Pursuing the discipline of a disciple, both rider and support crew missionaries embark on spiritual and physical training programs, preparing them for the National Ride, a 6-day, 600-mile bicycle ride:, a lived experience of sacrificing time and energy on behalf of the culture of life.
In this second period of formation, the missionaries
- Join prayer with physical sacrifice over thousands of miles and hours of training, pursuing a life of virtue, discipline, and greatness rooted in Christ, starting with faithfulness to a training program.
-
- Riders primarily train physically to be prepared to ride about 100 miles/day for six days in the summer heat. Their training is intentionally coupled with prayer, so that all that they do is fruitful, not just for them but for others. Unification with Christ’s Cross is at the heart of the riders’ missionary role, as, on the Cross, Jesus showed us that life is given meaning when it is sacrificed for others (John 15:13).
-
- Support crew train by ascetism at the forefront so they are prepared physically, mentally, and spiritually to serve their team selflessly throughout the National Ride week. Support crew take on a “ministry of presence” as they walk with their teams in humble service to their needs. Support crew stand as witnesses to God’s design for our communities: that we belong to one another and that we are to act as our brother’s keepers (John Paul II, 1995, Evangelium Vitae, #7)
-
- Both roles are imperative to our mission, and people with differing qualities and gifts are often drawn to each role for different reasons. The lessons learned in both rider and support crew training are applicable to all areas of life, first with preparedness for the National Ride, then with their communities, vocations, and relationship with Christ and His people.
- Fundraise for the mission by writing letters, making social media posts, giving parish/church talks, etc. Since missionaries understand the truth of the Gospel of life, are invested in and receiving opportunities for transformation from their formation, and see the need to support families served through pregnancy resource centers, they go out to find support to accomplish our two-part mission to both form young adult missionaries and to raise awareness and funds for pregnancy resource centers and the communities they serve.
- Share the Gospel of life and grow in virtue on a 600-mile biking mission trip called the National Ride, experiencing further opportunities to practice humility, love, courage, faithfulness, generosity, joy, and discipline.
-
- Riders, in their bright yellow jerseys, catch the attention of passersby to share that doing something hard, something sacrificial, for others gives meaning and purpose to our lives and works toward our directive to make disciples of all nations while protecting the least of us (Mt 28:19, 25:31).
-
- Support crew serve their riding teammates by driving support vans full of equipment and nutrition, navigating, and ensuring safe travelling, while remaining the connector for Biking for Babies’ mission to each of the communities we stay with throughout the week.
-
- As they go, they are stopping in cities across the nation to share and witness to the beauty and joy of the Gospel of life, their personal testimonies, and the joy of pregnancy centers and families served therein.
Having lived through opportunities to connect physical and redemptive suffering, missionaries are equipped, habitually and virtuously, to invite Christ into suffering to sanctify it for the rest of their lives. Their “staying on the bike” supports families in “sticking with their unplanned pregnancy.” This is our effort to renew the culture of life through redemptive suffering and intercessory prayer; transforming ourselves first, and then the world.