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"We are building not only buildings but personal faith. We have many ways to grow our faith when we participate." Participant at the International Conference on Sending and Hosting Volunteers, November 1998. |
All day long, day after day, the phone brought the same inquiry: "Is there anything that I can do?" The computer screen was filled with E-mail messages offering help. Hundreds consulted the Volunteer Hotline (1-800-918-3100). |
| United Methodists throughout the world were responding to the scenes unfolding on their television screens. Hurricane Mitch had parked off the coast of Honduras and was dumping unprecedented amounts of water on the land. Winds, floods, and mudslides were wiping out whole villages, killing hundreds. People were suffering, as they did this year in Hurricane Floyd, and then, as now, compassionate people felt compelled to help and to serve when needed. |
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Today's technology makes instant information possible. We can be on the scene of a disaster, thanks to television. We can communicate with someone at the scene via the Internet. Whether it be the plight of refugees fleeing ethnic cleansing in the Balkans, children dying from famine and disease, or national infrastructures being devastated by civil conflict, we know about it as it is happening. For many, to sit back and do nothing is unthinkable.
Mother Teresa observed that "there is a tremendous strength growing in the world through sharing together, praying together, suffering together, and working together." There is a new spirit in mission that focuses on developing relationships between people for a common cause. There is a new understanding that the call to be in mission is not just for the chosen few, but for all Christians. The vital, growing mission-volunteer movement in The United Methodist Church is fueled by this new spirit. Last year, more than 60,000 people served in 48 different countries through the United Methodist Volunteers In Mission program. Thousands of others chose different volunteer opportunities for service. |
![]() Bruce Robbins (on ladder), General Secretary, General Commission on Christian Unity and Interreligious Concerns, builds a house frame with Honduran colleagues as a member of a 1999 UMVIM team from New York. In 1998, more than 60,000 people served in 48 countries through the United Methodist Volunteers In Mission program. Photo by Christie House. |
![]() As a medical volunteer from a local church in the South Georgia Conference, Les Kicklighter, a dentistry student, examines a member of a local Hispanic congregation. Photo by Hilda Dutrow. |
Volunteers are helping to provide housing for the homeless and medical care for those who have access to little or none. They are establishing dental clinics, offering their skills for agricultural projects, and working with ministries that seek to provide food for the undernourished. They are teaching Bible studies, literacy, and skill development. They are constructing and repairing church buildings, raising funds, and helping with congregational development. As volunteers put their faith into action, they become, through their caring presence, powerful witnesses of the love of Christ. |
| We speak of the importance of experiencing community in the local church, but it is not easy to achieve. Bishop John Hopkins of the Minnesota Area, himself a veteran volunteer, reminded attendees at the Southeastern Jurisdiction's Volunteers In Mission rally that John Wesley started a movement, not an organized church. Bishop Hopkins noted that, from his experience, whenever Methodists around the world act like a movement, God blesses them and does marvelous things with them. | ![]() As part of a Mission Discovery experience, Cynthia Burnson, Roxanne O'Brien, and Sara Florkey worked at Rockford Urban Ministries in Rockford, Illinois. Photo by Jon McGinty. |
Text and photographs copyright 1999 by New World Outlook: The Mission Magazine of The United Methodist Church. Used by Permission. Visit New World Outlook Online at http://gbgm-umc.org/nwo/.
For reprint permission, contact New World Outlook by E-mail at nwo@gbgm-umc.org.
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