Letting go, pressing forward

​Mennonite Mission Network's Service Adventure unit in Jackson

​Mennonite Mission Network's Service Adventure unit in Jackson

​Laurie Oswald Robinson is editor for Mennonite Mission Network.

Note: The below story is featured in Beyond Faith in Action February 2021, only available in digital form in these two links: English. Spanish


When Debbie and Rick Lee were invited to uproot their lives in Homestead, Florida, to lead Mennonite Mission Network’s Service Adventure unit in Jackson, Mississippi, Debbie Lee said that  she initially resisted the idea. 

 Debbie Lee, who is artistically gifted, felt deeply bonded to what she described as her "mid-life dream home" in Homestead. After frequently moving to engage a variety of ministries, she and Rick Lee, who was pastor of Homestead Mennonite Church for 10 years, had taken root in the Homestead community. 

"My house was my castle, and I really liked my castle," she said during a recent interview. "I worship God by making things beautiful wherever I live. But, at 58, I wanted to be done moving." 

God had other plans.

Prayerfully, last August, the Lees became leaders of the Jackson Service Adventure unit — a year-long service program for young adults, aged 18-20. Following God’s call meant letting go of the beautiful spaces filled with family mementos and artwork, which she created and collected in Florida. 

Rick Lee, too, grappled with leaving behind a meaningful pastoral ministry. Their new roles as unit leaders, however, are a good fit. Rick Lee is using his gifts for young adult discipleship and administration with two participants, Jocelyn Baker and Malachi Lind. Debbie Lee is expressing her love for God and people, as she creates artwork and offers friendship and service to neighbors, including regularly walking with a friend from the neighborhood and helping a neighbor finish burdensome yard work. 

"Mennonite Mission Network has developed a thorough, balanced and well-structured service-learning program," Rick Lee said of Service Adventure. The unit forms layers of Christian community: being salt and light to the neighborhood, ministering through participant placements, and pursuing growth within the unit household and Open Door Mennonite Church — the unit’s sponsoring congregation.  Most weekday evenings include: teaching, Bible reading, worship and prayer, playing, cooking and eating together, and socializing with other church families. 

"Vocationally, I worked with college students and found it to be a fruitful fit," Rick Lee said. "Young people are interested in growing, and I like being part of helping to shape that trajectory."

Debbie and Rick Lee hope to serve for six to eight years, they said. As longtime disciples, this move has reinforced that they experience joy when they prioritize kingdom values. 

"Many of us can be tempted to seek security through money in the bank and in jobs, but God invites us to hold those loosely," Rick Lee said. "God is trustworthy. Trusting God for our security and our significance frees us up for ministry and service and blesses us with seeing God proving His trustworthiness." 

Debbie Lee said she is grateful that she trusted God. "At the end of the day, it was a matter of choosing kingdom values over material things," she said. "I knew from past experiences that the joy of walking with God would be so much greater than any good thing I left behind in Homestead."