四虎影院 Magazine Students Prepare for a Summer of Service
The fall semester hadn鈥檛 finished, but the six students leading Emmaus Road were thinking a lot about summer. What service projects should they sponsor in 2007? Which students should participate? After prayer and consideration, the core team decided to send about 30 students to Indonesia, Ukraine, Cambodia and Nigeria.
鈥淲e want to be messengers to the world,鈥 says Megan Griffith 鈥07. 鈥淲e want to bring the message of Christ to people all over the world and to have our students come back and let people know what鈥檚 going on in those countries.鈥
Megan traveled with an Emmaus Road team to Indonesia two summers ago.鈥淚 loved my experience there,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was one of the most valuable things I鈥檝e done at 四虎影院.鈥
Core team members, advised by the Center for Leadership and Learning, select the service trips, appoint team leaders and oversee the application process.
The trip to Nigeria proved to be the most popular this year, and the core team had to turn away some applicants. 鈥淧eople are so interested in AIDS and Africa right now that the trip advertised itself,鈥 Megan says.
Students are responsible for raising the funds for the trips, which range in cost from $2,000 to $3,500 per person. The core team helps participants write support letters. Though the cost may be prohibitive for some students, a lack of funding has never canceled a trip.
鈥淭he best way to recruit is to ask students who鈥檝e been on past trips to tell their friends,鈥 says Stephanie Hansen 鈥08. She was profoundly influenced by her trip last year to Russia, where she worked at a summer camp for orphans.
鈥淭he kids are so in need of love that they cling to you,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey need good examples of people that they can look up to and try to model their lives after.鈥
According to the CoMission for Children at Risk, about 15,000 Russian orphans must leave orphanages each year, and about half of the girls are forced into prostitution.
鈥淚 had a heart for the girls,鈥 Stephanie says. 鈥淭he statistics are terrible. Even though there鈥檚 a language barrier, they understand love and attention.鈥
She hopes that students serving in Ukraine at the Little Lambs Ministry summer camp, a Christian program for more than 200 orphans, will continue the work students did last year.
鈥淥ne of the goals of Emmaus Road is working with organizations that are there long term so we can be a part of an ongoing effort,鈥 says Alyssa Prigel 鈥07. 鈥淲e want to bring vitality to these organizations and better serve the people there.鈥
Alyssa worked with Christian Associates International in France, Holland and Germany. 鈥淏eing on the core team has allowed me to build relationships and minister in a way that was modeled to me on my trip,鈥 she says.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been able to see God work a lot through us during this process,鈥 Megan says. 鈥淚t started out looking like a jumbled mess of people, but, by the end, we all felt an undeniable peace about the people and trips we had chosen. It was amazing to feel God鈥檚 presence because it鈥檚 not really us picking, but Him.鈥