August 24, 2023

Australian Union Conference Launches First Mission Trip to Laos

STORMCo outreach group is extending its reach beyond the South Pacific.

Kimberley McMurray, Adventist Record, and Adventist Review
The volunteers at Namtipsavan Bilingual School. [Photo: Adventist Record]

The Seventh-day Adventist Church in Australia took a small group of seven volunteers on a STORMCo mission trip to Laos from July 7 to 21.

Service To Others Really Matters (STORMCo) is an initiative of the Australian Union Conference (AUC) youth ministries which has been running for more than 30 years internationally and across Australia.

The mission trip was the first of its kind to be held in Laos, as part of AUC’s Global Mission Partnership Program. The group was hosted by Phonsivan’s Namtipsavan Bilingual School, a kindergarten, primary school — up to grade 3 — and an English language center located in Xiangkhouang Province. While there, the team conducted a STORMCo/VBS program for the roughly 70 junior and teen young people in attendance.

“Each day began with team members being immersed in classrooms teaching and assisting in the teaching of English,” Murray Hunter, AUC media project officer and associate ministerial director, said. “The morning teaching program was then followed by an afternoon filled with singing, stories, games, physical challenges, craft, as well as the team being taught the finer points of traditional Lao cooking!”

“This first STORMCo mission was a resounding success despite the challenges that can present themselves while ministering in a country that is 95 percent [from a non-Christian faith],” Hunter said. “It’s hoped that this trip will be the first of many that will leave our shores to go and help the church spread the good news of the gospel respectfully and sensitively in a country full of opportunity and possibility.”

For participant Tulip Nguyen, a highlight was the time they spent at Namtipsavan Bilingual School. “Each day, we were given the opportunity to work in classrooms, converse over lunchtime, have a friendly football match, run our STORMCo program and teach English in the afternoons.

“However, the true blessing in all that we did was building friendships,” she continued. “Despite the cultural and religious differences, we were able to connect and bring a glimpse of joy and hope to the community.”

The AUC has initiated plans for three STORMCo mission trips to Laos in 2024. The objective is to send volunteers annually to the region, expanding the reach of their community programs.

About STORMCo

According to the STORMCo website, Storm Company began in Queensland, Australia, after a high school chaplain recognized that Christian students wanted to do something rather than just be told about Christianity. They were hungry to put their faith into practice. The team set out for Moree, New South Wales, without a plan, except to help out any way they the could.

The life-changing experience of the first team in 1992 inspired others to follow. Teams adopted the name STORMCo in 1993 and began visiting other outback communities.

Within a few years there were STORMCo teams in every Australian state. The “STORMCo Guidebook” was written in 2000 to record the foundations that allowed STORMCo to work in Australia, New Zealand, Europe, North America, and Africa as well as the South Pacific.

STORMCo trips continue to increase in number around the world, organization leaders reported. It is a tribute to the Spirit of Jesus Christ represented in those who humbly choose to give of themselves in an adventure of service to others, they said.

The original version of this story was posted by Adventist Record.

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