Team

The Lost Art

The Lost Art of Disciple-Making, LeRoy Eims

Our teams often have frequent turnover, with new staff coming in every year, and staff transitioning off as time goes by. This dynamic led me to create a standard several years ago; important training issues need to be repeated every four years. This is because after four years you have new staff who have not yet had direct contact with specific content, and many who did have direct contact have likely transitioned off the team. 

At our most basic essence, Campus Outreach's content revolves around being a college ministry that focuses on evangelism and discipleship. This semester our leadership team decided it was time for a specific focus on discipleship training for our team. We are reading and discussing a classic on the subject, The Lost Art of Disciple-Making, by LeRoy Eims, who served with the Navigators ministry. This book is both a theoretical manifest for the need of life-on-life discipleship, but also for the biblical basis and full of practical application. There is a lot of content on which to reflect and discuss as a team. 

I have led our team discussions and provided discussion questions for our interaction. I have enjoyed thinking about the specific applications to our context here in urban Brazil on the college campus with a local church. We have come to wholeheartedly agree with many of the author's points. We have, also, disagreed with several points and considered how to adjust in light of what we believe was Jesus' example. It has been great to see how the maxim of "more is caught than taught” can be enriched and potentialized by consuming quality content and working it out through hearty discussion. 

Our plan is to finish reading and discussing all 12 chapters and 3 appendixes by the end of November, and we are right on schedule. This has been a great reminder for me of how I originally was drawn to the opportunity to work in Brazil with Campus Outreach because of the commitment to life-on-life discipleship, and oh how I have been encouraged to see this same vision continue strong 20 years later. 

Prayer Walking on UFMG

Our primary campus, UFMG, has not had in-person classes since March of 2020. There is limited activity on campus, research and faculty meetings, and the large open campus with lots of green has remained open to the public as a haven for outside activity since the restrictive measures have been in place in Belo Horizonte. 

A few weeks ago, a few people on our team began to talk about taking advantage of this unique opportunity to have a day of prayer walking on the campus. A huge campus, open to the public, with almost no one around to interrupt or ask what we are doing - a perfect situation to spend some time praying specifically for this campus and for God to open doors there!

Today, Monday, June 21st this happened. Two of our campus staff members organized it and it was great to see the younger generation taking the reins of important initiatives. 

Teammates Prayer Walking on UFMG’s campus

If you have a minute today, would you pray with us? 

  1. That God would open doors for the gospel on UFMG.

  2. That our team would have access to campus in 2022 (still no concrete plan on how open campus will be in 2022 because of COVID measures.

Lonely BH, Once Again

Empty streets in BH due to COVID-19

Empty streets in BH due to COVID-19

Belo Horizonte (BH) is a lonely place, once again.

Our city has retreated back to only essential services as of Friday, March 5th. The COVID-19 scenario in Brazil and BH has worsened, and vaccination has not shaped up to be as organized or wide-spread as needed at this moment.

In the last weeks, we had the first in-person ministry event with students of the year, and our church was weekly increasing the number of people participating in-person. Everything has screeched to a halt for now, and we will be going back to basing our efforts and events via online access and socially-distanced formats.

It is a hard reality to accept, as things were ramping up, new relationships, depth of in-person interaction and studies. Pray for us! Pray for Brazil.

Vitor & Pedro through the Pipeline

Vitor Pedro Pri Pipeline cropped 2021.jpg

We talk about the idea of "pipelines" in terms of staffing for Campus Outreach. A larger number of students and young Christians go into the pipeline at one end, and out the other end comes a smaller number of laborers poised to join our team in full-time ministry. This is NOT the goal of our ministry. The goal is Christ-centered laborers for every walk life in every aspect of society and church. However, we do seek out those who would join us if they desire and if the fit is right.

Vitor (pictured, middle) joined our team this year for a 1-year internship. He came to Christ in college a few years ago, and is excited about the possibility of a life called to ministry. This is a special moment for our team as Vitor is the first male Brazilian staff we have hired specifically for the campus ministry in 9 years. Our pipelines are small and slow moving on the campus here in Brazil, but fruit is being borne!

Another aspect of our pipeline is how we as a ministry develop leaders. Pedro (pictured, right) is fruit of our leadership pipeline. I have spoken to many personally, shared at a few churches and included in updates about Pedro's process the last few years. As of last year, Pedro is the new Regional Director over our team and ministry in Belo Horizonte. It is very fulfilling to see him in this role, not only because he is stepping up and facing the challenge head-on, but because in it I see God's faithfulness. I met Pedro when he was only 15. Today, he is my Director!

A New Friend and Co-Laborer

Rafael and family with our family (my kids have “issues” with group pics).

Rafael and family with our family (my kids have “issues” with group pics).

The year of 2020 has been a strain on most relationships for most people; a dark year concerning depth of friendships. For me, the charge to continue firm in the midst of darkness in Phillipians 2 to "shine like stars in the sky as you hold firmly to the word of life," brought me alongside a new friend who has become one of my many "Band of Brothers". Rafael Santos, our local church's new pastor, despite all the challenges, maybe due to all the challenges, is a relationship that has been a blessing to me.

In March, I posted a quick blurb about Rafael officially being confirmed by our church as the new pastor on Instagram and Facebook. He had been serving as our interim pastor since July of 2019, so this was not a brand new relationship. However, beginning with his official calling to our church, Comunidade Horizonte, we began to relate closer and deeper, and even scheduled a weekly meeting to discuss a wide range of subjects from church, strategy, families and personal issues.

Our families took a short trip together in July, and it was great to sit down each night, the two couples, and talk for hours about life, ministry, faith and future! They have let us into their lives with no reservations, and it has been such a breath of fresh air.

I am currently the President of our church's Session of Elders; so our relationship is needed, strategic and purposeful as the Campus ministry and the Church have a direct relationship. But it is much more than that! It has been great to have a new friend, brother-in-Christ, and co-laborer with whom to walk along the challenging road of ministry.

Try, Try and Try Again - 2nd Semester 2020

Next week our Campus Outreach Belo Horizonte team will have our semester planning as we continue to try, try and try again to regroup, reinvent and re-up our efforts to do ministry in the conorovirus reality. At least now we know what to expect - sort of.

Belo Horizonte has had an up-and-down reality with COVID-19, and currently the situation is still far from stable. We are closing our dry, winter months here, so we are still in peak cold and flu season - aggravants in the midst of a viral pandemic. UFMG, our primary campus, was hit hard with uncertainty and limitations during the initial phases of quarantine as a public, federal university that offers free education to its students. Because not everyone in our context has access to online classes, UFMG was simply forced to interrupt activities until an inclusive plan could be put into place for all students. Therefore, since March, all undergraduate activities have been on hiatus. Next week, in August, the university will resume the first semester of 2020 via online and distance classes.

Up until now, the vast majority of our contacts and young Christians had a lot of free time, since UFMG abruptly halted activities. However, we now know that the rest of the year will be a crunch for them, since they will be cramming 1.5 semesters into the rest of this year and the beginning of 2021. Students' free time was a commodity of which we were able to take advantage, but that will soon be in short supply.

We do not expect to be back on campus this year, and we understand our students will have many academic demands.

We are trying to seek God's direction and continue to be faithful in personal relationships via social distancing and virtual options. It really has us depending on God for any and all fruit - but it is still happening! New conversions, Bible studies starting, discipleship groups having the best quality time they ever have had, and young leaders being trained. As you can see in the group pic above, there are blessings in the madness. God is still sovereign.

Yellow Mangos & Tube Socks

The title is just because what nobody can stand is another "coronavirus update." Truthfully, I've eaten a lot of mangos recently, and I wear long socks everyday because there are mosquitoes under my desk in my office - so there you go.

The new coronavirus has made life and ministry much different than planned the past month. Our reality in Belo Horizonte is much like everyone else's. BH is a large metropolis; therefore, measures have been implemented to make sure the health system is not overloaded. No school, non-essential commerce extremely limited, social distancing - the whole 9 yards.

Personally, it is a challenge with A LOT of time in the house all together. It has been such a blessing to live in a house now, with outside options. The kids are still at ages where they desire a lot of interaction and dynamic changes of what is going on. That's not a bad thing, it's good quality time - but it is a change. Tension can grow, patience can wear thin, and bedtime, sometimes, cannot come soon enough! Our family style and being in ministry give to a very fluid structure, but the current reality has given way to a whole new form of fluidity. It's hard to prioritize urgent demands from the team, online meetings, time with kids, time with God, personal time - some days we don't do it well - and we are thankful for the joy that comes every new morning (Psalm 30:5).

Ministry has been a complete change of routine. It's been a whirlwind of figuring out how to do social distance with a team ministry that is based on face-to-face relationships on a closed college campus. My role is primarily in leading staff and the macro-ministry on campus. That is a challenge when nothing macro is really feasible! But as a team we have had a lot to interact together - because this is just hard. Our team is young, several non-Brazilians, and it's a lot to deal with. We continue to press hard in personal ministries, going deeper with discipleship groups and with students who are already engaged in a personal search for God.

One specific element that has been on my plate is that our local church is on the tail end of a pastor-search process and, currently, I am the church Session President. I am leading the search process and also am responsible for our Session meetings and decisions - and let's just say we have had many uncommon decisions to make recently. There is no game plan to rely on. It is a new way of practicing what a local church body looks like. It has been refreshing, but has also required a significant investment of time and energy.

Lastly, I want to be honest. I am not a fan of online meetings, conference calls and remote interaction. It is ok when needed, but using this as the foundation of almost every interaction I have outside my immediate family is not my cup of tea. But we press on!

Thank you for all the messages of encouragement. Please send more messages and prayers, it helps immensely!