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God Still Hits Home Runs
God spoke to Steve Tengan with a baseball analogy. An alumnus of 果冻视频 at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), Steve was working full-time (40 hours) at an engineering job and volunteering with 果冻视频 almost full-time (30 hours). 鈥淚 really liked being an 果冻视频 volunteer, but I knew it wasn鈥檛 sustainable to do both," he said.
He also felt strongly about justice ministry, particularly helping inner-city kids, and wondered if that was the kind of ministry he should be doing. Should he continue volunteering with 果冻视频 or was God calling him to another ministry?
As Steve prayed and pondered, he was reminded that campus ministry offered a unique window of opportunity: to be able to help redirect the lives of students who were being called by God to live a life of purpose, to redirect their lives as his had been. He realized that sometimes new circumstances meant changed priorities. God gave him the analogy of giving up the Giants to become a Dodgers fan when moving from the Bay area to Los Angeles. He left his engineering job and joined 果冻视频 full-time as a Campus Staff Minister.
A Miserable Failure
Steve met 果冻视频 his first day on campus at UCLA when student volunteers helped him unload the family minivan and then invited him to a Bible study. But for his first two years on campus he was apathetic and drifted spiritually. As his sophomore year wrapped up, he vowed to turn his life around, but realized he had failed miserably by the end of that summer.
鈥淚f I hadn鈥檛 known that I could get forgiveness from God and, with his guidance, make better decisions, I would have considered suicide,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was very clear to me in that moment, I didn鈥檛 want to mess around anymore.鈥
Living in community with other Christians, beginning in his junior year, and helping with outreach for a Bible study on his floor, brought focus to Steve鈥檚 spiritual life. He was no longer living the double life that made him weary. 鈥淚 went from 鈥榟aving fun鈥 and neglecting class to doing ministry,鈥 he said.
As he approached graduation, Steve was thankful for how God had redirected his life. He wanted to follow the other five UCLA 果冻视频 students who were joining 果冻视频 staff, but to honor his parents he took an engineering job instead. However, he stayed involved as a volunteer until, through the baseball analogy, God called him to full-time campus ministry.
God continued to speak to Steve through circumstances about priorities. He met his wife Sherilyn on campus鈥攕he worked for another ministry鈥攁nd they were married in 2003. At the time, he still felt that God might eventually call him to inner city ministry. But Sherilyn was drawn to ministry overseas and prayed God would also call Steve to overseas ministry instead.
One day, as he met with colleagues to talk about the challenge of supporting a ministry plant in a country in the Middle East, God revealed to Steve that missions was a social justice issue. 鈥淚鈥檓 all about the margins and now I'm on a campus with 40 Christian groups,鈥 he thought. 鈥淲hy not go to a country with less than that many churches?鈥
It took several years of discernment and preparation until finally, in 2007, Steve and Sherilyn moved to Paraguay as part of . 鈥淚t was good for my soul but hard to adapt to,鈥 he said later, about their time in Paraguay. The first challenge was learning the language. Then came the challenge of replanting a campus ministry. By the time they left in 2014 there was a healthy and growing student movement.
From Paraguay to Portland
Steve and Sherilyn figured they would return to southern California after leaving Paraguay but were encouraged instead to check with Pauline Fong, who was then Regional Director for the Northwest. As Pauline explained the unique opportunity available in the position of International Student Ministry Area Director in Portland and how living there contrasted with living in L.A., both Steve and Sherilyn were on board.
(ISM) has a long and rich history in the Portland area but it was time for some restructuring. Two of the top issues Steve is wrestling with are preparing converts for re-entry to their home country, so that their faith remains strong, and building stronger connections between ISM chapters and multiethnic chapters, to help international students develop more Christian friendships.
鈥淚鈥檓 excited about God's expanding vision for us,鈥 Steve said, citing successes such as an African student who has blossomed in leadership in a variety of contexts, including with African American students. However, some staff transitions away from ISM have slowed advances.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not in a big season of harvest right now but we are seeing noticeable differences,鈥 Steve said. 鈥淓verybody who has stayed with us for the last five years owns the vision and is excited by it.鈥
What enlivens Steve most of all is being able to see students transformed by the power of the Gospel. Mark Camp, where students spend the whole week studying the Gospel of Mark, is his favorite week of the year, one of the times when he has the most contact with students. His family staffed the last summer and he praised God for the spiritual growth he saw in students鈥 lives. 鈥淚 haven鈥檛 experienced seeing that quick and drastic transformation elsewhere,鈥 he said.
Through it all, Steve鈥檚 reminded that God still hits home runs. 鈥淚鈥檝e learned that I鈥檓 not as important as I think I am,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 can have all these plans but ultimately it鈥檚 not me, it鈥檚 God.鈥