The invitation at HULA is simple but profound: through our experience with humanity in South America, can we learn something about what it means to be human? If God’s earth is, as I believe, a playground for diversity and learning, we ought to learn about God, others, and—ultimately—our own humanity, as we travel through it, attentive to the Spirit of God at work in all of the earth’s diversity. It’s more than just classes and some travel: it’s an invitation to see in a new and very tangible way.
I close with a few examples of just that, new lenses that have opened up a new way to see. These are excerpts of the students’ final essays wherein they reflect on what it means to be human:
Morgan:
I have never interacted with the world or the people in it like I have these past three months. To be human is to realize the beauty in every place, every person, every situation. To be human together is to cherish every conversation, every shared laugh—everything we have in common.
Alayla:
To be human in a world that God created means to be curious, not only in your faith, not only with God, but with present life itself. Learn, discover, be present when traveling or even learning about small things, find God in each thing you do because it creates a whole new purpose and meaning to what you do, find, or see…Being human together is inviting discomfort and unfamiliarity. To accept one another just as we are without any prejudice or stereotypes. To grow, learn from, and love each other.
Toby:
To be human is to lose, to make mistakes, and to stumble and fall. We fall—and we learn to pick ourselves up again. To be human is all those things I said before but to be human is also to persevere, to keep trying, to keep moving forward…to feel alive.
Jellybean:
In seeing the world, it shapes you. It is shaping me, and I think it will shape me for a while after this. I want to constantly be formed by travel and the vastness of God’s creation and humanity. To be human is to see the world in a new light that transforms who we are. To be human is to be surrounded by a community that gives you the capacity to grow.
HULA 2024, you have brought me deep joy this semester. You’ve accepted the invitation beautifully and have been radically present to the experience. You teach me more than you know.
-Jeremy Daggett
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