Outside the Box: Mission Takes Flight

Missionary Jeff Tideman easily recalls the time it took six hours to drive 80 miles during a missionary trip in Mozambique, Africa.

“It was killing me,” says Tideman, 54. “It was hot, bouncy. I kept hitting my head on the roof. I was tired. And by the time you get there—then you have to minister.”

That grueling road trip and others like it sparked an idea in Tideman: Why not fly?

To that end, River of Life church in Clarendon Hills, Ill., is building a small airplane. Tideman, a flight instructor, says the Zenith CH801 doesn’t need a runway. It can take off at a distance of 390 feet and carry up to 1,000 pounds of supplies, such as medicine and food.

The small Baptist church, home to about 30 families, relies on donations and volunteer manpower to fund the roughly $60,000 effort, which is halfway complete. The project even doubles as outreach, as the church hosts open houses for strangers to pop in and help build—and they do.

“It’s been amazing,” Tideman says.

70 Years of Ministry Through Flight

Since the early 1940s, Mission Aviation Fellowship has been bringing aviation and technology to the world of Christian missions, making it possible to serve isolated people in Africa, Asia, Eurasia and Latin America. MAF works with pilot missionaries and their families to provide medical assistance, disaster response, community development, training and evangelism support to churches.

Jennifer Kabbany
Jennifer Kabbanyhttp://www.featurearticlewriter.com/

Jennifer Kabbany is a Southern California-based freelance journalist and associate editor of TheCollegeFix.com. Her work has appeared in: WORLD and OUTREACH magazines, The Washington Times, The Weekly Standard, U-T San Diego and many other publications.

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