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Pastor Lives on Fast Food Rooftop

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A pastor in New Mexico will be living on the roof of a local restaurant to raise awareness and funds for children in need and orphans in Africa starting on Monday.

  • The Rev. Dr. Michael Hattabaugh, director of the National Day of Care, will set up camp on top of a Chick-fil-A restaurant in Albuquerque Nov. 12-18, 2007 as part of the ''Get Mike Down'' project to remind people that millions of children need ''a roof over their heads.''
    (Photo: Get Mike Down)
    The Rev. Dr. Michael Hattabaugh, director of the National Day of Care, will set up camp on top of a Chick-fil-A restaurant in Albuquerque Nov. 12-18, 2007 as part of the ''Get Mike Down'' project to remind people that millions of children need ''a roof over their heads.''

The Rev. Dr. Michael Hattabaugh will set up camp on top of a Chick-fil-A restaurant in Albuquerque, Nov. 12-18, as part of the “Get Mike Down” project to remind people that millions of children need “a roof over their heads.”

“It is hard to wrap your arms around 15 million orphans [in Africa],” said Hattabaugh, director of the National Day of Care. “That’s bigger than a lot of states in the United States. That’s like eight New Mexico’s just full of orphans. It is just hard to grasp that.

“So I thought if I lived on a roof that is how people will get their arms wrapped around the idea,” explained the founding pastor of Gathering Church in Farmington, N.M. “It is a good connection. People ask why are you doing this and I use it draw people’s attention.”

Hattabaugh’s rooftop project was inspired by a Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade he saw on TV a couple of years ago where one of the band member spent an afternoon on top of the band hall roof to raise funds for the band. He thought he could apply the same idea to raise funds for orphans and live for a longer period of time on the roof.

“Some crazy guy living on a roof waving at people will hopefully get people’s attention long enough so we can convey the message,” the New Mexico pastor said. “We have so much and it would take so little to really make a huge impact on the continent of Africa if we would just do a little bit.”

For $3, a person can buy a mosquito net and save someone from malaria. It costs about $1,000-$1,500 to dig a well in a small community that could provide children at an orphanage with clean drinking water.

“It just takes so little. It is sort of like out-of-sight, out-of-mind and we just want to bring awareness,” Hattabaugh said.

“15 million orphans on one continent has never ever happened before,” he emphasized.

While on the roof, the National Day of Care director will live in a tent, use a chemical toilet, and possibly use a solar shower if weather permits. If it is too cold, Hattabaugh said he plans to use a lot of deodorant and change his clothes often instead of taking showers while on the roof. Chick-fil-A has offered to feed him.

A wireless security camera will be stationed on the roof where Chick-fil-A customers below can see what Hattabugh is doing.

“We really encourage everyone reading this to get involved in some way through us or something they are already involved in or through their local church because it is really a cry of desperation and these kids really need to hear from us,” Hattabaugh urged.

The goal is to raise $200,000 of which half will go to Carrie Tingley Hospital in Albuquerque – a pediatric orthopedic rehabilitation center for children, adolescents and families. The other half will go to the National Day of Care.

The National Day of Care is an annual observance promoted in the United States one day in February with the purpose to mobilize a response to global humanitarian crisis. The initial focus is to provide assistance to the over 15 million orphans and victims of AIDS in Africa. The National Day of Care is also involved in assisting orphans, vulnerable children, and victims of AIDS in the United States and around the world, as well as disaster relief. It also sponsors “Get Mike Down.”

“It (Get Mike Down) is something everyone can get behind. It is cross-denomination, across places we might never agree, but on this we agree – that we must rise up as Christ commanded us to help widows and orphans and that is what true religion looks like.”

This is the third time Hattabaugh has done a roof project in New Mexico.

The National Day of Care will be held in Feb. 10, 2008.

On the Web: To hold a “Get Mike Down” in your community or for more information, visit www.getmikedown.com

Most recent comments
  • Wed Nov 14, 2007 8:30 am : 0 : 0 Flag

    This shall be interesting...Hopefully he achieves his goal.

  • Tue Nov 13, 2007 2:21 pm : 2 : 3 Flag

    Zenodaddy:

    Our brothers Benny Hinn and Ken Copeland and sister-in-Christ Joyce Meyers, are accountable to God [and to theircongregations] for the things they do with the millions they make in their ministries. Whether they come forward or not to help the 15 million orphans in Africa is something they have to decide, but either way, it should not prevent the less affluent defenders of the true gospel who post on this site to put their money where their mouths are, as it were, and give generously to support this cause. True religion is looking after the widows and orphans. God bless.

  • Tue Nov 13, 2007 2:04 pm : 1 : 0 Flag

    The thought of 15 million orphans in Africa needing love and care is the most heartbreaking thing imaginable. It has touched me deeply and I thank God that there are people like Mike who are rising up at this time to help these orphans just as Jesus commanded us to do. Thank you Mike for making us aware about this huge humanitarian crisis in Africa and thank you also for stirring us up to do something. God bless.

  • Tue Nov 13, 2007 1:56 pm : 0 : 0 Flag

    Well, this would be a great time for Benny Hinn, Joyce Meyers, Ken Copeland, and the rest of them to put up or shut up... and I am guessing... neither will happen... I am sure there is a 50,000 toothbrush that needs to be purchased by Joyce...

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