Chaplain's Office Receives $6,000 for Disaster Relief Trips The Office of the Chaplain has been awarded a $6,000 grant to allow Wilson students to continue partnering with a central Pennsylvania Presbyterian relief organization, Lend A Hand, to undertake disaster relief trips in 2019. Wilson students work with a Lend A Hand volunteer on a J-Term 2018 disaster relief trip to North Carolina. The grant was awarded by the Synod of the Trinity, Presbyterian Church (USA), which oversees 16 Presbyteries in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio. The Synod has provided the chaplainās office with an annual gift for more than 25 years, but this year, the process was different. āThe Synod redefined its giving program this year as a competitive grant for campus ministry,ā said Margaret Light, Wilson director of corporate and foundation relations. The result was a grant that is significantly greater than in the past. āI was stunned to get $6,000,ā said the Rev. Derek Wadlington, the Collegeās Helen Carnell Eden Chaplain. āI think this is a tremendous opportunity and Iām grateful for this funding, which allows us to engage students in a service-learning activity that will return tenfold on its investment.ā Last January, Wadlington and nine Wilson students worked with a dedicated group of volunteers in the Lend A Hand groupāa disaster relief team coordinated by the Synodās Camp Hill, Pa., baseāto help families in Princeville and Tarboro, N.C., where the communities are still struggling to recover from 2016ās Hurricane Matthew. The funding for that trip was pieced together with a collection taken at the 2017 Christmas vespers service and money provided by President Barbara K. Mistickās office, Wadlington said. With the new funding, Wadlington said his office will be able to take two relief trips in 2019. He plans to lead a return trip to North Carolina over the upcoming January-Term and another relief mission over Alternative Spring Break in 2019, the location of which has yet to be determined. The disaster relief trips are important, not just in helping Americans in need, but also in terms of developing Wilson studentsā character, according to Wadlington, who said working with the Lend A Hand volunteers last January was an āawesomeā experience for students. āIt educated and empowered a number of students who went on the trip in a way that was transformative for them,ā he said. āIt also exposed them to a group of people who give because of their faith ⦠and also offered conversations to folks who want to talk about faith and spirituality. I do believe that spiritual growth and discernment should be part of their college time.ā Contact ŗģ˹µĘÓ°Ļń Office of Marketing and Communications 1015 Philadelphia Avenue Chambersburg, Pa. 17201