I don’t get it! Every spring Rena and I dedicate ourselves to decluttering. We claw through our closets and cull what we don’t want anymore. Then we feature all this flotsam in our annual MacGillivray family yard sale or donate it to a local thrift store. So how is that every spring we have more stuff to sell and donate? Can you relate?
This year what if we spring clean FOR OTHERS? Here are three ways you can do that for our friends in Haiti this spring:
1. Part with your prom dresses. Couples in Haiti often wait to get married because they lack nice clothes for the wedding and money to buy food for guests. Haitian pastors
have a creative solution to this problem. They organize weddings for several couples at a time and help them with the cost of wedding clothes and food. Brilliant!
We can help couples celebrate their wedding with joy. You may have a little used prom dress (or two) or maybe a wedding dress that you could donate. All sizes needed. Pastor Isaiah and his wife, Celina, have a good plan for coordinating this effort in northeastern Haiti. On our end, either drop off or ship your prom or wedding dress to PPI, and we’ll get it to Haiti in short order.
2. Donate your drum kick to a Haitian church. This one’s a little more specialized. If you or your church recently upgraded your drum kick, consider donating your good used kick to a Haitian church.
Again, drop it off to us and ship it. Our address is Partnership of Pastors International, 465 Mayflower Drive, Saginaw, MI 48638. Also, we’ll give you a “gift in kind” receipt for all items donated.
3. Turn over your couch cushions for a Bible college roof. Pastor Jasmin, one of our key team members, launched a Bible college in northeast Haiti about five years ago. The
Evangelical Theological Institute of Haiti (ITEPHA) is the only college of its kind in northeastern Haiti, and it’s doing well!
Jasmin purchased land three years ago and is building what will serve as a church, elementary school and Bible college. Earlier this year, the Haitian government told Jasmin that he needs to finish the building in 2025 to retain the recognized status of the college. After some negotiation, the government agreed that completing the roof would satisfy their requirements for this year. Take a video tour of the future Bible college building HERE.
Can you help Pastor Jasmin put a roof on the Bible college? Consider contributing the proceeds of your yard sale or Marketplace transactions. Or you could just make a special donation to PPI and note that it’s for the “Bible College roof.” DONATE HERE
Let us know if you have questions HERE.
Giving to our brothers and sisters in Haiti can give us purpose and joy. Happy spring cleaning!


We tell pastors that making disciples is Job One for the church and that church leaders must exemplify disciple-making as well as teach it. Modie’s pastor did that. He opened his heart and his home to a boy from the streets. He loved him, won him to Christ and discipled him over many years. That boy was Modie. God changed his life and now he loves Jesus and serves faithfully in His mission – a perfect picture of what we teach church leaders in Course 3. May God use this course to inspire and equip church leaders to devote themselves to making disciples in Haiti!
How uncomfortable am I willing to get to be part of Jesus’ mission?
How uncomfortable am I willing to get to be part of Jesus’ mission? The question returned. I thought of Paul’s words in 2 Corinthians 4:17-18: “For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all.” What Paul calls light-weight problems would level most of us. A few verses earlier, he says he is “hard-pressed . . . perplexed . . . persecuted and struck down.” Later in this letter, he tells us:
How could Paul call these high pressure even life-threatening situations “light and momentary troubles”? He doesn’t believe for a moment that he’s paying for his sins through hardships, nor is he bragging about his latest episode of suffering for Jesus. He only shares these hardships to combat the super-spirituality of false teachers unwilling to get uncomfortable for the mission of Christ. 
We exited the plane, helped unload our 900 lbs of Bibles and training materials, then scanned the crowd. Which one is Pastor François, our host pastor, and where’s the van we reserved? Both Isaiah and Jasmin, key members of our Haitian ministry team, were on their phones. They have it under control. Within minutes, an older, distinguished looking man and two younger men walked toward us smiling. The two younger men looked familiar to me. Where had I seen them before?
The two younger men stood by patiently. We had met but hardly spoken to them. As we organized our materials and luggage, they talked more to me. I was sweating. “It feels hotter than usual for December,” I thought. They told me they were pastors in Hinche. “Do you remember us?” they asked me. I told them I remembered their faces and asked if they had taken a PPI course in the past. They had attended PPI training a few years before in northern Haiti. They had another question for me: “Do you remember that we asked you to come to Hinche to train many pastors in our city?”
I stopped in my tracks and wiped the sweat from my face. I was reminded again that our God works through the faithful, fervent prayers of His children. “Thank you for praying for us so faithfully,” I told them. “The Lord is answering your prayers.” And He certainly did! Course 1 in Hinche overflowed with church leaders, eager to learn and grateful for the training. During our recognition time on the last day, pastors expressed how much they needed and appreciated PPI training and the Thompson Bibles. They gave our team a certificate of appreciation (pictured) and asked when we could return to offer our other courses. We plan to return to Hinche and Pignon in late April.
In October, we introduced Spread the Word 2024 and challenged all of you to help us fund the purchase of 2,024 Creole Bibles by the end of the year. Friends of PPI put up $20,000 to match dollar for dollar all donations given in November and December.