(written by Heid, the head of YAGM, not by me)
  
[1] "Is that really what it's like in the United States, Heidi?"  asked an elderly friend as we sat around the kitchen table one  afternoon. "Isn't it true that everybody has their own bedroom and their  own house? That everybody has cars and big televisions and internet in  their houses? I'd never go myself; I'm too old and too scared for that.  But I understand why people do it. Everybody wants those things.  Everybody wants a nice, comfortable life like you all have in your  country. Who wants to spend every day worrying about whether you can  feed your kids when you can go to the United States and just buy  anything you want?"
So went one of many similar conversations I had with friends and  colleagues when I served as a long-term missionary in Mexico. These  conversations often began as a reflection on a neighbor's decision to  try and cross the border into the United States as a means of supporting  one's family — a last-resort decision for most, and one that was never  reached lightly. The frequency with which those conversations turned to  my friends' assumptions about the U.S. American consumer lifestyle,  however, became for me a convicting commentary on my home culture.
[3]  Many a social scientist has compared consumer culture in the United  States to religion. Indeed, consumerism has shaped a series of norms and  rituals that look a lot like religious practice. Receipt of one's first  credit card is as important a rite of passage as confirmation for many  young people. The Friday after Thanksgiving — Black Friday — is  consumerism's most holy of days, calling people out of their homes and  into places of worship where offerings go not into plates but into cash  registers. Most of us can sing television commercial jingles as easily  as we can sing the lines of old hymns.
[4] In a cultural milieu  that preaches economic prosperity as the sole vision of the good life,  the church has both an opportunity and a responsibility to lift up  counter-cultural models of life and witness. The Lutheran theological  tradition, and the ELCA as an expression of Christ's church, is rich  with resources to help us create such counter-cultural space. One of  those resources is the ELCA's Young Adults in Global Mission (YAGM)  program. (Those "in the know" pronounce fondly, if a bit awkwardly,  "YAGM" as one full word.)
[5] I'm certain I'm not alone among  clergy and lay rostered colleagues in saying this, but I'm convinced  that I have the best call in the entire church. As Program Director for  YAGM, I have the deep and humbling privilege of accompanying some 50  young adults each year as they engage in a transformative, year-long  journey in international service. These young people, all between the  ages of 19 and 29, serve alongside companion church bodies and  organizations in one of ten countries around the world. They serve in a  variety of areas, from congregational ministry to human rights work,  from alternative education to health and development projects. The YAGM  program is structured in such a way as to provide support for each  volunteer. At the same time, it provides a challenging level of  independence that impels volunteers to wrestle profoundly with questions  of faith, justice, sense of self, and sense of call.
[6] The  YAGM experience runs deeply counter to the U.S. consumer culture. It  forms and transforms participants in remarkable ways that can only be  attributed to the work of the Holy Spirit. Of course, many YAGM  volunteers have already been shaped counter-culturally through  experiences with other ministries of the ELCA. Liberal arts education in  the Lutheran tradition taught many YAGM to think critically about life  and the world. Service at Lutheran outdoor ministry sites has acquainted  many with a lifestyle of simplicity and the gifts of intentional  Christian community. Many are members of congregations, or have been  part of Lutheran campus ministries at public universities, where the  preaching and teaching focus on service and social justice. Not all YAGM  volunteers share this formation profile. Nonetheless, these are the  kinds of experiences that appear to open particular young adults to the  challenge of living and serving abroad for a full year.
[7] Many  components of the YAGM program contribute to the counter-cultural  formation of our young adult volunteers. Some of those components seem  simply to be the work of the Holy Spirit and are difficult to capture  fully in words. Some themes, however, saturate the experiences of nearly  all of the young people who serve in the YAGM program. These themes  form a base by which our volunteers develop a deeper capacity to look  askance at consumerism in the United States context. Among these themes,  the following are central: learning how to live with less, discovering  the gift of relying on others, and understanding relationship as core to  our call as people of faith.
How to Live with Less[8]  YAGM volunteers are supported financially throughout their year of  service. They receive full room and board, travel to and from their  country of service, and health insurance. They also receive a small  monthly stipend meant to help them live at a level similar to the  community among whom they're serving. That stipend is typically less  than $5 per day.
[9] For many, it's the first time they've come  face-to-face with literally not having the cash (or the plastic) to do  or buy everything they'd like. Almost every YAGM volunteer struggles at  some point with the perceived lack of freedom that comes with having  reduced financial resources. Amy, who served as a YAGM volunteer in  Mexico, shared this in one of her newsletters:  
 "I knew my monthly stipend of 1200 pesos [about $90 US] would not  last if I wasn't careful…Realizing the month of October has 31 days and 5  Saturdays, I was really feeling the money crunch. My host family's  clothes washer was broken for 3 weeks and instead of paying for laundry  services I decided to wash my essentials by hand (which is terribly time  consuming) like my host family. The realization 'I really don't have  the money to [get my clothes washed]' was a startling one. Applying that  to families all over the world that have to make bigger decisions than  whether or not to wash clothes by hand was a lot to take in. Everyone  'knows' there is need in the world, but experiencing it firsthand really  deepens the understanding."
[10] Yet living on a stipend is an exercise in 
voluntary  poverty. Like Amy, over the course of the year most YAGM become  increasingly aware that, while they "feel" poor, they have the wild  privilege of escaping that "poverty" whenever they like. At the same  time, our volunteers witness daily the ways in which such escape is  impossible for most people in their communities of service. One YAGM  volunteer leaves her comfortable flat in Slovakia, where she is serving  among Roma ("Gypsy") people, only to witness a woman and her children  digging through the Dumpster across the street in search of food and  items they might resell. Another grieves with a South African family who  has lost a child to AIDS, principally because they did not have bus  fare to get to the clinic where free antiretroviral drugs were regularly  administered. A third volunteer, who grew up on meat and potatoes,  tries with all her might to develop a "taste" for the Malaysian  rice-based diet. She seeks to be grateful for any kind of food as she  serves her kindergarten student what she knows will be his only meal of  the day. For a moment, at least, the YAGM stipend which once looked  meager feels terribly extravagant. Those moments begin to multiply as  the year goes on.
[11] It is important to state that pity is not  generally a feeling that most of our YAGM connect to the witness of  poverty in their friends' lives. Far more often, I hear our volunteers  reflect with humility on the tremendous strength of spirit they  experience in the people among whom they serve. Even in the midst of  dehumanizing situations of poverty, our volunteers discover in their  global companions a confounding ability to live with joy. Such joy is  wholly unconnected to "stuff." Rather, it is lived in simple things like  spending unhurried time with family, praying with neighbors, or sharing  tea with a new friend. These kinds of experiences are often co-opted  for our volunteers by the U.S. consumer culture. Time with family and  friends is rarely unhurried. Rather, it needs be scheduled into an  already too-busy day planner, and is almost always buffered by the fancy  coffee shop, the big screen television, or the new video game which so  often become the bases of our relationships. Being required to live with  less frees our volunteers from consumerism's demands that they  accumulate more and more. Instead of finding "joy" in a latte they can't  afford, voluntary poverty allows our volunteers to reflect on what  truly brings them joy. It allows them to rediscover life in all  fullness, which God desires for each of us.
[12] The voluntary  poverty that YAGM volunteers experiences also opens for them new ways of  living in solidarity with God's people. They learn from their  communities how to live with simple joy. They also learn to move far  beyond the maxim I often hear from people who have short-term  experiences in communities of economic need — "they are so poor, but so  happy." The strength of spirit that our volunteers witness in their host  communities is borne of deep necessity. There is nothing "happy" about  not being able to provide for one's family, nothing "happy" about  burying a child because they had no access to medicine, nothing "happy"  about a malnourished kindergartner. The life in all fullness which God  so desires is found, in part, in the simple joys that host communities  model for our volunteers. It also requires, however, an economic  structure in which all people can live not just with simple joy, but  with dignity. Our volunteers' voluntary rejection of wealth is also a  rejection of the economic powers that steal a dignified life from so  many of God's people. By learning to live at an economic level similar  to that of their host communities, our volunteers are living the  conviction that all of God's people deserve access to a dignified life  where their basic needs are met.
How to Rely on Others[13]  YAGM volunteers are drawn to the program because they want to be of  service to others. Jesus' commands in Matthew 25 are compelling. Like  all of us, our volunteers are called to feed the hungry, give drink to  the thirsty, welcome the stranger, clothe the naked, visit the prisoner,  care for the sick.
[14] Coming from a monetarily wealthy  culture, our volunteers — along with almost every U.S. American  Christian I know — are accustomed to thinking of "the other" when  considering who is hungry and needs food, who is a stranger and needs  inviting, who is sick and needs care. How shocking, then, to quite  suddenly encounter a complete paradigmatic role reversal of the call in  Matthew 25.
[15] Imagine being plopped down in the middle of a  country into which you have never set foot. If you speak anything of the  local language you likely don't speak it well. If you know anyone else  in the country, it is likely only through one e-mail exchange. You don't  know how to use the bus system, don't understand how the money works,  don't know how to navigate the local market, don't know the appropriate  ways to greet people, and cannot blend in no matter how hard you try.  Such is the life of a YAGM volunteer.
[16] YAGM volunteers do,  without question, provide tremendous service to their host communities  throughout the year. But especially at first, our volunteers can't  function well enough to be of much help to anyone. They are the hungry,  the homeless, the stranger, the needy. They find themselves, for the  first time in their young adult lives, having to rely fully on the  genuine hospitality and care of strangers. Discovering that they  literally can't make it on their own, and must learn to accept the gifts  of their hosts, who typically have so much less in material resources,  is both humbling and worldview-altering.
[17] The United States  consumer culture teaches us implicitly to value people, at least in  part, based on what they own. Even as early as elementary school, the  kids who rise to the top of the "cool" crowd are the ones whose families  have money. They're the kids who come to school dressed in the  trendiest fashions, or who bring of-the-moment toys for show-and-tell.  As adults, we are pressured to keep up with the proverbial Joneses in  various and sundry ways. Whether it's the house or the car or the  clothes or the electronics, we compare ourselves to others, often  without even realizing it. The message comes at us, overtly and  covertly, from all kinds of directions — you are what you own. There's a  sense of personal and social security in having lots of stuff. Our  "stuff" helps us feel confident that we can take care of ourselves, and  it shows others that we are successful people.
[18] Except when  it doesn't. YAGM volunteers board airplanes for their countries of  service carrying just two pieces of luggage and a carryon. Many live  with families who don't own much more than that collectively. Yet in  these families our YAGM volunteers discover a deep and radical  hospitality, the likes of which they've never had need to experience  before. They are welcomed in and cared for unconditionally, as Christ  welcomes and cares for us. It is a simple gift of grace, and it's one  they can't live without in this new context. Unable to rely any longer  on the security of their "stuff," our volunteers recognize that this  sense of security was false to begin with.
[19] In learning to  accept the gifts of their hosts, our volunteers also learn the value of  shared power within the Body of Christ. In order for a gift to be  honored and appreciated, that gift must have a receiver. Accepting the  immense gift of radical hospitality is often very difficult for our  volunteers. They know the economic realities present in most of their  host communities, and they are accustomed to not wanting to put people  out. Yet as they learn to accept the material and spiritual gifts of  their hosts, they are swept up into a new vision of what it means to be  members together of one body, where 
all have needs and 
all  have gifts to share. They learn to supplant the false security of  material goods with the deeper power of Christ-like hospitality.
Relationship Is Humanity's Telos[20]  Reading YAGM applications reveals some fascinating things about the  dominant cultural context of the United States. Young adult resumes  include long lists of achievement awards, impressive grade point  averages, prestigious leadership roles, and challenging internship  experiences. Independence and self-reliance are often cited in essays as  standout personality characteristics. When asked about personal  strengths and weaknesses, nearly every potential weakness is couched in  positive language. In short, our applicants do their best to sell  themselves. And who could blame them? The very language of "selling"  oneself is telling. Our very selves are commodities to be sold. Ours is a  culture built on the values of achievement, competition, and progress.  These goal-oriented values permeate nearly every aspect of our lives.  There are noble things to be found in these values, to be sure. There is  also a danger, however. In my experience, these consumer values lead us  to believe that our primary worth and purpose as human beings lies in  the things that we do.
[21] When entering into the YAGM  experience, much of the things by which our volunteers have been  accustomed to defining themselves are stripped away. Nobody knows the  school from which they graduated and frankly, nobody cares. Their GPAs  are immaterial. The prestigious choirs and sports teams and honor  societies mean nothing. For most YAGM, this is downright terrifying. Of  course, it can also be liberating. Just like one's achievements don't  matter, neither do one's failings. Dropped out of school? It's a  non-issue. Made poor personal decisions in the past? Nobody knows. In  short, the cultural trappings that define our YAGM volunteers in the  United States are simply rendered irrelevant in their new contexts. As  they live into the year, it becomes abundantly clear that the only thing  that really matters is one's ability to create authentic, meaningful  relationships with people from whom the volunteer is very different.
[22]  Christian ethicist Rebecca Todd Peters says this about the  industrialized world: "What is sorely needed in the industrialized world  is a recovery of the moral conviction that human beings are  fundamentally social creatures, and an important aspect of the good life  is the recognition that the social well-being of people arises from  participation in community…" (from her book 
In Search of the Good Life).  In many ways, the first months that our YAGM volunteers spend in  service are akin to entering a recovery program. It's a recovery from  the capital-minded, goal-oriented, fast-paced world in which they were  socialized. They don't earn enough money to consider shopping as a form  of "therapy." They typically don't have the resources to be connected to  the internet 24/7. For those who do have television, watching it in  another language, or based out of another cultural framework, often  feels too much like work for it to be a mindless escape. They rest more.  They read more. They pray more. I recognize that such a lifestyle may  sound like a dream for many who read this article. Yet I can assure you  that such sudden separation from all that one formerly used to define or  care for oneself is extremely unsettling.
[23] It's also a  supreme gift. When all the cultural trappings are stripped away, our  volunteers are freed to understand themselves anew. They aren't the  Honors Student or the Dropout or the Athlete or the Screw-up. They  simply are. The oily cross is again traced onto the fabric of their  lives — "Child of God, you have been sealed by the Holy Spirit and  marked with the cross of Christ forever." That is enough. The pressures  of a consumer society, which seek to commoditize our very beings, are  washed away in the return to our baptismal identity. The good life, our  YAGM volunteers begin to recognize, is not about how much stuff we can  accumulate, nor about how accomplished we are. Rather, it's about living  into our primary identities as children of God, called into  relationship with one another and with the world. The work they do is  very significant to the lives of their host communities, but a YAGM  volunteer's first and most important "job" is to simply be present with  people. They are called to bear witness to the movement of God's spirit  in the lives of the communities among whom they are serving, and to  allow themselves to be shaped by what they witness there. They discover  that their "good works" aren't worth much if they are not first rooted  in relationship. Such a discovery, to many of our young people, feels a  whole lot like salvation.
[24] Learning to understand humanity's  purpose as something that we are rather than something that we do is  perhaps the biggest challenge inherent to accepting the call to serve as  a YAGM volunteer. But it's also tremendously transformative, and not  just for our volunteers. We are not "social creatures," as Peters names  us, simply for the sake of being social. We are "social creatures" —  called into relationship — for the sake a world in need. It is  impossible to live and work for a new spiritual, economic, and social  order without being rooted in community. It is from the base of  relationship, rooted in Christ and reaching out to one another, that we  are able to exercise moral agency, able to create new ways of being in  the world, able to support one another through the ups and downs of  struggling for justice in a world seemingly stacked against the poor.
Coming "Home"[25]  I often tell our volunteers that, as profound as their experiences  abroad have been, their most significant work as missionaries won't  begin until they return home to the United States. Coming home is hard.  In fact, most of our YAGM struggle mightily to reconnect with the United  States as "home" after a year away. Their host communities around the  world shape and transform our volunteers in such a way that makes  returning to the U.S. consumer cultural milieu feel like an intensely  foreign experience. Thankfully, they have one another to rely on as they  navigate the transition. It takes time, but as they slowly resettle  into life here in the United States, our volunteers begin to recognize  the major internal shifts that came as a result of their YAGM  experience.
[26] About thirty percent of our YAGM volunteers end  up in seminary following their journey in international service. Others  attend graduate school for social work, medicine, international  development, or environmental science. Still others commit themselves to  another year of volunteering in the domestic sphere, or accept jobs  with organizations like Bread for the World or ELCA World Hunger. Some  enter into a period of discernment, crashing with Mom and Dad and  serving for a time as coffee shop baristas. In all of these experiences,  the lives of our returned volunteers become vivid reflections of the  global host communities that shaped them. I am continually grateful for  their witness in the world, and for the ways they will challenge this  church — and all of us together — to live with joy and intention.
The Rev. Heidi Torgerson-Martinez is the associate director for global service-YAGM and Recruitment in the ELCA's Global Mission unit.
 January 2012
Journal of Lutheran Ethics
Volume 12, Issue1