Please join us!
To sign up to participate, or to sponsor a team or another participant, please visit our Event Page here:
https://www.zeffy.com/en-CA/peer-to-peer/trekking-for-home–2026
Please join us!
To sign up to participate, or to sponsor a team or another participant, please visit our Event Page here:
https://www.zeffy.com/en-CA/peer-to-peer/trekking-for-home–2026
Please join us for this important annual event!
Tickets available here:
https://www.zeffy.com/en-CA/ticketing/harvest-moon-2

Sanctuary Values People
In a world where people are increasingly reduced to quanta of data used to create performance-oriented statistics that reduce people to human capital or human waste, Sanctuary values people as people.
Sanctuary refuses to believe that a person is more or less valuable because they are housed or forcibly deprived of housing. Sanctuary rejects the proposition that a person is more or less valuable because of the money they have hoarded or had taken from them. Sanctuary gives no credence to the argument that a person is more or less valuable if they receive their medications from a family doctor or from an ad hoc street-pharmacist. Sanctuary does not believe that the person who experiences inner peace has any more inherent dignity than the person who shows outward signs of distress. And Sanctuary absolutely refuses to believe that a person is more or less valuable depending on if they have been praised or criminalized by the government, the judicial system, the nonprofit sector, or the healthcare industry. Sanctuary values people as people.
Sanctuary Values Relationships
People exist in and through relationships with other people. In these relationships, we communicate to one another how and why we do or do not value each other. Because we value people, Sanctuary values relationships. Because all relationships are messy, all humans are fallible, and sometimes even the best intentions cause harm, valuing people thoughtfully and well means that we value certain kinds of relationships more than other kinds.
At Sanctuary, we value relationships that honour and nurture the agency, wisdom, strength, and power that all people (ourselves included!) already have within them. We value the formation of horizontal relationships of mutual care and mutual respect, over relationships that are oriented around institutional hierarchies of power. Rather than viewing power as something we share with others who do not have power, we believe that all people already have power which should be acknowledged, nurtured, celebrated, and grown. Instead of paternalistic or condescending models of charity, we recognize that our own wellness is inextricably linked to the wellness of those whom we serve. We value solidarity over charity, and journeying alongside of others rather than telling them where to go or what to do.
At Sanctuary, we value relationships that foster a sense of belonging, encourage the creation of mutual trust, spark joy, and assist us with finding home together. We are gentle with those who have been greatly harmed by others and firm in our boundaries with those who would cause great harm to others—while also affirming that our well-seasoned and intersectional perspective means recognizing that many people simultaneously experience harm and cause harm. Valuing people as people and valuing relationships with people means starting from this recognition and then collectively, creatively, and dynamically engaging in the work of home-building.
Sanctuary Values Mutual Care and Mutually Liberating Solidarity
As Sanctuary, we recognize the realities of oppression, colonization, gendered, racial, and heteronormative violence, intergenerational trauma, religious abuse, and the ongoing impoverishment of more and more people in order to make a tiny number of people extremely rich. We are a community of some of the people who have been most harmed by these forms of systemic, structural, historical, and contemporary violence. Consequently, at Sanctuary we value relationships that are tender-hearted, understanding, liberatory, honest, therapeutic, caring, and resourceful. We practice mutual care as the pathway to mutually liberating solidarity. In this way, everyone of us, especially the most abandoned and oppressed who are the centre of the Sanctuary community, can participate joyfully, meaningfully, and freely in the great abundance of life that has been given to us all.
To register or to donate towards this event, please visit our Zeffy Fundraising Page here: https://www.zeffy.com/en-CA/peer-to-peer/trekking-for-home-2

On a morning walk through the woods with my 3 kids, we came across Someone’s place, tucked away under a grove of trees near the river. A tarp, sleeping bag, clothes hung on the tree and everything damp from the recent rain. The site was quiet and there were some small knick knacks thoughtfully organized to give the feeling of being in a room. I noticed a few unopened letters off to the side. Social services and housing notices…stark and stiff.
We stopped for a minute, (Isaac, my oldest, said we shouldn’t trespass!) And talked a bit about what it might be like to live here.
Some questions asked were, “What if it rains? What if someone steals their stuff? It looks like they need a new pillow. Is the jug for water? I really like their campfire! It must be fun. Look, a candle! I think it’s a girl who lives here.”
And in the end we prayed for the person who lives here, and the kids insisted on leaving a package of rice crackers there for them. Strategically and thoughtfully placed “in case of bears!”
The last thing said was by my daughter after a few moments of silence on the walk back was; “I’m tired, I just want to go home now…”
I was overcome with emotion as I thought of the times this Someone has wished the same thing.
Beside 513 Talbot Street sits a very special place called Sanctuary. It makes use of an addition to the main church building called ‘the atrium’. Two churches working together, sharing the same space. One Church. Often, the ‘Church-outside-the-church’. The people who come here are looking for something; food for the most part, as there are two meals provided each week. There are others who come looking for something more than physical sustenance. They come early, before the supper for fellowship, cards and coffee. Spiritual needs are taken care of.
I have been attending all of the functions at Sanctuary for nearly four years and have the others neatly divided into two camps: those who have had their lives destroyed, and those who are questioning their faith. Of course i’m sitting on the fence between the two. Many are lonely and looking for fellowship. Some can be alone for short periods in solitude; but few can endure isolation for any length of time and remain healthy. I believe that we are social creatures. The food may seem like it is the only thing drawing the folks in, but the fellowship, such as it is, keeps them coming back. It may not be as close-knit as some other churches, but it does welcome outsiders, many of whom have no where else to go because of drugs, alcohol, and mental health. They don’t get neatly dressed for the Bible study and they don’t put on their Sunday best for the circle meeting, possibly because they don’t own any fine and fancy clothing for such a purpose.
Paul talked about the social gospel and the scum of the earth congregation in the first century. It still exists, and will probably continue into the future if prophecy can be relied upon. It’s just that these days rent is offered free.
By Dan Lenart
For the first time ever, Sanctuary London has found some designated space to call ‘HOME’. As of February 2015, we will be renting space on the main floor of 531 Talbot Street. We are so thankful for all the people who have helped to make this possible, and are extremely excited about the increased ministry opportunities this space will provide. Please come by to say hi and see our space soon!

Special thanks to:
Talbot Street Church
Rodney Lover from Lover’s AtWork Office Furniture
Tom Miles
Eldon and Lena Clelland
Gary and Helen Nash
Bob and Marie Spindler
Bill and Marg Reckman
Eric St. Pierre
Keith and Eithne Griffiths
Adam Mackey
Derek Gwynn
Congratulations to Mr. Al Miller who won the Canoe Raffle.
Al shared with us that he is extremely excited about being able to take the canoe up to the cottage to teach his 9 grandchildren how to paddle.
Huge thank you to everyone for your support!
Interested in winning this cedar strip canoe? Only two weeks left!
Albert DeVries built this with a great team from our faith community, Sanctuary London, and our partner Talbot Street Church. Tickets are $10 each. 500 tickets total. Canoe is valued at $3500. 16 foot Prospector.
All funds raised will of coarse be split between Sanctuary and Talbot Street to pay for our programming. Thanks for your support!
Draw is on January 21/15. Please contact Darryl at 519-280-8895 or darryl@sanctuarylondon.ca
“John, I’m surprised to see you here tonight. I thought you had said you wouldn’t be able to make it to our Christmas Eve dinner because you would be over at your parent’s place?”
John has been hanging out with the Sanctuary community for a number of years. Living in a geared to income apartment now, he was new to the streets when we first met him. He was pushed out of his family home at a young age as a result of deep conflict between he and his father. Christmas was the one time of year they would get together and attempt to put their differences aside.
“Don’t you remember last year?” John asked.
…And I do remember chatting with John last year the day after his family Christmas gathering. John told me that he may have eaten, and definitely drank way too much. It was all he could do to cope with the family berating him with questions: His dad, ‘got a job yet?’, Uncle Bill, ‘got a job yet?’, Uncle Fred, ‘got a job yet?’ The last thing John said really stuck out in my mind. “Just once I would like to be able to come and relax and enjoy myself and to have people happy to see me, just for me, and not be reminded of the fact that I am a complete failure in life.”…
“Ya, I remember what happened,” I told him, “But this is the one time in the entire year you get to see them, and you told me on Monday that I wouldn’t see you till after Christmas.”
I know, that was my plan, but I asked my mom if we could change our plans so that I could be here tonight to have Christmas dinner with my real family.