Friday, November 9, 2018

Repacking Your Life Raft


If you have a commercial fishing vehicle, you need to repack your life raft on a regular basis.  Between inspection and repacking costs, it can be costly.  It can, however, be what saves your life.  AMSEA says, “life rafts live in a tough environment.”  They list exposure to sun, cold, rain, hail, salt water, vibration, and storing gear on top of it as part of the problem.


My question to you is, since the storm hit, have you repacked your life raft?  Our life raft includes community support, dealing with pain, allowing ourselves to rest and recover, and finding hope and a plan for moving forward.  The most important part is strengthening our relationship to God and allowing Him to rebuild our lives.


Life is tough.  It is not just hurricanes, fires, and tornadoes that wear away at our rafts.  We face personal loss, illness, pain, family struggles, discouragement, anxiety, and loss of direction.  We may have been struggling with these things and then be hit by a hurricane.  When our resilience is threatened, we need to repack our life raft.

Some ideas for this are:

1. Refocus on God.  Let your major concentration be on Him and not your problems.  Isaiah 26:3 says, “You keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on you, because he trusts in you.”

2. Find your strength in God’s love and power through faith. Ephesians 3:14-21 tells us about our powerful God who strengthens us “through his Spirit in your inner being” through faith so we may “know the love of Christ” and fills us “with all the fullness of God.”  We are assured that He “is able to do far more abundantly than all we ask or think, according to the power at work within us”.  His love for us is not earned, but freely given.  

3. Connect with a local body of believers.  We are not meant to do it all on our own.  We need a support system, and we need to be connected to support others.  It is not just about us.  We need to care about the storms in the lives of other people too.  

4. Realize that storms are exhausting physically, emotionally, and spiritually.  Allow yourself time and opportunities to rest and recover.  Don’t just keep pushing at the same hectic pace.

5. Allow yourself to grieve rather than just burying pain and not dealing with it.  Talk to God and others.

6. Don’t get stuck.  Realize God has a plan for your future.  Figure out what you need to do to move forward.  This might mean finding someone to help coach you through a difficult time.

7. Recall how God has cared for you in the past and note ways He is caring for you now.  God uses our experiences to enable us to help others, so don’t be surprised if you find someone you can help later through how God worked in your struggles. 2 Corinthians 1:3-4 says, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God.”

Don’t allow yourself to drown because you do not take the steps needed to survive.  Take the time and action needed to repack your life raft.

Thursday, November 8, 2018

What She Really Needed

The teams meshed well together
Maureen is a homeowner we are helping in Newport, NC.  She has dealt with a great deal of loss in the past 4 months.  When her son died, One Harbor Church was there to support her immediately.  The pastors have been a great comfort to her, and families from church brought her meals for a couple of weeks.  
Rob and Maureen

This week, teams came together from ReachGlobal Crisis Response under the direction of Rob Passer to replace her roof that was destroyed by Hurricane Florence.  Rob traveled up from Texas to teach the group how to roof, and this was a particularly difficult roof to start with.  The teams from New Jersey and Ohio meshed quickly.  God protected AJ when a shovel fell off the roof barely missing his head.  

Maureen told me, "These teams have been such a blessing to me."  She showed me photos of her son, and we were able to pray together.  She is leaning on God for support.  She shared with Arnold, "The best part was the team prayed with me morning and afternoon.  I know they cared about me."

So many hands working well together


 If you too would like to help but are unsure how, check out

 Email respond@efca.org to volunteer or to send a team.

Maureen and the team


Friday, November 2, 2018

A Heart of Compassion



He felt the pain of those forced out of their homes in North Carolina by Hurricane Florence, because he too was homeless and living in a local shelter.  He was concerned for the people of his community, so he came and asked how he could help them.  Injured in Vietnam and currently facing cancer, he was limited in what he could do to help.  That did not stop him.  ReachGlobal Crisis Response and One Harbor Church where he attended provided him with blank note cards.  He had been keeping a journal of Scriptures and quotations that provided him with material to quickly write notes of encouragement to local homeowners. 

Limitations did not stop him from reaching out to help others, because his heart had been touched by the things that touch God’s heart.  If you too would like to help but are unsure how, check out

 Email respond@efca.org to volunteer or to send a team.

Evangelical Free Church of America EFCA ReachGlobal
#efca #reachglobalcrisisresponse #hurricaneflorence