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Church van tragedy stirs upcoming revival

Posted on Jun 30, 2011 | by Karen L. Willoughby

OAK GROVE, La. (BP)—Five people killed in a church van crash June 22 all had made professions of faith within the last 18 months, said Greg Dunn, a pastor in Oak Grove, La.

Providentially, Dunn added, the 50 or more churches of several denominations in West Carroll Parish began planning for an area-wide crusade a year ago.

The 3,000 people in and around Oak Grove are broken with grief, said Dunn, pastor of New Zion Baptist Church. Even so: “We believe what Satan meant for harm, God will use for good. We are going to honor their lives by many souls coming to the Lord.”

Investigation continues into the cause of the crash, which took place in daylight about five miles from New Zion as the 15-passenger church van took folks home from Wednesday night services.

Killed were Portia Thornton and her two daughters, Katelyn, 19, and Brittany, 12, as well as Emma Adams, 4, who was visiting the church, and driver Joey W. McKan. Six others were injured, some critically.

“I will never forget that night, standing in the hallway while surrounded by church members, still talking about the service and laughing and fellowshipping like we always do, and then came the call that would forever change our lives,” Dunn said.

A frantic yet prayer-filled dash to the accident site followed.

“We could have never been prepared for what we saw and heard when we arrived,” Dunn said. “I have never felt so helpless, wishing that this was not happening, and yet it was.”

The next few days were filled with hospital visits, funerals and road trips between Shreveport, La., and Jackson, Miss., “to pick up the broken pieces and try to do all we could to minister to these precious families,” Dunn said.

As Sunday quickly approached, Dunn recounted, “I lay in my bed Saturday night, knowing that my church family was expecting a word from the Lord.

“Jesus reminded me of the storm the disciples faced in Matthew 8, when they were all in the boat and the wind and the waves began to shake their faith.

“We can’t choose the storms,” Dunn said. “We are guaranteed to have storms. … I cried out, ‘Lord, where are You in our storm? Where are You in the midst of this tragedy?’”

Dunn said God told him that He was in all the people who have united because of the crash: EMT personnel, hospital staff, volunteers, families, churches and communities “from all over who have come together for one purpose: to help the hurting. … He’s the one holding the hand of the dying. … He’s a piano player, a deacon, a body of Christ who rallies around a scared, young preacher who wants to quit and run the other way.”

Dunn wrote down 21 places where God was amid the tragedy and read his “Where is God?” list at Mt. Zion at the Sunday, June 26, service. The pastor said he could see comfort settling atop the congregation’s raw wounds.

“The Lord is doing His work here,” Dunn said, turning from the tragedy to view the big picture of God’s activity. New Zion, planted in 1934 during the Great Depression, reported 60 professions of faith and 31 baptisms in 2010 and probably that many already in 2011.

“We’re a very mission-minded church and serious about being real,” Dunn said.

“We know God has given evangelists as a gift to the local church, so we use them,” he added in reference to revival meetings held at Mt. Zion twice a year.

“Everybody on this van were folks saved and discipled in the last 18 months,” Dunn continued, “every last one of them,” including a 16-year-old girl who made a profession of faith six months ago as a result of the van ministry.

“We send 20 to 25 missionaries out of our church each year to do missions, and we believe missions starts at home,” Dunn said. “We seek through our Brotherhood and the women’s group to minister any way we can — cutting down trees, providing school supplies, groceries — any avenue we can to get the Gospel to people not just in word but in action.

“Our director of missions [Jay Morgan] was out of town when this happened,” Dunn said, returning to the loss his congregation is enduring. “He was doing ministry with Kingdom Builders and drove all night to be at the hospital with the families and me.

“It was overwhelming, the first few hours,” Dunn said. “The people have moved from ‘overwhelmed’ to very evidently trusting God in it. They’re still hurting, still in need, but trusting God.”

Dunn said his immediate goal is “to be there and try to be strong for them and with them”

“The one thing we know is we can cling to God’s Word and God’s presence,” the pastor said. “The message God gave us Sunday morning was about the storms of life and how we can’t choose whether or not we go through them, but we can choose how we handle it.”

The July 10-15 community crusade is scheduled for 11 a.m. Sunday and 7 p.m. each night in the Thomas Jason Lingo Center in Oak Grove, with evangelist Bill Britt as guest speaker and the Mackey Willis Family leading in worship.

Depending on what God does with hearts already broken, the crusade could be extended, said Dunn, chairman of the crusade steering committee.

“One thing God has given us is that this [crusade] is going to be big,” Dunn said. “[Britt] has a gift to challenge Christians to be real and not lukewarm. … We felt like this is who God wanted to be part of this crusade.

“This is something no one is going to want to miss. … You’re going to want to see for yourself what God does.”
—30—
Karen L. Willoughby is managing editor of the Baptist Message (www.baptistmessage.com), newsjournal of the Louisiana Baptist Convention.


1,678 posted on 06/30/2011 6:16:24 PM PDT by Dubya (JESUS SAVES)
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In Japan, ‘ground presence’ makes impact

Posted on Jun 30, 2011 | by Susie Rain

KAMAISHI, Japan (BP)—The woman closely examines the handmade doll. On one side, the doll’s face sports a big smile and exudes happiness. She flips it over and sees the facial expression is a frown, symbolizing sadness and grief.

The Japanese woman tightly clutches the gift and softly thanks the Southern Baptist volunteer who gave it to her. This simple child’s therapy toy expresses how she and others in the fishing village of Kamaishi have felt since the earthquake and tsunami hit Japan on March 11 — a mixture of emotions that won’t come out.

Three months after Japan’s triple disaster — the earthquake, tsunami and subsequent nuclear crisis — residents in the northeast are still digging out emotionally and physically from mounds of debris and mud.

The largest natural disaster in Japan’s history left Kamaishi in shambles. An hour after the 9.0-magnitude earthquake, a 50-foot tsunami wave whipped through this hillside block of houses. Many people died as every home was badly damaged.

Since that fateful day, many survivors have lived — or camped out — on the second floor of their homes, rather than leave. The bottom floors are filled with layers of mud, dead fish and rubble.

Supplies are still hard to get. Some stores are open with a limited stock, but getting there is a problem. Most forms of transportation were damaged in the tsunami. The government estimates more than 146,000 vehicles were destroyed in Miyagi Prefecture alone. Then, factoring in that most residents are over 60 years old and cannot walk up to an hour — one way — to the store, most just make do with whatever they can scrounge.

They are delighted if someone comes along to help.

About three teams of Southern Baptist volunteers are going to Japan each month to help with the ongoing disaster response, said Jeff Palmer, executive director of the Baptist Global Response international relief organization. Three teams from the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention have assisted Japanese Baptists in relief initiatives in recent weeks; a team from North Carolina currently is in the country; and teams from Oklahoma, Louisiana and Kentucky are going in August.

“Most of the volunteers are serving as utility teams, which means that they are doing a number of odd jobs in partnership with Tokyo Baptist Church’s North East Japan Recover program and the Japan Baptist Convention’s Tohoku Care Team,” Palmer said. “They are meeting needs of people in the affected areas and providing services such as mud-outs, cleaning houses, streets, parks, public areas, delivering relief supplies and encouraging disaster victims.

“The simple fact they are there, that they care enough to come help people in need, speaks volumes about God’s love to people who are struggling to survive and find new lives,” Palmer said.

CONSTANT STRESS

The constant stress of day-to-day survival is written across the faces of the Japanese whom Southern Baptist volunteers meet. When a team of volunteers from Tennessee arrived with supplies and shovels, for example, the residents’ relief was obvious.

This was just one of several stops the Tennesseans made with Gerald Burch, volunteer coordinator for Tohoku Care, to offer help in “mudding out” homes and businesses or tearing down remnants of houses.

Many neighborhoods in the three affected prefectures were destroyed — in the city of Ishinomaki, 28,000 homes have been lost, according to local officials. Officials estimate more than 88,000 homes in the three affected prefectures are clogged with filth but may be salvageable.

During their trip to Japan, the Tennessee volunteers helped clear out a community center and distribute fresh vegetables and other supplies. This stop, however, made an unusual impact on both the volunteers and the Japanese.

“Just a few weeks ago, we had a community block party led by International Mission Board missionaries Charlie and Teresa Seelen. It really boosted everyone’s spirits,” Burch said. “The only thing they have holding them together is community cohesiveness. There is no hope of eternity.

“The Japanese are naturally a community people,” said Burch, who lived in Japan for 23 years and recently returned to help with the relief efforts. “The community here is about to be broken up and that has everyone frustrated and concerned.”

The government’s goal is to relocate communities such as this one to temporary housing by the end of June, Burch said. Community leaders say they will “draw lots” to see who goes where. Not everyone will go to the same center. Some will stay in the area while others will be moved to “pre-fab” housing projects farther away — from jobs, friends and the community support that has sustained them for the last three months.

Many will move from once-spacious homes to a 20-by-20-foot structure squeezed in with as many units that can fit in a space the size of a soccer field.

FACING THE UNKNOWN

“The problem people face here is not only did they lose their family and houses, but most lost their livelihood as well,” Burch said. “People have frustrations and concerns as they face the unknown.

“What Baptists need to continue to do is have an on-the-ground contact ministry that is sensitive to physical and emotional needs,” the volunteer coordinator added. “Sometimes what is needed most in these disasters is just listening and touching someone’s life.”

The Tennessee volunteers did just that as they cleaned out homes and businesses. In Kamaishi where it was cold and rainy, one Japanese woman insisted they warm up in her house. She scrounged up some coffee and snacks for the guests while her friends and neighbors talked about the difficulties they expect when the community breaks up.

The volunteers asked if they can pray for the community. No one objected as the Tennesseans asked God to watch over and comfort their friends. As volunteer after volunteer prayed, their Japanese hostess gripped the two-faced therapy doll tighter and tighter — until finally she allowed a tear to fall.
—30—
Susie Rain is a writer/editor living in Southeast Asia. To learn more about volunteer opportunities in Japan, email info@tohokucare.com. Baptist Global Response is on the Internet at www.gobgr.org. Donations for Japan relief may be sent to Office of Finance, International Mission Board, 3806 Monument Ave., Richmond, VA 23230. In the memo line write “Japan Response Fund.”


1,679 posted on 06/30/2011 6:20:26 PM PDT by Dubya (JESUS SAVES)
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To: All

Some thing just came up I will be back later. Take care everyone.


1,680 posted on 06/30/2011 6:23:18 PM PDT by Dubya (JESUS SAVES)
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One more

Wanted?

A group of kindergarten children were on a class outing to their local police station where they saw pictures, tacked to a bulletin board, of the 10 most wanted men.

One of the youngsters pointed to a picture and asked if it really was the photo of a wanted person.

“Yes,” answered the policeman.

“Well,” wondered the child, “why didn’t you keep him when you took his picture?”


1,681 posted on 06/30/2011 6:26:12 PM PDT by Dubya (JESUS SAVES)
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