April
2011
- Vol. 49
A time
of worship and praise at the Kairos
Europe Weekend
.
Where
Are We Headed in Serving God?
A personal reflection
on the Kairos Europe Weekend 2011
by Stephen Bick
On the 2nd
of February this year,
seven Londoners got off a train at Leuven,
home of, we were told, chocolate
and beer. While we did find these things, in
various quantities, eventually,
what we first discovered was a crack team of
hand-selected brothers and
sisters from the Jerusalem community waiting
for us to help direct us to
La Foresta where we were to spend the weekend.
They said they had been
there all day waiting for us, which I
initially assumed was some kind of
translation error but later found out was
true, and their willingness to
stand in the rain all day waiting for us
really touched me.
After a
brief bus ride and hike we
came across La Foresta, a labyrinth of a place
with a tremendous echo through
the corridors, which we were to share with an
orchestra, an African drumming
group, and the cast of a production of Grease,
not to mention some monks.
After a simple but welcome dinner of cheese,
ham and bread we proceeded
to the main hall where Ravish, a Koinonia
staff worker in London, UK and
Marie-Sophie, a Pharos staff worker in Leuven,
Belgium briefed us on the
weekend: talks on the subject of vocation
given by none other than Martin
Steinbereithner, the Mission Director for the
Sword of the Spirit region
in Europe and the Middle East.
Martin is an
excellent speaker who
did not pull the punches when telling us how
to actively respond to God’s
plan for our lives. In the first of these
talks, ”There’s no lack of vocations,”
he told us how God had a plan for each of our
lives, a plan that would
take a lifetime to discover.
Come
Saturday we were ready to find
out more, and after morning prayers we met in
the main hall for the second
talk, entitled ”...just a shortage of people
responding to them,” in which
Martin showed us the things that block us from
fulfilling God’s plans for
our lives. Plan-blocker number 1 is
pusillanimity, meaning smallness of
spirit, or in other words, “life shrinks or
expands in proportion to one's
courage.” Other dangers were selfishness and
fear of failure. Martin also
used the analogy of a sculptor chipping away
at a slab of granite: it may
be scary to limit ourselves by making specific
decisions for specific paths
and not keep our options open, but this is how
we reveal the form beneath
the rock. Included with the talk was a sheet
filled with inspiring quotations,
which really inspired me during the weekend.
My favorite quote was from
Winston Churchill: "Never give in – never,
never, never, never, in nothing great or
small, large or petty, never give
in except to convictions of honor and good
sense."
After the
second talk four workshops
were on offer to choose from: a workshop on
turning vision
into reality, Tadgh Lynch (decisions), Martin
(mission), Brian Shell (Gap
years), and Dave Quintana and Mags Tierney
(state of life). It was the
last one that I went to and, while not being
the best attended, was very
helpful and insightful for me.
Afterwards:
lunch and sports and
recreation time, in which I gave the young men
of Europe a lesson on football,
although it took me 90 minutes to get up to
peak form.
That night
we had our big prayer
meeting, led by my good friend John Robinson,
an artist who is doing student
evangelism in his native Belfast. It was a
very special time for everyone,
it seemed to me, and I felt closer to God than
I ever had. After receiving
prayer, my small group leader told me he had a
word from the Lord for me,
which was most welcome. Afterwards, we went
down to the basement for some
entertainment, including crowd games from
Belgium and Glasgow UCO, dancing
the Polonaise, an excellent sketch from the
Belfast University Christian
Outreach team, and, stealing the show, a
mashup of songs from Koinonia,
London’s university outreach.
On Sunday,
after going to our respective
church services, we said goodbye to La Foresta
and each other. It was a
fantastic weekend, and we now eagerly await Adelante
2011 – the
international Kairos conference
in Victoria, Spain August 10-15! Thanks to all
who served, especially the
main speaker, Martin Steinbereithner.
Stephen
Bick is a high school
student preparing for university in London,
UK, and a member of the Antioch
Community. At 17, he is unfortunately
too young to be in Koinonia,
the Kairos outreach to university
students in London, but sometimes
sneaks along anyway. |
The
Kairos
Mission
by
Paul Jordan
When
asked to explain Kairos I often start by
talking about a global net-work.
The aspect of our work which seems to speak
loudest to young people is
our international call and nature.
More
than three thousand young people in over
30 countries are net-worked through
Kairos. In truth I think they are one of
our best assets. Having set out,
in some way, to attempt to build this
network, in another it is merely
the gift which the Lord gave us, it is our
reality.
The
mission is local but God’s work is global.
It is a blessing to be able
to use our network to help young people
grow in vision for God’s kingdom
and develop as young Christians through
international connections.
Our
Adelante conference this summer is one
example. We are expecting 500 people
from 20 nations to gather in Spain. The
GAP programme is another, a year
placed in a foreign country to learn what
it means to be a servant while
building our mission.
Though
they have very different goals, Adelante
and GAP both serve to help young
people grow in their Christian faith and
conviction. This conviction helps
them give to local mission for the long
haul.
[Paul
Jordan is the Director for Kairos in
Europe and the Middle East]
Kairos Europe
Weekend 2011
Kairos
Weekend is always a very special and
important time of year for us in Europe.
It is the time when students from all
across the continent (and some from
even further) gather for three days. We
come together for many reasons
but three are paramount; to worship God,
to grow in discipleship and to
build relationship across barriers of
language, culture and church tradition.
Although a challenging and costly
undertaking to gather 100 students from
across Europe, Kairos Weekend bears fruit
in many ways.
The
theme of the weekend this year was
vocation. Guest speaker Martin
Steinbereithner
(a full time missionary with the Sword of
the Spirit) spoke to us of the
need today to both seek a call and to
respond to it. Exhorting us that
there is no shortage of vocations in the
world today – merely a lack of
response, the message was challenging and
inspiring. A blur of workshops,
sports, meals, and the infamous soul food
café where (among other
things) Polish polkas, Belfast dramas and
Scottish team games of dubious
origin were on offer for a cut price deal
– rounded out the weekend.
A highpoint
for many is often the time of prayer on
Saturday evening. This year proved
to be no exception as the Lord exhorted,
encouraged and stirred us to respond
to him with joy. Hearing a call is one
thing, finding a way to answer is
another. We have found in Kairos that our
times of worship together are
often the place where we are most united,
most challenged and ultimately
transformed gaining the courage to make
decisions for ongoing discipleship
as we return home.
Through
bringing this group of people together,
the work of many individual Kairos
outreaches throughout our region is built,
while the vision of international
student community is made a reality for a
few short days.
|