Keijo sees neighbors from a distance on walks and prays with friends on the phone when Joe gets home from mornings at the garden. Unfortunately, conversations with other parents no longer happen while their kids hop on the school bus.
But in the midst of the pandemic, God continues to bring opportunities for relationships.
Keijo says she interacts with teachers more than ever before. Now, Keijo helps her children grow, guiding their learning through a virtual school’s full-time program as their family adjusts to a new schedule. Gatherings like Joe and Keijo’s morning Bible study or ministry trainings still take place online.
An outlook of expansion
As Joe serves inside and outside the garden, he envisions more. Joe put together a proposal to triple the size of the garden, adding more plots, an area for fruit trees and a larger space for gardening specifically to support the Cru City ministry. This would allow more people to receive the produce and enable others to join Joe in his efforts at the garden. Joe has taken harvests to his church, and with a larger space, people who have offered to help there could take part in serving as well.
“I think the heart of it is... facilitating the coming together of people,” Joe says.
Investing in relationships with community members full time does not look how Joe and Keijo envisioned when they first jumped in before COVID-19. It doesn’t occur at charming backyard parties where people dine under the glow of neatly strung twinkle lights, Joe says. Instead, it happens in everyday moments of planting seeds, making friends and seeing God bring life.