by Rich Stratton, Assistant Director of Public Relations
When wildfires swept through Lahaina, Maui, in 2023, they left more than ashes behind 鈥 they left a community in mourning. Homes were destroyed, lives were uprooted, and hope felt fragile. However, during a recent spring break, hope arrived in the form of a team of students and faculty from 黑料社区 led by Col. (Ret.) Greg Thompson and Dr. Patrick Oliver.
The idea began in a moment of connection. Greg, who had recently moved to Ohio from Hawaii, met Mark and Dawn Brown 鈥 Hawaiian parents of a Cedarville student 鈥 during Getting Started Weekend. What started as a conversation about community turned into something much bigger: an opportunity to serve.
鈥淚 reached out to the Made In Hope ministry the Browns mentioned and learned they had enough room for our group,鈥 Greg shared. 鈥淲e slept on cots 鈥 five-star location, one-star accommodations 鈥 but it was perfect.鈥
That setting became the base for a week of powerful ministry. The team didn鈥檛 just come to rebuild homes or pass out supplies 鈥 the needs had shifted. Instead, they got to rebuild hearts. Through prayer, presence, and listening, the students poured into a hurting community.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 just physical work,鈥 Greg said. 鈥淚t was about being there 鈥 about showing the love of Christ in a place that desperately needed comfort.鈥
What the team gave may seem simple, but it left a deep impact: game nights with families, worship with locals, and heartfelt conversations with those still grieving. It was a reminder that healing isn鈥檛 always measured in walls rebuilt but in souls encouraged.
And the work isn鈥檛 finished. As Mark Brown shared, 鈥淭here will be many stages of recovery 鈥 prayer, rebuilding, financial support. But God has been faithful.鈥
Cedarville鈥檚 team was a living testimony to that faithfulness. Through simple acts of service, they brought the message that Lahaina is not forgotten 鈥 by them or by the God who walks with them.
Learn more about this labor of love on this week鈥檚 episode of the podcast.