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‘Vacations with a Purpose’
on the Rise among American Christians;
1.6 Million Now Making Overseas Mission Trip Each Year
ORLANDO,
Fla. -- $6 billion!
That’s one estimate of what 1.6 million American Christians are contributing
in labor annually as they travel to remote areas of the world on short-term
mission trips. The catch phrase to describe this increasingly popular phenomenon
– “vacations with a purpose.”
Gerry and Sylvia Powell, a 60s-something couple from Beattyville, Ky., have
spent almost all their vacation time volunteering on trips to help missionaries.
To date, they have been on more than 30 volunteer trips with Wycliffe
Associates, and they aren’t slowing down.
Wycliffe Associates (www.wycliffeassociates.org)
was founded in 1967 to support and encourage Bible translators in tangible,
practical ways. The ministry provides opportunities for volunteers to use their
gifts and abilities in hands-on projects, meeting the real needs of Bible
translators on the mission field.
Instead of heading to a resort or a favorite vacation spot, the Powells have
found the experience of working in places that don’t have resorts, hotels and
vacation destinations to be more purposeful and satisfying. Their objective is
to help missionaries with some sort of a construction project, a calling that
has been extremely joyous and rewarding.
They are not alone. A growing number of Americans are using their time off to
help others.
Wycliffe Associates is one of those organizations whose investment into
short-term missions is growing. Devoting $10 million a year in recruiting,
training and sending volunteers overseas to assist missionaries, the “vacation”
of choice for 1,500 Wycliffe Associates volunteers is missions.
“Part of our investment in short-term missions is the completion of our new
Volunteer Mobilization Center, a 16,000-square-foot facility in Orlando that
will be used to mobilize thousands of volunteers heading out on short-term
missions,” said Bruce Smith, president and chief executive officer of Wycliffe
Associates. “Designed and built primarily by volunteers, the center will service
a growing tide of American’s seeking to use their free time more productively.”
50,000 Churches Participating
Roger Peterson, president of STEM International (Short Term Evangelical
Missions) (www.stemintl.org), estimates
that 50,000 churches in the United States are sending members out on mission
trips each year.
Just one example, White Memorial Presbyterian Church in Raleigh, N.C., had
almost 200 members go on 15 foreign and domestic mission trips in 2007,
according to Danita Morgan, director of missions. The foreign nations were
Haiti, Northern Ireland, Poland, Russia and Mexico. Several White Memorial
members took the mission trip to Mexico with their teenagers in lieu of the
time-honored spring break trip.
Global Crossroad (www.globalcrossroad.com),
a for-profit firm based in Baton Rouge, La., arranges volunteer vacations in 34
countries. It is one of more than 3,000 nonprofit and commercial enterprises
catering to travelers who are more interested in serving than being served.
“Mission Maker Magazine,” (www.missionmakermagazine.org)
with a circulation of 150,000, is another example of just how large this
phenomenon is. It is a full-sized, full-color, multi-page magazine whose
editorial and advertising serve North Americans interested in Christian missions
throughout the world.
Back in 2005, David Bernstein of “Satisfaction Magazine” quoted Doug Cutchins,
co-author of the book “Volunteer Vacations: Short-term Adventures That Will
Benefit You and Others,” as saying “this phenomenon continues to grow.”
Disasters Changed Landscape
“It’s gone on in small ways for a very long time,” Cutchins said. But the
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks brought on a surge of interest in this
small, but growing segment of the travel industry, according to Cutchins.
The 2004 tsunami disaster that wrecked havoc on Thailand and Indonesia sparked
even more attention to service-oriented tourism.
No exact figures exist on the increase in volunteer vacations – also referred to
as “volunteerism.” But all evidence points to the popularity of the trips
skyrocketing, particularly among baby boomers and empty nesters.
The Powells, who have seven grown children, make at least one trip a year for a
few weeks up to a month. “These trips are exhausting, and can be emotionally and
physically taxing. But the rewards are incredible. We literally have met and
worked with hundreds of people, from Peru to Nigeria,” said Gerry Powell.
“My children have learned that when we plan for an ‘educational experience,’ it
will be to help build cabinets in Nigeria or a roof in the Ivory Coast,” said
Sylvia Powell.
One year the Powells traveled to an exotic South Pacific island paradise to
attend a ceremony that celebrated the completion of the New Testament in the
Arosi language. Once there, they experienced a celebration that was years in the
making; an event that transcended any vacation.
Baby Boomers Lead the Way
Baby boomers and empty nesters have come to the point in their lives where they
think less about keeping up with their neighbors and friends by accumulating
more material things and have begun pondering more about how to enrich to their
lives and the lives of others. “Time” magazine reported that boomers volunteer
at a rate of 33 percent, contrasted with 24 percent for those 65 and older. Last
year, 65.4 million people did volunteer work, but 75 million volunteers will be
needed in 2010, the magazine reported.
Airlines have recognized this and advertise special rates and packages for
“religious” travel.
Wycliffe Associates has recognized this as well. As hundreds of thousands of new
volunteer missionaries rise from the ranks of retired baby boomers, they will
challenge the status quo of missions and how organizations will respond to them.
Wycliffe Associates is positioned to usher in a new era of Christian service in
missions by involving thousands of boomers in the acceleration of Bible
translation worldwide.
Advice for Those Who Want to Participate
Kim Hurst, the founder of World Tracks, a national training organization for
short-term mission teams, and Chris Eaton, founder and president of Bridge
Builders (www.bridgebuilders.org),
an organization that assists colleges, churches, schools and other organizations
in developing transformational service experiences, have written a book entitled
“Vacations with a Purpose.”
They suggest:
• Before the trip—Read your Bible and “Vacations with a Purpose” to prepare your
heart, your suitcase and your expectations.
• During the trip—Record your discoveries, thoughts and feelings.
• After the trip—Use it to debrief, evaluate your experience, and pursue further
study on missions.
You can mix fun with a visit to a mission program. .
How?
To “truly encounter the secrets of the land and its people is to serve them. By
incorporating a short-term volunteer service or mission component into their
vacation itinerary, ‘travelers-in-service’ can transform an ordinary excursion
into a deeply meaningful travel adventure,” wrote Dale Painter in “Discipleship
Journal.”
“Don't limit your assessment to your professional skills—often a change of pace
from employment-related duties is important,” Painter wrote. Manual skills or
interests in gardening, building, outdoors or writing may represent valuable
resources to service organizations.
“We can use anyone overseas or here domestically. Every skill is needed in the
mission field and is especially valuable to Bible translators, who want to spend
most of their time actually translating languages into Scripture. Folks should
not worry if they have had formal missionary training. They are welcome and
invited to come use their skills God has given them,” said Bruce Smith,
President and CEO of Wycliffe Associates.
Dale Painter did raise the question of whether it is it worth it to “waste”
money on a trip, when you could be spending the money on missions.
“Most people agree that visiting a developing country changes you for life. You
have real images in your mind: kids sharing beds; a home with cardboard walls;
wires hanging from the ceiling with one light bulb powered by an extension cord
stretched from another building. When you hear someone say that God supplies all
our needs, you think a little harder about all that entails. You have more of a
sense of partnering with God in bringing Good News to the world,” he said.
The Powells, who have traveled to so many places with Wycliffe Associates, are a
model for others wanting to use their talents. For them their vacation time
spent going to help Bible translators is much more than leisure or adventure,
it’s the opportunity to experience life in a bigger perspective.
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| Wycliffe Associates volunteers in Kenya
take a break from volunteer work to enjoy African wildlife and adventure. |
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| Mike Bender and his two daughters spent
their vacation time as Wycliffe Associates volunteers working on the Juba
Translation Center in the Southern Sudan. |
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| A Wycliffe Associates family cools off
after working in the hot sun on the renovation of the Juba Translation
Center in the southern part of the Sudan. |
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