June 8-11, 2013
Our first stop was to visit the Food for the Poor distribution center. This Catholic charity serves partners regardless of denomination; as long as they get the food, supplies and medicines to the people without taking a cut or charging anything. The young lady in charge of agriculture projects and fish farms told us about some of their sustainable projects. They have rebuilt whole villages after the earthquake, and given fishermen more powerful boats to improve their catch. Here you see the processing center, where requests are handled.
They also feed hundreds of people every day. They prepare one meal a day so that people without work and food can take it home to feed their family. Why did we visit a Catholic Charity? We don’t give them funds. They are doing a wonderful holistic work. They have asked WorldLead, the training effort of our home church to equip their top leadership in the Christian Leadership principles and will be gathering in November for that.
S.T.E.P. Seminaire Theologique Evangelique de Port-au-Prince
· “Fruitful Practices for Finishing Well,”
· “Mentoring,”
· “Kingdom Communities.”
Source de Grace Church
On Thursday I met with the church
planting team. They are off to such a good start. But church planting is a
marathon, not a sprint. They shared victories and challenges. They decided to
meet regularly for prayer and planning. The Fontamara church plant has been
functioning as a satellite of Source de Grace. But now the leaders must step up
and train local disciples and leaders. It was obvious that they needed coaching
to apply the church planting principles we learned together in June. They will
go over their training little by little when they meet together and I plan to
meet with them again in December. Ultimately the goal is to have a Haitian
trainer and coach who can follow-up on site.
On Friday I returned home. The batteries were all charged in
the plane. I was in Haiti for only 3 ½ days but what a fruitful time! Being a
missionary is an adventure of faith, sometimes exhausting, sometimes exciting, and
always stretching. I thank God for the prayers of each one and the
contributions that allow me to go. Adventure or spiritual battle? Both. Definitely.
Another Adventure in Haiti, or should I say spiritual battle?
My day started at 4:00 a.m. and we experienced a taste of Haiti even before leaving South Florida. The battery was dead in our plane. At first they said it would take 3 hours to charge it. Then they said they would take one from another plane. So we were only one hour ½ late. As we flew into Port-au-Prince, you could see why it was once called the jewel of the Caribbean.
However deforestation for charcoal (still the dominant form of cooking fuel) has washed away the top soil and made the shores brown with silt. Fishing has suffered as most fishermen have to stay close to the shore because they don’t have strong engines.
Food for the Poor
I was really impressed by the scope and quality of their operations. They receive an average of 30 containers a week, mostly filled with rice from Asia. Much of it is donated by governments or charities. They use 30 trucks to get it to their ministry partners all over the country. A manager showed us all the temporary storage sites spread out so immediate supplies would be available in case of an emergency.
Members of our team being shown around. Look at the most popular food items on the shelves.
They also feed hundreds of people every day. They prepare one meal a day so that people without work and food can take it home to feed their family. Why did we visit a Catholic Charity? We don’t give them funds. They are doing a wonderful holistic work. They have asked WorldLead, the training effort of our home church to equip their top leadership in the Christian Leadership principles and will be gathering in November for that.
Our next stop was Bolosse, on the hill above this city of
eight million. From 9 am to 2 p.m. It was a privilege to come alongside this
small group of mature servants of God. The main themes were:
·
“Spiritual Formation from Matthew’s Gospel,”
· “Fruitful Practices for Finishing Well,”
· “Mentoring,”
· “Kingdom Communities.”
The men that we worked with all have a Masters or a
Doctorate in Theology. So it wasn’t a question of giving them more knowledge,
but wrestling with issues that stand in the way of healthy and fruitful
leadership. These men desire to build more margin and improve their time with
God but they are swamped. Two are pastors as well as seminary leaders. One man,
Wawa, just became president of the seminary and had to take off to visit his
wife in surgery. But he still made the effort to be with us whenever he could.
Two missionary leaders are among the most godly and hardworking that I have
ever known. You have to be a servant in Haiti; or else you won’t make it for
long. The needs are just too overwhelming.
Fontamara Church Planting Team
I had hoped to meet with a group of 25 men and women, mostly
lay evangelists and disciple-makers, that we trained in June. Tuesday, upon
arrival, I found out that I was the designated teacher at the daughter church. It
was started in August through intensive evangelistic efforts that touched 300
people. A group was baptized and they started services in September. I wasn’t
prepared to teach that night and was tired from the long day. Assistant Pastor
Giraud asked me to challenge them to be thinking already about starting a “grand-daughter
church.” I see they learned the lesson about multiplication well. God gave me
strength and passion to talk about being a branch that bears fruit from John 15.
Some branches need to be cut back, others pruned, but all are called to bear
much fruit to God’s glory. There is nothing that brings greater joy then being
firmly connected to the life-giving sap and allowing it to produce fruit. “We
can do nothing of eternal good in and of ourselves.” Mostly I wanted to bless
them and encourage them as they grow this new kingdom community.
Giraud took me to see the new sanctuary being it built on
the 3rd floor of Pastor Moise Vaval’s home. Already they are saying
it is a temporary solution and they are praying for a lot in a more public
neighborhood. The room could seat 200 and they had 85 for their inaugural Sunday.
About 30 disciples and seekers of all ages came out Tuesday night. Four cell
groups are meeting for prayer and Bible study. What a
wonderful start! That was very rewarding.
Source de Grace Church
I was asked to speak on Christ's
victory over Satan from Genesis to Revelation in the mother church on Wednesday.
I almost expected some opposition or interference. It happened 2/3 of the way
through the message. The wind and rain pounded the tin roof so hard that I
could hardly hear myself, in spite of the amplification system. I waited and
prayed. It got better and I started up preaching again, talking about how Jesus
rebukes the wind and storm in the gospel of Mark and had authority over all
storms.
Then the lights all went out and I
lost sound. I was shut down in darkness with 200 people waiting. Giraud came up
and said we can end now. I said "No wait, we can't end like
this." God will see us through. Then the lights came back on and we
finished the service. It ended with praise and confidence with a challenge to
reap the victory that Christ won by going out boldly with the gospel. The rain
continued. The van couldn't make it up the hill so I had to walk the last mile
in the rain without an umbrella. I was drenched but grateful. God answers prayer
and sees us through. Ps 34 says: "Problems often come to the righteous but
God always delivers them."
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