One Church's Easter Gift to Another
Ashburn Worshipers Send Pews to Hurricane-Struck Miss. Congregation
Workers Leonel Amaya, left, and Carlos Diaz help to remove pews at Crossroads United Methodist Church, which is undergoing renovations.
(By Tracy A. Woodward -- The Washington Post)
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Sunday, April 16, 2006
In February, the membership of Crossroads United Methodist Church in Ashburn decided that its sanctuary needed an extreme makeover.
It would become a more flexible space, allowing the church to use the sanctuary for more purposes than Sunday-morning services. The altar and pulpit would be moved forward and made level with the rest of the room, and the rigid wooden pews would be replaced with padded, stackable chairs.
"Space in Ashburn is so tight, and the building is so expensive that we decided to make better use of our space," said church spokesman Steve Freeman.
But what was Crossroads to do with those pews? They were barely more than a decade old, too new to chuck into the trash dump.
Through happy coincidence -- or, perhaps, divine intervention -- a solution was at hand, thanks to a trip some church members made to Mississippi in January to provide hurricane relief.
Nona Tiedge was one of the 17 Crossroads members who made the trip to the city of Moss Point, whose population the 2000 Census put at 15,851. The destruction they saw, she said last week, was unfathomable.
"There were clothes hanging in trees, washing machines on the sidewalk, totaled cars in front of people's lawns," she recalled. "You could see the foundation where structures had been, but there were no homes."
The group heard about a congregation in another Mississippi town, Escatawpa, population 3,566 in 2000, that had also been dealt a cruel blow by Hurricane Katrina.
The Rev. Willie Hill estimated that 90 percent of his congregation at Summerville United Methodist Church lost homes or businesses because of the hurricane.
"They were sad for themselves and sad for the church," which didn't fare much better, Hill said. "Basically, we did everything but take out the walls."
Hill preached a message of hope to his 100 church members. "I told them, 'We're going to build the church back and it's going to be better.' "
In the months afterward, Summerville managed to restore most of what the wind and water had destroyed. But it did not have the $12,000 needed to replace the rotting pews. So instead, for months, parishioners sat through services in metal folding chairs.


