Food, faith and fun
Michele Marr
It started with a prayer.
In January of 1999, Suzanne Lemonnier-Smith, her husband Rick
Smith and their two young children were living in a small mobile home
in Huntington Beach. Rick was a student and the family’s sole
provider. It wasn’t easy each month to stretch his income to make
ends meet.
“The Holy Spirit put it on my heart to pray for a freezer,†said
Lemonnier-Smith, “and I thought, ‘Why in the world should I pray for
a freezer?’ Our cupboards were a bit bare.â€
But pray she did.
Six months later she had a freezer -- in her living room. It was
the only place the huge upright appliance would fit in their mobile
home, which had no garage.
The freezer, it turned out, was the start of the food ministry at
Fountain Spring Church in Huntington Beach, where Lemonnier-Smith and
her family worshipped.
“You know in the Bible it says, ‘my cup runneth over.’ Well our
freezer, refrigerator and coolers were running over,†she said.
Her sister got a job with a food company taking food with expired
dates off grocery store shelves. Every night by 11 p.m. she would have loads of dairy and meat products that filled the freezer and
then some.
Meanwhile Smith met the director of a food ministry warehouse that
collected and distributed package-damaged, hard-to-sell but usable
non-perishables and sundries. He offered them all banana-box loads of
the staples they could use.
Now, on every Wednesday, every other Saturday and many of the days
in between, a couple of handfuls of women and children from Fountain
Spring Church deliver nearly a ton of food each week, mostly to
families with children who are, according to Suzanne, “within our
reach and juggling utility bills, car payments, medical bills and
rent†on an income that just doesn’t quite cover them all.
Where they get the food and where they deliver it changes as
circumstances change. But their commitment to the ministry remains.
When God closes one door he opens another one, according to
Lemonnier-Smith.
They take the groceries to a 160-unit apartment complex, an
80-room motel, a transitional home for battered women and their
children and anywhere else they find a need they can help fill.
“We do a lot of stuff disproportionate to our size,†the church’s
pastor Bill Crouch said. “This is a lot more than giving food. It’s
giving hope. It’s giving love.â€
The women who volunteer their time to the ministry say it’s a way
of life.
“We rejuvenate our spirits by exercising our hearts in love,â€
explained Lemonnier-Smith who spends 25 hours a week in the effort.
Her children, 7-year-old Savannah and 4-year-old Madison often make
deliveries with her.
Kathy Bogdan, a working mother of two children, figures she spends
an average of 36 hours a week picking up, packing and delivering
food. Her children, Amanda, 7, and Robert, 4, and her mother Margie
Selstad often work with her.
“We are doing what we think God would want us to do,†Bogdan said.
They do a lot more than throw food at a problem. They make their
rounds with cars full of food and hearts full of tender loving care.
Their sense of fun is contagious. They take clothes, furniture,
diapers and, said Bogdan, “whatever God provides.â€
They take time. They spread out blankets and crafts for the
children to make. Bogdan, who was once a manicurist, paints the
fingernails and toenails of women and children and has taught some of
the other women and children how to do it. They paint flowers in
summer, Christmas trees and snowmen at Christmas, flags for the
Fourth of July. They take Bogdan’s pet snake Butterscotch Suzie for
show and tell. They share cupcakes and cookies.
They talk. They encourage. They comfort. They pray. They get love
back.
“People give us cold sodas, tacos, flowers. The kids make us
pictures, cards, hats and crowns,†Bogdan said.
They have come to feel like family.
“A lot of people come to the church through the food ministry,â€
Bogdan said. Even more would come, she said, if they only had
transportation. One of the ministry’s women, Debbie Knox, ferries as
many people as she can. The church is praying for a bus or van.
“When the Lord places a prayer on your heart, ridiculous as it may
seem, pray and have faith he will answer your prayers,â€
Lemonnier-Smith said. “He uses ordinary people to deliver his
extraordinary love and blessings. We are only his messengers. It’s an
honor.â€
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer from Huntington Beach. She
can be reached at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.