Pastors

Holy Crime Fighters

Pastors become newest action heroes.

Hunger Striker

Tired of the sex shops, drugs, and crime in his neighborhood, Roger Huang decided to get city leaders’ attention. He sat outside city hall 33 days on a hunger strike.

Huang runs the San Francisco Rescue Mission in the Tenderloin district, so named for its rough character. At least 48 liquor stores and 14 porn shops do business in the 35-block neighborhood. Some 10,000 homeless people pass through the neighborhood each night. With three major crimes per hour, Tenderloin averages two crimes per resident per year.

Huang was employed in the neighborhood in 1985 when he felt led to minister there. Leaving work one day, he found his car had a flat tire. While waiting for a tow truck, Huang watched a group of teens pick on a younger boy, and he wondered what he would do if it were his son. For the next eight years, Huang worked two jobs to support the mission. Huang also started a Christian school.

Huang’s hunger strike impressed the city hall crowd. Mayor Gavin Newsom initiated a “scrubdown”: the police department assigned more officers to walk the streets to detain those suspected of drug-related activity. The public works department ordered more street sweepers and sidewalk steamers to clean up. One city supervisor is considering a limit on liquor licenses, and another introduced legislation to prohibit new strip clubs and porn shops within 1,000 feet of schools, playgrounds, and daycare centers.

Huang ended his hunger strike after 33 days when he felt the city had made enough progress.

Anti-porn Outreach

Jim Norwood of Kennedale, Texas, found an unorthodox way to encourage people to attend his church while fighting pornography in his town. The pastor of Oakcrest Family Church began taking photos of cars parked at a nearby porn shop. He then sent the pictures to the owners’ homes. Included was a note saying, “Observed you in the neighborhood. Didn’t know if you were aware there is a church in the area.”

On the back of the postcard is a church schedule and a list of its sexual addiction classes. So far, five people have showed up for church after receiving a postcard.

Norwood serves as a counselor for sex offenders in the local jail. He was recently elected mayor on an anti-porn platform.

Complied by Rob Moll with information from the San Francisco Chronicle, Fort Worth Star Telegram, Baptist Press, and Fox News

Be careful what you reveal when praying for the sick. A Cleveland, Ohio minister sued his church for posting his health information on their website—and won.

His suit involved the new Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), the same law that requires you to sign disclosure forms at the doctor’s office. After a long absence, the church said, their music minister was to return following treatment for bi-polar illness. The posting “included information in a way that would be highly offensive to the ordinary person,” Richard Hammar, publisher of Church Law & Tax Report, told the Washington Post.

The United Methodist Church cited the case in a 13-page memorandum. Although in most cases HIPAA does not affect churches, the memo recommends getting consent before announcing someone’s medical information. And, the UMC guideline says, err on the side of discretion by not providing more information than necessary.

Government officials say those churches are overreacting; the law was designed for health insurance companies, not congregations.

The music minister resigned and is working at another church.

Prayer Request Lawsuit


with information from Dallas Morning News and the United Methodist Church

Copyright © 2004 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal. Click here for reprint information onLeadership Journal.

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