On the morning of Dec. 31, 2019, residents from the close-knit community of Mallacoota, Australia, fled to the ocean in an attempt to escape a huge bushfire headed their way. Local resident David Jeffrey claims it was prayers that spared them.
Jeffrey described himself and the gathered crowd as having been “terrified for our lives.”
The fire approached Mallacoota from the west. A local fire chief called and warned Jeffrey, who owns a bed and breakfast, to round up his neighbors and get to safe ground. They headed for the wharf.
An alleged 60-foot-high wall of fire advancing at a rate of around 90 kilometers per hour was headed their way. “We could hear the roar,” Jeffrey said. “It sounded like a thousand freight trains coming at us.”
Jeffrey, who identified as previously being an “atheist” before converting to Christianity 25 years ago, began to pray alongside other close-knit members of his community, later describing their fevered pleas as “desperation personified.”
“I prayed, ‘Lord if you don’t push this [fire] back now, we need [wind] from the east,’” Jeffrey recalled. “As soon as I said that, it started blowing from the east a little bit. Then I got louder and [the wind] got stronger.”
Gusts of wind blew black clouds into the air above the wharf. The smoke was so thick, Jeffrey explained, that it became difficult to breathe. But shortly, the terrified crowd noticed a shift on the horizon.
“I felt it change,” Jeffrey explained. “I was yelling, ‘In Jesus’s name, thank you Lord for rescuing these souls!’”
As the sky turned red, the crowd momentarily panicked that the fire front was pushing through the easterly wind. But to their great relief, they realized that the redness was simply the sun shining through.
Thousands of people escaped with their lives. However, tragically, many lost their homes.
“Once you’re aboard and it’s safe, they‘ll do a final head count,” an official explained, “and it’s about a 10 to 15 minute transit over there. Once you’re in location, you’ll be provided with some food, some water, and accommodation.”
“There is no way that it was all just luck,” he said.