Cultural Immersion

After doing missions work in Mexico and experiencing a very different culture from its own, Westover Hills Church of Christ’s youth group knew that intensifying border drug wars would make future trips too dangerous. That’s why the Austin, Texas, youth group sought alternatives for missions work that would still give it a different cultural immersion.

That led the group to the Wind River Indian Reservation in Wyoming. With so much success its first year, the group was invited back again and again; last summer was its third on the reservation in the past four years.

Last year, youth worked alongside native staff for two days at the reservation’s understaffed Shoshone-Arapaho Head Start schools. Teens constructed a fence for bus parking, sanded and stained decks, painted a wall, installed linoleum in bathrooms, bundled books, created picture collages and landscaped. They spent a third day just south of the reservation cleaning and landscaping at adult residential community Wyoming Life Resource Center in Lander, Wyo.

The Lander Church of Christ housed and fed the teens, who led a one-day Bible camp at the church building for local children in fourth through sixth grades.

The Westover church—with 1,350 in weekend attendance—puts a large emphasis on outreach and missions, says Youth Minister Kathrine Pimentel.

“We always have a willing group of teens ready to go and serve, and they get to experience Native American culture.”

Rhonda Sholar
Rhonda Sholar

Rhonda Sholar lives in Orange City, Florida, with her husband, Darrin, and two children. A newspaper and magazine writer and editor for 20 years, she returned to the classroom in 2013 to teach writing to 40 fourth graders.

How to Overcome Betrayal Trauma in Ministry

With their friends’ departures, pastors have had to recalibrate the very real cost of spiritual intimacy in doing life together.

Ryan Kwon: Nothing to Prove

“We’re so accustomed to the church being a noun. I want our bias to be action-oriented, and a movement that goes outward.”

The Rise of the Entrepreneurial Church: How Churches Can Fund Ministry Beyond Tithes

Entrepreneurial church models allow churches to step outside the walls of Sunday services and meet people where they live, work and gather. They open doors to relationships that lead to discipleship. They create spaces for people who might never set foot in a sanctuary to encounter the love of Christ.