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Catholic News Herald

Serving Christ and Connecting Catholics in Western North Carolina

‘A beautiful partnership’

112219 responders2Members of the Christian Responders of St. Matthew Church in Charlotte and Catholic Charities Diocese of Charlotte were part of a group of volunteers who attended a house blessing upon completion of a new home on Oct. 17 in Lumberton. (Photo provided by Amy Loesch)CHARLOTTE — Parishioners of St. Matthew Church have spent the past two years volunteering with an effort to help rebuild parts of eastern North Carolina that were devastated by hurricanes in 2016 and 2017, and they have recently been joined by Catholic Charities Diocese of Charlotte staff to help build a home in Lumberton.

The south Charlotte area church members have given their time, talent and treasure to Christian Responders, originally called “Lumberton Ministry,” created as part of the larger Family Life Ministry of St. Matthew Church to reach out to those hurt by Hurricane Matthew in 2016. They partner with the N.C. Conference of United Methodist Churches to serve people in need throughout the Lumberton area, helping disaster survivors and offering long-term disaster recovery assistance.

Parishioners volunteering with Chrstian Responders made their first trip to Lumberton in May 2017, after coordinating with NCCUMC’s local disaster response team, Jeff and Ann Wade. Volunteers traveling to the area were provided with lodging at the Chestnut Street Methodist Church and direction for each building project. Similar to Habitat For Humanity projects, volunteers of all levels have been welcome as recovery work encompasses tasks for both skilled and unskilled workers.

When Hurricane Florence struck in 2017, St. Matthew parishioners stepped up again to help. NCCUMC requested gift cards to local fast food restaurants to provide meals for residents, many of whom had not fully recovered from Hurricane Matthew before they had to endure the effects of Hurricane Florence.

Catholic Charities got connected with Christian Responders during a visit with Father Pat Hoare, pastor of St. Matthew Church. Thanks to a $50,000 grant from Catholic Charities USA, Catholic Charities Diocese of Charlotte began partnering with the effort – providing some of those funds to help victims of both hurricanes rebuild and get back on their feet.

In May, volunteers from St. Matthew Christian Responders and the Moravian Church committed to rebuild an entire house. The original house, devastated by the two hurricanes, was uninhabitable. When demolition began, asbestos was discovered, so the City of Lumberton also pitched in with demolition and tree removal.

Thanks to the dedication of the NCCUMC staff – and the financial support and 1,500 work hours provided by 16 volunteer teams that included St. Matthew Church, Catholic Charities Diocese of Charlotte, and Yadkin View Moravian Regional Conference of Churches – the new home is finished.

“The Christian Responders group is another example of the many ways in which the people of St. Matthew respond to those in need,” Father Hoare said. “There was a sense, after Hurricane Matthew pounded eastern North Carolina, that we need to do more than just donate funds to help.”

“The people of Lumberton are our not-so-distant neighbors,” he said. “It is important to help people who live in poverty in far-away places, but the people of Lumberton, we could help with our own hands. And it is also an opportunity for families – parents and children working and learning together what it means to be disciples of Jesus.”

Father Hoare said he was thrilled to hear that Catholic Charities wanted to help, when he discussed the Christian Responders initiative with Amy Loesch, Catholic Charities’ special projects coordinator.

“It has been a beautiful partnership between St. Matthew and the diocese that is already bearing good fruit,” he said.

Dr. Gerard Carter, Catholic Charities’ executive director, agreed.

“This opportunity presented Catholic Charities with a wonderful opportunity to work collaboratively with the St. Matthew Parish community to serve the victims of a natural disaster here in our own state,” Carter said.

Staff and volunteers recently gathered to bless the home they had built together in Lumberton. Pastor Herbert Lowery of Chestnut Street United Methodist Church led the group in prayer. Comments and words of support were offered by staff and volunteers, with a closing prayer offered by Pastor Chris Thore.

“Working side by side with the survivors, hope is restored and victims witness God’s love in action,” Loesch noted. “Not only was much been accomplished, but many new friendships have been created.”

— SueAnn Howell, senior reporter

 

120619 Movie at OLC Steve CrumpCHARLOTTE — On Nov. 19, more than 100 parishioners from Our Lady of Consolation Church and St. Peter Church gathered to view and discuss “Facing an Uncomfortable Truth: The Struggle of African American Catholics in Kentucky.”

The screening of this documentary, produced by award-winning journalist Steve Crump, was one of Our Lady of Consolation Parish’s Black Catholic History Month events.

Crump is a Louisville native and a longtime reporter for WBTV in Charlotte. He grew up in the Archdiocese of Louisville and is a descendant of those early African-American Catholics who helped build some of the oldest churches in Louisville.

The film dives into the history of the early Catholic Church in central Kentucky. Enslaved men and women adopted the faith of their captors, and according to the documentary, helped establish the parishes in what’s now known as the “Kentucky Holy Land” in Nelson, Washington and Marion counties. Those slaves who were skilled masons and carpenters helped build some of the very first places of worship for Catholics in Kentucky, as well as structures on the campus of the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth in Nazareth, Ky.

The film screening was the first of two major collaborations between the Black Culture Commission of Our Lady of Consolation Church and St. Peter Church’s Social Justice Committee. The two groups have been building “authentic relationships” since 2015 and remain committed to “walking the talk” of racial equity and social justice together.

The Nov. 19 audience seemed to find the film riveting and the discussion afterward, as well as the questions posed to Crump, were thought provoking. One key point of the discussion centered on the fact that this history remains unknown and needs to be taught and discussed openly.

Five Catholic students from North Carolina A&T State University in Greensboro also came down to participate in the event.

— Toni Tupponce, Special to the Catholic News Herald; WAVE 3 News in Louisville, Ky., contributed.

View the documentary

Watch the documentary “Facing an Uncomfortable Truth: The Struggle of African American Catholics in Kentucky” by award-winning Catholic journalist Steve Crump: