Hey everyone!
In case you didn't hear, we all made it safely to Scotland! The first five of us (Cassie, Christina, Christie, Jennifer, and I) flew in at 8:30AM on Monday morning. We were detained in customs for about 10 minutes as they verified where we were going to stay in Aberdeen, and that was actually the only delay we experienced during our entire trip here! Carter arrived later in the afternoon because his flight from Paris got cancelled, but no worries, he caught a flight a few hours later and joined us right in time for dinner. Caitlin and Alicia were delayed in Gatwick (a smaller airport in London) for the afternoon due to bad weather, but arrived safely later that night.
During our first day, we had a blast getting to help out with an Open Mic night at Starbucks. In addition to having great coffee, we all got to make new friends while watching some great acts. UNC represented Chi Alpha well with 3 different performances! Cassie read a poem she wrote, Jennifer and I did an "amazing" magic act, and Carter shared some American culture with a few country songs. The event was a big success and everyone had a really good time connecting with each other.
You might be thinking, well, what does an open mic night have anything to do with missions or God for that matter?
Even though the event was not focused around "evangelism" in the strict sense of the word, you could feel God's hands reaching out to the people that don't know Him. Evangelism happened every time an acquaintance walked into Starbucks and was warmly greeted by Radiate students and talked into grabbing coffee and having a seat right in the middle of new friends. It happened every time someone went up and sang a song that everyone in the room knew. It happened when a girl named Christine got up and sang a Spice Girls song in a way that was so funny that everyone was falling out of their chairs laughing.
People felt like they could belong before believing, and that is critical for a ministry that is focused so outwardly, that 80% of it consists of new believers. If people are comfortable, they're more likely to open up. If they know that they're loved and accepted, they're even likely to bring friends.
It's a clear modern-day replica of Matthew 9:9-13:
9As Jesus went on from there, he saw a man named Matthew sitting at the tax collector's booth. "Follow me," he told him, and Matthew got up and followed him.
10While Jesus was having dinner at Matthew's house, many tax collectors and "sinners" came and ate with him and his disciples. 11When the Pharisees saw this, they asked his disciples, "Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and 'sinners'?"
12On hearing this, Jesus said, "It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. 13But go and learn what this means: 'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.'[a] For I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners."
The side-by-side comparison:
Matthew:
- Jesus asks Matthew to throw him a dinner party.
- Matthew, being an eager new follower, invited all of his friends. (considering he was a tax collector, you can imagine that his friends weren't exactly saints)
- Jesus speaks truth into people who just came for the food and fun.
Radiate:
- Jesus asks his followers to share His love, mercy, and grace.
- Radiate throws an open mic night at a Starbucks (= great coffee + fun times)
- Jesus speaks truth into people who just came for the "food" and fun.
It was that simple, and that ingenious. We all had a great time, and loved getting the opportunity to help Radiate with such a great and effective ministry event.
Day 2
We kicked off the day with a morning walk to the beach. After spending a little down-time at a nearby coffee shop, we headed to the University of Aberdeen campus for the day's events. What a beautiful campus, by the way...full of historic buildings with towers like what you'd see at a

castle wall, and brightly painted coats of arms.
We got to help follow-up the Starbucks event with their bake-sale (which raised money for cancer research). Simultaneously, we helped them publicize their evening event, which was a trivia night at the church.
Once the bake-sale wrapped up, we went back to the church to cook and eat dinner, and prepare for the trivia night. Once again, people who normally wouldn't set foot in a church showed up and had a great time alongside us and Radiate students trying to figure out the answers to questions like: How many US states have names which begin and end with the same letter? (the answer, by the way is 4: Ohio, Alaska, Arizona, and Alabama)

It is our prayer that those who came for the first time had such a great time, that they will want to keep coming. That means more opportunities for friendship, more conversations, and the hope that truth and grace will grow out of these new bonds.
Tomorrow we will go to a different part of Aberdeen to do advertising for some upcoming Radiate events for this weekend during the day, and in the evening we will all split up and attend different home groups (A.K.A. Bible study groups).
On that note, it is bed time (as it is 1AM here). Thanks again for all your support and prayers!
God bless,
- Greg.