The newly rebuilt Tabernacle Baptist Church in Freeport, Bahamas, doesn't see as many parishioners as it would in normal times, simply because coronavirus concerns keep a number of them from venturing too far from home. So these days, the church arranges delivery of groceries, care packages, health supplies and more to those in need.
Strangers made that possible.
And it all started with a layup.
Nathan Bain provided one of college basketball's signature moments last season, a buzzer-beating layup in overtime to give unheralded Stephen F. Austin a stunning upset over Duke on Nov. 26. 2019. Duke was the No. 1 team in the country at the time and hadn't lost a nonconference game on its home floor in nearly 20 years.
But that became just a sliver of the story that night. Bain's layup won a game — and rebuilt a home, rebuilt a school and rebuilt a church, all of it directly impacting the lives of hundreds of Bahamians.
"It was a game and it became a bigger cause," Bain said. "More often than not, people want to do the right thing. And I think that's what happened with us, that people just saw the opportunity to be good human beings."
Bain's family home in the Bahamas was destroyed when Hurricane Dorian slammed into the islands on Sept. 1, 2019, with wind reaching 185 mph. Their belongings were washed away. The church and school that his father has operated for decades were badly damaged. School officials at Stephen F. Austin had set up an online fundraiser to help Bain's family; it raised $2,400 in the two months preceding the win over Duke.
But after Bain's game-winner, word got out and donations poured in. All told, $151,740 came in from about 4,000 donors.