This story starts with David Uth, a member of an organization that is always open, especially in life’s storms.

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He is Pastor At First Baptist Orlando.

“What I say to our people: He will either calm the storm or calm his child,” said Uth.

So when Hurricane Irma made it impossible for his flock to join him at church, he went to them online via a virtual service that took place in his wife’s study.

He set up a camera and with the backdrop of a world map, gave a sermon of hope and faith—and ended it as his wife handed him his infant grandchild, Sawyer.

“I looked into the camera, and I said, ‘Guys, I want you to know this is what matters: not our houses, not our stuff, but the people God have given us in our life. May the Lord Bless you in the storm.’ And that’s how we closed the service,” Uth told us.

The story continues with a flooding-related evacuation and another baby born during the storm ... one named Noah.

“I actually decided his name when I was either two or three months pregnant, and I never considered any name," said new mom Stacey Knauer.

Knauer told us leaned on her faith as she was having a baby while a hurricane made its way up the state. Concerns about flooding forced the evacuation of Manatee Memorial Hospital in Bradenton—Knauer’s initial birthing hospital.

“In my opinion, God had something to do with it,”, Knauer said. “It’s also really nice to know that something magical and beautiful is about to happen—even during the worst times."

In a hurricane-safe room -- no windows in a back-up hospital in Lakewood Ranch with the lights flickering -- baby Noah came in the world with the eye of Hurricane Irma 87 miles away.

"He was a great distraction for a lot of very helpful people at the hospital, and was a true blessing for everyone," Knauer said.

Welcome to the world, Noah. There was someone in Orlando you don’t know that was praying for your calm entrance into the storm.