Chattanooga Times Free Press

Razed by Gatlinburg fire, church now stands bigger

- BY AMY MCRARY USA TODAY NETWORK-TENNESSEE

GATLINBURG — Leveled by the Nov. 28, 2016, wildfire that swept through its town and killed 14 people, Gatlinburg’s Roaring Fork Baptist Church is rebuilt — bigger, better and blessed.

The Rev. Kim McCroskey sees the last 13 months of challenges and gifts as the Lord’s plan. The devil tried to destroy his church but only burned its buildings. Great things, he believes, will happen when Roaring Fork comes home in early 2018.

“The Lord gave the devil permission to burn [the church] down. But the devil didn’t know what was coming. If the devil had seen all this now — and he’s not omnipotent like the Lord is — I believe he’d have left us alone,” McCroskey said before Christmas.

BLESSINGS BUILT IN

Roaring Fork was one of at least four churches damaged or destroyed. First Baptist Gatlinburg will replace the building that held its youth and food ministries. Banner Baptist lost its fellowship hall; it’s built a small, temporary replacemen­t as it creates a long-range developmen­t plan.

The 28-member Gatlinburg Church of Christ was destroyed. It plans to start rebuilding in early 2018, said church member David Barton.

At Roaring Fork, larger, modern buildings replace destroyed ones. “The Ark,” a 12,000-square-foot family life center with a commercial kitchen, should be ready mid-January.

Roaring Fork Baptist Church had its annual children’s Christmas play at its temporary worship center at Camp Smoky on Dec. 17.

It will be mid-March — just weeks before Easter — before services are held in the two-story, 14,000-square-foot worship center. Its 452-seat sanctuary is nearly double the 229-person capacity of the 1949 building. Ten basement Sunday School classrooms are at least twice as large as those they replace.

Blessings are built in the walls. Volunteers rebuilt most of Roaring Fork, leaving Bible verses or encouragem­ents scribbled on supports and door frames. Paint, Sheetrock or wood eventually will cover such phrases as “For when I am weak, then I am strong,” and “Bless this house and all would enter.”

Roaring Fork’s growing congregati­on wanted to build a new worship center on one side of its sanctuary. But the expansion could have eliminated needing parking.

Then fire set the church’s course. “God has provided amazingly. This church could never ever have hoped to have these kinds of facilities without the fire,” said McCroskey, Roaring Fork pastor for 10 years. “You had to take away what was here to force our hands to do probably what God wanted a long time ago. We have gained more than we lost.

“The Lord decided he didn’t want something new on something old. The Bible says, ‘Don’t put new wine in old wine skins.’”

‘THE CHURCH IS GONE’

The fire already had burned almost a week inside neighborin­g Great Smoky Mountains National Park before it came for Roaring Fork.

At his Sevier County home in Kodak, McCroskey noticed it was “snowing ashes” the morning of Nov. 28. People knew the park’s remote Chimney Tops were burning. No one was ready for what happened hours later.

Around 6 p.m., winds approachin­g 90 mph sent flames through parts of Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge and Sevier County. Downed power lines and burning debris sparked at least 20 fires in 15 minutes. Fires burned through the night and into Nov. 29.

In addition to those who died, almost 200 people were hurt. Nearly 2,500 homes and busiynesse­s were damaged or destroyed. Other churches also were damaged.

Around 8 p.m. Nov. 28 a deacon who lives near the church called McCroskey. The stone and cinder block sanctuary was gone. So was the wood and metal family life center built in 2003 and paid off in 2015.

Fire hopscotche­d. Two homes behind the sanctuary burned; Roaring Fork later bought the land where they stood. Next to them, the small white frame house where McCroskey sometimes stays wasn’t touched. “The Lord knew I needed my suits,” he said.

SIGNS FROM THE LORD

Three things survived in Roaring Fork’s charred wood and twisted metal. Its steeple bell, a concrete Jesus statue and the pastor’s basement study.

Authoritie­s evacuated areas of Gatlinburg until Dec. 9. But McCroskey, like others, got in to see the rubble of his church. On Nov. 30, he walked what remained of the worship center basement, passing rooms where fire melted metal tables.

His small study stood at the hall’s end. Its locked door wasn’t burned. Inside, everything — his ordination papers, church records, books, furniture — was covered in soot. But they remained whole in the only room the fire didn’t get.

“I think that was God’s way of saying, ‘You’re not through.’ About that time, I needed some hope because I was just walking through rubble and destructio­n and thinking, ‘What now Lord?’

“The Lord gives us signs that it’s going to be OK and that was the first one I got.” he said.

BUILDING FOR CHRIST

Church leaders knew they’d rebuild Roaring Fork. Insurance — $2.1 million on the buildings and $300,000 in contents — would help but wouldn’t cover all the cost. The church was financiall­y solid.

They were uncertain how they’d rebuild. Then, three weeks after the fire, Builders for Christ called.

Builders for Christ builds church buildings, providing and coordinati­ng volunteers whose jobs range from framing to roofing to carpentry to hanging drywall to installing heating and air conditioni­ng. Churches supply materials; Builders for Christ labor.

The group usually books work a year or two in advance, McCroskey said. But on Nov. 29, a day after the Gatlinburg fire, Builders of Christ’s planned summer 2017 project was canceled. So they came to build Roaring Fork.

Working in teams of 80 to 300, about 2,000 volunteers built the two buildings. McCroskey estimates that work saved $1 million, maybe $1.5 million, in labor. Without it he says Roaring Fork may have only had one new building.

When Builders for Christ left mid-August, constructi­on was 90 percent complete. In mid-October the church hired Knoxville general contractor George W. Reagan to complete the work.

SERVICES CONTINUED

Roaring Fork congregant­s quickly found a temporary home six miles away at Camp Smoky Christian Retreat Center. Sometimes, in good weather, they worshipped on their own property under an open-air pavilion.

Before the fire, 200 to 250 people — local residents and out-of-state vacationer­s — attended Sunday services. At Camp Smoky, attendance dropped to about 130. McCroskey sees the dip as temporary.

“It’s a testimony to the spirit of the church how well we have stayed together,” he says. “It’s amazing to me how people from out of state still find us. But when we get back over here, it will be phenomenal.”

‘BEARING ONE ANOTHER’S BURDENS’

McCroskey said rebuilding will total about $3.5 million, not counting Builders for Christ’s free labor. Benefactor­s — individual­s and Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran and nondenomin­ational churches — donated about $1 million. Others gave material gifts, including a sanctuary piano.

“Right now, we have not borrowed a penny. We still have a little in the bank, and it’s going to cost a little something going forward,” McCroskey said.

“There are people in the world who are just good people who love the Lord and believe in what we do. This is how Christiani­ty should look all the time — bearing one another’s burdens and fulfilling the law of God as the Bible says.”

‘THOU SHALT NOT BE BURNED’

Fifteen days before this Christmas, the Old Testament verse Isaiah 43:2 was posted on Roaring Fork’s Facebook page. The verse, in part, promises “When thou walkest through the fire, thou shall not be burned; Neither shall the flame kindle upon thee.”

Days after Roaring Fork was destroyed, McCroskey read that same verse. About 40 church members met at a Seviervill­e bed and breakfast on Dec. 1, 2016.

“I read that scripture. It was tough. We all cried. I just assured everybody we were not through,” he recalled.

Isaiah’s aren’t the Bible’s only words McCroskey’s leaned on. He quotes verses from Philippian­s that read “I can do all things through Christ which strengthen­s me” and, in part, “my God shall supply all your need…”

“I depend on it all,” he said. “I know you can trust God. You can trust him to be faithful in whatever’s going on, whatever happens. When it seems hopeless you can trust him. And when you go through the fire, you won’t be burned.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Senior Pastor Kim McCroskey inspects a statue outside the remains of the family life center at Roaring Fork Baptist Church in Gatlinburg on Dec. 6, 2016. The church and center burned down in fires a week earlier.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Senior Pastor Kim McCroskey inspects a statue outside the remains of the family life center at Roaring Fork Baptist Church in Gatlinburg on Dec. 6, 2016. The church and center burned down in fires a week earlier.

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