United Methodists must be AIDS ambassadors, speaker says
Sep. 12, 2006 News media contact: Kathy Gilbert * (615) 7425470* Nashville {542}
NOTE: Photographs and a related story are available at http://umns.umc.org.
By Erik Alsgaard*
WASHINGTON (UMNS) - United Methodists from around the world gathered in the nation's capital to hear that the church must get involved in the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
"We need you, and more people like you, to become ambassadors for the United Methodist Global AIDS Fund," said the Rev. Don Messer, a retired theological school president and a member of the fund's board of directors.
"We need United Methodists to pray, speak out in their local churches and wherever their ministries take them, and do something in support of HIV/AIDS ministries."
"Lighten the Burden," held Sept. 8-9, was the first conference of its kind in more than 20 years. The event was sponsored by the Global AIDS Fund, created by the 2004 United Methodist General Conference, Board of Global Ministries and the Board of Church and Society.
Sobering statistics
The statistics on HIV/AIDS are staggering. Attendees heard that nearly 40 million people have the virus worldwide. Sixty percent of those with the virus live in sub-Saharan Africa, and nearly five people die of AIDS every minute.
Participants were challenged at many levels to get involved in HIV/AIDS ministries in their local churches. That challenge was spelled out in a frank panel presentation Friday afternoon.
Lonny LeFever is the education coordinator for the West Ohio Annual (regional) Conference's AIDS ministry. He has been HIV positive for 23 years. Because of his sexual orientation, he told participants, he had many struggles as a child and eventually left home at 16. It was through a congregation's outreach program to HIV/AIDS patients that he eventually returned to the church as an adult.
"No longer can we sit back and wait for others to do something," he said. "Quit judging other people because while we wait, people die."
Another panelist, Diane Carter, is an HIV/AIDS educator in the Washington area who visits schools and conducts workshops for young people. She has been HIV positive for years.
"The church is in need of bold leadership to face this cunning disease," she said. "Face it: people have sex. We have to be able, at least willing, to address that. Let's have condoms in our churches. Do an HIV/AIDS outreach every Sunday and make the congregation knowledgeable. We have a big job ahead of us, and I hope the church will join us."
For coordinators of the United Methodist Global AIDS Fund, retired Bishop Fritz and Etta Mae Mutti, HIV/AIDS is personal. Two sons, Tim and Fred, died from the disease in the early 1990s.
"We are here to show the love of Christ to everyone around the world," Mutti said, in his opening remarks.
"There are numerous ways that local churches can come in and become involved in this," said Etta Mae Mutti. "All they need to do is get the stories out; they just need to get some personal stories going in those churches, and if you have that, the money is going to come in."
Overcoming stigma
For many, overcoming the stigma of being a person with HIV/AIDS is something the church can help with.
"You (the church) kept us away by telling us we have sinned," said Carter, "but what a greater sin to let the next generation of children die."
Musa Dube, associate professor at the University of Botswana's Department of Theology and Religious Studies, offered the opening sermon. In it, she explained how the churches healing ministry needs to be recaptured to reach out to HIV/AIDS sufferers.
"Jesus cured every disease, scripture reports," she said. "What have characterized your efforts to heal God's world?"
The story of HIV/AIDS has traveled with her for the last 25 years, she said, and left many marks: denial, fears, silence, indifference, hopelessness, disappointment.
Using Ezekiel 37, Dube invited United Methodists to see the spirit of the Lord "is inviting you to see the bones of 40 million people living with HIV/AIDS today; living with poverty and hopelessness; inviting you to listen to them.
"Look across the HIV/AIDS valley of dry bones," she continued. "Do we hear the dry bones of the orphaned children? Let us listen to them. Do you see across the valley of dry bones the women who risk infection by caregiving to others? Take a walk around the valley, see the poverty that makes people vulnerable to HIV/AIDS."
While saying that the problem is huge, and that only 150 people were present, she reminded participants that with God, nothing is impossible.
"You have powerful resurrection ability," she said. "The Christian mandate is to call people back to hope and life. Go, prophesy to the valley of dry bones."
Drop in the ocean
The Sept. 8 keynote speaker was Bishop João Somane Machado of Mozambique. In his sub-Saharan country, 1.7 million people are living with HIV/AIDS and 123,000 have lost their lives to the disease, leaving more than 300,000 children as orphans.
"Is HIV/AIDS only for poor people?" he asked. "The reality is it is for all of us, but the poor are more affected. The poor, they die twice. They die because of the HIV/AIDS disease. They die because when you give them the medicines, they don't have the food to balance the diet."
In Mozambique, most people cannot afford to spend U.S.$2 per day for food or medicine, the bishop said, because 60 percent of the population lives below that country's poverty line. As a result, many people turn to prostitution, which only makes more people vulnerable to the disease.
To combat the virus, many new ministries are being tried, he said.
"Some pastors, even in my church, will not talk in the pulpit or Sunday school about HIV/AIDS," he said. "It is the women's groups in the conference that is pulling the church to go there."
Bishop Machado talked of radio stations being established by churches to get information in the public arena; he talked of home health care workers being trained to assist HIV-positive women who are about to give birth; and he talked of hospital programs and education programs being offered.
All that, he said, "is not enough. It's like a drop in the ocean."
"This disease is not just for Africa," Bishop Machado said. "If we all come together, we can one day see the difference. ... The time is here. We need a global alliance to make a change."
The goal of the Global AIDS fund is to raise $1 per United Methodist in the United States or about $8 million. The United Methodist Global AIDS Fund is an Advance Special of the United Methodist Church, #982345. Write that number on the memo line of a check and drop it in the offering plate at church. Credit-card donations may be made by calling (800) 554-8583.
"Make sure every Sunday you say something about global AIDS," said Mutti. "There are 40 million people affected with this in the world. You can't ignore it."
* Alsgaard is the director of communications for the Baltimore-Washington Conference.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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United Methodist News Service Photos and stories also available at: http://umns.umc.org