Journey = Friendships and Memories

Journey. It builds friendships throughout thick and thin, providing memories that will last a lifetime. On my last post, a Journey leader shared his story of his students creating a silly little catchphrase during a Quizzing practice, and this saying remained with them for years to come. A friend did a similar thing during my freshman trip, way back when Summit was still in Chicago. He was constantly quoting the movie Elf, in particular the line “The yellow ones don’t stop,” in reference to taxis. Our church was located in a rural part of New York so we rarely saw taxis in person, making a sighting of them incredibly exciting for us, much like seeing a unicorn would. Experiences and stories like these are what truly made Summit special for me, and I’ll be sharing many more of my favorites as the weeks go on.

While Summit itself is still a little ways away, Regionals are here for many of you. For those who have never participated in a Regional competition, they were a constant in my Awana career from the time I was in second grade all the way until junior year of high school. These competitions were far less intense than Summit competition-wise, but no less beneficial.

The most obvious impact was that Regionals showed my Journey Team, and myself, where we needed to dedicate our practice time. Whether this was a new strategy for the Balloon Relay, more intense Volleyball practices or renewed focus on a particular section of the Quizzing material, Regionals were essential in our preparations. Without these intense events we would not have been the same team at Summit-certainly we would have arrived less prepared.

These trips also provided something far more important than practice: friendships. While the teams we competed against were from all over the state, there were people we just clicked with. Every year we’d be thrilled to see who came to compete and who came to support, especially our recently graduated friends. These friendships added so much meaning to Regionals, giving them a value far beyond a trophy or ribbon.

I had an incredibly weird coincidence show up my sophomore year, when my best friend from my basketball team and I were chatting about Awana. Her church offered it up through T&T, and we were discussing quizzing when our T&T years came up. She mentioned participating in Regionals, a remark that made me freeze. There was only one Regional competition for T&T in our state-the same one I competed in annually. As it turns out, we had competed against each other in quizzing for all four years of T&T before we even knew each other! Two of those years my Quizzing team had actually beaten hers by only the slimmest margin. God had brought us together years later and granted us an-admittedly unique-bond through these competitions.

If I had to give you a moral through this post, it’s never underestimate how God is moving in your life. Regionals grew me both spiritually and in maturity through ways nothing else could have. If you’re feeling doubt, fear, or boredom about Regionals, talk to God. These competitions may seem silly and trivial, and honestly, in the long run–in the world’s eyes–they are, but don’t let this prevent you from being open to God moving in your life. I’ve heard countless stories about how Summit impacted my friends-don’t limit God to those three days. Use this entire experience from the first Journey meeting of the year to the finale event as an opportunity to grow.

For my next post, I want to hear your stories of how Summit challenged you. These can be simple things, like patience with your team at 1 a.m. or more personal, such as your relationship with God. Don’t feel pressured to share anything, especially if it makes you uncomfortable. I want this blog to be a place of encouragement for the Summit community. Please e-mail your stories to me.

I’m praying for you all!

Introducing The Summit Social Media Intern

Summit.

For some, this is one of the highlights of their year. The experiences and friendships are like no other.

These competitions were defining moments of my high school years. They helped shape me into the person I am today.

Who might that be?

My name is Elisabeth Phillips, but most everyone calls me Lissa. I participated in Awana for numerous years – almost longer than I can remember, if I’m being entirely honest. The majority of this time took place in New York state, west of Rochester. Junior year I was uprooted and moved to Kansas City for a year, and even though the following year found me living in Pennsylvania I kept those friends and still consider them dear ones.

Here’s the Cliffnotes of the basics of who I am. I am a lifelong pastor’s kid, have only one younger sibling (my little sister who is quite the character, and who may make some cameos on this blog), and I absolutely adore my dogs (golden retriever Molly who is a 60 pound cloud of anxiety and black Labrador Ruby who just turned 1 and is the epitome of the bratty younger sibling to Molly). I am currently in my junior year of college at Lancaster Bible College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania where I am studying Communication, with a focus in writing (no pressure here).

Now, the real question: why does this matter? Why should you care who I am, and why am I writing here in the first place?

The simple answer is that I am the Summit Social Media Intern for this 2019 competition, so you’re going to be seeing and hearing a lot of me in the months leading up to the competition, and even more once we’re there. I thought it would be best to explain who I am and why I’m here rather that poofing out of thin air and expecting you to take me seriously.

You will mainly see me here on this blog and on the Summit Instagram page, and expect interactive content. The first interaction I need from you is input on the Summit t-shirt design for this year. Rather than the leadership team picking out a design themselves, they want your thoughts and designs for this year’s shirt! (click here for the t-shirt design guidelines)


The first interaction I need from you is input on the Summit t-shirt design for this year

Submit your entry, and any questions, to finearts@summit-journey.org and have an impact on a shirt that will be in your daily wardrobe for years. (Trust me on that one. I’m a junior in college and still wearing my Summit shirts regularly. They can be quite the conversation starter.)

New Blog Feature

I am also going to be starting a new feature of this blog modeled on “Ask the Editor” articles. If you don’t know what that is, I automatically feel old, but it’s pretty much exactly like comments on a YouTube video, Facebook post, or the Q&A feature of Instagram stories (which I will also be doing, but more on that later). “Ask the Editor” was the predecessor to all of these way before the Internet was a thing, and even after as well. The audience can write in to the editor and ask questions, tell stories, give feedback; you get the idea. I didn’t want to limit those times to the 24 hour period that the Instagram Q&As are active and I want to be able to answer questions in detail if need be, something that fits this blog perfectly. With this format you can send me any questions you have about me, Summit, Awana, what Bible College is like post-Awana, etc. Get creative! These don’t have to be questions either. If you want to share a testimony of how Summit impacted you spiritually, how you grew in maturity, or some shenanigans you and your friends got into, I’m all ears. I also have dozens of these stories of my own to contribute, so don’t feel embarrassed or singled-out. I am also not limiting these questions to you teens participating. Do the parents out there have questions about Summit from their students perspective? Go for it! Do any leaders want feedback, questions answered, or to share a story about when a student carved his name into a rock at a national park? (carving your name in a rock at a national park is not encouraged) This is your platform as well, and I am merely the moderator of it. The email you can send all of these stories and questions to is summitjourneyalumni@gmail.com.

Here’s my first topic for you to respond to.

What is your favorite story of the beginning of practices for Summit?

I’ll give you a hint about mine: Fundraiser Valentines Dinner. These can be serious, silly, or anything in between. I’m looking forward to reading all of your stories.

So, to conclude, remember to submit your designs and ideas for the 2019 Summit t-shirt and send me a story about your favorite Summit practice story. I’m praying for all of you.

-Lissa