Canine Comfort Ministry (Outreach)

Photo courtesy of Outreach Magazine.

By Nadra Nittle, Outreach Magazine, May 24, 2023

When a May 2011 tornado wiped out portions of Joplin, Missouri, Immanuel Lutheran Church used comfort dogs to soothe traumatized community members. 

Also known as crisis response dogs, comfort dogs receive training to console people in a variety of settings, including schools, libraries, health-care facilities, disaster zones and mass shooting sites. 

“We had never heard of comfort dogs before. [We] didn’t really know what they were,” recalls Jason Glaskey, youth and family minister at Immanuel Lutheran, which has an average weekend attendance of 200. “But we invited them in, and we saw how much of an effect they had on the people who were coming to our church’s relief center after the tornado. People would stop and pet the comfort dogs who were there, and you could see the relief and the release in their emotional state.”

By the end of summer 2011, the Immanuel Lutheran staff decided to start a full-time comfort dog ministry. With comfort dogs Louie and Jackson, the church not only helped community members recover from the tornado, but also visited public schools, nursing homes and hospitals with the animals. Today, their latest comfort dog, Daniel, is a young Golden Retriever. 

Read the full article at Outreach Magazine.