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Intercultural Studies and Missions
alumni are using their degrees around the world in a plethora
of ways and contexts. You can read about a few below.
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Rob
Maupin graduated from the Biblical and Theological
Perspective Missions track:
Before coming to Wheaton, I was a
youth minister for eight years, working in churches
in Texas and Missouri. I also worked as a youth minister
in Wheaton while I was studying. After graduating
from Wheaton, I recruited a team of four couples to
work in Mexico City (missionmexicocity.com).
Most of my personal work involved leadership, team
development, fundraising and leadership training.
My team's work revolved around existing churches.
We developed a series of Spanish language discipleship
resources and events for youth (www.lavidaprofunda.com),
did leadership training for elders and pastors, and
also developed an outdoor ministry of camping, rock
climbing etc. for local youth groups. Our team lived
and worked there for five wonderful years.
My studies at Wheaton were foundational
for our work in Mexico, especially in shaping
a wiser approach to cross-cultural problems.
Within four months I was applying the case study analysis
process to some of the cross-cultural problems we
faced. The research and communication models in the
core courses became both maps and life-preservers
for me. In addition to the course content, I was deeply
happy to learn a new model of intellectual and spiritual
discipline. The need for wisdom in cross-cultural
work is simply astounding; this job sometimes seems
like one of the most complicated fields in the world.
I am deeply thankful for the classes and professors
which so shaped my vision of God, development, holism,
spiritual conflict and leadership.
At present I am the assistant professor
of Intercultural Studies at Lincoln Christian College,
in Lincoln, Illinois. I have been at LCC for a year
and, along with Professor Mike Nichols, I am working
to train undergraduate students to become healthy,
excellent “entry-level” missionaries.
Professor Nichols and I try to help match students
with agencies/ministries. Our program allows a fair
degree of preparation in a specific area of mission
like Business, Youth Ministry, Bible Translation,
Urban Ministry and TESOL. My
experience and studies at Wheaton have stirred my
passion to call students toward a disciplined and
wise approach to cross-cultural work. When I left
Mexico I began reflecting on how the discipline of
study blessed our life and work on the field. I am
convinced that this kind of preparation is both loving
and effective. It is my honor to be a small part of
that task. I think of my time at Wheaton and realize
that I owe a great debt of love to the professors
there. A great deal of the good in my life is a direct
result of contact with them.
I have been married to Shannon for 15 years and we
have two gorgeous kids, Garrett and Kate.
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Chris
Irwin, who has worked as a church-planter in
Guayaquil, Ecuador for 16 years, completed his Intercultural
Studies MA during his last furlough. As he studied, he
was unexpected and deeply impacted by Principles of Development,
one of the courses in the Community Development track:
During our
last furlough, the Lord guided us to study at Wheaton,
and while I expected to grow in knowledge, the Lord
had much deeper plans. One of His plans involved a paradigm
shift in ministry philosophy through a course I tried
my best to avoid, without success!
As a church
planter, my focus has been on reaching out to address
people’s spiritual needs. Our city is surrounded
by invasiones; miles and miles of squatters’ shacks
where the poorest of the poor live without basic necessities.
We have two works in these areas and we've done our
best to reach out with spiritual help. We even wrote
in our team's purpose statement that we did not want
to involve ourselves in any social work. Didn't Jesus
say that the poor will always be with us?
Having tried
unsuccessfully to avoid the course Principles of Development,
I sat in the first class and wondered just how honest
I should be when Dr. Campbell asked each student to
share why they were in the class and what they hoped
to learn from it. When my moment came, I was very frank.
I am a church planter and not only have I not been involved
in social ministries, I feel like they deviate from
the most important work which is spiritual, not physical...
Over the
next few months God used this class more than any other
to open my eyes to the fact that we should not separate
the spiritual from the physical, that we are to work
to establish God's kingdom here on earth as it is in
heaven, that poverty, social injustice as well as many
other developmental needs are spiritual matters. Furthermore,
my Ecuadorian brothers and sisters will imitate what
I do! In spite of having established several churches,
there was virtually no ministry to reach out to the
needy.
I came away shaken in the realization that I had ignored
the poor and our responsibility as Christian leaders
to involve ourselves in their lives. Most importantly,
I came away with a plan of action. While my primary
work has been church planting and I am not directly
working in development, I am equipped to implement change.
First, was the determination to begin dialoging with
our churches regarding the issues. Second, was providing
them with resources, many of which are already in Spanish,
and some even written from a Latin American perspective.
Third, I would seek to read scripture with an eye toward
the poor and not from my own privileged cultural lenses.
Taking the
course Principles of Development wasn't easy, but it
was invaluable. I'm glad that the Missions Department
of Wheaton had the foresight to make what I thought
should be an elective a course requirement.
www.IrwinsInEcuador.com
www.MissionsForDummies.com
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Miriam
Smith graduated from the Community Development
Missions track:
It
has been my huge privilege to graduate from the Intercultural
Studies program at Wheaton Graduate School. This was
made possible for me through the Billy Graham Scholarship.
I
am a missionary kid (MK) from Chad, Africa and I grew
up loving and thriving in Africa. I returned to Africa
the day after my wedding to another African MK and we
began our own missionary journey. During our furlough
in 2002-2003, I was able to begin studies as a full-time
student at Wheaton. After years in Africa, living out
the reality of cross-cultural communication and contextualization,
it was so amazing to sit in a class and hear professors
explain in concrete terms what had been my experience
for so many years. It gave me so many hooks to hang
my realities on. I also learned so much from our readings
and from interaction with other students, especially
our international brothers and sisters.
Currently,
I have been asked by our mission to develop curriculum
and teach a course in transformational development and
missions at our East Africa School of Theology. This
is my absolute passion and joy and I couldn't have done
it without the scholarly and personal input from the
classes and professors at Wheaton.
My
husband and I are also involved in helping the national
churches of Kenya gain a vision for transformational
development and training local bodies of believers to
touch their communities in tangible, love-centered ways.
On
a personal level, the presentation of God, especially
in my development classes, broadened my view of God
and my love for Him. He is a big God, concerned about
poverty and injustice as well as the God of solutions
for these problems which so often confound us humans.
It is encouraging to know that the God we serve has
answers not only for our personal, spiritual problems,
but also for societal and structural evils.
I
can only thank God for the opportunity to study at Wheaton,
and trust Him for opportunities to pass on the knowledge
and hope He has given me.
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Megan
Johnson has used her Intercultural Studies
and Community Development education in agricultural
development in Zimbabwe:
I completed Wheaton’s Intercultural Studies MA
program in 2003. Some of my favorite Intercultural Studies
courses, including Cross-Cultural Research and Intercultural
Communication, imparted to me new ways of viewing the
world around me and the possibilities that exist in
that world. The Cross-Cultural Research course really
awakened in me a gifting and desire to make discoveries
about a particular culture and to use that information
to bless them in some way. I was able to take “informal”
surveys during my time in Zimbabwe, simply by being
available and interested when I was sitting among farm
workers during our tea breaks. Asking a simple question
and giving people time to respond unveiled before me
a view of life of which I knew nothing. Discovering
that many of the poorest visitors to the farm’s
medical clinic had no close access to a water source
prompted us to provide a teaching session on how to
plant a small veggie garden using a minimum of water.
Beginning
in August of 2007, I spent four months in Zimbabwe working
as an agriculturalist with Farming God’s Way and
Eden Children’s Village. I had recently completed
a one year internship in tropical agriculture with Florida-based
ECHO (Educational Concerns for Hunger Organization),
and traveled to Zimbabwe to complete the internship
and explore long-term possibilities for work. While
in Zimbabwe, I had the privilege of learning first-hand
from Zimbabwean farmer and Farming God’s Way founder,
Brian Oldreive, and observing how he has implemented
a powerful spiritual and agricultural solution for the
poor of Africa. Using Farming God’s Way principles,
I then spent two months working on a farm at the children’s
village, where I was able to work amongst the people
(weeding, fertilizing, planting, turning compost, digging)
and appreciate and value the kind of life that is normal
for a large portion of our world (that of survival and
manual labor).
I
plan to return to Zimbabwe for my future work and am
so grateful for the “eyeglasses” my Wheaton
program imparted to me. I feel the possibilities are
endless regarding ways I can make a difference in Africa
if my eyes remain open!
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Nara
Bayadaa was one of the Community Development
track’s international student graduates:
I
am involved in a teaching ministry at Union Bible Theological
College (UBTC) in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. UBTC has been
operating since 1995. The college is the largest theological
institution in Mongolia. UBTC serves member churches
from all denominations and currently has about 130 students
from 70 churches in Mongolia.
While I was studying at Wheaton Graduate School, I took
two courses on Community Development, Theology of Development
and Principles of Development, which reshaped my thinking
of Christian perspectives on development. Particularly,
I was educated more on Biblical holism and holism in
the ministry. My desire is to convey the sound doctrine
and genuine Biblical truth to the student body at UBTC
and to the Mongol church, as it is young and newly established.
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Scott
Bert was
a graduate student in the Intercultural Studies Department.
He and his family are involved in Greater Europe Mission.
I
was quite comfortable in my job as a Civil Engineer,
but God had other plans when He called my family to
serve Him in Romania. I felt very unqualified for the
calling. However, I have always heard that "God
does not call the qualified, rather, He qualifies the
called." Wheaton Grad School & the Intercultural
Studies degree definitely helped to 'qualify' and prepare
me to fulfill that calling.
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