40 Years of Shepherd: The Shepherd Family
When Shepherd Community first began, it wasn’t the impressive...
40 Years of Shepherd: A Continuum of Care
Over the past 40 years, Shepherd has been here, committed, loyal,...
Shepherd partner says thank you for working together to assist children in Indy
Partnerships are a major part of how Shepherd Community Center meets neighbors’ needs on the near Eastside of Indianapolis. The benefits of partnerships flow in both directions, as one of those partners, the Central Indiana Woodworkers, recently noted while presenting a plaque to Shepherd as a show of appreciation for supporting the...
Podcasts
Christian compassion has deep roots in American history
Shepherd Community Center Executive Director Jay Height and historian Dan Miller discuss...
Shepherd launches a major expansion of its health, housing and education ministries
Executive Director Jay Height talks about Shepherd Community Center’s celebration of 40...
Summertime, and the living is hard: How Shepherd is helping families meet kids’ needs
Executive Director Jay Height discusses how Shepherd Community Center is helping...
Columns by Jay
Legos at Easter: We’re made to work together to build something beautiful with our neighbors.
Legos at Easter: We’re made to work together to build something beautiful with our neighbors. My grandchildren love to build all sorts of things – spaceships, castles, skyscrapers – with Legos. For them, snapping together brightly colored Lego bricks to create something new is a fun outlet for their imagination. I’m not so enamored with Legos myself – I’ve had too many late night, barefoot encounters with hard-edged bits of plastic that a grandchild left behind on the floor. The other...
As inflation bites, my neighbors water down their children’s milk to make ends meet.
As inflation bites, my neighbors water down their children’s milk to make ends meet. Inflation is an insidious tax on people in poverty. And it’s one that forces my neighbors on the east side of Indianapolis to make heartbreaking choices each day. I know parents who in recent months have begun to water down their children’s milk to make it go further. I’ve seen multiple families move into one small house because they can no longer afford a home of their own. And I’ve listened as mothers...
Shepherd partner says thank you for working together to assist children in Indy
Partnerships are a major part of how Shepherd Community Center meets neighbors’ needs on the near Eastside of Indianapolis. The benefits of partnerships flow in both directions, as one of those partners, the Central Indiana Woodworkers,...
40 Years of Shepherd: The Shepherd Family
When Shepherd Community first began, it wasn’t the impressive...
40 Years of Shepherd: A Continuum of Care
Over the past 40 years, Shepherd has been here, committed, loyal,...
Podcasts
Christian compassion has deep roots in American history
Shepherd Community Center Executive Director Jay Height and historian Dan Miller discuss...
Shepherd launches a major expansion of its health, housing and education ministries
Executive Director Jay Height talks about Shepherd Community Center’s celebration of 40...
Summertime, and the living is hard: How Shepherd is helping families meet kids’ needs
Executive Director Jay Height discusses how Shepherd Community Center is helping...
Columns by Jay
Legos at Easter: We’re made to work together to build something beautiful with our neighbors.
Legos at Easter: We’re made to work together to build something beautiful with our neighbors. My grandchildren love to build all sorts of things – spaceships, castles, skyscrapers – with Legos. For them, snapping together brightly colored Lego bricks to create something new is a fun outlet for their imagination. I’m not so enamored with Legos myself – I’ve had too many late night, barefoot encounters with hard-edged bits of plastic that a grandchild left behind on the floor. The other...
As inflation bites, my neighbors water down their children’s milk to make ends meet.
As inflation bites, my neighbors water down their children’s milk to make ends meet. Inflation is an insidious tax on people in poverty. And it’s one that forces my neighbors on the east side of Indianapolis to make heartbreaking choices each day. I know parents who in recent months have begun to water down their children’s milk to make it go further. I’ve seen multiple families move into one small house because they can no longer afford a home of their own. And I’ve listened as mothers...


