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Local churches show Easter spirit year-round

On Sunday mornings, Lighthouse Baptist Church in Lehighton sends a bus out into the community. It takes the same route every weekend, circling through Weissport and Franklin Township to pick up children, as well as other congregation members, who otherwise wouldn’t be able to attend church for lack of transportation.

It’s a service the church has offered for more than 20 years, the Rev. Marshall Wolverton said. And for him, it’s a way to make sure people have access to the church’s teachings.

“I think the key word for me is hope,” Wolverton said. “People today need hope. I mean, there’s just so much bad news out there, and the word gospel means good news.”

Hope, Wolverton added, is a feeling expressed by many churches around this time of year. On Sunday, people across the country will celebrate Easter, a Christian holiday observing the belief in Jesus Christ’s resurrection.

Like other holidays, Easter brings its own list of traditions, namely egg hunts and hearty dinners. But for many area pastors and churches, it’s sharing that spirit of hope that matters most — both on Easter Sunday and beyond.

April marks the seventh rendition of Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church’s monthly Diaper Depot, an outreach the Tamaqua church came up with after conducting a study into the community’s need.

“We wanted to meet a need,” the Rev. Cindy White said.

Between twice monthly community dinners and senior lunches, and a monthly children’s breakfast, Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic Church in Monroe County opens its kitchen to the community at least five times a month.

The meals offered are free to anyone who comes through the door, and according to Deacon Joseph Rodgers, of Queen of Peace, often end with visitors taking home leftovers. The parish, comprised of about 2,900 families, offers dozens of ministries throughout the year.

“We’re a Catholic church, but not everybody’s Catholic, and not everybody belongs to our church,” Rodgers said. “They’re coming for companionship. They’re coming for that feel of community. They’re coming just to talk to somebody. It’s just that simple, and that’s what we provide.

“That’s what God tells us to do.”

Another local religious organization, the Tamaqua Area Faith Fellowship Network, is gearing up to host a food drive that — while it may span only a few weeks — might make a difference year round: The Hunger Walk.

A joint effort between the Tamaqua Area Faith Fellowship Network and the Tamaqua Area Community Partnership, the event itself takes place in May, but food and monetary donation collections start this month. It’s about a one mile trek, through which participants can raise contributions by acquiring sponsorships.

The stroll raises food and funds for three area food pantries: the Salvation Army of Tamaqua, Trinity United Church of Christ and Primitive Methodist Church, which Hunger Walk Coordinator Paul Dodson said collectivity serve about 300 people through the year. He added that it’s important the event take place in early spring, because “it’s the time of year when other people do not necessarily support the food banks.”

“They usually do that on holidays,” he said.

“We’ve been trying to get people to donate year round to TAFFN (Tamaqua Area Faith Fellowship Network) and to the Tamaqua Area Community Partnership, and we’ve had some success, but not enough,” Dodson said. “We would like to have collections all year long.”

Last year’s stroll raised $6,900 and amassed 124 boxes of food.

For Major Sharon Whispell, of the Salvation Army of Tamaqua, a call for help can come at a moment’s notice.

With a goal to “serve the most people, meet the most needs” and “do the most good,” Whispell said the Salvation Army’s responsibility is to assist people with whatever hardship follows them through the organization’s door. That could mean helping with their utility bill, finding them temporary housing or providing food assistance.

In the end, she said, it’s making sure people know they are not alone.

“There’s somebody out there that cares for them. There’s somebody out there that’s willing to help them so that they don’t have to feel like they’re alone,” Whispell said. “Sometimes the hardest thing is to say, ‘I’ve never had to ask for help, but I lost my job, or I lost my home, or there was a death in my family.’”

“Knowing that there’s a place that they can go, and they’re not going to get judged, but they’re going to be loved and given direction and help — I think that encourages people,” she said.

Marshall Wolverton, pastor, and his wife Josie prepare to pass out invites to Lighthouse Baptist Church’s Easter Sunday service. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
ABOVE: Lighthouse Baptist Church Bus. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Diaper Depot volunteers Sandy Scott, Beth Ann York, Judy Brennan and Joe Oliver prepare diapers for the monthly distribution at Zion Lutheran Church in Tamaqua. Since its beginning last October, Diaper Depot has distributed over 10,000 diapers to 71 families in the Tamaqua School District. The diaper pantry is a partner of the Greater Philadelphia Diaper Bank and has received financial aid from the Morgan Foundation. For diaper request forms and program guidelines visit www.ziontamaqua.com. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO