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Baylor Goes Worldwide With Multiple Missions Opportunities

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  • Baylor Goes Worldwide With Multiple Missions Opportunities

    BAYLOR GOES WORLDWIDE WITH MULTIPLE MISSIONS OPPORTUNITIES
    by Ashley Lintelman, student newswriter, (254) 710-6805

    Baylor University, TX
    http://www.baylor.edu/pr/news.php?action=story&am p;story=46399
    Aug 20 2007

    They have different majors, follow different career paths and come
    from different backgrounds. But Baylor University students are united
    by a commitment to missions and a desire to demonstrate God's love
    throughout the world. This year Baylor offered more than 10 extended
    mission trip opportunities, challenging approximately 125 students
    to use their classroom studies to serve others and reminding them of
    Baylor's mission - "to educate men and women for worldwide leadership
    and service by integrating academic excellence and Christian commitment
    within a caring community."

    Baylor students, faculty and staff spent several weeks this summer
    contributing to service projects and working to meet the needs
    of people in Armenia, Honduras, Kenya and Mexico. Coordinated by
    University Missions, Baylor's Louise Herrington School of Nursing and
    Baptist Student Ministries, each trip offered students in different
    areas of study hands-on learning and mission opportunities.

    University Missions was created through Baylor 2012, the university's
    10-year vision, to help Baylor students "understand life as a
    stewardship and work as a vocation." The program allows students to
    better understand how God might use their gifts to make a difference
    in the world.

    "At Baylor, we continue to focus on our Baptist heritage and the
    Baptist tradition that is closely tied to missions, and it lives on
    through our university," said Rebecca Kennedy, director for University
    Missions at Baylor. "While encouraging students to participate in
    church-based mission trips, Baylor also is offering discipline-specific
    missions as an expression of our identity as a Christian university. We
    want to create opportunities for students to understand and utilize
    their God-given gifts and abilities in serving others and spreading
    the love of Christ."

    Armenia

    Armenia is a country with a deep heritage of Christianity, located in
    the middle of the largely unreached 10/40 window. Kennedy said Baylor's
    mission teams were focused on learning about and participating in
    economic development that could truly impact an entire nation, while
    helping spread the hope of the message of Christ and the richness of
    discipleship as a believer.

    During Baylor's inaugural mission trip to Armenia this year, groundwork
    was prepared for future ministry opportunities.

    Students were pre-divided into three teams before they went into
    Armenia. Dr. Walter Bradley, distinguished professor of engineering,
    led Baylor's engineering team of ECS majors who joined students from
    two other universities to build two low-cost and energy-efficient
    model homes for low-income families. With the assistance and contacts
    of local Armenian-American builders, the team was successful in
    accomplishing its goals and already has requests for 15 additional
    homes.

    The second Baylor team was geared toward business and leadership
    development. Dr. Marlene Reed, visiting professor in management,
    taught a leadership development course to Armenian business leaders
    and has agreed to further partner with University Missions next year to
    provide additional leadership for Baylor's Outdoor Recreation/Tourism
    team project. Students from that team will work to build partnerships
    with local business leaders to create a sustainable tourism/outdoor
    recreation business. Next summer, Baylor students and team leader Kelli
    McMahan, assistant director of campus recreation and program director
    for Outdoor Adventure Living-Learning Center at Baylor, will begin
    a long-term task of mapping trails for hiking and biking in Armenia.

    Maxey Parrish, lecturer in journalism at Baylor, led a general
    ministry team to Armenia to provide social ministry and evangelism
    to un-churched villagers throughout the country. The team assisted a
    missionary and a local church through children's Bible clubs, community
    carnivals and manual labor, and was part of the first evangelical
    Christian service to be conducted in the 1,500-year-old village.

    Parrish said the team lived in villagers' homes in Zarinja, Armenia,
    and came as close as possible to experiencing 19th-century life.

    There was no running water or sewage and all the food served was
    grown at the home.

    "My favorite part of every mission trip I take is seeing my students
    exposed to situations in which the only way to succeed is to rely on
    God and see Him at work," Parrish said. "Putting [the trip] in God's
    hands and leaving the results to Him, you can't help but experience
    Him in a different way."

    As students served the Armenian people, they also got to see Biblical
    sites such as Mount Ararat, the landing place of Noah's Ark, and the
    world's oldest Christian cathedral.

    Honduras

    In Honduras, Kennedy said that Baylor students were challenged by
    the faith and resolve of the people in the Central American country
    who live out the gospel message in everyday life.

    Baylor students have been serving in Honduras since 2002, beginning
    with deaf education through the department of communication sciences
    and disorders. This year five additional teams from engineering,
    education, nursing, medical and general ministry participated in
    the trip.

    "Faculty and staff-led teams from various disciplines at Baylor
    create ways for students to explore what it looks like to serve
    God by using the skills and expertise from their major and field,"
    Kennedy said. "Participating in discipline-specific teams often allows
    students to have even more to offer as they serve in international
    settings. Students also greatly benefit from learning and serving
    alongside professionals in their respective fields, and this experience
    can help shape a student's view of their own future of service and
    ministry."

    Kennedy said Honduras continues to be an excellent location for
    students to serve because of the many needs represented in Honduras.

    Baylor students on the deaf education team were able to work with
    students in the only deaf school in Honduras, while team leader Lori
    Wrzesinski, director of Baylor's American Sign Language program,
    focused on teaching English as a Second Language to Honduras' deaf
    school teachers. This year Wrzesinski had her first graduating ESL
    class, Kennedy said.

    The second part of the team, led by Nancy Pfanner, lecturer
    in communication sciences and disorders, assisted a non-profit
    organization in hosting an annual camp for deaf and hearing-impaired
    children.

    "Each year has been a success," Kennedy said.

    The medical and nursing teams provided relief and assistance to local
    medical clinics. Baylor students gave immunizations to local villagers
    each day and used medical supplies to meet the needs of impoverished
    communities. Students had the opportunity to interact with villagers
    and experience real-life needs of underprivileged people.

    Andrew Pham, a senior biology major from Frisco, said the people
    in Honduras re-emphasized that there is more to life than money and
    materialistic desires.

    "Their happiness spawned from the relationships developed between
    friends and family. I believe our society needs to be reminded of
    that as we all seek our own sources of happiness," Pham said.

    As an aspiring physician, Pham said he hopes to one day be able to go
    back to Honduras or other indigent countries and set up "more efficient
    medical infrastructure to educate citizens in preventative healthcare."

    Other teams included an education/general ministry team, led by
    Baylor education professors Randy Wood and Rick Strot and Baylor BSM
    director Clif Mouser, which provided Bible stories, manual labor,
    health care and ESL training for teachers at a recently established
    Christian school at a church in a small Honduran village. A Baylor
    engineering team, in the meantime, was in the country to construct
    a micro hydro-generator and install a water purification system,
    led by Dr. Brian Thomas, lecturer in engineering at Baylor's School
    of Engineering and Computer Science.

    Kenya

    For the third year in a row, 93 Baylor faculty, staff and students
    traveled to Kenya, the largest number of participants to date.

    "Because of the large number of participants many different activities
    [could] be accomplished," Kennedy said.

    Baylor students had their perspective challenged, Kennedy said, as
    they encountered the HIV/AIDS epidemic as an individual rather than a
    statistic. But they also learned from believers with a rich deep faith.

    Led by Dr. Randall Bradley, director of Baylor's Center for Christian
    Music Studies, and Dr. Sharyn Dowd, associate professor of religion,
    Baylor students used music to reach orphans and neighboring villages,
    while representatives from University Baptist Church in Waco built
    partnerships with Kenyan churches to provide social ministry within
    village communities.

    Students from Baylor's George W. Truett Theological Seminary
    trained future Kenyan leaders in HIV/AIDS education, evangelism,
    church leadership and community development, as well as business
    sustainability. The teams worked with several faith-based organizations
    in order to accomplish their goals.

    Several freshmen and sophomore students provided general ministry to
    Kenya's HIV/AIDS victims, orphans and widows. Despite the language
    barrier, students played games and learned songs with Kenyan children
    during their lunch time.

    Tiffani Riggers, a graduate assistant for University Missions and
    a team leader with fellow grad student Marquette Bugg, said often
    parents are too tired to play with and love on their children due
    to long daily struggles to get money to feed their families. Simple
    actions, such as giving individual attention to the children, allowed
    team members to show God's love by filling that parent-to-child void.

    "Knowing that spiritually we made an impact is awesome, and we had a
    great reminder that we don't always see the fruit of our works until
    we are in heaven," Riggers said.

    Also in Kenya, engineering students, faculty and staff continued
    to provide practical solutions for real-world needs, such as the
    installation of solar panels in a deaf school with no electricity, the
    construction of windmills to provide electricity for a school and the
    designing of a foot bridge to be built over a river in eastern Kenya.

    In 2006 Baylor students created a non-profit organization called
    Omega Kids, which provides resources to Kenyan pastors who minister to
    orphaned street children. This year Omega Kids donated money and helped
    a local pastor purchase land for a dormitory to be built specifically
    for street children.

    Riggers reflected that the time in Kenya showed how much Americans
    take for granted, "from the amount and type of food that we choose to
    eat, to the clothes we wear." Riggers described the desperate need,
    the incredible joy and indelible hope that the Kenyan people had,
    even while living in abject poverty.

    "It was a very special time for me, as I felt that our Baylor students
    were seeing how much they are a part of something bigger than just
    a mission trip," Riggers said. "It was wonderful to get to worship
    God in a Kenyan church with my brothers and sisters and know that
    even though we may have been speaking different languages, we were
    worshipping the same God."

    Baylor's Louise Herrington School of Nursing, located in Dallas,
    also offered Baylor nursing students an excellent way to get involved
    in missions, as well as obtain hands-on experience in their field of
    study. Lori Spies, mission coordinator for the nursing school, said the
    growth of students on all levels during the trip is very impressive.

    "It is gratifying to see our students spread the love and care of
    Jesus Christ while they deliver much-needed health care," Spies said.

    Nursing students participated in the University Missions' trip
    to Chuloteca, Honduras, providing health checkups to every child
    attending the host church's school. Students put together seminars
    on health, hygiene, nutrition and sexually transmitted infections
    at both public and private schools. A Baylor graduate student led an
    extensive question and answer session specifically for women both at
    the church and throughout the community.

    David Kemerling, director of student ministries for the nursing
    school, said faculty, staff and students were a "fresh set of eyes"
    for the community.

    "The question we ask ourselves throughout the trip is, 'How can we
    live differently once back in the U.S.?' I believe, for students,
    the trip puts value into nursing in preparation for their future
    careers," Kemerling said. "It builds confidence and gives experience."

    Mexico

    Baylor's nursing school also continued a 30-year tradition of students
    providing care in Juarez, Mexico. While in Juarez, students set
    up free clinics inside a local church and offered complete health
    check-ups to assess the general needs of children and adults.

    Medication, prayer and health education were often provided. Clinics
    also are a way for the local church to make life-long contacts with
    people in their community, helping them to continue to reach those
    in need.

    "It is a practical exercise in servant leadership, improving health
    care and gaining skills and expertise as nurses," Spies said.

    Another trip is planned for August in Mexico City, where faculty,
    staff and students will continue to administer health check-ups to
    the housing community in Mexico City.

    Baptist Student Ministries

    Baptist Student Ministries (BSM) is a specialized ministry of
    the Baptist General Convention of Texas aimed at Texas college and
    university campuses. The BSM offers students the chance to serve not
    only their community but also the world around them throughout the
    year. Missions and showing God's love to others is heavily emphasized
    through different programs offered by the BSM.

    The Baylor BSM hosts Missions Week activities for Baylor students
    to learn about the locations where missionaries serve, as well as
    discover areas they can provide life-long changes in the lives of
    those less fortunate. This year Missions Week hosted more than 20
    missionaries who spoke in more than 40 classrooms at Baylor. A Global
    Village was set up next to the Student Union Building and featured
    ethnic student organizations, ministry organizations, international
    students and missionaries. Baylor faculty, staff and students could
    come and learn ways they might participate in mission work.

    The BSM participates in weekly community ministries such as room
    visitation at Hillcrest Baptist Medical Center in Waco, a partnership
    with the Waco Association of Retarded Citizens for special needs
    ministry, children's tutorials at two community locations and
    children's missions in three Waco apartment complexes. These are
    available to students during the school year.

    GoNowMissions is a student missions program the BSM has provided to
    Baylor students since 1946. Through GoNowMissions students have the
    opportunity to raise money and serve others for either a semester or
    for a summer. The program builds leadership, helps enrich student's
    spiritual walk and teaches them about selfless love and service to
    others. This year's giving goal was $4,000, and seven Baylor students
    are currently serving during the 2007 summer both nationally and
    internationally.

    In addition to sponsoring a team to Honduras, the BSM partnered with
    Habitat for Humanity to construct houses and provide practical relief
    to the people of New Orleans. These trips held specific purposes to
    meet the needs of the people in that region.

    The BSM also took a trip specifically for international students at
    Baylor. The trip offered the opportunity for international students
    to see Texas and get to know each other and the BSM staff better.

    This year there were seven different countries represented among the
    Baylor students. The group stayed in churches as they toured Texas,
    stopping at the Alamo, SeaWorld and the Houston Rodeo. During this
    time, students were able to talk about their Baylor experiences,
    their cultural heritage and discuss spiritual needs on a more personal
    level with BSM staff.

    For more information about University Missions at Baylor, contact
    Rebecca Kennedy at [email protected].

    For more information about Baylor's Louise Herrington School of Nursing
    missions, contact David Kemerling at [email protected] or
    Lori Spies at (214) 818-7982.

    For more information about the Baptist Student Ministries at Baylor,
    contact Rae Wright at [email protected].
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