Plan for: Thanksgiving | Advent | Christmas

Sermon Illustrations

WHAT CAN POOR PLANNING DO? UNHEEDED WARNINGS… NOT READY? UNEXPECTED?

THE GREAT MOLASSES TSUNAMI? What are you expecting at 12:40 PM in the afternoon? Children were playing. Those that worked the night shift were sleeping.

Let us understand what SORGHUM MOLASSES really is… Molasses is something like honey. It is a sugary-sweet product from sugar cane. MOLASSES is 5,000 to 10,000 times denser than water. It is impossible to swim in SORGHUM MOLASSES.

Boston had a 50 foot tall steel holding tank. As a whole the molasses came from the CARIBBEAN AREA. The sorghum molasses was used in making liquor and munitions. World War 1 had demanded tons of molasses. Many people warned the company and the area this 2.3 million gallon tank was a great danger. SEEMS NO ONE LISTENED. The tank often made rumbling noises.

It was 40 degrees on January 15, 1919 in the north end of Boston, Massachusetts. Businesses and farmers formed a MOLASSES CO-OP. They built a huge 2,300,000 gallon tank to store MOLASSES as a reserve for the area. This huge storage tank was filled with 2.3 million gallons of molasses. The weight of that much MOLASSES is guessed to have been 13,000 tons. The weight caused a stress failure.

1/15/1919 there was an unexpected event. The huge molasses tank ruptured and the molasses pushed through the streets at 35 miles an hour. 21 PEOPLE WERE KILLED and 150 PEOPLE WERE INJURED. The newspapers reported there was a 15 foot high wall of thick molasses traveling 35 mph. Buildings, electric poles, horses and people were destroyed. The local fire station was knocked off its foundation. There was a ½ mile path of total destruction. North Boston had been warned many times. Profit was the motivation. Jobs were at stake. Alcohol and liquor were in great demand. The warnings were unheeded.

Related Sermon Illustrations

  • Seoul -- At His Father's Funeral, American Carl ...

    Contributed by Bruce Landry on Jan 15, 2007
    based on 1 rating
     | 2,800 views

    Seoul -- At his father’s funeral, American Carl Lewis placed his 100-meter gold medal from the 1984 Olympics in his father’s hands. "Don’t worry," he told his surprised mother. "I’ll get another one." A year later, in the 100-meter final at the 1988 games, Lewis was competing against Canadian ...read more

  • Let Me Close With A Poem That Was Read Out At The ...

    Contributed by Revd. Martin Dale on Aug 12, 2004
     | 2,708 views

    Let me close with a poem that was read out at the Queen Mother’s funeral; which I think sums up the Christian faith very well. "I said to the man who stood at the gate of the year. “Give me a light that I may tread safely into the unknown.” And he replied: “Go out into the darkness and ...read more

Related Sermons