September
2007
- Vol. 11
Answering
the Cries
A
post-graduate American finds hungry searchers
for God in London
by
Hannah Gornik
Crying
out for a savior
I was watching the
movie Superman
Returns the other night, and the hero said something
which really struck
me. “You say that the world doesn’t need a savior —
but everywhere I go
I hear people crying out for one.” In 2005, I was just
finishing my studies
in psychology at Notre Dame University, and I heard
the same cry. I had
applied for a variety of business jobs, but gradually
realized that what
I wanted to do was share the gospel, particularly with
university students.
I worked as a resident assistant in halls of Norte
Dame University, and
every day I saw the brokenness of lives lived without
a savior. My own
faith and my experience of living in Christian
community had convinced
me that I wanted to share the gospel in the context of
a faith-filled Christian
environment. When I heard that Koinonia,
a university student outreach in London, was looking
for a staff worker,
I jumped at the chance. It was a two year commitment,
in a different culture
and a new community, but I heard the cries of those
students and knew this
was where I had been called.
Planting
a seed of faith
The idea of western
Europe as a
mission field might seem a bit odd to some — but after
spending a summer
in Dublin in 2004, I had felt a call to the particular
challenges found
in the “post-Christian” societies. The students I have
met in London seem
a long way from a living faith in Jesus Christ.
Growing up in the UK and
in western Europe, a majority of them have seldom, if
ever, been to church.
Most of their parents did not attend church, so their
attitude towards
religious belief is either complete apathy or slight
curiosity. Some also
have strong intellectual arguments against faith. Many
of them have not
thought about God, let alone death or sin. That is
where our work begins.
For most of these people, a short conversation when we
give them a free
cup of coffee is the only chance we get to share the
gospel. In that brief
window of opportunity, we try to plant a seed of
faith.
Helping
searchers of the truth
This past academic
year we ran a
lunchtime course in which we examined some big life
questions, such as
why suffering exists and whether God is relevant, and
we presented the
Christian response. We had quite a few people come
along, and our hope
is that through hearing the presentations and getting
to know us, they
will eventually come to faith in Jesus Christ. But
they are in some ways
the exception, willing to engage the big questions and
search until they
find the truth. Many more students here in
London will not even approach
the questions.
This may seem like a
bleak environment
in which to spread the gospel, but I see a lot of hope
here. There are
students who are really searching, and in some ways
they are more open
and curious than in other places. The difficulties
people face in living
and working in this city make our community life in
Koinonia that much
more visible. People see our life and are drawn
to it, because it
shines so brightly. Non-Christians come to events like
our Lord’s Day celebration
because there is a sense of belonging there, and their
curiosity gives
us the chance to speak to them.
One girl who had
lost her faith as
a teenager got to know us through social events, and
accepted an invitation
to come to one of our weekly prayer events. She felt
welcomed and began
attending regularly, but during the times of prayer
she sat in the back
and just watched. She saw something in our
communal prayer that answered
the questions in her heart, and after a few months of
just watching, she
talked to me and said she was ready to commit her life
to the Lord. Our
willingness to love her where she was at and help her
to join in our life
allowed her to take that step.
A shared
life in Christ among students
In addition to our
evangelistic
efforts, we do a lot in Koinonia to build the life of
our core students.
The highlights of this past year were our prayer and
fasting week, our
Holy Spirit night, and an all-night prayer vigil.
These were all opportunities
to get out of our comfort zones, to really re-dedicate
our lives to God
by taking another step towards him. And those
times, as well as the
regular life of Koinonia, equip us to reach out to the
students we meet.
They give our students the opportunity to tell their
friends what they
do every Thursday night, or explain fasting when their
friends ask — and
that has an impact. Through our prayers (and
yours too!) and constant
focus on drawing closer to God, we have the
opportunity to answer the cries
we hear around us.
[Hannah
Gornik, a member
of Word
of Life Community
in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA, recently served for two
years as a staff worker
for Koinonia,
an outreach ministry
to university students in London.]
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