African-American leaders hear needs of damaged churches
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green The Rev. Martha Orphe, mission zone director for the greater New Orleans area, listens to pastors give a wish list.
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The
Rev. Martha Orphe, United Methodist mission zone director for the
greater New Orleans area, listens to pastors give a wish list for
churches damaged by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Nearly three dozen
African-American staff - representing churchwide boards, agencies,
commissions, conferences and districts - gathered July 20-22 in New
Orleans under the auspices of National Black Staff Forum for a "Rebuild
Our Churches" summit. They heard from Orphe and others who have been in
the trenches since Aug. 29, 2005. A UMNS photo by Linda Green. Photo
#06849. Accompanies UMNS story #472. 8/9/06. |
Aug. 9, 2006
By Jeneane Jones*
NEW ORLEANS (UMNS) — The wish list for United Methodist churches
damaged by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita is a long one.
“If you have it in your church, we will need it in our churches to be
vital,” the Rev. Martha Orphe told a group of the denomination’s
African-American staff. The needs cover everything from Bibles and hymnals
and computers and printers to refrigerators, furniture, silverware and drywall.
Orphe, the United Methodist mission zone director
for the greater New Orleans area, is in charge of helping some 45 churches
in the
area redefine their ministry.
That effort is occurring in a post-hurricane world where — 11 months
after the hurricanes — 80 percent of the citizens have lost homes, many
churches remain mired in muck and mold, and pastors are relearning that the
church is about community-building.
Nearly three dozen African-American staff from
churchwide boards, agencies, commissions, conferences and districts gathered
July 20-22
in New Orleans under
the auspices of National Black Staff Forum for a “Rebuild Our Churches” summit.
Afterward, they participated in two days of recovery work in the city and in
Mississippi.
During the summit, the black staff members heard from Orphe and others who
have been in the trenches since Aug. 29, 2005.
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green African-American staff of United Methodist agencies and conferences worship with pastors in New Orleans.
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African-American
staff of United Methodist boards, agencies, commissions, conferences
and districts worship with pastors in New Orleans during a July 20-22
"Rebuild Our Churches" summit. The nearly three dozen staff listened to
pastors give a wish list for United Methodist churches damaged by
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. A UMNS photo by Linda Green. Photo #06850.
Accompanies UMNS story #472. 8/9/06 |
The pastors and lay leaders were emotionally spent,
though spiritually strong. “We
can’t do this kind of living without God,” was a refrain the staff
members heard from summit participants, who described the loss of homes, church
members and belongings with the rhythmic repetition of a sad song, sung too
often.
Responding to the question, “What is the state of United Methodist ministry
in New Orleans?” Orphe said, “Like everything else, it is hurt,
broken and rebuilding.”
The Rev. Andrew J. Douglas, a towering, silver-haired pastor working with
the St. Matthews, Algiers and Boise United Methodist churches, answered another
way.
Rising, he spoke about losing two of his best
church members, of living 19 days in a shelter to escape the hurricane’s violence, and traveling to
Texas with a borrowed shirt and tie to deliver their eulogies. He lightly touched
the shoulder of one from his congregation and added, “The district superintendent
offered me a church in Shreveport, but I wasn’t going anywhere.”
His bass voice changed to a preaching timbre as
he recalled the 14 members he had in church after the evacuation of New Orleans
ended. “I
told them to start calling. We would have church on that next Sunday. We
had 300 when
I got back. Nurture, outreach and worship is vital. When our churches are back,
the people will come back.”
New mission frontier
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green "When our churches are back, the people will come back," says the Rev. Andrew J. Douglas.
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"When
our churches are back, the people will come back," says the Rev. Andrew
J. Douglas, who works with the St. Matthews, Algiers and Boise United
Methodist churches in New Orleans. He spoke to African-American pastors
and church staff at a July 20-22 "Rebuild Our Churches" summit in New
Orleans. A UMNS photo by Linda Green. Photo #06852. Accompanies UMNS
story #472. 8/9/06 |
Across town in Mission Zone Six, the Rev. James
Haynes said the floodwaters brought a sense of renewal to his community.
He spoke
with pride of the former
white and black churches, once separated in worship, which have now, post-Katrina,
become a symbol of connectionalism. “We indicated we wanted our churches
to worship together. Now it’s one of the strengths we have, that we all
worship at the same time,” he said.
In addition, Haynes’ mission zone is setting aside Arabi United Methodist
Church for housing work team volunteers. The church, nicknamed the “Arabi
Hilton,” can house 85 people.
At neighboring Hartzell United Methodist Church
in the Lower Ninth Ward, flood damage has prevented worship services, but
people
want to maintain the church’s
presence in the community. Soon it will be available to host up to 125 volunteers.
“This is our new frontier of mission. We are rebuilding from the ground
up,” Orphe said. “And it is not just the structures that need rebuilding.
We need help bringing our people back. We need churches to partner with us.
We need people to come down to do vacation Bible school, discipleship training.”
Orphe pointed out that damaged churches cannot
look to the United Methodist Committee on Relief for assistance with rebuilding
because
the agency’s
mandate does not include repairing churches. Instead, the agency provides services
to Katrina survivors. In response, the United Methodist Council of Bishops
has launched the Katrina Church Recovery Appeal to help rebuild the storm-stricken
churches. Information is available at http://archives.umc.org/interior.asp?mid=11099.
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green The Rev. James Haynes believes the floodwaters from Hurricane Katrina brought a sense of renewal to his community.
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The
Rev. James Haynes tells participants at a July 20-22 "Rebuild Our
Churches" summit that the floodwaters from Hurricane Katrina brought a
sense of renewal to his community. Pastors of African-American United
Methodist churches damaged by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita provided black
staff from the denomination's agencies with a wish list of their needs,
which include Bibles, hymnals, computers and printers, refrigerators,
furniture, silverware and drywall. A UMNS photo by Linda Green. Photo
#06851. Accompanies UMNS story #472. 8/9/06 |
Participants at the two-day session divided their
time between strategizing in small groups and hearing from pastors and lay
people
from around the state.
They discussed ways to reconnect churches in the region with the denomination’s
resources. They listened as pastors shared their needs, including expertise
to strengthen their congregations and help finding their church members.
Churches of color needed
The summit grew out of a challenge made at last
March’s national meeting
of Black Methodists for Church Renewal, according to Diane Johnson, executive
secretary for the Office of Urban Ministries at the United Methodist Board
of Global Ministries and president of the National Black Staff Forum. “We
wanted to encourage African Americans to be a more visible presence among the
countless volunteers that are helping rebuild the region.” The summit
and relief effort were organized by the board.
The Rev. Connie Thomas heads the Louisiana Conference
volunteer effort. “We
need partnership churches of color to be on the list,” she said. “We
are grateful to all who come to work with us, but we need to see the faces
that look like us too. They represent our strength and a unique understanding
of what we are going through.”
Volunteer work teams can partner with the mission zone churches and learn
more about the relief effort by visiting www.laumcstormrelief.com. They may
also sign up to partner by calling (877) 345-5193.
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A UMNS photo by Linda Green United Methodist agency staff and pastors of hurricane-damaged churches in New Orleans join in two circles of prayer.
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African-American
staff of United Methodist agencies join in circles of prayer with
pastors of hurricane-damaged churches in New Orleans. The staff met with
pastors in a July 20-22 "Rebuild Our Churches" summit in the city. The
pastors say their needs cover everything from Bibles and hymnals and
computers and printers to refrigerators, furniture, silverware and
drywall. A UMNS photo by Linda Green. Photo #06853. Accompanies UMNS
story #472. 8/9/06 |
Thomas noted that the conference’s volunteer effort focuses on the people
and the churches. “There are less than 50 churches that need to be rebuilt
and repaired. We have more than 200,000 families that need our help. They need
a home to come back to before they can go to church. We need volunteers who
can rebuild homes, as well as help to rebuild lives.”
Listening and acting
At the start of the summit, the Rev. Kelvin Sauls
told participants “we’re
here to listen and take action.” The newly appointed national director
of congregational development at the United Methodist Board of Discipleship
led two work groups to the Gulf Coast earlier this year and helped facilitate
the gathering of pastors and agency leaders at the summit.
By the end of the summit, the power of water, its capability for destruction,
also came to symbolize the power of unity and rebirth.
Sauls recalled a South African proverb in urging
participants to share the information they had learned as widely as possible. “?Any waterfall
starts with one drop.’ Our work is but one drop in a waterfall for justice
and God’s righteousness.”
The National Black Staff Forum comprises 208 black
and Africana people who serve in executive and professional positions on
the
denomination’s boards,
agencies, commissions, annual conferences and districts, as well as 25 bishops
and four top agency executives.
*Jones is director of communications for the California-Nevada Annual Conference.
News media contact: Linda Green, (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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