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Mission in Halifax, Nova Scotia, means working together with neighbors for the peace of the city.

“So, what kind of Christians are you guys? Are you the ones who only care about people’s souls?”

The question came from a neighbor. Sam Kamminga, who works with Resonate Global Mission and the Trellis Collective as a community chaplain in Halifax, Nova Scotia, was helping another neighbor move. “You tell me,” he said. “What do you see?”

Sometimes global mission work is treated separately from justice and mercy work, and Christians get a reputation of caring only for people’s souls and not whether they have enough food, clean drinking water, or a safe and comfortable place to live. It’s one of the reasons Sam often meets people who are wary of Christians.

“So many people know the church as preaching something but not embodying what God cares about,” said Sam. “When you’re walking with people and discovering God together, then how else to do it than to live it out with them?”

When Sam is getting to know—and reading the Bible with—neighbors in his work of unearthing the good news of the kingdom in the city, he often sees and hears about injustices in the community that they can’t ignore. “What is God’s dream? What does God want?” he asks. “When I read Scripture, I see the big picture is the restoration of all things.”

The reconciliation and restoration of all things is part of the good news of the gospel. Sam, the Trellis Collective, and their neighbors are working toward God’s peace—shalom—in their city, and they come alongside and support one another when they are fighting injustices. 

“So many people know the church as preaching something but not embodying what God cares about. When you’re walking with people and discovering God together, then how else to do it than to live it out with them?”

This past winter, for instance, many families in their apartment building of 3,000 people did not have heat. Most of these families had come to the city as refugees from countries like Afghanistan, Somalia, and Syria. Some had lived without heat for several of Halifax’s frigid winters.

Many residents, including Sam, worked together to resolve this issue. They went first to the building’s management, but when management did not take action, they were finally able to get the attention of a fire inspector. It took months of work, but now all residents can stay warm.

The Trellis Collective also knew that many children who recently came to Halifax as refugees weren’t learning how to read. With packed classrooms, teachers didn’t have the time or resources to give individual attention to so many students, and students have been completing grade levels and even graduating from high school without being able to read.

The neighborhood worked together to rally young adults to work with students. They visit students in their homes, and in the process, they are able to form friendships. One relationship at a time, literacy rates are improving among newcomers in the city.

That’s often how Sam and the Trellis Collective works. Starting from the ground-up in relationship with one another, they work together for neighbors’ wellbeing. They invite one another into their homes, share meals together, and often talk about how they see God present and at work.

“I find that when we are seeking the right relationship of all things—this shalom—then along the way...we’re going to find Jesus in really unique and surprising ways,” said Sam.

This story was originally published by The Banner.