Faith-Based Relief Groups Offer Food, Water and Emotional Support to Texas Flood Survivors

Texas flood
Salvation Army volunteers organize and distribute aid for the Kerrville community following deadly flooding in the Texas Hill Country. (Photo courtesy The Salvation Army)

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(RNS) — For the past week, Captain Jenifer Phillips, an emotional and spiritual care officer with the Salvation Army, has been working out of a basecamp in Kerrville, Texas, as part of a team of eight chaplains responding to the deadly flash floods.

The spiritual care officers are part of a larger Salvation Army response to the Hill Country floods. As of Thursday (July 10), they served close to 6,000 meals and about 34,000 cold drinks out of four mobile food pantries to disaster survivors, emergency responders and other relief workers. They also distributed 998 clean-up kits and more than 1,400 hygiene kits and led a drop off-site for donations.

The chaplains have also been listening to survivors’ stories, said Phillips, who is usually based in East Texas.

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“We want to be able to talk with people, hear their stories and be able to provide support,” Phillips said in an interview from Texas.

She said most of that listening happens naturally while volunteers are handing out supplies or while people are eating meals. Phillips said folks want to talk through what they’ve experienced.

As a chaplain, Phillips said she doesn’t try to make sense of what happened but instead tries to be present and hear them. That’s part of providing emotional care — she said even those who aren’t religious need a human connection and a listening ear.

Salvation Army members and volunteers pray in the Kerrville community following deadly floods in the Texas Hill Country. (Photo courtesy The Salvation Army)

“In such moments of deep despair, there are not words,” she said. “We call it the ministry of presence. I think that being with people is the only thing we can do in these moments.”

As the immediate response to the disaster comes to an end, relief groups like the Salvation Army are making plans for long-term recovery efforts. Phillips said the best way to support both current and future needs is to give to disaster relief groups. She said groups like the Salvation Army are already running out of space to store some of the gift-in-kind donations they received.

Those monetary donations, she said, will go both to help survivors and fund rebuilding.

Aimee Freston, director of communications for Texans on Mission, a disaster relief ministry of the Baptist General Convention of Texas, said volunteers have started to arrive in the areas affected by the floods and will begin working on clean-up efforts. The group also has chaplains on site as well as assessors looking at damage and making plans for how to best deploy volunteers in the upcoming weeks.

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Bob Smietanahttps://factsandtrends.net
Bob Smietana is an award-winning religion reporter and editor who has spent two decades producing breaking news, data journalism, investigative reporting, profiles and features for magazines, newspapers, trade publications and websites. Most notably, he has served as a senior writer for Facts & Trends, senior editor of Christianity Today, religion writer at The Tennessean, correspondent for RNS and contributor to OnFaith, USA Today and The Washington Post.

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