el shaddai ministries international,
inc. HAITI RELEIF UPDATE AND
PRAYER REQUEST
DouDou is out of the hospital. Thanks for
your prayers. When we talked with him today he said he was
ready to return to work. We told him to go home and REST. We
know DouDou doesn't know the meaning of the word but pray that
he will be wise and do just that.
The medical team was unable to go to Gonaives because the
helicopter had mechanical problems. We will meet the team in
the city of Mont-Huit. This is where they'll have to change
vehicle because the bridge is lopsided due to the flood waters
damaging one of the beams.
The flood waters have receded in the cities heading to Gonaives,
but not so for the said city. This is what it looks like as we
enter. The people try to "skip" the water as vehicles pass.
The 25 pastors who were waiting for the food
and clothing yesterday to be distributed.
The pastors receiving the food for their
community. Note the pastor in the far left. He walked through
miles of water to get there. You can see the water level on his
T-shirt. He almost lost his wife and children in the flood
waters. This pastor is living on the roof of another church and
there are 50 kids just in his community that are sick. He hopes
he can cross the deep water with the kids tomorrow.
The team met another pastor on Saturday who was literally
shaking, traumatized by the experience. Today, we learned that
he died.
MNA Mission To
North America
Through the cooperative prayers and efforts of the Presbyterian Church
in America, we strive to ignite a powerful church planting and
vitalization movement, one that impacts all of North America with the
Gospel of Jesus Christ and transforms the heart and face of the PCA
churches and presbyteries.
more partners
Reach the Haitian community in Miami, Florida — 90.7 percent of whom are unchurched.
Develop ten additional Haitian PCA churches in major cities and counties of the US that will become central in a multiplying movement throughout North America.
Solidify ownership of church planting expansion among Haitian PCA leaders, lay persons, and churches