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Making the most of your internship

In an article in Time Magazine you will find how to make the most of your internship.

This article is speaking of the internship that business students will work but applies very well to those of you heading into ministry.

The writer makes it clear that internships have become critical preparation for the job search after graduation. Nearly half of the internships are unpaid. The students now believe that the internships are almost mandatory.

The writer said that if you are going to work in an internship then be sure and do the following five things:

1. Go above and beyond. Try to expand your role to the extent possible. You want to leave that internship with a series of accomplishments that will support your job search. Find ways to add value to projects that you aren’t part of.

2. Ask for feedback.

3. Build your network.

4. Get a recommendation.

5. Turn your internship into a job.

Read more

I suggest that most people going into the ministry get involved in an internship. If you want to be a missionary you really want and need a mentor. If you are going to pastor there is so much to learn that you did not get in Bible College. You need experience.

I think these points are very good points and well worth your consideration.

You can learn more about an internship with Vision Baptist by clicking on the following links:

The program

Get Training to Plant a Church

Overseas Internship

Check out bcwe.org

Getting the nationals to take ownership of the ministry!

The following is a discussion between two great missionaries. Keith Shumaker in Burkina Faso is sharing with Kevin Hall in South Africa some of the ways to get the national men and women to take ownership of the ministry there. Read this and let me know what you think. Ask any questions and we will discuss it with you in the comment section below.

Keith is answering the question of how to get the nationals to take ownership of the ministry. This is the sort of discussion that might take place in a class at the Our Generation Training Center!

This is a real battle in the ministry. I have tried to teach ownership in the ministry to many of the men here. They understand the principle easily but don’t always want to live it and follow it.

It is easier for them (as for all of us) to be leaches. It takes a real man of God that is driven and not afraid to work to take real ownership. It will mean many times personal sacrifice for them.

Most missionaries can float, be lazy, work half hearted because they have their support. A national in a third world country can’t unless he stays a leach.

I did have a pastor, Konate, tell me this morning, “I am looking at some villages or small towns near here so that our church can start a work without any help from the outside”.

I have told them on many occasions that I dream of the day when our churches can start a work without any help from America. I guess he wants to take the challenge.

The work will never really grow if they don’t take responsibility. It will always be an inferior church like Paul said the Corinthians were.

You need to really help teach their people how to give. It is hard for Sippo to teach his people how to give. They will say he is in it for the money. Have special services where you teach on giving or print some material to give them.

I tell them that I can only support a few works. If they continue to take, we will not be able to do more. I have really preached hard lately about evangelizing the world. Trying to give them a burden for the lost. If they get a great burden, I believe they will begin to take responsibility or ownership.

Use examples of other churches. Not just American churches. They think that American church can do it but they can’t. Prove to them others are doing it.

Living Water Baptist Church just bought a moto for Pastor Konate. I lead them in that but I didn’t pay it. We had enough money in the bank to do it. The people got excited. It will be good example to use in the other churches.

You must create a desire in them. A desire for ownership. Some will never get it. In my case the majority don’t but a few will.

Don’t get frustrated, keep teaching, preaching. It is like hitting a rock. Doesn’t seem like it will break but one day it does. Many give up right before success comes.

You have to give them responsibility and ownership. Many missionaries don’t want to. They make them feel inferior. They don’t make them feel equal.

I was accused of being a ball-hog. It hurt but it was true. I was afraid things would mess up but they will never take ownership if I don’t give them a chance.

Pastor Konate did a great job in my absence. When I got back he stopped leading. He became the servant again. I had to have three different talks with him. I had to tell him that I needed him to lead. That I couldn’t lead the church like it needs to be lead. I told him he can though. He has seen the importance. That I need him. He has really taken ownership.

You can teach it, and you need to but I think it is as important to show them and give them ownership.

I want to tell you that it isn’t easy. I have struggled with this. Some of my pastors are leaches.

I have a few that seem to really get it. I hope that the ones that get it will be a testimony to the others and the new ones coming along.

Check out bcwe.org

Overseas internship

The following material that is being quoted is taken from here! At the Our Generation Training Center we have all of our students spend 6 months living and studying overseas. I think that there is much to be gleaned from the following article!

The American bubble that is mentioned is a great danger. The spending so much on time communicating back to the states and home is also a great danger. I am afraid that this modern technology can make it harder to adapt to the new culture and your new home.

Educators are thrilled to see more American college students venturing abroad — perhaps 300,000 this year alone.

Now if they can just get them to venture out of the “American bubbles” that can make the streets of study-abroad hot-spots like London, Barcelona and Florence, Italy almost feel like exclaves of Tuscaloosa or Ann Arbor.

They’re trying.

After decades of laissez-faire and faith that just breathing the air in foreign lands broadens horizons, American colleges and international programs are pressing students harder to get out of their comfort zones.

It’s happening in popular destinations as well as more exotic spots in Asia and Africa, where there are fewer Americans, but language and culture barriers make them even more tempted to stick together.

And it’s happening online, where one study found Americans on study abroad spent more than four hours per night communicating back home via the likes of Skype, Google Chat and Facebook.

Their tools: less free time, mandatory local internships, signed promises students won’t speak English, and even “Amazing Race”-style solo scavenger hunts — like one where wide-eyed Nebraska students were dropped off their first morning in China in a distant corner of their new city with $5 and instructions to find their way back home alone.

“Unless something is set up that really forces them to get involved in that environment, they really don’t,” said William Finlay, a University of Georgia sociologist who became so frustrated with the bubble leading trips to Italy that he set up a new, intensive program that takes Georgia students to work in impoverished South African townships.

“We push them to do things that are uncomfortable,” Finlay said. “Sometimes they get overwhelmed.”

Once reserved for a wealthy and adventuresome elite, it’s now reaching a wider, more diverse population which often has less travel experience.

But also like higher ed, study abroad is getting more expensive, and facing pressure to demonstrate its educational worth.

That’s harder on the short-term and summer trips — less than a semester — that account for most of the growth, and at the “safer” destinations of Western Europe that remain the most popular.

The danger is that it’s become easier to head off on what’s supposed to be a voyage of discovery and fail to immerse oneself in the local culture.

“People want real outcomes, said Mark Lenhart, executive director of CET Academic Programs, which sends about 1,100 students per year from feeder colleges like Vanderbilt and Middlebury to programs in seven countries. “They want to come home with big improvements in their language and a really deep understanding of the place.”

That means giving at least some students a nudge, says Lenhart, whose programs make students live with local roommates.

On his own study abroad experience in China years ago, Lenhart remembers the Americans sticking together, fueling each other’s griping about the amenities. When they’re sharing a room with a local and can only speak in Mandarin, they think twice about going to the trouble to complain.

Historically, most study abroad has taken place in so-called “island” programs, where Americans live, study and often party together. U.S. colleges like keeping a close eye on the education side of the experience, particularly if they’re awarding course credit. Island programs, educators say, remain popular and valuable for many students — particularly those new to study abroad.

Marie Hankinson loved her semester in London, but admits parts of the experience didn’t feel all that different from being back on campus at Syracuse University. She lived with four Syracuse classmates, took classes with fellow Syracuse students in a Syracuse-owned building from Syracuse-affiliated faculty.

“Our social circle was pretty much other people in the program,” says Hankinson, who says she met a few Brits through the local university union but rarely hung out with them elsewhere. Still, she says her time abroad was a great introduction to international travel that will push her to visit more exotic destinations in the coming years.
“I wanted to go abroad, but I’ll be honest, I wanted to speak English as well,” she said.
Many students want something different.

With little knowledge of the country or Arabic, he took a full year away to study in a Moroccan university where he was the only American.

He was grateful his program didn’t mollycoddle him. Moroccans were welcoming and he resisted the temptation to hang out with his compatriots.

“I know Americans pretty well. I didn’t go there to learn about them,” he said.
Hug, who now works for a Chinese freight company, says his last two employers seemed especially interested in him because of the self-reliance he showed studying abroad.
For students who aren’t so driven, a creative push from an educator can help ensure they learn something about both themselves and their host country.

In China, students from Beloit College in Wisconsin are assigned to become a regular at some local spot, — a park, a restaurant, a corner shop — returning there repeatedly to get to know the neighborhood and people there.

University of Nebraska professor Patrice McMahon won’t go so far as her colleague who dropped students off on the far side of a city in China. But she does give ice-breaker assignments — getting their picture taken with a monk, or taking a note card with an unknown Chinese word around town until they can figure out from locals what it means.

“Our students are from small towns in Nebraska,” McMahon said. “They’re really nice kids. But they haven’t had a lot of opportunities to just figure things out.”

The people who run study-abroad programs say not every student responds. But most welcome the push. “I always ask them, ‘Did you make some friends (in the host country)?’” said Kelsi Cavazos, study abroad adviser at the University of Texas at Arlington.

Most have, “but they always say it was hard to break free of the Americans.” The technology bubble can both help and hurt. Fifteen years ago, study abroad programs misjudged cell phones as a danger, assuming students would use them to stay tethered home, says Mary Dwyer, CEO of IES, a nonprofit consortium that sends students abroad for 200 colleges.

In fact, cell phones have transformed study abroad by helping students meet and mix with locals. Technology’s also handy in emergencies, and using it to report back to friends and families can facilitate reflection— the modern-day travel diary. But technology can also be a crutch, and suck up valuable time.

A University of California-Santa Barbara researcher found one group of students averaging 4.5 hours per day online, and 83 percent of their contacts were with other Americans, either at home or in the country they were visiting. Other studies paint a somewhat less alarming picture.

Still, some educators are taking needles to the technology bubbles. One Australian program makes students leave their iPods and sometimes all electronic devices back home on field trips, to help them focus on their experiences.

Others — dumbfounded to see students busy posting pictures when they should be taking them — purposefully choose day-trip destinations where they know students won’t find Internet cafes.

“You could say there’s a spiritual shift,” said Sonja Bontrager, who leads her students from Carson University in Kansas on a semi-formal “technology fast” during the early stages of their travels in Guatemala.

She says the ritual bonds the group together and makes them pay more attention to their surroundings. She remembers the group huddled under shelter during a rainstorm at forestation project. Normally, students with time to kill would turn habitually to their smart phones.

Without that option, one noticed a column of unusual ants, and soon the whole group was on hands and knees examining the ground. “It just makes people more aware,” Bontrager said.
When the connection home is set aside, “it’s not that they’re just left with emptiness. It’s that other things can come in.”
In many cases, it isn’t the students who are to blame for the tether — it’s parents.
“I wish parents would say, ‘You’re going abroad for the semester, let’s not talk every day, let’s talk once a week,’” Lenhart said. “If they could cut those ties a bit, it would serve them well.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/travel/2011/09/25/overseas-studies-gets-students-out-their-american-bubbles/?test=faces#ixzz1Z4STTSdh

We are constantly looking to improve what we do in our overseas study at the Our Generation Training Center. We have been guilty of allowing too much “island or bubble” study. We also know that they have used technology as a way to hide out. But it has been helpful and many have returned to the field as missionaries over the years.

Check out bcwe.org

The Blessing Service

Several have asked what the blessing service is, how we do one, and why . I wanted to take a few minutes of your time to try and answer that.

The reason we do a blessing service is that we want to honor God’s men and also because “you get what you honor!” You get what you expect, what you are looking for, what you honor! I firmly believe that, so at Vision we look for, honor, and expect missionaries/church planters!

The idea of the blessing service comes from the stories in the Old Testament when the man of God would lay hands on the young man and give him his blessing. It often happened just prior to death or when the ministry change was taking place.

The idea would be that our church would recognize publicly the ministry of a man and his family. We would just love on them profusely. I learned something very beautiful while living in Peru. Those days were very difficult financially for the Peruvian people.

I would get invited to a family birthday, anniversary, or something else very special. They might not have had something for a gift but they would have the person of honor sit in a special seat. Then everyone would share loving comments about the person to their face.

It was the kind of thing that you hear at the funeral. It is too late to say it then but many of us wait until that moment.

So when we have a blessing service we do the following things.

We try and sing a couple of songs and have a couple of special music pieces that are the favorite of the person being honored.

We write them letters or notes with encouraging words that will go in a memory box that they will be presented that evening. Vision gives them a sword that says either, Has your sword tasted blood? Or His hand clave to the sword, depending on if they are just now going out into the ministry or if they have already been in the ministry.

Pastor Trent Cornwell represents our church preaching something to challenge and motivate the family. Then I, also, as pastor preach to challenge and help them.

The main goal of the evening is to magnify Jesus while letting them know how much we love them.

We then will have a couple dozen testimonies from men and women to each of them telling how we love them and will be praying for them.

After all of that we have them sit in chairs on different sides of the auditorium and then the men gather around the men and the ladies around the lady and we lay our hands on them and pray.

It is a super sweet time. It is one of our most beautiful services. The people always tell me how much they love being there.

Of course we also take up a love offering to give them but that is the least important part of the night!

I hope you can institute something like this in your church. I hope you will look for, expect, and honor men of God in your church.

We desperately need more missionaries and church planters. Our churches need to be training the next generation and more leaders for the work.

Check out bcwe.org

Police Break Up Our Service

This is from one of our dearest friends. He serves in China and is home on a short furlough now. I am right now on the phone with another friend from our church in China! I hurt for the believers, the Bible teachers, and all who serve God in China.

I want to comment on the questions asked by my friend.

source

Oh the junk going through my head right now….

Got a phone call from my buddy tonight just as we were laying down to go to sleep. Told me that there was an email from China just sent out to our missionary team (I am in the States right now). This morning’s church service was interrupted by twenty police officers. Two of the Chinese men training for ministry, two of the best friends God has ever blessed me with, are in the police station right now.

One of them was about ten minutes into his sermon when they came in. They didn’t all have on uniforms – most didn’t I understand. The pastor from the government church was in their entourage. Guess it didn’t get ugly or anything. They gave the Chinese people a lecture on the illegality of the service. Took down people’s info. Then they took the guys away. In good spirits, according to my co-laborer still on the field.

- why am I here on the other side of the world when this goes down?
- how long are they going to hold the guys?
- what are we going to do next week?
- whose faith will be shown to be false in this trial?
- will the cops leave us alone after this?
- how much of our 4 years of work must be rebuilt?
- do those two know how much I love them and how proud I am?
- have I prepared them sufficiently for this day?

One question need not be asked, and I pray my friends won’t ask it even in custody: is it worth it? Preaching the Gospel to many who are learning to love it, to some who’ve never heard it before? Attempting to share it with even more people? If that’s not worth it all, what is?

Was there a way to avoid this? Sure. By staying under the rock. Maybe they’ll keep pushing us back under. If so, we’ll do all we can from there. But how can we not try to reach? Not try to be more bold? How can we content ourselves with the rumors of other people’s persecutions and avoid all of our own? How can we act like we have no higher purpose than escaping persecution? Jesus was expelled from places, as was Paul – who do we think we are to rest under the rock?

So to all my friends and brothers who visit this page: please pray, not that the Lord will allow us to escape safely under the rock, but that we will take refuge in him and gladly pay the price of preaching the Salvation that cost the ultimate price to earn.

God is in control. He knew this was going to happen as well as did my friends. They have been the boldest witnesses I know of in China. They will continue to be so. Many have been saved. Others have grown spiritually.

They were big enough to get on the Devil’s radar. Their message was never political but Biblical. They told people about the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

The true believers will be stronger. Some will go back because they never believed. Others may be scared for a short time but will believe and get stronger.

This is just more proof of why we must train national pastors to do the work in case the missionaries get kicked out!

This is proof of the need for an indigenous church. A church that can operate on their own, serving Jesus, without help from America.

I am so proud of these believers. I am super proud of my missionary friendsh. They are my heroes. They have trained the men. One of them was preaching today. None of them backed down. None of them denied who they were, who Jesus is, or what they were doing.

That happens because God’s men have invested correctly in the people.

This is not a man’s work and it will stand. Jesus is and will be glorified. To my friends M and J. I love you and I am so proud of you!

To my friends in China I love you. I am so super proud of you and blessed they get to know you and serve Jesus with you.

Keep up the good work!

Check out bcwe.org

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