I am the daughter of Bob and Mary Wood Meynardie, Lutheran missionaries to Japan. And I have been a Lifetime Member of WELCA since 1953. It wasn’t called WELCA back then. It was The Women’s Missionary Society of the LCA. The membership was given to me a day after my infant baptism, in April of 1953. The WMS had been supporting Mom ever since she traveled there as a single missionary in 1948. In fact, they began a special project where one could “become” a missionary for a day for ($5) by supporting Mom’s salary. In addition, several circles in South Carolina named themselves Mary Wood circles, and as I understand it, there are a few still meeting today.
I was born in Japan and lived most of my first sixteen years there. I grew up amidst fellow Lutheran missionaries, some of the best people on Earth, in my opinion. The highlights of my year were mission meetings in the winter and summers at Lake Nojiri with other missionary families.
When we did finally move to the states, I attended Newberry College like my father had before me. And spent my summers as a counselor at Camp Mowana, Ohio’s Lutheran summer camp. At Newberry I met my husband. We got married and settled in Summerville, SC and attended St. Luke’s Lutheran Church.
St. Luke’s is now and has always been, in my opinion, a warm and welcoming church. Jeff and I and both our children became active in many aspects of its ministry. One of those aspects is the Women of the ELCA or WELCA.
In 2020 in an effort to do something to help during the pandemic, I started a daily email/blog to help keep us connected while apart. The Spirit of WELCA goes out every day, Monday – Friday, to the women of our three circles and a few other folks. This blog includes devotions, Prayer on Tuesdays, and news about the women of St. Luke’s. Of these 130 folks, about 40 have sent in contributions for the blog. It has been a good thing, keeping us together while we were apart. Although the pandemic phase of COVID appears to be over, the blog continues.
At our monthly circle meetings, one of our members usually spends a good deal of effort putting together a short program for the circle that will inspire us. When a job needs to be done at Saint Luke’s, it is often WELCA that is willing to do the work. And our circles have always sought to find ways to reach out to others outside the church. But it is the relationships of the women within St. Luke’s and within my circle that have inspired me the most.
Over the last few years one of our WELCA programs was about Eagles. I think of this one often. You see, when an Eagle gets older and starts to molt, she loses her energy. She stops flying and simply sits on the ground ready to die. But the other eagles do not abandon her, they fly in a circle above her, dropping bits of food until she is strong enough to fly again.
It is a good analogy for what we do in our circles. When one of us gets sick or is dealing with another kind of tragedy we rally, much like the eagles. We want there to be no sister left behind. And it is because of this that I always want to be a part of this organization that behaves in the way that I believe Christ taught us to behave.
Excerpts from a interview for the SC Synod Assembly in June 2022