Saturday, June 2, 2012

Kevin’s Post
The defining feature of this trip has been our team.  This is the fourth one month mission trip I have been on in the last five years and this team is by far the most mature.  This has been the most physically demanding trip I have been on in many ways and the team has been not only content, but joyful.  We just spent 8 days in a shore city called Point Sable.  Most of our days, we would be carrying rocks and sand up a mountain for a church to be built.  In the afternoons we would walk to a beach with a host of Haitian children who would all take their clothes off when we jumped in the water.   Most nights we had church which included a lot of worship and some teaching.
The church is being built out of rocks on the mountain, sand from the beach, and cement that you helped raise money to purchase.  This serves as a great example of Haitian culture as I have experienced it.  They use what they have and they make it work.  They are an extremely joyful people and humble us daily with their spirits.  They have not stopped serving us and worrying about us working too hard.  There have been no missionaries in Point Sable for over fifteen years so this is a big deal to them.  I pray that God used us to encourage them and help them understand the connectedeness of the nation-spanning body of Christ.  Although I haven’t felt clean in over a week and I sweat every night while I sleep, God has given each of us grace upon grace to experience His peace while we have been serving Him. 
                Next, we go to Boucan La Marre.  I know we will be doing some more construction, but other than that, I’m not sure.  I’m not fluent in Creole yet, but they do get a kick out of the idea that a skinny white guy from the U.S.  knows some Creole. 
Pray for continued openness for our team and for our eyes to be open for opportunities to love.  Thank you for all the prayers.  I am certain that God is working through them to sustain us.

Hailey’s Post
When our plane flew over Haiti, I looked out the window and saw what looked like a hilly golf course.   Haiti, a victim of extreme deforestation, is the texture of a crumbled up piece of paper.  Never have I seen such a mountainous terrain that seemed completely impossible for humans to exist on.  The roads are like paths of boulders that somehow the Haitian Toyota trucks trample over, only to suffer a flat tire here and there.  The food here is exciting.  Mangoes, pineapple, watermelon, radish pasta salad, beans and rice, plantains, Conch stew, popcorn, fried chicken and fruit juices.  Strong coffee has been served to me every morning even in the poorest village we’ve stayed in, Pointe Sable.  The coffee is the best I’ve ever had. 
Our trip has been a roller coaster – like going up and down the Haitian mountains.  We’ve all had our highs and we’ve all had our lows.  My personal low started when Kevin threw up for five hours one night, and I thought the world was ending.  Fear overcame me, but as our team prayed for me I felt God’s spirit tell me how in control He was.  Fear in general has been a struggle for me but God delivers me every time.  We are now in Boucan La Marre and we will be here until the 16th when we go to Port Au Prince.  We will be doing construction here as well.  Please pray that we continue to stay well and in good spirits and that God may do what He wants through us.
In Boucan La Marre, we have our tents set up under a couple of huge, ancient mango trees.  At night the mangos drop like leaves – often almost hitting us in the head.  Pastor Pierre’s house, school and church are all on the property we are staying on.  It’s a beautiful place, with auburn colored rocky soil, palm trees and lush vegetation.  All around it truly feels like a tropical island.  While we don’t have a/c, at night, it conveniently cools down to the 70’s and sometimes 60’s and we occasionally get chilly.  There is a constant breeze.   Our clean clothes hang from a clothes line and our bathroom consists of three stalls, a toilet in the middle and a shower on both sides.  If you take a shower in the late afternoon you will be lucky because the water will be warm – the afternoon sun heats it up in the cistern about the house.  Madame Pierre is cooking for us – 3 meals a day.  There is always fresh fruit and often American dishes.  She has been cooking for missionaries for 15 years and in my opinion is a gourmet chef.  In the daytime you can hear the children singing Christian songs in Creole, and at night we fall asleep to the church praising God through enthusiastic song and drum beats. 
                Today is Saturday and we are resting.  Sunday we will drive down the mountain to Ans-au-Galet to church and Monday will begin construction work in the school.  I know that what I’ve described to you sounds like paradise.  Well that’s because it is compared to the village we’ve been in the majority of the trip – Pointe Sable.  We are so thankful here for the love from Pastor Pierre’s family and the relationships we’ve formed with some of the people who work here.  In Pointe Sable, I think the main thing that astounded us was that in a village with stick houses, animals, poop, trash and naked Haitian children everywhere, a village where they materially had so little, the christians we met there were spiritually rich.  It is scriptural if you own nothing but have God, you’re rich.  I met God in Pointe Sable joyfully, because He and the people there showed me that He is all you need.  He is in control of my body, mind, and Spirit.  He is in control of my appetite (which left me there and I lost some weight).  He is in control of how much sleep I get at night when the donkeys, chickens, and goats won’t shut up.  He will sustain me no matter what the circumstances. 
                I found out that Pastor Pierre often hikes from Boucan La Marre to Pointe Sable in the middle of the night, arriving at day break.  This hike consists of going up and down an impossibly steep mountain.  Pastor Alfonso has wanted to make the hike with him, but Pierre won’t let him.  He says it’s too dangerous.  Sometimes wild birds try to attack him on his hike.  Regardless of the obstacles, he still gets to Pointe Sable because that’s where God calls him.  He does not always feel hydrated, full on food and happy, but God sustains him.  He may not get sleep that night, but God sustains him.  That is who we are called to be, sustained by God and obedient to God despite life’s circumstances. 
                The pastor of the church in Pointe Sable, Pastor Jinual, is another figure of inspiration to me.  He is the most loving, gentle, humble person I’ve ever met.  He was so thankful for us to help him build the church.  He told us everyday how thankful he was and he always took care of us.  The last night we were at Pointe Sable, we gave him a Proclaimer, which is a solar charged audio bible in Haitian Creole.  He was so thankful.  On the boat ride from Pointe Sable to Ans-a Galet yesterday, Pastor Jinual played the Proclaimer the whole 2 and 1/2 hours for everyone on the boat.  It was very enjoyable except when the Proclaimer began spouting off a lineage list of names that lasted 20 minutes, which conveniently happened right as Kaiti and I were leaning over the rocking, hot boat waiting to puke.  We didn’t throw up, and we were never as excited to see land as we were yesterday when we arrived.  We have two more weeks of construction and relational work.  Everyone here is thriving – we’ve all gotten so close.  The pace of life is slow enough here to read and journal quite often.  Some have finished books and are exchanging reads with other team mates.  Some are rediscovering what rest means after a busy year of school and work.  I’m learning how being still is the best way to hear God’s whisper, and I feel overwhelmed by peace and joy and the richness that comes from true community – from my eight new best friends.  God is so great to let us experience this wild adventure.  I’m so thankful to be a part of it. 

Monday, May 14, 2012

5 days until...

We will be in Haiti in five days.  Writing this post is helping me process this reality.

Tonight Kevin and I set up our tent in our backyard for practice. Our backyard in Ruston, Louisiana, with our freshly cut grass to cushion our white, soft American feet.  Our tent will be our home for a month- we had better know how to put it up.  Standing in our backyard, mosquitoes biting our legs (and really any skin exposed), we put the very simple tent together.  I got frustrated at every single step, because of the mosquitoes and the heat (it was only 80 degrees).  Once the tent was finally up, we got inside and watched all of the mosquitoes buzz around the netting, trying to get in.
Laying in the tent also helped me to process our trip that is five days away.

If you want to pray for us, you can pray for our health and moral, but mostly for the Haitian people to know Jesus. That's the reason we are going.

I'm excited about the fact that La Gonave used to be inhabited by pirates; I'm excited about the food; I'm excited about the culture possibly resembling that of West Africa.  But mostly I am excited about taking this journey with God- He is orchestrating this trip to be exactly how He wants.

I'm not excited about the spiders.

We may not be able to update our blog while we are in Haiti.  But I am going to try my best to borrow a stranger's computer when we are lucky enough to catch internet.  I love posting to you all so I'm committed to making this happen, even if I have to go out of my way.

In the mean time, take a look at Remember the Poor Int.'s website and get to know their ministry!
http://www.rememberthepoorintl.org/index.html

Bonswa!

Hailey
Bonjou Zanmi m' yo, (Hello my friends)
Hi everyone, this is Kevin, not Hailey:)
                In less than one week, our nine-member team will be in the country of Haiti. So many events and changes have transpired over the last five to six months. Many more than I can recount. It is enough to say that God has given me more clarity about the life He has planned for me. I have always heard a whisper that says, “give it all up and follow Me”. That voice has been minimized and trivialized so much over the years that I’m surprised it is still there. But thankfully it is and I’m trying to listen to that voice now. In my life right now, I do not believe that voice is found in social work. Do I know specifically what God has planned for my life? By no means, but I know I am willing to give everything up to find it.                                                                                                                                            Our one-month trip to Haiti is a part of this journey. Hailey and I are considering the possibility of returning to Haiti full time with the ministry we are going through for our one- month trip, Remember the Poor Int. Although that possibility does loom large in my thoughts, I remember Jesus had a few things to say about thinking too much about the future, so I will look for what God is doing now.        
                I could tell you so many things, but right now I have a desire to tell you a little bit about our team. Let’s start with Hailey. For those of you who don’t know Hailey, I wish you did. She would make your life a lot more fun. In short, she was made for adventures like this. She loves anything with excitement and a little danger. She lived in the African bush in Niger for two months, which gives her some confidence going into a trip like this. I have known the other team leader, Katie Reese, for about two years now. She was new to our community at Wesley then, but has made a huge impact here since then for the kingdom of God. I have seen her grow with tremendous strides since I have known her and am honored to be on a team led by her and my wife. John McGee is the next team member I’m going to tell you about. I’ve had the privilege of leading a guy’s small group with John for the last three months. John and I are extremely different and God has used that to sharpen us. I am proud to call him my brother in Christ and can’t wait to serve alongside him. The only other male on the team beside myself and John is Chase. I didn’t know Chase before we started preparing for this mission trip. It has been great to spend time with him over the past four to five months. It is obvious God is at work in his life and I know our friendship will grow deeper during the trip.
                    Ali, Jillian, and Phoebe are also new to me as of the last four to five months. Ali and Jillian are both from Shreveport and are roommates. They remind me a lot of Hailey and one of her best friends, Dani. They couldn’t be more fun to be around. They bring joy with them everywhere they go. Phoebe has done a lot of traveling around the world, but has never traveled with a team. I know it will be a blessing and at times challenging for her to experience a trip like this with eight other individuals. I have known Sarah for about three years now. She was in my small group when I was an intern at the Wesley Foundation. Her parents are missionaries so she did not grow up in the United States. The last two members of our team are Brother Bill and Pastor Alfonso. They are part of their own congregations in Benton, LA and Tampa, FL respectively. Pastor Alfonso is the head of the ministry we are going through.
                     All of us (except for Brother Bill and Pastor Alfonso) prayed together last night at our last mission trip meeting before we leave for Haiti. It was a wonderful time where I could see the hearts of each individual in the room. I was so encouraged and overwhelmed by the unity that God has created. God has uniquely equipped each one of us to serve Him during this time. I am sure of it!
                      There is so much more to tell you, but I’ll stop here. This is what I know: God is at work in this team and I have big expectations for what He will do in and through us while we are in Haiti.
                   Pray for us as we finish preparing and as we leave next Sunday, May 20th!!!

Saturday, March 3, 2012

We Leave May 20th

Bonjou!

I am making this blog so that you can track me and our team on our quest to Haiti this summer. There are nine of us total going to Haiti. Kaiti and I are the official "trip leaders." We are both interns at La Tech Wesley. Our trip dates are May 20-June 18. We are flying out of Monroe, to Dallas, to Ft. Lauderdale, then straight into Port-au-Prince (Haiti's capital). The official language of Haiti is Haitian Creole. For our trip, we are going to be traveling around to different villages in Haiti throughout the month. The plan is to stay in tents the entire time we are there. This will be interesting because we will be there in the rainy season......

We are working with a ministry call Remember the Poor Int. You can view their web site at http://www.rememberthepoorintl.org/index.html

The things we will be doing while we are in Haiti are: Sharing the bible with people through a Proclaimer (a solar powered audio bible we have ordered in Creole), various construction projects, church visits, vbs and possibly medical mission projects. We also may do a "croc drop" (a distribution of free Crocs to the Haitians) but we first need Croc shoes donated!

I am going to try to post on this blog throughout our trip in Haiti. We won't have internet for parts of the trip, but I will try to update whenever possible so you can know what to pray for us for, and so you can join us in any adventures that we want to share with you while we are there!

Our team is preparing for the trip by doing weekly fasts, having weekly meetings, sharing our testimonies with each other, and fundraising. We are currently in the process of getting all our immunizations!

I am incredibly excited about the trip, and I wish we were leaving tomorrow. But there is still preparation to be done, so with prayer and patience our team will be moving forward excitedly! I will update more when there is more to update!

Hailey