Category Archives: Worldwide Challenge

Tuesday Morning in Seoul

So, what was Korea like? Here’s some text that probably won’t see the light of day in print or online.

It’s 6:45 on Tuesday morning and Yura Park and her teammate Rachel race down the hill, green with trees and flowers. The air is clear and crisp. A cool breeze blows past them. birds chirp but they are in too big of a hurry to catch the bus to notice. They race from their dormitory, past store-front grocers and coffee shops fronting immaculately clean sidewalks to meet the bus that will take them to the subway on their hour-long commute to Kyung Hee University.

Yura and Seojung. Yura showed the Sand Art short film version of Have You Heard of the Four Spiritual Laws? and Seojung prayed and received Christ. Seojung is holding the Bible Yura just gave her.

Yura and Seojung. Yura showed the Sand Art short film version of Have You Heard of the Four Spiritual Laws? and Seojung prayed and received Christ. Seojung is holding the Bible Yura just gave her.

The streets are clean, the traffic is heavy, and crowds move quickly and in an orderly fashion.

Yura and Rachel board the bus and read their Bibles to pass the time. Sometimes they fall asleep because they are so tired. They use the commute to wake up and think about the day. A few old-schoolers read a newspaper, but, for the most part, passengers stare at their screens.

Yura eats Gimbap, rice rolled in seaweed and stuffed with tuna, ham, egg, carrots and spinach. She calls it Korean fast food. Wrapped in a foot-long piece of foil, it proves to be more than she can eat this morning. She and Rachel exit the bus and head toward the subway stairs.

The sidewalks are clean, and professionally-dressed people they pass move efficiently to their destinations. The women quickly scan their subway passes at the turnstiles and board the train. It’s well-lit, clean and quiet. Once again, passengers stare at their screens. Korean people, even the children have smart phone. Koreans don’t talk that much to each other because they are doing things with their smart phones. Wifi is everywhere.

Seven stops later, Rachel and Yura exit the subway and board a bus that takes them to campus. Once on campus, they climb up an intolerably steep driveway, round a corner, pass The Crown, the campus theater, and enter an attached classroom building for all the official clubs on campus. No elevators in this building so they climb the stairs all the way to the fifth floor. By the time they reach the top, they are exhausted, sweating and awake. On the fifth floor, they enter KCCC’s club room on campus at 7:55, efficiently five minutes early.

Two other staff members and nine student leaders sit on mats on the wood-like laminate floor. they sing worship songs while one of the students plays the guitar, and then they pray, everyone, all together, at the same time. A beautiful chorus of Korean ascends to the throne of grace as they ask their heavenly Father to guide their steps that day and to help them live lives that please him. Prayed for summer conference, we prayed that our disciples, especially our freshmen would attend. Also programs for non-believers who have weak faith. We invite them to join us. Many of them meet God there. Poster on wall,  30-40 students usually go. They become the leaders on campus the following year.

Freshmen attend conference, can do internship to become multipliers, who do Bible studies with other students on campus. Intern multipliers experience this life and choose whether or not to continue being multipliers and becoming the student leaders. The student leadership changes after this conference.

After the prayer time, they take out a workbook of devotions from Exodus. They read the daily reading together and then silently answer the questions. A breeze wafts through the open window into the un-airconditioned room. Outside, the sounds of traffic passing by in the distance provide a quite white noise. Scenes of an animee Jesus welcoming a cartoon character into his presence adorn the wall. On one side, a poster shows all of the small discipleship groups on campus that the students lead.

Everyone breaks up into small groups to discuss their answers to the questions, share prayer requests and pray with each other. After the prayer time, one of the students moves to the piano and plays quietly in the background. Eventually, the students leave for class. The four staff members, including Yura and Rachel stay for the daily staff meeting.

They laugh easily together. Yura, easy to tease, fends off questions about whether or not the boys will ever get to see her playful side. Boys see her on the lecture day, very focused on the task at hand. However, she claims that when she is with her friends, she makes so many mistakes she becomes high maintenance. The girls each have boyfriends but Yura doesn’t yet. They tell her she needs to find a boyfriend, but she needs to let him see her funny side.

How will the readers know I was actually there and saw what happened? By reading scenes where I describe what I experienced with my five senses. There’s the challenge. So many scenes. So few words. Like every writer who has ever written before me, I wonder if the editor has any extra words he can spare for me. Doubt it.

Report from Korea

Well, that escalated quickly. That was the tagline on the email Mark sent to my editor and me on a Thursday morning.

From left to right: Stephen, Peter, Yura, Tom and me. We're at Blessing coffee shop, started by one of the local churches. There are more than 14 million Christians in Korea, making up almost 30 percent of the population. Yet, I am told that the Church in Korea is in crisis because younger generations are missing in action. Maybe short films will be part of the solution.

From left to right: Stephen, Peter, Yura, Tom and me. We’re at Blessing coffee shop, started by one of the local churches. There are more than 14 million Christians in Korea, making up almost 30 percent of the population. Yet, I am told that the Church in Korea is in crisis because younger generations are missing in action. Maybe short films will be part of the solution.

After almost a week of making pre-dawn phone calls, talking about the timing, and collecting information, we determined I should go to Seoul, South Korea, with photographer Tom Mills. Less than 48 hours later, I was packed and on the plane.

During the trip, I watched new staff member Yura Park use short films on her campus to explain her faith to unbelievers and to encourage young Christians to grow. Tom and I were even able to witness one of the students pray and receive Christ.

I also spent time with the Korean staff leaders who told me they had been looking for a new way for our staff members to share their faith. Then they heard about short films. Currently, our staff members use the booklet, Have You Heard of the Four Spiritual Laws?  But, after 50 years, everyone saw the need to repackage the message in a way that makes sense to this generation.

Enter the Jesus film short film strategy. Staff members download the Jesus Film app (as you can at the iTunes store or Google Play store at app.jesusfilmmedia.org) to their smart phones, download their favorite short films and then head to campus. Tom and I watched asYura showed films to students and then asked questions that led to genuine conversations.

If you want to watch some of these films, you can go to YouTube and search for “The Black HoleFalling Plates,  and Sand Art P4U. The Sand Art film is a gorgeous piece of someone doing sand art while the speaker narrates the Four Spiritual Laws. Our Korean ministry produced that film, first in Korean, then in English.

So much to tell, and so few words to tell it with. I plan to post more her on our blog as I write the story and continue to reflect on the trip. I am so grateful to be writing again and to be serving in the role as missionary journalist.

Meet My New Korean Friends

From left to right: Stephen, Peter, Yura, Tom and me. We're at Blessing coffee shop, started by one of the local churches. There are more than 14 million Christians in Korea, making up almost 30 percent of the population. Yet, I am told that the Church in Korea is in crisis because younger generations are missing in action. Looking forward to learning more this week.

From left to right: Stephen, Peter, Yura, Tom and me. We’re at Blessing coffee shop, started by one of the local churches. There are more than 14 million Christians in Korea, making up almost 30 percent of the population.

 

This morning, I am writing from my hotel room in Seoul, Korea about our staff members here using short films to start spiritual conversations. They are energized, our leaders are thrilled and I can’t wait to write  about it.

When we arrived yesterday, three of our Korean staff members arrived at the airport to pick us up. (I’m traveling with Worldwide Challenge photographer Tom Mills). Yura is joining Korea Campus Crusade for Christ as a new staff member after growing up as a missionary kid in the Philippines. She attended a university in Manila, found Philippine Campus Crusade for Christ, and now she’s a new staff member in Korea. Due to my own roots in the Philippines, I like her already. Grateful that her English is flawless.

Stephen, also a new staff member, leads teams of new staff who are successfully using the short films strategy. Last night after dinner, when I asked exactly how the short films strategy works, he whipped out his tablet, found a link to a film called The Black Hole and showed it to me. The premise was funny.

A sleep-deprived worker photocopies a paper that has a big black circle on it. The employee sets his plastic cup on top of the hole, and the cup disappears. He reaches into the hole and discovers he can retrieve his cup. The possibilities for greed are endless. It’s only two minutes long, well inside the length of my short attention span.

Afterward, Stephan asked me what I thought the film was about. Greed. But what about greed? It grows. How did greed escalate? No matter what you are looking for you can never get enough. And then, just as Stephen was getting ready to show me the related clip from the Jesus film, we arrived at our hotel. I agreed to wait for another day to see how the rest of it plays out. Isn’t that the way?

Peter, a pastor through and through and our driver, directs the school that the new staff members attend. Married with three children, he likes to make jokes. Perfect. I like to laugh. But more than that, he serves the body of Christ and equips our new staff members to do the work of the ministry.

Peter joined Korea Campus Crusade, and then he gave up the chance to go to seminary in the United States to attend seminary in Korea and become a pastor. After faithfully serving his congregation, Peter recognized that his true calling is to Korea Campus Crusade, so he rejoined staff. I have about six more questions I don’t have answers to yet.

When I asked him why the short films strategy in Korea, he stopped, thought carefully, leaned into the conversation and told me some wonderful reasons. Next blog post, I’ll explain those. I think his words speak to the heart of the story I’m writing. Biggest challenge? Deciding what the story is really about. So much to write; so few words.

For now, it’s time to wrap this up and meet Peter. He has found a cell phone that Tom and I can use while we’re here in Korea.

Very grateful for his help and for Yura and Stephen. I’m fortunate to call them friends.

 

Writing for Life, Xenia, Ohio

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Earlier this fall, Mark and I traveled to Xenia, Ohio, home to Athletes in Action, Cru’s ministry to student and professional athletes and their fans. We helped train their communications team to tell better stories. But as usual, we gained every bit as much as we gave from spending time with them.

Bruce, one of their free-lance writers, drove seven hours from his home in Wisconsin to spend the day with us. He interviews baseball players who have a faith-based testimony. He easily moves from one interview to the next. When asked for his secret to getting great interviews, he told us he asks for them. We smiled. He explained further.

When he interviews an athlete he asks for the name of a teammate who can answer questions about that players faith. During the second interview, he asks that player if he can tell his story, too. Of course, they all agree. He continues, in this way, to interview athletes and write their stories. His work is posted at beyondtheultimate.com. You can read his work here:  http://www.beyondtheultimate.com/athlete/Ben-Zobrist

While we were in Xenia, I taught one of my favorite seminars. I call it Sort. It’s step two of the writing process. Can you finish the sentence: This piece is about…. Once a writer clearly states in a sentence or two what the piece is really about, then that writer can pick the details that most closely fit that statement. I call this the focus statement. Not every detail can be included in every piece. By picking and choosing which details to include, the author helps the reader more easily understand the point of the story.

We had a spirited discussion among writers and editors in the room. Writers want to include everything. They usually think they need more words. I know this. I’m a writer. Editors want to tighten up what’s already been written and think the writers could write their stories using less words. I know this. I’m an editor. As they talked to each other, I smiled because I have been on both sides of that discussion.

Mark and I were grateful for the time we could spend with our new friends in Ohio. We’re going back again this spring for a longer conference. We’ll invite other staff members from the region to join us. Already, we’re planning content for that conference. We’ll keep you posted about our progress.

Marriage, the Empty Nest and Ministry Together Again

 

Winz onlyMy thoughts have turned to marriage several times over the last few months. Anne Marie and I are planning to celebrate 25 years of wedded bliss—well, mostly bliss—in April.

We’ve been working on a story for Worldwide Challenge that tells about a couple in North Carolina whose marriage came apart, but later was renewed by God’s grace. Now they’re helping other couples.

Then last month, as we traveled to to Nebraska, I saw how my parents remain committed to each other after more than 55 years. We met my brother Rex’s new wife. He “finally” got married, reminding me that it’s better to wait for the right match at the right time than to rush things. We also spent time with my cousin, a widow after her first husband’s tragic death, now happy with her second husband of two years.

In Ephesians 5:21, Paul addresses marriage and offers a basic instruction: Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ. This references a voluntary act of yielding in love, not a submission that is forced by one side or the other.

Early in our marriage someone advised Anne Marie that sometimes you can chose to be right or you can chose to be loved. We joke that she prefers to be loved and I prefer to be right, so we can both be happy. At least I hope it’s a joke. But the truth is, I often benefit from choosing to submit to her preferred direction.

We’re seeing more and richer opportunities to practice this idea now as we live in our empty nest. From November 13-16, we were in Xenia, Ohio, to teach writing and editing skills to some Cru staff members who work with our Athletes in Action ministry.

They recently started a magazine, and their team leader contacted me asking for help with writing. I knew where to send him. He and Anne Marie planned for what they need and landed on three writing topics and three editing topics.

We spent those days in November with their staff. That conference went so well, that we’re going back again in the Spring. Please pray for us as we plan the details of that conference. We’ll post more details as we have them.

Worldwide Challenge magazine and Writing for Life

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Mark and I have been on staff with Cru (formerly Campus Crusade for Christ) for 30 years. Our mission is to tell stories about what God is doing around the world and to invite our readers to join Him where He is at work. The adventure has led us overseas to countries like the Philippines, India, Nepal and Indonesia. We have also told stories from right here in the United States. We have written and edited for Worldwide Challenge and other ministry publications. We have also trained writers.

We have lived in Orlando for 20 years and we have raised our family here. This picture shows, our daughter, Bethany with us and our son, Michael, and my parents, Jim and Helen Larkins, on the night Bethany graduated from high school. Michael and Bethany are now college students, and Mark and I have more freedom to do ministry together. We especially enjoy teaching together.