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When I Had No Heat, You Welcomed Me: Texas Churches Offer Refuge

With freezes knocking out power across the state, ministry networks rally to help.
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When I Had No Heat, You Welcomed Me: Texas Churches Offer Refuge
Image: Montinique Monroe / Getty Images

In the deep freeze that has taken electricity from millions, cut water supply, iced roads, and disrupted communications, not even Texas’s churches can provide reliable sanctuary—but leaders are doing all they can to connect and comfort their communities.

“We were a little late to the game on the warming station because the church lost power for a while as well,” said Steve Bezner, senior pastor of Houston Northwest Church.

Once the building opened on Tuesday afternoon, more than 60 residents came through to escape the cold and charge devices during the day, and the church has also covered hotel stays for people without a warm place to sleep.

The state is going on four straight days of extended power outages and freezing weather, a crisis so widespread and dire that families are warming up in their cars or venturing to places still on the power grid, such as friends’ homes or churches like Bezner’s.

During the unseasonably cold temperatures, which has dropped to single digits, ministries are scrambling to offer shelter, distribute blankets, and provide food for people living on the streets, such as those in the downtown Austin homeless encampments that have swelled over the pandemic.

Down the street from one encampment, Christ Church of Austin closed its building after burst pipes flooded the building and blew the electrical system—unable to take in its neighbors or to offer an Ash Wednesday courtyard service and drive-thru ashes as planned.

Christine Warner, the Austin-based director of the Anglican Church in North America’s Matthew 25 Initiative, described how “the vulnerable are serving the vulnerable.” People are taking care of one another in the encampments as well as in communities of undocumented workers in trailer homes.

It’s often the working poor who have sought shelter in churches, since they aren’t as likely to have networks of friends and family to help, Warner said, noting that at least five suburban Austin congregations have opened up as warming centers.

The big and small acts of generosity—rides, meals, and supplies exchanged between neighbors, fellow church members, or near-strangers, people camping out in each other’s living rooms—seem both necessary given the circumstances and like a departure from the arms-length solidarity built up over the 11 months since COVID-19 hit.

“People are caring for their neighbors in a way that’s different than pandemic care, in a way that’s a bit bolder,” said Warner. “What’s happening is an awareness of the collective trauma fatigue. Everyone is so exhausted from that, and decision fatigue, and pivot, pivot, pivot.”

But the earlier disasters that linger in Texans’ minds—Hurricane Harvey in 2017, the hit of the COVID-19 pandemic last year—actually helped ready churches to respond quickly to this cold spell nobody imagined in the Lone Star State.

In Killeen, Skyline Baptist Church staff attended training last year to become a certified emergency shelter; three deacons have stayed at the church since Sunday afternoon to help 35 people staying in the gym, being fed by the local soup kitchen, Baptist Press reported.

After distributing emergency food and supplies during the COVID-19 pandemic, Highland Baptist Church in Waco opened as a shelter for around 60 people this week, with church members volunteering to host, pray, and bring hot meals for guests.

In Mesquite, a Seventh-day Adventist congregation is distributing free firewood. Across the state, others are offering working restrooms and showers for those without water, in addition to places to eat and sleep. Earlier in the week, Joel Osteen opened space at the massive Lakewood Church stadium in Houston.

Jamie Aten, the executive director of the Humanitarian Disaster Institute at Wheaton College, recommends churches that want to offer shelter have an emergency plan in place and reach out to partner with local authorities or the Red Cross.

“Before opening up your doors, make sure your facility is safe to welcome others, from screened volunteers to basic resources,” he said. “I’d also highly encourage churches to reach out to local emergency management or other local authorities to see what resources may be available to support their outreach efforts. Another way churches can help is to reach out to other nonprofit organizations that specialize in shelter-in-place to explore partnering together, such as with the Red Cross.”

In The Woodlands, north of Houston, Church Project opened its building as a warming center with cots provided by the county, water and snacks from the local food bank, and support from Hope Beyond Bridges, a homeless ministry. Since Sunday evening, 23 people have come in, according to John Shaw, pastor of connections at Church Project.

The winter storm in Texas has compounded the psychological and physical toll of the pandemic. With rolling outages and boil-water advisories suddenly issued by text, people don’t know when they are in the clear. Although temperatures are supposed to rise, electricity providers in the Houston area say power outages could continue into the weekend.

“This is hard. It’s cold. Many of us are without power or water or both. We’re all still dealing with COVID frustrations and fears and anxieties,” tweeted David Norman, pastor of University Baptist Church in San Antonio. “But no one has to do this alone. Let’s make sure they don’t.”

Even when power and water are restored, many will be left with the aftermath of their non-winterized homes being hit with such severe winter weather. Bezner at Houston Northwest Church is already preparing to mobilize to help families with home repairs, laundry, or financial assistance.

Like with COVID-19, the freeze has also exaggerated disparities in resources. Hope Community Church in Austin and the Immigration Coalition launched collections to offer blankets, clothing, and food to immigrants in their own community and along the border, quoting Matthew 25:35–36, “For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me.”

March
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