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The Family That Evangelizes Together
Pro-Life Profile
BY Monta Monaco Hernon
October 18-24, 2009 Issue |
Posted 10/9/09 at 2:06 PM
The Second
Vatican Council called missionary work the “greatest and holiest task of the
Church” and described the Church’s commission to “rally the forces of all the
faithful” to “spread everywhere the reign of Christ” (Ad
Gentes, The Mission Activity of the Church, 1965).
Most missionaries will tell you that
their work brings rewards no other sphere of spiritual activity can. They’ll
also tell you the missionary life is a challenging one. Difficulties —
everything from language barriers to financial hardships to health issues to
physical safety — abound.
Enter the Family
Missions Company, which assists Catholic individuals and families in
becoming missionaries. It was founded in 1996 by Frank and Genie Summers, who,
after serving in missions for more than 20 years, returned to the United States
to better care for a son diagnosed with a rare genetic disorder.
“We understood that at the time we
could provide something that the Lord showed us was needed — an organization
offering Catholic laypeople, including families with children, the opportunity
to be trained, assisted in finding a mission, and supported,” says Frank
Summers. “Over the years, we had been approached by people who thought about
being missionaries and didn’t know what to do.”
The Summerses built Big Woods
Mission outside Abbeville, La. By coincidence, there happens to be a lot of mud
and mosquitoes, which they like to say is part of the preparation for would-be
missionaries who come for a three-month formation process.
The trainees study Church teachings
and Scripture, work in local Catholic service centers, and travel with the
Summerses to the company’s semipermanent mission in General Cepeda, Mexico.
Language training, if necessary, comes later, once people discern where they
will serve.
The new missionaries must raise the
$300 per month they will need to support themselves by compiling a “benefactor
list” of friends and family. ”St. Francis went around begging,” says Summers.
“People gave him money, and with what they gave him, he went forward.”
So far, all new missionaries have
been able to provide for their own needs. “We are not talking about a whole lot
of money,” he explains. “We are living like the poor we live among.”
Two by Two
The missionaries are sent out in
pairs. The Family Missions Company (online
at FMCMissions.com) helps them make arrangements, but General Cepeda is the
only established mission. “They have to be able to go with what God is doing,
and trust God in all the difficulties that will occur as they serve God,” Summers
points out. “This isn’t already set up. It’s missions to go forward to extend
the Kingdom of God.”
Last
year the organization had 28 missionaries serving in countries around the
world, including Africa, Mexico, India, Spain, Thailand and the Philippines.
They are asked to make at least a two-year commitment, but the hope is they
will stay longer.
Short-term
opportunities are also available. Family Missions sends groups for weeklong
work stints. But, whether the participant is a college student on spring break
or a full-time missionary, the primary goal is evangelization.
“Two-thirds
of mankind has not heard the Gospel,” says Summers. “They know about Jesus the
way we know about Batman. They never have had an encounter or been in a setting
where God could convince them to follow Jesus. That work is only done by
missionaries.”
Father
Charles Langlois, pastor at St. Peter’s Church in New Iberia, La., and chaplain
of Family Missions Company, talks of a trip to Mexico. He describes how the
missionaries and volunteers laid hands on and prayed for a sick woman wearing a
pagan amulet.
“They
took the amulet off while they prayed, and she got better physically. They are
amazing people,” says the priest. “They give their all for whoever they run
into. They make a difference.”
Participants
in Family Mission’s short-term program say the experience changes lives. Lisa
Killeen, a parishioner at St. Pius X Catholic Church in Lafayette, La., has
made five mission trips with her family.
“The
people (in General Cepeda) don’t have the conveniences that we have. It is a
realization (for us) that we don’t need material things to be happy,” says
Killeen. “All we need to be happy is to have God in our lives. To love God with
all of our heart, our mind and body. That is what these people do.”
Family
Missions Company missionaries help with physical needs as well as the
spiritual. The groups Killeen has traveled with worked on houses and churches,
brought supplies to the homebound and elderly, and assisted with medical needs.
At least one doctor has accompanied them to treat patients.
While
her church group decided not to go this year due to an increase in violence,
Killeen’s family was still prepared to make the journey — but Family Missions
canceled the trip. “The way I look at it,” she says, “if it is time to go be
with Our Lord, what better way for us to go?”
High Adventure
Summers
explains that the Family Missions Company does its best to make sure short-term
trips are safe, but fully discloses the risks to participants. As for the
full-time missionaries, he makes no bones about the fact that the life can be a
dangerous one.
“What
if Jesus said, ‘I’m out of here because they are going to kill me?’
Missionaries have to be willing to give their lives to the people whom they
serve,” Summers says.
The
Summerses have spent 34 years working for the missions in some capacity. For
them it has been a family affair. All seven of their children were raised in
part in missions, and several of them are still involved, including Joseph, who
coordinates the organization’s short-term trips.
“The
older I got, as I tried to figure out what I wanted to do, the more I realized
how much I loved mission life,” says Joseph. “I have a more grounded
perspective of the world and of the needs of the Church and a better understanding
of different cultures and places.”
It
didn’t hurt that, as an 11-year-old, he and his brother could paddle an
outrigger canoe in the crystal blue waters of a lagoon in Micronesia. “We got
to have adventures that most (kids) never had,” he says. But the most important
missionary experience is meeting the people: “Living among God’s poor is a
tremendous grace and blessing. We can learn so much from their attitude toward
God and life. It bursts the American bubble in a good way.”
Monta
Monaco Hernon writes
from
La Grange Park, Illinois.
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