Germany: Childcare Assistant and Café Ministry
Program name: tranSend (1-2 years)
Program length: Internship
Vocation: Business, Discipleship Ministries, Education, Social Services
Assignment: Empower long-term pioneer mission workers David and Rebekka Stutzman through child care and home help as needed while participating in the life of the Emmaus Gemeinschaft missional community.
Experience with caring for young children and previous cross-cultural experience preferred. Travel with the family and have a front-seat experience in a post-Christian cross-cultural mission.
Timeframe and Details: Assignment is a two-month minimum commitment, up to one year, with open-ended start and end dates. German language study may be offered; assignment could be effectively combined with study in Germany.
Context: Germany’s 20th century history is well-storied. Humiliated and broken into two nations following the century’s two great wars, Germany rose from literal ashes to become the strongest economy of the European Union. Germany’s strength makes it the key leader in the many crises facing the EU today from wide-spread unemployment, Greece’s failing economy, Russia’s aggression, the rise of terrorism, to the ongoing refugee crisis. Whether to redeem a xenophobic history or to overcome population decline, Germany is leading the world in the embrace of refugees, particularly from Syria, Iraq and Eritrea.
Home of Martin Luther’s Protestant Reformation, today Germany is largely post-Christian. One-third of the population claims to be not religious and two-thirds claim to be Christian, but most only nominally so. How Germany’s welcome of largely Muslim refugees into its post-Christian, secular culture will change Germany is unknown. But this great confluence presents an historical opportunity for gospel witness.
Ministries: VMMissions’ workers David and Rebekka Stutzman, with their three young children, are church planting in the urban setting of Mannheim, where the Rhine and Neckar Rivers meet in southwest Germany. Mannheim has a large Turkish population, and is known as one of the more intercultural cities in Germany. The Stutzmans also resource a national network for persons interested living out the gospel in a culture that is increasingly uninterested, if not hostile, to traditional presentations of Christianity.
Contact Kierston Kreider to learn more about this assignment.