Pastors

A Real Trip

Pulling off the family mission experience.

Leadership Journal March 5, 2006

“Are you sure you’ll be safe?”

“Maybe you should try something smaller first.”

When we told friends and family we were thinking about taking a family missions trip, the general reaction was less than enthusiastic. They thought we were three seats short of a full flight to pack up our grade-school age kids and travel to the other side of the world with a group of strangers just to help out at an orphanage. Did we really think our girls could and should minister beside their parents so far from home, eating, sleeping, and (worse) going to the bathroom in strange places?

Well, yes.

Traditionally, short-term missions are the province of youth groups and adults who want the chance to minister to other cultures without quitting their day jobs, if you will. But Adam Henry of the relief and development organization Food for the Hungry says that’s starting to change. “More and more, families are beginning to inquire about the possibilities of serving together,” says Henry. “I see it as beneficial for a child to see parents serve the Lord. Children become world Christians.”

My husband and I had talked about the idea for three years, but it never seemed to feel quite right. Yet as our girls got older, I saw them adapting more to our relatively easy life in the suburbs. Yes, they went to church every week and learned the evils of sin, but what about the evils of complacency? I feared that our culture of prosperity and instant gratification would slowly numb them into being careless Christians, unaware of and unconcerned with the hurting world beyond their comfortable lives.

We also felt our kids needed to experience their faith in action, to discover that they didn’t have to grow up before they could be ministers. Pastor Eric Spangler, Director of Mobilization for Free Methodist World Missions, took his children ages 4-12 to India for that very reason. He says, “We hoped our children would gain a larger perspective of the world and the kingdom of God, as well as a sense for the lives of those who suffer.”

And so last October, our family of five (Mom, Dad, and three girls ages 6, 10, and 11) were on our way to Beijing, China for two-weeks. None of us returned home spiritual giants, but the experience made us certain of one thing: We’ll do it again. Because of their time with Chinese children, our three girls have indeed become “world Christians” in ways we never imagined.

The First Step

Once we decided to pursue a family mission trip, we had to figure out where to go and what to do once we got there. To find the right location, I took the easy route and surfed the Net for “short-term missions.” I narrowed down those results with a few logistic issues. We probably needed to go someplace close, no trans-Atlantic flights for our three girls, all of whom deal with some degree of ADHD. It had to be affordable. I also had some specifically family-oriented questions: 1) Is the area safe? 2) Can all family members participate in the ministry? 3) Is the agency open to sending families?

When I saw the opportunity to work in an orphanage, I knew it was perfect. Then I saw the place. China. China? Seriously, God? What happened to close, affordable, and easy? But it didn’t take long for God to let me know that none of those things were hurdles for him. “Okay,” I prayed, “China it is.”

In the Field

Our two-week mission with The Sowers International (www.sower.org) included two parts.

1. We spent days going into Chinese classrooms to help them practice English by telling them about ourselves. Their questions often led us to share our beliefs; and 2. After school and on weekends, we assisted in an orphanage run by a Christian couple, bonding with the children. The orphans spoke minimal English, but despite this, our children helped them with their homework, taught them songs, did crafts with them, and raced them along the Yellow River.

Becca, our oldest, gravitated to the nursery where three little girls with cleft palates smiled at her touch. She held them, rocked them, and even let them spit up on her with none of her characteristic “eew-gross” declarations. Becca is typically rather shy and reserved. She also has Tourette Syndrome, which causes her to be extremely sensitive and easily overwhelmed. As I watched her with the infants, I could see her mind working to match the unthinkable act of abandoning such beautiful babies with the reality that some mother felt the need to do just that.

When we came home, I asked Becca if her experience changed her. She said, “I’m not so shy to help people. Before I was too scared. Now I know if someone needs help, I can do it.” Becca still knows one girl can’t change the world, but she knows one girl can hold a motherless baby.

On the other hand, Emily, our 10-year-old, has rarely felt overwhelmed by anything. Hers is the confidence that asserts, “I don’t need the instructions, Mom!” Emily, whose energy and volume could power a 747, discovered in China what she had been hearing for years: God made me special to do what only I can do. It was Emily who figured out she could teach English with a rousing rendition of “Head and Shoulders, Knees and Toes.” It was Emily who led the other kids hiking up the side of the mountain. It was Emily who met a group of girls on the street, invited them to have dinner with us, and introduced us to their families.

Emily, who is forever being told to calm down, quiet down, and slow down at home, learned the beauty of channeling her gifts into ministry suited to her. While she ponders where that ministry will take her, Emily’s expanded worldview makes China and it’s children a part of her that simply comes out in whatever she does. Guests at our County Fair last summer viewed an unusual display on “China’s Forgotten Children,” Emily’s “own” 35 orphans, now a part of her heart.

I know much of what Beth’s 6-year-old mind took in won’t be revealed in immediate, concrete ways. But one thing Beth knew from the first trilingual announcement on the airplane: these people are different. They speak differently. They look differently. They drive differently, go to different schools, and eat different food. Her second conclusion followed quickly “different” can be a blast.

She ate the food. She pulled her Pooh Bear suitcase along without help. She smiled and shrugged when two strange women took her into their merchant booth and began brushing and caressing her long brown hair. She accepted being the center of attention in every classroom we visited. Shy and quiet herself, she drew the quieter children into her orbit. She also served as an inspiration to the rest of our team, who joked, “We can’t complain about anything getting rough, or we’ll look worse than a 6-year-old!” Through her daily unconscious attitude of “adjust and appreciate,” quite different from her at-home attitude, Beth taught the other eleven of us how to be a missionary: Become as a little child.

Preparing the Kids

Beyond the physical preparations, shots, passports, clothes, etc., a family requires special social, emotional, and spiritual preparation. Children in particular need to know what to expect: No TV, Nintendo, or swimming pools, and calling your best friend to chat will pretty much be out of the question. The restrooms (if any) will be “unusual,” as will the food. But we found that our kids adapted quickly. After the first crisis over the very public bathrooms, our girls said, “It works for them, must be okay for us too.”

As best we could, we prepared them for the pain they would see. Little hearts are tender, and they don’t understand the complexities involved in the struggles of people around the world. The stories of how the children lived before coming to the orphanage broke our girls’ hearts in a good, but painful, awakening. Children ministering to children, however, can impact everyone profoundly. Adults often move in with pity and helplessness, but children do instinctively what should be done. They treat their new friends like equals, with respect, interest, and love. Repeatedly we witnessed this truth: children can open doors that adults cannot.

For this reason, many short-termers and agencies recommend choosing a mission where the work itself includes families or children. Pastor Spangler’s family conducted a pastor’s family retreat in India, and his four children ministered to the nationals’ children in ways their parents couldn’t. “Whatever you do,” warns Adam Henry, “don’t sign on for a trip that employs the parents and relegates the kids to spectators.” Though my husband is a doctor, we did not seek out a medical mission for that very reason. We wanted a hands-on experience for everyone, ages 6 to 40.

Our most imperative preparation, however, was prayer. We prayed for China. We prayed for all of our financial support needs. Spiritual lessons don’t start when the plane lands. From the first investigation through coming home and beyond, opportunities for trust, obedience, and answered prayer abound.

Coming Home

We knew our trip had succeeded when, after the 13-hour plane ride home, all three girls asked, “When will we do it again?” Now, months later, we keep the memories of our time in China alive with prayers, talks, e-mails, and gifts to the orphanage.

For Christmas this year, we gave Becca a card from Samaritan’s Purse that read “A gift was given in honor of Becca to provide loving care for orphans.” I watched her eyes get moist and I knew that, much as she loved the new “Rippin’ Rocket Roller Coaster” set she had opened first, she would have traded it for that card. These orphans are not pictures on a flyer or names pulled off of a website. For our girls, these children on the other side of the planet have faces and names.

I want to assure you that we are not some ideal family. We have real struggles, real challenges, and real excuses for not heading off to a foreign country for two weeks. But, believe me, if we can do this, you can, too.

This article first appeared in the Summer 2004 issue of Christian Parenting Today.

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