LANG, November 2018

I Can Do All Things, A Ministry for the Disabled

I can do all things….

A ministry for the disabled

Warren Coupel smiles as a young boy shows off his bow shooting certificate after an event.


Coupel says his ministry relies on the time and talents of his wonderful staff and volunteers.

 Philippians 4:13 — I can do all things through Christ, who strengthens me.

They say everyone has a cross to bear. Warren Coupel was given his at age 30, and though it took a while to accept it, he now believes his illness has made him a better man.

Coupel had a normal childhood. After high school, he worked in construction and in the petrochemical industry. His physical health was fine until age 30 when he learned he was in the early stages of muscular dystrophy. Not long after the diagnosis, he needed a cane to help him walk, and by age 33, he was confined to a wheelchair.

“I had a lot of anger in my heart,” he said. “I was angry with God. I used to pray over my legs and wish that I could walk again. One day, in prayer, God said, ‘Stop worrying about ‘form’ and start doing the work I sent you to do.’ At that moment, I quit struggling. The fight was gone and I accepted my situation.”

Coupel now believes that God used his illness as a tool to reach people he otherwise would not have been able to reach. “Now I share my story, my testimony, my faith … with other people. It was a revelation coming to this wheelchair, it has changed me for the better. I’m a better husband, father, son … a better man.”

For a few years, Coupel was involved with another faith-based organization that creates outdoor adventures for those with disabilities. He volunteered at first, then became a leader, and eventually was named a vice president. “It was a great experience,” he said, “but it was based near Lake Charles and I wanted to be able to offer something similar here in Baton Rouge.”

After a lot of prayer and discussion about starting a new ministry, Coupel and the leadership team that is in place today, came across a Bible verse that spoke to their hearts — Philippians 4:13  — I can do all things through Christ, who strengthens me.

4:13 Outdoors was born, and today, Coupel and a staff of 15 organize hunting and fishing trips, campouts, sporting events, bow-hunting activities and more for disabled children and veterans. “I came to realize that everyone has a disability,” he said. “For some people, it’s physical. For others, it’s as simple as being scared of the dark. That’s bondage, too. We serve the disabled, but that label has come to include children who are at-risk … so we also help those struggling in school, those who have been bullied, and those who have lost a parent.”

Most of the people he helps are referred through local schools and churches. Many are nominated online through the 4:13 Outdoors website. “A lot of people will not come out and ask for help, but if help is offered to them, they are grateful and will accept it,” he added.

Outdoor adventures are just one component of the 413 Outdoors ministry. “We support a lot of organizations in the community,” Coupel said. “We co-sponsor events and raise funds for groups like the American Cancer Society, Bayou Autism Chapter, Dreams Come True Foundation, and others. Wherever the need arises, we want to be there to help. We have done disaster relief related to the 2016 flood, and  in Assumption Parish, we served 8,000 meals in one week to help people who were affected by a tornado.”

“During our events and our trips, we use the time to minister to others and tell our own stories of what God has done in our lives,” Coupel said. “It’s how we connect and become part of the same family.”

 Coupel finds therapeutic value in the work he does. “I do it because of the smiles on the kids’ faces,” he said. “I understand that wheelchair they are sitting in and that little body that doesn’t work. I had my childhood so I’m fortunate. Some of these kids are thrilled just to be outside their house — to be out in the fresh air and sunshine. That’s a blessing for me to be able to do that for them.”

In the grand scheme of life, a lot of things are clearer now, Coupel says. “We have to love each other no matter what. Our differences — skin color, mental, physical, religious … these are boundaries that need to be broken down. We need to love everyone the way Christ loved the church. Once you’re out there doing work like this, you see everyone’s the same!Your heart is softened … you begin to understand things at a different level.”

Coupel says his life was not only changed, but saved, when he accepted Christ. But he doesn’t judge others who choose a different path.

“I know that some people never get past their anger. Not everyone comes to terms with their situation and gives their life to God. But it’s our prayer that everyone would. Once I realized that God doesn’t want any of us to suffer, I was able to let it all go. I know in my heart I am doing his calling … and that brings me happiness.”

For more information, call Coupel at (985) 992-0856 or email him at warren413@yahoo.com. You can also visit 413outdoors.org, where there are forms to fill out if you would like to donate, become a sponsor, or nominate someone to be helped by 413 Outdoor Ministry. The Facebook page is 4:13 Outdoors Ministry.

Coupel says his ministry relies on the time and talents of a wonderful staff and volunteers.
Children pose with pest bunnies during a 413 Outdoors event.


Faith Life, October 2015

Trinity Outdoors Disabled Adventures

Helping the Disabled Experience Christ Through the Outdoors

by Mark Hunter
Matthew Matherne, a board member of Trinity Outdoor Disabled Adventures, who is paralyzed from a drunk-driving accident before he became a Christian, was manning a display booth at the recent Gueydan Duck Festival. Photo by Mark H. Hunter
Matthew Matherne, a board member of Trinity Outdoor Disabled Adventures, who is paralyzed from a drunk-driving accident before he became a Christian, was manning a display booth at the recent Gueydan Duck Festival. Photo by Mark H. Hunter

Sometimes God uses something small, like a drill bit, to create something as big as the great outdoors to bless hundreds, if not thousands of people.

Trinity Outdoors Disabled Adventures, “was a vision given to me by God seven years ago,” said Jason Bland. But it took a lot of pain and suffering, and the loss of his right leg below the knee for God to get his attention.

Bland, who grew up near Gramercy, La., hunting, fishing, and playing high school and college football, was living for himself a decade ago, drinking hard liquor and smoking meth. He’d already ruined his first marriage and lost custody of his two children when he was involved in a motor vehicle accident in Lafayette. When doctors repaired his broken leg, they left a drill bit behind.

For seven months he battled anxiety, depression and worst of all – infections. When they saw the drill bit on an X-ray, his infected leg was amputated. He now gets around on a stainless-steel, articulated prosthesis.

“I knew God was working on my life – I know now he was transforming me from a big bully to a child of His with a soft heart,” Bland said. Following the amputation he met a Christian woman, now his second wife, who helped him find Christ.

In November, 2009, he was praying for guidance for a ministry to help disabled people get out into the woods when, he said, “God told me, ‘name it Trinity Outdoors. Help people and bless them.’”

They started out by taking wounded veterans and disabled children on hog and deer hunts throughout Louisiana, Texas, and a half-dozen other states at no charge.

“What we try to do is bless them through the outdoors,” Bland said. “The outdoors is our church.”

They are now expanding the ministry to include recovering alcoholics and addicts, as well as children who don’t have a father in their life. “They’re disabled but in a different way,” Bland said.

Some of the men and women they’ve served have since joined the non-denominational, non-profit ministry, and they are getting calls from outside Louisiana to start other local chapters. “We are being obedient to God and are being blessed.”

Matthew Matherne, 37, is the group’s secretary-treasurer and has been involved ever since he went on a deer hunt with the group three years ago. In April 2006, he was driving drunk when he wrecked his truck and broke his back. He is now paralyzed from the waist down.

Some of the team of Trinity Outdoor Disabled Adventures that was hosting a booth at the recent Gueydan Duck Festival. Back row, L. to r. Frank Miller, Lori Credeur, Gerard Credeur, Scott Miller. Front row - L. - Matthew Matherne and ministry founder Jason Bland. Photo by Mark H. Hunter
Some of the team of Trinity Outdoor Disabled Adventures that was hosting a booth at the recent Gueydan Duck Festival. Back row, L. to r. Frank Miller, Lori Credeur, Gerard Credeur, Scott Miller. Front row – L. – Matthew Matherne and ministry founder Jason Bland. Photo by Mark H. Hunter

“I have only myself to blame and plan on using the rest of my time here on earth to right my wrongs and do everything I can for the Lord,” Matherne said. Married with three children, Matherne often sits with the kids in the blind.

“It is a life changing experience,” Matherne said. “In 2014, we met girl and her parents at a show at the Lamar Dixon Expo Center. She has Spinal Muscular Atrophy, and is in a wheelchair. She had always wanted to go hunting but never had the opportunity or the means because of limited use of her arms.”

“We have equipment to hold the gun and when we showed her how it worked her eyes lit up,” he said. “Last year at a Texas hunt – when she shot her deer – everybody in the stand was crying and hugging.”

“It changes not only how you see your life but how you see other people,” Matherne said. “Something as simple as harvesting a deer or a hog or some ducks or catching some fish – to see the joy on their faces and see how much it means to them changes you.”

Gerard Credeur, 39, is the group’s cook. He is disabled from a 2007 oil rig accident that broke his back in four places. The injury still affects his walk. Like Bland, he’d been living a wild life of partying, drugs and booze before Christ transformed him.

“Matt (Matherne) came to my house, introduced me to Jason, and I got involved and it’s now two years of being sober,” Credeur said. “If you keep your faith in the Lord, the Lord will bless you many times.”

 

You can support Trinity Outdoors at its upcoming fundraiser:

3RD ANNUAL TRINITY OUTDOORS BASS CLASSIC

March 12, 2016

Lamar Dixon Expo Center

The event will also feature:

* CLYDE CARAWAY “REVELATION” CAR SHOW

* “UNCLE BOGA” JAMBALAYA & PASTALAYA COOK OFF

* HOOKED ON FISHING EXTRAVAGANZA for kids

For more information visit Trinity’s website: www.trinitydisabledadventures.com