From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Ice Storm a Test of Faith, Kentucky Lutherans Say


From <NEWS@ELCA.ORG>
Date Wed, 4 Feb 2009 14:53:50 -0600

Title: Ice Storm a Test of Faith, Kentucky Lutherans Say
ELCA NEWS SERVICE

>February 4, 2009  

Ice Storm a Test of Faith, Kentucky Lutherans Say
09-034-SH

CHICAGO (ELCA) - John Rogers of Paducah is without electricity,
heat and hot water more than a week after the deadly Jan. 27 ice
storm that struck Kentucky.

"There was so much ice that you could hear the trees crack,"
he said of the storm. "It sounded like shotgun blasts."

He throws logs on the fire to keep warm, puts food outside
to keep cold. But the associate in ministry worries about other
members of St. Matthew Lutheran Church.

"I can't reach those who live on the outskirts of town," he
said. The congregation is part of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America (ELCA).

The storm is being blamed for 60 deaths across several
states -- at least 25 in Kentucky. Half of the state's 600,000
residents are waiting for power to be restored.

"It looks like a tornado went through," said the Rev. Betsy
Dartt, House of Prayer Lutheran Church, Elizabethtown.

The storm created a dire situation for families already
struggling with the nation's economic woes, Dartt said. "People
with limited incomes didn't have resources to store food," she
said. 

House of Prayer became a hospitality hub during the storm.
The congregation offered its basement floors for people needing
a warm place to sleep.

Church members served them soup and hosted a spaghetti
dinner. They delivered hot meals to elderly people and brought
others to the church to get warm.

"We had one 90-year-old lady who was not going to come out
of her home," said House of Prayer member Allan Poikonen. The
storm knocked out the woman's electricity, heat and water.

"We finally got her to come with us to the church to warm
up," Poikonen said.

Many of the storm's casualties died trying to keep warm
in the aftermath. Several deaths are blamed on carbon monoxide
poisoning caused by propane and kerosene heaters. Others died
in traffic accidents. In Radcliff, just 12 miles away from
Elizabethtown, an elderly woman died from hypothermia in her
mobile home.

>"People are still in danger," Poikonen said.

Kentucky is now a federal disaster area. Two-thirds of
the state's 120 counties  incurred severe damage. Recovery
costs are estimated at $45 million.

In the state's Bluegrass Region, a Lexington church
building lost power for nearly five days. Gethsemane Lutheran
Church also incurred water damage caused by a leaky roof.

The Rev. Joe Trester, Gethsemane's pastor, said he'd
never voluntarily spent five days without power before
except when camping. He and his wife moved to their home's
basement, where they worked to keep the pipes from freezing.

"The Dakotas were looking mighty fine," Trester said
and laughed. "With six inches of snow you can still get
around, but six inches of ice brings you to your knees."

Trester said individual members of the congregation
helped many of their neighbors. In retrospect, he wishes
the congregation had been better prepared to respond as
a whole.

"We didn't have a contingency plan to open our (church)
doors to others who needed help," Trester said. "We're now
going to put one in place."

Members fared better in Cold Spring, a northern Kentucky
town eight miles south of Cincinnati. Those without power
are using generators, according to the Rev. Anne R. Pairan,
St. Luke Lutheran Church.

"We've been removing tree limbs and snow," she said.
"But for the most part our people are getting along okay."

Even so, she echoed the sentiments of church members
across the state.

>"Keep us in your prayers," she said.

For information contact:

John Brooks, Director (773) 380-2958 or news@elca.org
http://www.elca.org/news
ELCA News Blog: http://www.elca.org/news/blog


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