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Child Welfare

Ministry Spotlight: Safe Families for Children

As we continue sharing resources during Child Abuse Awareness Month, we want to highlight the work of another one of our incredible ministry partners, Safe Families for Children.

Safe Families for Children is a national movement of compassion that gives hope to families in crisis by providing temporary care for children and relational support that helps families move toward stability.

The three goals of Safe Families are child abuse prevention, child welfare (foster care) deflection, and family support and stabilization. In St. Charles County, most of the families served are facing homelessness or other significant hardships such as job loss or hospitalization. Volunteer host families provide temporary homes for children while parents navigate these difficult circumstances. Alongside hosting children in their homes, volunteers help expand a family’s circle of support through relational care and practical connection. Safe Families believes everyone should have a community of support in times of crisis.

Historically, in the Greater St. Louis area, 98% of parents who use Safe Families services have their children returned to them and avoid foster care. Many families also remain connected with their host families long-term, forming ongoing relationships that function as an extended family. Host families themselves often share that their own lives have been deeply impacted as they serve. Safe Families creates connections between people who may have never met otherwise and brings awareness to the realities of poverty.

There are several meaningful ways the community can support this work and serve families in crisis.

Host Families temporarily welcome children into their home while a parent works through a crisis. The average stay is 2–4 weeks. The approval process includes an application, references, background checks, including fingerprinting, online training, and a home safety assessment.

Family Friends support both host families and parents by offering help such as babysitting, transportation, mentoring, assistance with resources, or simply being a consistent, supportive presence. The approval process includes an application, references, background checks including fingerprinting, online training, and an interview.

Resource Friends provide tangible support such as diapers, meals, clothing, and other needed items for families in crisis.

There is an upcoming Info Meeting via Zoom on May 7th at 7 pm for those who would like to learn more about Safe Families and ways to get involved. Register for the info meeting by clicking this link.
https://bethany.org/locations/us/mo/st-louis/events/sffc-info-meeting-5-7-26-5-7-2026

To learn more or get involved, visit:
bethany.org/sffc

https://www.facebook.com/sffcStLouis

Please also keep Safe Families and the children and families they serve in your prayers this month.

Blog written by Christina Bollinger

Local Outreach Communications Volunteers

Community Partner Spotlight: Child Advocacy Center of Northeast Missouri

Pack A Pack 2025 Season has begun!

Our Harvester family always looks forward to Pack A Pack season. This is an annual initiative where Harvester Christians intentionally pray over our local school children whose families struggle to purchase all the school supplies required to help their child experience success in the classroom.

This year, we have a goal of 900 packed backpacks. These backpacks will go to the Boys and Girls Clubs of St Charles County, families at schools right in our backyard, as well as our inaugural Good Neighbor Market where local families will come to the church for a storefront experience to “shop” for their child’s school supplies (more to come on this.)

For now, we need Harvester Christians to pray, shop, share, and serve during this initiative. Below is the generic shopping list you can use to buy 1 item, collect a few others from neighbors, or maybe you will choose to fill a whole backpack. You can drop these supplies in the worship lobby on Sundays. Don’t delay, though! Our first delivery of backpacks is Thursday, July 17! 

Elementary backpacks

  • 1 sturdy book bag
  • 2 plastic folders with pockets and prongs in different colors
  • 1 pencil box
  • 1 wide ruled notebook
  • 2 glue sticks
  • 1 pack of 24-count crayons
  • 1 scissors
  • 1 pack of 12 markers
  • 10   #2 pencils
  • 1 ruler
  • 1 water bottle

Middle/High School backpacks

  • 1 sturdy book bag
  •  5 plastic folders with pockets and prongs in different colors
  •  1 pencil pouch
  •  3 college-ruled notebooks in different colors
  • 10 #2 pencils
  • 2 three three-ring binders
  • 3 highlighters
  •  10 blue or black in pens
  • 1 ruler
  • 1 pack of colored pencils
  • 1 pack of loose-leaf college ruled paper
  • 1 calculator
  • 1 water bottle

 

You can also use our Amazon wish list to choose your donated items and have them sent directly to Harvester St Charles.

April 2025 Newsletter

New Life in Christ: A Season of Baptism and Service

Spring is a season of renewal, a time when we can usually shake off any worries of bleak winter days and look forward to days that just burst with vibrant new life. It is so wonderful to be able to celebrate Easter in this season—the ultimate reminder that Jesus conquered death and offers us new life in Him. At Harvester Christian Church, we see this truth come alive in so many ways, but few are as powerful as witnessing baptisms during this time of year.

Baptism is a public declaration of faith, a moment when someone steps into the water to proclaim that they are leaving behind their old life and stepping into a new life with Christ. Romans 6:4 says, “We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life.” This new life is not just about our own salvation—it calls us into something greater: a life of service, generosity, and love for others.

Volunteer Job Description: Family Friend

Volunteer Job Description: Family Friend

Purpose:

  • Ephesians 4:11-12: “So Christ himself gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the pastors and teachers, to equip his people for works of service, so that the body of Christ may be built up.”
  • Harvester Christian Church is dedicated to caring for the least of these. One of the ways we do this is by providing support and encouragement to Harvester Christians who have made the decision to be Safe Families, Foster Families, or Adoptive Families. Safe Family Friends play a crucial role in encouraging and strengthening these families through various means of support.

Key Responsibilities:

Prayer Support: Commit to praying regularly for Safe Families, Foster Families, and Adoptive Families within the Harvester community.

Practical Support: Provide practical assistance such as:

  • Dropping off diapers or essential supplies.
  • Preparing and delivering occasional meals.
  • Offering babysitting services for a few hours to give parents a break.
  • Providing transportation to appointments or school.

Emotional Support: Offer encouragement and a listening ear to families, providing a sense of community and understanding.

Flexible Assistance: Be available for other support tasks as needed, ensuring families feel supported and valued.

 

Qualifications:

  • Commitment to the mission and values of Harvester Christian Church through membership.
  • Completion of Belong and/or Discover Harvester class (highly recommended, though not required).
  • A heart for serving and supporting Safe Families host families, foster or adoptive families in need.
  • Strong communication and interpersonal skills.
  • Ability to handle sensitive situations with confidentiality and compassion.

 Time Commitment:

  • Flexible and variable based on the needs of the families and the availability of the volunteer.
  • Regular check-ins with the Safe Family/Foster/Adopt Crew Leader to ensure families’ needs are being met effectively.

Training and Support:

  • Initial orientation and training will be provided to familiarize volunteers with the role and responsibilities.
  • Complete Core Training and Sexual Abuse Prevention Training through Safe Families for Children
  • Ongoing support and resources will be available through Harvester Christian Church.

Benefits:

Spiritual Growth: Deepen your faith through acts of service and prayer, fulfilling the call to love and support others as Christ loves us.

Community Connection: Build meaningful relationships with other volunteers and families within the Harvester Christian Church community.

Personal Fulfillment: Experience the joy and satisfaction that comes from making a positive impact on families who are caring for children in need.

Skill Development: Enhance your skills in areas such as caregiving, communication, and organization.

Flexibility: Enjoy a role that offers flexible hours and tasks that can fit into your personal schedule.

 

Reporting To: Crew Leader for Safe Families/Foster/Adopt

By serving as a Family Friend, you will be making a tangible difference in the lives of families who have opened their hearts and homes to children in need. Your support, whether through prayer, practical assistance, or emotional encouragement, helps to build up the body of Christ and strengthens our community.

 

Contact:

For more information or to sign up, please contact

Carissa Figgins

Local Outreach Pastor

cfiggins@harvester.cc

 

Local Outreach Ministry Partner Spotlight: Joni & Friends

This is one of my favorite times of the year. We ask each of our Local Outreach partners to send brief impact reports back to us. This allows us to glimpse what God is doing to unleash hope in our community through your generous Give Hope gifts. This week we are spotlighting our ministry partners Joni & Friends.  Be sure not to skip over the success story section!

The Good Neighbor.

In Luke 10, we read a story that we have heard since we were kids, the Good Samaritan. It is a story that can encompass a lot of lessons learned throughout life. If you haven’t read the story or maybe haven’t read it as an adult…..take a moment to read it: 

 

” And behold, a lawyer stood up to put him to the test, saying, “Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?” He said to him, “What is written in the Law? How do you read it?” And he answered, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind, and your neighbor as yourself.” And he said to him, “You have answered correctly; do this, and you will live.”  But he, desiring to justify himself, said to Jesus, “And who is my neighbor?” Jesus replied, “A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and he fell among robbers, who stripped him and beat him and departed, leaving him half dead. Now by chance a priest was going down that road, and when he saw him he passed by on the other side. So likewise a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side. But a Samaritan, as he journeyed, came to where he was, and when he saw him, he had compassion. He went to him and bound up his wounds, pouring on oil and wine. Then he set him on his own animal and brought him to an inn and took care of him. And the next day he took out two denarii and gave them to the innkeeper, saying, ‘Take care of him, and whatever more you spend, I will repay you when I come back.’ Which of these three, do you think, proved to be a neighbor to the man who fell among the robbers?” He said, “The one who showed him mercy.” And Jesus said to him, “You go, and do likewise.”  – Luke 10:25-37

 

It’s a fascinating story when you really dig into the content. First off, Jesus, being a master story/parable communicator, finds a man that is looking to catch him off guard and/or trick him into saying something that the Pharisee’s could use to arrest him, so Jesus uses a story to answer his question. Secondly, the content of the story revealed a glaring piece to not only the social status/structure, but also the image that some of these people that everyone would have known, had to the public. Lastly, Jesus uses a kind of a dark horse character in the end to illustrate the point of the story. 

 

This story, as much as it is about Jesus teaching about the two greatest commandments of the 10, but he also calls those that follow Him, to a goal in life: 

 

to be The Good Neighbor. 

 

That might look different for all of us. It might literally mean the person that lives right next store to you, in all reality those neighbors should be on your heart all the time, but it could also be someone that lives around the corner or up the street or around the block or in a different apartment building. It could be someone that lives in a completely different area. 

 

The thing about this story Jesus tells, is that it is in a random spot on the side of a dangerous road where this outside of the time, shows what it means to really show mercy to someone. The Good Samaritan in this case, was  The Good Neighbor. 

 

The question of our day, is will you be The Good Neighbor? 

 

John 13, gives us another example of what Jesus means by loving and being a good neighbor. In the upper room, before passover we see Jesus take the place of a servant, by bending down with a basin or water and a towel to wash his disciples feet. This was the role of typically a servant of the house to clean the guest’s feet, not the person sitting at the head of the table. But Jesus does this and then he looks at his disciples and says: 

 

When he had washed their feet and put on his outer garments and resumed his place, he said to them, “Do you understand what I have done to you? You call me Teacher and Lord, and you are right, for so I am. If I then, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet. For I have given you an example, that you also should do just as I have done to you. Truly, truly, I say to you, a servant is not greater than his master, nor is a messenger greater than the one who sent him. If you know these things, blessed are you if you do them. ” – John 13:12-17

 

Even as Lord and Teacher and Rabbi and Messiah and King….Jesus showed us what it means to be The Good Neighbor. 

 

A few moments later, Jesus also commands his disciples to love one another and those around you just like Jesus loves them and that BY THAT LOVE SHOWN, people will know you are disciple of Jesus. 

 

As people, we have a hard time looking past our own situations and problems and seasons and tasks and home to-do lists and schedules and the rest of the things that keep us bogged down. What if as a group of people that love and follow Jesus, we look to be The Good Neighbor? Not just to our own neighborhood, but the one’s that need their lawns mowed or that need help moving or need help with getting a dresser up some stairs?? 

 

We have the ability and the time, we just need to think about re-prioritizing that time. 

 

If you would like to stay in touch with our Local Outreach opportunities BE THE GOOD NEIGHBORclick that link, it might bring you an experience that you don’t expect. 

 

When we allow God to work in our lives and then also through our lives……we can also be The Good Neighbor. 

2024 Pack A Pack School Supply Lists

Middle & High School Backpacks

  • Plain Backpack (neutral, gray, black, navy)-1

Main Pocket of Backpack

  • Binder -1
  • Spiral bound, 70-sheet, college ruled notebooks-3
  • Pocket folders-5
  • Water bottle -1

Middle pocket of backpack:

  • 12 pack of pencils-1
  • 12 pack of colored pencils-1
  • 8 pack of black pens-1
  • Pencil pouch-1
  • Calculator-1
  • 100 pack of index cards-1

 

Small front of backpack– leave empty

Top loop of backpack: hook on green tag to designate as middle/highschool

 

  • Backpack 1

Main pocket of backpack

  • Spiral bound 7- sheet wide ruled notebooks-3
  • Pocket folders-5
  • Water bottle-1

Middle pocket of backpack

  • 12 pack of #2 pencils-1
  • 1 Pack of markers-1
  • 24 pack of crayons-1
  • Pencil pouch-1
  • Glue sticks-2 (insert into pencil pouch)
  • Scissors-2 (insert into pencil pouch)

Small front pocket of backpack leave empty

Top loop of backpack: hook on a tag: yellow to designate elementary

 

 

Give Hope Ministry Partner Spotlight: The Sparrow’s Nest

We unleash hope in our community through generosity and justice. One way God provides the opportunity to do that is through local ministry partners such as The Sparrow’s Nest. I recently asked for and received The Sparrow’s Nest Give Hope Impact Report. I thought this would be very useful information to share with you as you continue to pray over Give Hope and as you look for opportunities to consistently serve in our community.

The mission of The Sparrow’s Nest is to embrace the God-given dignity of all human life by empowering young families with resources to realize their full potential. They fulfill this mission by coming alongside young families with the love of Christ to educate, equip, and empower both the parent and the child. Through their innovative childcare cooperative families enrolled in their program will receive free childcare, mentorship, and case management to reach their family goals. They also have access to a resource closet and pregnancy help.

What is one specific way Harvester Christian Church’s GIVE HOPE contributions have unleashed hope in your organization or to the community through your organization?
GIVE HOPE has allowed The Sparrow’s Nest to
1. Remain open in a time of transition while we were going through the very lengthy process of acquiring licensing to become a child care cooperative.
2. Plan for our future. We KNOW we need to purchase/lease a larger facility. We are currently serving the maximum number of children we are licensed to provide care for, 5. We currently have 7 children on our waitlist. We have had to turn away over 120 children who could not wait for a spot to open up.
Please share a brief client-success or services-success story we can share with Harvester Christian Church.
“Words can not express the thanks my family has to each and every staff member as well as volunteers at Sparrows Nest who have become a part of our family. As a parent, I trust Sparrows Nest with my greatest blessing and I am thankful for all the love, attention, and guidance that my son receives as well as myself. I have received nothing but the utmost respect and care. Sparrows Nest genuinely cares about my family and not just our current situation but the future. I feel like Sparrows Nest is a family always willing to help in any way they can. I have no worries when my son is there which is the greatest peace of mind any parent can ask for when you have to work to provide for your family. If I have a need they have multiple solutions to assist us, I never feel alone in this journey thanks to the amazing staff at Sparrows Nest.”
Where is God leading The Sparrow’s Nest in the future? 
Our goal is to be in a much larger facility in the very near future. We will continue to not charge the families who participate in our programming and will remain donor-funded. The estimated cost of this project depends on the type and size of the facility we are able to move into and the amount of staff that will be required to care for the children. If we were able to accommodate 50 children that could require we hire up to 10 childcare providers depending on how many kiddos are in the different age groups.
What existing volunteer needs can we share with Harvester Christians?
We are looking for volunteers for a donor appreciation event on June 27. Volunteer information can be found here ==>https://thesparrowsneststl.org/volunteers/
*Lance Rogers, a Harvester Christian currently serves as the board president for The Sparrow’s Nest. Harvester Christians routinely serve in The Resource Closet as well as maintaining the grounds.)
How can we pray for your organization, staff, volunteers, clients, and community your organization serves?
Please pray that we are able to secure the funding required to grow the organization. We know that the need we are filling a critical need of so many families. Please pray that our state legislators pass legislation for the child care tax credit.

Faith without works, is dead

 

“What good is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith but does not have works? Can that faith save him? If a brother or sister is poorly clothed and lacking in daily food, and one of you say to them, “Go in peace, be warmed and filled”, without giving them the things needed for the body, what good is that? So also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead.”

– James 2:14-17

 

Serving others, out of a humble heart, is not an easy choice that not everyone will make. 

 

In the church, we talk about serving all of the time. And to be honest, we have too. Serving is of vital importance to every church’s existence and operational ability. The church was not created to be a paid enterprise organization that is able to pay every single person that changes a diaper or leads a small group. As crazy as it sounds, the church was created to be a vessel of people that would pour into the people around them and inside the walls of the church building to be able to lead those to knowing and following Jesus.

 

There is one thing about learning about God from an academic stand point, but it is something completely different when it comes to following Jesus’ example of life here on earth.

 

When we see the disciples, which eventually become Apostles in the book of Acts, get called by Jesus, very early on we see the disciples both learning things and unlearning things. The disciples are learning from Jesus about what life could look like and unlearning what they have been taught since they were kids. Jesus also takes the moments to send his disciples out, very often, the disciples are sent out to serve and to preach the good news of Jesus.

 

You see when you begin to follow Jesus, and become his disciple, we find that serving is intertwined with your faith and your deepening understanding of who Jesus is for us and through us.

 

The problem we all face, is that serving has become somewhat of a ‘glamour’ seeking endeavor. Serving has been distorted to be into something that we can brag about. If you read Thought #8, you may be thinking, this sounds a whole lot like hospitality, well because serving and hospitality go hand in hand with our discipleship to Jesus.

You see as we get closer to Jesus, we see that Jesus had a natural rhythm to life that we can emulate. It may not be as deep or as perfect as Jesus’, which is no surprise, it can be lived out in a daily way.

 

” ………….But it shall not be so among you. But whoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be slave of all. For even the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.” – Mark 10:43-45

 

Serving is not about your ability to brag about where you serve or how many people you serve. Serving is about the love you have for Jesus overflowing out of our hearts towards others. It could look like this:

 

Having a meal with family friends that don’t know Jesus. (hospitality)

 

Planning a VBS while on a mission trip in Ethiopia. (serving)

 

Wiping the nose of an upset 3 year old at church in the middle of the summer. (serving)

 

Stopping to listen to a hurting friend or coworker. (hospitality)

 

Cleaning the bathrooms at a church that doesn’t have anyone to clean the church on a regular basis. (serving)

 

Reaching out to your neighbor about the doctors appointment they had. (hospitality)

 

Could it be hauling furniture from The Sharing Shed to a family in our community? (serving)

 

As our love for Jesus grows, our hearts for hospitality and serving increase.

 

There is a forward-facing part of serving and hospitality that is undeniable and very real.

 

When we serve someone or a group of people, there is a very real and undeniable focus put on you and the same goes for when you show hospitality to someone or a group. As Christians, we are called to go and make disciples of all nations, of anyone that will listen and accept the good news of Jesus and to lead them to following Jesus and his commands. Which means we will be looked at and unfortunately, potentially judged for our actions.

 

Jesus gave us a new command in John 13 by saying ” we must love one another, like I have loved you…..BY THIS, all people will know you are my DISCIPLES.” – John 13:34 & 35

 

Then again in John 17, Jesus says ” I do not ask that you take them out of the world, but that you keep them from the evil one. They are not of this world, just as I am not of the world. Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth. As you sent me into the world, so I have sent them into the world…..I do not ask this for these only, but also for those who WILL believe in me through their word, that they may be one just as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also may in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me….” – John 17:15-21

 

To James’ point, can we have faith with out works….yes but it doesn’t mean much. On the flip side of that, can we just serve others with out the faith behind it….sure but that also doesn’t mean much because there is nothing attached to the deed. Sure you could be looked at a good person, but in the discourse of salvation, serving to check a box on a to-do list, doesn’t lead to being a disciple of Jesus.

 

Serving should first and foremost always come from the outpour of love that Jesus has given you and now you attempt to give to others.

 

As much as bible study and worship and small groups and prayer and silence and solitude are important to your discipleship with Jesus, if we neglect to serve also, then we are missing the whole picture of being a disciple of Jesus.

 

The question then is, where will you serve to be able to breath the life and love of Jesus out to others?

 

If you are reading this and are not serving, here is a painted picture worth thinking about: 

 

Here at Harvester Christian Church, there are hundreds of places you can serve…….hundreds really. 

 

Recently I asked just some of the ministries around HCC, what kind of volunteer numbers could they use right now…….150…..Meaning, we could use 150 more people to come and serve the church and the guests that are coming to church each and every week and month. 

 

That number gets even larger when asked what would a dream number of volunteers be….one ministry said 200, another said 270!! 

 

Imagine the kingdom impact we could make as a church if we all took one opportunity to serve in some way….what would it look like, what would it feel like, how would you be used to impact someone else’s life? 

 

Can I challenge you…..take a moment and think about where you would want to serve, just TWO TIMES…what ministry would be it, how would you be serving? 

 

Could it be that you want to help guests find a parking spot with our parking team? 

Could it be opening a door for one of our disabled guests that struggle to open the door themselves? 

Could it be serving behind the cafe counter helping our guests with some donuts to make the environment of Sunday morning warm and welcoming? 

Could it be holding a crying baby until they fall asleep in your arms so that the parents can go and worship? 

Could it be leading a small group of 2nd graders to help them understand how much God loves them? 

Could it be flipping switches on our tech team in that back where if we didn’t have people, our services wouldn’t happen? 

Could it be having conversation with our online guests to welcome them and help them have the best online experience they can? 

Could it be helping a new family walk from Guest Central to Kids Check in to help them feel calm and welcomed as they bring their kids to Harvester Kids? 

 

There are so many opportunities for you to step out, in faith, and serve those coming to Harvester Christian Church.

 

The question is, will you? 

 

If you are interested, let us know or join us for Discover Harvester on June 9th, here is a link – Discover Harvester – 

April 2024 Newsletter

Welcome to our April 2024 newsletter!

We are thrilled to share with you the latest developments in HCC’s Local Outreach ministry and our mission to unleash hope in St Charles County. Firstly, we would like to express our gratitude to all of our volunteers who continue to serve consistently to build relationships with our neighbors in St. Charles County. Continue to share information, opportunities, and prayers with your friends and family. You all are GREAT ambassadors.

In terms of our recent activities, Local Outreach volunteers have been BI-ZEEEE! We cooked and served hundreds of pancakes at Harvest Ridge Elementary, we served at The Sharing Shed, we assembled gifts and wrote thank you cards to local school teachers, and we served at Barnwell Middle during their Kona Ice Days.

With more and more people finding their way to Harvester we need more and more Guest Services volunteers. In particular, more Parking Lot volunteers would be great! Check-in with Brendon to see what that would look like. Local Outreach and Guest Services had their first fellowship meal in March. It was just a nice time to come together over a fabulous potluck meal and get to know each other better with no other agenda. Together, we can make a real difference in the lives of those who need it most. Thank you for your continued support! Enjoy this month’s newsletter!

 

DID YOU KNOW? April is Child Abuse Prevention Month & Foster Care Awareness Month

The zip code 63376 which runs through the cities of St. Peters, Cottleville, and parts of St. Charles has the highest substantiated rate of of child sexual abuse. This is one of the reasons we are partnering with the Child Advocacy Center to bring the free Stewards of Children: Darkness to Light Training. EVERY adult needs to protect all children. As the saying goes, knowledge is power and eliminates fear. Join us on April 11th 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m. in the Large Conference Room in the lower level of the Offices to learn how to prevent and protect children from experiencing abuse.

We are also excited to announce that we will be hosting an informational meeting for Safe Families for Children on April 23rd from 6 p.m.-8:30 p.m. in the FLC. Safe Families for Children hosts vulnerable children and creates extended family–like supports for families through a community of devoted volunteers meeting is for families that would like to learn more about becoming a host family. This meeting is also for those who want to support host families with things like babysitting, transportation, meals, and resources. Register for one or both of these events on the HCC website or email Carissa at cfiggins@harvester.cc

Safe Families for Children

“If anyone causes one of these little ones—those who believe in me—to stumble, it would be better for them to have a large millstone hung around their neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.

Matthew 18:6

A Few Ways You Can Prevent Child Abuse

  • Know the signs: Consider attending the free Stewards of Children Darkness to Light Training on April 11th in the Large Conference Room in the lower level of the Offices from 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.
  • Join millions around the world for the 30th anniversary of Blue Sunday, April 28th, a day of prayer for child abuse victims. Wear blue to church to show your love and advocacy for child abuse victims. 
  • Invest in the lives of at-risk children
  • Speak up! If something doesn’t feel right – SAY something
  • Join us on April 23rd at 6 p.m. to learn more about Safe Families for Children an intervention for families before foster care gets involved.
  • Join our HCC group that provides meals, transportation, or babysitting to HCC Safe Families, foster families, and adoptive families.

Ready to unleash hope in St. Charles County?

Click here to sign up for upcoming April information meetings, trainings, and serving opportunities!