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August/September 2010 Issue
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The Tennessee
Flood of 2010
In what was an all-too-common story
around Nashville and Middle Tennessee, a Two Rivers Baptist Church
pastor said May 4 that "dozens" of families in his congregation
saw their homes flooded from a record-setting rainfall, and many
of them have no flood insurance.
The flood, which was the result of what the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration and the Corps of Engineers described
as a "1,000-year rainfall event," damaged thousands
of homes May 1-2 after more than thirteen inches of rain fell
in a 48-hour period, pushing streams, creeks, and the Cumberland
River far over their banks, and flooding roads, houses, and businesses.
More than twenty people died statewide as a result of the floods.
The Cumberland River began receding after it crested about twelve
feet above the flood level.
"There are houses where water is up to the roof. It's
total devastation," Scott Hutchings, executive pastor of
Two Rivers Baptist, told Baptist Press.
Gov. Phil Bredesen declared fifty-two of the state's counties
disaster areas and requested federal aid, and eventually more
than forty counties in West and Middle Tennessee were declared
major disaster areas by the federal government.
Nashville Mayor Karl Dean reported the estimated cost of the
flood damage reached more than $1.5 billion in Nashville alone
and would climb even higher.
David Acres, Disaster Relief Director for the Tennessee Baptist
Convention, said 10,000 homes were flooded in the Nashville area
but another 200,000 homes were flooded in the rest of the state.
Two Rivers and hundreds of churches across the region spent
much of the days following the weekend of flooding checking on
their members and communities, surveying the damage, and determining
how they could help. Churches then recruited and deployed volunteers
who could go out and help do everything that is needed to repair
a flooded home cleaning out the mud, tearing up carpet,
replacing drywall.
Two Rivers is located just a few thousand feet from the Cumberland
and just across the street from the Gaylord Opryland Resort and
Convention Center, which was flooded with around ten feet of water
and which will be closed for months. Although Two Rivers' building
itself was spared from any major damage, the surrounding communities
were not. The Pennington Bend neighborhood less than a
mile from Two Rivers was nearly completely flooded. The
Nashville Police S.W.A.T. team used boats to rescue more than
eighty families from their flooded homes.
Two Rivers initially sent out scores of church members in teams
to assess needs and pray with victims. The church facility eventually
served as a major coordination and facilitating command post for
hundreds of volunteers, some who traveled from across the nation.
Two River Baptist Church received national attention on ABC's
Good Morning America show when it broadcast flood coverage
from the church's parking lot.
On the opposite side of Nashville, the flood relief work of
another Southern Baptist church in Nashville was featured May
6 by CNN's Anderson Cooper, who applauded the state's response
and said he had "never seen" such an outpouring of volunteers
following a natural disaster.
Cooper broadcast live from the Nashville community of Bellevue,
which was hit hard by the May 1-2 disaster.
"It's an incredible place," Cooper said earlier in
the night on CNN in previewing his show. "I've never seen
so many volunteers so quickly after a disaster, descending and
helping out neighbors thousands of members of church groups
and individuals who just come out. You see people in front of
homes and you say, 'Is this your home?' They're like, 'No, I'm
just here, I just came down here to help.' It's an incredible
sight to see. It's a real testament to the spirit and strength
of Nashville."
Cooper walked around the Bellevue community and bumped into
a team from Judson Baptist Church that was helping clean out one
flooded home, pulling out spoiled insulation and sheet rock. The
flood in the area reached four feet in the homes, Jack Oliver,
a minister at Judson Baptist, said.
"It's amazing," Cooper said, "because we were
in New Orleans [following Hurricane Katrina], and it took months
in some cases to get to this point. To see this, just a couple
of days after it's a sign of how organized things are here,
largely thanks to volunteers."
Oliver told Baptist Press, "We're doing what Jesus
would do meeting the physical needs of the people. He told
us to love your neighbor as yourself. That's what we're trying
to do. If Jesus were here Himself, He would be walking up and
down these streets, ministering to people's needs and trying to
console them."
Oliver told BP that assisting flood victims is going
to be a three-stage process: 1) helping with initial disaster
relief, such as gutting out homes, 2) helping people financially,
and, 3) helping people during reconstruction. Many people, he
said, will need a place to stay, if not now then during reconstruction.
"Believers have to be financially sensitive to what the
Lord tells them to do and support folks financially," Oliver
told BP. "A lot of folks don't have flood insurance,
and lot of them aren't going to be able to get a $20,000 or $50,000
loan. The Christian community needs to respond and say, 'God,
do you want us to forgo our vacation?'"
He added, "It's an opportunity for believers to live out
Philippians 2 others are more important than ourselves."
Compiled from articles by Baptist Press and Baptist and Reflector.
Baptists Responding to a
1,000-Year Event
Calling recent major flooding a
once-every-1,000-year event, Tennessee's congressional delegation
asked President Obama for additional federal aid beyond what had
been planned.
The legislators thanked Obama for the federal government's
response but said more needs to be done.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency said May 11 that 23,000
residents in forty-two Tennessee counties had registered for federal
aid. Southern Baptists across the state stepped up to help, the
Baptist and Reflector newsjournal reported.
Randy Davis, Tennessee Baptist Convention president and pastor
of First Baptist Church in Sevierville, visited five associations
affected by the flooding.
"This could be one of Tennessee Baptists' finest hours
as we respond to help each other as well as other victims affected
by the tragic flooding," Davis said.
Tennessee Baptist disaster relief set up its feeding unit at
Judson Baptist Church in Nashville May 6 and prepared more than
12,000 meals a day. The American Red Cross distributed the food
to flood victims not only in Nashville but in towns outside the
city.
Additionally, the Hardeman County Baptist Association set up
its feeding unit at Buffalo Baptist Church in Hurricane Mills
seventy miles west of Nashville preparing more than
6,000 meals a day, and a Shiloh Baptist Association feeding unit
prepared 2,000-plus meals a day at Poplar Heights Baptist Church
in the West Tennessee city of Jackson.
Meanwhile, specially trained Southern Baptist flood recovery
teams often called "mud-out units" were
on the ground throughout the state helping clean out flooded homes.
Also, Baptist flood recovery teams from Alabama, Georgia, Indiana,
and North Carolina joined to assist in the effort.
David Acres, the Tennessee Baptist Convention's disaster relief
director, worked through volunteers and workers across the state
to assess needs and send workers. Trained disaster relief volunteers,
along with chaplains, will still be needed, Acres said.
Adapted from reports by Baptist Press and the Baptist & Reflector,
published by the Tennessee Baptist Convention.
Donate to Tennessee flood disaster
relief at www.TnBaptist.org or by sending a check to TBC, P.O.
Box 728, Brentwood, TN 37024, with the designation "TN Floods
2010" on the check. Learn ways to help in the Nashville area
at www.nashvillebaptistassociation.org. Learn ways to help in
the Clarksville area at www.cumberlandba.org. Flood victims may
complete a form at www.TNBaptist.org to request assistance. Forms
can be faxed to 615-371-2014 or scanned and e-mailed to MgrDOC@TNBaptist.org.
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© 2010 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
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Nashville, Tennessee 37203
Tel. 615.244.2355
Email us: sbclife@sbc.net
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