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GYC Annual Meeting Offers End-Time Inspiration and Outreach Opportunities

Refugees and residents of Houston, Texas, benefit from participant efforts.

Seth Shaffer, and Adventist Review
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GYC Annual Meeting Offers End-Time Inspiration and Outreach Opportunities

With the theme To the End, the 2018 Generation of Youth for Christ (GYC) national conference convened in Houston, Texas, United States, from December 28, 2018 to January 1, 2019.

Each year at the end of December, GYC brings together young participants from around the world who are eager to grow their spirituality and be fed solid spiritual food, organizers said.

At GYC, participants have the opportunity to engage in outreach in the community, hear various sermons, interact at the networking sessions, and take in music and testimonies. Participants can also connect with supporting ministries and discover opportunities for service in the exhibit hall.

According to the GYC website, the organization was founded by a small group of young people in 2002 who desired to delve deeper into scripture and study it for themselves. They wanted to have a revival similar to the excitement and power experienced during Pentecost at the beginning of the Christian church.

Reflecting on this year’s conference and its theme, GYC participant Chris Matts said, “GYC gives me hope that I will see Jesus come in my lifetime!”

GYC leaders said that this year’s conference was intended to instill in people the idea that God does not want to leave anyone behind. As Seventh-Day Adventists, do we step out of our comfort zone or do we stay in our little Adventist bubble, content to let the world perish all around us while we wait to go to heaven? they said.

Moise Ratsara, current president of GYC, shared with participants in his sermon on opening night that God is not willing to lose one person on earth to sin. The reason God sent His Son is that we would otherwise all be lost, and God wanted to give fallen humanity the opportunity to be saved, explained Ratsara. God went to the end literally to save us, so will we go to the end for Him? he asked.

Steven Conway, a pastor from the Michigan Conference, told participants in his presentation, “We cannot reach the ends of the world until we first reach the end of ourselves.” Going to the end does not always mean heading off to some faraway place to serve God in the jungle, he said. It may mean serving God by being a light and witness to those closest to us, our families. The people we know best are sometimes the people we forget about because our focus is on reaching others.

Key speakers for 2018 GYC plenary sessions included General Conference youth ministries director Gary Blanchard, Ron Kelly, and Steven Conway. Blanchard encouraged participants to be bold for God and not to sit back. In a day and age where young people are more likely to search for safe spaces, he said, God calls us to step out and be bold for Him wherever we are. General Conference president Ted N. C. Wilson also gave a presentation, in which he encouraged participants to “avoid ecumenical compromises and stand firm for God’s unique truth to the end.”

The outreach opportunity for GYC attendees this year took place on Sunday afternoon. Participants had the option of traditional door-to-door outreach or could reach out to refugees and immigrants from around the world living in Houston, Texas, who speak more than 145 different languages. It is GYC’s hope that this outreach would help people realize that serving God goes a lot farther than the traditional means of outreach, organizers said.

Representing God to the world around us involves the little things in life, like being welcoming to our new neighbors on the street, helping out at the local soup kitchen, or teaching English as a second language, one GYC leader said.

Some GYC participants went door to door collecting brand new items to put together for refugee kits. These kits would be assembled and distributed during the GYC post-conference outreach effort. GYC attendees who signed up for the post-conference effort revisited refugees to deliver the kits and also revisited homes where residents had requested Bible studies during the initial conference outreach, to begin studies with them. This is the first time GYC volunteers have returned immediately following an outreach effort to contact residents who made a decision to study the Bible, organizers said.

At the end of the GYC conference outreach day, participants heard statistics from the day’s activities:

32 buses that took participants into the community

1,664 volunteers knocking on doors

11,044 total doors knocked on

3,276 doors of refugee homes knocked on

151 refugees interested in Bible studies

622 total people interested in Bible study

536 Bible study sets distributed

19,643 Glow tracts given away

The GYC annual conference is organized by both the organization’s executive committee members as well as by hundreds of volunteers. This year’s GYC conference also had a dedicated media team that served in various capacities throughout the conference, organizers said. The team was led by Clive Coutet, media director at Weimar Institute in Weimar, California, United States. Coutet had been a photographer and videographer for GYC for several years in the past. His six-person student team from Weimar managed Instagram stories for the GYC conference, recorded mission stories and testimonies from participants, and captured footage of the conference that will be used in the upcoming trailer for GYC’s next conference. “It’s been powerful passing on years of knowledge and experience to a new young generation of media evangelists,” Coutet said.

This year, GYC conference participants also had the opportunity to do something a little different during the networking session, organizers said. A new workbook was created by Eric Louw, vice-president of networking for GYC, entitled Activate. The workbook helps people find God’s calling for them in life and helps them achieve their God-given life goals and plans. Each evening of the conference, participants got together in small groups based on where they live in the US or in the world, and each one had an opportunity, alone and as a group, to complete the workbook chapter assigned for that day.

On Saturday (Sabbath) afternoon, Tara Vang, GYC vice-president of evangelism, gave her testimony. As a person who was a refugee herself, Vang’s message was timely for the age we live in, one leader said, when it seems as though we are constantly learning more about refugees from all over the world. At the end of her testimony, Vang gave an appeal, asking participants to come forward and sign up for mission service.

One participant approached Vang the following day, she said, asking her if she could still be counted among those who came forward for the appeal, since at the time she had not been wearing her event name tag and had not been counted. Young people are hungry for action, Vang said. They are eager to be more than what society thinks they can be.

“If you want to be inspired and challenged to take sacrificial initiatives for Christ to the end of the earth,” noted Ratsara, “then GYC is for you.”

Young people are invited to get involved with GYC, Ratsara said, and they can also discover service opportunities that are available by looking at the GYC website. The next GYC national conference will take place in Louisville, Kentucky, United States, January 1-5, 2020.

Seth Shaffer, and Adventist Review

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