116 3rd St SE
Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401
Home / Churches rebound two years after flood
Churches rebound two years after flood
N/A
Jun. 10, 2010 4:33 pm
The Rev. Damian Epps missed the floods of 2008 by two weeks.
He had been named pastor of Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church and was set to come to Cedar Rapids at the end of June 2008. When he got to the church, he found it a wet and muddy mess.
From June 11 to when the Cedar River began to recede on June 13 of that year, floodwaters gushed into the church at 824 Eighth St. SE, destroying the building and everything in it.
Rather than let the flood and its aftermath deter them, Epps said he and the congregation grew stronger.
“The flood is in the past, we're looking to the future,” said Epps, 38. “We're not forgetting the flood, we're just operating in the favor of God from the flood.”
Mount Zion is one of dozens of churches in Linn and Johnson counties who faced thousands - and sometimes hundreds of thousands - of dollars in repairs, rehabilitation or demolition of their buildings following the worst flood the area has seen.
Now, two years later, most churches have refurbished their buildings and returned. Some have moved on, either renting or purchasing new buildings, and a handful of others are still in transition.
For Mount Zion, the last two years have been spent more than doubling the congregation's size, from 300 to just over 800 on the membership rolls, refurbishing a building at 1200 Second Ave. SE and now buying the church currently housing King of King's Lutheran Church at 6621 C Ave. NE.
Epps said the congregation has been blessed.
“God has a way of just blowing your mind with his purpose and his will,” he said. “I just thank him for the favor, for giving me the opportunity to be part of this.”
Parkview Evangelical Church, at 15 Foster Rd., in Iowa City, took on 4 feet of water from the Iowa River's flood, damaging the office, classrooms and worship space and causing $850,000 in damages to the 50,000-square-foot building. The congregation met for six months at West High School before returning in January 2009.
For Salem United Methodist Church in Cedar Rapids, the two-year flood anniversary comes with some closure.
The original church building, at 225 First Ave. SW in Cedar Rapids, sits just a block from the Cedar River. Water filled the church basement and much of the sanctuary. The congregation has shared space with three other churches in Cedar Rapids and used a vacant church building until it sold last summer.
Earlier this month the congregation voted to purchase the building now housing New Creation United Methodist Church, 3715 33rd Ave. SW, when that church closes its doors June 30.
“We now know where we're going to be landing,” Louk, 41, said.
Now, with a new home in its future, Louk said the congregation can really begin to move forward.
“Things have been moving very slowly and that was frustrating to a lot of us,” said Louk who, like Epps, came to Cedar Rapids just after the floodwaters receded.
“For about a year and a half there was a fair amount of chaos, of ‘what's going to happen next,'” Louk said. “I see this as a real blessing. It's a real gift.”
Was your church affected by the floods of 2008? How has it rebounded? Leave a comment, let us know.