Posts filed under 'short-term missions'

Taste and See - SMP 2008

Jordan in Eastern Europe 

Open your mouth and taste, open your eyes and see—
         how good God is. 
Blessed are you who run to him.    Psalm 34:8

Want to taste and see how God is working around the world this summer?  Apply for SMP 2008 by February 15.  You could learn, serve, and grow alongside your sisters and brothers in Christ in places like Mali and Guatemala (and elsewhere!). 

Jordan (above), who tasted and saw God’s goodness in Eastern Europe last summer, wrote this about his experience:

It is with great joy that I write to you to tell you of the power that is at work in God’s Kingdom, a power that surpasses our understanding. We went out as a small group of 4 to proclaim the gospel to both young and old in Ukraine, Romania and Hungary. Sent out with the power of the Holy Spirit, uplifted by the prayers and support of our families and friends we proclaimed God’s love, mercy and saving grace to more than a hundred teenagers in six different one-week camps. This message was also heard by countless others whom we didn’t even realize were listening. It is a message that continues to spread and one day will be resound around the globe. I feel privileged that God chose me to take part in this summer ministry and witness his power in amazing ways.

Do you want to witness God’s power this summer?  Apply today!


Add comment January 24, 2008

has hollywood discovered its conscience?

I read a very interesting article with this title in Collide magazine. It talks briefly about a couple of major films that came out: Blood Diamond (Dec 2006) and Amazing Grace (Feb 2007).  The article, from Collide Magazine’s inauguaral issue Sep/Oct 2007 written by Stephen Presley, indicates that these films are part of a growing trend in social justice issues being presented in films.  These hollywood releases have shown us the diamond trade, slave trade, and the sex trade with each film crying out for justice.  The author ponders: ”one wonders if Hollywood has discovered its conscience.”

Furthermore, the article indicates that the cry doesn’t end when the credits appear, on the contrary.  Many production companies partner with non-profit organizations to act on their outcry.  The article points the reader to the Blood Diamond and Amazing Grace websites so we can see for ourselves.

Collide Magazine’s tagline is “where media and the church converge.”  We are the church, and we can and should join those already acting on their outrage at these injustices.  The article offers a few suggestions (for churches, but I think they apply to individuals too):

  • Be aware of new releases that speak to issues of social justice
  • Host a screening of a film at your church (or home, or group, or wherever!)
  • Partner with organizations that are currently involved in the specific issue addressed by a film (hey, that might be us!)
  • Look around your own community at how you can build bridges to the ‘poor and needy’
  • Offer mission trips that are aimed at a particular need (hey, we do that!)
  • Host a Bible study on an issue that a movie addresses

1 comment January 16, 2008

Finally–a Canadian post! (well, Canadian-Nicaraguan, eh?)

Here’s a perspective from Trish DeJong, one of our Missions Resource Consultants, on short-term missions. Enjoy!

               This past winter,  I ventured into unchartered and mysterious territory in my tenure with World Missions – I went overseas with a short term missions team!
In joining a group from my church (Faith CRC in Burlington, ON), the experience as a “team participant” instead of “a staffer” was significantly different. First of all, most of the participants only knew a few other team members. Getting to know one another and pray for each other has been a blessing that continues well beyond the plane ride home. Usually I head to the field for a specific purpose – meetings or training that keep me indoors a good part of the day. In Nicaragua we spent most of the day outdoors, working alongside Nicaraguan tradesmen, painting a village church, building latrines, and learning about the culture. When I led a small college / university group for a summer ministry in Kazakshtan (central Asia), I was responsible for our group’s health, welfare, and ministry activities. In Nicaragua I was just another team member. I must say it was strange, but refreshing!

 Trish DeJong with service-learning team in Nicaragua

                From the get go, our team’s name spoke loudly about our purpose and posture. We were a Service & Learning Team to Nicaragua’s Nehemiah Centre. Not a Work Team. Through our team’s orientation and preparation, we began to understand that our role in Nicaragua was not only to do, but also to learn - to join life’s journey with our Nicaraguan brothers and sisters. I found it fascinating to delve into Nicaraguan politics and geography; to hear the country’s story and then pile into bus for downtown Managua to see the sites where it all happened. I gained a deeper appreciation of the complexities of missions and what it means to do wholistic, transformational ministry.

             Our team’s view of the role of missionaries and their typical day also shifted significantly. No longer were Kim & Steve Holtrop just magnets on our refrigerators. They became real people to us: raising a young family, trying to keep a healthy balance between work and family, and living out God’s call to strengthen and transform communities in Nicaragua and North American church teams.

                 Our team experienced the blessing of team devotions every night, of naming and discussing some difficult things we saw and experienced, of sharing the highs and lows of our day, and laughing till our sides hurt as we traveled for an hour down an 11 kilometer road.

                    Our team also served as a tangible expression of our church’s ongoing commitment to the Nehemiah Centre. Now there are 24 people in our church, including council members and ministry leaders, who have had a first hand look into the ministry that is happening on our behalf. Next year our youth will be making the trek, Lord willing. In the future we hope to receive a team from the Nehemiah Centre to our own local community.

                    Through this experience, our team grasped that it’s not so much the “doing” but the “being together” that builds up who we are as the Body of Christ. This doesn’t come easy to our cultural heritage. But in taking intentional time to listen, to work alongside, to break bread with, and just “be”, our team has grown closer to the Lord, our missionaries, each other, and our Family in Nicaragua. What a blessing!

Trish DeJong, Missions Resource Consultant

below: Trish in a colder time and place!

Trish DeJong in a colder time and place

BONUS: Read about another short-term participant’s experience here.


Add comment June 14, 2007

Kingdom preview

                This past Sunday, at our SMP commissioning service, I think I saw God’s kingdom come. In the small, mostly African-American congregation of Coit Community Church, I watched my beautiful Latina sister sing to God (in both English and Spanish) of her willingness to go wherever God asked her to go . . . she was there at the service with her other teammates who hail from around the US and Canada, not to mention the grandbaby of former CRWM missionaries to Bangladesh (Albert and Mindy Hamstra), who is herself fresh to us from Uganda. It was beautiful, and it only made me hungry for more . . .

praying for the SMP orientees

 

                At the CRCNA’s 150th Anniversary Service that afternoon, we prayed prayers of thanksgiving, but we also prayed prayers of confession and repentance for the ways that we have practiced, as Roy Berkenbosch said, “the well-rehearsed arts of exclusion that have kept people away from the table.” I truly believe that the way to keep our denomination alive (and I say “our” denomination, even though I am myself an outsider) is to continue in this posture of repentance and openness, mindful of our past mistakes, and showing a willingness to do the hard work of becoming a truly multicultural people of God.

  –Lorraine Woodward, Recruitment/Training Assistant

the commissioning litany on the screen at Coit Community Church


Add comment June 11, 2007


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