
06 December, 2011
2nd Food Collection Depot now on Rolling Road

05 December, 2011
keeping food dry
30 November, 2011
The mailbag
From today's mailbag:
"I just got off the phone with my wife. We turned down an “offer” to help a friend host a Christmas cookie party. I don’t have anything against cookies (obviously), but we’re trying desperately to remember what Christmas is about for our family. For us, that means buying the kids just 3 presents, it means we go down to the Ice Skating Rink as a family, it means buying a stack of Bill Mangum Honor Cards to send to friends and family and stocking up on Wendy’s gift cards to hand out to the homeless and hungry, it means I spend one night this month as a chaperon at the winter emergency shelter, and (gasp) it means even telling my 4 year old what happened in Bethlehem more frequently than I mention what happens at the North Pole. I’m not saying we have it right, but I would encourage all of you to think through what is important for you and your family this next month…and then do it."
"And for all things Lighted Christmas Ball, go to: www.lightedchristmasballs.blogspot.com"Lighted Christmas Balls are lighting up all around the Triad. The food collection depots are filling up with non-perishable food. Already, 600 pounds of food has been given to those in need.
"The life-light blazed out of the darkness, and the darkness couldn't put it out." John 1:5 The Message
Whatever you believe, don't leave any life-light turned off this season.

26 November, 2011
the season's first gift
25 November, 2011
LCB in News-Record
Today's paper mentions look for LCB in Saturday's Life section.
28 February, 2011
Greensboro's Lighted Christmas Balls glow all the way to Washington, DC
Congressman Howard Coble called last week to thank us for spearheading Shine the Light on Hunger, collecting donations of money and canned food for Greensboro Urban Ministry and Second Harvest Food Bank of NW North Carolina, and last but not least, the beautiful Lighted Christmas Balls. The Congressman is, at heart, a "good finder."
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Washington, DC could use some cheer |
My relationship with the Congressman goes back a few decades and my admiration and respect for this man of integrity is deep. Let me know when Congress wants to host a Lighted Christmas Ball workshop; it would be our privilege.
Thanks Howard; your call the other day was a Surprise Joy.

23 February, 2011
Greensboro Running Club
Dear Shine the Light on Hunger,
The Greensboro Running Club has been enjoying the Sunset Hills' Christmas light display for several years now. Each year we marvel, not only at the festive display, but also at the community spirit that works so hard to impart the beauty of Christmas throughout their neighborhood.
This year we would like to thank you with a donation to the Urban Ministry in the name of "Shine the Light on Hunger". Please accept this gift as a small token of our appreciation for making our December-Tuesday runs a bit lighter and whole lot more joyous!
All the best in the New Year!
THE GREENSBORO RUNNING CLUB
Jim HalschIf running causes the men and women of GRC to look at life so closely and see so much what the lights are about, I say we all better take up running.
President
More information about The Greensboro Running Club may be found here.
Thank you Greensboro Running Club!
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Image courtesy The Greensboro Running Club, all rights reserved |

30 December, 2009
Shine The Light on Hunger - 3,831 pounds so far - still a ways to go

25 December, 2009
Christmas Day evening
22 December, 2009
All the way from Long Island Sound
When I saw who was carrying the armful of canned goods, I knew the real reason for their visit to Greensboro, two granddaughters, one grandson, a daughter, maybe more.
What a joy to be on the receiving end of from folks filled with the joy of giving.
The little trailer is filling slowly but surely, albeit a little more slowly than I'd like to see. If you're out and about, pick up an armload of non-perishable food, come visit the trailer, and see if the Lighted Christmas Balls don't burn more brightly than usual.
08 December, 2009
Food Bank Service Entrance
All totaled, Friends of Lighted Christmas Balls, which includes Sunset Hills neighbors and friends who attended the 7th Annual Lighted Christmas Ball Workshop, had given an abundance of nourishing, life-sustaining non-perishable food to Potter's house.
Our goal is 10,000 pounds this year. Help make it so. We've got a good start, but that's where you come in. If your life has been blessed with abundance, consider making a grocery shop using this suggested shopping list, stopping by one of several food collection points in the neighborhood, or investing cash in 2nd Harvest Food Bank of Northwest North Carolina or Greensboro Urban Ministry. Come enjoy the Lighted Christmas Balls. Bring your friends, family, and co-workers, and bring a bag of non-perishable food. And share your hope with those whose hope has run dry. Here's a map, we'll have other collection points mapped out by this weekend.
You can't read the dial on the scales just above the big box on the right. It reads 488 pounds.
It's raining where we live, hard. It's 37 degrees cold. I just went outside to check the trailer, it's already starting refilling itself. I can't believe folks brave cold and the wet and dark of night just to put a few cans of groceries in a wet trailer. But then, my faith is pretty small.
02 December, 2009
More pics from Lighted Christmas Balls workshop #7
Kerrie Orrell has a dear friend who was just diagnosed with breast cancer. So she and her daughter set out to make a bow, cover it with pink lights, and hang it from a tree in her friend's yard.
(Ross Martin, background, wonders if making a lighted Christmas ball while using his cell phone improves reception.)
26 November, 2009
Happy Thanksgiving

24 November, 2009
And there was light !
21 March, 2009
This Hope's for you
No stranger to the Moses Cone Regional Cancer Center, David gave life to everyone he met: fellow cancer patients, nurses, doctors, even those in waiting rooms. Never a complainer...always an encourager, abundantly generous in hope.
Not long before David went to be with God, he said, "You'll never know what a ministry of encouragement your neighborhood is to everyone at the cancer center. Patients, nurses, doctors, and visitors, that's all they talk about. Promise me you'll teach them to make the Lighted Christmas Balls."
David and his cancer fighting friends encouraged everyone at the Regional Cancer Center, after chemo therapy, to drive down Ridgeway Drive into the land of wonder, where each and every Lighted Christmas Ball is transformed into a beacon of hope, in a world long on suffering and short on hope.
We told David and Patricia and Kris and Roman that we'd keep David's light on, seven days a week, twenty four hours a day, in memory of him and every person fighting cancer. (David's light is a gigantic Lighted Christmas Ball with 1,400 mini Christmas lights wrapped around a 36" diameter sphere.)
So if you're reading this, and you or someone you know is fighting cancer, this Symbol of Hope stays lit, day and night, for you.
"God, the one and only— I'll wait as long as he says. Everything I hope for comes from him, so why not? He's solid rock under my feet, breathing room for my soul, An impregnable castle: I'm set for life." Psalm 62:5; The Message
11 January, 2009
Food Drive totals
23 December, 2008
today's offering
09 December, 2008
WFMY News 2
WFMY reporter Kerri Hartsfield and camera man John Brumbaugh pulled into the Grace Community Church parking lot late Monday afternoon. It's a good thing they did; Jeff, Justin, Emmett, and Jonathan needed just two more pairs of hands to raise the 60 or so Lighted Christmas balls that had been made by kids in the Glenwood Tutoring Program, and Kerri and John jumped right in and helped. Kerri had to make several trips to her car to thaw out, and John clutched his camcorder and shivered now and again and didn't get to thaw out. The two stayed until all the trees glowed with lights before heading to Sunset Hills for a different perspetive and to broadcast the 11:00 pm news, 'live from the corner of Ridgeway and Madison.' Afterward, I went outside thank them for all they had done to raise the awareness for hunger, and how together, our communities can solve a real live problem affecting one in eight North Carolinians and one in five children. Seeing the true spirit of Christmas reflected in their eyes was gratifying; grinning, I cautioned them that they're now hooked on Lighted Christmas balls for life and invited them to come back often and enjoy the beauty when they're off the clock.
01 December, 2008
Bringing light to dark corners one mini light at a time
This was Marlene's view of the Hassell's: