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HBCU students experience international missions, see ‘someone like me’

Chyler Hughes, from Soma Community Church in Jefferson City, Missouri, helps feed children and homeless families in the favelas of Sao Paulo, Brazil. The recent graduate of historically black Lincoln University in Jefferson City, Missouri had never heard about international missions until she entered college. Her trip to Brazil taught her “missions is for everybody.” IMB Photo


Chyler Hughes had never seen a Black missionary. At church, she learned to minister in her local community, but no one ever talked about international missions.

With the help of a translator, Lillian Bower talks with a homeless man in a Sâo Paulo, Brazil park. The college student worked alongside Igreja Batista na Sé, a Brazilian Baptist church, as part of a short-term trip with her church and collegiate ministry from Jefferson City, Missouri. IMB Photo

The concept entered her world when she left Kentucky and enrolled at Lincoln University, a historically Black university in Jefferson City, Mo. She learned about international missions by attending Rooted, a collegiate ministry of Soma Community Church. They partnered with an International Mission Board missionary team in Brazil and sent their first short-term team of students to work with them.

It was on this trip to São Paulo, Brazil, where Hughes met her first IMB missionaries, Eric and Ramona Reese, and saw firsthand how they share the Good News of Jesus Christ in the favelas, low-income settlements.

“It was really inspiring to see Eric and Miss Ramona in a place like Brazil,” Hughes said, speaking of the diversity of the community. She witnessed people with different ethnic backgrounds and of different color spreading the Gospel and sharing their testimonies. “Seeing that representation shows you missions is for everybody.”

Jon Nelson, pastor of Soma Community Church, nodded. This is exactly what he prayed for his young team to learn on this missions experience for HBCU students. The pastor pointed out statistically about 8.4 percent of all missionaries in any denomination are African American or of African descent. He noticed this low engagement among his students who typically don’t think of leaving their own communities for missions. For most, the trip to São Paulo was their first international trip.

Jon Nelson, pastor of Soma Community Church in Jefferson City, Missouri, grabs a hot meal. He and the group of college students he took to Brazil helped feed homeless people and others in need at the Cristolândia ministry center. IMB Photo

“Some fruit from this trip is just in the way they [will] see the world now. My students were able to see people that look like them,” Nelson said, referring not only to the Reeses but the diverse Brazilian population. “That takes the racial aspect out of missions and better allows them to think about what it looks like to serve God in another country. They see it’s about being obedient to God.”

Brian Kinney kept reminding himself that the whole experience was “bigger than me.” With tasting new foods and experiencing a new culture, he didn’t want to get wrapped up in the new and miss what God wanted him to see. He found he was able to spread God’s Word, no matter the language barrier, through smiles, play, hugs, feeding the homeless and of course, translators. The experience now has him thinking about full-time missions, something that wasn’t even on his radar before the trip.

Eric Reese, IMB missionary to Brazil, speaks with Brazilian men sitting in the square about “hope in Jesus.” Reese is the first Black missionary many of the students from Lincoln University have ever met. Students said this representation showed them missions was really for everyone. IMB Photo

The same happened with Hughes as she saw many challenges and hardships in the lives of the people she met. She held babies in the favela and played games with the children. She talked with a man in a little town square where people with addiction hang out and learned his struggles. She listened to national believers tell their testimonies of coming to faith in Jesus.

Through all the new experiences, Hughes felt her eyes and heart opening. She went from thinking somebody else can do missions to “why not me?”

“There are so many people out here in São Paulo and all over the world that are struggling with things similar to how all of us are struggling. They just need Jesus in their lives,” Hughes said. “We need more people out there spreading the Gospel.”

To join a team like the one in Sao Paulo and work alongside IMB missionaries, visit https://www.imb.org/go/.