sethbarnes Oct 8, 2005 8:00 PM

Messy compassion

I just returned at 4 a.m. from ground zero on the Gulf Coast. The devastation was total. I've been so encouraged by the sacrificial response of man...

Subscribe


I just returned at 4 a.m. from ground zero on the Gulf Coast. The devastation was total.

I've been so encouraged by the sacrificial response of many Christians. At the same time yesterday at the largest church in Gulfport, all I saw were suburban white folks in dress shirts and ties doing business as usual with God. Two miles away their brothers and sisters in the Lord wandered the shattered remains of their hurricane-stricken homes. It was surreal.

I saw such a contrast in the life of my good friend Marty. He dropped everything in his life and, towing his camper behind him, drove down to New Orleans to help.

Hurricane Katrina represents the greatest opportunity of our generation to mobilize an ingrown church for radical outreach. We don't have all the answers and if we wait to get them before we engage, we'll miss it. It's a messy situation. We have 70 staff on site at resettlement centers in Baton Rouge. This week, many have contracted a virulent virus as they touch the displaced. Our expectations are being dashed daily.

Compassion can't be black and white and it is inevitably messy. In the life of Annie ---- it was messy. She needed to get to Corpus Christi. She didn't trust anybody, least of all our AIM staff. We talked to her for the better part of a day. Elizabeth Scaife talked with her for six hours. Finally she agreed to go. We bought her a Greyhound ticket to Houston. AIM staff member Cesar Gonzalez drove to Houston from Mexico to pick her up. He then drove her down to Corpus Christi.

Annie said, "I'll never forget you guys."

This was messy compassion at work.

Comments


Comment created and will be displayed once approved.

Related Blogs

Who will care for my children?

Who will care for my children?

From a staff member's blog in Swaziland: When I walked into the room, Pastor Gi...

By sethbarnes
Ripping out your heart

Ripping out your heart

The Watson kids grew up with our kids. Two years ago we went to their graduation...

By sethbarnes
Fear of storms in life

Fear of storms in life

  Katrina was such a catastrophic event, leaving a whole city homeless, ...

By sethbarnes

Related Races (3)

Southeast Asia | Semesters | January 2026

Southeast Asia | Semesters | January 2026

Colombia | Semesters | June 2026

Colombia | Semesters | June 2026

Central America | Semesters | August 2026

Central America | Semesters | August 2026

Next article

How AIM Started: Struggles Along the Way

AI Generated Content

Here's a suggested caption you can copy and tweak.