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West Virginia pastors respond to mine tragedy
Erin Roach, Baptist Press
April 06, 2010
6 MIN READ TIME

West Virginia pastors respond to mine tragedy

West Virginia pastors respond to mine tragedy
Erin Roach, Baptist Press
April 06, 2010

MONTCOAL, W.Va. — Two teams

of about six Southern Baptist pastors each were among the first to respond with

grief counseling for families affected by the worst U.S. coal mining disaster

in more than 25 years.

“In West Virginia, our clergy is our grief counselors,” West Virginia Gov. Joe

Manchin told reporters, alluding to the strong faith shown by many of the state’s

coal mining families.

A massive underground explosion killed 25 workers April 5 and left four missing

in Massey Energy Co.’s Upper Big Branch mine near Whitesville, W.Va., about 30

miles south of Charleston.

Officials said Tuesday that rescue efforts could be delayed by another day as

rescuers had to bulldoze an access road above the mine so they could begin

drilling three shafts of more than 1,000 feet each to release methane and

carbon monoxide, the Associated Press reported. The bulldozing and drilling

effort, they said, could take up to 12 hours.

Meanwhile, families held out hope that their loved ones, if among the four

missing, were able to survive in an airtight rescue chamber containing enough

food, water and oxygen for four days of survival.

Photo from Newscom

Policemen block the entrance to Massey Energy Co.’s Upper Big Branch mine near Whitesville, W.Va., April 6. At least 25 miners were killed at an explosion in the mine.

Norm Cannada, pastor of West Charleston Baptist Church, told Baptist Press (BP)

he was leading a team scheduled to arrive at the site Tuesday night.

“I’m just finding out what I’m doing. We’re taking a team tonight,” Cannada

said. “We’re going to the Performance Coal security building and meeting with

families and giving them people to talk to because they’re devastated.

“Local pastors were there all day and night, and now we’re trying to get some

teams there to give them some time to catch up on some rest because they’re

going to be doing this long-term,” Cannada said.

“There’s a team there now from

the Coalfields (Baptist) association not far from us, and they are going to be there

from noon to 5 or 6 p.m.

“There’s a team from Appalachian Bible College that’s going to be there at 5

and stay until 9 p.m., and we’re going to get there at 9 and maybe stay until 1

or 2 a.m. We’re just going to be there to offer assistance to families, to help

them make sense of this if that’s possible, to help them see God in all of

this, and to love them and point them to Jesus.”

Cannada was waiting to hear from a couple of people, but he said his team would

consist of about six people, mostly pastors and at least one layperson.

“We’re waiting to see if this is going to be something we’ll need to do over

the course of the week or what the need is going to be beyond this,” Cannada

said.

Delton Beall, state director of missions for the West Virginia Convention of

Southern Baptists, told BP the group from the Coalfields Association of

Southern Baptists is headed by Charlie Minney, a newly commissioned North

American Mission Board worker who serves as the associational missionary in

Logan, W.Va. Beall said that group consists of about six pastors too.

“We are deeply concerned for the families,” Beall said. “This state largely is

a coal mining community, and we are greatly grieved for their struggles right

now and pray for God’s sustaining grace in their lives. We call our churches to

continue to pray for them and be ready to minister in the days to come.

“We ask all of our Southern Baptist family to pray for these families right

now. It’s a horrific event to have to endure,” Beall added. “We want to convey

our deep concern and sympathy to the families, and we are looking at some

extended care projects, but right now they’re in the formative stages.”

President Obama asked for prayers for the men killed, their families and the

rescue workers trying to reach the missing miners, and he said the federal

government stands ready to offer assistance.

“May they rest in peace and may their families find comfort in the hard days

ahead,” Obama said from the White House.

The Associated Press (AP) said 31 miners were in the area during a shift change

when the explosion occurred. Some were able to escape. Eleven bodies had been

recovered and identified but 14 had not. A buildup of toxic methane gas, which

is believed to have caused the explosion, forced rescue workers from the mine

early Tuesday morning.

Manchin said a man who lost his father in the nearby Sago Mine disaster in 2006

now is counseling families in this tragedy.

“The families want closure,” the governor said. “They want names…. These

families are good people, hardworking people. They understand the challenges.

Right now I told them to do what they do best: Love each other and come

together as a family.”

Gary Williams, a miner and pastor of New Life Assembly, a church near the mine,

told AP there is always risk associated with coal mines.

“It’s not something you dread every day, but there’s always that danger. But

for this area, it’s the only way you’re going to make a living,” Williams said.

The sister of one of the miners killed in the blast said Benny Willingham, 62,

was a deacon in his church and was just five weeks away from retirement.

“He was a good man. I know everyone thinks that about their loved ones, but

Benny truly was a wonderful man,” she told CNN. “He loved the Lord, and in

church the other day, he thanked the Lord for saving his soul, and he thanked

Him for watching over him in the mines for over 30 years, and he said, ‘If He

takes me tomorrow, I’ve had a good life.’”

(EDITOR’S NOTE — Roach is a staff writer for Baptist Press.)