"Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”
Matthew 28:19-20
That is exactly what over 50 other students and I did this Spring Break! We took the good news of Jesus Christ to the country of Belize. It was a long and very spiritually uplifting trip and I am sure everyone who went is forever changed by it. I have a lot to say, but bear with me. God for sure moved this past week.
Belize is a small Central American country. It is a fairly poor country with little to no government control or regulation. The people there are smaller than Americans and most speak a language called Creole which is a mix of Spanish and English, but most of them can speak and understand both.
We arrived in Belize on Sunday night. We stayed at a "resort" called La Estima where we slept and
ate while we were not out doing mission work. Cypress was mixed with South Campus for a total of I think 18 students. We worked in a small poor town called San Felipe, where we helped a local church build a outhouse because because there was no place for these people to use the restroom. We also visited a school where we told the kids about Jesus Christ and played with them. At that school we played a group of Belizians kids is soccer. Well opposed to our knowledge they were the national champions of Belize for their age group so they creamed us! On the second day we got to go to a hospital and pray with people who were sick. That was an awesome experience as well. Then the third day we did a VBS type thing in San Felipe at the church and it was so sad to leave the kids at the end of the day. On the last night we did a revival in the town square and alot of people came to know Christ.

It is different being on a mission trip, eventhough it shouldn't be. It's so easy to be closer to God and he see his hand on our lives. The re
ason is because for some reason we feel like we have to go half way across the world to experience God's power. Alot of times in Belize we couldn't speak to the children because of the language barrier, but they understood why we were there. We both shared something in common, we were speaking the language of Love. The language of Christ. On the first day of visiting San Felipe we had no idea what to expect. We had no idea what God was going to do and how he had prepared these Belizian peoples heart to just come in and radically shake up all our lives. We arrived and children flocked from every direction to see us. Just to see us! These poor children who didn't have anything were jumping out of their shoes (the ones who even had shoes) just because someone was there to be apart of their lives. The thing I said from the first day of being in Belize is that these people should be coming to America on a mission trip. They understood even at some of their young ages about how to come to Christ as you are. To come with nothing, and trust me most of them had nothing. Some of the things that these kids were beyond zealous about like a sticker book, is something a spoiled American kid would just shrug off.


"My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you." John 15:12
"What good will it be for a man if he gains the whole world, yet forfeits his soul? Or what can a man give in exchange for his soul?" Matthew 16:26
As compassionate, Christ driven people we understand that people's main need is to know Him. Not saying that the compassion and love Christ gives us won't compel us to provide for peoples material needs because it will. But what good is it to give someone the world, but have them lose their soul? We know that all things work together for the good of those who love the Lord, so why would we not teach them to love the Lord and know Christ.
In final thoughts I just want to challenge you. Earlier I said that the thing about mission trips is that we go on them and feel like we are closer to God than ever before and that He is so much more evident in our lives, but that is so far from the truth. It's just that when we go on mission trips our whole mentality is changed and we think about God and how we can serve and love people constantly. But when we return home it becomes all about "I" again. God is the G
od of all nations, including America, and the Father of all people, including the nerdy kid nobody likes or your boss who is a jerk to you. As Christians we for some reasons think we get to decide who comes to Christ or we try to reap some benefit from telling others. We look at certain people and we think, "Hey that person needs Jesus.", and we go on this quest to try and tell this person we think deserves it and leave all the other lost people in the dust to drown in their sins. We want to decide who deserves grace or not, but that is an oxymoron. None of us deserve grace, which is the undeserved favor of God. We should have that mission mindset here in America as well. There are so many people who need Jesus Christ and who are we to pick and choose who should come! GO AND MAKE DISCIPLE OF EVERY NATION! Not just some nations, not just some people, but everyone! It is not about where God is taking you, but it's about where God has you. You are on your mission field. Take advantage of it. Go and claim the harvest for Christ.

"Then he said to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few." Matthew 9:37
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