No Images? Click here The Weekly is a rundown of news by the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission highlighting the week’s top news stories from the public square and providing commentary on the big issues of our day. What You Should Know About Hurricane HarveyLast weekend the area around Houston, Texas was struck by Hurricane Harvey, a storm which continues to leave devastating rainfall and flooding in its wake. Here are several facts and figures to help put this natural disaster in perspective: • Harvey was the strongest storm to hit Texas since the 1960s. Harvey has made landfall three times since Friday, once as a hurricane and twice more as a tropical storm. • The highest gust reported on land during this storm was recorded at 132 mph in Port Aransas, Texas. • Harvey has produced the greatest amount of rainfall ever recorded in the continental United States from a single storm. A rain gauge near Cedar Bayou, about 40 miles east of Houston, has registered 51.88 inches of rainfall as of 9 pm CDT on Wednesday. (60 inches of rain is considered a once-in-a-million-year event.) Average rainfall totals will end up around 40 inches for Houston. • The total amount of rain that fell on the Houston area since the storm made landfall is estimated to be 20 trillion gallons. • If the amount of rainfall that had fallen on Texas by Sunday was spread over the city limits of New Orleans, it would reach to 128 feet in height—roughly reaching as high as a 12-story office building. • If the rain had been snow it would have been the equivalent of nearly 210 inches, or 17.5 feet of snowfall. • The storm has affected about 6.8 million people in 18 counties, a quarter of the Texas population. The Texas Education Agency estimates more than one million students in the state's public school system have been affected by the storm, and 200 of the state’s 1,200 school districts have had some sort of closures this week. • An estimated 30,000 to 40,000 homes have been destroyed in the Houston area alone. • All of Texas’s National Guard, 24,000 troops, have been deployed in the state. As of Thursday, the National Guard has made 8,500 rescues, evacuated 26,000 people and done 1,400 shelter-in-place welfare checks in Texas so far. Currently, there are 32,000 people in shelters throughout the state. • As of Thursday, 40 people have been arrested in Harris County for looting. • More than 1,800 staff members, one million meals, one million liters of water, 20,000 tarps, and 70 generators have been deployed to Texas by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). FEMA has also deployed 14 urban search and rescue teams, 65 mobile emergency response support staff and 10 mobile communications office vehicles. • As of Wednesday, the storm has been responsible for at least 38 deaths. Click here to learn more about how you can help victims of Hurricane Harvey. This week on ERLC podcasts: On the Capitol Conversations podcast, Senator Ben Sasse joins Russell Moore to discuss parenting, education, and vocation in an era of historic disruptions in the workforce. Other IssuesAmerican CultureBoaters from around the country helping with water rescues in flood-ravaged Texas
Facebook has more people than any major religion except Christianity
BioethicsIceland Capital’s Only Baptist Pastor Doesn’t Want Down Syndrome Eliminated
Colorado case spotlights divorce dilemma on frozen embryos
South Carolina governor ends funding of abortion clinics
The Ethics Issue Blocking Organ Transplant Research
Christianity and CultureSouthern Baptists talk sex, LGBT issues at parenting conference
TRUSTEES: ERLC seeking to equip churches
Died: Michael Cromartie, the Church’s Ambassador to Washington
Family IssuesERLC conf. urges parents to be models for children
International IssuesChild suicide bombings by Boko Haram at all-time high
Religious LibertyTrump’s Justice Department Still Defending Obama Contraception Mandate
Sexuality IssuesEvangelicals counter 'agree to disagree' sexuality
California Could Start Jailing People Who Don’t Use Transgender Pronouns
Mattis: For now, transgender troops can keep serving
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