A family that attends Hope Community Evangelical Covenant Church escaped possible injury when a tree crashed into their roof. The family was staying with friends, says pastor John Fagg.
The debris fell onto an area just above where the couple’s two-week-old baby normally sleeps. “We just rejoice that they weren’t there and the baby wasn’t there,” Fagg says.
Fagg says his church sustained “slight water damage” and lost several trees. “Some pews were wet, and the Narthex was really wet.”
Power had been restored to the homes of some church members, but many still were without electricity.
McPherson is staying with his daughter in McPherson, Kansas, and plans to return on Wednesday. He left after the storm had passed through Houston.
Power and water was restored Monday at the home of Ed Lee, pastor of Mosaic Community Covenant Church in Missouri City. Lee says he was grateful that the weather cooled after Ike passed through.
Rick Lindholtz, a Covenant minister who serves a Lutheran congregation in Kingwood, Texas, says, “It’s stressful to be continually living without power.” He has had to make arrangement for his son’s insulin to be stored elsewhere. Still, he says, “We’re doing okay.”
The church was one of the first to have power restored because it is on the same power grid as the police department and local hospital. The church is reaching out to others in the community and making its building available to other congregations that want to hold services.