Houston pastors plan to ‘stand with our people’ during Rita
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Photo courtesy of Ed Edahl/FEMA Traffic is heavy on Houston's freeways as residents flee Hurricane Rita.
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Traffic
is heavy on Houston's freeways as residents flee Hurricane Rita. The
destruction wrought by Hurricane Katrina, which made landfall Aug. 29,
and the problems surrounding the government's recovery effort compelled
United Methodist bishops and UMCOR to urge people in Texas, and along
the coast of Mississippi and Louisiana to get out of harm's way. A UMNS
photo courtesy of Ed Edahl/FEMA. Photo #05H112. Accompanies UMNS story
#532. 9/24/05 |
Sept. 24, 2005 A UMNS Report By Steve Smith* In his seminary ethics class, the Rev. Jim Jackson learned an important credo: never desert your parishioners in time of need. So
while Hurricane Rita aimed its wrath for the Texas Gulf Coast and 2
million area residents fled for safety, the senior pastor at Houston’s
Chapelwood United Methodist Church planned to stay put. “It never
occurred to me to leave,” said Jackson, whose church stands 35 miles
from the coast. “Staying goes with the turf. We’re here not to save our
skins but to stand with our people. “Besides, I’ve got my dog here, so I’m not alone.”
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Photo courtesy of Ed Edahl/FEMA Evacuees from the Reliant Center in Houston load onto planes to fly to Arkansas to get out of the path of Hurricane Rita.
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Evacuees
from Hurricane Katrina, who had been housed at the Reliant Center in
Houston, load onto planes to fly to Arkansas. People have been evacuated
from Texas, Mississippi and Louisiana to get out of the path of
Hurricane Rita. A UMNS photo courtesy of Ed Edahl/FEMA. Photo #05H114.
Accompanies UMNS story #532. 9/24/05 |
As the hurricane continued its collision course for the coast, United
Methodist pastors said Sept. 22 they would weather Rita’s rage so they
could open the doors of their churches for people needing spiritual
solace. Many of them lead churches in areas around Houston that were
under voluntary evacuation, though some, like the Rev. Clay Whitaker,
were in coastal areas where disaster officials had ordered all residents
to flee for higher ground.Whitaker, pastor of First United
Methodist Church in Vidor, Texas, about 90 minutes from Galveston and in
Rita’s projected path, said he intended to stay so he could open his
church for people living in mobile homes and poorly built houses that
Rita could crush easily. However, Red Cross and disaster relief workers
said Whitaker would do more harm than good because opening the church
would discourage people from obeying mandatory evacuation orders. Whitaker said his wife and four children were staying in a pastor’s parsonage in Palestine in east Texas, far from harm’s way. “I’m
a die-hard, a pastor who doesn’t want to run out on his parish in times
of crisis,” Whitaker said. “But if I opened the church and Rita knocked
out the electricity and water for several weeks, we’d be in a real
pickle. The Red Cross, fire chiefs and the others said I would provide
better service by getting people to a safer place so all of us could
come back in one piece and rebuild.”
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Bishop Janice K. Riggle Huie |
Bishop Janice K. Riggle Huie |
Bishop Janice Riggle Huie, leader of the denomination’s Houston-based
Texas Annual (regional) Conference, said she was staying in Houston so
she could respond to needs once Rita blows over.“Most of us
feel like while it might not be an easy night, we’re really going to be
safe or we wouldn’t be doing this,” said Huie, who lives in an area
under voluntary evacuation. “We learned from Katrina and watched
the aftermath, so now it’s time to pack up, not take undue chances, and
hope and pray the situation isn’t as bad as it was in New Orleans.” As
Rita bore down on Texas, United Methodist leaders and volunteers
continued providing shelter, living supplies and other aid to many of
the more than 50,000 former New Orleans residents bused to Houston after
Hurricane Katrina left them homeless Aug. 29. “Katrina relief is
winding down after three nonstop weeks, and now Rita is on the way,”
said Susan Silvus, outreach director at St. Luke’s United Methodist
Church. The church’s leaders coordinated relief efforts for hundreds of
thousands of New Orleans residents at Houston’s Astrodome. “Needless to
say, we are more than antsy.” The Rev. Jim Moore, the church’s senior pastor, was staying in Houston, Huie said. Meanwhile, Chapelwood United Methodist Church’s special Web site, www.chapelwood911.org,
helps congregants and other people keep up with Rita. The Web site
offers prayers, songs and other resources people can use to worship
together in their neighborhoods as well as streaming audio of
inspirational words from the pastors.
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Photo courtesy of Ed Edahl/FEMA Houston citizens stock up on hurricane supplies before evacuating for Hurricane Rita.
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Houston
citizens stock up on hurricane supplies such as water, batteries and
food for 3 days. Recent memories of Hurricane Katrina sent people
hurrying to prepare for Hurricane Rita. A UMNS photo courtesy of Ed
Edahl/FEMA. Photo #05H115. Accompanies UMNS story #532. 9/24/05 |
The Rev. Cynthia Harvey, pastor at Memorial Drive United Methodist
Church, said she is not evacuating because her west Houston church is 40
miles from the coast and her church is a central part of the community.“After
Katrina, we became a hub for helping people evacuate,” Harvey said. “We
fed them, helped them find clothing, find apartments, and other
denominations joined us. My big concern right now is whether our
building will be safe enough after Rita to respond to the needs of this
community. “We’re about responding to the needs of the people, and that requires us to sometimes be in a place that comes with risks.” The
Rev. James Bankston, senior pastor at St. Paul’s United Methodist
Church, said his wife, two daughters and four grandchildren left about 5
a.m. Sept. 22 bound for Malakoff in East Texas. About 10 hours later,
they had traveled as far as Cleveland, Texas, only 100 miles from
Houston, because the highways were clogged with outbound traffic. A son-in-law moved to Austin, Texas, with his company, while another son-in-law stayed with Bankston. Bankston
is chairman of the Interfaith Ministries of Greater Houston, which is
helping members of Christian, Muslim, Jewish and other faiths respond to
Katrina and Rita’s survivors. About 20 parishioners and members of his
maintenance and custodial staff planned to hole up in the church during
Rita’s onslaught. “I want to open the doors on Sunday morning for
people who want to be in church,” Bankston said. “I didn’t want them to
find locked doors.” *Smith is a freelance writer based in Dallas. News media contact: Tim Tanton, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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