UPDATED: Hurricane Florence: ‘This One Really Scares Me,’ Leading Forecaster Says , Let us Pray!

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We are praying for the safety of all……in Jesus name we pray, Amen!

And pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the Lord’s people. Ephesians 6:18

Shonda Savage Whitworth leads us in prayer………

When the storms of life come, even literal storms, we need to grab hold of the word of God. Praying God’s word is praying God’s will.

Let’s pray together in agreement for protection of all those who live on the east coast where Hurricane Florence is threatening to hit.

Mark 4:39 reads, “He [Jesus] got up, rebuked the wind and said to the waves, ‘Quiet! Be still!’ Then the wind died down and it was completely calm.

Let’s pray like Jesus prayed…

Father God, Jesus stood up in the boat and said to the wind and the sea, “Peace, be still!” And the winds ceased and there was a great calm. (Mark 4:39) And Your Word says in John 14:12-14, that whoever believes in You will do the works that You do and whatever we ask in Your name, You will do it. Therefore Lord, by the power and authority You have given us in Christ Jesus, we speak to Hurricane Irma and say “Peace be still!” Turn and go back into the ocean where no one will be harmed. Protect those lives and properties in the Caribbean Islands. Protect lives and property in FL. This we pray in Jesus name. Amen.

Feel free to grab this prayer graphic and share it. Let’s all pray together in agreement! Amen!

UPDATED Thursday at 6:26am:

Hurricane Florence’s winds and rain begin lashing Carolinas

3 MINUTES AGO
The outer bands of wind and rain from Hurricane Florence began lashing North Carolina on Thursday as the monster storm moved in for an extended stay along the Southeastern coast, promising to drench the properties of 10 million people with immense amounts of water.

UPDATED 5:09am Wednesday Sept. 12

“A beast like no other”
September 12, 2018  |  READ TIME: 4 minutes
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This storm is a monster. It’s big and it’s vicious.” This is how North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper described Hurricane Florence, the most devastating storm to threaten the Carolinas in decades.The National Weather Service states, “This will likely be the storm of a lifetime for portions of the Carolina coast.” CNN is warning this morning, “Even for a major hurricane, Florence is a beast like no other.”

It’s not too late for God to intervene. If Jesus could heal the sick, raise the dead, and calm a storm, he could turn Florence back to sea or otherwise prevent this disaster.

We should be praying fervently for him to do so, remembering that “you do not have, because you do not ask” (James 4:2 NRSV). As Gabriel told Mary, “Nothing will be impossible with God” (Luke 1:37).

But what if God doesn’t answer our prayers the way we want him to?

The worst thing we can do

If you had a child with cancer and your oncologist could cure her but chose not to, your outrage would obviously be justified. If God does not stop this hurricane from devastating cities along the Carolina coast, many will wonder why.

We could blame the Fall since our sin led to a broken world with hurricanes and other disasters (Romans 8:22). But God parted the Red Sea, stopped the flooded Jordan river, and calmed the stormy Sea of Galilee–all miracles that occurred in our fallen world.

We could blame the victims, remembering that God used natural disasters to judge the sins of Pharaoh and the Egyptians. But he sent Moses to warn them before the plagues began; I know of no prophetic warnings issued to those in North and South Carolina. Nor am I aware of any unique sinfulness that would make them a special target for divine judgment.

When disaster strikes, the worst thing we can do is to blame its victims. I had a dear friend in one of the churches I pastored who was dying of cancer. I asked her if some aspect of her experience was hardest. She replied, “It’s all the people who tell me if I’d repent I’d be healed.”

Three facts about God

We could wrongly blame the Fall or unjustly blame the victims. Or we could blame God just as we’d blame an oncologist who refuses to heal our child. What if he’s not as powerful or as loving as we thought him to be?

When C. S. Lewis’s wife died, he later wrote: “The conclusion I dread is not ‘So there’s no God after all,’ but ‘So this is what God’s really like. Deceive yourself no longer’” (A Grief Observed).

Before we decide that we are wrong about God, let’s consider three related facts.

One: Our finite minds cannot comprehend God’s infinite wisdom.

If God is truly God, by definition my fallen and limited mind cannot understand him. If my four-year-old granddaughter tells me that she learned calculus at her preschool today, I’ll assume that either she or her teachers are mistaken. If I can comprehend God, either he’s not God or I am.

Two: We must be close enough to hear his voice.

Jesus said, “My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me” (John 10:27). By contrast, “The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned” (1 Corinthians 2:14). It is difficult to hear God’s Spirit unless we are listening to God’s Spirit.

Three: God is more concerned with action than with speculation.

In Luke 10, a lawyer asked Jesus the speculative question, “Who is my neighbor?” Our Lord responded with the best-known story in literature, the Parable of the Good Samaritan. It answers the lawyer’s question, not with a logical explanation but with a practical application: we prove to be a neighbor when we show mercy. Then Jesus said to the man, “You go, and do likewise” (v. 37).

When people face a crisis, they need logical explanations less than they need loving neighbors.

The bottom line

Tomorrow we’ll look together at practical responses to the hurricane. For today, let’s note that nothing about Hurricane Florence changes the character of God. By definition, his nature cannot change. He is the summum bonum, the highest good. And he must love us because he is love (1 John 4:8).

Here’s the bottom line: When crisis comes, I can turn from God at the very time I need him most. Or I can join him in redeeming tragedy for good. I can turn from speculation to action.

So can you.

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Hurricane Florence: ‘This one really scares me,’ leading forecaster says 
NPR

The severity of Hurricane Florence is intensifying, triggering hurricane warnings along most of North Carolina’s coast and a portion of South Carolina’s. Read the full story

 

Shared from Apple News

UPDATED 2:09pm Tuesday Sept. 11:

Millions brace for impact as Hurricane Florence churns toward East Coast
CBS News

Hurricane Florence’s size is “staggering,” National Hurricane Center Director Ken Graham warned Read the full story

 

Shared from Apple News

UPDATED 4:29am Tuesday Sept. 11:

How Hurricane Florence could cause unprecedented damage to the Carolinas
PBS NewsHour

A week ago, no one expected Hurricane Florence to roll into the Southeast, and now it may create storm surge taller than a house. Read the full story

 

Shared from Apple News

UPDATED 3:17pm Monday Sept. 10:

Hurricane Florence strengthens into potentially catastrophic Category 4 storm
CBS News

Forecasters warn it could hit anywhere from Carolinas to Mid-Atlantic, and linger long enough to cause major problems Read the full story

 

Shared from Apple News

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UPDATED: NATION

Carolinas brace for extremely dangerous Hurricane Florence

52 MINUTES AG

Florence on track to hit East Coast as a major storm later this week
CNN

Hurricane Florence is on track to hit the East Coast as a major storm later this week. Read the full story

 

Shared from Apple News

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