Volunteers welcome campers to a new week of SpeakOut.

Slovak Students Speak Out for Christ

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Thirteen Slovaks belt out a birthday song in a high school cafeteria. A single candle glows atop a chocolate cake frosted with white icing.

Four high school students — Katka, Matej, Sara and Tomáš — celebrate their “first” birthdays. Last year, all four of their lives changed when they chose to follow Jesus — or be “born again,” in Jesus’ words.

Four teenagers celebrate their “first” birthdays, or the first anniversary of their belief in Christ.

The party breaks out around a white table on the gray-spotted, slippery-when-wet cafeteria floor. The 13 Slovaks in attendance, along with two Americans who’ve joined them, lead a session of SpeakOut camp in Piešt’any, Slovakia.

Bojnice Castle, dating from the 12th century, is one of Slovakia’s nearly 300 castles.

SpeakOut, an outreach of Hlas Pre Krista, translated as “Voice for Christ” — Cru®’s name in Slovakia — helps high school students learn English while learning what it means to know Jesus as Savior. Coldness toward the gospel is common among Slovak students. But in 2018, this camp gave 15 campers a chance to build relationships of trust with Christ-followers.

Slovak volunteers Dávid Šmilňák, Tomáš Hanuš and Matej Bělousov return to the campus hosting SpeakOut camp after a shopping trip.

The hesitant student

Tomáš Hanuš, a 17-year-old “first birthday” celebrant, went to SpeakOut reluctantly in 2017. When four of his school friends signed up, he gave in.

The oldest of three children, Tomáš grew up hearing the gospel from his Catholic parents (about 65 percent of Slovaks follow Roman Catholicism). Still, he didn’t trust Christ. “I didn’t really listen to them because they were my parents. They tell me stuff, but I’m not interested.”

Tomáš returns to SpeakOut as a volunteer after trusting Jesus to forgive his sins after attending camp in 2017.

At SpeakOut, he again heard about the forgiveness Jesus offers and began to understand the message. Two weeks later, he attended SpeakOut Loud, which brings students from SpeakOut who trust Christ or who show interest in learning more to a three-day camp to help them continue their spiritual journeys. There, Tomáš trusted Jesus to forgive his sins.

Now, Tomáš returns as a volunteer.

“I really wanted to share the gospel, and everything that they gave me, so that I can give it to other students. I can tell them what I experienced, how God changed my life. It is possible that one decision can change your life.”

Tomáš Hanuš

Slovak volunteers and staff members worship God during a meeting the first night of this SpeakOut session in Piešt’any.

Tomáš’ reluctance is common, according to Doug Meyerdirk, a Cru staff member from the U.S., who with his wife, Patti, has served in Slovakia for 25 years. They raised five children there. One son, Michael, recently returned with his wife, Alyssa, as part of a Cru team focused on reaching students there for Christ.

Four students celebrate their “spiritual birthday”: left to right, Tomáš, Matej, Sara and Katarina.

“I had a difficult time at the beginning accepting the reality that we can’t just give someone the gospel,” Doug says, recalling his early days in the country. “They’ll listen, they’ll be kind, and they’ll never want to talk to us again.”

Religiously, most Slovaks believe they need to earn God’s favor, Doug explains. And culturally, Slovaks don’t talk about spiritual concerns, even with close friends. Gospel messengers must overcome these lifelong preconceptions and patterns.

“We have to become someone that these people trust in order to really have a hearing for the gospel,” Doug says.

SpeakOut camps build this trust as students make friends with the volunteers and hear about Jesus from them.

A Bigger Picture

SpeakOut camps form a small but significant part of Cru’s ministry in Slovakia.

In 2017, five students from one high school English class went to a SpeakOut camp. When Cru staff member Doug Meyerdirk visited their classroom, he was surprised to find such a warm welcome. Then he learned that the teacher had attended SpeakOut as a university student nearly two decades earlier, soon after SpeakOut camps started.

Originally, university students were invited to SpeakOut camps to learn English while hearing the gospel. Because Slovaks often take years to choose to trust Christ, students would often make that decision shortly before university graduation.

Then, in 2002, camp leaders invited high school students, like those in the English class. High schoolers were more responsive and offered a longer timeframe for discipleship.

“The exciting thing about working with high school students is, they come to SpeakOut, they trust in Christ, we can work with them for four years,” Doug says. “Then, they may go to university in the same town for another three years. So we can maybe disciple this student for seven years.”

Camps offer disciples who are part of the ministry a chance to be part of a spiritual movement up close.

“Students can look at it and say, ‘So that’s what a movement looks like,’” Doug says. “That’s one of the reasons SpeakOut has really benefited the ministry.”

Slovakia first hosted SpeakOut camp in 1995, importing the idea from neighboring Hungary, where camps started in 1993. Since then, nine Eastern European countries have hosted at least 94 similar camps.

Each dot represents a year when a camp, similar to SpeakOut in Slovakia, took place in a country in Eastern Europe.

This SpeakOut brings together five groups of people: high school campers, Christian Slovak volunteers, Cru staff members, an American summer mission team and a STINT team that includes Michael Meyerdirk, Doug’s son. STINT — Short Term International — team members, often recent college graduates, spend one or two years serving with Cru to launch or strengthen ministries.

Slovak students and volunteers learn about their guests during “American culture night,” enjoying grilled hamburgers.

Camp volunteers get in the spirit, dressing in red, white and blue (left to right: Nicole, Rebeka, Lenka, Katarina, Sara and Tereza).

Typically, campers aren’t yet followers of Jesus. Staff members and volunteers teach English while also discussing spiritual topics, hoping Christ will change campers’ lives.

An eager high schooler

Matej Bělousov, one of Tomáš’ friends who attended SpeakOut last year, grew up going to church, yet he did not respond to God’s offer of forgiveness.

Yet Matej helped persuade Tomáš to attend the camp.

Four Slovak volunteers relax in their SpeakOut camp dorm room (left to right, Tomáš, David, Samuel and Matej).

Matej wanted to improve his English and meet people from a different culture. That week at camp, he heard the gospel multiple times, as all campers do. The message made its way into his mind and heart, along with American slang.

“Before SpeakOut, I broke up with my girlfriend and I wanted to find something else that can fulfill me. I was trying drinking and I was trying also marijuana, and it just didn’t work,” Matej says. “After SpeakOut, my life totally turned. I was happy.”

Upon returning to school, Matej, Tomáš and their friends who went to SpeakOut continued to make changes in their lives.

Matej (left) and Tomáš recall how attending SpeakOut led to studying the Bible back at school.

Matej says, “After we accepted Christ, we started to talk about Jesus and about the Bible and about spiritual things.”

At school the next fall, Tomáš says, “We weren’t the guys we were before. Relationships started to be more honest and open.”

The repeat volunteer

Matej understood his need to trust Christ for salvation last year as he spoke with Miška Ihnátová, an art student and one of the volunteers.

Miška Ihnátová and two neighborhood girls talk about chalk art during an outreach. “We were created into [a] beautiful garden with someone who loves us — Jesus” was written on one sidewalk.

Miška grew up with her single mother until the age of 8. Her grandmother took them to church.

In February 2011, Cru staff members visited her campus to help students learn English. Miška Vargová, a Slovak Cru staff member, explained the gospel to Miška, the student. She demurred. The two continued meeting, having tea and cooking together.

“She was discipling me back then, but I didn’t know what she was doing,” Miška says.

Miška recalls the first time she heard how she could trust Christ to give her new life.

In 2012, Miška attended SpeakOut as a camper. She began comprehending God’s offer of forgiveness but didn’t respond. But she saw something unusual in the Christians and how they interacted. “This was different — a living, wild kind of spirit there,” she says.

Miška (in red) joins other camp volunteers outside the SpeakOut meeting room.

A delayed response is common, Michael says. Among other reasons, most campers are hearing the gospel for the first time. “It was too much to process in just a week.”

Back home, a television broadcast of a church service reminded Miška of the message. She prayed, expressing her desire to trust Christ: OK, Lord, if you are, I want to give you my life. I don’t have anything to lose.

Rebeka, a fellow volunteer, hugs Miška during a break in camp activities.

In 2013, she returned as a volunteer, as she did again in 2016 and 2017, taking Jesus’ command in Matthew 28:18-20 to make disciples — called the Great Commission — seriously. In 2016, she joined a SpeakOut summer mission trip to Macedonia and in 2018, she studied in Poland for a semester.

Now, she returns to SpeakOut as a volunteer for a fourth time.

“If I can spend one month of my summer serving at SpeakOut, helping bring someone one centimeter closer to the Lord, why not?”

Miška Ihnátová

Miška explains her hope for this year’s SpeakOut campers.

Inside camp and beyond

In Piešt’any, a city of about 28,000 people known for natural hot springs, SpeakOut takes place on a high school campus that includes dormitories.

Tourists and residents stroll near Kolonádový bridge.

After breakfast, the 15 campers — all girls for this camp — gather for “Morning Blast,” a class led by two Americans. Monday morning, as a lawn mower hums outside, the Americans explain slang, like using “buck” to mean a dollar. They move on to vocabulary, including words that will help clarify the gospel to the campers, such as “purpose.”

Jeremy Zeleny, part of the American STINT team, explains slang and vocabulary to SpeakOut campers.

Camp action moves to the lawn most afternoons. Traffic noise spills over a wall as campers and Slovak volunteers gather in shaded areas.

Volunteers explain the gospel using a different method each day. On Monday, Soularium® cards — images designed to help people discuss life’s questions — lay atop the grass.

SpeakOut campers respond to Soularium® cards, one of several ways volunteers invite them to talk about faith.

During a break, volunteers race across the campus lawn and back.

On Friday afternoon, called “decision day” at camp, every camper is invited to place her faith in Christ and to express that through prayer. Each heard the gospel at least five times this week.

Some still push back. Sitting on the lawn, one camper says she understands the message but simply doesn’t see the need to respond.

Miška (at left) instructs volunteers as they prepare to talk about Jesus with apartment residents a few blocks from the SpeakOut campus.

Usually, the Slovak volunteers and visiting Americans focus on the campers all week. But this week, the volunteers and staff members face a change of their own. Only 15 campers signed up instead of the expected 30 or 40 campers.

When God Changes Your Plans

On a Thursday afternoon in Piešt’any, Slovakia, eight Slovaks and three Americans from a SpeakOut camp visited an emergency shelter for families in need. Activities drew 13 children and five parents into a playroom. Crayon drawings of hot air balloons filled a bulletin board. Some volunteers conversed with adults while others played with children.

Typically, these visitors would be talking about Jesus’ love with SpeakOut campers. But this week in Piešt’any, they hosted fewer campers than expected.

Camp leaders didn’t fret. They trusted God, recalling Philippians 4:6-7: “Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”

Because of the small number of campers, volunteers broke their usual pattern.

Contrary to the cold responses to matters of faith common among Slovaks, three mothers in the playroom eagerly learned about Christ and accepted Bibles.

When you face changes, what parts of God’s word encourage you to find a new path forward?

On Tuesday afternoon of camp, about two dozen staff members and volunteers joined a pastor at his apartment complex. Basketball, soccer and sidewalk chalk bring children to public areas. In pairs, volunteers asked adults about spiritual interest, pausing to huddle under a balcony briefly as a pelting rain passed overhead.

Matej dribbles a soccer ball on the way to the apartment outreach, where the group will invite teens to join in games and activities.

Staff member Michael Meyerdirk (left) shares the gospel with a passing apartment resident as Sara and Lenka, two camp volunteers, look on.

Most politely listened for a few seconds, decided the message wasn’t for them and rushed on — a typical reaction in Slovakia. One resident complained about the noise.

But Thursday evening, a man in a black hoodie and a woman with green-dyed hair from the apartment complex joined an evening camp event where they heard of Jesus’ offer of forgiveness.

Thursday evening during SpeakOut, volunteers present a drama designed to challenge campers to consider Christ afresh.

Despite the reluctance from some students this week, seven of 15 campers indicated decisions to trust Christ. Four went to SpeakOut Loud, as did 24 campers from the previous week in Piešt’any and another camp in Eastern Slovakia.

The volunteers and staff members trust that when the four volunteers — Katka, Matej, Sarah and Tomáš — celebrate their second “spiritual birthday,” some of this year’s campers will celebrate their first.

“I want to see lives changed by the huge love of Christ,” Miška says. “And even for the volunteers, if we could experience what does it really mean to be loved by Christ and share that, lives would be transformed.”

Two girls fight gravity outside the apartment complex where the SpeakOut camp team held an outreach.

Reach out

How do you react when God changes your plans?

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Mark Winz
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Mark Winz

Mark leads a Cru® team of missionary journalists and editors. He has served as a writer, photographer and correspondent from Asia, among other publishing roles. He and his wife live in Florida and are parents of two adult children.

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Ted Wilcox
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Ted Wilcox

Ted loves zigzagging the globe, capturing photos and stories of what God is doing. Originally from California, he serves as a missionary photojournalist with Cru® in Orlando, Florida. Ted also ministers to international scholars who come to Orlando to study.

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