
As you may be seeing, reports from the south are bad. The damage in many places is being compared to the earthquake of 2010. Homes have been washed away. Roofs have been torn off. Roads and bridges have been washed away. STEP has alumni serving in the south and preliminary reports from them show extensive damage.
Additionally, there is significant damage in the north where our organization here in Haiti, the UEBH, has many churches. We have a group traveling there as I write this and we should have info back from them soon.

Compounding the issue is that many of the hardest hit areas are now only accessible by plane or boat. Our friends at Mission Aviation Fellowship are flying supplies into the hardest hit areas and other crews are working to open the roads up.
Many have asked us “Where do we give?”
Crossworld has set up a Haiti Relief Account so we can have funds to begin helping our UEBH churches and our STEP alumni get back on their feet. If you are interested in giving to this effort, Becca and I would love for you to give there.
Thanks for your partnership as we serve our brothers and sisters here in Haiti, we’re so grateful for the opportunity to serve here.
Watch the video below to see an update from our Haitian leadership here on the effects of this storm. We shot this yesterday on the STEP campus.


As you probably know, Hurricane Matthew has made a turn to the north and is heading our direction. The last update I saw said the eye will pass over the western part of the country on the southern peninsula and the effects of the hurricane will extend here to Port-au-Prince as well. There is a good chance that this storm will result in a significant loss of life and damage to property. As a developing nation, the country is just not equipped to handle this stuff.
So when I saw him sitting on the step, I went and sat with him catch up. He showed me the book he was flipping through and explained that a group of women passed by moments before and gave it to him. I looked to our left and could see a group of women from a local church, slowly making their way up the hill. As I flipped through the book, I realized it was a gospel tract.










