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2nd
July, 2006
DAVID
ADAMS
Australian Peter Bradbury was, up until last week,
among the thousands who had gone to Germany for the World
Cup. But unlike those who had gone as soccer spectators, he
was in Germany for another purpose altogether.
Bradbury, who spent close to three weeks in Germany, is among
25 Australians who travelled there as part of a Fusion team
with the aim of linking up with local churches to run a series
of the organisation’s signatory “open crowd”
festivals as a way of reaching out in communities all around
the country.
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PICTURE:
Rene Mansi www.urbancow.net
INDEX PAGE PICTURE: Julie Elliot (www.sxc.hu)
“No matter where we are, people have a hunger
inside for connection and for purpose and for community.
We know where that hunger comes from and it’s
just a matter of really finding a way for people to
give it expression, if you like..." says Peter
Bradbury, one of the Fusion team members working at
the World Cup. "There’s that sense of connection
and community that many people just don’t feel
these days.”
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“What
amazes me is the way that (the open crowd festivals) can hit
a common chord in every culture,” he says.
“No matter where we are, people have a hunger inside
for connection and for purpose and for community. We know
where that hunger comes from and it’s just a matter
of really finding a way for people to give it expression,
if you like...There’s that sense of connection and community
that many people just don’t feel these days.”
Bradbury is a former telecommunications technician who now
is a full-time field support worker with Fusion and is based
at the organisation’s national headquarters in Poatina,
Tasmania. He was in one of three teams of Fusion staff and
volunteers who went to different German cities to conduct
the festivals.
Most of those who attended the festivals - which attracted
anything from between 50 to a few thousand people depending
on where they were being held - were local residents and while
Bradbury says he only speaks a few words of German, the group
had a number of bilingual people among them who could translate
for them.
Over his three weeks there, Bradbury spent time in three German
cities - Strassburg, Leipzig and Iserlohn - while other teams
went to places like Hamburg, Hannover and Stuttgart.
He says the partnership with local churches was amazing and
recalls members of an English-speaking church in Leipzig in
particular being “amazed at how quickly they connected
with people in the community (via the open crowd festivals)
that they probably had no direct connection with before and
how open they were to just engaging”.
Bradbury, who had previously been involved with his wife Heather
at open crowd festival outreaches at the Athens Olympics in
2004, says partnership with local churches is crucial to ensuring
the outreach continues beyond the open crowd festivals themselves.
“Very clearly we believe it’s not so much what
you achieve in the time, it’s what you set in motion...”
he says. “For us, (these) open crowd festivals is part
of a process of mission - we’re not pretending it’s
ever going to provide everything that’s needed, but
it’s a very good way of providing initial contact and
interest in the community and meeting a real need in bringing
people together which then paves the way for future programs
and connections.”
Fusion, which is now establishing a permanent office in Berlin,
was running the open crowd festivals under the broad umbrella
of Kickoff 2006, a network of Christians in Germany facilitating
the involvement of local churches, denominations, and national
and international ministries and communities in outreach during
the World Cup.
Among other organisations involved in Kickoff is Athletes
in Action which has several staff members serving as chaplains
in Germany as well as staff “on the ground” who
are forming partnerships with local churches and conducting
clinics and camps.
The organisation has also produced an outreach DVD that they
say “uses the platform of football and the heightened
awareness of the sport worldwide due to the World Cup to share
the stories of great football stars”.
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NON-THREATENING
OUTREACH: The 'Prize: Quest for the Ultimate Goal'
includes football footage and testimonies from players.
“These players are people that the
soccer community admire and respect," says Shawn
Keith of Athletes in Action. "They are truly
superstars in a variety of ways, and what they have
to say carries a lot of weight. To see them not only
have success in their sport, but failures as well,
shows that they are human and not perfect. This goes
for both on and off the field, as well as in the spiritual
sense. They understand that they are sinners, but
through a relationship with Christ, they can have
that forgiveness that we all need.”
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The
Prize: Quest for the Ultimate Goal, which can be purchased
for a small fee, contains football footage and testimonies
from players like Brazil’s Edmilson, Lucio and Ze Roberto,
Korea’s Lee Young Pyo, the Ivory Coast’s Cyrille
Domoraud and US player Tim Howard from Manchester United.
“It’s a great way to introduce someone to the
person of Christ...” says the AIA’s Shawn Keith.
“This is truly a global outreach tool and that is why
is was created.”
Keith says the World Cup is a “great time” for
Christians to reach out to football fans around the world.
“Many people may not listen to you or I share their
faith, but when their (misplaced) idols and gods, football
stars, share their faith and what a relationship with Christ
has done in their lives, it takes on a whole new meaning,”
he says.
“These players are people that the soccer
community admire and respect. They are truly superstars in
a variety of ways, and what they have to say carries a lot
of weight. To see them not only have success in their sport,
but failures as well, shows that they are human and not perfect.
This goes for both on and off the field, as well as in the
spiritual sense. They understand that they are sinners, but
through a relationship with Christ, they can have that forgiveness
that we all need.”
“This is a great, non-threatening way to share Christ
with others with a piece that they will enjoy because of their
love for the game.”
Keith says that thousands of the copies of the DVD - which
are available for a small fee (http://the-prize.org)
- have already been distributed with one country ordering
as many as 20,000. Several Australian ministries and churches
are among those who have received copies.
The DVD is available in an English-language version and a
24 language version. In Germany, Athletes in Action has established
a partnership with the people behind the distribution of The
Jesus Film and Kickoff 2006 under which copies of the
DVD distributed in Germany include The Jesus Film.
For Bradbury, meanwhile, one of the highlights of the trip
came at the end of his stay in Germany when all the Fusion
team members came back together for a three-day pilgrimage,
tracing the footsteps of the likes of Martin Luther and Count
Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf, founder of the Moravian Church.
“It really was a very special way to finish the outreach...”
he says. “For us there was something about not only
doing the mission but just connecting with the meaning of
it all and the legacy that the great pioneers, if you like,
of old have left us. Germany has a lot to remember, positively.
There’s not just shadows in the past.”
Bradbury says it's very interesting to view the sort of work
Fusion is doing at the World Cup in the broader historical
context.
“Someone has described the kind of thing that Fusion
does as another positive wave of the reformation, if you like.
We’ve had the priesthood of all believers, and with
the charismatic movement, we’ve had the giftings of
all believers, but this is (about) the ministry of all believers
- that God’s called us all to reach out.”
~
www.fusion.org.au
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http://the-prize.org/
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