When the media reported the tragic news that Camp Mystic director Dick Eastland died trying to save kids amid catastrophic Guadalupe River flooding, Dr. Jim Denison was heartbroken but unsurprised.
âDick Eastland was a friend,â he said. âHe and [his wife] Tweety have been with me to Israel twice. I donât know a more gracious, humble, servant-hearted person.â
Denison detailed the ways Eastland served others on their Israel expeditions, stating he was the first to arrive at the bus to ensure everyoneâs luggage was loaded on and would often wait after to be certain people safely made it to their rooms.
âThatâs just who he was,â Denison said. âHe was known to be kind of the grandfather of the camp. I mean, generations. ⌠They took over Camp Mystic in 1974, and he and Tweety just gave their lives to it.â
He continued, âSo, in one sense, I wasnât surprised when the news said that he had died trying to save some of the campers. That was just who he was.â
Denison said Eastland was simply the type of person to ârun to the floodâ or to a fire to try and rescue others, noting, âThatâs just how he was wired.â He said itâs the very same passion that led Eastland and his wife to take over the beloved Texas-based camp decades ago.
âYou want to live in such a way that when you act heroically, people arenât surprised â that when you act in faith, people say thatâs just who you are,â Denison said. âThatâs, I think, a lesson that Dick can teach us even today ⌠to be the kind of people that other people expect to rise to the crisis, and to step out in faith, and to demonstrate the grace of Christ.â
In the wake of a natural disaster in which at least 27 Camp Mystic campers and counselors have died â and at least 100 in the area are deceased or missing overall â Denison, like many, has been forced to ask some of the difficult theological questions surrounding such a tragic horror.
Mainly: why did a good and loving God allow this to happen, and why did He not stop it?
âThis is so close to me,â Denison said. âThis is personal for me. âŚMy backgroundâs in philosophy. I spend a lot of time thinking about evil and suffering from an academic point of view.â
Listen to the latest episode of âQuick Startâ
He continued, âFor me, itâs not just an intellectual, even professional issue. It becomes a very personal issue.â
But, while questions and doubts are natural in difficult times, Denison urged people to remember what C.S. Lewis said after his own wife died from cancer.
âHe said his fear wasnât that he would stop believing in God,â Denison said. âHis fear was that he would come to say, âOK, so this is what Godâs really like.'â
This posture can lead people to attribute negative qualities to God and hold misguided understandings.
âWe all ask the question and we should,â Denison said of the âwhy.â âThe wrong approach is to take the off ramp that says, âOK, Heâs not all-loving. Heâs not all-powerful. Heâs not all-knowing.'â
He added, âFirst of all, I canât understand God. My mind is finite and fallen. A first-grader canât understand calculus. ⌠Itâs Isaiah 55: His ways are higher than mine, His thoughts are higher than mine. I canât expect to understand the nature of God Himself, and I have to keep that in mind.â
Denison said itâs also important to remember the Lord has the âbigger picture in mindâ and that He redeems everything that unfolds. Rather than running from God in times of crisis, he encouraged people to run to the Lord.
âWe bring our questions to Him,â he said. âWe ask our hard questions of Him, and we ask Him to redeem this in our lives and through our lives.â
Denison said itâs also important to look for ways to help ourselves, which is often sparked by being the hands and feet of Jesus â something that helps us rediscover His peace.
âOne of the best ways to experience the peace of God is to share the peace of God,â Denison said. âOne of the best ways to experience His presence is to ⌠manifest His presence. And, so, even in my hurting, I can say, âLord, direct me to someone else thatâs hurting like me.'â
Ultimately, though, it all boils down to asking difficult questions and realizing that these situations â and the mourning and pain â arenât simple issues; theyâre complex dynamics that should be treated as such.
Denison recalled speaking at a series of university chapel events years ago. Just days before he arrived, four students were killed and the community was in mourning.
âThe person who was the campus minister who was up introducing me in the midst of this horrific crisis ⌠said something Iâve never forgotten,â Denison said. âHe said, âIf anyone offers easy answers today, run fast. Run fast. Pay no attention. Donât hear it. There are no easy answers to this.'â
Dealing with the complexities is key, he argued.
Denison also offered advice for those struggling amid pain to make sense of the seemingly nonsensical, pointing back to Christâs own proclamation on the cross: âMy God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?â (Matthew 27:46).
âFirst thing to do is to admit it, to know that itâs there,â he said of struggle and doubt. âItâs not a lack of faith to have doubts and questions. If Jesus ⌠could cry from the cross, we can ask that as well. Itâs an expression of faith.â
Expressing, through prayer, that one doesnât understand why something has happened can be helpful and turning to Scripture is essential, he added. Watch above for his full theological discussion on the matter.
Please sign up for Faithwireâs daily newsletter and download the CBN News app to stay up-to-date with the latest news from a distinctly Christian perspective.
News Source : https://cmsedit.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2025/july/texas-flood-hero-camp-mystic-director-makes-ultimate-sacrifice-just-who-he-was