Jane Compton and her husband, who lost their home and possessions in the storm when Hurricane Ian approached last week, found sanctuary at a Baptist church and cuddled with fellow parishioners through the wind, rain and fear.
When the hurricane made landfall last Wednesday, they prayed that the gusts would subside and that God would do them no harm. I put my faith to the test. A raging storm tore off the church steeple, leaving a large gap in the roof. The parishioners shuddered.
“God save us,” Compton prayed, with her husband, Dell, by her side.
She compared the Flood to the biblical story of Noah’s Ark and said that the water level never stopped rising. There was Hallelujah when it happened.
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Now that the storm has passed and its devastation has spread, the church in hard-hit southwest Florida provides a steadying force to the lives of those in turmoil and grief. Heartache, frustration, and uncertainty swirl through the sanctuary amid sermons about the matter.
“The Comptons’ pastor at Southwest Baptist Church, a congregation of several hundred in one of Fort Myers’ most devastated neighborhoods, Pastor Robert Kasten, said:
Many of the nearly 250,000 Catholics in the Parish of Venice, which spans 10 counties from just south of Tampa Bay to the hurricane-borne Everglades, are also being tested. Bishop Frank Dewane has visited as many of his 50 parishes and his 15 schools in the diocese as possible.
“A lot of people just wanted to talk about ‘why are they suffering so much,'” Dewane said of parishioners he met as they celebrated Mass over the weekend at a flooded Northport neighborhood church and a stormy parish hall. Told about – Sarasota church damaged. “We must move forward. We are people of hope.”
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Priests have a fine line between holding Masses to provide comfort and not endangering elderly parishioners in areas with widespread shortages of water and electricity and flooded roads. It was single. Dewane said one of his rescued men kept asking about his wife, unaware that she had drowned in the storm.
Around Kasten’s church, a nearby mobile home park where many of his parishioners lived was flooded. About a quarter of his congregation suffered extensive damage to their homes, and many like Compton lost almost everything. The church sanctuary has become a temporary quarters for nearly a dozen newly homeless people.
Most people handled things fine until the reality of tragedy struck.
“They burst into tears when they saw the picture,” Kasten said.
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“The mere shock of knowing and seeing what you knew had happened overwhelmed them.
Retired Barbara Wasco, sleeping in a lounge chair at Sanctuary, believes the community will be rebuilt.
“I’ll get by,” she said. “We make it.”
Hurricane Ian’s fury—150 miles per hour (241 kilometers per hour) winds and deluges—dead dozens and left millions stranded. For many communities, it was the worst calamity in generations.
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Rhonda Mitchell, who lives near a Baptist church, said all she had left was faith in God.
“We don’t know what he’s going to do,” she said.
“I lost my whole life,” she said, and began to sob. “I’m still here, but I’ve lost everything I owned….I’m just trying to figure things out.”
Reconstruction work is already underway at the badly damaged Catholic churches and schools. But Dewane said his priority is to “meet where the people are,” allowing the Catholic community to support the entire relief effort.
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It can range from finding shelter for teachers whose homes have collapsed to helping elderly neighbors consult, even though many schools are reopening this week. The Diocese works with Catholic charities to set up distribution centers for donations and supplies provided by FEMA.
But many successful initiatives are grassroots. When a small group of nuns in the inland town of Wauchula lose power, they decide to empty their freezers of meat and other perishables and invite the whole neighborhood to a barbecue. A fire blazed, and hundreds of people lined up and began adding what was in their own fast-warming refrigerators.
“We’re doing the best we can,” said Dewane. “I think we can only be instruments of the Lord.”
Reverend Charles Cannon, pastor of St. Hillarys Episcopal Church, preached on the temporary loss of community. Much has been lost, he said, but not all is gone.
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“People think they’ve lost everything, but if they haven’t lost themselves and loved ones, they haven’t lost everything,” Cannon says, outside among the fallen branches of a once-majestic oak tree. said after a Sunday service at
Cannon pointed out that the debris that left the church grounds looking like an ugly and eerie place could be cleaned up.
“Most of the job was to make people feel safe again,” he said.
Down the street, about 50 parishioners from the Assembly of God Bethlehem Ministry gathered to share their struggles. They detailed how they had no electricity, no drinking water, and in many cases their homes were left in disrepair.
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“But God kept them safe,” said Victoria Araujo, a parishioner and occasional Sunday school teacher.
“Some people have lost more. We need to pray for those who have lost more than we have,” said Pastor Ayrton da Silva, whose congregation is mostly Brazilian immigrant families. rice field.
The storm has truly tested the resilience of his community, he said, adding, “I think people will think about faith, family and God.”
Five years ago, Hurricane Irma hit the area and caused extensive damage to the church. Repairs were still underway when Ian was hit. This time the church fared much better.
Ultimately, “it’s just a building,” da Silva said. “The church is us.”