From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Lutheran Disaster Response Leaders 'Come to the Waters'


From News News <NEWS@ELCA.ORG>
Date 13 Jul 2000 13:08:26

ELCA NEWS SERVICE

July 13, 2000

LUTHERAN DISASTER RESPONSE LEADERS 'COME TO THE WATERS'
00-171-MP*

     SAN ANTONIO, Texas (ELCA) -- Chief executive officers and
disaster coordinators of Lutheran social ministry organizations
gathered here for the Lutheran Disaster Response Consultation June
23-25. A highlight of the conference was the debut of the Lutheran
Disaster Response Coalition, an affiliation of different Lutheran
organizations that work in disaster response.
     Lutheran Disaster Response (LDR) is a joint ministry of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) and the Lutheran
Church-Missouri Synod (LCMS). Staff of statewide Lutheran social
ministries, which are supported by both church bodies, meet every
other year. Social ministries are at the front lines of disaster
response for LDR, which aids disaster survivors in the United States
and Caribbean.
     The conference theme, "Come to the Waters," highlighted the
nature of many of the disasters to which LDR responds. San Antonio,
where the San Antonio River is one of the main attractions, was at
the center of the 1998 floods in Texas -- the worst in almost 500
years.
     Some 85 participants heard an address from Lutheran Social
Services of the South (LSSS) representatives on the agency's
involvement after the floods.
      "The church was there because of people and support, and
because (the church) wanted to share the love of Christ," said the
Rev. James E. Bennett, of the LSSS response.  Bennett is bishop of
the ELCA Southwestern Texas Synod, which is based in San Antonio.
     The new disaster response coalition was formed to help Lutheran
disaster response become more efficient, said the Rev. Gilbert B.
Furst, director of Lutheran Disaster Response and ELCA Domestic
Disaster Response, Chicago.  "In one sense each coalition member has
its own vision, its own idea of what it wants," he said.
     The organizations that signed the coalition agreement include
Laborers for Christ, LCMS World Relief, Lutheran Brotherhood, Orphan
Grain Train, Mission Builders, Aid Association for Lutherans,
Lutheran Services in America, Lutheran Hour Ministries and ELCA
Domestic Disaster Response.
     "I'm feeling good about this agreement," Furst said.  The
coalition will meet in September to discuss how it plans to proceed.
     The birth of the Lutheran Disaster Response Coalition came with
a new identity for LDR and the coalition. Elaine Richter Bryant, LDR
associate director and director of LCMS World Relief, St. Louis,
introduced a new logo featuring half of a building joined to a wavy
line representing water, surrounding a cross.  The logo was developed
jointly by communication staff with the ELCA and LCMS.
     "The logo was created because there was a need to make LDR's
national image clear,"said Bryant. "The building could be a church,
home or community that is broken." The water represents the waters of
life in baptism as well as destruction in the form of floods, Bryant
added.
      "We established a coalition in Florida in April," said Judith
Bunker, a member of Lutheran Services in Florida and statewide LDR
coordinator. "It already has a number of important parties: agencies,
judicatories and brotherhoods." Bunker plans to use the new logo as a
way to identify the new Florida coalition partners.
     "It's not going to change the way we respond, but it is going
to make our work more visible," she said.
     During the conference, participants also attended workshops on
topics ranging from serving the unique needs of children to an update
on terrorist-caused disasters. Larry Zensinger, a representative from
the Federal Emergency Management Agency, highlighted ways that the
federal government and non-governmental agencies can work together in
disasters.
      "The three areas where I see a need for improvement are in
strengthening volunteer networks, working to integrate the different
networks, and training and education," said Zensinger.
     The Rev. Foster McCurley, coauthor of "Making Sense Out of
Sorrow" and theologian-in-residence for social ministry
organizations, and the Rev. Christine Iverson, director of Lutheran
Social Service of Kansas and Oklahoma, led the group in devotions and
Bible studies throughout the consultation. McCurley, a theologian
with expertise in the Old Testament, used the flood story in Genesis
6-9 of the Bible for a talk on "When God Sent the Flood to Judge."
     "People assume that God sent a flood as some kind of object
lesson," said McCurley. "But this is not the case. God hears our
laments and he remembers us."

[*Melissa Pavolka is a junior at Indiana University, Bloomington,
Ind.  This summer she is an intern with the ELCA Department for
Communication.]

For information contact:
John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or NEWS@ELCA.ORG
http://listserv.elca.org/archives/elcanews.html


Browse month . . . Browse month (sort by Source) . . . Advanced Search & Browse . . . WFN Home