MISSIONARY SPOTLIGHT - Norman
Cannada
Norman
Cannada
1304 Seventh Avenue
Charleston, WV 25302
304-343-2223 home
304-345-7733 church
normcannada@cs.com
A
Christmas [Store] Story
Norman
and Debbie Cannada love Christmas. They love the decorations, the
songs, and the
celebration parties. But, one of the things they love the most is
the opportunity to be part of their
church's Christmas store, which provides much needed toys for
low-income families. Read the
story below, then click on the link to read Norman's email follow-up
and learn the rest of the
story.
Our
Christmas toy store is in its fifth year.
I remember being involved in adopting children and
families and doing that is good.
But I wondered, "How would it feel to have other people
pick
out gifts for my children?" So we got involved in the Christmas
store. We have people
apply
and we check their income guidelines and make sure they are not
getting help from others. (We
rarely have to turn down someone.)
People
come and shop and spend $7 per child, but they get
about $70-$80 worth of gifts, and we offer free gift-wrapping.
But, the most important thing to
is that every parent who comes through the store doesn't leave
without first talking with a
counselor about Jesus. It's
thus a ministry that provides an opportunity to love them and let
them
do something for their kids, but on top of that, we tell them what
Christmas is really all about.
Folks
have criticized us and said, "Why do you make them talk with a
counselor? After all,
if
they
are not in the mood to hear the gospel, they won't, will they?"
My answer is simple. These
parents can't leave here just thinking we are nice people. They have
to know why we are doing
this.
We'll
minister to over 400 families through the Christmas store this year,
and it'll be a miracle
when it's over. Why?
Well, we really literally schedule people not knowing where
the toys are
coming from. A few years ago, I thought we would need about $10,000
worth of toys that year.
Then,
I discovered I added wrong and we really needed $30,000.
We had 300 or so kids that
year. I remember
praying and God saying to me, "If I need to I can do a thing
like the feeding of
the 5,000." Well, on the first day of the toy store (it went
three days), we had a great turnout and
plenty of toys. The second day, we were a little bare, but rejoiced
because we had a person
accept Christ that day. Then,
on Saturday, we took all the toys to a housing project.
We put the
toys in the middle of this floor, all in bags and boxes, and we just
knew we didn't have enough.
So,
we prayed. And, we
discovered there were more toys after the prayer than before.
We just
kept giving out toys all day and not running out.
We figured the toys were multiplied by $8,000.
Last
year, we were $14,000 short. And,
we got checks totaling $14,000 during the week.
God is providing!"
Click
here to read an email update from Norman,
telling how this year's [2001] Christmas store turns into a miracle
story.
Norman
Cannada - Missionary Profile
When Norman Cannada submitted his resume and inquiry letter to the
West Virginia Convention of Southern Baptists, he hesitated to
specify that his calling was to inner-city
missions. He wondered if West Virginia had such a place.
"I
got a letter from the West Virginia church and communities
ministries director, and
she said that the state was looking at starting an African-American
church in the west side of
Charleston. While I'm not African-American, I told them I'd be
interested in starting a bi-racial
congregation. I came up
and visited Charleston and fell in love with it."
Norman
describes the area as "rural Appalachia meets the
inner-city." "People are very
clannish and family is a big thing," said Norman. "They
have the usual crack cocaine drug
dealers and such, but the prostitutes wear jeans and sweats. I've
learned that it doesn't have to be
a large city for it to be an inner city.
Our community is racially 50/50 Anglo/African-American.
We
believe this is where God wanted us, so we came, and we
started the church by loving
people."
That
was more than four years ago, and today, that church start, West
Charleston Baptist
Church, is effectively reaching out to its inner-city community.
"I would describe it as bi-racial
but not as much as it could be.
I hope we look like our community, but we are still very much
segregated. Yet, we're trying to reach our whole community,"
said Norman.
As
a church planter missionary, Norman pastors West Charleston
("kind of as a hobby,"
he notes), but his role as a strategist is to help start new
churches. Currently,
there are two:
Lighthouse Baptist and Living Hope in the Jefferson community.
Lighthouse Baptist has a lay
pastor, and the church is reaching out to a large trailer park area.
It's rather "rural inner-city."
The
Jefferson community, work is led by a Nehemiah Project church
planter. The Jefferson
community, although only four square miles, includes 14 adult bars,
adult video stores, and lots
of children.
"One
of the ways we discover areas to start a church is through prayer
walking," said
Norman. "I remember prayer walking in the Jefferson community
in 1998. It was during
that
walk that we noticed all the bicycles and toys.
So, we decided, "Let's reach children!" So, that is
exactly what they are doing.
Norman's
journey to ministry started reluctantly. "I struggled through
college and
seminary as to whether I wanted to be in a secular job or ministry
full time. I was 'vocationally
schizophrenic.'
I did ministry on the side for a while, and helped start a church in
South
Carolina. Most of that time, though, I was a reporter and then a
managing editor for two papers
in South Carolina. In
1994, God told me to quit my job and He would show me where I was to
go. We argued for
several weeks about that. I wound up in Statesville, N.C., as a
youth, single,
and children's minister at Front Street Baptist Church. It was there
that I was asked to head our
single adult ministry and asked to go to New York City to look at a
partnership opportunity. So,
in 1995 I went to Graffiti Baptist Center and met Taylor and Susan
Field.
"I
had never seen ministry like that.
I got a heart for the inner city there.
I decided then
that it was time to pursue ministry full time." After
completing seminary, he went to West
Virginia, and the rest, is history, or, perhaps, "a work in
progress."
"What
we see here more in Charleston than anything else is
hopelessness," said Norman.
"There's
an attitude that life doesn't change much from one generation to
another. If great-
grandma was on welfare, then her children believe they are destined
to live that way. There's
a
lot of talk about suicide and such.
My response is that there is hope.
As long as there's Jesus,
there's
hope."
PRAYER
REQUESTS:
-
Pray
for Norman and Deborah Cannada.
-
Pray
for their ministry to flourish in its effectiveness.
-
Pray
that they will keep their eyes focused on Jesus and not on
themselves.
-
Pray
that they will keep family a priority.
MISSIONARY
SPOTLIGHT ARCHIVE
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