Praying for Those in the Path of Hurricane Sandy

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Praying for Those in the Path of Hurricane Sandy

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Hurricane Sandy has already moved through the Caribbean (reports indicate that over 60 people have died in that region) and is moving up the eastern coast of the United States.  The hurricane is forecasted to bring life-threatening storm surges that would affect millions of people living along the eastern seaboard. Many cities and low lying areas along the coast have already been evacuated in anticipation of the coming storm surge. Other areas of the Eastern United States could be affected with torrential rains, high winds and heavy snows.

When natural disasters are upon us and the potential loss of lives and extensive property damage is possible, it is important to remember the words that God inspired to be written in the Bible: "... The effective, fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much."' - James 5:16

Please join us in praying for those that will be affected by this massive storm.  We will continue to update this page as we hear new developments. 

 


Update - Thursday, November, 1, 2012 12:00 EST

Report from Howard Davis, UCG Pastor for New York City:

As the wall of water in the perfectly designed super-storm Sandy smashed all records in New York City's 387 year history, lower Manhattan and the financial district called, "Downtown," was inundated in a flood 2.5 feet higher than the flood of 1827. All the United Church of God brethren were individually protected either by angels or wisdom or God's personal intervention from the harm and devastation found throughout the megalopolis. Most are still unable to get to their jobs until the flooded subways, severe water damage, and blown power transformers are restored.  

Parts of the Long Island's coastline communities have devastation scenes like New Orleans had after hurricane Katrina in 2005.

We all prayed and now have many examples of God's hand in keeping the effects of the devastation away from members and their property. Living in a higher elevation area which received severe wind damage at the height of the storm Monday, a wife said to her husband "that tree is coming down on the house." This relatively new family (the wife was baptized just before the Feast) who live in Queens saw every large tree on their block blown down on neighbors' houses. Thinking of God's promise, her husband said the tree won't fall on them. Moments later, it did fall, hitting not their house, but unfortunately a neighbor’s house. Another member who works for the New York City Sanitation department was the last house in his Queens neighborhood to have power before the sea of urban darkness.

Up to 7 million people typically use the subway system and Long Island railroads daily. The 1.8 million people living on Manhattan are augmented with millions of others to make up the Manhattan workforce of 4 million. Functionally, the city remains shut down as of Thursday. New York City has 47 million visitors per year, by far the most in the US and the impact on tourism, at least for a while, will have negative impacts on this great industry, as well as on many aspects of the retail and financial sectors.

All 80 members are physically fine, but everyone's lives have been disrupted. The members’ school-age children in the NYC public school system and members working as teachers and school bus drivers for the system’s 1,000,000 students have the week off—as well as those attending area universities.  Three graduate university students are typical—one in Art History at Hunter College near the Metropolitan Museum can't get back to the Upper East Side on Manhattan from her stay with brethren in Brooklyn. Another student studying cellular chemistry has her classes cancelled and her work in a lower Manhattan retailer shuttered. Yet another in a masters program in physics at Long Island's North Shore New York University at Stonybrook has her life disrupted.  At Stonybrook, our student prayed that her roommates would not freak out as the wind sounded like freight trains on top of a superhighway of traffic blowing a tree down on her roommate's car.

All subways, and the major freeway systems were shut down, and while the freeways are now open, very few trains are coming online. Power, phone service, television and Internet services have been disrupted for many, making the brethren’s wired and wireless connections complicated. Elements of the grid go on and off in a crazy irrational pattern since the storm left the city.

Knowing there would be a disaster on the South Coast of Long Island where I live in Bay Shore, and in order to have phone, Internet, and other abilities to communicate with brethren and the outside world, I left my home Sunday at noon, a day ahead of the disaster, thinking the roads out of Long Island would be jammed with people also trying to get out. I was shocked to find the opposite.  

It was weird, like one of the disaster movies of mindless millions fleeing the wrath to come but heading the wrong way, in this case to go and stay on Long Island which I was fleeing. Cars bumper to bumper streamed out of Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens joining the jammed traffic. While there was nearly no traffic in my lanes toward the city and up to Connecticut and safety. It seemed like a “lemming syndrome” leading to certain tragedy or at least inconvenience of unimagined dimensions.  

As it turns out, many people did not obey civic leaders’ orders to leave dangerous coastal areas and were quite foolish to not evacuate. Then many more thought they were safe in Long Island. So it was not surprising that many were headed to severe problems while I was heading north to get far away from Long Island's fragile utility infrastructure. Everybody staying faced the highest probability that they will be without power for at least a week or many weeks—no refrigeration, no food in grocery stores, no gasoline in stations.

And as it turned out, Long Island’s power grid was devastated with trees knocked over exposed power lines everywhere blowing out transformers. Two of the three million Long Islanders in Nassau and Suffolk counties are still without power, and some estimates say it will be weeks before many people have power. A member called to inform me that my house is safe, but without power, and he has learned that it take 10 days or longer to repair the electric system in that neighborhood. National Guardsmen are now stationed at gas stations near where I live to maintain order as lines of over 100 cars long wait to get fuel.

Members had a variety of storm experiences.  Some members above Manhattan's 155th Street felt very little rain or wind, no power disruptions, and even engaged in pleasant bicycle riding to vantage points where they could view the Hudson River and hurricane level winds ravage lower Manhattan. Still there is no power below 34th Street where the Empire State Building is located.  One member employed at the huge hospital Beth Israel complex on 14th Street can't work because there is no power. There is no subway service yet anyway which would normally take her 45 minutes to travel from her Long Island home—a trip that would take four hours each way on the overwhelmingly crowded bus system.  

Lower Manhattan and Wall Street employs members whose lives are chaotic for the foreseeable future. The area has hundreds of thousands of people now beginning to really suffer, just a mile or two away from the New York Stock Exchange.

The world's financial district is functionally reduced for a time to Third World levels of inconveniences and lack of services. These people are climbing 10, 20, 30 stories in high rises without heat, enduring 40 degree temperatures at night and unable to flush toilets due to a low or non-functioning water and sewer systems. Restaurants are boarded up, and few or no local neighborhood stores open even in some of the trendiest areas of the lower east and west sides. Block after block of trendy affluent young people in their hip twenties are stranded, and fleeing to the middle class homes out of the city, or are simply stuck. Huge lavish and very exclusive buildings are hemmed in and everything is shuttered, some without backup generators and no functional life-flow happening. Just blocks away is the unfinished, 1776 foot-high Freedom Tower due for completion sometime next year, God willing!  

Huge swathes of Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens next to the Atlantic Ocean are black at night—as if there were none of the millions of people burning candles and trying to stay warm in their homes. A few brethren are without power, but can use their cars to charge their cell phones. One 60 year old member on dialysis had to have special emergency vehicles take him to and from the hospital with only partial treatments because some facilities are not operating and the demand is huge. He and his married children and grandchildren are happy to be in upper Manhattan apartments and the nearby Bronx with food and heat at night even though they are cramped in quarters most of us under normal conditions  would find acceptable. Another member who is an RN and professor of Nursing in Brooklyn's VA hospital cannot work because the hospital is flooded. The huge Bellevue Hospital in Lower Manhattan was emptied yesterday when it was considered too medically dangerous to continue without power and with millions of gallons of water in the basement.

Please pray for our brethren in New York City and the Northeast generally. There is much more to come, and as the brethren here know from Bible prophecy, we are all moving into times that will try men's (and women's) souls. The brethren are fine, but appreciate being a part of a very vibrant, praying United Church of God. We will keep you updated.

 


Update - Wednesday, October 31, 2012 8:38am

From Don McCoy - United Church of God Pastor, Delaware/Maryland/Virginia areas

There are still a few we haven’t been able to reach since the storm, but those we did contact all told us the same thing…lots of wind and rain, some trees down, but no significant damage.  There are some who lost power, but for the majority it has been restored.  Those who were still without power when I spoke to them all told me they had generators.  

New Jersey was hit the hardest, but most of our members there live far enough inland that it was not a problem for them.  Most of the damage you see on tv is from coastal areas where storm surge inundated everything.  We have members in Delaware who live a mile or two inland from the ocean, and they had no problems whatsoever.  

 


Update - Wednesday, October 30, 2012 3:41pm

From Lee Cole - United Church of God Pastor, Central Pennsylvania

We have heard from almost everyone in our church areas.  Everybody appears to be fine, even those in Central New Jersey.  One lady in New Jersey had a big tree fall in her front yard, but it missed her house and car.  She is very thankful.  There are widespread power outages with the possibility of the power being out for several days.  Lewistown had widespread power outage, but they are expecting creek flooding in the next couple of days.  Everybody is safe, but putting up with the inconvenience of no power.


 

More Resources

 

View the latest Hurricane Sandy updates at the NOAA - National Hurricane Center website.

 

Natural Disasters: A Biblical Perspective -- Here are 16 points we should keep in mind concerning the biblical perspective on tragedies, regardless of their scale or circumstances.

Hurricane Sandy: Coincidence or Warning? --  Hurricane Sandy bears down on the northeast corridor of the United States 21 years, 3 cycles of 7, after the perfect storm of 1991. Is there a message?

Praying for those in Hurricane Sandy -- Severe weather expected. Schools closed. Evacuations. Flooding. Probable life-threatening storm surges. Hurricane Sandy is gaining strength and barreling towards the East Coast. The potential impact of this storm may be very great and could affect many Americans.

Meeting An Unmovable Force -- Hurricane Sandy offers us an example of how fragile life can be. Some events we cannot escape.

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Comments

  • Kathy Lausted

    Praying for all on the East Coast area.

  • Jason Witmer

    Here in Lancaster County, PA, there are a number of power outages, including very close to our residence. There is also an evacuation of homes close to the dam of a nearby lake. The evacuated properties were just a block from our home, so we narrowly missed that. Right now, it's very windy outside. So far, we are doing well. Thank you for your prayers. Our own prayers go out to those who may not be doing as well.

  • olumayokun

    We pray to our heavenly father for safety of lives and minimal damage to properties in the name of our Lord and savior Jesus Christ. Amen

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