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2000
ACTS puts teens to work
Easter event part of larger youth network initiative
KEVIN
HEINRICHS
CW Managing Editor
Ontario
Between 3,000 and
5,000 youth picked up trash, raked yards and performed random acts of
kindness during the Easter weekend and the weeks leading up to it. The
massive effort was the practical outworking of a large youth event in
Hamilton last year in which 11,000 youth were commissioned to do acts
of service in the year 2000.
Now 2000 ACTS is
seeing the fruit of that commitment. Director John Latta says he was thrilled
with the participation. It was incredible to see them as they were
serving, he says.
Youth groups from
across the province planned service events in their own communities. In
most cases, the youth cleaned up the neighbourhood around the participating
church. In one of the larger events, 300 teens from the Ajax/Pickering
area cleared trash from a large piece of commercial property nearby.
Even on a smaller
scale, students made an impact. Latta tells of a small youth group made
up of a handful of teens who did a rake and runanonymously
cleaning peoples yards by raking and hauling away leaves.
One elderly man
came out of the house to ask them what they were doing. When the teens
told them they were raking his leaves as a favour, he cried. His wife
had died two weeks ago, the man said, and he hasnt been able to
get out of the house. The teens later brought him a sympathy card with
a Bible verse and visited with him.
Its small
stories like that, says Latta, that prove the vast good that comes from
small acts of service.
And those acts will
continue. 2000 ACTS workday coordinator Vanessa Hamilton adds that many
of the Ontario youth groups have monthly service projects planned.
Canadian youth
network
2000 ACTS is already
evolving in the short time it has been around. It began when then youth
pastor Dale Winder envisioned a way to involve the more than 65,000 youth
who attended a 1995 Skydome concert during a Billy Graham campaign. That
evolved into a vision to network the various youth groups of Ontario and
get them doing practical acts of service to back up their commitment.
The Hamilton commissioning was part of a service curriculum that taught
a biblical model of servanthood.
Now that the acts
of the commissioning are underway, 2000 ACTS will likely go by its alternate
name, the Canadian Youth Network. And its goal for 2001 will concentrate
on establishing prayer groups in high schools, says Latta.
Weve
established it to assist churches in the body of Christ. Serving will
always be what were about, but what weve decided to do is
that we need to target our high schools.
To do that theyre
teaming up with Darien Kovacs, the teenaged first-year Arts student at
the University of Victoria who started Canada Fire, a network of student-led
prayer groups. Latta says he is mentoring Darien and they are merging
their prayer networks.
Darians
got that vision. Weve got to release students into their environment.
The next event for
Canadian Youth Network is a celebration event at Copps Coliseum in Hamilton
September 30. The event, featuring the band Out of Eden, will celebrate
what has been accomplished through the acts of service in 2000.
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