Christians get first glimpse of Olympics ministry opportunities

Christians get first glimpse of Olympics ministry opportunities

By Frank Stirk

Tom Cooper of VWGN presenting the vision.
ORGANIZERS hoping to mobilize the broadest possible Christian involvement before, during and after the 2010 Winter Olympics seem convinced things are off to a very good start.

A kick-off event hosted by the newly formed Vancouver Whistler Games Network (VWGN) at Broadway Church last month drew 275 people wanting to catch a glimpse of how they and their churches, ministries or businesses might be able to participate.

"It's all God's work," said VWGN director of operations Jack O'Halloran. "You got [people from] Surrey over there, you got Delta over there, you got Langley there. Then you got Catholics sitting next to Baptists sitting next to Pentecostals.

"That's what it's all about. It's not about sport. It's not about the Games. It's about coming together as the body of Christ."

The Olympic and Paralympic events combined are projected to attract close to 7,000 world-class athletes from over 80 countries. With them will come their families, coaches and technicians, plus upwards of 10,000 journalists and thousands of spectators.

And like the VWGN, the Vancouver Organizing Committee (VANOC) has a vision that, as executive vice-president Donna Wilson told the gathering, also extends far beyond sports. "It's about the partnership of many to help us build a stronger nation," she said.

VANOC's mission, Wilson added, is therefore "the development and delivery of an extraordinary Olympic and Paralympic experience with a lasting legacy-not just bricks and mortar, not just the venues . . . but after the event as well. We're looking at the social and economic legacies that we can leave behind."

The entire Olympic enterprise, she insisted, is "truly spiritual."

VWGN's ultimate desire is to use the opportunities presented for a united Christian witness during the Olympics as a catalyst for transforming the communities of the Lower Mainland and Whistler long after the event in ways never seen before.

"What we really hope is going to happen," said O'Halloran, "is that people are going to start to step outside their silos and really start to interact as the body of Christ . . . that the whole Olympic thing is our launching pad to a silo-less Christian body that's just really working to reach people."

Grayson Bain, the network's chief executive officer, said he believes that God wants to use them to turn Vancouver into "a city set upon a hill. Imagine working together on . . . the plight of the poor and actually seeking out ways to minister to a hurting world together. The possibilities are just mind-boggling."

This transforming power could well extend to Christians in the private sector. "What the Vancouver Whistler Games Network could do . . . is help to bring heart and soul to a group that tends to put competitiveness first," said business owner Dianne Ledingham. "We need to open ourselves to the greater community for a bigger reason."

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Even Whistler -- with only about 300 regular churchgoers among its 10,000 permanent residents -- could experience spiritual transformation as a result, according to VWGN board member and former Whistler municipal councillor Kristi Wells.

"When you widen the network," she said, "you create an opportunity for the smaller churches within Whistler to work together, to lean on the other resources just down the highway from us. . . . It suddenly builds a new momentum."

Wells noted the fact that Whistler attracts thousands of visitors and seasonal workers each year means that if their lives can be touched with the love of Christ, "they're going to take it home."

"More than the beautiful mountains or the party lifestyle or their chance to get better at their sport, they're going to say, 'I met an amazing group of people -- and I found Jesus.' No other community has that kind of ability," she said.

In May, VANOC formally invited VWGN to assist them in four "official" capacities -- chaplaincy, organizing home-stay billets for athletes, the use of church parking lots and car-pooling to and from events, and "sustainability" or helping build a lasting legacy.

Overall, Wilson estimated they will "need an army of at least 25,000 volunteers." In some cases, the people they require will need specialized skills, such as medical training.

O'Halloran, a veteran of numerous international sporting events, told the crowd that "only your imagination can limit what our 2010 [Olympics] can look like." For example, he said, churches could offer "big-screen viewing events" or host barbeques or pack bag lunches. But they also need to be prepared and available for the unexpected.

At the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, he said, "they had these manned fire-pits all around the city. At the last minute, they had no one to man them. So they went to the Christian community and said, 'Would you guys put volunteers here?' Well, praise God."

But since VWGN operates under VANOC's umbrella, some discretion is required as to what Christian activities are permissible. A basic rule of thumb, said David Wells, district superintendent of the BC and Yukon district of the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada and VWGN's liaison with VANOC, is any ministry is acceptable that is non-intrusive.

"All those things that are viewed as being out of the free will of the athletes or the officials or even the volunteers -- if they express an openness, a willingness, a desire -- no problem," said Wells, whose involvement in Olympic events dates back to the 1988 Calgary Winter Games.

"There's always going to be a constituency that wonders, 'Why do we have this?' because it's not a value to them. But most organizers just want to be assured somebody's not out there doing overt things that are going to embarrass them."

"If people come and say, 'We want to be part of this and we're very big into Christian witness and street evangelism,' we'll just make sure it's done in a non-offensive way -- not a soapbox way -- to make sure everybody's kind of on the same page," said O'Halloran.

"We want to deliver that message, but we want to deliver it in love."

October 4/2007

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