fbpx
News Articles

DISASTER RELIEF DIGEST: Flood victims turning to Christ; Football player dies after helping in Kentucky cleanup

A team of Georgia Baptist Disaster Relief volunteers remove soggy drywall from a Kentucky home damaged by flash flooding.


Kentucky residents turning to Christ in aftermath of deadly flash floods

By Roger Alford/The Christian Index

FLEMING-NEON, Ky. (BP) – In the aftermath of flash flooding that killed 37 people in the Kentucky mountains, residents here are turning to Christ.

Georgia Baptist Disaster Relief Director Dwain Carter said it’s not unusual for people to seek God amid tragic circumstances. That why, he said, teams of Disaster Relief volunteers realize their role isn’t simply to help with the cleanup, but to offer spiritual guidance to survivors.

“People are lot more open to spiritual conversations after tragedies like this,” Carter said. “And a lot of times, these conversations are with people who never would darken the door of a church. This is the church coming out to them and meeting them on their own playing field, so to speak. We tell them there’s help and hope and healing in Jesus, and, in their brokenness, they realize that’s true.”

In their first week in the Kentucky mountains, Disaster Relief teams from Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas had reported 17 salvation decisions. The largest chunk of those – eight – was the result of gospel conversations initiated by Georgia volunteers.

“Our people love to introduce people to Jesus,” Carter said.

The section of Kentucky hardest hit by the flash flooding has been declared a federal disaster area. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has already provided more than $3.1 million in relief funds.

The flooding was triggered by a storm system that dropped up to 10½ inches of rain over two days on steep mountains that funneled the runoff into normally docile streams that became raging torrents, sweeping away people and homes.

Because of the steep terrain, homes in central Appalachia tend to be concentrated along narrow floodplains at the base of the mountains, which makes them susceptible to flooding.

Georgia Baptist volunteer Bob Sprinkel said a father called and asked if he, his son and his son’s friend could come to the church where Disaster Relief crews are stationed and talk.

“Twenty minutes later they showed up,” Sprinkel said. “The son accepted Christ. The father rededicated his life to Christ. And the son’s friend rededicated his life. We sat around until after midnight with them, rejoicing.”

Sprinkel said Georgia Baptist volunteers report similar encounters each time they’re deployed.

“Anytime that you have a major event such as this, people’s hearts are broken. And a lot of times, they’re asking, ‘Why did this happen to me?’ We don’t know why. But we can point them to the Lord who can help them in their brokenness.”

Southern Baptist Disaster Relief volunteers reported 2,133 professions of faith during deployments last year. They also reported 83,000 meals distributed, a cumulative total of more than 51,000 days worked, and 10,000 one-on-one gospel presentations.

Following Hurricane Ida last year, Disaster Relief crews reported at least 100 salvation decisions in Louisiana, plus another 19 others in Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey, where flooding from remnants of the hurricane killed nearly 40 people.


Kentucky football player falls ill, dies after helping with flood cleanup

By Mark Maynard/Kentucky Today

JEFF, Ky. (BP) – A Knott Central High School football player is being remembered for his kindness to others and love for Jesus after a tragic turn.

Aaron “Mick” Crawford is flanked by parents Ronda and David Crawford. Mick Crawford died Friday after becoming ill while helping with a flood cleanup in Perry County. He is being remembered in the community for his giving heart and love of Jesus. (Family photo)

Aaron “Mick” Crawford was helping victims of the southeastern Kentucky flooding for three days last week when he became ill. He passed away Friday at UK Hospital, four days after becoming sick, according to his mother, Ronda Crawford.

His mother, Ronda, said he went into cardiac arrest. She and David Crawford, his father, decided to donate his organs because, “It’s what he would want. “

Mick Crawford was a soul-winner who would pray for anyone he met and ask them if they knew Jesus, his mother said on Facebook. “If Mick could give us his final wish it would be that everyone come to know Jesus because that’s the most important thing in this world to him.”

Mick Crawford turned 18 last month and would have been a junior at Knott Central, where he also was part of the wrestling team. He was the youngest in a family of eight siblings. The family attended Blair Memorial Baptist Church where Joe Engle, the Perry County sheriff, serves as the pastor.

“He loved superheroes and he was a real-life superhero,” Engle told WYMT.

Mick Crawford’s body is being brought back Monday from Lexington where he was in the hospital. He was accompanied into Perry County Monday morning by a police escort.

Thirty-seven have been confirmed dead from the floods, according to state officials. Two women from Breathitt County are reported missing.

    About the Author

  • BP Staff