Posted: 4/02/04
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| Thousands of spring break vacationers–mostly high school and college students–roam the beach at South Padre Island as giant sand sculptures depicting Jesus' resurrection, death on the cross and outstretched arms provide scenic testimony. Beach Reach mission volunteers would “hang out” by the sculptures to strike up conversations about spiritual matters with passersby. |
Hardin-Simmons University Baptist Student Ministry Director Chris Sammons (right) and a group of students work in a Boston inner-city kitchen during spring break.
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No break from ministry for student missionaries
By Ferrell Foster
Texas Baptist Communications
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND–No written record documents commitments to Christ made one night this spring on South Padre Island. But campus minister Buddy Young said hundreds of college students used the local convention center as an altar that evening to “lay their lives down for the work of the kingdom.”
About 440 Christian college students went to the island at the tip of Texas to minister and witness to thousands of students who went there to party.
The Beach Reach missions volunteers joined hundreds of Texas students who traveled all over the country and beyond its borders to minister during spring break.
Churches and campus Baptist Student Ministries of the Baptist General Convention of Texas sponsor the annual evangelistic effort.
Some students scattered throughout Mexico to meet medical and other needs. Others journeyed to Florida to build a Habitat for Humanity house. Still others traveled to snowy Boston to support Christians there.
Bill Barker, BSM director at the University of Texas in San Antonio, took students to Vancouver, Canada, to teach English as a Second Language classes to Chinese residents.
One team shared the story of Christ with people who had never heard it before, the BGCT's Brenda Sanders said.
A group from the University of Texas, Pan Am, went to Monterrey, Mexico, as part of a partnership between Mexican and the university's Baptist ministries.
As a result of this partnership, four Mexican students will serve as summer missionaries in Texas this year, and a combined team of the two BSMs will go to North Africa later this year, Sanders said.
The Beach Reach effort on South Padre Island is the biggest single endeavor each year, but shocking news from Iraq jolted this year's volunteers. A former Beach Reach volunteer, missionary David McDonnall, had been killed along with three other Christian aid workers in a drive-by shooting. McDonnall's wife, Niki, was critically injured.
“The news of his death was devastating but not surprising to those of us who knew him,” said Young, coordinator of Beach Reach and BSM director at West Texas A&M University where McDonnall had attended college. “David was committed to missions and to proclaiming the gospel to the Arab people.”
During the Tuesday evening worship service, Young told the students how God had changed McDonnall's life through Beach Reach. McDonnall “died to the things of this world at Beach Reach and during other monumental mission moments.”
Later, Young recounted that he encouraged the students to “die at Padre, not physically, but to those things in their flesh that would keep them from wholeheartedly serving Jesus Christ.
“God took over the meeting with his presence and power. It was as if everyone was crying out for God to take away everything in their life that would hinder them from a total commitment to him. Many were lying on the floor of the convention center weeping and pleading with God to break them of anything that would hold them back from his purpose. …
“The worship band couldn't continue playing because they too were on their face before God.”
In the wake of McDonnall's death, “God's hand was raising up a new generation of Beach Reachers who were willing to take the gospel throughout the world, not fearing death because they died that night at Beach Reach,” Young said. In eternity, countless students will look back to that night as “an encounter with God that lead them to go to the nations.”
Young said one freshman told him: “This was the most intense worship I have ever experienced. I was physically drained when it was over. God broke through and changed my heart forever.”
Medical missions
Hundreds of miles to the west and a long way from the beach, a group of Dallas students and six doctors held medical clinics in Juarez, Mexico. JoAnna Hoyt, BSM director for Southern Methodist University and the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, led a group of 39 medical students and seven others from SMU on the trip.
They sent out six teams to various small churches “mostly on the outskirts of Juarez,” which is across the border from El Paso, Hoyt said. They held clinics for four days, treated 1,300 patients and recorded 43 professions of faith in Christ.
One SMU junior went on the trip to “serve in any way God would allow her,” Hoyt recalled. Amanda, who didn't speak Spanish, got some of the Spanish-speaking students to help her prepare a simple explanation to go along with the pictures on an “Evangicube,” an evangelistic tool.
“There were many instances when a waiting patient would see the strange picture cube and try to figure it out,” Hoyt said. “Amanda would then get her handy notebook with the Spanish explanation of the gospel and sit down with the people and read it to them.”
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| Volunteers from Dallas Baptist University spend spring break working on two Habitat for Humanity building projects in Tallahassee, Fla. |
One day, Amanda explained the gospel to an 80-year-old man. She summoned a medical student and the local pastor to answer the man's questions. Others watched and listened.
The old man, shedding tears, eventually gave his life to Christ, Hoyt said. Then the pastor asked the others who had been listening if they would like to do the same.
“At the end, all eight of the people sitting there had shared that they wanted to give their lives to Christ. Amanda, upon seeing the tears of the old gentleman, had no choice but to join her tears with his.
“Eight people! And all because one student was willing to serve in any way possible, even if she didn't know the language,” Hoyt said.
Ministries in Boston
Ninety-two students from Hardin-Simmons University spent spring break in Boston supporting a variety of Christian ministries, said Chris Sammons, BSM director.
They participated in more than 80 projects in the greater Boston area, including a food bank, a rescue mission, after-school programs, women's shelters and churches.
The HSU students also “prayerwalked” around several college campuses, including MIT, Harvard, Northeastern and Boston College.
Senior theology student Justin Jackson said he expected people up north to be unresponsive but was pleasantly surprised at their friendliness.
“I thought we would be bringing Jesus to them, but God was already there and at work through the ministries in Boston.”
Habitat for Humanity
Sixty-five students and staff members from Dallas Baptist University helped build two houses in Tallahassee, Fla., as part of Habitat for Humanity's Collegiate Challenge.
They put up siding, painted the interior, installed insulation and laid sod for the houses.
They also pulled up shingles and rebuilt the roof on a home that is going to be sold with the hope of using the money to buy land for three or four more Habitat Houses.
“I love doing something for people that lasts,” said Michelle Morris, a DBU freshman.
“A house is something that can last for years and is a place where a family can create a lot of wonderful memories.”
Charles Richardson and Kristie Brooks contributed to this story.
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