Sunday morning at Metairie Baptist Church, some members of Lakeview Church–inundated by high levels of polluted floodwater following Katrina–told me they are at work cleaning out the bottom floor of their sanctuary and expect to bring the church building back to normal. “That is a well-built church structure,” one said.
Paul Gregoire, longtime pastor of St. Bernard Baptist Church in Chalmette says the same thing about his church. “We’ll be back,” he told me, even though as Director of Admissions, Paul has had to relocate temporarily to Atlanta with the seminary administration. Meanwhile, Pastor John Galey of Poydras Church and Pastor John Jeffries of First Baptist Chalmette have teams working on rescuing their buildings. The Missouri Baptist Convention has adopted St. Bernard Parish’s Baptist churches, for which we are more grateful than I can ever find words to express.
Pastor John Faull gave me time in the morning worship service of Williams Boulevard Baptist Church in Kenner to thank the congregation for their great service. To my knowledge, this was the first church of any denomination in the immediate area to be up and running, ministering and serving. Hundreds of state troopers from all over America converged on New Orleans to restore law and order. They worked out of the Troop B headquarters, next door to Williams Boulevard, and hundreds slept and ate in the church’s gymnasium. Even now, WBBC continues to serve hundreds of meals a day to law enforcement officers still on the job.
Brother John read several letters he has received recently, some from family members of troopers thanking the church for “taking care of my daddy.” One letter came from some children in Taiwan who held a bake sale in their yard and raised twenty dollars for hurricane relief, then sent the money along with drawings they had done.