Southern Adventist University initiative is helping students find purpose and belonging.
When 20-year-old China Williams attended an evangelistic meeting in May 2020, she had no idea she would end up leaving her home in Auckland, New Zealand, to live in the United States three months later. After a long day of work, sitting in a meeting was the last thing on Williams’s mind, but her mother had convinced her to go.
“Once I got in [the meeting], I felt a presence,” Williams said.
During the session, Williams heard about Southern Adventist University’s Soul-winning And Leadership Training (SALT) program from Douglas Na’a, SALT director, who is also from New Zealand.
“I told God, ‘I want to be able to teach people,’ ” Williams said. “And then when I saw [Na’a] standing with Soul-winning And Leadership Training, I just thought, ‘OK, that’s it. I’m coming.’”
After the meeting, Williams spoke with Na’a about joining SALT.
“My mind was blown,” she said. “This [program] was what I was waiting for. I was not going to miss this opportunity.”
Williams is one of three international students who traveled to the United States in August 2020 to be a part of the SALT program without enrolling at Southern. While SALT can be taken for college credit for students seeking a minor in evangelism, students can also register for SALT as non-credit participants, taking evangelistic classes at Southern without them counting toward a major or minor. Na’a reported that 21 students are a part of SALT for the Fall 2020 semester, eight registered as non-credit participants. Three of the non-credit participants are international, including Williams. The other two students are Doh Htoo from Thailand and Aadesh Biswa from Nepal.
SALT is an outreach program organized by Southern in partnership with the It Is Written media ministry. It teaches students how to share the gospel and has students go to homes throughout the Chattanooga, Tennessee, area to offer Bible studies. Na’a said international students have been joining SALT since it first began in 2011. And, while their participation is not widely known, it is not uncommon.
Na’a said SALT goes beyond teaching and door knocking.
“Students experience transformation and community in their [lives],” he said. “Students find purpose and belonging.”
He said international students bring a worldview of evangelism and leadership unique to people in the United States.
“Because of that, learning and exchanging of ideas occur,” he said. “It becomes a collaborative experience for students, both overseas and local.”
Williams’s journey from New Zealand to the United States was not without its challenges. She experienced delays in obtaining her visa. She did not know how she would pay for her trip. In addition, she had to prepare herself for international travel during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“I thought, ‘I’m going to do this. I’m not going to miss [this opportunity], because if I do miss it, [God] is going to use someone else,’ ” Williams said.
When the pastors at Williams’s home church heard about her trip, they began to spread the word about her financial need. Soon after, her trip was fully funded with the help of her church and conference.
“Once I got on the plane, everything that I went through was worth it,” she said.
Williams has enjoyed SALT since her arrival, she said. She loves meeting new people, teaching them about God, and learning from her experiences in outreach.
“SALT is an amazing program that will test your limits,” Williams said. “They take care of you, and they bring out something [in] you, and it’s not them. It’s God.”
The original version of this story appeared in Southern Adventist University’s student newspaper, the Southern Accent, and was reposted in Southern Tidings.