Storm levels Manteno, Ill., church construction

By Joe Isenhower Jr.

Risen Savior Evangelical Lutheran Church’s new building under construction in Manteno, Ill., lay flattened after a line of strong storms with high winds, rain and hail raced east through the area some 50 miles south of Chicago on June 12.

About one fourth of the construction was complete, with most of its timber frame in place, when tornadic winds hit the structure about 6 p.m.

The only other major storm damage reported in the Manteno area was to a nearby horse barn, where one horse was killed.

No one was injured at the church-building site — including eight Laborers For Christ workers who had been with the project since they started construction there in April.  They rode out the storm, safe in their RVs on the new church property.

Tim Brettiin, Laborers For Christ project manager for the congregation, told Reporter that the Laborers team experienced no damage other than “a few dents and scratches” to vehicles in the parking lot from flying debris, as well as loss of tools and other lighter equipment.  He added that he and his wife, Peg, were in their RV just 50 feet from the ravaged church site — “the closest we’ve ever been to weather that destructive.”

Out of gratitude to God, the Laborers nailed together a 4-by-3-foot cross of wood from the damage and positioned it upright into a pile of storm rubble.

That cross “symbolizes very well, of course, that Christ is still present among us,” Risen Savior’s pastor, the Rev. Kevin Werner, told Reporter the day afterward.

MantenoCross-inside
Laborers For Christ team members place a cross made from damaged wood atop the rubble pile after a June 12 storm destroyed the framing for Risen Savior Lutheran Church’s new building in Manteno, Ill. (Peg Brettin)

Werner said he sees two “dominant themes” following the storm. “We’re thankful that none of the Laborers were injured. And we’re trusting God that He will continue to provide. Even though this is a delay – and something unforeseen – God still blesses us through it.”

The new construction project is covered by insurance.

When completed, it will provide the 150-member LCMS congregation a 5,500 square-foot facility with a multipurpose sanctuary, a large narthex for fellowship, three rooms for Sunday school or meetings and a covered walkway to the parking lot.

The congregation — currently worshiping in space provided by the First Presbyterian Church in Manteno —purchased the new building site some 18 years ago. In 2011, Risen Savior sold its own interim facility, providing the impetus for building.

With the new church planted on the edge of a new subdivision, “we’ll have a lot more visibility and want to try and step up reaching out in our community,” Werner said.

In addition to participating in Lutheran Church Extension Fund’s (LCEF) Laborers For Christ, Risen Savior used LCEF loan support to buy their first worship facility, and for the land purchase and construction of their new building.

Brettin said the previous goal of having the new church construction  completed by Thanksgiving of this year will probably have to be extended “by no more than a few months.”

Several families also lost their homes in storms that swept through parts of Oklahoma and Missouri May 31. Read an earlier Reporter Online story about those storms here.

 

Updated July 2, 2013 / Sept. 12, 2013