Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Cleveland church must stop helping the poor or stop being a church: City govt
Cleveland church must stop helping the poor or stop being a church: City govt
Apr 15, 2025 11:31 AM

After being thrown out of a Cleveland church that doubles as a homeless shelter, a vagrant used a pistol to force his way back inside. Unfortunately, the gun-wielding intruder wasn’t the biggest threat to the facility’s survival: Its own government was.

The Denison Avenue United Church of Christ began sheltering the homeless last fall, after joining forces with the Metanoia Project, a local nonprofit. When St. Malachi Catholic Church had to reduce the number of people it housed, Denison UCC accepted the people left out in the cold.

Unfortunately for the homeless, the building is zoned as a church, not a homeless shelter.

On Christmas Eve, six police officers and two Cleveland fire inspectors descended on the church. They did e bearing gifts.

Instead, they affixed an official letter on the church door, telling the congregation there is no room at the inn.

The city’s “cease use notice” instructed the parish that, if it wished to keep helping the homeless, it had to “submit plans and permits to the City of Cleveland Division of Building and Housing to change the use of its facility” from a church to a shelter. More precisely, the church had to change its purpose from “assembly” to “temporary residential use.”

The facility would also need to add exit signs, emergency lighting, more fire extinguishers, and a sprinkler and fire alarm system to meet the city’s fire code.

Today, on Christmas Eve, Denison UCC was issued a Cease of Use notice even after Fire Chief Calvillo agreed to meet this AM as a result of yesterday’s action.

Let’s not forget that these threats arise from Councilwoman Brady’s efforts to keep homeless people out of her ward. /CIMWluJH5i

— NEOCH (@clevhomeless) December 25, 2019

The congregation immediately began adding those items in order to bring the facility up to code. Almost six-dozen people volunteered to hold fire watch, making rounds every half hour of the night.

But parishioners are not willing “to admit that we’re no longer a church,” said Pastor Nozomi Ikuta. “We’re being told to make a choice between saying we are no longer a church and selling our homeless friends down the river.”

The congregation appealed the order on December 31, citing theReligious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000. RLUIPA, signed by President Bill Clinton, bars local governments from placing a “substantial burden” on the freedom of religion, except to pursue a pelling governmental interest.”

Changing the church’s zoning status “would not affect its operations as a worship space,” according to an official statement from the city. But the church’s appeal states that feeding and housing the homeless is an act of worship. After all, the mands His followers “todivide your bread with the hungry andbring the homeless poor into your house” (Isaiah 58:6-7). Didn’t Jesus go about “with nowhere to lay His head” (St. Luke 9:58)?

“We’re asserting our right and obligation, really, to do what Jesus tells us to do about caring for people who are poor and in a tough spot,” said Ikuta. “I think that we’re trying to do what is in the heart and mind of God.”

To be sure, the city has an interest in assuring that no charity risks the life and limb of its recipients. However, prudence states Cleveland’s homeless face a greater risk of hypothermia than immolation.

“From November to March, Cleveland can remain below freezing all day long,” according to the weather website . “The city typically has 36 days a year when the temperature never rises above” freezing.

“We think that most people would agree pared to letting people freeze to death, having residential-grade smoke detectors is a reasonable step,” said Ikuta.

Even during this year’s unseasonably warm winter, predators – animal and human – also pose a threat to the 1,727 men, women, and children that the Department of Housing and Urban Development found living on Cleveland’s streets in its annual count.

Ultimately, the city relented for this season. munity expressed its support during a raucous session of city council on January 6 – the Christian feast of Epiphany, traditionally known as the “twelfth day of Christmas.” Fire inspectors held a surprise inspection around midnight on January 7, which the church passed. In early February, the Cleveland Board of Building Standards and Building Appeals ruled that the church could continue acting as a homeless shelter until April 15, when the worst of the weather will have passed. Church officials announced that, thanks to help from local philanthropists and faithful volunteers, it will be able to present a plan pliance by that date. And the city councilwoman said to have spearheaded the crackdown against the church’s homeless ministry, Dona Brady, resigned in late January.

All’s well that ends well, but nothing dictates that it had to conclude this way. Expanding government contracts liberty.

Everyone who loves liberty should drink in the absurdity of the situation: A local government tried to stop a church from aiding the homeless on the holiest night of the year, then demanded that it has to give up its legal designation as a church if it wants to follow mandments.

Thankfully – with massive mobilization and media attention – sanity prevailed, as it did when their “de-escalation” tactics kept them safe from the armed homeless man who burst into their facility on February 21.

May that portend another victory in their greater David-and Goliath struggle against the government.

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
C.S. Lewis and Nicolás Maduro on Venezuela’s plunging birthrate
The birth of a child is life’s greatest joy – unless a dictator is asking you to have children to increase his personal power base, and he has destroyed the economy so badly that you can’t feed yourself. That is the situation in Venezuela. “Every woman should have six children for the good of the country,” said Bolivarian socialist Nicolás Maduro in March. He urged the nation’s women to “give birth, give birth” in order to “grow the country.” In...
The top 5 insights of RNC 2020, day 1
The 42nd Republican National Convention, the first virtual convention in GOP menced on Monday in Charlotte, North Carolina. Its lineup of speakers highlighted the fact that the American dream is an enduring reality for minorities and immigrants, the harms that teachers unions inflict on students (and some teachers), and the patibility of socialism with Christian teaching. 1. Christianity and socialism are patible. Maximo Alvarez, the Cuban emigré who became a successful American businessman, recounted the way socialism came to dominate...
Acton Line podcast: COVID-19 pandemic economics with Dr. David Hebert
The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020 has brought with it enormous costs. These include, first and foremost, an enormous cost in the terms of human life, with more than 178,000 deaths from the coronavirus in the United States alone, and at least 814,000 deaths worldwide, as of late August 2020. But also, with the pandemic e significant economic costs, fiscal costs, and personal costs to our happiness and quality of life. Why is living under quarantine so...
Karl Marx’s greatest lesson
Karl Marx famously concluded in his 1845 Theses On Feuerbach with his eleventh thesis: “Philosophers have hitherto only interpreted the world in various ways; the point is to change it.” How this change from analysis to activism can be justified in light of Marx’s own materialist conception of history is an enduring puzzle. Lester DeKoster, in his always insightful Communism & Christian Faith, states it is, “a problem more easily ignored than explained.” Marx’s tomb itself has literally etched this...
Donald Trump’s bad prescription for drug prices
The final night of the 2020 Republican National Convention included powerful lines promoting the Trump administration’s drug price policies. President Donald Trump claimed that his recent executive orders on drug prices “will massively lower the cost of your prescription drugs.” His daughter Ivanka likewise said that her father “took dramatic action to cut the cost of prescription drugs.” In 2015, U.S. Americans spent more than twice the OECD average on prescription drugs. Trump signed a price control-based executive order in...
Explainer: What does Kamala Harris believe?
Senator and presumptive Democratic vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris will address the Democratic National Convention on Wednesday night. As the convention plans to nominate the oldest presidential candidate in U.S. history, Harris’ views and record hold greater significance than any running mate since Harry Truman in 1944. What does the junior senator from California believe on key issues? Here are the facts you need to know. Background: Kamala Devi Harris was born on October 20, 1964, in Oakland, California. Her...
The political theology of global secularism, part 2: secularization and the re-emergence of myth
This is part two of our series, “The Political Theology of Global Secularism.” You may read part one here. Check back frequently for ing installments. – Ed. David Foster Wallace wrote of our secular age: [I]n the day-to-day trenches of adult life, there is actually no such thing as atheism. There is no such thing as not worshipping. Everybody worships. The only choice we get is what to worship. In the first part of this series, I distinguished different facets...
DNC makes the case for deregulation and lower taxes
The 2020 Democratic National Convention’s only viral moment to date plished something rare in any political season: It taught sound economic policy. The image of a masked Rhode Island delegate holding a platter of calamari during Tuesday night’s state roll call overshadowed the fact that he promoted the state’s official appetizer while praising deregulation. Further research shows the importance of reducing trade barriers and that high taxes destroy wealth. “Our restaurant and fishing trade have been decimated by this pandemic,”...
Work like Daniel: economic witness in a post-Christian age
America is seeing a steady rise in secularization, pronounced by accelerating declines in religious identification, church attendance, and biblical literacy. As the norms of “cultural Christianity” continue to fade, the call to “be in but not of the world” is stirring new questions about how we live, create, and collaborate in modern society. In response, Christians are pressed by a familiar set of temptations toward fortification, domination, and modation – prodding us to either “hunker down,” “fight back,” or “give...
Kellyanne Conway and America’s politically fractured families
Kellyanne Conway likely gave her last public speech in her role as White House adviser on Wednesday night at the Republican National Convention. The Conway clan’s political divisions mirror the growing bitterness that has e ingrained in families nationwide as America es more politicized, more secular, and less tolerant of philosophical diversity. The Conway family’s carnage has played out painfully on social media. Kellyanne Conway distinguished herself as a pollster before guiding Donald Trump’s successful presidential campaign. She has served...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved