Thursday, August 8, 2013

Report on the July 2013 Mission Trip


Report on the July 2013 Mission Trip

Christian Mission to Restore Haiti spent 10 days in Haiti this past July.  It was one of the more difficult trips we have taken recently, yet we feel it was productive.  Two of our officers, Fred Correll and Melissa Shatney could not travel with us this time due to various reasons.  Pastor Andre brought his wife Unique, his daughter Jotan, and two grandchildren with him.  Pastor Andre and Pastor John were joined this trip by Pastor J.D Mallory of Naples and his family; wife Christa, son Nick and daughter Cassidy.  Accompanying them was Pablo Garcia also of Naples.  They are a welcome addition to our team.

Instead of giving a moment by moment accounting of our trip, I’ll give a brief overview.  We arrived on Monday July 21 at 8 AM in Cap-Haitien.  Immediately we began discussions with Methelus, our in country administrator, about our medical clinic in Dubre.  Due to lack of donations equal to our need there, we have been forced to temporarily close the clinic for the month of July.  Our plans are to reopen in August.  Our nurses are anxious to resume their responsibilities.

Our Bible Institute is doing well.  The students are learning and progressing in their Bible knowledge.  I gave them an oral quiz on the Gospel of John and they did well.  In addition to our regular professor, we had a guest professor who taught them church administration.  If finances allow, he will be a regular on our teaching team.  The students love coming to study and learn.  Our desire is to hold the institute two times per month, and eventually increase it to every Saturday. 

On a visit to Robillard to see our church there, we travelled through Plaine Du Nord.  The village was completely trashed.  The reason was there had just been a four day voodoo sacrifice held there.  Thousands of people from all over Haiti and the USA were there to “appease the evil spirits” by sacrificing cows, pigs, chickens, sheep, goats and other animals.  As hard as it is to believe, this sacrifice was sponsored by St. John’s Catholic Church.  There were at least three other sacrifices scheduled by three other Catholic churches.  The people travel from one to the other. 


How the sacrifice works is this: the Catholic priest drinks a portion of alcohol, passes the bottle around to others and call for the evil spirit to land on them.  When the evil spirit comes, they kill the animal and pour its blood and throw a hunk of meat into a large mud hole that has been filled with water.  Then the sacrificers jump into the bloody pool, thinking that now the evil spirit is appeased and will leave them and not bother them again. Voodoo is still a large part of Haitian life, even in some churches of all denominations.

The next day, while holding services in the morning, Pastor Lucien of Dubre was attacked by men wielding a knife.  They told him they were taking over the building that the church has maintained for 27 years.  They beat him with fists and left.  Pastor Lucien verbally restrained his people from approaching the men, thus protecting them from harm.  The next day they returned and damaged the gate to the property and further threatened Pastor Lucien.  He was able to contact the police who arrested the men. The next morning Pastor Andre and Methelus went to Millo to the court where the judge collected $400 (Haitian) from them to go to Dubre and inspect the site.  After finding that it was true, he told the perpetrators that they would remain in jail until they repaid Pastor Andre the $400.  My concern is charging them with assault with a deadly weapon.

Pastor Andre bought a half gallon of Mott’s Apple Juice at the local market for 400 gourdes, which is approximately $30 US.  In the USA it sells for under $4.  Any US product there is horribly overpriced.  Most Haitians live on rice and beans - when they can get them.  They are malnourished, thin with gaunt faces.  Few are healthy.  We are attempting to begin a self-sustaining food program for our four churches (to begin with). 

For hundreds of years Haiti has been severely oppressed physically, emotionally, mentally, financially and spiritually.  Those of us who have ministered there understand why they are in the mentally exhausted state of being.  “Why try when nothing seems to work?”  They have been beat down mercilessly by despots who have ruled their country and by the witch doctors of voodoo.  They reached the end of their rope years ago.  But we believe that the Haitian mindset can be changed from “give me” to “I need to work to help myself.  I need to trust in Someone much bigger than me.”  That is what we are striving to achieve.  Many are turning to Lord Jesus Christ as their only means of hope and salvation.  But there are so many more people who need to be reached with the gospel.

Our church in Cap-Haitien has out grown the current building.  We have an opportunity to move to a much larger – 4 times the size - and more modern building in a part of the city where there is no church.  Already our bus driver, Navior, who lives adjacent to the building has been “evangelizing” to let the people know that the church may be moving there.



Many are excited about the possibility.  The cost for the yearly rent is $2,500 US, about double the amount for the older building.  We need your support for this to happen. 

On Sunday we went to Bas Limbe for church and Pastor J.D. preached on David and Goliath and how we can overcome giants in our lives.  Christa, Nick, and Cassidy sang.







It was a good service.  18 years ago, Pastor J.D. came to Bas Limbe and worked on the building, 
putting the roof on with his own hands.  This was his first time back to Bas Limbe since then. 

That evening I preached in the Cap-Haitian church on forgiveness.



During each service they have “worship time.”  Here is a shortened video of “worship time.” Usually it lasts 10 minutes or more.


I asked them why they get so involved with “worship time”: was it the music that they loved?  To a person they said “We love Jesus.”

Daloune is a 12 year old who I first heard sing two years ago.  She has gotten better.  The video is not the best quality, but enjoy her singing “Agnus Dei.”


Our visits on Monday to the villages of Robillard and Dubre reminded me of the church in Smyrna.  Jesus said concerning them in Revelation 2: 8 “Write to the angel of the church in Smyrna: “The First and the Last, the One who was dead and came to life, says:  I know your affliction and poverty, yet you are rich.”

These two villages are extremely poor financially and materially, but the churches there are far richer spiritually than many in the US.  Neither building is anywhere close to being completed.  Both need walls and roofs.  Both of them have chickens that walk through on the dirt floors during the services.  No one seems to mind.  Pastor J.D. commented that the visit to these two churches were the highlight of this mission trip.  These churches must be experienced to be fully appreciated.  The two pastors are Godly men who have taught their congregations to love Jesus.

On Tuesday we went to the Citadel but because of the high cost we did not go to the top of the mountain, but instead toured the Palace San-Souci, which was the home of King Henri Christophe in the early 1800’s.  He was an evil man who murdered tens of thousands of Haitians just because he could.  When Napoleon sailed to Haiti on three ships and ordered him to stop, he burned many houses in Cap-Haitian.  Napoleon sailed his one remaining ship back to France after Christophe burned the other two.

On our last evening we got sad news that Lismany, the 16 month old daughter of Bergemane Toussaint, the guitar player in the Cap-Haitian church fell into the river and drowned.  That night the Cap-Haitian church gathered at his house and held an all night prayer and hymn singing vigil.  Three nights before this, the entire church held another all night prayer and singing service.  Services that last all night are a regular occurrence in this church. 

Bergemane faithfully walks an hour and 15 minutes each way to church every time there is a service, at least 3 or 4 times a week.  He desperately needs a bicycle to ride.


As we were flying back the next morning, she was being buried.

Someone mentioned to me that they just could not go to Haiti for any reason; it would be too uncomfortable; there is no A/C, no running water, the power goes off for several hours at a time.  There are many other inconveniences and discomforts.  For me it is also the food.  I like the taste, but it does not like my stomach.  There are so many excuses one could give for not wanting to be involved in mission work.  What I have resolved is that God did not call me – or anyone else for that matter – to a life of comfort.  That is not His primary concern.  He has called every one of His children to a life of obedience and faithfulness.  Missionaries go to their God appointed field knowing what lies ahead, but they go anyway because of their desire to obey our Lord.

I am not naïve enough to believe that everyone is called to go to the mission field, but I am absolutely convinced that if God does not call you to go, He has called you to send others.  No Christian is exempt from mission work; either going or sending.  Your mission field may be foreign or local, but we must all be involved in His work.  The great commission still stands today. “Go… baptize…teach.”

The need is urgent.  What does God want you to do?