September 11, 2004
Column #1,202
Southern Baptist Hurricane Disaster Relief
Across the entire length and width of Florida,
millions of people were without power as the result of two huge hurricanes
in weeks. With rotted food in refrigerators, some had nothing to eat for two
days, and many were without hope this week.
However, on Wednesday the Southern Baptist Disaster Relief
crew was on its 28th continuous day of disciplined, organized assistance for
the victims - first of Hurricane Charley then to help those hit in the past
week by Hurricane Frances. Huge tractor trailers, each of which is
capable of cooking and serving 20,000 hot meals a day, rolled into place and
began serving meals. Few grateful victims realized the nutritious meals they
began to eat this week were cooked, not by the Red Cross which delivered
them, but by 1,800 Southern Baptist volunteers.
North Carolina Baptist Men set up one feeding station in the
parking lot of First Baptist Church of Melbourne, a smaller one at King
Street Baptist Church in Cocoa and a third at Cornerstone Fellowship in
Sebastian. Each cooking crew was accompanied by a recovery team equipped
with chain saws and blue tarps to cover roofs which no longer kept the daily
rains out.
On Wednesday, their first day on scene, 10,000 meals were
served, 3,500 of which were in an open serving line at First Baptist in
Melbourne. More would have been served, had the Red Cross sent more delivery
vehicles. The lucky recipients ate Salisbury Steak, green beans, hot rolls
and butter, fruit cocktail, cookies and lemonade or coffee.
One woman in her mid-80's marveled that unpaid Southern
Baptist volunteers came to fix her house: "I was the only one on my street
without hope. You guys showed up, prayed with me, and showed me the love of
Christ," she told volunteers.
She looked at the yellow shirts and caps emblazoned with
North Carolina Baptist Men logos and marveled, "You are heaven's helpers,
God's angels," reported Dale Duncan, director of the North Carolina
contingent.
Neither he nor other Southern Baptist volunteers saw any
adult children of the frail elderly came to help their own parents. But
Southern Baptists reached out to them.
The scale of help delivered by the Southern Baptist Disaster
Relief for Hurricane Charley alone, is now tallied up. A stunning 886,107
meals were served by 2,000 volunteers who gave 19,637 volunteer days.
They performed 3,368 clean up jobs for homes damaged by the powerful storm,
provided 16,947 showers and ran 1,899 laundry loads.
Showers? Laundry loads? Yes, some of the Southern
Baptist vehicles contain portable showers and Laundromats.
Dale Duncan, a retired school superintendent, served weeks
helping Charley's casualties in the Orlando area, drove part way home to
Georgia, and was directed by the Southern Baptists North American Mission
Board (NAMB) to wait a couple of days and then return to Florida to help
victims of Frances.
Of course, many other denominations and groups were serving
hurricane victims - United Methodists, Mennonites, Seventh Day Adventists,
Catholic Charities, Samaritan's Purse.
But none deliver so much help to so many as the Southern
Baptists. Terry Henderson, National Relief Director of the Southern
Baptists, interviewed on his cell phone, said this service "is one of the
best ways to prove the relevance of our faith."
He predicted that the relief efforts for Hurricane Frances
would be "one of the largest operations the Southern Baptists have ever
undertaken. The Red Cross wants us to provide a million meals a day.
Certainly it will be in the hundreds of thousands a day."
The Red Cross, which is chartered by Congress, buys the food
which is cooked by the Baptists, and then delivered by Red Cross vehicles. Similarly, the Salvation Army depends on Southern Baptists to cook the food
it delivers. However, due to a shortage of Red Cross and Salvation
Army volunteers, Baptists were also driving their vehicles in parts of
Florida.
What has it been like? "Just standing still is hot. You start
sweating before doing anything," says Dale Duncan who came from North
Carolina's mountains.
To him this is nothing new. In 16 years Duncan's
greatest love has been serving in foreign missions where he coordinated
relief efforts in Africa three times, Germany, twice, the Czech Republic,
Hungary, Russia, Puerto Rico, Honduras, Alaska, 32 days to help after the
Indian earthquake, feeding victims in the Kosovo War, the Gaza Strip, etc.
Truly, these Southern Baptists are modern Good Samaritans.
They acted on Jesus's words, "I was hungry, and you fed me."
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