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Joplin relief workers cry out for rain to stop
Brian Koonce, Baptist Press
May 25, 2011
4 MIN READ TIME

Joplin relief workers cry out for rain to stop

Joplin relief workers cry out for rain to stop
Brian Koonce, Baptist Press
May 25, 2011

JOPLIN, Mo. — Relentless rain and the threat of more severe

weather are holding back efforts in Joplin, Mo., to move forward with rescue

and cleanup two days after the May 22 tornado that killed at least 117 people,

including three worshipping at Harmony Heights Baptist Church.

The weather is not cooperating. The Weather Channel forecast for the evening of

May 24 noted a 70 percent chance of storms and winds of 20-30 miles per hour.

Occasional thunderstorms may be severe, with damaging winds, large hail and

possibly even another tornado. Wednesday’s forecast is just as bleak with an 80

percent chance of rain and more strong winds that may produce large hail.

Greg Walker, student pastor at Forest Park Baptist Church, asked for prayers

that the rain and lightning would stop.

“It would be a huge help,” Walker said. “People go out to work and then they

have to run right back.”

Steve Patterson, director of missions for the Spring River Baptist Association

based in Joplin, said the rescue and cleanup process is barely moving.

“It’s been a long, strange prep stage,” Patterson said. “Everybody is so ready

to do something. We just don’t want to get in the way of search and rescue

work.”

Patterson said disaster relief assessment crews are staging to move in as soon

as the city gives the go-ahead. A DR incident command center was set up May 23

at the Baptist Student Union of Missouri Southern State University and a

meeting took place May 24 to regroup DR efforts and focus.

Photo by Brian Koonce/The Pathway

Missouri Baptist Disaster Relief chaplains and assessors meet in Joplin, Mo., to discuss the morning’s work in the aftermath of the May 22 tornado.

On Sunday evening, 53 people at Harmony Heights Baptist Church were listening

as pastor Charlie Burnett preached when storm sirens began to sound. Burnett

moved everyone into the designated storm shelter interior rooms of the church

(it had no basement). Moments later, the tornado hit the church, tearing it

apart.

“It is a miracle that many survived,” Patterson said.

Empire Baptist Church, near the heavily damaged hospital that has received

extensive media attention, was likely a total loss, Patterson said. No one was

injured there.

“The whole sanctuary wall collapsed and that caused the roof to cave in and the

windows to blow out,” he said.

Eastvue Baptist Church was spared, but its pastor, Tim Sumners, is one of the

hundreds whose homes were destroyed. Patterson added that all of the churches

affiliated with the association had at least one member who lost a home. John

Marshall, president of the Missouri Baptist Convention and pastor of Second

Baptist Church in Springfield, reported that Forest Park, the largest church in

Joplin, has several injured members and one fatality. More than 30 members lost

their homes.

“As a church, we’re doing pretty good considering, but we’re trying to look

outside our walls,” said Walker, the student pastor. “Everybody knows someone

who lost someone. Some of our students have lost their homes, but as far as I

know they’re OK.”

The facility of Forest Park was unharmed and has been serving as a collection

point for donated items. Most feeding is being done on the campus of Missouri

Southern State University.

The death toll of 117 is the highest for any one single tornado in the United

States since a 1953 twister hit Flint, Mich., killing 116, FoxNews.com

reported. Several sources have indicated to The Pathway, the Missouri Baptist

Convention’s newsjournal, that the number of fatalities will grow.

(EDITOR’S NOTE — Koonce is a staff writer for The Pathway, newsjournal of the

Missouri Baptist Convention. Online donations can be made through www.mobaptist.org/mbcdr. Trained DR

volunteers should check in through their DR chain of command.)