Tuesday, May 21, 2013

the Moore I see, the less of it there is to see-an ode to Joplin













Like most of you, my first encounter with a tornado was “The Wizard of Oz,” and I would have been satisfied with that. But in 1979 I saw my first real tornado damage riding around Cheyenne during Frontier Days. We were almost in a trance like state driving around neighborhoods, patrolled by the National Guard, and amazed how you could see the path the tornado had taken, some homes still intact, some leveled, and some just an empty block. And that would have been enough too. Driving across Kansas a few years ago we came upon the remnants of a town totally obliterated by a tornado. One of those small towns that appear out of nowhere across the prairies, it was down to what was left of a convenience store, and part of a gas station. It was hot so we stopped and went in, and the sound of portable generators was everywhere. All food was in boxes, some damaged, some like new. They were rebuilding the small hospital, and it seemed electricity was at a premium. An older crowd, as for many this was not their first tornado, they could only hope it would be the last. But you could feel the energy and the hope among those there, and you almost wanted to stop and ask “where do I start?” But ride on knowing sometimes prayer is all God wants you to do. And I still think of them today and pray, and two years ago we were able to see how much the town had recovered-many new buildings, a new convenience store, and life was going on-as we were riding through. Neighbors helping neighbors, there for each other...
Oklahoma City has always been the center of the US of A to me. Almost 1500 miles from home, it means another 1500 to the East Coast. It has meant three stops during Torches Across America to visit the bombing scene at the Murrah Building. It was my less than 28 hour stop on my 70 hour ride across America. It is where Braums and Steak and Shakes begin to appear at every freeway exit, and the brown of the Texas panhandle turns to green rolling hills. A modern big city, with a small town attitude, it is driving through Bricktown, catching up with old Route 66, and leaving to the east and riding past Pop’s. It is also 220 miles to Joplin, where Andrew and I assisted with clean up and recovery ministry two Mays ago. It is a small town named Moore, where we spent the night in 2011, where it was over 100 degrees after 10 at night. We were right along I-35, and had met up with our good friend Joe, and eaten some of the best BBQ this side of the South. It is where we would take off from the next morning on a ride of over 500 miles, covering a distance of only 300 as the crow flies. It is where the sirens warned yesterday of a tornado with Moore in its path. A sound that most Okies are used to, this is Tornado Alley, but yet is terrifying. We sat huddled in a basement in Red Wing, Minnesota a few years back while the sirens went off for 90 minutes. Time stands still while you are waiting, and our wait produced nothing but a new respect for those who live in these areas, as the tornado passed by. We met those who had been in these storms, some who had lost things, and some who rebuilt-that was their tradition. The land was theirs, where else would they go? California? Don’t you have earthquakes every day? No this is home, and this is where they stayed, and will stay-again if necessary. For be it ever so humble, there is no place like home.
So when Joe called Theresa yesterday and advised us of the damage, he lives in Moore, and family lives around there, we knew the area, and Joe. And please keep them all in prayer, the devastation can only be imagined. What we saw in Joplin two years ago cannot be told on TV. When you first come upon the damage, you cannot believe it. But there is also a certain sound, one of silence, as no life or business is going on. Neighborhoods, shopping centers, and freeways that produce all the background noise we cannot hear is gone. You see people in shock, just moving around. Where do you start? How can you help? And then driving through the neighborhoods, you lose all perspective. No landmarks, no trees, and debris everywhere. Cars on top of cars, and the smell-it smells of death, an odor I cannot describe. And I hope you never do. But we found a resilience in Joplin, like we had seen in Kansas, and like I know we will see, and already see in Moore. People doing what needs to be done-teamwork, family work, town work. Everyone leveled to a common denominator of need, and all the things that were important that morning don’t matter any more. Home work, after school activities, Little League, graduation, and jobs are all put on hold-survival now is the first thing, and for most the only thing. So what can we do? What should we do?
If you aren’t already, pray. Thank God for His mercies, I am always amazed at how few deaths there are among the devastation. Get out your wallet, and send money to the Red Cross, Operation Blessing, who we worked with in Joplin,and contacts me every time a tragedy occurs-I wish I could respond this time, but physically can’t. But if you can, contact them, along with Samaritan’s Purse, and go and volunteer. Get out and get ‘er done. I cannot express the joy of helping we had, or to see the lives of those we touched. Go and listen to their stories, and ask what you can do. Ask to pray for them, after listening to one man’s story and the tour of what was left of his home, when I asked if I could pray for him, he called all his family together, “this man from California came out here to pray for us.” Be it ever so humble...
But don’t do nothing. As Joplin becomes Tuscaloosa, becomes Hurricane Sandy, becomes Texas, becomes Moore, get out and help. The winds of Oklahoma may not be as romantic as Hawaii, but the memories will be sweeter. Stop if you are going by, spend the day or night, stop by a church and ask to help. We never saw a need for less volunteers, and I still get info on Joplin today, two years later. And perhaps the greatest thank you note was from Joplin, hand signed, reminding us and thanking us for being there, and the difference we had made. I’ll put it against any postcard you have anytime. The ministry of just being there, how many times do you ask for Jesus to be there, and He always is, can we not follow His example? Maybe JFK said I best in his famous speech, “Ask not what your country can do for you, but ask what you can do for your country.” We are that country, we are that people, and we are that church. We ask God what he can do for us,today ask what we can do for Him? Moore, Oklahoma, just a town on the map. But hometown to many. Jesus Christ Lord of all. Don’t wait for a storm to invite Him to your hometown, and don’t wait for that special invite-I just extended it to you-in the name of Jesus. The harvest is already full, will you be a worker?
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com
pictures are of Joplin, May 2011