Missionary vocation is a beautiful gift from God that
when responded to becomes a source of abundant blessings. One of the greatest blessings is the personal
change that the missionary experiences as a result of his or her service. Our own Deacon Al Austin who served in Papua
New Guinea reflects on the way he changed.
Dn. Al was one of the pioneer African American Lay Mission-Helpers who
served in Papua New Guinea, and now serves on the LMH Board of Directors. It must have
been quite a novelty for Papua New Guineans to receive a missionary who, in Dn.
Al’s own words, “was of the same skin color” as them. We hope Dn. Al’s story inspires others to
discover in them the missionary call and follow in his footsteps as Lay
Mission-Helpers. See below what Dn. Al has to say about his experience in
mission.
How
did serving as a Lay Mission-Helper change you?
By
Dn. Al Austin,
I
am probably like many others that went through the training program before they
left on their assignment. We were not fully aware of what we would be
experiencing until we arrived at our mission station. Papua New Guinea at the time was a young
country being controlled by a neighboring country, desiring to come into its
own, to be independent, yet they did not really know what that was or meant. Economically and socially, Papua New Guinea
was in a period in their history of transformation.
Al with fellow Lay Mission-Helpers |
When
I landed in the country, I became fully aware that I was entering into a unique
environment; being invited into a country where I was of the same skin color
but from a different culture and time. I
was black but not Papua New Guinean. I
was a young Catholic missionary but not a priest or religious brother. I was of age but not married, nor was I
seeking to marry. I came to share not to
take or exploit.
Al assisting local women |
Because
of this wonderful experience in these surroundings, I began to see myself and
life differently. It was not just about being a Catholic Christian in a foreign
country and culture. It was not about an
African American in a country where we were the same skin color but from a
different time and place. I had traveled
over 18,000 miles to encounter a people of whom I never knew until then. Yet
somehow we connected. They wanted to
know more about me and I about them. I
felt that part of God’s divine plan was to bring us together in order to
witness and share our lives. For them,
to be introduced to a person from the modern world who was trying to live a
Christin life by example, who shared their way of life in the simplest way
possible, close to nature and depending on each other. That showed me how I could live on the basic
needs of life and live well. It took me
a few months to appreciate it, and it has never left me.
I
hoped that I was able to show as many as I came in touch with that you do not
have to be westernized in order to be a good Catholic Christian. Being a successful Catholic is not about the
physical pleasures of life it is about coming to believe in the spoken word of
God and living it.
Al giving a talk at an event |
Thank you Dn. Al for your service as Lay
Mission-Helper!