18 September 2011
sing praise
We had a great morning this morning in church. Matt preached at Vilmer's to help him prepare the church for their annual October of "Soul Harvesting", as a focused month on evangelism in Haiti is often called. Several of the guys went with us, and that was great, too.
Several hours together outside of school with just 3-4 students at a time is one of our favorite ways to really get to know them, their hearts, callings, passions and struggles...providing the "wheels" for church make that relationship ministry kind of happen spontaneously.
Someone sent us a little bit of money this past week, so after church we took Junior, Leandre and Wilex out to lunch, and I haven't laughed so hard in a long time. The more time we spend with the students at Emmaus, the more excited we are about how He has made them and how He is using them, and will, here in Haiti. We just want to help them do and become all that He has made them to do and be! They are good men to just get behind!
Meanwhile, we received great and rather spur-of-the-moment news from Matt's parent's that they are coming on Friday for a few days! The last time they were here was before we moved to Saccanville and before the Seminary moved into its current campus, so we're really excited to introduce them to new friends, share our "new" home with them and have a few days together. Lily is also very excited to have visitors, as that she's been quiet bored with "just" mom and dad since Uncle Don left.
Matt, Lucner and Paul then leave for their very last residency for their Masters degrees on October 10th, and my dad is coming to help me with the girls while Matt is gone. Dodo and Bubba are coming in on October 13th, Lord willing, to help us with an onslaught of wonderful visiting professors in October and November. All this to say, family and friends are on the way and we're grateful.
25 August 2011
starting the year in Romans...
The 2011-2012 school year is officially underway, with more beds being moved into the men's dorm, 75 people eating lunch together and about 55 students (still working on a final number!) From the buzzing market, the crowded dusty streets, the tops of the mountains and the stretches of Haitian desert, one by one men and women have emerged and come together in one place with one purpose.
...now we know that whatever the Law says, it speaks to those who are under the law, so that every mouth may be closed and all the world may become accountable to God...
It is a beautiful thing to walk down the halls or past the chapel and hear the Word of God already being dug into. Matt is teaching Romans to third and fourth year students and an Introduction to the Old Testament to first year, Guenson, Biblical Interpretation and Systematic Theology, Vilmer: Biblical Culture and Geography and Methodology, Lucner: Christian Philosophy, Fan Fan: Pentateuch (1st five books of the Bible)...
...who will separate us from the love of Christ? Will tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or the sword?...
The year hasn't begun without its peril...one of our first year students became so sick on Tuesday that he was rushed to the clinic, aggressively vomiting blood. He is still with his family and not doing very well.
One of our night watchmen, Augustine, lost his 5-year-old daughter on Monday morning to "sickness".
Pastor Elizay has been sick as well, and is facing surgery next week, a big deal (especially here). Belony is STILL not recovered from his stomach pains of last year, and not feeling great at all today...all things for your prayers.
Also, Irene has dumped a lot of rain on us, but thankfully, never really "hurricane'd" us...just rain and some wind. Even our visitors were able to get out today without problem, and students and staff have had no major issues coming and going.
...be of the same mind toward one another; do not be haughty in mind, but associate with the lowly. Be at peace with all men...
Then, some playful new student "induction" traditions got carried away and really hurt some feelings. A very concerned and somewhat discouraged administration met yesterday and had a meeting with the whole student body this morning. Matt was dreading it, and just hates the discipline-side of administration in general (who doesn't!?), but then the meeting was fantastic...The problem was well articulated, and the students quickly agreed that they had taken playfulness too far, and left the chapel of the same mind and at peace...Praise the Lord!
...since we have gifts that differ according to the grace given us, each of us is to exercise them accordingly...be devoted to one another in brotherly love...
Uncle Don, Emily and Phil all left this morning. I cannot begin to count the ways that Don has blessed us these past two weeks...here's just a few of his (and Phil, too) finished projects.
Lily woke up so sad this morning to find Uncle Don and "my friends" gone, and Matt and I feel the loss as well. We had such a good time getting to know Phil and Emily better. The help is fantastic...but the friendship is even better. Don is one of those rare people who doesn't seem to even think about himself or his own rights, but just pours out what God has given him freely and joyfully. Can't help but feel a bit lonely in the house this morning! (hint-hint...our guest room is empty!)
...how will they call on Him in whom they have not believed? How will they believe in Him whom they have not heard? How will they hear without a preacher? How will they preach unless they are sent? How beautiful are the feet of those who bring Good News of good things...
Let me squeeze a quick pitch in here! We have SO MANY men and women at Emmaus right now that are in great need of being under-written. While it costs $2500 each year to feed, educate, house, and care for every student, each is only charged $500. This is already a very difficult amount of money to obtain for the large majority of our student body, so part of what I do here is seek out the other $2000 to back each man and woman.
I have shared and will continue to share SO many stories of what God is doing in Haiti through the lives and ministries of the students at Emmaus, and we need help keeping these same students in training, fed and cared for. If you or your family or your Sunday School class or business or church or small group is interested in aligning life and ministry with His kingdom-building here, PLEASE contact me for a student name, photo, testimony and giving info.
Your "little bit" can go a long way in providing for beautiful-footed-preachers of the Word to learn It well and to take it out to those who have not believed.
...being fully assured that what God has promised, He is able also to perform...
At staff retreat on Saturday, we talked a lot about different visions everyone has for the Seminary and for Haiti. As I've pondered these, I've been going back to the basics in my heart: what has God promised? What's He promising for this year? There are a lot of unknowns, but here's just a few of the things He's PROMISING, just in Romans alone...
He will render to each person according to His deeds (2:6).
There will be glory and honor and peace to everyone who does good (2:10).
The doers of the Law will be justified (2:13).
The righteousness of God through faith in Jesus is for all those who believe (3:21).
The one who believes in Him, his faith is credited to him as righteousness (4:6).
We have peace with God through Jesus (5:1).
Tribulation brings about perseverance, perseverance, character, character, hope (5:3).
The love of God is poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit (5:5).
Christ died for the ungodly, while we were still sinners (5:6).
We shall be saved from the wrath of God through Christ (5:9).
We can be united with Him in His death and in His life (6:5).
Sin does not have to master over you, for you are under grace (6:14).
Though we deserve death, the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ (6:23).
We can serve in the newness of the Spirit and not in the the oldness of the letter (7:6).
There is now no condemnation for those who are in Jesus (8:1).
The mind set on the flesh is death, but the mind set on the Spirit is life and peace (8:6).
He who raised Jesus from the dead will give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit (8:11).
We are not under obligation to the flesh (8:12).
We have received a spirit of adoption as sons (8:15).
The sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed to us (8:18).
The Spirit helps our weakness (8:26).
God causes all things to work together for good to those who love Him (8:28).
Nothing, nothing, nothing will separate us from the love of Christ (8:35).
In all things we overwhelmingly conquer through Him (8:37).
He loves us (8:37).
It all doesn't depend upon us, bot on God who has mercy (9:16).
Those who were not His people shall be called Sons of the Living God (9:26).
The gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable (11:29).
We are one body in Christ (12:5).
God will repay (12:19).
The authorities which exist are established by God (13:1).
Through perseverance and the encouragement of the Word we might have hope (15:4).
Christ accepted us to the glory of God (15:7).
There is power in the Spirit (15:19).
The God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet (16:20).
He is able (16:25).
I am SO fully assured that what He has promised, He is able to perform...which makes this new year just drip with hope!
16 January 2011
friends!
Yesterday, Abel turned 50 and Kerline (Maxi's wife) turned 34, so we had a great afternoon visiting and celebrating these two friendships. Birthday's are just not that big of a deal in Haiti. In fact, when we entered Kerline's singing "Happy Birthday", half her family said, "Today is your birthday?" Nonetheless, we took them both cupcakes and sang for them and talked about some our favorite things about them both, which prompted their families to do the same thing and we ended up having a really special time at both houses.
This week ahead is a BIG week with lots of meetings, students moving back in, financial registration, a slew of marketing projects, several new students for orientation, and new classes to prepare for.
22 November 2010
His beautiful plan for an ugly world
Paul's wife, Sarah, and the baby are doing well, Paul is happy to have mom and baby safe...I know they were nervous about having a baby in such a time as this! Luke was back from his honeymoon today, too, and it seems that in the midst of struggle, life, and it's many joys, continue.
It might seem a bit random, but John and Dorothy gave me a rack of ribs for my birthday flown in from Florida, a rare and beautiful gift :) Matt fixed them for us, with rolls, green been casserole and cranberry, and a cake. We all had a lovely dinner together, making 28 feel a bit less depressing. Lily loves birthday's SO much, and was thrilled to have candles to blow out and gifts to open :) Thank you all for your cards, gifts, emails and prayers!
One of our third year students, Civil, gave "Pastor Matt" a letter today, not asking for anything, just reminding us of his prayers and thanking us for being here....as rare and beautiful a gift as those ribs!
"Thank you for everything God put in your heart to do for me. God said to me to pray for you and your family and for your responsibility. I thank God because through the blood of Jesus Christ God put us together. I ask God to blessing your family because you leave the very best country, America, and you come to live in the very worst country, Haiti."
For some reason it always breaks my heart to hear Haitians acknowledge that most of the world considers Haiti one of "the very worst" countries. I hate when these dear brothers and sisters acknowledge that they KNOW things are terrible. It's much easier when we all talk about the things we love. At the end of the day, I continue to claim Haiti as being one of the best places in the world.
And there is only one reason.
Anyone with two eyes can acknowledge that the roads, the buildings, the schools, the health care, the politics....just a mess, most of it seemingly beyond repair, most of it seemingly with no hope and no answers. I don't KNOW what to say about cholera, about the government, about the UN, about the instability, about the way things are going, about the earthquake, the tents, the orphans, the financial aid, the poverty, the corruption.
There may be no Thanksgiving dinner. No where to safely go on your birthday. No movie theaters, no malls, no stores, no ice cream, no air conditioning. We might get cholera, or whatever comes next. Or get locked in again. Or have another earthquake, hurricane or drought. The government might always be a mess, there might always be poverty and corruption and instability.
But I have spent much of life these past years with Civil. With Junior. Lucner. With Paul. Dear and normal moments with Gertha. Enick. Abel. Maxi. Pehpay. The young girl with the amputated leg in Port. I have seen faith that crumpled me, miracles that have changed me, kindness that astounded me, and a TRUE hope in THE True Hope that I would not have dreamed of here on earth.
And I saw it all in Haiti. I want to be like Christ like these.
If I didn't know Him, I guess Haiti would hold nothing of value for me. But because I DO, and because I have so frequently and beautifully met Him here through His people, I might just always claim Haiti as being one of the best places in the world.
Little Evangela, coming into the world in a time of sickness, a time of devastation, a time of fear in "the worst" place. Easy to think, "Ah, what a shame." But man, do I thank the Lord that He sent Little Jesus into the dark world in the time of sickness, devastation and fear, smack into a stinking manger leading to the worst death.
What great transformation and unparalleled beauty comes with the fact that
I,
and you,
and HE,
and Evangela,
were sent to a dying, ugly world in a dying, ugly day to help transform that which was HIDEOUS, the WORST...separation, death and sin, into something BREATHTAKING, the BEST...reconciliation, life and holiness.
Brothers and sisters, let's keep taking up His cross with an EXPECTATION to be sent into lostness, ugliness and disease, EXPECTING to lose our lives, so that we take on more of His.
28 September 2010
lots of beautiful feet
It was a 3rd year evangelistic outing to "Of the Mangoes"
Please be praying! While everything has happened quite rapidly these last days, today marks the beginning of a long and difficult journey of bringing transformation and redemption and new life to an entire community that has been dead, and celebrated it, for a LONG TIME. "Of the Mangoes" is deeply rooted in Satan and lostness, and planting the Gospel in this dry and thirsty land will be hard work. His work. We covet your prayers.
And now it's time for them to go to Jackson, Mississippi for their mandatory 2 weeks residency...and Emmaus, who is working to keep food on the table (literally :) and pay the staff and run the generator, currently has NO money in their continued education account.
19 September 2010
we've got power...and GOOD news
29 April 2010
the important question when standing alone...
“If I EVER complain again,” Paul told his wife after joining Matt and some of the students Wednesday for evangelism, “Just SHOOT me.”
After visiting a few families, a few houses, one of which being Pehpay’s, he was humbled to the core by the impoverished state of daily life for most Haitians. No matter how many muddy floor shanties I enter, I am still frequently stabbed with the unmistakable knowledge that people live here. EVERYDAY. THESE people.
There is just no explaining why I wake up in a comparatively ginormous house with tiled floors and screens in the windows and fans whirling overhead and a fridge full of food and a door, a real door, guarding my family….and a woman my exact age, Angeline, with a little boy one month older than Lily wakes up in a crumbling mud thatched hut after sleeping on a dirty mat and wondering what and if they will eat today.
What I do know is that that is not the most important question. And the longer we’re here, the more we realize that. Full fridge, empty stomach…same real problem, same real solution.
“It DOESN’T MATTER,” Belony shared over and over again today as we went house to house in the scorching sun, “if your mom was a Christian! I don’t CARE if you go to church every single day. Doesn’t matter if you don’t think you’ve sinned as bad as the other person. Doesn’t matter how good you do.”
“When He returns, or when you die, you, by yourself, will have to stand before Him, and He will say, ‘What did you do with the life I gave you? How did you live? Who did you serve? Do I know you?’ and you will have to tell Him what you did with what He gave you. You will have to tell Him, ‘I was Yours!’ or ‘I did not choose the salvation I was offered by Jesus Christ.’ Are you His? Will He take you up, or cast you aside?”
Talk about putting things into perspective! Every time Belony preaches the Word or speaks about the Lord, my heart is being touched as well.
What I’m doing with what He’s given me, hmmm.
It is beautiful work, telling people what He has offered them in Jesus…salvation and freedom from their sins, from themselves…abundant life…new life…a hope and a future. I get genuinely excited, overjoyed and overwhelmed just sharing salvation with each person...because it is something I have experienced! AM experiencing!
THIS is the good stuff, I kept thinking as we walked. There are many important things to do here, lots of kingdom work, lots of discipleship, lots of administration and paperwork and meetings and things that must be done, that should be done. But it is these hours of walking with my brothers and sharing with The Ones For Whom He Died that are the most sweet. As different as He has made us all, He put in us EACH a call to share the Gospel, to preach His word in His world, and fulfilling that call resonates deeply as "RIGHT" despite all the reasons that it is NOT fun or easy.
It is HARD work, telling people who are so lost! Hard-headed….angry….quick to fight...living in total darkness…unkind…stubborn….proud people (people like ME, without Him!).
We talked to a LOT of people today. It was SO HOT that most every yard had people just sitting, a bit glassy-eyed in the noonday sun. We talked to a bunch of people in the first three or four houses. Lots of people wanted to fight about Christ and truth and Voodoo, and since we don’t see a Biblical model of Christ fighting people to believe in Him, we just shared salvation and love and moved on.
But the best place today, by FAR, was my first time evangelizing in a voodoo temple. I saw the temple approaching, but thought (I have no idea why) that we would pass over. Belony is NOT the type to pass someone over. We headed right in, and Belony, trying to warn me a bit, whispered, “THIS IS A VOODOO TEMPLE” as if I might not notice.
Just like Noah’s temple down the road, this one had mirrors and bottles and talismans hanging everywhere and flags in all the trees. But the more unique characteristic was all the chickens. Every three feet or so, filling almost the whole yard, chickens were tied…Each chicken with a small string from their foot to a stake. These were NOT scrawny Haitian chickens, but big, beautiful chickens, all tied to their poles.
Sacrifices. All for sale for different sacrifices. I almost laughed to myself, thinking, “Really? Chickens? Put your life in the hands of the God of the Universe or in…chickens? This is the hope of change and a better life that Voodoo has to offer?”
In the middle of them, the witchdoctor laid, sprawled out on a straw mat, lethargic in the sweltering heat of the day. He was a surprisingly young man, thin and in a red t-shirt. His eyes were clear, his mind quick, and the ‘closed’ look I had seen in the faces of many others was not there. He was the only person today that offered us a seat. The first one that got up to greet us. He listened to Belo for a minute or two, and then politely interjected.
“You are not the first Christians to come here. I know what you are saying, and I know it to be true. I KNOW that this way is not the way. God knows all the terrible things I do, even those that you do not know, and He knows they are wrong. I know they are wrong. I don’t want to do this, and I know it is not the true way. I have heard about Jesus many times now, and I want Him and want to leave this life.”
Rachelle joined the students this past Wednesday and was able to meet Pehpay...
Everyone in the area that follows this man was SOLD on the lies that he teaches…except for him! He knows the god he has served his whole life WELL, and knows him to be of no comparison with the Lord. He knows the slavery he sells better than anyone…PLEASE keep praying for the witchdoctors. They continue to be the ones that seem to have the best grasp on the truth...what a following Christ would have if these influential men gave Him their lives and work.
“Are you ready to make that choice?” Belo said, excited.
“Almost.” The young boko said.
“You see this house, this work, my things, my food. This work is how I have this, and I’m not in a place yet to leave it.”
We talked a little bit longer, and he promised that he will be making the decision to leave Satan and follow Christ before the end of 2010.
“You never know if you will have the opportunity to change after right now,” Belony warned.
“I know,” he said again sadly. “But I can’t leave yet. What would I do? I would most definitely become poor, lose everything, become hungry.”
How difficult it is for the rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven, I thought.
“Yes,” Belo agreed. “Probably so. Could I promise you something? You will NOT be sorry. Not for a moment.”
I thought back through my life, and though I have never been hungry, there have been many incredibly difficult moments, many valleys, many tears.
How many times has following the Lord probably made you look foolish, stupid and ridiculous to the world? (Remember the guy on the plane into Haiti that verbally ripped Matt to pieces about the stupidity of bringing a one-month old Lily to Haiti?)
There are dozens of times that we all could have done much better, in the eyes of the world, to follow a different path, an American path, a financial path, an easy path, a me path, a popular path, right?
It was then that I realized that Belo was right. I’ve never been sorry I made Him my Lord, or that I took up that cross. I have never been sorry, even on the hardest, loneliest, and hottest days, that following Him has led us a world away from home. As much as I have ever complained to the Lord about hardships, I have never wished I had chosen a path other than His.
Three hours of work, and no one accepted Jesus as their Path today.
But a lot of people heard that He has one for them. And until everyone has heard, we must stay on that dry and dusty road, family!