Author: Amy Medina Page 5 of 229

Worth Your Time (December 2023)

I hope you all had a wonderful Christmas! Below are some articles and books I’ve recently collected. I would be happy to hear your thoughts on them.

Articles:

Blessed Are the Thrifty? by Susan Mettes
As a very thrifty person, this one was so thought-provoking for me. I read it a month ago and keep thinking about it.

“As Christians around the world live through a period of discomfort—or worse—in their household budgets, even thrift can bring them dangerously close to the errors often attributed to greed. Any perspective that filters reality through money distorts our ideas of worth. And isn’t seeing worth as God sees it an enormous part of discipleship?”

There’s another Christian movement that’s changing our politics. It has nothing to do with whiteness or nationalism By John Blake
“The victory not only reinvigorated an emboldened labor movement in the US, it also marked the revival of another movement in America: the Social Gospel. Fain’s sermonette was remarkable because labor leaders don’t typically cite the Bible in such detail to justify a strike. But they once did. Fain’s decision to blend scripture with a strike is straight out of the Social Gospel playbook.”

The Impact of Social Media on Youth Mental Health: A Summary of the 2023 US Surgeon Report
We have got to pay attention to this: “95% of youth ages 13-17 use social media with many using it “almost constantly.”

Why I Am Now a Christian by Ayaan Hirsi Ali  
“Unlike Islam, Christianity outgrew its dogmatic stage. It became increasingly clear that Christ’s teaching implied not only a circumscribed role for religion as something separate from politics. It also implied compassion for the sinner and humility for the believer.

Yet I would not be truthful if I attributed my embrace of Christianity solely to the realisation that atheism is too weak and divisive a doctrine to fortify us against our menacing foes. I have also turned to Christianity because I ultimately found life without any spiritual solace unendurable — indeed very nearly self-destructive. Atheism failed to answer a simple question: what is the meaning and purpose of life?”

Why I No Longer Support the Death Penalty by Matthew T. Martens
I came to this conclusion myself after reading Just Mercy. This article sums up my thoughts as well.

Books:

The Toxic War on Masculinity: How Christianity Reconciles the Sexes by Nancy Pearcey
Nancy Pearcey has yet to disappoint me with anything she writes. In the past several years, I’ve read a number of books on Christian gender roles, trying to wrap my head around the current debate in light of Scripture. This one made a lot of things so much clearer for me. Pearcey does a dive into American history and shows convincingly how the Church has been influenced by culture — and not in positive ways.

Here’s a taste: “Compared to secular men, devout Christian family men who attend church regularly are more loving husbands and more engaged fathers. They have the lowest rates of divorce. And astonishingly, they have the lowest rate of domestic violence of any major group in America… [In contrast], The numbers are staggering: They tell us that men who claim the Christian label often exhibit worse behavior than men who are outright secular. Nominal men skew the statistics, creating the false impression that evangelical men as a group are abusive and domineering.”

Dangerous Territory: An Inquiry into Everything I Thought I Knew about Faith, Love, and Saving the World by Amy Peterson
This is a page-turning memoir about the idealism of missions and learning God’s sovereignty the hard way.

The Gospel Comes with a House Key: Practicing Radically Ordinary Hospitality in Our Post-Christian World by Rosaria Butterfield
The Butterfields do hospitality so well that it was hard not to be totally overwhelmed by what I’m not doing. But as I read on, I was encouraged. Rosaria is quick to show her family’s own mistakes and failures and how they grew into an ability to love their neighbors well. I finished the book feeling inspired.

Video:
Christmas is over but it’s not too late to listen to this wonderful rendition of Joy to the World from Uganda!

Medina Family Life:

Gil and Grace at a Switchfoot concert
soccer season has started again
Gil’s extended family plays Wiffle Ball every time we are together!

A Year in Review: 2023 Medina Family Update

Hey faithful blog readers,

Below is an adaption of the Christmas letter I sent out to my ministry email list. If you’re interested in news about my family, read on!

If you’ve prayed for us in 2023, I am so grateful. God is good; all the time. Every year we’ve been back in the States has gotten a little better, a little easier. Raising three teenagers (and one almost-teenager) who are working through a variety of layers of loss and identity keeps Gil and I on our knees, but we are thankful for so much in 2023: Grace’s baptism, academic improvement in a couple of kids, lots of reunions with friends from Tanzania this year, and a number of wonderful adults who are pouring into our kids’ lives. 

Here’s some updates and pictures about all of us:

Grace had an amazing year! She went to Panama on a short-term service trip, starred as Ursula in “The Little Mermaid,” made it onto “All-League First Team” in varsity basketball, helped to choreograph the church musical, works a part-time job in child care, and is taking several AP classes. She brightens everyone’s day with her sunny personality. Grace is now a senior and would love to go to Biola next year but she’s thinking she will likely go to our local community college first to save money. She wants to be a middle school English/History teacher, and of course, we think that’s a great idea! 



Josiah (now a sophomore) continues to excel in soccer, making “All-League First Team” on the Varsity team as a freshman — which is quite an accomplishment. He just turned 16 so his aspirations are now to learn to drive and get a job (so that we let him drive!). Josiah likes to pretend he’s tough but he still hugs his mom (and still greatly enjoys jumping out and scaring the living daylights out of her).
 


Lily graduated from 8th grade in May which means we have three high schoolers this year! She’s decided she is done with sports and is sticking with creating things. She took a sewing class and bought her own sewing machine this year. She also happily takes over the kitchen whenever I travel to Minnesota for work.
 
 

Johnny is now in 6th grade and is nurturing a love for music — he plays clarinet in the school band, but he also started piano lessons and is taking off. (His teacher says he is a natural at playing by ear!) He also joined the cross-country team and is pushing himself hard. He is especially proud of the fact that he broke his older brother’s 6th grade 1 mile time (under 6 minutes). This boy can run for days! He recently hit a growth spurt and is rapidly catching up to his siblings. 


Gil continues to teach high school Bible full-time and was requested by the Class of 2023 to be their commencement speaker — a testimony to his impact and influence on his students. Gil’s favorite class to teach is “Worldviews,” where he challenges students to think deeply about what they believe. 


And of course, we must acknowledge the happy presence of Mzungu the dog in our family, who can make even the grumpiest teenager smile. 

As a family, we continue to deepen our relationships at our church and in our community. The home group we host is thriving and has expanded this year. I joined the committee at church that plans short-term missions trips, and, in fact….we plan to lead one next year: Our family will be returning to Tanzania in June for three weeks (with a team from our church)!


I’m now in my fourth year serving with ReachGlobal (the organization that sent us to Tanzania). I am on the Engage Team, which means I help to interview, onboard, and train new cross-cultural workers. I was promoted to Associate Director this year and have enjoyed the challenge of new and different responsibilities. I work remotely most of the time but travel to Minnesota several times a year for interviewing and training events.

I also have had several additional speaking events this year–to help train short-term teams in cross-cultural sensitivity, to train church missions leaders in creating a missions culture, and even to teach a weekend retreat on anxiety for teen girls.

My job is a support-raising position, meaning I have to raise all the funds needed for my salary, benefits, and travel expenses. I haven’t yet met my fundraising goals for 2023, so if you would be interested in becoming a monthly partner or making an end-of-year gift, please click here to make a donation. It’s always tax deductible.

If you are interested in joining my ministry email list, please let me know at contactamy@amy-medina.com. (This is different from subscribing to this blog by email.)

Thank you for reading this post, and so many others! Your comments and emails in response to my articles are what keep me writing. I am so grateful to each of you!

By grace,
Amy

Finding Grace in Infertility and Loss

Last week at a pre-op appointment, I needed to sign a document that read, “I understand that I will not be able to become pregnant if I undergo this procedure,” and my breath caught in my throat and tears stung my eyes.

The next moment, that reaction surprised me. I am 47 years old and I haven’t thought about becoming pregnant in years. I long ago lost the hope of bearing a child and eventually lost the desire as well. But somehow initialing my name next to that sentence compressed the last 20 years, and I was suddenly a young wife again, crying over Dollar Store pregnancy tests that stubbornly refused to show me two pink lines. 

A Marriage Forged on the Mission Field

The EFCA blog is doing a series on marriage and asked me to write this one.

A bride and a groom smiling at their wedding.

A guy in college told me that if I wanted to be a missionary in Africa, no one would date me. I didn’t care. And he was wrong. 

In fact, it was during college that Gil Medina came into my life, and we got to know each other while co-leading a ministry in a cross-cultural, low-income neighborhood near our church. The two of us became a team before we were even friends. We hit it off and worked well together: he was the visionary, relational guy, and I was the administrative and logistics gal. 

I wanted to be more than friends but didn’t think he did, so I barreled along with my plans to move overseas. I was accepted with ReachGlobal, agreed to teach in Tanzania, raised all my support and got a visa. 

Meanwhile, Gil wanted to be more than friends too, but kept his mouth shut so as not to get in the way of God’s plan for my life. Finally, some mutual friends helped us break through our self-sacrificing martyrdom and pointed us in the other’s direction. It didn’t take long for us to figure out that, really, we wanted to do this missionary life together. 

When we got engaged, we weren’t sure if Tanzania would be as good of a ministry fit for Gil as it was for me and considered serving in a different country. But then a youth sports outreach position opened up in Tanzania, which felt like Gil’s dream job. We got married on October 7, 2000, and nine months later, we were on a plane out of California. We arrived in Tanzania just a year after my original plan to leave. ReachGlobal got two for the price of one and I felt like I had everything I could ever want: I got to serve in Africa, and with my best friend and ministry partner. The Gil and Amy Medina Team couldn’t have been more perfect. 

Turns out, it wasn’t so perfect.

Go here to read the rest.

Dear Sending Churches, We Need to Get the Parents of Missionaries on Board

This post was written for A Life Overseas.

My mom sits at her mom’s breakfast table, wailing and pleading. My grandmother sits opposite her, wailing and angry. 

It is one of my earliest memories.

I’d never heard so much emotion out of either of them, and the sunny little room encircled by cabinets of glassware suddenly felt tense, alarming, to my five-year-old soul.

My Gram struggled to accept that we were moving to Africa, so that day at her table was one of many tense conversations. In her anger that my mom was taking away her grandchildren, Gram even consulted a lawyer to see if she could sue for custody. 

During our first two-year term in Liberia, we faithfully sent her letters and pictures. My mom tape-recorded my brother’s and my voices and mailed the cassettes off too. Gram didn’t call once during the entire two years. She didn’t send a single letter. Her anger and grief consumed her. 

My grandmother never understood my parents’ love for Jesus, so their motivation to become missionaries didn’t make sense to her either. But unfortunately, her response wasn’t all that different from many parents who do share their children’s faith. 

In Mobilizing Gen ZJolene Erlacher and Katy White quote the Future of Missions study from Barna: “Only 35 percent of engaged Christian parents of young adults say they would definitely encourage their child to serve in missions, while 25 percent are not open to the idea at all.”

They continue, “Career success and physical safety are the top concerns. Nearly half said, ‘I’d rather my child get a well-paying job than be a career missionary.’”

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