via markcurrie.typepad.com
Dear NHI and friends,
Let me brief you on our Urbana 2009 experience in St. Louis. Now, three months later, several things I carried away with me stand out. I'll give you a brief description and some impression so you have a feel for what the conference was like.
Description: The conference was held in Freedom Hall, a large convention center with closed walkways to the indoor football stadium, home of the St. Louis Rams American Football team, where our plenary sessions were held. In the Freedom Hall exhibit center, our table was in the "urban ministries" section next to the Bookstore, across from World Impact, an inner city ministry, and adjacent to Freeset, a ministry to enslaved women. Observing different exhibits gave me a good idea how we can improve future exhibits at low cost. The Freeset people had photographic banners and backdrops that rolled up into a tent-size carry-on item. At our simple booth, we used a small flat screen to displaying an NHI slideshow presentation, a video of Angam's ministry, and a video featuring Paul Victor and his Capstone ministry. In Bangalore, Paul partners with Don Lee in discipleship ministry. We also had a display board with several display items and a gun-like bar code reader to register visitors to our exhibit. I had some fun with the reader. The highlight of our exhibit was Sharon Lee modeling a series of emerald green saris. People remembered Sharon! As I continue to correspond with students and others who visited us, my reference to Sharon always helps distinguish our booth from perhaps 200 others. We said hello to a couple hundred people walking by and spoke at length with 70 souls who let us zap them with the bar code laser. My decorum was perhaps a bit light-hearted in this, but I had some fun with the bar code reader. For the next 6 months I will follow up with these visitors by email, but initial response suggests people's mission radar is pretty selective. The way we are going to reach candidates is if they already know us or know someone who knows us. Nevertheless, we will keep the names and email addresses on file permanently unless people request to be taken off and we’ll monitor the bounce ratios.
Impressions:
(1) 17,000 missions-minded folks in one place will disabuse one of any Elijah complex.
(2) Almost 30% of the conference was Asian-American. Perhaps 30% of the leadership was, too.
(3) Great conference organization –Intervarsity really does an excellent job.
(4) Many young people, particularly young women, were keen to take part in the effort to rid the world of sexual and labor slavery among women and children throughout the world.
(5) Many desire to serve "the poor" and to help with "the environment" in a general sort of way.
(6) A lot of interest in China and India. Not much interest in Europe or the post-Soviet world.
(7) This was a pretty "intellectual" group which is probably a natural reflection of Intervarsity's ministry.
Conclusion: I've lived outside the USA for the last 17 years and doing Urbana was culture shock for me. Initially, I wasn't sure how NHI fit into the panoply of missions, but as I talked with many different people, I got a much clearer picture of where we belong and whom we can best serve. This was probably the most important thing I brought back to Moscow with me. You will hear more about it at the Retreat. Chris and I are also increasingly grateful to God that we've been able to commit ourselves to mission service for so many years. I think we all share in that expression of thanksgiving. May we never be weary in well-doing for in due season, we shall reap.
In Christ,
Mark Currie
1 Thess. 3.8
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