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Thursday, July 24, 2008
Medical workers prepare for missions
By Shawn Hendricks / Baptist Press
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ROCKVILLE, Va. (BP)--Cheryl Simonson and her volunteer missions team were only halfway through their weeklong trip to the mountains of Peru when they ran out of medical supplies. Fortunately a Baptist missionary was there to help track down a pharmacy with the needed medications.

Before the week was over, the team from Bell Shoals Baptist Church in Brandon, Fla., treated 580 people. One of them was a 93-year-old woman with Parkinson's disease who gave her life to Christ.

Simonson credits the 2007 Global Medical Alliance Conference with helping make her church's first overseas medical mission trip happen -— even if she did underestimate the amount of supplies the team needed.

"Last year, I came not knowing really anything except that our church wanted to do medical missions," Simonson said, remembering all the questions running through her mind.

"How do you get a team together?"

"What kind of training do you do?"

"What kind of equipment do you need?"

Simonson returned this summer with her daughter Rachael to the International Mission Board's second annual Global Medical Alliance Conference, July 15-20 in Rockville, Va. -- two of nearly 200 Southern Baptist medical professionals, missionaries and other partners who attended the event. The purpose of the conference was to inspire, educate and mobilize more people to use medical missions overseas.

"They had a lot of nuts and bolts workshops," Simonson said, but the conference went beyond logistics and medical clinics.

"It's not just about handing out pills and doing that type of work," she said. "It's about reaching the lost with the Gospel."

Inspiration for that came during time to network with medical professionals and hear stories about medical missions impacting lives for Christ.

Tom Kent, a missionary for 34 years, shared how working with mobile medical clinics, which sometimes involves navigating rough roads into remote villages, has led many to the Lord in Paraguay. In June a volunteer team from the United States treated more than 2,000 patients -— 350 of whom also embraced the opportunity to follow Jesus Christ.

Years ago during one of Kent's first mobile clinics, he recalled one man saying, "You know, all my life I've heard about God's love, but this is the first time we've seen it in action."

Attendees learned that medical mission trips aren't just for professionals. Hospice care, free reading glasses and simple counseling are just a few examples of services that do not require much medical skill.

Those who attended the event received the newly published book "Preach and Heal: A Biblical Model for Missions" by Charles Fielding, a medical professional overseas. In the book Fielding shows how Jesus taught His disciples to meet both physical and spiritual needs wherever they went and suggests that Christians today are not exempt from following His lead. Continued...

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