Called to serve
- Share via
Young Chang
For two years, Tim Nelson lived among Ukrainians suffering from
poverty. They ate watered-down soup, beets, cabbages and potatoes. Kids
in orphanages were shabbily dressed in the winter. Cracked windows let
the air in, and uncarpeted floors froze children’s feet.
Nelson has been back from his Christian mission trip for more than a
year now, but these images haven’t faded.
Of course, he remembers sunny summer days, pretty spring flowers and a
winter sky that didn’t look so bleak once he adjusted to his new
environment. But most vividly, Nelson, a member of the Newport Coast
Singles Branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,
remembers adults and children who lived without luxuries and often
without necessities.
About two weeks ago, the UC Irvine senior began setting up a Southern
California branch of Project Reach Out, a nonprofit organization working
to improve the condition of orphanages in Eastern Europe and Russia.
Based in Salt Lake City, Project Reach Out was founded by two fellow
missionaries in the Ukraine -- Benjamin Becker and Nathan Shipp. It made
its first overseas trip last year, bringing money to the Ukraine and
purchasing food, clothing, medicine and medical devices there to avoid
going through customs officials.
Inspired, Nelson is starting a local chapter. For now, headquarters
is his dormitory room. He is looking for local individual and corporate
donors.
“I feel like Orange County is a very wealthy area,” he said. “And it’s
very blessed in many ways. People are generous and willing to give to a
worthy cause.”
From Utah, Becker said he would like the program to expand as widely
as possible.
“We would like to keep it always personal,” he said. “But the more
children we can help, the more lives we can change.”
Nelson, 23, left for the Ukraine when he was 19. The Newport Coast
Singles Branch sponsored the trip, as do many local churches for their
missionaries.
Ric Olsen, pastor of global outreach at Harbor Trinity Church in Costa
Mesa, said congregants there sponsor annual mission trips to Romania and
Mexico. It is part of the faith experience for churches to sponsor these
trips.
“Your faith will die if you don’t give it away,” Olsen said. “There’s
a point where, if we sit back and just absorb everything that God gives
us, it will become really a poison that will kill us. The more you give
away, the more you’ll get.”
Congregants of Latter-day Saints churches believe 19 is a good time
for young men to serve as missionaries, Nelson said. His parents
preferred he finish his schooling first, but the political-science major
felt he had to go when he did.
“I was so happy, I wanted to share it with others,” Nelson said. “I
have been given so much in my life, and I owe much of my life to my
religious beliefs.”
He put his life here on hold and served overseas for two years without
visiting once. Sure, he missed his family, his friends, a good pizza, but
his cause soon overpowered the homesickness.
He taught English, visited children in hospitals, donated clothing and
other goods to schools and invalid hospitals and transported buckets of
dirt to help build a greenhouse at an orphanage for kids with
developmental disabilities.
He also evangelized on the streets, sharing his faith with people
passing by.
Nelson’s faith and service has also helped his personal life. He said
being a missionary gave him discipline, organization and a perspective on
what’s important in life.
The law school applicant worked with Newport Beach Councilman John
Heffernan during last fall’s campaign. Nelson said Heffernan respected
that he was a missionary, which helped him get the job.
Looking ahead, Nelson wants to help children in the Ukraine, whose
faces he still remembers.
“When you’re over there for two years, you really grow to love the
people,” he said.
FYI
For more information on the Southern California chapter of Project
Reach Out, call Tim Nelson at (949) 854-9195.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.