Garlain Johnson scoops scrambled eggs, hot sausage and buttery biscuits onto white Styrofoam plates. In his hands, the steaming plates become Christmas spirit for a line of hungry men wearing thick winter coats.
Johnson is not a guy who gives to the less fortunate because he has plenty. He's 63, recently widowed and lives on disability payments for painful back problems. He gives because that's what he and the people of Shiloh Temple International Church do.
"Regardless of what I'm going through in my life, I still feel good about taking time out and doing things for other people," said Johnson, a longtime member of the north Minneapolis church. "I wish I could do more ... not only because it's Christmas, but because I'm a giving person."
With little money to buy gifts, Johnson is giving of himself. His culinary talents. His heart. He finds great joy in cooking breakfast for people who are homeless, jobless, addicted or alone.
At Christmastime, the members of Shiloh intensify their year-round work of helping the needy. They donate toys to poor kids, hold a special banquet for seniors, and give gifts to children whose parents are in jail.
The fact that they have their own needs, well, that just makes them acutely aware of the value of human kindness.
"We have many people here ... who are either low income or no income. And really just living paycheck to paycheck," said Tim Brewington, an associate pastor at the church. "But they're faithful in their volunteer service to the church. They give what they can."
A force for good