Los Angeles Fires: How to Help

Even for a state used to dramatic natural disasters and not-uncommon apocalyptic scenes, this week’s wildfires in the Los Angeles area were especially scary and devastating. Large sections of prominent, historic neighborhoods, in some of the region’s most beautiful areas, now look like war-torn landscapes.

Fueled by ferocious winds and historically dry conditions (the LA area hasn’t received measurable rainfall in about eight months), the fires already rank near the top of the most destructive wildfires in California history. As of Friday evening, the Los Angeles Times reports that 11 people have died and more than 12,000 structures have been damaged and destroyed. Many families are displaced due to destroyed homes or mandatory evacuations, with persistent dry and windy weather presenting an ongoing fire risk.

Though my family and I live in the Orange County suburbs of LA (about 40 miles from the fires), we know plenty of people who have lost homes and been displaced. We’re currently hosting one family of four in our Airbnb, after they lost their Altadena home to the Eaton fire. Please be in prayer for them, and the thousands of others like them, who are experiencing shock, grief, and uncertainty.

From a Local Pastor

I reached out to Brian Colmery, pastor at Cornerstone West Los Angeles and a leader in TGC’s LA Chapter, to ask about the situation closer to the devastation. He shared this:

This has been a sad and frightening time for our city, but we are very resilient. And common grace is showing up across the city. Angelenos are not known for making small talk with strangers, but people in the grocery stores are sharing stories, even comforting one another. Neighbors are getting to know one another. God is at work in it all.

As in many disasters, even those not affected begin to realize how temporary things in the world are, and we are praying that we’ll see some of those people in the pews on Sunday in search of something eternal and a city that cannot be shaken. In my experience, the churches in LA have always felt like teammates, but this has drawn us together in deeper unity. Last night we hosted a last-minute prayer meeting, and 60 people from four or five churches braved LA traffic and ash in the air to be together and lament, intercede, and plead for God to grow his kingdom through all of this. I know of similar events happening the last several nights all across the city.

So God is at work in the disaster, as always, and we are probably only seeing slivers of what he’s doing. There are a lot of tears, but a lot of deep hope in the church that we’ll see even more of God’s goodness as things continue.

Ways You Can Help

If you are seeing the horrifying images and videos of the devastation and want to help, here are some practical actions you can take:

1. Pray

2. Give

Whether you live geographically near or far from Los Angeles, one tangible way to help is through financial generosity. We’ve highlighted a few specific ways to give through trusted local churches and Christian nonprofit ministries.

Churches

Other churches in the area I know and trust have set up designated benevolence funds to directly aid those in need because of the fires. Some of these include:

Christian Relief Organizations

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