Nazareth service experience awesome!

February 15, 2012 | God at work in Us | Number 4
By Deborah Froese | Mennonite Church Canada
Kayla Thiessen, right, with a fellow Serve Nazareth intern wear period clothing for their work at Nazareth Village. Thiessen’s service experience resulted from a Mennonite Church Canada advertisement in her church bulletin.

Kayla Thiessen bubbles with enthusiasm when she talks about her short-term service experience through Mennonite Church Canada in Nazareth. The University of Manitoba graphic design student, who attends Steinbach (Man.) Mennonite Church, experienced life far away from her Prairie home, learning about life in biblical times and sharing her faith with children and youths in the area.



It was Thiessen’s first time overseas and the experience was facilitated through an MC Canada partnership with Serve Nazareth.



“I had been talking to a friend about the places I wanted to go,” Thiessen says. “Israel was one of them. A week later I saw the ‘Adventurers Wanted’ ad [about opportunities for service] in my church bulletin. I applied and it took off after that.”



With four other young adults from the U.S., Thiessen took part in a three-month internship, an MC Canada program designed to help grow the kingdom of God in Nazareth through the service of volunteers and to grow the kingdom of God within the participants themselves.  



After spending a week in England to prepare for service, Thiessen’s assignment took her to Nazareth in the Galilee region of Israel last summer. She spent two days a week at Nazareth Village, where a farm and Galilean village have been recreated to represent life in Nazareth as it was during the time of Jesus. Dressed in clothing of that era, Thiessen led a donkey around the threshing floor, trampling grain from the recent wheat harvest. After wheat kernels were loosened from the chaff, she picked out individual grains by hand.  



Using her graphic-design skills, Thiessen also designed stationery and posters. “I confirmed my direction,” she says of the experience. Although she has had similar work experience before, she says that in Nazareth, “I had to do it more on my own, learning how I work and how to deal with new challenges and how to adapt.”



Thiessen related to the church in Galilee through Children’s Evangelical Fellowship camps in the area and youth groups, including those from Arab and messianic churches.



“They are passionate about what they are teaching, hungry to learn what God wants to say to them,” Thiessen says about the youth groups. “The only difference was of their background, so they would do some things differently. In the Arab church, they have singing at the beginning, a sermon, more singing—the same as here, but louder. They are more outgoing in the Arab church.”



She also became aware of the segregation of communities in Israel. While she was there, she says that “one Arab Christian went to a [Messianic] Jewish church on his own volition and was welcomed. They are not opposed to interaction, but I don’t think it happens a lot because of history,” she speculates.



Thiessen says the experience gave her the opportunity to “build relationships with people in Nazareth [and] it also allows you to travel and get a better understanding of the Bible.”

Kayla Thiessen, right, with a fellow Serve Nazareth intern wear period clothing for their work at Nazareth Village. Thiessen’s service experience resulted from a Mennonite Church Canada advertisement in her church bulletin.

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Comments

HiChris:

This is for Phebe as she spoke to us about visiting Nazareth but not being awre of thie village reconstruct from Christ's time

It was in tis weeks Cnandian Mennonite mag so thought I'd pass it on.

John

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