Click to Login or Sign Up

Baptist Message

"Helping Louisiana Baptists Impact the World For Christ"

Surprised (Cartoon: Church of the Covered Dish) Real talk (Cartoon: Fletch) Joyful heart (Cartoon: Joe McKeever)
  • John 3:16
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • Cartoons
    • Joe McKeever
    • Beyond the Ark
    • Church of the Covered Dish
    • Fletch
    • Preacher’s Kids
  • Contact
  • Louisiana
  • U.S. & Intl
  • Facts & Finds
  • Culture & Society
  • Editorial

Stephanie and Steven Smithson

Family of First Winnfield pastor stranded in Haiti as Hurricane Matthew roars ashore asks for prayer

October 4, 2016

By Message Staff

PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti – Hours after Hurricane Matthew made landfall in Haiti, the family of a Louisiana Baptist pastor stranded in the country was asking for prayers of safety for him and thousands of others in the path of the storm.

Steven Smithson, pastor of First Baptist Church in Winnfield, is in Haiti on a mission trip. His wife, Stephanie, posted on her Facebook page that he experienced strong winds earlier this morning, Oct. 4, but by 8 a.m. CST was seeing only rain. His flight out of the country is delayed indefinitely.

She said God is answering prayers for protection and peace.

“We are forever grateful,” she said. “Mudslides and third world housing will be the main cause in which lives are lost. Haiti needs our prayers. Steven needs to get home.

“But I want to say my fears are being set at ease because of your prayers,” she continued. “Thank you for you all for praying, please continue them.”

Hurricane Matthew made landfall near Les Anglais, Haiti, around 6 a.m. CST today. The Category 4 Hurricane was packing winds of 145 mph and is forecasted to dump up to 40 inches of rain in some areas, according to the National Hurricane Center.

The storm is expected to remain a powerful hurricane through Wednesday evening, Oct. 5, as it moves through the Bahamas.

Tropical storm or hurricane watches are likely for portions of the Florida peninsula and the Florida Keys later today. Some paths are projected to take the storm to the edge of Florida and up the east coast.

The storm comes six years after Haiti experienced magnitude 7.0 earthquake that left more than 230,000 people dead.

Comments

Editorial

Running the race

If you want to run the race of life successfully, then don’t look back. If you’ve ever run a race and looked over your shoulder to see what your competitor was doing, then you know that looking back can break your stride and ultimately cause you to lose. … Read More

Search

  • Trending
  • Recent
  • Must Read

Recent

Planned Parenthood under investigation from DOGE panel for misusing taxpayer dollars

Texas school district backtracks, will let student share Bible verses during non-instructional time

Christian falsely charged with blasphemy in Pakistan acquitted

Must Read

Foundation Executive Director
Jeffrey Steed to retire

Speaker Johnson to Calvary students:

Live to make an ‘impact’

FIRST PERSON: Silent Saturday

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme 2.1 On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in