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Florida Baptists grieve, respond to damage in Bahamas
Barbara Denman, Florida Baptist Convention
September 09, 2019
5 MIN READ TIME

Florida Baptists grieve, respond to damage in Bahamas

Florida Baptists grieve, respond to damage in Bahamas
Barbara Denman, Florida Baptist Convention
September 09, 2019

The utter destruction Hurricane Dorian wreaked on his homeland in the Bahamas is “too much to wrap my head around,” said Jacksonville, Fla., pastor Kenny Roberts.

Screen capture from Time

Florida Baptists are grieving after Hurricane Dorian hammered the Bahamas Sept. 1 with 180 miles per hour winds. The strongest hurricane recorded in history stalled for two days over the Great Abaco and Grand Bahama islands.

“I have watched a lot of storms come and go,” he said. “But this is just complete devastation.”

The catastrophic storm hammered the island chain Sept. 1 with 180 mph winds, reportedly the strongest on record to hit the Bahamas. Then for two days, Dorian stalled over the Great Abaco and Grand Bahama islands, chewing homes, businesses and people’s lives into little pieces. At least 30 people have been killed, but hundreds are still missing. Thousands have been left homeless.

Roberts, who was raised in Spanish Wells, said many friends and extended family live on these northern islands. While he has heard that some have survived, communication is challenging.

“The hardest part is feeling helpless and knowing it’s not just that people had damage to their homes,” said the pastor of MissionWay Community Church. “It’s that so many people have lost everything. Some say it’s unlivable.”

“Our hearts hurt,” said former Florida pastor Randy Crowe of New Smyrna Beach. For 12 years until his retirement in January, Crowe served as pastor of New Life Bible Church in Man-O-War Cay on Abaco Island, one of the hardest hit communities. He planned to fly back to the church on Sept. 8, a week after the hurricane hit.

“We need to be there, to love on our people and just hug their necks,” he said choking back the tears.

Crowe reported that he talked to church members Cindy and Will Weatherford Sept. 3 via satellite phone. “They said ‘Pastor Randy. It is devastated. Everything is demolished. We know you are coming.’”

According to media reports, Man-O-War Cay was so ravaged by the storm it took three days before outsiders could make their way to the island with 300 in population.

Though he has moved back to Florida, Crowe continues to return to the Bahamas with Island Outreach, a ministry he and his wife Paula established and led for more than 20 years.

When he flies the ministry’s 1976 Cherokee Six 300 back to the islands this weekend, they will take needed supplies.

The Florida Baptist Convention gave $10,000 to Island Outreach to provide immediate relief to the islands.

Tommy Green, Florida Baptist Convention executive director-treasurer, said the convention will also work with Baptist Global Response (BGR), the Southern Baptist relief organization, to assist the Bahamas recovery. Many Florida Baptist churches are also quickly responding to the humanitarian crisis caused by Dorian. (See today’s related story on how BGR and other Southern Baptists are responding to hurricane damage.)

Martin Vargas, pastor of Iglesias Real in Hollywood, Fla., said, “The Bahamas is only 90 miles away from me,” he noted. “It would be unforgiveable if I saw the needs of this country and didn’t respond.”

Vargas has led his church to partner with 33 countries, which will now include the Bahamas. When Puerto Rico was hit by Maria in 2017, church members immediately traveled there to make assessments on the ground and gather logistical data to establish “centers of hope and health” throughout the country. Vargas said they plan to use a similar strategy to connect communities in the Bahamas where generators, chainsaws, water filtration systems and commercial kitchens can be located.

Once the centers are established, response teams and churches can channel food, medicines and supplies while assisting with reconstruction, which he predicts will take years.

The Florida Haitian Baptist Fellowship has also pledged to help their Bahamian brothers and sisters, many of whom are also Haitians.

Working with BGR, Olive Baptist Church in Pensacola is already collecting supplies to send to the Bahamas.

Pensacola knows firsthand how devastating a hurricane can be. Numerous hurricanes have hit the Panhandle city, including the devastation wreaked by Ivan in 2004.

“So many have helped us through the years,” Olive Baptist pastor Ted Traylor said, “and we are just trying to do the right thing in giving back.”

Myles Dowdy, Florida Baptists’ lead catalyst for missions and ministries, noted the convention will work through local congregations both in the state and in the Bahamas to provide help to the hurting Bahama residents.

“We are empowering the local church to be the local church during the time of crisis,” Dowdy said. “We are trying to get supplies to them as quick as we can, helping local churches that have contacts.”

Dowdy said the “greatest part of our coming beside the churches in the Bahamas is through our daily prayers for them.” He suggests Baptists pray for physical and emotional safety for the people of the Bahamas, first responders and for churches that will be generous and bold during this time of crisis.

“We are praying that the churches in the Bahamas will be a lighthouse to their communities during this difficult time,” he said, “and that God will be glorified as the wonderful good news of the salvation of Jesus is shared throughout the Bahamas.”

For more information related to how you can respond to hurricane damage in the Bahamas, contact your state convention or go to the Baptist Global Response at goBGR.org.

(EDITOR’S NOTE – Barbara Denman writes for the Florida Baptist Convention, flbaptist.org.)