day is it?”  I felt as if someone had knocked the breath out of me.  There in the darkness twenty five years rolled away and I remembered living in the far country.  I remembered asking a stranger what day it was…  my heart went out to Suzy.  She was disconnected from family, from God, from time.  We would celebrate Thanksgiving in warmth, wealth and comfort.  Suzy didn’t know it was Thanksgiving.

Now angry, the man waiting for her made it clear she’d better move- fear was in her eyes.  Reaching out, I asked if she would do me a favor- she stopped – how many men must have pushed this young girl around over the years for “favors” – “Can we pray for you?”  “I can’t now- I’ve got to go.”  “Not now, but this week, we care about you, can I keep you in my prayers?”  “Yeah, yeah… that would be ok.”  Then I asked her what I always try to ask for from the people on the streets I pray for, “Will you remember to pray for me, my name is Eric…” by now she was in the middle of the street, she stopped and looked back,  “that’s Eric, will you pray for me?”  “Sure.  Okay.”  And she was gone.

This week as we prepared to feed over six hundred people on Thanksgiving through Central Community, with each meal I prayed for Suzy.  As I sat down to eat with strangers and discovered one of them was a man we had given a ride home from the streets late one night, I praised God for the miracle that drew us together again and wondered where Suzy was spending Thanksgiving.  As my twenty year old daughter and I put our turkey in the oven late Wednesday night I praised God for her safety and prayed that Suzy might be safe as well.  Sharing in the wealth, security and comfort that our family enjoys at Thanksgiving my heart broke for the certain loneliness, poverty and insecurity that Suzy experiences daily.  And I hoped that she was praying for me.  That somehow she would begin to take her first steps towards Home, if not for herself, as a lonely warrior for another.  I could never have survived all she’s endured.  The least and the most I can do is pray.  Will you join me in praying for Suzy today.  She’s not lost to Our Father.  He knows right where she is – He knows what time it is in her life today – His heart is breaking for her and all the other Suzy’s living in poverty.

Corners of hope, it’s a good thing to offer the many who are still lost in darkness.  There are bigger works to support with your prayers, work and finances, however, there are very few that are reaching out to Suzy, that even know she’s on our streets and looking for hope.  Christmas is coming.  My prayer is that Suzy is serving Jesus this Christmas and that she has the opportunity to celebrate His birth with people who will love and care for her in His Name.  You can help.  Will you join me in praying for Suzy?  It’s easy to point a finger in judgment, a little more difficult to humble ourselves and remember that we too once wandered in the far country.  That though our children may not have run off and put tattoos on their faces that still their hearts carry scars and they are often lonely.  Healing and The Way Home begins when we reach out to another in love and then leave them with Jesus.  He wore the only crown of thorns that counts.  He’s The Warrior who still calls us to battle for the hearts and spirits of every Suzy.  He’s The Light that never goes out on the corner of Hope we call Home.  He’s The Reason we go to the streets every Sunday night.  You’re an important part of the team.

Thanks so much for all you do.  Set a little aside for our Christmas party on the streets this year.  It will be December 23, (the Sunday night before Christmas day), you’re invited to join us.  Don’t forget to pray for Jackets for Jesus.  Don’t forget to pray for Suzy.

for changing lives,

Eric M. Denton

Time Away

John and Kayaks at LaJolla

It’s been far too long… but we use to schedule 2 or 3 days off every few months or so just to get away.  Don’t do it much anymore- but I still highly recommend it.  Even when we couldn’t afford it and stuck it on a credit card- it helped us, emotionally, through some of life’s challenges we all face.  Think I can safely say we miss it… I’m guessing our adult children do as well.

When the kids were little- we alternated between places and times where we’d take the kids with us: skiing, to the beach for a couple of days, etc… to when it would just be the two of us and we’d have a gracious friend stay with the kids.  One of our favorite getaways was Aliso Creek- familiar surroundings –golf, we golfed together, -and the ocean… hard not to find a little rest and healing with beach, water, waves and a gentle evening breeze.

That’s our son John- 18 or so –in front of La Jolla Shores,one of our all time favorite get away spots, surrounded by our kayak and fishing gear.  Think Debi and I had taken a break and John visited us from nearby Point Loma Nazarene University… Don’t remember if we caught fish- rigged those boats to catch big game…and mostly just got an incredible work out from them: garage to truck, up onto racks, strapping them down, everything into the truck, then assembling the things in the dark on the sand, paddling for miles- literally –with a gps, fish finder, carrying live bait… then paddling miles back in – the whole process in reverse back to Riverside with a good wash down before returning everything to the garage! 

And I RAN- in the dark -each morning before doing that.  Now it wears me out just writing about it!  What a difference a decade makes.

Taking a rare break from Jackets for Jesus tonight.  I’m still sick, and didn’t want to infect a couple hundred guys on the streets.  Instead I’m doing what each of us- those who’ve served together on the streets for years –does when the rare night comes that we’re not all together.  I’ve watched the clock and prayed.  They’re getting ready to leave the church, they’re at McDonald’s, now they should be getting started and serving, they’re on their way home… soon they should be getting to the church- provided the van didn’t break down… and I can’t sleep… because I’m not where I know I belong; with them.

Belonging- it’s why Debi and I use to take an occasional Monday through Wednesday away together… -it’s why we took our kids to all the places we’ve been and the spots they fell in love with… -and it’s why a simple picture like this makes me smile: I belong… we belong.

Kayaking, surfing, running, sailing, cycling, fishing… the list is long but it’s not about doing, it’s about belonging- someplace – having a community that we can relate to and with – it’s essential to who we are as people- it’s why we write, why we’re on fb- we long for intimacy, the knowledge that we belong- it’s our deepest quest and at The Heart of what we were created for – we belong together.

Missed being with the team because I was sick.  Gave me the opportunity to think of each of them by name.  To remember just how much they mean to me and how thankful I am to belong.  Also reminded me that I probably ought to take Debi away for a couple of days once I’m feeling better.  Just might even invite the kids and the grandkids!

We belong together.