Paula and I visited the Gruene (pronounced “Green”) United Methodist Church (UMC) on Sunday, October 21. Gruene is a historic south central Texas town, started by German immigrants in the 1840’s between what are now Austin and San Antonio. The Gruene UMC, begun in 2006 as a daughter congregation of the nearby New Braunfels UMC, is currently thriving with 3 pastors and a youth director.
New Gruene UMC |
During our short Sunday morning visit, they demonstrated a thriving outreach ministry with plans the following week to send out teams to:
- clean a playground at St. Jude’s Ranch, a Christian-based center that focuses on abused and at-risk kids;
- deliver cookies and cards to local fire and police stations, and hospitals;
- paint interior walls and hold fellowship with youth at a family services shelter; and
- frame a home for a new Habitat for Humanity project family.
Gruene Historic Music Hall |
As planned, Paula flew out of Austin airport the morning of October 16th to spend a few months in Vermont with friends and family.
In Louisiana, I stumbled onto a barbecue cook-off competition sponsored by the Ponchatoula Chamber of Commerce and held at their Memorial Park on a beautiful Saturday morning. Believe me, these people took their cooking seriously and were all members of the BCA (Barbecue Competitors Alliance)! I was disheartened to find out that the competitors prepared their meats solely for the judges, and the Chamber had hired a local restaurant to feed the public (that was me)! I nearly lucked out though when I sat down at a park table next to the daughter of the couple who were the head judges. It seems that only moments prior, her parents had been looking for another volunteer judge!
Ponchatoula BBQ Broadcast |
Somewhat dejected from this lost opportunity, I found a shady picnic table and began to assess my situation. I introduced myself and chatted with a local radio station DJ about our shared strong Christian beliefs, and befriended Lily (granddaughter of the judges) who had a leopard face painted on her by some artistic high school Key Club members nearby.
Lily the Leopard |
A couple of them were even undefeated Ponchatoula High School Green Wave football players who had knocked off a respectable 3-3 Slidell High School on the previous evening! Later that afternoon, I walked the mile back to the motorhome on the outskirts of Ponchatoula, and headed east to Mississippi.
Biloxi is a gulf-front community that was devastated by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. It has a beautiful white sandy beach,
Biloxi 2014 Beachfront |
but many of the hotels, casinos and stately older homes that had stood here in the past were destroyed during that storm.
While attending a yard sale at nearby J.T. Leggett UMC, I spoke with an elderly lady named Mae who told me that pre-Katrina she lived next door to the church in a very large United Methodist Retirement Home (apartment building complex), and many of the residents were members of the UMC congregation. After the disaster, the Biloxi Housing Authority bought the building from the UMC and converted it into an assisted living facility for low income families. Mae and most of her friends did not qualify, and thus had to find another place to live. I could tell that Mae still held a lot of personal bitterness toward the United Methodist Church for ‘abandoning’ her and her friends who had lived in the area their entire lives. Mae said that she still lives in another area in Biloxi where only 30 of the original 280 houses that were inhabited prior to Katrina have been restored to a living condition.
New Leggett UMC Sanctuary |
Off to St Andrews State Park in Panama City Beach, Florida tomorrow, Oct 26th, for some gulf coast camping and saltwater fishing with my brother, Terry!

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