A
mong the seven Missions students who served a five-week summer internship in China were 
Melissa Morrison (senior; Harrisburg, PA) and Cheyenne Parker (senior; Mechanicville, NY). As 
English teachers in a secular school, they could not openly witness to the first and second-graders in 
their class—but they found plenty of opportunities to communicate Christ and to grow in their faith. 
Here are some of their experiences in their own words.
THE ADVENTURES OF TWO ENGLISH TEACHERS
MELISSA
: Our students walked into 
class on the first day not knowing a 
lick of English and not even wanting 
to learn English. The first week was 
just survival! 
But it grew into 
a lot of joy. 
The “ting bu 
dongs” [Chinese 
for “I don’t 
understand”] 
turned into, “I 
love you, Miss 
Cheyenne and Miss Melissa!” My 
favorite part was showing God’s love 
to these children. These precious 
children are lost souls. Who knows? 
Learning the colors, learning the 
shapes—those foundational 
English words might 
help them understand 
English so they 
will have a greater 
opportunity to hear 
the gospel that will 
ultimately change their 
lives.
CHEYENNE
: Because 
you cannot rely on 
communicating verbally, 
your face, your body, 
your attitude—the 
students are watching all of that like 
a hawk. I did not display God at all 
at first. I didn’t act Christlike. My 
children never obeyed and I kind 
of freaked out. We had a teaching 
assistant and one day I let my 
emotions take over me. I didn’t even 
want to display Christ; I was bitter 
and frustrated. Melissa told me to step 
out and take a breather, and I stormed 
out and slammed the door shut. As 
I was leaving I caught a look at our 
assistant, her face. She was appalled. 
I still remember that look. She was an 
unbeliever and she knew that I was 
a Christian. I went to God all broken 
and said, “I need your strength.” I 
found myself responding totally 
different after that. I praise the Lord 
that I was able to patch things up with 
the assistant. I asked her to forgive me 
for having such a terrible reaction. We 
are still in touch, so I pray that God 
will use me in her life.
MELISSA
: I have never seen the 
Holy Spirit work in such a powerful 
way and orchestrate things like he 
did with April, a Chinese friend. It 
was on the bus, after hearing me 
spontaneously sing, that she first 
asked, “What does ‘the blood of the 
Lamb’ mean?” From there, it grew 
into a greater relationship. During 
our lunch breaks, I spent time with 
her and we read through the Word 
of God. We started with simple 
spiritual truths, mainly from the 
book of John. I felt very inadequate. 
Before each session I had to go to 
God and tell him that some things I 
can't even comprehend, let alone help 
someone else understand, and so He 
had to speak His truth through an 
inadequate person. April claims to be 
a Buddhist. She’s very fearful of death 
because Buddhism gives no assurance 
where she will go after death. April is 
the sweetest girl you will ever meet, 
but she is away from God, she is an 
enemy of God. But God's desire is 
to become her loving Father and I 
want her to become His child. She 
does have a Bible now and she has 
continued to show interest; I know 
God is softening her heart.
CHEYENNE
: I want to go back, to 
learn the culture, to tell people about 
the hope in me which could be in 
them. I get impatient for that. But 
this is where God wants me for now. 
He wants me to be equipped to serve 
so that if I do go back to China or 
wherever I’ll be ready.