Archives
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Miracle Farm offers refuge to Hurricane Rita evacuees
Posted: 9/01/06
Miracle Farm residents display a mirrored tile that was presented as a gift to the Texas Baptist child care ministry by the Little Cypress-Mauriceville Bears. (Photo by Courtney Cole) Miracle Farm offers refuge
to Hurricane Rita evacueesBy Courtney Cole
Miracle Farm
BRENHAM—When Hurricane Rita struck southeastern Texas, residents of communities near Orange found shelter from the storm at Miracle Farm. And everyone involved believed the provision was a miracle—or at least a divine appointment.
“We had extensively planned and were prepared to minister to families that had been displaced by this catastrophic storm,” said Jack Meeker, executive director of Miracle Farm, a childcare agency for boys operated by Children at Heart Ministries. “We soon realized that God had hand-picked a special group to be directed into our circle of care.”
09/05/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Nederland church marks new beginning in new sanctuary
Posted: 9/01/06
Nederland church marks
new beginning in new sanctuaryBy Elizabeth Staples
Communications Intern
NEDERLAND—Hurricane Rita des-troyed the facility of First Baptist Church in Nederland, but it also reinforced the importance of unity among the congregation.
Winds from the Sept. 24, 2005, hurricane stripped the roofs off all the church’s buildings. The steeple fell through the roof, allowing water into the sanctuary and ruining the carpet. Most of the pews, the steeple and carpet in other buildings needed to be replaced. The building suffered nearly $1.5 million damage.
Pastor David Higgs prays with a couple who joined First Baptist Church in Nederland. The decision took place during the re-opening of the church’s sanctuary.
View a video clip from First Baptist Nederland here.09/05/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Nehemiah’s Vision helps Southeast Texas recover from Rita
Posted: 9/01/06
Nehemiah’s Vision helps
Southeast Texas recover from RitaBy Elizabeth Staples
Communications Intern
VIDOR—Texas Baptists continue to help restore homes destroyed by Hurricane Rita, even as Southeast Texas residents make their way through another hurricane season.
This summer, volunteers from around the state lent a hand through Nehemiah’s Vision, a nonprofit organization facilitating disaster recovery ministry in Southeast Texas.
Nehemiah’s Vision, a nonprofit organization started with the help of BGCT disaster response funds, has brought volunteers from across the state to help rebuild portions of Southeast Texas. 09/05/2006 - By John Rutledge
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New Orleans churches radically changed by Katrina
Posted: 9/01/06
New Orleans churches
radically changed by KatrinaBy Robert Marus
Associated Baptist Press
NEW ORLEANS (ABP)—In once-vibrant New Orleans, the liveliest things in vast swaths of the city seem to be weeds exploding from once-manicured medians, lawns and parks.
And the rats, mosquitoes, mold and nutria—huge rodents that thrive in the Louisiana swamps—are the only other creatures swarming neighborhoods that—a year after Hurricane Katrina—still are largely devoid of human beings.
A boarded-up theater in a once-thriving area of New Orleans illustrates the toll Hurricane Katrina took on the Crescent City. (ABP Photo) 09/05/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Churches become rallying points for New Orleans recovery
Posted: 9/01/06
Churches become rallying
points for New Orleans recoveryBy Robert Marus
Associated Baptist Press
NEW ORLEANS (ABP)—Hurricane Katrina is changing New Orleans’ churches as surely as it changed the face of the flooded city itself—and some of those churches are serving as rallying points in the city’s recovery.
On a recent sweltering August day, Steven Meriwether sweated through his white T-shirt as he knelt inside the living room of a shotgun home on Toledano Street in the Mid-City neighborhood.
How to volunteer Nehemiah’s Vision
Contact: Andy Narramore
(409) 769-1616
nehemiahsvision@sbcglobal.net
www.nehemiahsvision.comBaptist Crossroads Project
Contact: Inman Houston
(504) 482-5775
i-houston@mindspring.com
www.baptistcrossroads.orgNAMB Project NOAH
Contact: Tobey Pitman
(504) 782-6122
Or (504) 362-4604; (877) 934-0808
noah@namb.net
www.namb.net/noahBaptist Builders International
(225)775-2053
info@baptistbuilders.org
www.baptistbuilders.org09/05/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Baptist volunteers make impact on Crescent City
Posted: 9/01/06
Southern Baptist volunteers worked alongside others in building new housing in the hard-hit 9th Ward of New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina. (Photo courtesy of NAMB/BP) Baptist volunteers make impact on Crescent City
By Hannah Elliott
Associated Baptist Press
NEW ORLEANS (ABP)—After serving the homeless for decades in New Orleans, Tobey Pitman finally is making significant inroads among leaders and homeowners in the predominantly Catholic region.
That’s not to say he hasn’t had noteworthy success with his Brantley Mission Center for the homeless. But since Hurricane Katrina hit, the Baptist missionary has led volunteers to help storm victims in ways other groups—religious or otherwise—have not. And that has made all the difference.
09/05/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Volunteer director feels calling to restore Mississippi town
Posted: 9/01/06
Volunteer director feels
calling to restore Mississippi townBy Robert Marus
Associated Baptist Press
PASS CHRISTIAN, Miss. (ABP)—When Amy Hardee came from North Carolina to what locals call “the Pass” immediately after Hurricane Katrina, the place was a mess.
A year after Katrina’s monstrous storm surge virtually wiped Pass Christian, Miss., off the map, it’s still something of a mess. But thanks in part to Hardee, at least it’s a far better-organized mess—and one she is working diligently to return to its former glory as a Southern beach town.
Amy Hardee of North Carolina, volunteer relief coordinator in Pass Christian, Miss., explains some of the plans the Hurricane Katrina-decimated town has for redeveloping its historic beachfront while remaining family-friendly. (Photo by Robert Marus/ABP) 09/05/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Sabine Pass churches focus on rebuilding community
Posted: 9/01/06
Hurricane Rita destroyed the facilities of Sabine Pass Christian Fellowship (pictured) and First Baptist Church of Sabine Pass, as well as nearly half the homes in the small, historic Southeast Texas community. Sabine Pass churches
focus on rebuilding communityBy George Henson
Staff Writer
SABINE PASS—Sabine Pass lost both its Baptist churches to Hurricane Rita. Nearly a year later, the two congregations are looking to rebuild a community as much as they are their church buildings.
Dale Martin, pastor of Sabine Pass Christian Fellowship, has put his emphasis on rebuilding homes lost at the same time the hurricane destroyed his church’s facility.
09/05/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Gulfport members learn church is not brick and mortar
Posted: 9/01/06
The building of First Baptist Church of Gulfport, ravaged by Hurricane Katrina, has been torn down. The congregation is rebuilding several miles to the north of the Gulf. Gulfport members learn
church not just brick and mortarBy Hannah Elliott
Associated Baptist Press
GULFPORT, Miss. (ABP)—Members of First Baptist Church of Gulfport have learned a lot in the year since Hurricane Katrina destroyed their waterfront church buildings. Mostly, they’ve learned that a church is much more than an edifice.
“It’s an exciting time for us,” Pastor Chuck Register said. “Probably the most exciting thing for us has been being forced to rethink the New Testament (concept of) what really is the church. The church is not brick and mortar.”
09/05/2006 - By John Rutledge
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Couple left family, friends to run volunteer base in Gulfport
Posted: 9/05/06
The North Carolina Baptist Men’s disaster-relief team has centralized operations in the Gulfport National Guard Armory with plans to build 600 homes. Couple left family, friends
to run volunteer base in GulfportBy Hannah Elliott
Associated Baptist Press
GULFPORT, Miss. (ABP)—It would take an act of God for most people to quit their jobs, move away from friends and family and commit to living for two years in a camper in Katrina-ravaged Gulfport, Miss.
Martha and Eddie Williams were no different, but they chose to respond to that act of God with cheerful hearts. Along with four other couples, the Williamses, who enjoyed a “comfortable, normal” life in North Carolina, moved to Gulfport March 1 to oversee Hurricane Katrina relief and construction operations for two years.
09/05/2006 - By John Rutledge


