It's now Monday evening, following our first day of work with the Grassroots Volunteer Network. As we were working today, I kept thinking about the Baptist church service we attended yesterday morning. The people there were so beautiful, so passionate in celebrating their community and God's love for all of us. We had been invited the previous day by their pastor, who told us we were in for a treat coming to a black church in southern Mississippi, the home of Muddy Waters, Willie Dixon, and other masters of the blues. The music of his church, he said, is heavily influenced by blues and jazz. He also told us that the Lord's spirit keeps coming to Biloxi through volunteers like us, that we are providing hope to his hurricane-ravaged community. He said they feel abandoned by the government and mistreated by the insurance companies, so it is only our presence from the outside world that offers hope.
And I witnessed that hope expressed during the Sunday service. When the choir sang, the congregation was on its feet, clapping and swaying and singing praises of God. Brother Arcell led us in a prayer that brought me to tears - it was a loud and forceful prayer of gratitude, thanking God for all that he has provided and for sending volunteers to help in rebuilding. This from people who have lost so much. Eleven months after "The Storm," many of their houses are yet to be rebuilt, so they're living in FEMA trailers. One hundred members of the congregation, about one-third, have moved away permanently. And their church building is still being repaired.
Pastor Davis preached up a storm. The sermon was long and rhythmic, with lots of shouting and arm waving, and I loved it. Maybe I was southern Baptist in a former life. He preached on the story of Gideon, from the Old Testament Book of Judges, totally unfamiliar to me. The Israelites have lost their way (again), distracted by the self-centered material world (like us), and forgotten about God and caring for each other. So God tells Gideon to go to the local heathen idol and "Tear It Down!!" Just like we have to do now with those things in our life that oppress us and keep us from what's really important.
"You gotta tear it down!" Pastor Davis challenged, "you hear what I'm saying?"
"Tear it down!" we shouted.
"Whatcha gonna do?"
"Tear it down!"
"Now turn to your neighbor sitting next to you, and tell them what you're gonna do."
Jerry and I turned to each other: "Tear it down!"
I was giddy with joy.
Then this morning we are taken to a house near the eastern end of the peninsula that Biloxi occupies. Katrina put this neighborhood under 30 feet of water. Most of the houses were gone, leaving only weeds and a crumbling driveway. But the houses built with bricks, like this one, were decimated only on the inside. Our job was to remove wooden planks of interior wall, pull up old square nails from the sub-floor, tear out a rotten carport ceiling, and clear off piles of pine limbs and straw that had landed (after floating) on the roof. Volunteers before us had begun the process of gutting out, and others would come after us to complete the job.
We were Tearing It Down, alright. We were getting rid of what had to go, the old moldy decaying stuff that prevents restoration and renewal. A family of Vietnamese immigrants lived in that house before the Storm. Before that family could return to Biloxi and live in their own house in their own community, we had to help throw out all that debris. We left a huge pile in the front yard.
Jeff