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Louisiana

Tornado hits NOLA

As if they needed more hardship. Please continue to keep this region in your prayers. Also, as much as I am looking forward to a snow day, I know that it can be as deadly as any other storm. Power outages are apparently common around here in the winter.

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (CNN) — A possible tornado damaged parts of Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport and surrounding businesses in pre-dawn hours Thursday in suburban New Orleans, said police in Kenner, west of the city.

Police also reported damage in New Orleans, particularly in the Lakeview area near the 17th Street Canal — among the places hardest hit by Hurricane Katrina. The city is still reeling from the devastating flooding the hurricane caused last fall.

 

Let it snow!

Finally! The snow is falling. So far just heavy flurries, but the ground is cold enough for it to stick and hopefully it will keep coming. I have missed snow… As I used to say when we lived in Louisiana, I don’t mind precipitation so long as I can move it before it comes in under my door.

 

Merry Christmas New Orleans

Once again, Studio 60 delivers a great show. This time Matthew Perry’s character is “a Jew and the only one who cares that its Christmas” (paraphrase) and insists on putting on a Christmas show. The finale is a group of NOLA musicians playing Oh Holy Night while images of the City are on the screen at behind them. Wonderful.

From their site:

The 12/4 episode featured musicians benefitting from The Tipitina’s Foundation. For more on how to help those displaced by Hurricane Katrina, click http://www.tipitinasfoundation.org/.

 

Congratulations to Fr. John Bauerschmidt

Fr. John was our rector in Covington, LA and a dear friend. His elections give me great hope.
From The Bishop of Louisiana:

Congratulations to Fr. John Bauerschmidt, Rector of Christ Church, Covington, Louisiana upon his election today as the 11th Bishop of Tennessee. Fr. John has informed the Covention that he will accept this election.


What a gain this is for the Diocese of Tennessee! We shall miss Fr. John and Caroline terribly in Louisiana. His time as President of the Standing Committee in Louisiana was one I shall remember with thanksgiving for Fr. John’s wise leadership.


Congratulations to Tennessee. You have chosen well. Your brothers and sisters in the Bayou State pray for God’s blessing on this election.


Bishop JenkinsTo learn more about the Episcopal Diocese of Louisiana and our post-Katrina re-building efforts, please visit our website at www.edola.org.

(Via The Bishop’s Blog.)

 

Jenkins: A Lack of Confidence

Bishop Charles Jenkins is the Episcopal Bishop of the Diocese of Louisiana (our home of 9 years) and relays some of the struggles of rebuilding that come from a history of political malfeasance. Be sure to read it all.

As I travel across this nation seeking support for the work of the Church in Mississippi and Louisiana, I continually come across a major stumbling block. Church members who are by nature generous and who have the capacity to do great good in our rebuilding efforts are hesitant to invest in our Louisiana Diocesan efforts because of a near universal and total lack of confidence in our local and state governments. The antics of decade upon decade of Louisiana politics has come home to roost and the stumbling block for our efforts of rebuilding, recovery, and justice is huge. I do not know if Bishop Gray of Mississippi is hearing the same thing in his travels. People are not giving voice in my hearing to a lack of confidence in Mississippi politics, I hear such concern only about Louisiana. That may well be because I am from Louisiana.

In response, I confidently point to the good work of the Church in Mississippi and Louisiana and note that if we do not stand for the poor, no one will. If the Church does not raise a cry for justice, no one will. If the Church does not continue to feed the poor, house the homeless, heal the sick and give hope where it has been washed away, no one will. I think our efforts in Louisiana are exemplary as are those good works done in Christ’s name in Mississippi. I think the work of the Church in Mississippi and Louisiana is a work of which Episcopalians can be proud. I think our stewardship of all that is entrusted to us, most of which is for relief work, is exemplary.

(Via The Bishop’s Blog.)