“Appreciating our Past 20 years: God’s
Sovereign Work,” June
1, 2001 topic of plenary panel
at
the Association of Christians Ministering to Internationals (ACMI) Conference,
by Ned Hale.
Early Vision
From its beginnings
in North
America
Inter Varsity has had a deep concern for all students and especially
internationals. With only a handful of traveling field staff in the early years
and the priority of pioneering an entire new student ministry, very little
staff energy could go to international student ministry. But over time this
vision expanded in Inter Varsity.
There was a strong belief in students reaching fellow
students with the Gospel, including and especially international students.
Therefore student-led groups were the primary base of outreach to
internationals, though staff were there to supplement
their efforts, give encouragement and training. Most notable of these staff was
Paul Little who briefly led a national department of ISM in the late 50s and
early 60s, but it was not until 20 years ago (1981) that a permanent ISM Dept.
was established in Inter Varsity and the ISM staff team began to expand.
The tradition of outreach by campus Christian groups or
“chapters” continued through the 80s and the annual evangelistic holiday
conferences or “Houseparties” for internationals continued to be led by staff,
volunteers or faculty at IV’s two major training centers, Bear Trap Ranch in Colorado, Cedar Campus in Michigan and many more sites in Canada. Discipleship of Christian
internationals continued, as always, to be enhanced by the Urbana student missions
conventions, which drew hundreds of Christian internationals together every
three years.
I continued to direct or speak at Bear Trap and Cedar Campus
Houseparties and was deeply impressed at one when a
Muslim student from Iran studying in South Dakota came up to me after one of my
evening messages looking very agitated. He’d grown up in Qum, he said, “Khomeine’s birthplace
and a very conservative Muslim area.” He’d wanted as a teenager to become a
Mulla (teacher) and considered himself very religious. But he’d become very
disillusioned with what Khomeine was doing back in Iran and felt that he now needed to
reject Islam entirely. Without a religion to believe in he felt empty and lost.
However, in his heart he could not bring himself to believe in Jesus as God,
for all his life he’d been schooled against this. Could I help him believe in
Jesus as God?
I did my best to show him from scripture and with
illustrations why and how God could be fully Divine
and fully Human at the same time. He said: “I will decide before we leave this
Houseparty and let you know!” I didn’t hear from him for two weeks after that,
so back in Madison I wrote him a letter asking how
he was doing in his religious pilgrimage toward Jesus. He wrote back: “Dear
Brother Ned…” and praised God for bringing him not only to believe in Jesus but
to be baptized that week in a local church there in Vermillion, South Dakota!
International Student Ministry Department
New initiatives were begun in the 80s. Bob Fryling had
become our National Campus Ministry Director and wanted to bring more diversity
and multi-ethnic ministry specialists into the organization because of the
increasing ethnic diversity of the campuses nationally, especially in urban
centers.
This led to my appointment in 1981 as the Director of a
restored National Dept. of ISM.
My
original vision was to create a new body of staff workers with a focused
ministry among internationals within the larger ministry of Inter Varsity. We
needed "ISM focused" staff in each region and on each local staff
team. In the 80s we succeeded in getting an ISM staff into about half of the
then 50 Area staff teams. (We're still working on it).
Inter Varsity now has 41
paid staff with international students as the primary focus of their ministry.
This is more a reflection of the IV organization’s commitment to cross-cultural
ministry at all levels than it is to my efforts, though my presence and
establishing an ISM Department nationally clearly gave sanction or “permission”
to the field to move ahead with more confidence in an otherwise difficult area
of ministry.
Additionally, about 400 of our 800 regular field staff are
known to be either personally involved or have campus groups with some internationals
involved within them. This may seem surprisingly gratifying, but when you
consider that IV serves over 800 campuses in the USA, the numbers pale in some
respect to the overwhelming task still ahead. ISM is “on the map” in Inter
Varsity, but not with an ISM focused staff in every area and not with
international students involved in an IV student “witnessing community” on
every major campus.
Our census currently shows 4,087 mostly American Inter
Varsity students involved in a "cross-cultural" international student
friendship, but this is actually only about 13% of the total 30,999 students in
Inter Varsity. Again, we have a very long way to go in mobilizing Inter
Varsity students to cross-cultural friendship and witness! Considering the fact
that we have an annual turnover of at least 25% of Inter Varsity students, it
is probably bordering on the miraculous that so many of our students do learn
to reach out cross-culturally.
Developing Resources for ISM
To resource this growing ministry in the 80s our ISM
Department worked closely with our multi-media branch TWENTYONEHUNDRED (“2100”)
develop a landmark 30 min. show called "FRIENDS," which ended up
getting amazing exposure to a total of over 75,000 delegates in 4 URBANA
conventions from 1984-1993. Though slide-tape formats are out of date as a type
of media, it's still available now on video and has been seen by probably a few
hundred thousand believers in churches and other groups all over North America. A new 2100 production was
introduced at URBANA 96 entitled “BRIDGING THE GAP,” now available in a
three-part 22-min. video as an educational and training tool for students and
community volunteers.
IV Press books were developed as
"books-of-the-day" at URBANA 84 and 87, including Internationals
at Your Doorstep (by Lawson Lau) and China at Your Doorstep (by
Stacey Bieler and Dick Andrews). These were groundbreaking steps for Inter
Varsity and a significant ministry to the churches and other parachurch
movements. A more recent book project we worked on with a team of 7 staff is an
IV Press book, Passport to the Bible, released in August 1999 with 24
cross-cultural Bible studies designed for international “seekers.” This Bible
study guidebook is already in its second printing and has sold thousands of
copies, to the astonishment of all of us. (I.V. Press initially questioned its
“marketability” as targeted to a “niche” international audience).
One of my greatest delights was being part of the formation
in 1981 of the Assoc. of Christians Ministering to Internationals (ACMI), which
provided in its annual conferences, a resource for training new staff and
volunteer workers. It was invaluable to Inter Varsity staff and volunteers in
reaffirming our ISM vision and calling, and helped keep us all from discouragement
or growing "weary in well doing” by relating to the larger body of
international workers.
As a Board member of ACMI in its early years I watched it
grow as its annual conferences were held in a different city in the USA and Canada each year. Many paid staff of
churches and mission groups or volunteer ISM workers who were
not attached to an organization found a home in ACMI. Many of us in the larger
organizations with an ISM Department were able to join hands speaking and
giving training seminars to the benefit of others both within and outside our
organizations who came to the annual training conferences. ACMI went a long way
toward bringing all the Evangelicals together and instilling a new vision for
prayer and cooperative ministries at local campus levels.
In 1987 a first “ACMI Consultation” of leaders in ISM
nationally met in Denver and presented papers summarizing
their organization’s or denomination’s ministry to internationals. This led to
a hunger for more of this level of sharing, and another of these was held a few
years later in Houston. In the early 1990s a few of the
leaders of the larger organizations working with internationals began to meet
together at ISI’s national offices in Colorado Springs. We called ourselves the “Cheyenne Mountain Gang.” There are now over 20 of
us, and we have met every year, sometimes twice in a year since then.
In the late 90s Paul Cedar of Mission America invited us to form an
“International Student Ministry Track” and meet with hundreds of pastors at
their annual meetings. Besides “networking” a lot of practical things have
resulted from these leaders gatherings. For example, the expansion of the
International Bible Society’s grant of free English and other language Bibles
for international students….and the distribution of tens of thousands of JESUS
films in many languages to our staff and volunteers for give-away to individual
internationals on the condition that follow-up requirements be met.
The Internet may also help us, even though it’s not as
personal and relational as we like ministry to be. We've developed an extensive
ISM resources web page within Inter Varsity's web site and are currently
working on a special web site for non-Christian internationals with the word
"internationals" registered as a search engine title and
"internationals.net" as a domain name.
Importance of Christian Internationals
Perhaps the most significant ministry Inter Varsity has
sponsored in recent years is our national triennial “Conference for Christian
International Students and Scholars” held immediately following each URBANA student missions convention at
the University of Illinois at Urbana. Begun in January 1988,
following URBANA 87, this conference has
consistently attracted over 400 Christian internationals representing over 70
countries of the world. The recent (5th) conference, Jan.
1-4, 2001,
surprised us all with 870 representing 80 countries! There were 20 plenary
speakers and 80 elective seminars in this conference. Many students commented
that this gathering of fellow believers was a “taste of heaven” for them and
much needed preparation both for going back to campus and after that going into
places of work around the world as ambassadors for Christ and workers in His
Kingdom.
Our Inter Varsity census tells us that we have over 2,280 international
students involved in our campus groups. This figure has leveled out in the 90s,
paralleling the number of focused staff we have fielded. Still it is a
remarkable thing that so many Christians from other cultures feel comfortable
enough (or are spiritually desperate enough) to identify with a largely
American organization in order to have their spiritual needs met.
Partly for this reason, and because it fits with our ethos
and new IV Purpose Statement, we have begun to “reinvent” ISM in Inter Varsity
since 1995. We have a new vision these days for establishing “International
Student-led Witnessing Communities.” We have begun to recognize the need for
Christian internationals to receive discipleship training, grow in their
evangelism skills, gain leadership experience by actually being leaders and
become prepared for reentry into their home cultures. All this happens best in
student groups where they can learn these things together.
Many internationals (Christian and non-Christian) feel more
at home in a non-North American cultural group. It is a well-known fact from
sociological studies that most internationals on campus drift into sub-cultural
groupings of their home culture by the end of the first year on campus here.
Some move off campus into apartments where they can cook their own kind of
food, most often with other students not only from their country of origin but
if possible from the same linguistic and societal group. This is not just
"cocooning." It's survival in an otherwise inundating North American
cultural context.
For Christian internationals study abroad in North America is a kind of spiritual as well
as cultural starvation unless they are fortunate enough to find or create a
home-cultural Christian group of some kind. It is not surprising, therefore,
that we have seen "sister" groups develop along ethnic lines on most
of the major university centers: Indonesians, Taiwanese, Singaporeans,
Japanese, Malaysians, central Africans, east Indians, etc. etc. Many have
formed larger networks and organizations, hold annual summer conferences and
keep in touch by email, even with returnees!
The spiritual "trade-offs" for such groups,
however, are significant. Perhaps without realizing it, they miss some opportunities
they might otherwise have for significant input from gifted Christians outside
their monocultural campus group or network. Some need leadership training or
counseling ministries a qualified staff level person might provide. Others need
the cross-cultural mission stretching that only comes by immersion in another
culture. Some need the opportunity for reconciliation experiences with those
outside their cultural group (eg: the Japanese with Koreans and other Asians).
For non-Christian internationals, it becomes imperative that
they see the Gospel "incarnated" in the lives of people as well as
hear the verbal proclamation of God's love for them in Jesus Christ. On campus
this becomes highly effective if the "incarnational witness point" is
an integrated Christian group, where the usual power of witness by fellow
country-persons is augmented by the astonishing power of Christian love across
cultural lines.
Integrated evangelistic group meetings and small
group Bible studies are good places for this to happen. Internationals expect
at least some Americans to be Christians, but they don't expect to see love between
cultures. Some internationals have become Christians because of the unusual
love of American Christian roommates or families who have welcomed them into
their homes and family life and genuinely loved them. Many more become
Christians because of the witness of those from within their own culture, where
the shock of discovering Christ in the life of one of their own is enhanced by
the Gospel being more clearly articulated in their own mother tongue and
thought forms. It is a rare and powerful witness indeed when both of these
things happen at once and where the body of Christ is seen to be a
multi-cultural expression of God’s love!
Some Personal Satisfactions
It is an exciting thing for me personally to be part of this
new vision for gathering
together on campus many of the
otherwise disaffected internationals that would remain lonely or isolated
without a cultural group they can feel more “at home” in. I look forward in
coming years to helping Inter Varsity develop this new emphasis, and suspect it
will soon be reflected in our census figures as a new breakthrough for us.
As I approach the years when I may
not be able to accomplish as much physically, I find that the vision for
“loving the stranger in our midst” (Lev. 33:19) continues to grow in me.
Memories of past personal ministries with individuals are sustaining to me,
especially those who have found flourishing ministries of their own and where
the ministry vision has multiplied in their lives. Some international
Christians became my lasting friends and went on eventually to become
missionaries and Christian leaders.
For
example, a Christian from India, Chong Singsit, came to the UW
Madison to work on his PhD in Agriculture. A mutual (missionary) friend brought
us together and we became good friends and prayer partners. I introduced him to
a monthly dinner-plus-Bible-study for internationals. He became so excited by
this approach to ministry that when he transferred to a graduate program in Virginia a few years later he began an
evangelistic Bible study ministry of his own at that campus. He left there to
become a college teacher, but carried with him this vision for international
student outreach as well as starting a mission educational project in his home
country.
Again,
Peter Ubomba-Jaswa from Uganda
came to Madison for a PhD in
Sociology. I met him as the leader of the African Students Christian Fellowship
and we became close friends and prayer partners. At one point a few in our
church helped him become reunited with his wife and family in Africa
(having been forced to leave them behind for the four years of his study here).
This saved him from quitting his PhD and, as it turns out, essentially salvaged
a life long career of his teaching in Africa. He secured
a teaching position initially in the University
of Botswana, where he also
pioneered a new student ministry for the International Fellowship of
Evangelical Students (IFES). He is currently teaching in the University
of Natal in South
Africa and continuing to look for ways to
extend the Kingdom of God
as a teacher and church leader there.
Passing the Baton
As I move toward retirement years
(I’m currently age 65) it has become obvious that the directorship of a
ministry like this needs to pass on to those who can carry it into the distant
future or as long as it is needed. God has been faithful not only in giving me
this opportunity to share in His work, but also in preparing others to “take
the baton” and carry it to the finish. The transition of the ISM Directorship
in Inter Varsity took place this past year, with Lisa Chinn accepting the
invitation to take my place starting in August 2000.
It has been thrilling to see God
choose a person with the precise background, gifts and preparation needed to
not only carry on the ministry but move it significantly forward in the Inter
Varsity context. As a woman in leadership, Inter Varsity immediately looks up
to her as a model of women in a leadership role. As a Filipino-born American
with work experience and student ministry experience in both countries she
brings new credibility and sensitivity to the whole vision of cross-cultural
ministry. As icing on the cake, she has even agreed to allowing
me to continue on part time in the ISM Department to help in needed ways
(hopefully without my getting “in the way”).
My hope is that in coming years not
only Inter Varsity, but all of God’s people involved in higher education will find
that in “loving the stranger” on campus, they are actually not only obeying
Jesus Christ but loving Him in loving the stranger. Perhaps even
then it will still be a surprise to us all when we stand before the Master and
he says: “I was a stranger and you welcomed me…just as you did it to one of the
least of these…you did it to me.” (Matt. 25: 35, 40).
May God give us all His grace and wisdom to form loving relationships with
internationals and to introduce them into cross-cultural relationships and groups
where they can see the love of Christ displayed in all its ethnic diversity and
power!