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SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH
Jan. 29, 2005
Fueling the spirit: Truck-stop chapels
allow truckers to tune up their souls
By Elaine Jarvik Deseret Morning News
The little chapel sits in the middle of a
truck-stop parking lot, surrounded by the rumble of engines. The
noise, a constant hum punctuated by the occasional groan of an air
brake, is a reminder that the congregation here is on both a
spiritual journey and a long, relentless trip on the
interstate.
The Truckers Christian Chapel Ministries trailer, the only
truck-stop chapel operating in Utah, is parked in the lot behind
Sapp Bros. truck stop in Salt Lake City.
On a recent Sunday morning, the husband-wife
trucking team of Loretta and LeRoy McEwin stopped by the chapel at
the Sapp Bros. truck stop off I-215 in Salt Lake City. The McEwins
transport explosives for the federal government and spend most of
their time on the road, often driving round the clock seven days a
week, only occasionally returning home to Odessa,
Texas.
"I need the Lord every day, really," says
Loretta, who is grateful for truck-stop chapels such as this
one.
There are about 200 trucker chapels
nationwide, 150 of them affiliated with Truckers Christian Chapel
Ministries. The chapel near I-215 is a TCCM church and is the only
truck stop chapel currently operating in Utah.
Before its conversion, the chapel was a
refrigerated semitrailer that hauled produce and frozen food.
Skinny and utilitarian even after being refurbished, the chapel can
accommodate rows only three seats wide, and an aisle up one side.
The layout, plus the constant sound of the motors outside, makes a
church service there feel oddly like an airplane
ride.
On a typical Sunday morning Pastor Charles
Clarke will get a handful of truckers in his folding-chair pews.
The day the McEwins attended there was one other couple — Patty and
Zoy Hann from California, who haul oversize loads — and a trucker
named Wayne.
Wayne, who has been living permanently in his
truck for the past two years since his divorce, once planned to
become a minister himself but got sidetracked after a stint in
Vietnam and marriage to a nonbeliever. "My heart turned hard," he
says. This trip to the truck stop chapel represented his first time
in church in more than 25 years.
"He never lets go of you," Patty Hann told
him after the service, referring to Jesus. "Maybe that's why I'm
still alive," Wayne replied.
The average truck driver is home only three
or four days a month, and that might not be on a Sunday, notes
Randy Fontaine, western regional director of another truck
ministry, Transport for Christ. So the driver tends to get lonely,
he says, and "the loneliness causes discouragement, depression and
low self-esteem." Because he's not home much, his relationships
there sometimes suffer.
"Where does he turn to when he's hurting?
What will help ease the pain? The bar around the corner, the adult
bookstore, the prostitute — or the chapel he can walk into because
there's somebody there 24 hours a day?" Fontaine
asks.
Transport for Christ has chapels in 17
states. Another group, Truckers for Christ out of North Carolina,
has chapels in 26 states. "We'd love to be in Utah because it's at
the junction of several interstates," Fontaine says, but so far
Utah hasn't met all four of his organization's requirements: an
invitation from a truck stop; $16,000 to convert a trailer into a
chapel; a group of eight to 15 local lay volunteers to staff the
chapel 24 hours a day; and a lead chaplain willing to go though
training and donate his time.
The round-the-clock volunteers are crucial,
he says. "We find the majority of our ministry is outside of
Sundays. . . . Where does a driver go on a Tuesday afternoon when
he finds out his wife is leaving him?"
It is the anonymity of the truck stop chapels
that can sometimes make the counseling more effective. "They say,
'My name is Bob,' but it's not really Bob," Fontaine says. "So
they're more willing to share what's going on. It helps you get to
the root of things a lot quicker."
Pastor Charles Clarke is high on the Bible.
"It's perfect," he says. Bible counseling isn't like psychological
counseling, says Pastor Clarke of the trucker chapel in Salt Lake
City. "Psychology and sociology are man-made sciences. Theology is
a God-made science. We give them the spiritual answer from the
Bible."
Like other trucker chapels, Clarke's has a
born-again bent with a literal interpretation of the Bible. "You
can trust your Bible," Clarke told his flock one Sunday recently.
"It's perfect, from Genesis 1 to Revelations 22. . . . I personally
believe that when we get to heaven, we'll be responsible for
everything in the Bible."
Clarke, who is also pastor of Bible Church of
Salt Lake, graduated from Baylor University in Texas and received a
doctorate in the philosophy of religion from Bethany Seminary in
Alabama. In his sermons he is fond of quoting from Greek and
Hebrew, sometimes writing Greek words on the white board behind the
lectern at the front of the trailer.
A call to the headquarters of Truckers
Christian Chapel Ministries, in Enon, Ohio, connects you to the
mother of founder Glenn Cope. Glenn is 71 and Lorene Cope is 90.
"Before he was ever born, I gave him to the Lord. And the Lord took
it from there," says Lorene, who is proud of her son's work with
TCCM.
A lot of neighborhood churches, she says,
won't accept a trucker who isn't dressed in his Sunday best. And,
too, there's usually nowhere for him to park his rig in the church
lot. Some people, she says, don't understand how hard a trucker's
life is or how hard it is to attend church. "Some like to sit on
their padded seats and not think about the trucker out there, dirty
and hungry, and how really hungry they are for the
gospel."
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