Category Archives: Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
Message from Joplin
The last three weeks in Joplin have been a combination of overwhelming and amazing, a combination of horrible and wonderful. These have been weeks filled with high levels of anxiety but also great amounts of love and compassion.
As a lifelong Disciple I have always been proud of our little denomination, but in these last three weeks that has simply multiplied. Your prayers, your donations, your calls and emails, your trips to Joplin to lend a helping hand have reminded us of the significant family ties among those of us who call ourselves Disciples.
Over the coming months we will continue to work with the Area Office to keep you updated on the progress here in Joplin and the ways you can help. As we continue on this journey together and as you seek to find ways to reach out, let me share a few thoughts:
- We will always say yes to your love and kindness, but sometimes we will need to say no to the ways you are offering to show it. Please remember the difference.
- Things change nearly every day. What that means is that we ask your patience. For instance, if you are wanting to come volunteer next month we won’t be able to tell you what sorts of jobs are available until much closer to the time.
- Your prayers really do matter. When you pray for Joplin, you are doing something important. Never feel like prayer isn’t enough.
- Week of Compassion does wonderful work. Please remember this not only in crisis, but each year as we take routine offerings.
- We are overwhelmed, sometimes even by the kindness of the broader Church. What this means is that sometimes it takes a while to return calls or emails. Sometimes we simply forget. Again, remember your care is appreciated even when we forget to acknowledge it.
- The Area Office is a great resource and can answer many of your questions. Jeni has been wonderful and stays in close contact with us. Although we don’t want to inadvertently overwhelm her, do remember that she is available, too.
More information will be coming next week about the progress that’s being made here in Joplin as well as more ways you can reach out in care to those who were affected.
Meanwhile, Mary Lin (director of the Distribution Center at First Christian) let Jeni know today that we could use the following items: Bath towels, mops, cleaning supplies, glass cleaner, laundry detergent, laundry baskets, and Depends pads (not pull ups). We are overwhelmed with water and clothing, so please do not bring more of those items.
Thank you for being the body of Christ with us!
Rev. Jill Cameron Michel
South Joplin Christian Church
Guiding Principles of a Faithful Disaster Response (part 4)
Still, these questions remain: What do you need? How can we help? Whether the answers to these questions are readily forthcoming or are simply unclear, four guiding principles can direct our individual and collective response (with apologies for the para-phrasing of others’ advice): Prepare. Care. Share. Be in prayer.
The Long Road of Disaster Recovery (part 3)
Recovering from a disaster does not happen overnight. It is not completed in a few days, weeks, or even months. Recovery takes time. It is hard to balance people’s immediate needs with their long term needs which will surface in the days and weeks and months ahead. It is likewise difficult to balance the passion with which people outside of an impact zone want to help (now!) with the fact that this help is generally more important many months from now. It is hard to ask people with needs and those who want to help to be patient, just as it is hard to hear this word. Yet we must find ways of pacing ourselves. Responders burn out quickly. Clergy burn out in communities hit by disaster is especially high; informal surveys place the number of clergy who leave their church following a disaster at more than 50% within the first three years. It typically takes 3 months for a community recovery effort to be fully implemented (consider recent flooding along the Mississippi River, which in some places will not even subside for more than a month). Then it is no less than 1 year – and for disasters of the magnitude of recent tornadoes, probably 2-3 years – for the recovery to conclude. It is never completed. This is a marathon, no way around it.
Disciples Volunteering represents the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in our programmatic response to disaster. We support the local recovery as it unfolds by matching resources to identified needs. Sometimes, that means structuring our own response through a congregational Mission Station. Other times, it means channeling resources through ecumenical partnerships. Our greatest resources are the congregationally based mission teams that answer the call to serve and our long term Servant Leadership Team. Other resources exist and as those offers of support are received we do our best to match them to identified needs.
As responses to recent disasters come together, from North Carolina to Washington and many places in between, Disciples Volunteering will extend the call to Get Dirty for Jesus and partner in the long mission of disaster recovery. Thank you for hanging in there with the people who are recovering from disaster. Disciples are only able to be present and bring hope, healing, and a hand because of the vision, patience, and compassion of individuals and congregations to serve in mission for as long as there is need.
Help in the Face of Disaster (part 2)
In the face of an unprecedented string of natural disasters, the outpouring of support remains tremendous. Figuring out how to help, however, is sometimes a challenge. The first question to ask is, “What do you need?” This is followed by, “How can we help?” When disaster strikes, critical needs are generally identified and addressed on the spot. The impacted community and its closest neighbors band together to do whatever needs done, with outside support as it arrives. Longstanding relief operations, such as the shelters and feeding programs run by the Red Cross, spring into action. Triage happens on the fly. Offers of specific, immediate support are hard to process because for days, sometimes weeks, needs change rapidly.
That is why the greatest help that can be provided immediately following a disaster is the gift of money. Faithful giving to Week of Compassion’s Compassion Response Fund enables the whole Church to be flexibly present however that presence is needed: immediate solidarity grants fill gaps and provide temporary housing, meals, and clothing; they support relief efforts so that critical needs are tended to when they arise; and they reassure people that the Church is standing with them.
Help Make Ministry Happen at Yakama Christian Mission
Serve the Body of Christ by sharing your time and skills with other caring people at Yakama Christian Mission in White Swan, Washington. This important project will run April 9-16. Help improve this great facility for mission and ministry during all or any part of that time. The focus is on remodeling the Parsonage and painting the Friendship House. Cost is $150/week or $25/day and includes all meals.
More information and a registration form are available at the Yakama Mission Blog. Or Contact Brenda Tyler (888-346-2631) for a registration form or David Bell (509-874-2824) with questions.
The Mission Continues in San Antonio
The first week of the Alternative Spring Break Project is now behind us, and it was a great one. The Mission Team from West Des Moines Christian Church, Iowa worked on installing showers and enclosing them in the basement of Mexican Christian Church. They also addressed a number of plumbing related needs at the church. Others in the group were busy on several projects at Inman Christian Center. They tore up part of a sinking floor in one office and built a new, secure, level floor in its place. Windows in both the office building and the upper floor of the education wing received a major face lift as cracked panes of glass were replaced, windows were reglazed and sealed. In some cases, new windows were framed in and installed in previously boarded up openings. Water damaged walls were repaired and repainted. A second floor space was removed entirely and a new roof constructed on top of the storage area below.
This week, mission teams from Timberlake Christian Church, Lynchburg, VA and Michigan State University are hard at work on Mexican Christian Church’s parsonage. I’m looking forward to some great pictures on their work. Right now, here are a few highlights from last week.
Thanks to Dwight and Bernie Elrod for sending the pictures!
General Assembly & pre-Assembly Mission Opportunities
UPDATE
Mission Opportunities are available during the General Assembly on Monday and Tuesday (July 11-12). Service projects in the community will run each day from 8:00 am to 2:00 pm. Other opportunities for giving back to the people of Nashville, including a blood drive, will be available in the convention center. We will continue to post details here as information becomes available. Register Now to Serve in Nashville.
Disciples Volunteering is also sponsoring a pre-Assembly Mission Experience in Nashville this summer. The event begins with dinner on Wednesday, July 6 and concludes with lunch on Saturday, July 9. We will serve with a variety of community organizations and contribute to the flood recovery efforts in Nashville. We’re pleased to announce that, with more than a dozen mission teams and 150 people signed up, we are at capacity. Mission groups who are on the waiting list may be contacted if space becomes available; however, we are no longer adding to that list. Opportunities for serving during Assembly are being coordinated, including a blood drive and a knitting room to take place at the Assembly. To receive more information, please register now.










