October 30, 2006 By John Gordon
ANNAPOLIS, Md. – This is not your ordinary church bake sale. Members
of Calvary United Methodist Church here are known for doing things in a big –
and delectable – way. "Wouldn't be anything without chocolate
chips," said Jean Graf, mixing the dough at Calvary's Cookie Factory in the church
kitchen. 25 years of cookies For
the past 25 years, the church's youth group and adult volunteers have gathered
one Saturday a month to bake chocolate-chip cookies – satisfying the hunger pangs
of midshipmen at the nearby U.S. Naval Academy and raising money for mission trips.
"A few years ago, we did 22,000 cookies in one day,"
said Gordon Duvall, manning the oven to make sure the cookies come out a perfect
light golden brown. "That took us most of the day, and that was the most we've
had." Members of parents' groups from across the country,
and other friends of the midshipmen, order the cookies by the dozen for delivery
to the Naval Academy. Cookies are sent as birthday and holiday gifts or for sugary
energy boosts during exams. Church members drop off the
treats at the Naval Academy within hours of baking them. "I
have a lot of midshipmen friends, and they're always excited to get them," said
church member Rachel Heisman, 16. "I deliver most days, so they're always like,
‘Ooh, cookies, do we have any?' It's fun." Caring
about others The Cookie Factory started small, with nine
youth from the church dipping dough by hand with ice-cream scoops. Since
then, as the orders have poured in, the operation has grown faster and more sophisticated
– using a commercial mixer and a machine that drops pre-measured dollops of dough
onto baking sheets. "Today, we'll make probably around
8,000 or so," said Lon Slepicka, an adult volunteer. "And I haven't eaten them
all. That's the good thing." Members of the youth group
don't seem to mind giving up part of their Saturdays to bake cookies with their
friends. "It's fun. And I'm working towards going on
my mission trip," said Arden Robbins, 12. "I see more people who need help than
me. I'm caring more about others than being selfish and being ‘I want this' or
‘I want that.'" Funds for mission trips This
year, the church's senior youth group made a long trek to New Orleans to help
victims of Hurricane Katrina, while junior-high students went to Pennsylvania.
"It contributes around 90 percent of the funds for our
mission trips that we do over the summer," said Kevin Burroughs, Calvary's youth
minister. "It's important to the church. That's how people know the church, and
(it) gets people involved." The cookies cost $3.50 per
dozen, including delivery, and can be ordered from the church's Web site at http://www.calumc.org/templates/eas03br/details.asp?id=25564&PID=112339.
Joan Moored, an adult volunteer in charge of taking Internet
orders, said her biggest fear is a delivery mistake that could leave a midshipman
with an empty stomach. "I have nightmares that I've forgotten
a mid, or that I've got them in the wrong company. And then we get the phone calls
saying that ‘my mid didn't get his cookies,'" said Moored. "Maybe his roommate
ate the cookies or one of the company-mates got them before he did. You've got
to be fast, I believe." The bakers and their helpers
are free to sample broken cookies – quality control, of sorts. Graf, the chief
mixer, prefers to eat the dough. Graf has been helping
at the Cookie Factory since the 1980s, when her children were members of the youth
group. "My children graduated from high school and college,
but then I continued, I liked it so much," she said. Heisman
described this year's mission trip to New Orleans as "very eye-opening." The Calvary
youth worked on rebuilding the home of a disabled woman who suffers from multiple
sclerosis. "She was a very open woman, sharing her life
story, and very open to letting us come in to her house and just supporting us,"
Heisman said. "She said it was more for us than just for her." United
Methodist News Service John Gordon is a freelance producer and writer based
in Marshall, Texas. |