Elim Christian School

Easter is such an amazing time at Elim Christian Services.  God’s love, resurrection power, and saving message of hope shine in the children and adults at Elim not only at Easter but each day throughout the year.

That’s because each individual served at Elim was created in God’s image and knows it!  Elim’s staff works hard to teach each precious child and adult that Jesus loves them, saves them, and values them!  Elim’s individuals know that Easter is a celebration of God’s completion of their salvation!
 
Through God’s grace and your generosity, the kids and adults at Elim are growing and thriving! You can invest in their lives right now by clicking here to make a secure online gift. Your gifts directly impact over 900 children and adults each day.   Your gift changes their lives because it translates into the programming, staffing, and equipment they need to achieve their God-given potential.

Why does your gift make such a huge impact?  Here are just a few reasons:
  • Elim Christian School provides Christian programming for approximately 275 children, ages 3 to 21, with developmental and/or physical disabilities each day.   These students could not succeed in a general school because they depend on the specialized services Elim offers.  Your faithful giving supports this important work!
  • Over 200 adults with disabilities and their families rely on Elim’s Adult Services program for meaningful and difficult-to-find work, educational, social and community programming.  Elim’s Adult Services program helps them grow in independence and happiness!  Your gifts make this happen!
  • Your gifts even impact the lives of children with disabilities and educators beyond Elim’s campus.  Through your support of Elim’s ministry, Elim’s staff members share their knowledge with special educators in Chicago and beyond – even as far as Africa and Latin America!

Your gifts are so important to Elim’s ministry!  God uses them to equip hundreds of children and adults with disabilities with the skills they need to achieve their highest God-given potential.   Thank you!
This Easter, will you open your heart to the children and adults at Elim?  And, will you take this love a step further with a life-changing gift?   What a great testament that action would be to God’s salvation and provision for each of us!

With prayers for God’s blessings in this resurrection season,

Bill Lodewyk
President
 
Everything's Relative Salon and Day Spa in Oak Lawn, Illinois is hosting its second annual fundraiser for Elim Christian Services. The salon and its employees are cutting and styling hair all day long and every penny they make and receive as donations is going to support Elim. This is a fantastic opportunity to try out a new salon (at half price!) and help Elim at the same time.
 

The following article, reprinted from the Chicago Tribune, reinforces Elim's distinctive vision.  We know that each individual, regardless of disability, is created in the image of God and has value within our society.  

My Brother's Valuable Life

How does one measure whether a life was a success, or a failure?

Some would measure it by recognition, that is, how many knew the person's name. For others, the measure of a successful life would be the amount of wealth accumulated, or possessions held. Still others would say a life was successful if the person made a major contribution to society — in medicine, sports, politics or the arts.

By that standard my brother, Marshall Stephen Thomas, who died Jan. 5, was a failure. If, however, your standard for a successful life is how that life positively touched others, then my brother's life was a resounding success.

Shortly after he was born in 1950, Marshall was diagnosed with Down syndrome. Some in the medical community referred to the intellectually disabled as "retarded" back then, long before the word became a common schoolyard epithet. His doctors told our parents he would never amount to anything and advised them to place him in an institution. Back then, this was advice too often taken by parents who were so embarrassed about having a disabled child that they often refused to take them out in public.

Our parents wanted none of that. In the '50s, many institutions were snake pits where inhumanities were often tolerated and people were warehoused until they died, often in deplorable conditions. While they weren't wealthy, they were committed to seeing that Marshall had the best possible care, no matter how long he lived. Because of their dedication and thanks to the Kennedy family and their commitment to the rights, causes and issues related to the mentally and physically challenged, Marshall had a longer and better quality of life than might have been expected. He outlived his life expectancy by nearly 40 years. He lived his life dancing and singing and listening to music he loved.

Yes, it cost our parents a lot of money to give him the care they believed he deserved. They might have taken more vacations, owned a fancier house and driven a luxurious car, but before we valued things more than people, they valued Marshall more than any tangible thing. And that care rubbed off on me and other family members.

The stereotype about people who call themselves conservatives is that we don't care for the less fortunate. Even if that were true (which it isn't), Marshall deepened my sensitivity and understanding for the mentally and physically challenged and for those who, like our parents, committed themselves to caring for others who were touched by a malady that could easily have been ours.

I was 7 years old when Marshall was born. A year or two later when the diagnosis was made, I bought a popular book written by Dale Evans and gave it to our parents. It was called "Angel Unaware." The title was taken from a verse in the New Testament which says, "Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares." (Hebrews 13:2) Evans' book was about the Down syndrome child she had with her husband, Roy Rogers.

Roy and Dale named their daughter Robin Elizabeth and their commitment to her (she died at the age of 2) strongly influenced our parents' decision to take care of Marshall, rather than institutionalize him. While it was sometimes difficult for them and later after their death, for me, we never regretted that decision because of the joy Marshall brought to our lives.

In an age when we discard the inconvenient and unwanted in order to pursue pleasure and a life free of burdens, this may seem strange to some. I recall a line from the long-running Broadway musical, "The Fantasticks": "Deep in December, it's nice to remember, without a hurt the heart is hollow."

Marshall Thomas' "hurts" filled a number of hollow hearts.

At the end of the Christmas classic "It's a Wonderful Life," George Bailey reads an inscription in a book given to him by Clarence, his guardian angel: "Remember, no man is a failure who has friends."

No life is a failure when it causes so many to care for others. At that my brother succeeded magnificently.

Tribune Media Services

Cal Thomas is a syndicated columnist.

Copyright © 2012, Chicago Tribune

 
Many families have faced the same questions as their child graduates the Elim Christian School.  They wonder what their child will do next.  The Transitions program at Elim, through the Building Bridges program in Chicago, helps to guide families through the complicated process.  In conjunction with five other social service facilities, Elim created the position of a Transitions Outreach Specialist (TOS) which has been filled for a year by June Oosterhoff-Hoops.  As a TOS, June works specifically with families who have children from the years eighteen to twenty-two, guiding them through the process of transitioning out of the school system.  Both the child and guardians walk together through this program. 
 
Joanna and Fred are currently navigating the Transition from school to adult services with their grandson Tim.  Joanna and Fred have guardianship over their grandson Tim who is currently in the “transition” stage.  Before June came on board with the Transitions program Joanna commented that, “the whole process was confusing, we didn’t know what needed to be done.”  Now, “as June assumed control of the conference process [a workshop in the transitions program], it became more professional, and less of a hassle - especially when June helped out with the computer issues” says Joanna and Fred. 
 
The Transitions program provides classes for guardians to attend, teaching them about different adult services and ways to gain financial support.  It also hosts tours of different adult facilities. 
 
These classes have informed Joanna and Fred of different options available to Tim who is currently exploring the possibilities of his adult life through Elim’s STEP program.  In STEP, Tim attends training for half of his day, learning about trades he can apply after his transition from school life to his adult life. 
June helped set up this transitioning program specially for Tim. This greatly reduced the work for his grandparents, who live out of state.  Describing their view of Tim in the Transitions program, Joanna and Fred agreed that, “He has a good and happy attitude about adapting to this change in his life.” It is through the TOS position that families are able to network and overcome the transitioning process. 
 
June currently works with about eighty young adults and their families in the process and expresses that, “if we could get some more help, that’d be great,” because she feels that she should be working with children as young as 14 years old.  The process of shifting from school to adult life is a long and often confusing path.  The process is made more straightforward for families like Tim’s through the Transitions program at Elim.  As a result, Tim and others like him are equipped to achieve their highest God-given potential in school and when they graduate into the adult community.
 
Find out more about Elim's upcoming Transitions Conference.
No School 01.01.1970
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