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The
most pleasant surprises in Kiev were the lessons I learned from having
an international conference outside of the US. Five positive advantages
illuminated the value of holding the International Leadership
Conferences in new lands.
As
the event drew near, my expectations for the International Leadership
Conference in Kiev, Ukraine were lowering due to the reduced number of
registrants from the U.S-about 250. Many, including myself, questioned
the call to have an ILC on soil other than the U.S. where a majority of
our leadership and missions support resides.
For me that all changed.
The Decision-Making Advantage-Wednesday October 8.
The delegate meeting before the conference began was telltale about
our need to think “internationally” to overcome our US lenses. Since
half of our churches are in the US, we naturally have a heavy US base
of leaders. Decisions that also affect churches on the international
scene seem more informed by the experience of being in another country
The
delegate meeting itself was almost seamless as we evaluated progress,
reviewed our service teams, changed some of the team leaders, made
progress on locations for future conferences and appointed a temporary
team for developing a long term conference strategy. We also launched
an initiative to create a cooperation agreement summary to replace the
original document which all agreed has become a period piece.
The report of this last year’s activities was especially
encouraging. An astounding 2,700 men and women participated in the
Singles conference in Dallas, over twice the original anticipated
number. And 1,500 campus students worked with HOPEworldwide in the
Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans as part of the ICMC. Regional
conferences were held on Youth & Family Ministry. New communication
tools were built to help each of these ministries and conferences, and
DToday.org introduced our first online social network for disciples.
Clearly, most initiatives coming in had more to do with US needs. But
having this year’s delegates meeting and International Leadership
Conference in Eurasia was a definite advantage for broadening our
faith, vision and future planning. Evangelists were constantly being
reminded of our international mission and many US leaders, elders and
evangelists, were being connected and consulted by churches across the
globe.
Congregational Connection Advantage-Thursday
The
nations where such events reside allow the host country and nearby
countries to experience a once-in-a-lifetime vision which will
encourage them for years to come. One brother brought 20 members from
his church with the passionate realization, “This may be the only
chance we have to attend an ILC in our lifetime.” And all the serving
disciples in Kiev gave the rest of us something extra to remember.
Participants
are forever grateful for “the white hats”, the name we gave hundreds of
youth and some adults who lined the way to every place we went while
wearing white hats with The Edge logo. They were constantly brightening
the paths to and from our destinations with warm smiles and hugs. On
occasions when I lost sight of where I was, I could just look for a
white hat-even en route on a train when entering the station-the hats
were our signal to get off at that train stop. They portrayed a great
image: may we provide a well-lit path for those who haven’t found their
way. Clearly the 2,000 member Kiev Church of Christ was both able to
receive strength from the events and lay down their lives at the same
time.
A few days later at church, we could spot those who had marked our
journeys because of their unforgettable faces. The language barrier did
not hinder the fellowship connection the following Sunday because we
knew the same songs and a brother or sister who could translate was
always nearby.
The Face to Face Faith Advantage-Friday
Attending conferences on non-US soil gives more people a chance to
meet the people whose conversion and miracle stories have become like
legends. This is the case for three stories of Moscow and Kiev which
belong to the book of Acts for our time, for our fellowship of
churches. I will use first names only.
 First
there was a former world-class wrestler and bodyguard for the Mafia who
became a Christian as the result of losing a wager against the prayer
of some disciples. Then there was the disciple who planned on taking
his life by setting himself on fire after his last cab ride to
pleasure. Instead the cab driver, who had picked up someone soon to be
baptized, pulled over to pray, told the future disciple to pray, then
brought him home; the next day the driver met two disciples, studied
the Bible.. Two weeks later he was set on fire spiritually in baptism.
Of course we cannot forget that two years ago a toddler fell nine
floors from a balcony to the shock of her sister and mother. Her
mother, a disciple, begged God to bring her motionless child back from
apparent coma. The little girl woke up and fully recovered.
Understandably, her father was exceedingly grateful and became a
Christian. The main characters of all three stories were at the
conference and were warmly greeted by all.
The Leadership Advantage-Thursday through Saturday
The
main speeches of The Edge were rich and meaningful. And having more
disciples from various parts of Europe, Eurasia and the Middle East who
cannot regularly attend these conferences was another advantage.
Conferences such as these expose future leaders to see a bigger
picture. These Christians can be inspired for new ways that their lives
can serve God and meet those that they have admired from afar.
Conferences in various parts of the world wake up older leaders to
other parts of our global family.
A
refreshing new approach to the program brought everyone in the
conference together for all the messages. The subjects were held in
blocks with one main message of 40 minutes followed by two ten minute
segments. This meant that everyone heard the main points that every
teacher said on a given subject. This approach was originally
stimulated by limited facilities, but God showed us something valuable
in bringing about a greater solidarity.
The immense advantage of bringing so many Christians to a new place to
inject some ideas, hope and encouragement will reap benefits to that
area for a lifetime. Each individual disciple’s experiences of being in
that place will reap personal benefits and impact the congregations to
which they returned.
The Multi-National Worship Advantage-Sunday
Worship with those in other tongues evokes the Pentecost image and inspires awe for God.
On
Sunday the musical styles were choral, contemporary, a cappella and
solo performances, each taking us to such places of praise that only a
truly multilingual international setting can accomplish. The worshipful
music made me think of rain on parched land as many attendees from
small and distant places had not seen or experienced anything like it
for many years, if ever. It left an indelible impression as it was
apparent that God was receiving adoring worship and we were encouraging
each other.
These five advantages were real. It was a great blessing to be in our
first non-English speaking country for our annual conference of the
International Churches of Christ. The question remains how often we
should have the conference outside the US. Many missionaries and
delegates have a preference for a US ILC because they can save travel
funds and time by visiting supporting churches on the same trip as the
ILC. Next year we will meet in Denver. The following year is scheduled
for Miami as they were the only church to present a bid. Hopefully, the
ILC will be held on other regions of the world in the years to come. We
encourage the delegates to begin planning now for hosting future dates.
We
left Kiev knowing that God is healing our fellowship and beginning a
new healthy growth among us. We are making significant changes to our
delegate process in order to facilitate an improved process for meeting
International needs. We are encouraged that our delegates have a deeper
role of service throughout the year.
We left knowing the importance of our relationships, face-to-face
communication and making decisions through a process that involves
international representation. We also left the Ukraine knowing the
importance of “the white hats”. God is calling us back to The Edge.
Steve Staten
Chicago, Illinois
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