Lightning sparked a seven-alarm fire that totally gutted an historic church in the small town of Wakefield, Massachusetts, on Wednesday, Oct. 24.
Nothing was left of the First Baptist Church of Wakefield, a town landmark for almost 150 years, save some remnants of scorched walls and a few ribs of the once 180-foot-tall steeple.
According to eyewitnesses, lightning struck the steeple shortly after 7 p.m.
Interim Pastor Norm Bendroth told Fox News he had just settle down to watch the second game of the World Series—the Boston Red Sox were hosting the Los Angeles Dodgers at Fenway.
Just as he got settled Bendroth saw “a fireball in the sky,” he told Boston 25.
“It just went up like a tinderbox. It’s a building built in 1870 and it’s balloon-style so once the fire starts you know the whole building just went up quickly.”
Painting Survives Undamaged
One of the very few artifacts to survive the fire was a painting of Jesus that hung by the front door of the church. Despite the intense heat, the smoke, and all the water from the firemen’s hoses, the painting suffered no damage at all.“It’s a beautiful sign of hope and a reminder that Jesus is with us,” church member Maria Kakolowski told Boston 25.
“I am personally just taking it as a sign and a reminder that the Jesus, the Christ that we serve is still alive and even though our church building is gone, our church is here. The God that we serve is still here.”
Susan Auld, a parishioner who was married in the church and had her four sons baptized there, told the Boston Globe that the rescued painting was going to be given to a former pastor for safekeeping.
The Church Will Carry On
The First Baptist Church congregation will continue to meet even though its beautiful home is gone.Interim Pastor Norm Bendroth told the Boston Globe that local clergy from other places of worship had already offered space for the congregation of about 100.
This was not the first time this particular iteration of the First Baptist Church of Wakefield burned down.
And the church is already planning to do it again.
On the church website, the church elders posted, “We know that we serve a God who specializes in restoring brokenness and who can bring beauty even from ashes. So we move into the future with trust, hope, and gratitude.”