Alaska Conference chancellor dies while doing relief work
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The Rev. Thomas and Gail Dahl |
The Rev. Thomas and Gail Dahl |
March 31, 2006
By Elliott Wright*
NEW YORK (UMNS) — A retired clergyman, who was also a lawyer and
chief counsel to the Alaska Missionary Conference, has died following a
fall while taking part in a United Methodist Volunteers in Mission home
repair project in southern Mississippi.
Thomas H. Dahl, 66, of Anchorage was injured when he fell from a
ladder in Moss Point on March 28. He was part of an Alaskan Missionary
Conference volunteer team working alongside people from the St. Paul
United Methodist Church in the town east of Biloxi and north of
Pascagoula. He never regained consciousness and was pronounced dead
March 30 at an area hospital.
“Tom Dahl was a man filled with a spirit of love and care in the name
of Jesus Christ,” said Bishop Edward Paup of Seattle, whose episcopal
area includes Alaska.
A veteran mission volunteer, Dahl led a 15-person team from Alaska
that worked in Moss Point in late March. His oldest son, Steven, was at
the site when the accident occurred; his wife, Gail, had been part of
the crew but had returned home before the accident.
Moss Point, a community of 15,500 people, is one of many sites of
post-hurricane relief efforts in the southeastern part of the
Mississippi Annual Conference.
A native and clergy member of the Minnesota Annual Conference, Dahl
went to Alaska as a missionary pastor in 1964 following his graduation
from Wesley Theological Seminary, Washington. He later worked in urban
renewal and decided to attend law school in California. He returned to
practice in Juneau in 1977, with an emphasis on administrative law.
Dahl was for many years the chancellor (chief legal counsel) of the
Alaska Missionary Conference, handling a landmark case that resulted in
the upholding of the property trust clause of the United Methodist
Church.
He returned to active clergy status in 2000 and for four years was
pastor of Aldersgate United Methodist Church in Juneau. Ten members of
the UMVIM team of which he was a part are members of that congregation.
Dahl held many positions of leadership within the United Methodist
Church, including being a delegate to several General Conferences and a
director of the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries from 1988 to
1996. He was related to that mission agency when he was a missionary
pastor.
Bishop Paup described Dahl as a man of “justice, mercy, and kindness”
who leaves a strong legacy and example of Christian commitment to
mission. “He understood that the mission of the church is never only
local. He set a model for United Methodists in Alaska reaching out to
other parts of the United States and the world.”
The Rev. Rachel Lieder Simeon, superintendent of the Alaska
Conference, said Dahl had a “great heart and an amazing mind filled with
joy.”
Dahl was born in Duluth, Minn., in 1939 and graduated from the
University of Minnesota in 1960. Survivors include wife Gail; three
grown children, Steven, Kathryn and Michael; and three grandchildren.
Plans for a memorial service were pending March 31.
*Wright is information officer for the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries.
News media contact: Linda Green, (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org
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