“Houseparties”
are memorable events for international students who discover a warm, loving
community of Christians and learn more about Jesus Christ there. They are also
memorable for campus ministry staff and volunteers who discover a unique and
beautiful way to communicate love along with the Gospel in a festive atmosphere
while celebrating Christ’s coming during the Christmas vacation period.
The name
probably originated in the British Inter Varsity movement where a lengthy
holiday away from campus life was an established norm for students wanting to
share their holiday periods with international friends and communicate the
Gospel message through a whole-life approach to evangelism by living together.
Were they effective in reaching internationals for Christ in those years? One
story here might illustrate their impact:
While I was
on a year of study leave in India, a professor of Education at Benares Hindu
University knocked on my door to welcome my wife and me to the faculty hostel.
As we got acquainted over tea, he asked me: “What are the spiritual foundations
of western culture?” This led to a discussion of the Gospel in which I found
that he already had a firm grasp of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ, which he said he had learned while a student himself in London in the
1950s. As he went on to describe a conference he’d attended there I realized
he’d been to an “international student houseparty!” Later I mentioned his name
to some other Hindu faculty in the same hostel. Immediately one of them said,
“Oh, he’s not a good Hindu…he thinks like a Christian, talks like a Christian,
acts like a Christian…he might as well be one!”
Houseparties
in the American Inter Varsity were introduced to Bear Trap Ranch by David
Adeney and Gene Thomas, December 20-26, 1954 soon after the Ranch was purchased
by Inter Varsity. David Adeney, a graduate of Cambridge University, had become
a missionary-in-residence for Inter Varsity USA after returning from mainland
China where he’d been a missionary with the China Inland Mission (now OMF).
David loved to speak at houseparties, which he did all over the country as
often as he could all the way into the 1990s! These houseparties at Bear Trap
were so popular in Inter Varsity they would become an annual tradition! A
Thanksgiving weekend event was also held in Chicago the following year, Nov.
24-27, 1955 showing how the idea was “catching on” all over North America.
The deep sense of mission
throughout the Inter Varsity movement, strengthened by the student missions
conventions starting in 1946, had already stimulated such events on both
coasts. Peter Northrup, for example, as a young staff in the early 1950s,
recalls having a houseparty at a location near Washington DC where over 80
international students “showed up” (it was always hard to tell in advance how
many to expect!). Paul and Marie Little ran similar events when he was first on
staff in New York City. A transcription of the series of messages Paul gave at
the Lake Tahoe, California houseparty in 1959 was the foundational material of
talks he would give in dorms and fraternity houses all over the country. This
was the houseparty in which a young student from Iran, Nate Mirza, made a
commitment to Christ. (In the 1980s and 1990s Nate would himself become a
regular speaker at the Bear Trap Ranch houseparties, where many more would come
to Christ).
In one year during the late-1950s
there were houseparties in four locations at Thanksgiving (NC, DC, IL and CO),
in six locations at Christmas (MA, FL, CO, WA and 2 in CA), and in three
locations over Easter or Spring vacation periods (DC, NC and CO). The CO ones
were all at Bear Trap Ranch!
My first
recollections of a houseparty at Bear Trap Ranch was in December 1964. Ed
Mihevc, one of our more “faith-full” staff in downstate Illinois, had been
“praying for snow” for this houseparty, because snow so greatly enhanced the
ambiance and recreational fun of a houseparty. I joined with a volunteer and
recent graduate from Wheaton College, David Hull, in driving a car full of
internationals all the way from Chicago to Colorado Springs. We had to purchase
“tire-chains” when we arrived in the Springs because the snow storm that hit
that day had deposited over a foot of snow on the mountains, making the Old
Stage Road to the Ranch almost impassable! (An obvious answer to Ed’s prayers,
which lifted all our spirits!). After one day of heavy snow it cleared, and the
rest of the entire week we had ideal conditions for enjoying snow sports at the
Ranch! PTL!
Paul Little was the speaker each
evening and gave his usual compelling series of messages on the meaning of
Christ’s birth and Christmas as centered in: Christ’s coming as fulfillment of
centuries of prophecy, his death for the sins of all humanity, many evidences
for his resurrection from the dead, and the importance of turning our lives
over to Him for salvation and a renewed life of holiness and love here on earth
as well as in the life to come. I still have a taped copy of those memorable
messages. Many of his arguments were his standard ones given to students all
over North America in evangelistic meetings from the early 50s until he died in
1976. Terrell Smith still remembers Paul standing in the middle of the “Cook
House Lounges” with “wall-to-wall students” packed-in, listening in rapt
attention.
The spiritual impact of the whole
houseparty experience was evident. Although there were usually only a few that
became Christians during the houseparty, we knew that most students were just
beginning to learn about Jesus and that others were giving serious
consideration to becoming Christians. David Adeney had made it amply clear to
us that “it is like a miracle when an international becomes a Christian…after
all, they have everything to lose (in this world) and little (at first glance)
to gain by becoming Christians.” We
counted on the ongoing friendships with Christians before and after the
houseparty to bring those He was calling to faith in Him. The houseparty
therefore was like an accelerated boost to the learning process, and we left it
to the Holy Spirit to bring many to faith in Christ in His own time and way.
Paul was quite busy in the late
60s preparing to direct Urbana 70 and his classes at Trinity Evangelical
Divinity School in Deerfield, Illinois. However, he never lost his love for
internationals and for houseparties as one of the very best methods of
“walking” as well as “talking” internationals toward Jesus. In January 1974 as
a Regional Director in charge of structuring events for the old (14 state)
Central Region, I received a phone call from Paul Little. He wanted me to know
that if I needed him for speaking at a houseparty at Bear Trap Ranch that
December, he was available. Paul gave memorable messages at that December 1974
houseparty…it became his last and his best one.
Another frequent speaker at
houseparties in these years was Dr. Glen Zumwalt, a “Distinguised Professor of
Aeronautical Engineering at Wichita State University” and a former Inter
Varsity staff in Texas. He spoke at one BTR houseparty around 1970 on “the
relevance of Jesus Christ to our present society and the essentials of
Christianity.” Ben Thurber, our staff in Denver, directed that one. The total
cost for that full week, Dec. 21-27, was $45.00 (up from $35.00 in December
1963 and $22.50 in Dec. 1956!).
Though houseparties were going on
in other parts of the country, and sometimes over Thanksgiving weekend, only
Cedar Campus and Bear Trap had consistently held them a full 5-7 days over
Christmas. Dr. Archie MacKinney, who was a frequent houseparty speaker at Cedar
Campus, began bringing his entire family to BTR from Madison, Wisconsin. They
each played a musical instrument and so new “sounds of music” gave them the
reputation of being the “Von Trapp family musicians of BTR.”
Since the houseparty had become an
annual tradition at Bear Trap Ranch (except for Urbana years), staff generally
took turns directing them. In December 1971 then Area Director Bill McConnell
directed the houseparty with Ned Hale as the speaker. To insure strong attendance
during the 1970s, I made sure as Regional Director that every staff in the
region was assigned to at least one houseparty during their first few years
on staff. Paul Steeves, IV staff in Lawrence, KS and Dick Young, Director
at Bear Trap Ranch in the early 1970s directed some, as did many other staff
leaders.
In 1979 the Iranian crisis took
place and many Iranian students were polarized politically. This had spiritual
repercussions since politics and religion are so interwoven for Muslims. I
spoke at the Bear Trap houseparty that December. After one of the meetings, an
Iranian student got me aside quietly and said: “Mr. Hale, I don’t know what to
do. I want to believe in Jesus, but I can’t. Please help me to believe!” He
went on to explain, “I grew up in Qom, the home city of Khomeini, and one of
the most conservative of Muslim cities. I wanted to be a Mullah when I grew up.
Now I am a student in South Dakota and am so disillusioned with Islam I can no
longer be a Muslim. Yet, I have always had a strong faith in God and can not
live without religion. All my life I have been told that I must not believe in
Jesus as Christians do….that it is the sin of blasphemy against God to do so.
Can you help me believe in Jesus?”
Wow! A contemporary version of
“what must I do to be saved!” I gave him some further words from scripture and,
at his request, a brief explanation of the Trinity. He said, “I’ll let you know
before the conference ends what I decide!” The conference ended and no word
from him…so I concluded that he didn’t have the courage to tell me he could not
yet believe in Jesus. Two weeks later, back at home, I decided to write him a
letter to find out “how he was doing” etc. I got a letter back immediately in
the mail: “Dear Brother Hale: This past weekend I was baptized in the church
here in Vermillion. Praise God!” Years later I met a church leader from that
Baptist Church in Vermillion who confirmed all he had said to me in his letter
and much more about his continuing on with Christ and in fellowship with these
Christians there in Vermillion.
In the
1980s houseparties took on new life with the re-establishment of a national department
of International Student Ministries, or “ISM,” (the previous department from
1958-1964 had been dissolved when Paul Little moved into full time evangelism).
Starting in 1981 new ISM staff “specialists” began to be added to regional and
area staff teams, and new houseparties consequently sprang up in various
regions. One of these “ISM staff,” Al Fairbanks, became a frequent houseparty
speaker. New media (MMCP’s “FRIENDS” show and an IVP book, The World at Your
Doorstep) were produced for Urbana 84, and a wave of new interest in
internationals on campuses were reflected in the growing census figures of
internationals getting involved in IV chapters everywhere.
Bear Trap
Ranch responded to this by launching a houseparty DURING an Urbana. More
students than usual came and everyone was asking, “why hadn’t we thought of
doing this before?” Up until then, staff had been seen as the backbone of
houseparties. But with increasing numbers of community volunteers getting
involved and helping, it had become apparent that staff could attend an Urbana,
volunteers could run a houseparty, non-Christians could attend the houseparty
and Christian internationals could choose between the two.
Around that time, Bob Culver, then
on staff with ISI in Houston, brought a van full of internationals to the Bear
Trap houseparty. The idea caught on and soon others from Oklahoma and Kansas
were also bringing vans full, and Bob even brought a bus full at one point!
From then on Houston volunteers always brought a large group to Bear Trap and
if there was ever a question about it, Jack Burke, then University of Houston
Foreign Student Advisor, made sure of it by finding a volunteer willing to
drive a group to Bear Trap!
Another
response of Bear Trap to the exploding interest during the mid-1980s was to add
a second houseparty over New Years. (Cedar Campus had done the same). There was
even experimentation with a third (summer) houseparty at one point (e.g.:
August 1985-88). In December, since the New Years dates were a little easier to
fill than Christmas because of some American families’ and students’ needs to
be at home together, the Christmas houseparty suffered a little in numbers by
comparison. But both were needed given the lack of room to accommodate all who
would have come to only one houseparty as before. This too became a tradition
by the 1990s, so that every year there are two houseparties at BTR, including
Urbana years (you can usually count on it!).
Speakers were always a special
concern because they needed to be fairly knowledgeable, not only about how to
present the Gospel in engaging and relevant ways, but also about the
backgrounds and needs of those from a variety of cultures and backgrounds.
Staff or faculty were needed who had experience working with internationals and
were willing to speak during the Christmas period. Ned Hale spoke at the 1985
and 1986 Christmas houseparties at BTR. During Urbana 87 (without staff present) the houseparties
featured former IV staff, Lendol Calder (then a PhD candidate at the Univ. of
Chicago), and a long-time faculty volunteer in ISM, John Stanford, from Iowa
state Univ. A former Regional Director and IV Press Director, Jim Nyquist,
directing this latter one. The August 1988 houseparty featured John Hoyt, who
was born and raised in China. Like David Adeney, his experiences of living in
China many years and knowing the language had special appeal for many east
Asians.
Here is what one staff director
reported about the impact of starting a houseparty in another region in the mid-80s:
“The houseparty was an incredibly effective tool for many reasons. First, it
brought together interested individuals and families who have a heart for
internationals. People supplied cookies, gifts, scholarships and
transportation. One family said, ‘This is a dream come true.’ God obviously had
prepared the community for the houseparty. I feel God used it to mobilize
individual efforts in reaching out to I-Students.
“The houseparty catered to the
special need that non-Christian I-Students have. About 90% of the students were
not Christians and many responded positively to the gospel. The community of
people there set the context for good Bible studies, large group talks and
conversations. The experience brought about a more defined identity for the I-Student
work in the region too. Momentum was established with the schools represented,
and all are committed to come again. These will be an example to others in the
region. The Christian I-Students also profited. They had the chance to invite
friends and follow-up back on campus. During the houseparty they learned more
about the gift of service as they helped with the various tasks required to run
the houseparty.”
Starting in the late 80s other
language Bibles were made available by the International Bible Society so that
internationals could receive a free copy of the scriptures in their own
language, especially at houseparties. This complemented the optional daily
Bible studies in small groups using English Bibles that had always been a vital
part of the Bear Trap program.
A very special event took place in
1987 during the Billy Graham evangelistic campaign in Denver. During four of
these ten days of meetings, July 17-21, about 425 internationals and friends
came from all over the continent to Denver and lived in the homes of families
in two churches. Where do you suppose many of them went on a specially planned
one-day “site-seeing trip to the mountains?” Bear Trap Ranch! This occasion
inspired similar visits by internationals in the early 1990s. During August
8-13, 1993, for example, a special “International Holiday Tour” to Denver
included “a day in Colorado Springs, a drive to the top of a 14,000-foot
mountain peak, and a day and night at Bear Trap Ranch including horseback
riding, and hiking.”
As we
entered the 1990s, some former staff emerged as houseparty speakers and
directors at Bear Trap. Ron Nicholas came from California to speak at one.
Jason Chen, a Christian Reformed Church pastor from Iowa, originally from
mainland China, became a popular speaker and we began to see a larger number of
conversions among the students in this period. During the 1990s it became clear
that the presence of foreign-born speakers, like Jason Chen and Nate Mirza,
made a real difference in convincing some students of the reality of Jesus
Christ and their need to take the step of commitment to Him. Rev. Telles Ritian
(Indonesia) was invited to speak at the December 1993 houseparty, Dr. Li-wen
Hammer at the December 1997 houseparty, and Dean Papajohn at the December 1999
New Years houseparty.
Many reports of spiritually
changed lives came out of these houseparties. Cookie Walden and Mark Enger had
played leading roles as Ranch administrators in promoting houseparties and
recruiting students and volunteers during this period. After one Bear Trap
houseparty in 1995 Cookie sent me a wonderful story as as part of her feedback.
She quoted this volunteer: “A family group leader told me that a Korean student
was close to making a decision. The next day after the group lecture, I visited
his cabin. We talked for 1 ½ hours and I shared a clear presentation of the
Gospel with him. God’s Spirit touched his heart for he asked me to pray along
with him the sinners prayer, and then he asked Jesus into his heart. Praise
God!”
After that houseparty in January
1996 she received a letter from the family group leader: “Last Sunday the
Korean student from Kansas, who accepted the Lord this year at Bear Trap, was
baptized. Another international from Oklahoma who was in my family group came
to visit Wichita two weeks ago on Jan. 12. He was asking about being baptized.
I was thrilled! This showed me that he truly committed his life to Jesus at
Bear Trap. Another (from Sir Lanka) is continually taking steps toward God. He
has come to church each Sunday since Bear Trap.”
Christian internationals also
experience growth in Christ at houseparties. One young woman from Japan put her
experience this way: “Before I went I was eager to love and serve God by loving
and serving His people, by being a witness. But the entire time, I was amazed
by how much I was loved and served and cared for by others. I was so thankful
to see the way the Gospel was communicated; loud and clear, not watered down,
not apologetic; and yet there was so much sensitivity and respect for those who
were not Christians. The staff and families involved were so welcoming and the
students all felt genuinely loved and cared about. It was so encouraging for me
to meet people who love the Lord and who have a heart to serve Him. And it was
also exciting to share my life with people who do not know Christ, but were
eager to seek.”
The Bear Trap houseparties even
inspired some to start similar local and area events of their own: After
visiting a houseparty to “see it for themselves,” a group in Dallas decided to
start a retreat for internationals studying at SMU. Similarly another group
started a holiday conference for internationals at Huntsville, TX. Another
group in Cedar Falls, IA began taking groups of internationals to Minnesota over
the holidays “because it was closer.” At one point staff directors in the North
Plains considered seriously starting a houseparty in northern MN and another in
Rapid City, SD. Michael Henson in AZ
persuaded his church to sponsor a conference there for internationals patterned
after the houseparty. These conference groups were smaller (20-50 instead of
the 90-125 we would usually get at Bear Trap) but this was a plus in many ways
because it created even more intimacy and sharing opportunities. Of all these
only the Dallas one continued more than one or two times, most of them
foundering for lack of finances or administration, but the experiences were
worth the effort.
The
houseparties at BTR during a 10 year period 1989-98 were statistically analyzed
by Jeff Yockey, BTR’s Director. The Christmas ones averaged 47 internationals
in attendance. The New Years ones averaged 54 internationals. Including
Americans, the average of all houseparties during this period was 97 at each
houseparty! The typical houseparty at BTR would draw together about 35-75
students from 7-8 central USA states with about 20-25 countries represented.
About 50-75% of them would be non-believers. A good mix of Christian
internationals, IV staff, faculty and community volunteers would make up the
rest with special programs being added sometimes to help the Christians, and
sometimes special optional “seminars” for everybody on topics of interest.
Usually there were 1-4 students who made a commitment to follow Jesus with
seriousness, though a houseparty was considered a success if a large majority
of attendees were all moved in even small ways closer to Christ.
Under Craig Colbert’s leadership
directors began measuring these movements toward Christ with a special
questionnaire used during the houseparty. This became an encouragement to the
planners and supporting community as it underscored and illustrated the
“process” toward conversion most internationals experience….e.g. moving from
“Atheist to Uninformed” or from “Uninterested to Curious” or from “Curious to
Seeker” or from “Seeker to Right-with-God.” It was particularly helpful to
those of us schooled in the “Engel’s Scale” approach to evangelism, which shows
that the inner working of the Holy Spirit can be seen in a person moving even
from “no-knowledge-of-God” to an “understanding-of-the-Gospel” or
“some-affection-for-Jesus,” etc.
In February 2000 a major new
reorganization for administering and funding of houseparties was agreed upon
between the principle ISM staff involved and the Bear Trap leadership. Jeff
Yockey, BTR Director, and Craig
Colbert, ISM staff in central MO, negotiated an agreement to insure that
houseparties were staffed and funded for the future. Ned Hale and ISM Training
Coordinators then met with Don Erickson to review the proposal. A Steering
Committee was proposed which would consist of five people (including one BTR
staff and at least one IVCF ISM staff) and chaired by an ISM staff member. This
committee would meet twice yearly to create and maintain vision, policies and
standards, establish dates, make program decisions, recruit speakers and
program staff, raise funds to subsidize program staff and keep program costs
minimal, and evaluate specific houseparties each year.
A number of improvements have
taken place under the leadership of Jeff Yockey and Craig Colbert. New
four-color brochures for houseparties have been developed, many new photos of
internationals at BTR houseparties have been posted on Inter Varsity’s ISM
website “photo gallery,” a new on-line initial-registration format has been
devised to give early and easier access to students and others interested in
getting more information, and a summer houseparty is envisioned as a new
development which will hopefully take place May 25-30, 2002.
The events of 9/11/2001 may have
opened new doors to the hearts of some Muslim students. Conferences for
international students are springing up in some local areas now as staff sense
the need and the opportunity to draw students together in shorter weekend events.
Sometimes amazing experiences illustrate God at work in special ways, like the
November 2001 conference in West Virginia reported on by a volunteer, Katie
Weakland:
“He had fallen asleep during York's talk that night, and while he was
asleep he heard Jesus say to him in Arabic, ‘I am pleased with you.’ At IV’s
mission conference, “Urbana,” we learned that 25% of Muslims are converted
after having a dream or vision of Jesus.
Both Ishmael and Hagar, his sister, were struggling with guilt all
weekend about coming to a Christian event, being that they are Muslim.
“Ishmael did pray with Sean and accepted Jesus as his Savior. Sean came
over to me at this point and said we needed to pray for Hagar. As we were praying I looked over and saw
Norma, a girl from Colombia, sharing with Hagar, from Iran. I thought to
myself, "this is so God." It was so awesome just to sit back and
watch as God answered prayers and the Holy Spirit changed people's lives.
“Both Hagar and Ishmael became Christians, and I have never
seen 2 happier or more joyful people in my life. Hagar shared that she always
felt guilty and full of shame, like she would never be good enough to be loved
by God, and now she felt forgiven, loved, and free. What a blessing to be a
part of God's work and see people literally 're-created' right before your
eyes.”
At a more recent conference for international students in
March 2002 a Muslim student from Turkey wrote on a response card, “Now there is
a struggle between my mind and heart. They’re hitting against each other. What
I believe is that coming to this conference is not just a coincidence. I pray
to God and beg his guidance and help for me to go through this struggle.”
In December 2001 Craig Colbert wrote in his prayer letter to
friends: “We will be taking 13 or more internationals from the University of
Missouri to this year’s house party. Most are seekers and several are very
close to the Kingdom… We recently received an e-mail from one of the folks
going saying ‘thank you for giving us spirit food.’ She is from China and
regularly attends the Friday night GIG’s (God Investigation Group). The
openness of many internationals is amazing, but they do not ‘cross the line’
easily or quickly. We hope that the houseparty experience creates an
environment where it is more natural and easier for folks to cross over into
God’s Kingdom.”
Craig’s
observations here illustrate the realities as well as the hopes of all the
staff and volunteers who bring internationals with them to houseparties. It
underscores the previously mentioned truth that for most internationals it is a
commitment of breath-taking proportions for them to risk leaving so much behind
to become a Christian, and we should consider it a miracle of God’s grace. It
also illustrates how the houseparty usually takes place in the midst of an
active involvement in a local ministry and set of friendships, all of which are
important in helping someone eventually “cross the line” into faith in Christ.
In Craig’s region the impact has been powerful for all of Inter Varsity there.
In a recent year, the number of international student conversions even
outnumbered American student conversions, and Bear Trap houseparties were a
large part of that!
International conferences and
houseparty events have been around a long time. They have been tried in many
circumstances including hotels, retreat centers, local churches with host
families, and recreational camps and conference grounds. They have been
anywhere from a weekend to 7 days in length. They have been sponsored by many
different organizations and churches and often co-sponsored by a coalition of
groups (though mostly just by Inter Varsity). They have been located in the
United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and other Commonwealth countries, Germany,
Austria, and the United States. They have been directed by faculty, community
volunteers and (mostly) by full time ISM campus staff workers. They have
attracted international students with a variety of country and religious
backgrounds as well as Christians of all ages and backgrounds with a variety of
involvements with internationals both on campus and in the communities
surrounding the campus.
The most enduring and effective
form of these events, however, has been the week-long “international
houseparty” held over the Christmas and New Years vacation period using the
basic model (with program variations) of recreational activity combined with
“low-key” presentations and discussions of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Bear
Trap Ranch has been at the core of maintaining and developing this traditional
houseparty model to the praise and Glory of God. May it continue as long as
there are international students eager to come, hear more about Jesus Christ,
and see His love lived out in a community of believers.
If you are interested in
announcements of future houseparties and reports and descriptions of recent
ones, you can find a number of articles on the new Inter Varsity ISM Department
website: www.ivcf.org/ism under the
headings “News” or “Events” or “Ministry Resources…see more categories” and
then “Camps, Houseparties, Special Events.” There are links there to Bear Trap
Ranch’s web-page where dates of approaching houseparties and other camps and
conferences are also announced.