๐ Slain missionaries mourned: Praying โGod will make a wayโ in Haiti ๐
'It's just a horrible, horrible, horrible thing'
By Bobby Ross Jr.
I can still see the joy on the faces of the Haitian people.
I traveled to the poor Caribbean nation in 2018 to report on Healing Hands International, a Christian humanitarian aid organization, drilling water wells.
As water gushed from a new well in one remote mountain village, a woman gleefully splashed the clear, flowing liquid on her face. Little boys and girls giggled as they cupped their hands under the spout, taking big gulps before filling plastic buckets to take home.

I witnessed a similar exuberant scene in a community near the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince.
In a country beset with challenges, I saw hope. So much hope. And so much promise.
But now?ย
Heavily armed gangs have overtaken Haiti. Fatally weak political institutions have collapsed. Kidnappings and homicides have surged, as noted by a United Nations report.
Just last week, a young missionary couple โย Davy Lloyd, 23; and his wife, Natalie Lloyd, 21 โย were killed in a gang ambush in Port-au-Prince.ย
They died along with Judes Montis, 47, a Haitian father of two who worked for more than 20 years with Oklahoma-based Missions in Haiti Inc. Davyโs parents, David and Alicia Lloyd, founded the faith-based organization in 2000.
โIt wasn't Haiti that killed our children, it was selfish evil men who only have evil purposes, they do not represent Haiti,โ a post on the organizationโs Facebook page declared Thursday. โHaiti continues to cry for help and prays the world doesn't continue to turn their backs on the terrible conditions that these wicked men are making a country live through. Continue to pray for God's deliverance.โ
As tears flow, Jason and Jennifer Carroll keep praying for the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere.
A decade ago, the couple moved to the developing island nation to work with Healing Hands, which is headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee, but funds clean water projects around the world.ย
The Carrolls quickly fell in love with the people and one boy in particular โย a newborn named Edyson whose mother had died in childbirth. They took in โEdy,โ now almost 10, and began efforts to adopt him. (Years later, theyโre still engaged in that arduous process.)

I met the family โย including two of their three biological children โ on my 2018 trip.
They returned home to Kentucky the next year.
โIt was just getting really bad,โ Jason said of the security situation. โJen and all the kids had to evacuate out by helicopter. So it was just getting too dangerous.โ
Jason served as Healing Handsโ water project coordinator in Haiti, where the nonprofit drilled 350 wells. Back home, he rebuilds municipal water filters. Jennifer works as a dental assistant.
Bowling Green, where the Carrolls attend Hillvue Heights Church, is roughly 1,500 miles โย and a world away โย from Port-au-Prince.
Still, news of the slayings of the Lloyds and Montis hit the couple hard.
โItโs just a horrible, horrible, horrible thing,โ Jennifer said in a telephone interview.ย
โI took Edy to school there four days a week,โ she said of Missions in Haitiโs Christian preschool, about 15 minutes from Healing Handsโ gated complex north of the capital.
Jennifer knew Davy Lloydโs parents and had met Montis. She describes David and Alicia Lloyd as โsweet, kind people who really had a heart for Haiti.โ
โI know they must be absolutely broken,โ she wrote on Facebook. โPlease pray for their family.โ
Jason told me: โItโs just really hard because weโve still got friends and family (of Edyโs) there. Itโs just really sad that the country is in such turmoil and chaos, and the gangs have taken over everything.โ
Despite the sadness, the Carrolls maintain their faith in God.
They pray that the situation in Haiti will improve, even as they work to help loved ones โย including Edyโs biological father and brothers โย leave the country. His older sister, Rogeline, 22, already is in the U.S.

Jennifer urges fellow people of faith to keep lifting up Haiti to the Lord.
โYes, thereโs a tremendous amount of gang violence and everything,โ she told me. โBut there are so many good, good, good Haitians that are just caught and just struggling daily to get food, get water, take care of their family, take care of their children.
โAnd we pray that someday our missionary friends who want to return can go back there,โ she added, โbecause so many of them really made a difference.โ
Jenniferโs voice choked with emotion as she spoke.
โI just hope and pray,โ she emphasized, โthat God will make a way.โ
Inside the Godbeat
Iโm a Wall Street Journal subscriber and fan of its high-quality journalism.
But Iโm perplexed by the newspaperโs latest move, shuttering its U.S. News regional bureaus.
This comes on the heels of the WSJ letting go Francis X. Rocca, its Vatican and global religion correspondent. Rocca was the paperโs last remaining Godbeat pro.
The final plug
I spent last weekend in Minneapolis.
I checked Target Field, home of the Minnesota Twins, off my bucket list. Read my new MLB ballpark rankings.
And I did some reporting, including a piece on the demand for church food ministries rising with grocery prices. Check it out.
Iโm headed on vacation next week, but look for Plug-in again in two weeks.
Happy Friday, everyone! Enjoy the weekend.
Bobby Ross Jr. writes the Weekend Plug-in column for Religion Unplugged and serves as editor-in-chief of The Christian Chronicle. A former religion writer for The Associated Press and The Oklahoman, Ross has reported from all 50 states and 18 nations. He has covered religion since 1999.