Home
Projects
Money Matters
Group Leaders and Chaperone Info
Team Registration

Individual Application
(for those without a team)

Basic Qualifications for Missions

Travel Info
Project Planning Timeline
Pre-Project Study
FAQ's
IWC Staff Info
Safety and Security
Coming Home
I Want to be a Career Missionary
Mobilize others for Missions!
Meet Jesus
Ministry and Resource Partners
About the IMB
Other Links

Home > From the Field > Photo Gallery

Testimonies | Stories | Photo gallery | Videos | Media Vault

From the Field more stories

Featured story:

Taking One for Missions

Over the years, thousands of students have sacrificed many things to serve as summer missionaries. They have given up lucrative summer jobs, summer classes that would have allowed them to graduate early, the comforts of home, mom’s home cooking (after two semesters of cafeteria cooking, or their own) and many other equally note-worthy items and opportunities.

They have suffered through…Montezuma’s revenge, heat and humidity…cold and wind… slimy, hard or itchy and strange and weird - and that’s just the food. The places where it’s eaten are sometimes hard to stomach, too.

Their beds have ranged from…hammocks…mattresses too hard…mattresses too soft…no mattresses…to the floor…in one star…two star…no star and a million star hotels (the last ones had no roofs).

Transportation---from taxis, combis (vans where you can always “fit one more”…that’s how many you can get in one), buses (of all sizes…with or without live animals on top) to two- and four-legged modes of mobility.

All of this with only one thing on their mind…to do ”whatever it takes” to get the Word to those who have no access to the Gospel.
So, the question is, are you willing to “take one for missions?” Oklahoma Baptist University student Jennifer Kennedy was this past summer when she served on a research team in southern Peru. During her team’s “mid-summer debriefing/r & r” time she followed through on a challenge issued by a friend back home.
“On the streets in Tupac there were small stands with little aquariums of frogs that they blend with papaya and other herbal things and it supposedly helps your brain somehow,” Jennifer wrote. “I picked out my frog and downed two glasses - which I think now ‘I deserved 2 pizzas, Rebecca!’”


What Jennifer did was, basically, outrageous, but that is the attitude summer missionaries need to have to ‘get the job done.
My team was responsible for identifying the “unreached” areas of southern Peru, Bolivia, northern Chile and northern Argentina and then advocating for them. Once “identified”, these areas are then made available to churches and associations in the U.S. and Latin America. After being adopted by churches, these areas are then engaged by the REAPartners who evangelize, disciple, train leaders and start churches with an aim to see a church planting movement born.


Mike Weaver, IMB missionary in Peru said that the REAPSouth Team has chosen to take a “student volunteer-intensive” approach. "Over the past five summers (and several semesters) we have used over fifty student missionaries and there have that many requests for 2006-2007 alone." Projects are listed on the task website at thetask.org/students/projects.
Jennifer was one of 17 students that served this past summer for REAPSouth. Her research team of three traveled throughout the area around Lake Titicaca identifying “fields white unto harvest” while the other 14 students lived on-site serving in concert with stateside partners. Their “homes for the summer” were small Andean villages where, for most, the Gospel had never entered. The Lord did many wonderful things to and through these valiant summer servants.
“As most of you know,” Jennifer shared, “we didn’t have too many comforts down there; well, pretty much the only familiar thing I had all summer was my backpack. Most of the other summer missionaries would probably agree that you experience God in a way that you never have before when you are forced to give up the things that you hold dear and those that you think you need. After two months there…I have come to a better understanding of what it means to rely completely on God for everything...and from that I have realized my need for Him more and more everyday.”

For more information on REAPSouth summer missions’ opportunities, visit www.reapsouth.org. To learn more about similar ministries contact the International Mission Board at (800) 999-3113 or visit http://going.imb.org

Other Stories

[ Read other stories at tconline.org ]

 

A Southern Baptist Convention entity supported by the Cooperative Program and
the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering®.
® Lottie Moon Christmas Offering is a registered trademark of Woman's Missionary Union
© Copyright 2006 International Mission Board. All Rights Reserved.

Additional questions, Comments, Concerns... Can't Find It? TO RECEIVE PERSONAL ATTENTION contact your IMB Webservant.