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After bridge collapse, Baptists dispatched to help
Nicole Kalil, Florida Baptist Convention
March 21, 2018
3 MIN READ TIME

After bridge collapse, Baptists dispatched to help

After bridge collapse, Baptists dispatched to help
Nicole Kalil, Florida Baptist Convention
March 21, 2018

Classes resumed March 19 after the collapse of a pedestrian bridge at Florida International University (FIU) in Miami left six people dead.

The 950-ton structure was undergoing final safety testing and repairs when it plummeted to the ground, crushing cars that were traveling busy SW 8th Street, also known locally as Calle Ocho. One FIU student and a construction worker were among the dead.

Screen capture from CNN

Baptist collegiate leader rallies campus ministers and Miami-area pastors to ministry at Florida International University after the collapse of a pedestrian bridge.

The $14.2 million bridge was to connect the campus with the neighboring Sweetwater community, home to thousands of FIU students. One student was struck last year and killed crossing the street.

Tommy Green, executive director-treasurer of the Florida Baptist Convention, noted the important role Baptist Collegiate Ministry (BCM) on college campuses can play when tragedy strikes.

“Our Miami-area BCM director Ricky Bailey was contacted to serve as a chaplain to hurting and grieving families,” Green said. “He is a trusted spiritual voice on campus through consistent demonstrated ministry to the students.”

As part of his ministry role at FIU, Bailey currently is president of the university’s multi-faith council, a body encompassing representatives of various denominations and faiths represented on campus. After the bridge collapsed, Bailey was asked to bring together a group of chaplains from as many faiths as were available to respond to the scene.

Bailey said that within two hours of the collapse, chaplains were there to pray with and comfort injured victims and witnesses.

Bailey also enlisted the help of area Florida Baptist pastors, one of whom was Tommy Parke, pastor of City Church in Miami, a church plant set to launch later this spring.

It was no accident Parke was someone Bailey reached out to. When Parke arrived at the location where families were gathering for information, he encountered an old friend, Carlos Rios, who was already comforting the family of victim Alberto Arias. Through that connection, Parke was able to meet and minister to a family who had lost a loved one in the bridge’s collapse.

“It was a reminder there are no accidents only divine appointments,” Parke said. “When your heart is to care for those in need, be willing to go – you never know what God is lining up for you.”

As students returned to campus and entered their new normal, there will be additional ways FIU’s BCM to comfort hurting students and point them to the only true source of comfort.

“I am thankful for Ricky and our campus ministers who have a gospel presence on our college campuses,” said Billy Young, the state convention’s next generation catalyst. “They represent Florida Baptists well and facilitate opportunities for our churches to engage on campus.”

Noel Lozano, pastor of Turning Point Baptist Church near the FIU campus, was one of those who responded when Bailey reached out for help. Lozano, whose church has services in English and Spanish, was able to minister to Hispanic families in their heart language.

Green appreciates the ability of the Florida Baptist family of churches to come together when disaster strikes.

“I am grateful to Florida Baptists for your commitment through the Cooperative Program to support Baptist Collegiate Ministry across our state,” he said. “Your giving enabled us to be ‘right beside’ a grieving university community.”

(EDITOR’S NOTE – Nicole Kalil writes for the Florida Baptist Convention.)