Youth from small towns discover God while building homes
Teens work side-by-side. |
Students
in church youth groups in Davenport, Reardan and Wilbur may compete in
school sports but, working through ecumenical community groups, they
recruited 45 youth in 2004 to build a house in Mexico. Plans are
underway for the 2005 trip.
The experience has changed participants’ lives and their communities’ culture.
In organizing such mission trips for 15 years, the Rev. Ted Broadway of
the Presbyterian Church in Davenport has found short-term mission
experiences “click” into place an understanding of the power of living
faith.
“They expose us to God without cultural trappings, helping us see God
at work in other cultures and giving us experiences of what it means to
serve,” he said.
It’s both at home and abroad
Aware there is “poverty in our own backyard” as well as abroad, he
believes response is not an either at home or abroad matter. It’s
a both/and matter.
Churches and youth can express caring in their own communities and
around the world. The accessibility of Mexico makes it popular.
Davenport youth help in Mexico. |
Ted
works with Amor Ministries in San Diego. Year-round, Amor
arranges for mission teams to build 11- by 22-foot, two-room homes in
the outskirts of Baja, south of San Diego; Ciudad south of El Paso, and
Puerto Penasco, south of Lukeville, Ariz.
Participants in two-week trips—including travel and orientation—learn
about hope in the form of a concrete floor, four walls and a roof, as
well as in the exchange of “giving more than you can and getting more
than you can,” part of the Amor slogan. Building a house in a week
without power tools or skilled labor, they feel a sense of
accomplishment.
‘Amor’ means love
Amor—“love” in Spanish—works with Mexican churches to create
cross-cultural understanding and immersion experiences to help people
understand poverty while building homes.
Two Mexican boys the teens met. |
The
program is an outreach to families. They do not need to be saved
or attend church to receive a home, Ted said, believing that “the
faith-based love of builders who are Christian speaks clearly” to them.
Having grown up in different states, the Middle East and Europe as his
father moved in the Army, Ted values international experiences.
After high school in Southern California, he earned a bachelor’s degree
in religious studies at the University of California in Santa Barbara
and a master’s of divinity at Fuller Seminary in Pasadena.
During 13 years of ministry in Southern Oregon, he connected with Amor. He has been at Davenport nearly three years.
The church, which called him to “shake up” the congregation, now draws
more than 80 at worship, rather than 30. More than numbers, Ted
finds “the Spirit is moving, and people are changing.”
When he first came to Davenport, he saw a “teachable moment.” A
poster on one wall said, “If you want to get close to the Lord, give to
missions.” He changed it to: “Go on missions.”
At first the idea of a youth trip seemed intimidating, but high school
youth were responsive in 2003. In 2004, Reardan and Wilbur church
youth joined the team, and Heather Drehobl, former youth leader at
Davenport and now youth minister at Community Presbyterian Church in
Post Falls, is recruiting youth from there for the 2005 trip.
Youth return changed
Girls assist with project. |
Ted described changes in youth from the trips:
• Many become Christians—those in the church and friends who go.
• Many begin to own and deepen their faith—praying, reading Scripture and attending worship.
• Many feel more grateful for what they have and more aware of the
brothers and sisters in the church around the world. That changes
their outlook about the world.
• Through service, fulfillment comes in different degrees to different people.
• Youth become more sensitive to issues of poverty and race.
• Some want to study Spanish.
• Trips can change the school culture, increasing appreciation of the value of education and improving students’ work ethic.
• Some have gone on to do short-term mission experiences or enter ministry.
Davenport youth raised $625 each last year by “selling stock” in the
trip. When they returned, they held a “shareholders dinner” with
a slide presentation and testimonies.
Reardan youth prepared
Organizers of Reardan First Presbyterian Church’s Mexico mission trip
last summer applied the local school sports approach of requiring
participants’ to attend training and fund raising regularly.
“If a volleyball coach can say that anyone who misses a practice cannot
play, we decided we could require attendance,” said Lori Ward, who
helped with preparations but did not go. Two of her children did
go.
“Finding time for church youth activities has been hard since schools
stopped holding Wednesday afternoons and evenings free for church
activities. After harvest, sports consume 20 hours a week,” she
said.
One group brings cohesion
To build on the cohesion among youth, who are all friends at school,
Reardan has a community youth group for the Presbyterians, Lutherans,
Methodists and Catholics.
The Presbyterian pastor, the Rev. Bill Ward, said changes in priorities
are part of the “angst” of small community churches, which are no
longer the pillars of the small community social culture.
Schools now have that role.
He believes that, because the church set expectations for participants,
they have been especially animated and articulate about their
experience. At a fall Friday Youth Prayer Breakfast, those who
went to Mexico described their experiences with ease.
The church and the community raised funds for more than two years to
send 11 youth and adults along with 14 from Davenport, 11 from the
Wilbur area as part of a group of 103.
For Reardan youth, whose previous mission trips were to lead vacation
Bible schools in Washtuchna and other communities, this was their first
experience abroad.
“They returned surprised that people who had so little could be so happy,” said Lori.
In Mexico, the group drove past empty condo developments in Tijuana.
After the North America Free Trade Agreement, companies built these
condos, expecting to hire 25 million people. More came, but after
Sept. 11, there were fewer jobs.
Many Mexican families spent all they had to go there, so they now live
in shacks, cars and drainage pipes. One family of seven lived in
a tent patched with duct tape, she said.
The team stayed in a tent city.
Groups built nine homes
Supervised by adults, groups of 12 youth built each unit. The
group built nine dwellings. Some Mexican families built with the
teens, and some were working. A mother of seven stayed at home with her
four pre-school children, Lori reported.
Amor purchases the land, prepares it and cedes it to families. Part of
the funds youth raise provides materials. Youth pour a concrete
floor, put up wood frames, cover chicken wire with a stucco exterior
and spread tar on the roof, Lori explained.
Homeowner receives keys to home teens built. |
When
the Reardan group passed the key to the mother of seven, she cried as
she repeatedly opened and closed the door with the keys.
On Sunday after church, families shared their limited food and embraced the youth.
Students who knew Spanish used it, but many Mexicans under 30 speak English fluently.
The Reardan group now knows teens from neighboring communities and
southern Oregon and experienced the empowerment of being in a large
group.
Wilbur youth empowered
Nine youth and two adults from Community Presbyterian in Wilbur and
nearby churches and communities found the Amor experience empowering,
said Becky Sheffels, youth leader and mother of one participant.
“My son, Corbin, had a strong faith before going. Putting his
faith into action by building with his hands, he came back charged with
educating and helping serve others,” she said.
“We interacted with Mexicans, seeing people with amazing joy even
though they had little of what we consider basic necessities,” said
Becky.
In worship, Americans found they knew many of the songs the Mexican Christians sang.
“We realize that we serve the same God although we live in different
cultures,” she said. “We go on a mission trip to help people and
our lives are changed by the people and by God.”
They shared with their church and community a report in slides, music and personal stories.
“Youth are eager to reach out to others. They realize they can do
something here, too. They now see past themselves,” said Becky,
who plans to go again with her son and husband. She hopes the
Wilbur group for 2005 will be 12.
The Wilbur team included a student from Creston, two from the Catholic
Church, two from the Lutheran Church and four from the Presbyterian
Church. All are together in the community youth group.
While church youth activities compete with school sports in Wilbur,
there are no games Wednesday evenings, so from a third to half of 80
students at the high school attend each week.
“We offer a biblical message tied to everyday life. We open and
end with prayer. We have ice-breaking, relationship-building
activities and discussion,” Becky said.
One annual project is to buy gloves, hats, toothbrushes, shampoo and
other items to make 20 boxes for homeless teens at Crosswalk in
Spokane. The group carols and gives cards to the elderly, gives
cookies to shut-ins, goes bowling and visits the local nursing home.
Becky said it takes time for teens to move from the understanding that God loves them to putting their faith into action.
More youth will join 2005 trip
For 2005, students are raising $675 each to participate.
Ted said that the Davenport group could be as large as 30, plus 12 from
Reardan, 12 from Wilbur, 16 from Post Falls and 10 from Sunset
Presbyterian Church in Portland.
They will again join First Presbyterian Church of Jacksonville,
Ore. He expects the total number to be about 175, and the total
budget to be about $100,000.
This summer’s team, which will be in Mexico six of their eight-day
trip, will seek to build at least 12 houses. This year, area
participants will fly to San Diego.
“Again, we expect to see lives changed—Mexican lives and our own,” said Ted.
For information, call 725-1802, 796-2142 or 647-5402.
By Mary Stamp, Fig Tree editor
-Copyright © March 2005