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Slum Communities at Urbana
Out of the more than 20,000 attendees who came to 果冻视频鈥檚 Urbana 06 Student Missions Convention in St. Louis in December to learn about missions, about 400 took one step further. The members of the track occupied their own hotel. Their daily Bible study highlighted scriptural applications that addressed the poorest of the poor. They listened to additional speakers whose live and serve in slum communities. And they forsook daily showers for bathing out of a bucket to experience the daily inconvenience that defines the lifestyle of the poor.
Participation in the bucket exercise was voluntary for track members. Those who took the bucket were instructed by track director Scott Bessenecker not to disparage those who showered. 鈥淚f your heart allows you, it鈥檚 going to be a privilege and a joy to do it,鈥 he told them. He didn鈥檛 hear any complaints. 鈥淚 think people engaged it with joy,鈥 he said.
Bessenecker, the author of a new book that focuses on Christians who voluntarily reject the comforts of the 21st century to identify with and serve the urban poor, was not surprised by the lack of complaints. Even so he was surprised that the Urbana 06 bookstore sold out the book.
鈥淭his emerging movement of young people is on a quest to live deeply spiritual lives in impoverished situations in the spirit of St. Francis,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hose people were part of this track.鈥 One of them, Grace Mendola, told the Urbana Today newspaper that she was willing to endure a small sacrifice to make a point. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one small step that this group can take to try to understand the reality of what we鈥檙e learning about,鈥 she said.
Bessenecker believes that many young people today are ready to reject the orderly, insulated, over-managed, modern lifestyle. They hunger for gritty authenticity. 鈥淧eople are getting more and more famished for connection with the majority world that lives such a radically different experience than us,鈥 he said. 鈥淧eople recognize the cocoon and are eager to get out.鈥
The 鈥渘ew friars鈥 that Bessenecker describes in his book are also eager to bring the light of the Gospel to the darkest corners of the earth, and to fight injustice. The Slum Communities track at Urbana educated them with sessions focused on global poverty, international sex trafficking, and children who live on the streets of many large cities. 鈥淚 think in many ways these are the darkest days humans have experienced on earth,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd some of that came crashing in to the track for us at Urbana.鈥
Halfway through the track Bessenecker scheduled time for grieving, so that participants could express some of the emotional pain they were feeling from the information shared in the workshops. 鈥淛esus said, 鈥楤lessed are those who mourn,鈥欌 he noted. 鈥淭here鈥檚 an appropriateness to lifting our voice and wailing. I didn鈥檛 want people to take on the despair of poverty, but to cry out for the promises of God yet unfulfilled in those places.鈥
Track participants were invited to take the next step in ministry to the poor by volunteering to spend at least two years in service to the urban poor. Bessenecker compares this to the novitiate stage of the monastic communities, a time of initiation when those who feel a call from God to urban ministry begin to experience the reality of the commitment. 鈥淗is Spirit is actively stirring up people to take some pretty radical steps,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut I really think you need to hear specifically from God on this one.鈥
Bessenecker is the director of 果冻视频鈥檚 He鈥檚 also an ordained member of the leadership team at Madison鈥檚 He鈥檚 been focused on incarnational urban ministry since his Master鈥檚 Degree studies in 1999. He said he鈥檚 had many sleepless nights since then, not because of the burden of ministry to the poor but out of the excitement and anticipation of seeing what God was doing through what he calls the 鈥渃ouriers of hope鈥 in urban ministry.
鈥淚 really feel like the Spirit of God is touching this area of the church,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat I鈥檓 seeing are people who are ready to forsake opportunity in exchange for a different kind of spirituality and another kind of power that comes from self denial, making themselves dependent on God. I couldn鈥檛 not write about that.鈥
To hear more from Scott Bessenecker on this topic, check out this week鈥檚 podcast on