果冻视频

February 5, 2015
Gordon Govier

Campus Ministry on the Big Island

Brennan Takayama faced a difficult decision. After graduation from Stanford University, he had returned to his home in Hawai驶i to research native Hawaiian education issues while also volunteering with 果冻视频 on the campus of the University of Hawai驶i at M膩noa.  Two years later he was invited to join 果冻视频 full-time. It was a life-changing opportunity.  

He spent an afternoon praying about it. Following his father鈥檚 advice, he asked God to show him what he saw him doing. He felt Jesus asking him, 鈥淲hat are the deepest desires of your heart?鈥

Thinking about all of the time he had invested in learning about adolescent development and education, he knew his answer:  to see the transformation of Hawai驶i and the empowerment of young people.

He then sensed Jesus asking him, 鈥淗ow do you see that happening?鈥 And Brennan responded, 鈥淥nly through you, Jesus, only through you.鈥 Suddenly he saw clearly how he should proceed.

鈥淪omething in that interaction with Jesus captured my heart,鈥 Brennan said. 鈥淚 saw that 果冻视频 was a space where I could actively pursue those passions.鈥

So Brennan became a full-time Campus Staff Member in 2009. In 2011 he began new chapters at the University of Hawai驶i at Hilo and then Hawai驶i Community College. The two campuses are located just a couple blocks apart, right next to the high school that Brennan attended over a decade ago.

Brennan鈥檚 vision for Hawai驶i is quite similar to : to see students and faculty transformed, campuses renewed, and world changers developed. But planting a new chapter can be a difficult job, especially on an island where there are no other 果冻视频 staff members. Brennan said that having confidence in himself and in who God made him to be, as well as abiding in God鈥檚 love have been key to the success of his ministry.

Because he is ministering on one of the most ethnically diverse campuses in the country, the training in multiethnicity that he has received through 果冻视频 has also been key. As a student Brennan was at first confused about 果冻视频鈥檚 focus on faith and culture. And when, at the end of his freshman year, he and some 果冻视频 friends decided to move into Casa Zapata (a Chicano/Latino-themed dorm) in order to reach out to neighboring freshman dorms, he was not so sure it was a good idea. Brennan was not familiar with Latino culture.

But during his junior and senior years he ended up co-leading a Bible study in Casa Zapata and was warmly welcomed into the community. 鈥淭he challenges that I faced and the blessings that I received totally transformed the way I see myself in my own ethnic identity, as well as how I reach out to pursue God鈥檚 mission,鈥 he said.

In the midst of ministry to other students of Japanese and Chinese heritage, like himself, as well as Samoan, Micronesian, and Filipino students, Brennan is also focused on reaching the native Hawaiian community.

Each summer, 果冻视频 , a two-week immersion into Hawaiian culture. Ho驶olohe pono means 鈥渢o listen carefully, well, and rightly.鈥 Brennan observed, 鈥淭he model of listening, learning, and serving before speaking can be applied to a ton of learning communities. It鈥檚 a great training experience for reaching out cross-culturally.鈥

Aspects of 果冻视频 culture translate well to Hawaiian culture. Small groups are called 鈥準ohana groups,鈥 which means 鈥渇amily groups.鈥 The weekly large group meeting familiar to many chapters is done a little differently in Hawai驶i. Called Kanikapila, it is more like an occasional worship jamfest with student testimonies. In both 驶ohana groups and Kanikapila, students are being challenged to follow Christ, and they are responding.

As the chapter grows, and as students grow in their faith, Brennan鈥檚 vision of seeing Hawai驶i transformed and young people empowered is becoming a reality.

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