The Vision
The vision of Cornerstone is one of a diverse community of Christian believers cooperating to provide medical care and a constant, present, on-going hearing of the gospel of Jesus Christ to the people of the north coast of Honduras. In order to accomplish this, a tertiary care referral hospital is the structural hub of various services and outreaches including public health & community development, chaplaincy, pastoral/Christian leadership & discipleship training, home health care outreach, and ministry through local schools. We pray that the hospital and community surrounding it would be a "city set on a hill that cannot be hidden" and that we would not only meet physical needs, but that the meeting of those needs would serve as an in-roads into peoples' lives. It is our goal that the people who would come to the hospital for medical care, the people who would find employment related to the hospital, and the people who would benefit from other connected services would not only hear the gospel preached, but also see it lived-out in the lives of the Christian workers.
The need in this part of Latin America is concrete, ubiquitous, and “with you always.” Honduras is considered “the poorest nation on the mainland of the Americas” with over half the people living below the poverty line and an unemployment rate above 28%. About the size of Tennessee, Honduras has a population of 6,560,600. The average per capita income is $660 per year, but the lives of the people in the remote countryside, where we are ministering, fall far below the statistical averages for the country as a whole. Malnutrition, intestinal parasites, impure water & improper sewage disposal, along with inadequate housing, are major causes of health problems. Diseases such as malaria, dengue fever, and TB are not uncommon, and HIV disease in Honduras is “the elephant in the room,” a present and quietly growing crisis.
Reaching the nearest public hospital often requires nearly a day of travel for
many of the people in our region even with the best of weather conditions and
is often simply inaccessible during the rainy season. Even if one reaches that
hospital, chronic shortages of personnel and supplies make the effort a gamble,
and “extra” expenses such as food, lodging, medicines, and materials
make this care prohibitive for most of our people. From a physical perspective
it boils down to this: with the simple “wear and tear” diseases
of life, Hondurans in the countryside are likely to suffer without relief. From
an injury, such as a broken arm or burn, they are likely to be crippled. From
a simple emergency, such as appendicitis, an obstetric complication, or a serious
trauma, they are likely to die.