Path of construction
Michele Marr, For the Independent
On a pleasant March day, under clear skies and a bright, mild sun, 121
normally landlocked students from Texas Tech University in Lubbock,
Texas, stepped from two huge buses onto the warm sands of Huntington
Beach to begin their spring break.
From 3 p.m. until dusk on March 9 they walked along the sand. They
took snapshots of each other standing ankle deep in the surf. They passed
out handbills that said “Life Changing: experience worship with 120
college students.” They roasted hot dogs and melted s’mores for dinner.
Then they piled into their buses and headed for Santa Fe Springs.
From Sunday through Friday they would spend their days in places like
Norwalk, Bell, Downey, Brea, Garden Grove and South Normandy and West
Florence avenues in Los Angeles. They would sleep in bedrolls on the
floors of two churches in Santa Fe Springs.
This was MT6, short for Mission Tour 6, California 2002, a whirlwind
working vacation organized by Nine Thirty, the university ministry of the
First Baptist Church of Lubbock. Not your standard spring hiatus.
During the week the group held worship services at Huntington Beach
Baptist church. Pastor Gerald Squyres welcomed the students and said they
could reap great benefits from the tour. “We hope it will influence their
lives for a wholesomeness of character and help them to develop enough
spiritual depth to sustain them when crisis comes.”
This year’s tour slogan was “Never give up. Never surrender,” based on
scripture verses 12-14 in Philippians Chapter 3. The student’s wore the
motto emblazoned on T-shirts. It fit the challenge ahead of them.
“I’m tough,” said Bill Davis, coordinator of the mission tours for the
past 14 years. “They work hard. They get tired. But that is often when
the Lord works best in their lives.”
These students have worked hard already to get here. Each has attended
two required semesters of Bible study and discipleship classes, part of
the Nine Thirty, university ministry, known as The Challenge.
Under the direction of John Strappazon, the university minister at
First Baptist Church, they read and memorized scripture. Any student who
missed more than two meetings was disqualified for the tour. Those who
made the final cut paid for their own travel expenses.
During the weeklong tour the students worked every day and on Monday
through Thursdaythe students participated in praise and worship services
at the Huntington Beach Baptist Church.
They brought their instruments and their own sound system. They
brought the tools, ladders and scaffolding they needed to complete the
work they had come to do at more than a dozen church sites in both Orange
and Los Angeles counties. They hauled the equipment here in trucks and
vans on the 24-hour, straight-through drive from Lubbock.
They painted buildings, inside and out, laid flooring, installed
windows and doors, leveled ground for a parking lot and hung drywall.
At Huntington Beach Baptist Church they painted the exterior of the
education building and fellowship hall to match the church and installed
a new window in the nursery.
It wasn’t just their labor, but also their energy and their spirit
that many congregations said they appreciated. Alvin Johnson, pastor of
the Universal Christian Center in Los Angeles told the students, “You
have brought joy to our church and to our hearts.”
Davis pointed out that many of the students become pastors,
missionaries and Bible translators.
“They may not realize it at the moment, but the decisions they make
now in many ways form who they will be when they are my age,” Squyres
said of the group of students.
Strappazon echoed this thought in his closing message on Thursday
night when he read from Galatians 6.
“Do not be deceived: God cannot be mocked. A man reaps what he sows.
The one who sows to please his sinful nature will reap destruction; the
one who sows to please the Spirit will reap eternal life. Let us not
become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest
if we do not give up.”
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