Thursday, November 8, 2012

Haiti Mission Trip, Day 3: Build Us Back With Precious Stones

It is through tears that I write today as I listen to Know Hope Collective's "Build Us Back" and think back to where I was just a week ago -- halfway up a mountain in Jacmel, Haiti, looking down at one of the most beautiful sights I have ever seen.  In the photo above, you can see the wall of the new House of Abraham from the bottom of the very steep driveway.  Reaching the top and looking out from what will soon (by faith) be the completed house, you see this:


Mountains to the left and the green waters of the Caribbean to the right.  Photos don't even begin to do it justice.  It was here that we would labor for the next few days.

Let me back up a little and take you on an adventure that we experienced just to get to the work site.  As if the 45-minute drive through Jacmel traffic and up the mountain on the thin ledge of the back of a truck weren't adventure enough, there was the crossing of the river.  You couldn't see the edges of the road, and the water came up to about a foot below the bottom of the window.  Take a look at this video, featuring the raging river and co-starring the back of Pat "Mr. Benatar" Goodwin's head:



We found a crew of Haitian workers already hard at work and were assigned our task, mixing concrete and pouring the foundation of the second level of the house.  This is the house at the beginning of Wednesday morning:



Concrete didn't come from a mixing truck or even a mixer.  It came from mixing gravel, sand (which had to be sifted), bagged cement, and water.   This was hard work!

 (Dwayne and Fenel mixing concrete, with Gabe providing expert supervision, while the Haitian crew is able to concentrate on laying block for the outer walls)

 (Mark and Pat providing the expertise in pouring and floating concrete while the rest of us did the grunt work of bringing them concrete in buckets and -- thanks to a little ingenuity in ramp-building -- wheelbarrows)





(Pouring concrete to frame the front door and windows.  All carried in buckets down a steep hill and handed up to the workers pouring it.  We were definitely glad to call it a day after this!)

Playtime with Sidewalk Chalk


After a quick trip to the ocean to cool off and partially clean up, we returned to the House of Abraham, and the kids were ready to play!  We brought out the sidewalk chalk, and they quickly turned the driveway into an art gallery.





(Gabe enjoying a foot massage, compliments of Richardson)

Precious Stones

This was the day when our team really began to click as we worked together, made sure we were all getting plenty to drink and breaks as we needed them, and played together.  In the process we began to learn one another's stories.  Though I won't share them here, let me just say that God is still very much doing the work that He had planned even before the fall: redeeming broken man back to Himself.

I admired the native stone foundation of the new HoA all week.


Each of these stones individually is just a broken piece of rock.  Fit together, however, they add stunning beauty to an already-picturesque landscape.  I couldn't help but think about how Jesus is building his Kingdom in the same way, broken pieces joined together by His blood into a beautiful tapestry of the redeemed.

Consider the lyrics of "Build Us Back":

We’ve been crumbled, we’ve been crushed
City walls have turned to dust
Broken hands and blistered feet
We walk for miles to find relief

When the thief takes, when our hopes cave
You build us back
You build us back
When the earth shakes, when the world breaks
You build us back
You build us back

We are scared, we are poor
All our safety nets are torn
We’ve been humbled to our knees
From these ruins, we believe

Redeemer, redeem us
Restorer, restore us
Oh build us back
Though the mountains be shaken, the hills be removed
Your unfailing love remains
After all that’s been taken, Your promise, still sacred
You build us back with precious stones
It's Haiti's story.  It's our story as the body of Christ, the church.  
I was privileged to see some precious stones put together to form something beautiful in Haiti last week.  Here is a photo of those precious stones:


 Thanks for reading.

4theVoiceless,
Al

2 comments:

  1. TOTALLY STINKIN' AWESOME! Made me miss the river, the rough roads, the heat (almost), and the kids. Great job by a great team serving a marvelous God...

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  2. Thanks, Dusty. Marsha did a great job preparing Salisbury's team, and the rest of us just jumped right in. I can't wait to go back!

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