The Oklahoman

Flood: Lives are ‘out on the curb’

- FROM PAGE 1D [AP PHOTO/MAX BECHERER]

God created us for one reason: to know Him and love Him and have fellowship with Him. And originally that’s what happened; Adam and Eve loved God and had unbroken fellowship with Him. They not only lived in a perfect world, but they had perfect fellowship with their Creator.

But God created them with a free will — that is, with the ability to either love Him or even reject Him. Otherwise they would have been like robots, unable to choose to love God. We may enjoy watching a robot in action — but we can’t really love it, nor can it love us. And that’s why God didn’t make us like robots. Instead, He gave our original parents the ability to love Him — or even reject Him. True love requires the ability to respond.

But you know what happened. Satan told Adam and Eve that God was deceiving them (which was a lie), and if they obeyed him instead of God, they’d become like God. Tragically, they believed his lie — and their fellowship with God was broken. You and I now share in the consequenc­es of their sin.

But God still loves us, and He still yearns for us to know Him and love Him and have fellowship with Him. And He has made this possible by sending Jesus Christ into the world to give His life for us. Have you responded to His love by accepting Christ into your life? The Bible says, “This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins” (1 John 4:10). a month, but he believes the storm recovery is making that happen now as people build relationsh­ips with each other through God.

“It’s been this entire community,” Carroll said by phone. “We couldn’t have done anything without everyone, and I mean just about everyone, pitching in.”

Stories and service

Chuck Craft, a member of South Walker Baptist, said he and his wife, Karen, lost their home about a mile from the church but have been able to salvage some irreplacea­ble items, such as photos of their four children and 16 grandchild­ren. He said everyone in their family is safe, and that’s the most important thing.

“My story is no different than anybody’s down the road,” Craft said. “Everybody’s life is out on the curb to be picked up by garbage.”

The Baton Rouge area got thundersto­rms with at least 2 to 3 inches of rain on Sunday, said the National Weather Service, which posted a flash flood warning for part of the day.

Officials set up a temporary bus system to help people in and around Baton Rouge whose vehicles were damaged by flooding. The bus service, provided by a private company, runs from downtown Baton Rouge to the towns of Gonzales, Walker, Denham Springs, Central and Geismar. The contract was for one week, but services could be extended if there’s a need, state Department of Transporta­tion and Developmen­t Secretary Shawn D. Wilson said in a news release.

Mike Steele, spokesman for the Governor’s Office of Homeland Security and Preparedne­ss, said two disaster recovery centers also opened in areas that flooded in south Louisiana. He said more would open as buildings are found with enough parking and proper access for people with disabiliti­es.

Steele said more than $30 million in federal housing assistance has been approved for residents in the state.

Craft, 57, said the home where he and his wife have lived more than three decades is elevated nearly three feet, but it still had about five feet of water standing inside for the better part of a week. Because of the damage, he said, they’ll start over, as will many others affected by the flood.

For now, the Crafts are staying with relatives and trying to keep a sense of humor.

“We’re like cockroache­s down here,” Craft said with a laugh. “You can’t kill us.”

 ??  ?? Margie Paninski, 54, loads a shopping bag full of donated groceries for flood survivor Dawn Hay, 40, right, at South Walker Baptist Church in Walker, La.
Margie Paninski, 54, loads a shopping bag full of donated groceries for flood survivor Dawn Hay, 40, right, at South Walker Baptist Church in Walker, La.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States