The owner of the Kansas City chiefs mourns the death of a parent

The Hunt family expresses their sorrow.
After the Texas -based camp, mystic, confirmed that 27 campers and advisers died during the sudden floods that hit the state on July 4, the owner of the Kansas City chiefs Clark HuntThe family confirmed that among these lost people, their 9 -year -old cousin Janie Hunt.
“Our hearts are broken by the devastation of Wimberley’s floods and the tragic loss of so many lives,” said Clark’s wife Tavia Hunt wrote on Instagram on July 6, “including a precious little hunting cousin, as well as the little girls of several friends.”
Indeed, the flood has become one of the deadliest to strike the United States in the past 100 years, therefore, on July 7, 81 people among these dead, by NBC News, including 75 in the county of Kerr, where Camp Mystic, a Christian girl camp, is based.
“How do we trust a god who is supposed to be good, all informed and all powerful, but who allows such terrible things to happen, even children?” Tavia continued. “It is a sacred and tender question – and one that the Bible does not fear. The Scriptures are filled with the cries of those whose hearts have been broken, which always fights to trust the same God who, according to them, allowed pain.”



