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Using a Youth Missions Provider
By: Doc Newcomb I love the youth minister at my church. She's great. The students and the parents love her, too. She has affected many lives in her ministry. She leads three mission trips each summer: one with the junior high, one with the senior high, and one with young adults. She knows, firsthand, how powerful mission trips are in shaping faith in people. She knows how valuable it is to take people away for a week of service. She organizes the home repair projects (in out-of-state communities). She manages the purchase and delivery of building materials. She arranges the lodging. She figures out the meals and gets someone to get the food and prepare it. She develops all the faith-building content. She does everything. Plus she recruits students to participate. She gets adult chaperones. She arranges the transportation. She budgets the trips and collects the money. She oversees the fundraising. She trains her adult volunteers. She does everything else. I asked her about this one time, and she said she really enjoys managing all those details. It energizes her to figure out all the pieces and make it happen. I was a youth minister for 14 years, and trying to figure out all those issues would have driven me to an early retirement from youth ministry...or worse. For that reason, I used a missions provider every year. Some were better than others, but they all managed the important details that happened once I got my kids there. That freed me up, so I could deal with the things I knew how to deal with: working with students. There are good reasons why using a third-party missions provider is the way to go in youth mission trips. I'm worried this is going to sound incredibly self-serving since I work for a missions provider now. I don't think there's anything I can do to avoid that perception, given my position, but you should know I said these things when I was serving in the church, too. This is what I believe deep down. 1. Missions providers manage the myriad of details on the service end. 2. Missions providers can assure you're doing work that's genuinely needed. 3. The best missions providers have experience dealing with outside youth groups that come in. 4. Missions providers are aware of the safety issues at the mission location. 5. Missions providers for youth provide growth experiences for teenagers. Sure, you might be good at managing all those details, and maybe you even enjoy it. If you're not, I'd recommend investing in a missions provider for youth groups. Yes, you could save some money if you try to do it on your own, but for the expertise and logistics management, it is money well spent in my opinion. And it enables you to do what you do best: minister to your students. Doc Newcomb is a pastor, youth pastor, and program manager for Group Workcamps Foundation, www.GroupWorkcamps.com, a non-profit organization that provides a variety of short-term mission opportunities for church youth groups. This article originally appeared in Doc's weekly column on YouthMinistry.com. |
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