Geoff StewartMore PostsStudent Missionaries For The Homefront

In seven days I am leaving with a group of 20 students and leaders and heading for Mpigi Uganda for a 3 week missions trip that I know will be life changing for all of us. For all the students this is their first trip to Africa or anywhere in the developing world and all of them feel deeply convicted that God has called them to this trip and each of them are excited to see what God is going to reveal to them through this experience.

As we have met and prepared to go, we have been very careful and intentional to help our students understand the culture and climate of where we are going . They have an understanding of what would be considered offensive or disrespectful. We have taught them how to dress, what to say, how to pray for people. Our students are aware of the religious culture, social norms and conventions and I feel they are equipped to serve and lead well there.

But I started thinking about all this training and education and wondered,  we are training students to go abroad and prepare them for the culture they are going to encounter, but we are doing the same thing with our students at home.  

-Are we training our students and our Churches about this culture?

-Do they know what might be considered offensive when talking about their faith?

-Are they equipped to articulate what they believe?

-Do they know how to talk about God in a language that connects with the people around them?

I worry that we are not doing a good job of that, although I assume that there are groups out there that do. I was working in my garage the other night and two young missionaries from the LDS Church were going door to door in my area sharing about Mormonism and talking to my neighbours. I think I am black listed or my neighbour tipped them off that I am a Pastor and they could see me waiting to chat because they skipped my house all together. But here is what I do know about them, the LDS missionaries have a better understanding of the demographics of my neighbourhood than me. They have a better understanding of how to engage people of different religions that I do and because of this they  have had conversations with my neighbours I have only dreamed of having and they were equipped to engage.

This is a tough pill for me to swallow, but I am wondering how we can work this coming school year to do a better job of equipping our student’s missionaries for the mission field here at home. I am excited about it and would love to hear how you your groups train your students or congregation how to engage this culture and be true disciples. I wonder what would happen if we spent as much time equipping them for this missions field as we do for the global one?

-geoff

Geoff StewartMore PostsGUEST POST: 3 Healthy Practices for Youth Ministry Fundraising

1) Help your students see the need. Fundraising is just like anything else in teen ministry that you want to be effective and successful, which means that your students to be “sold” on whatever the need is that you are raising funds for.  It’s easy for them to see the need when it’s money being raised for them personally to go on a missions or teen summer trip. But if your raising money to build a clean water well in Africa, your going to have to be more creative in helping them see the need. Brainstorm and create short videos to help the teen visualize the need. Teach a three or four week series around the topic that you are raising funds for then use the fundraiser as a challenge to be a solution to the problem.

2) Balance “Youth Ministry” and “Kingdom” fundraising. Selfishness has been engrained into our society. Youth Ministry is no exception. Students sometimes choose the church they go to based on what they have to offer them (a bad spiritual habit they’ve picked up on from us adults). We have a responsibility to help students see beyond themselves. So once their lives have been transformed by Christ, then we need to help them to make an impact for the Kingdom. There are times to raise funds for a Youth Ministry need, but there are local and world ministry needs that we should rally our students behind. So many of our missionaries budgets have been cut back because of our economy. Why not partner with one of your church missionaries, and use the ideas above.

3) Weight the cost vs effort factor. Let’s be honest that if your group has to do fundraisers, you personally are are most likely getting burnt out on them. If you haven’t yet, you will get to the point where you want to get the most funds with the least effort. Time is vital to us in the world of ministry so we don’t want to waste it. There were car washes that I have done in the past that actually some how lost money instead of profited.

Jai Haulk is a Teen Minister at Ringgold Church of Christ in Hagerstown MD and is also a Fundraising Specialist with a ton of great opportunities for youth workers. Contact me if you have questions or are interested at (301) 331-1300 or jaihaulk@hotmail.com.

 

Josh GriffinMore PostsYouth Ministry Missions Trip Fundraising Made Easy

Are you leading a team on a mission trip this summer? You owe it to every person on your team to check out Razoo, a new website that can help you reach your fundraising goal faster and easier.

Kevin Weikel, Youth Pastor of First Church of Christ, Simsbury, Connecticut said of his experience on Razoo:

“Our goal was to raise $6,250 … Because of Razoo, we ended up almost doubling our goal, raising $11,657! Gone are the days of going door to door with envelopes, Razoo enabled our group to email aunts, uncles, grandparents, and friends from all across the country. We wouldn’t have raised nearly as much without Razoo.”

Razoo simplifies mission trip fundraising. It gives a mission trip team the ability to tell their story in a fun and easy way. It also keeps leaders organized and saves time.

Using Razoo:

  • Helps you stay organized by keeping track of each person’s fundraising progress
  • Saves time by covering all tax-deductible receipting
  • Is easy to share with friends and family via email, Facebook, and Twitter
Sign up today and receive a special More Than Dodgeball scholarship of $50 for your mission trip team. (Limited offer to first 20 signups.)

JG

Josh GriffinMore PostsHSM Kenya 2011 Highlight Video

A sweet little video made by one of our students who went on HSM’s Kenya mission trip last month. Great memories!

JG

Josh GriffinMore PostsWhy I’m Going Back to Kenya

I’m honored and excited to be going back to Kenya for the 2nd time – I figured going halfway around the world was a once in a lifetime opportunity last year, so going for a second time in 11 months is incredible. Why am I going? As I’ve prepared for our high school mission trip, I came up with two thoughts:

I’m going for our students to grow and be stretched in their faith
There’s nothing like a 20,000 mile trip to push anyone to the brink. Taking students from Orange County to Kenya is going to be culture-shocking for them. When jet lag is at is fiercest and comforts are all but gone, it seems like we respond to God’s Spirit the best. Our walls are down, we are raw. And getting to challenge students in this atmosphere in that environment excites me. I want to be their pastor, their body guard and their friend. I want them to experience the Kenyan church’s vibrant faith. I want them to wrestle with the faithfulness of God to these poor African children. This will be the time and the place.

I’m going to be a dad for a week to the fatherless street kids
I throw the football around with the boys 4 nights a week. We never miss church. We’re still an old fashioned family and eat family dinners in a culture that demands drive-thru. We go door-to-door selling Girl Scout cookies and my kids play soccer in the city league. We read the Bible and pray every night. One of my central life goals is to be a great dad to my 4 kids. And there are hundreds of fatherless little children in Kenya. My kids get me 51 weeks a year. The street kids, who lost their parents to HIV/AIDS, get me for 1 week a year. I’m going over there to be a dad.

I know you’ll enjoy the 25 amazing guest posts over the next 10 days. I’m going to the other side of the world with some students and leaders I love, knowing God will do something big in all of our hearts. See you in a couple weeks!

JG

Josh GriffinMore PostsFree Missions Trip eBook from LeaderTreks

Talking to the guys over at LeaderTreks this week – they have a new FREE eBook out today that looks really solid. Doug Franklin wrote an 18-page eBook about a subject he’s very familiar with:

Why not look at short-term missions a little bit differently? Why not craft the short-term missions experience to be a greenhouse for student development, using every experience to give them the best chance for growing into a strong and healthy Christ-follower. These trips can give you the materials you need to build a greenhouse for your student’s growth — multiplying the effectiveness of service and tapping into new potential.

Download The Student Mission Trip Greenhouse right here! Here’s a little clip of the inside from the “preparation for the trip” section:

Team Building Training
Every team will experience interpersonal conflict on mission trips. It’s unavoidable. But having team building training beforehand will help them deal with this conflict in a mature way. Teach your students about the power a team can have when they are unified, focused, and caring for each other. Using team building initiatives and games are a great way to build these values. Plus, it’s a ton of fun.

Spiritual Training
Take time in pre-trip training to teach your students about the spiritual value of missions and the ways in which their personal spiritual growth connects with God’s plan for the world. The Kingdom of God is huge, and while your students’ mission trip is just a small part of the Kingdom, it is significant for their future work. We often focus on logistics during our training time and miss the opportunity to train our students spiritually. What a shame if their trip program is prepared, but their hearts aren’t ready.

JG