Written: 10/1/2008
Manvel Grace Feeds Multitudes After Hurricane Ike

Community volunteers
distribute food to Hurricane Ike survivors at a supply center set up at Grace United
Methodist Church in Manvel, Texas. (UMNS photo courtesy of Grace UMC)
By Kathy L.
Gilbert, UMNS
MANVEL, Texas - With a
handful of volunteers, the contents of a small church's pantry and the "absurd
notion" that she could, Elaine Warner fed hot meals to more than 400
stranded survivors of Hurricane Ike in the first days after the storm hit.
Warner was one of
about 12 members of
Grace
United
Methodist
Church
who believed that they could feed the multitudes like the little boy who
offered Jesus fishes and loaves, said the Rev. Donald Brown. "And we
did!" he said.
The soft-spoken
Warner earned the nickname "kitchen nazi" after taking charge of the
feeding ministry when Ike struck
Texas
on Sept. 13. "Everybody raved about the food," she said, shaking her
head in amazement. "I just dumped some generic gallon cans of tomato sauce
into a pot and made spaghetti."
Like many places on the
Gulf
Coast
, the small town of
Manvel
was without water, electricity and food after the hurricane. No stores were
open, and Manvel was not on anyone's radar to receive assistance, according to
Brown. Because Grace recently had started a food pantry, members of the
community began coming to the church for help. With an average Sunday worship
attendance of about 50, the small church was used to serving about 125 families
a week. In the first few days after Ike, Grace fed more than 13,000 people.
"It was the Holy Spirit, it was a God thing," said Brown, explaining
how the small congregation was able to do so much. Brown called everyone
he could think of for help, and trucks of water, food and ice started arriving
in the church parking lot. "One pastor from
Austin
,
Texas
, told me he had just written the biggest check in his life to Costco for
water," Brown said.
Soon, helped began
arriving from United Methodists from across the
United States
. "On
Wednesday, we had four 24-bottle packages of water and 50 volunteers. By
Thursday we had 30 pallets of water," Brown said. "Volunteers started
appearing out of nowhere. … They came from every local church-the Marines, Boy
Scouts-it was just a blur." It took several days for FEMA to set up a
pod to distribute food, water and ice to the community. Brown said many
officials he had called for help had a "let-them-eat-cake attitude."
One county official told him to send the needy people to Wal-Mart since it
recently had reopened. "These are economically disadvantaged
people," Brown said. "They don't even have transportation to get to
Wal-Mart. "It
was truly a loaves and fishes story. Food was so abundant and came so fast we
didn't know what was happening."
Visiting with Brown 12
days after the storm, Bishop Janice Riggle Huie told the pastor that
"people looked at you and saw the face of Jesus." Huie later
wrote about her visit to
Grace
church
in one of her daily letters updating United Methodists about storm response and
needs. The letters were posted on the Web site of the church's Texas Annual
(regional) Conference, which Huie leads. "The practice of operating a
food pantry week after week can easily feel more like hard work than some grand
example of 'risk-taking mission and service,'" she wrote.
"However, that practice gave these dear Methodists the eyes to see the
'least of these' in their community. They saw them as friends who needed their
help, and Christ multiplied their generosity many times over to serve far more
people than they could ever imagine. Truly, the presence of God was in that
place."
*Gilbert is a United
Methodist News Service news writer based in
Nashville
,
Tenn.