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By Linda Bloom*
12:00 P.M. EST March 5, 2010 | NEW YORK (UMNS)
Melissa Crutchfield (right) of the United Methodist Committee on Relief
views
earthquake damage at the Methodist Church of Port-au-Prince.
UMNS
photos by Mike DuBose.
View in Photo Gallery
Eight days after the January earthquake in Haiti, Melissa Crutchfield
led a small team to the island to start assessing emergency needs for
the United Methodist Committee on Relief.
The ability of her team to get to Haiti quickly was due in part to
One Great Hour of Sharing, an annual churchwide offering for UMCOR taken
on the fourth Sunday in Lent. This year’s offering is on March 14.
To Crutchfield, who coordinates international emergency response for
the relief agency, One Great Hour of Sharing “is the backbone of what
makes everything possible.”
Because that fund pays for everything from staff salaries to
electricity to cell phones, UMCOR is able to pledge that it will use 100
percent of donations earmarked for specific disasters and projects on
the projects themselves.
And by supporting UMCOR’s headquarter operations, One Great Hour of
Sharing allows for both emergency and long-term responses to a wide
range of domestic and international disasters and ongoing projects
related to hunger and development issues. “All of that takes an enormous
amount of coordination and communication,” Crutchfield said.
The high-profile disasters that receive extensive media coverage—the
Haiti earthquake, Hurricane Katrina, the Asian tsunami—generally draw
enough donations to finance UMCOR’s long-term recovery projects in those
places.
But other small-scale disasters do not.
In 2009, for example, localized flooding in New York, Illinois,
Hawaii and North Dakota drew requests for assistance but little
attention. However, UMCOR can still help with money from One Great Hour
of Sharing or other undesignated funds, said the Rev. Tom Hazelwood, who
oversees U.S. disaster response.
“Those are disasters for which no money, or very little money, may
come in from donors,” he added.
Keeping the promise
In a March 4 message to the denomination’s bishops, the interim top
executive of the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries, UMCOR’s
parent agency, noted that gifts for Haiti relief are expected to top $25
million and reminded them of the 100-percent pledge.
“As you know, UMCOR is able to make this promise because
administrative expenses are covered through the One Great Hour of
Sharing,” wrote Bishop Joel Martinez.
Melissa Crutchfield (center) conducts a needs assessment at a temporary
camp in Mellier, Haiti, following the earthquake.
View in Photo Gallery
“Because UMCOR does not receive World Service funds or any other
apportionments, the costs of doing business are underwritten by The One
Great Hour of Sharing. I encourage you to please highlight March 14th
with your annual conference as a day to lay the foundation for UMCOR to
seek justice and mercy for suffering people everywhere.”
In Western North Carolina Conference, Bishop Larry Goodpaster had
already urged his local churches to go the extra mile and receive an
offering for One Great Hour of Sharing.
“To make sacrifices on behalf of others means that we who have been
blessed in many ways will have to adjust our own ways of living,” he
wrote in a letter to church members.
“Perhaps we will have to deny ourselves that extra purchase or
additional meal out; or, perhaps we will have to make a sacrificial gift
that stretches us; or, perhaps we will have to trust God deeper.”
Churches can order free offering envelopes
or posters for One Great Hour of Sharing by calling 888-346-3862.
Other resources can be found at http://new.gbgm-umc.org/umcor/give/oghs.
Online donations can be made at give now.
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in New
York.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, 646-369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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