MISSIONS CONFERENCE PROGRAM IDEAS
Throughout the years, many ideas have been used
to promote missions in annual missionary conferences. We list some
of those ideas with the prayer that pastors and churches will be
helped and become more effective in their world missions outreach.
No one church can do all of the following in any given year. These
are suggestions that can be
used from time to time to give variety to your conference, or can
be evaluated in order to choose what best fits into your goals for
the conference. You are free to make adjustments since there is
no copyright on the use of these pages. If you do make a notable
adaptation, please, let us know so that we can possibly add it to
the site. Thank you.
I will deal with “Planning” in another
section. However, let me say that many of the suggestions here assume
that the conference will end on a Sunday. If your conference ends
on a Wednesday then I suggest that you begin your conference on
Saturday rather than Sunday and use some of these ideas to get off
to a running start.
Missionaries and their children enjoy many different
activities with fine Christian people in the churches they visit.
Some of the activities you may want to consider during your missions
conferences are the following:
1. Men’s Prayer Breakfast
A Saturday morning prayer breakfast is a “must” in every
missions conference.
It may be held at the church or in a restaurant.
However, if it is to be held in a restaurant the person responsible
must make sure that there will be a room large enough for the group
and that the atmosphere is conducive to spiritual things.
The spiritual time may be used in several different
ways. You may ask the main speaker to give a testimony or preach.
You may either give him a topic you want covered (like ‘Faith
Promise” or “Grace Giving”) or let him choose
his own topic.
You may ask the missionaries to give a personal
word, maybe something they would not say in mixed company. Ask them
to share a trial they went through and how the Lord used it in their
lives. Ask them to share about their own involvement in giving to
missions. (Be careful about using the term “Faith Promise”
as it is possible that the missionary’s home church does not
give on a “Faith Promise”
basis.) Ask them to challenge your men briefly regarding prayer,
giving, or correspondence with missionaries.
You may also ask your men to give testimonies
about what past missions conferences have meant to them or about
the blessings of this specific conference. Ask for testimonies of
God’s provision for their “Faith Promise” or how
they gave by grace and God met each need.
Make sure your missionaries know how they are expected
to dress for this breakfast. It is best to let them know this at
the beginning of the conference, during the orientation time.
Take advantage of your missionaries while they
are with you and get them together with your men for physical and
spiritual food.
I have seen God use the conference prayer breakfast
in the lives of boys as well. I suggest that you invite all the
boys to come with their fathers. Some boys may be coming to church
without their fathers. It would be nice to assign them to sit with
a man who does not have his sons with him. If you feel that you
need to limit the size of your group then I recommend that those
under 13 not be invited. It is an important time for teens to rub
shoulders with missionaries and hear the testimonies of the men
from the church.
2. Women’s Luncheon or Tea
If you have an international banquet on Saturday then it is best
to schedule your ladies’ luncheon or tea on another day. Thursday
would be best in this case. If you do not have an international
banquet on Saturday then it is best to schedule your ladies’
luncheon or tea for Saturday since more ladies will be able to participate.
It is wise to include your girls as well.
You may want to ask the conference speaker’s
wife to speak or simply give the time to the missionary wives to
give a testimony of some kind. You may be specific as to the subject,
if you choose. (Refer to the Men’s Prayer Breakfast speaking
ideas and make the adaptations for the ladies.) Other testimony
ideas for women would include talking about the woman’s role
on the mission field, hardships women face
in a foreign culture, or difficulties with raising children on a
foreign field.
It is best to let the missionary wives know on
the first day of the conference what you will expect from them at
this luncheon or tea. That way they can prepare adequately.
3. Youth Pizza Party
After the service on Friday evening, you may want all the missionaries
or one of them specifically to speak to the young people. You should
order pizza and plan for it to be delivered shortly after the service.
Make sure there is someone responsible to receive the pizza and
pay for it.
After eating, have a time when one or more of
the missionaries can share a testimony or challenge the teens regarding
missions.
You may also want to consider having a time when
the teens can ask questions.
4. Senior Citizen’s Luncheon
At some time during the conference, possibly Thursday,
you can schedule an activity for the senior citizens to have more
time with the missionaries.
Going out to a restaurant together is a nice idea.
However, if you have a potluck type meal at church you may find
the fellowship with the missionaries to be more profitable.
Missionaries can give personal testimonies and
prayer requests for your older saints to pray about.
Another interesting idea is to have your people
talk about the blessings of being involved in missions throughout
the years through their prayers and/or giving.
5. International Banquet
Many churches have International banquets. They
are held traditionally on Saturday nights but some churches have
changed the banquet time to Wednesday, Sunday, or even Monday evening.
Conferences that normally end on Sunday may want to try a Monday
night closing banquet. Conferences that normally begin on Wednesday
may want to start with the banquet.
Some churches ask the people to bring food while
other churches have the banquet catered. Some churches ask the people
to specifically bring international dishes. If possible, divide
the serving line into four major areas: Asia and Asian food, Europe
and European dishes, Africa and African food, and South America
with typical South American cuisine. It is nice to appoint different
Sunday School classes to be
responsible for decorating a specific table with decorations from
that area of the world.
Another interesting
twist you may want to add to your conference is to request that
your people dress up in International costumes
typical of some country or region.
Rewards may
be given to both men, women, and children for each of the following:
Best Dressed
Outfit
Most Original Outfit
Funniest Outfit
You could also
offer rewards for the couple who dresses up the best in an International
costume.
Be sure to take
pictures of all those who
dress up. Besides using the pictures for your own purposes, please,
send me copies so that
I may include some on my site for others to see the creativity of
your people. Thank you.
6. Unsung Heroes
This is a special recognition of the missionary wives for all they
do on the mission field. Roses or a bouquet of flowers may be presented.
Cards with money may also be an option. Baskets of toiletries, stationery,
candy, etc. can be awarded.
One church had a lady decorate paint cans in pastel
colors and lace. Then it was filled with items for the missionary
wives and single women. Each woman received her own beautiful can
filled with goodies.
The presentation may be done by either calling
the wife or wives to the platform or by taking the gifts to them
at their seats.
Some churches ask the missionary husband in advance
to write an article about his wife and all that she means to him
in their ministry. This article may be read publicly, either by
the missionary husband himself or by another designated reader from
the church.
This programmed activity is one of the most emotional
missions activities you have ever experienced.
7. Missionary Shoe Shining
Missionaries may be asked to bring an extra pair
of shoes to church. Then their church shoes are removed and either
men or boys of the youth group are assigned to shine their shoes
for them. As you can imagine, this serves to teach several lessons.
The missionaries receive the benefit of freshly
polished shoes.
I recommend that the missionaries be asked to
bring all of their shoes that need polished. The more people involved
in the shining, the better.
8. MK Offering
Often times the missionary parents are honored, rightly so, but
the children are left out. Some churches have remedied this in different
ways. One way is to have a special offering just for the MKs. This
offering is announced ahead of time and everyone is asked to contribute.
The MKs may be brought up front during the offering.
You may ask all the MKs to sing a song like “Jesus Loves Me”
or one from the hymnbook. You may also ask some of the MKs, in advance,
to prepare special music in the language of their native country
to be presented during the time of the offering.
Another idea that is similar to this one is the
following. Ask your Sunday School classes to take up a change offering
for several weeks before the conference. Present this change offering
to the MKs at the end of the conference.
Of course, the offering should be divided equally
between all the MKs present in the conference. Although it takes
more work, it is impressive to MKs to receive the offering in change,
or all in pennies. At the end, the treasurer may offer to each MK
to exchange the change offering for a check in the same amount.
That is easier to travel with than a ton of pennies.
9. Daily Parade of Needs
Although the following idea scares many pastors at first, this idea
put into practice has been the cause for much joy and rejoicing
in many churches and to many missionary families.
Each evening of the conference, ask the missionaries
to stand on the platform and to file by the podium and list three
outstanding material needs that they have presently or expect to
have soon. Give each missionary 1-2 minutes to explain their individual
or family needs. Do this every evening.
Ask the church folks to pray about these needs
and also to do their best to meet these needs over the next few
days. As needs are met each day, request that the missionaries thank
the church publicly
in the very next service. As needs are met, ask the missionaries
to add other items to their needs list and relate them to the church
the next night.
It is surprising how God uses His own in the pews
to meet the needs of those going abroad to preach the Blessed Story!
Your people will find tremendous joy in meeting real missionary
needs on a daily basis and seeing the great gratitude of the missionaries.
The missionaries will experience a fresh revival of faith in seeing
God meet their needs through your church members.
(Caution: Be prepared with a few boxes of Kleenex
in order to wipe away the tears.)
10. Missions Conference Project
Some churches take on a large missionary project during their missionary
conference. This may be the purchase of land, a radio station, or
taking up funds for a new church building or Christian School expansion
somewhere. It may be for the printing of thousands of Bibles or
millions of tracts in a foreign language. It may be for the purchase
of an airplane in Africa or a boat for an Amazon ministry.
The choice of the project must be made in advance
of the conference since there are many missionaries begging God
for financial help. A thorough evaluation must be made to determine
which missionary has the greatest need or which need are you, as
a church, able to take on entirely as a project.
The one strongly suggested factor that we recommend
be a part of your project choice is that you pick a project that
will be represented by the missionary who is requesting the financial
help. In other words, that missionary should be present in your
conference so that he may be presented with the check at the end.
Some projects require $300,000 while others require
only $80,000 or even less. Maybe your church can take on two projects
of $10.000 and $3,000 each. Whatever the case, that must be a church
decision and should be determined before the conference. Let the
church know, in advance, of the project coming up during the conference.
Ask the church to be praying about it, as well.
Be sure to remember from time to time the needs
of your Mission Boards who may need to expand their headquarters
or office facilities, and requesting funds for such.
Also, consider the special needs of missionaries
working in countries who have recently experienced natural disasters
such as volcanoes, earthquakes, and tsunamis. Your
project money may open many doors otherwise closed to the Gospel.
Keep your eyes open during the year to the needs
of the world and of your missionaries. Read their prayer letters
carefully, combing them for special needs such as vehicles, audio-visual
equipment, appliances, and church furniture. There are many projects
worthy of your investment. Be sure to invite to your conference
a missionary who presently has these types of needs.
It is exciting, and also emotional, to come to
the end of a conference and to be able to present a missionary or
two with a huge check in the amount of the offering given, which
hopefully will be more than the goal set.
11. Missionary Christmas/Christmas in
(Month of Conference)
Ask the missionaries involved in your conference
for a personal list of both needs and wants. Tell them to make out
a Christmas list for you. You may or may not want to add some conditions
or restrictions to this list.
I strongly suggest that this request
be first made in writing and in detail as to what exactly you are
thinking. Then do a follow-up verbal contact to ask if the missionary
family has any questions about the specifics.
Most missionaries feel awkward about making a
list of this kind. Still others may not want to seem “selfish”
or “presumptuous” in making a “Wish List.”
Let the missionaries know
that you want the list as a suggestion list, and that you don’t
know what the church will do in relationship to the items listed.
Some churches budget money for the buying of the
gifts. These churches then choose folks from the church to go “Christmas
Shopping.” Some or all of the items listed are bought. Sometimes
even more things are bought for those missionaries who were modest
in making their “Wish List.”
Other churches display these lists in a visible
place in the church a month or more ahead of the conference. People
can read over the lists and make their own choices, according to
their own personal financial abilities, as to what they want to
be responsible for buying. Some churches print each item on little
cards for the members to pick up and then become responsible to
buy that item for the missionary.
Christians who love missions and love missionaries
get a lot of joy from being a part of the conference in this way
because they are having a part in the personal life of those missionaries.
These gifts are taken to a specified place at the
church for the conference. A special “Missionary Christmas”
night is chosen for the distribution of the gifts.
Some churches even decorate the place with a Christmas
tree, wreathes, candles, and full Christmas decorations. This really
makes it seem like Christmas for both the giver and the missionaries.
Some have provided Christmas goodies on tables
for all to snack on, complete with hot chocolate or hot apple cider.
I, personally, have been impressed with the creativity and love
shown by God’s people who love having a part in blessing God’s
servants who take the Gospel to a lost world.
Distribution may be done by family, by age, or
however you deem best. I strongly recommend that the Christmas distribution
be done at a time when all the church can see the excitement, joy,
and tears of the recipients. This encourages your folks to be involved
even more and rewards them for their faithful giving to world missions.
12.
Showers of Blessing
This is another
way of honoring the missionaries, which is similar to the
Missionary Christmas, except it is done without the Christmas theme
and decorations. You
may want to decorate however with umbrellas and spring shower colors.The
motive behind “Showers of Blessing” is the same as that
of the “Missionary Christmas.”
If your church
honors your missionaries with gifts during the missions
conference, but you have found a different, unique way of doing
so, please, let us know about it. Thank you.
13. Missionary’s Wall of Fame
This is NOT what you think. I personally experienced
this one and found it to be a very interesting idea.
Schedule a time when your missionaries can give
a 5-10 minute testimony. Ask them to tell about one or two lay-people
God has used in their lives in some great way. It may be a Sunday
School teacher or an AWANA worker. It can be an older saint in the
church who prayed faithfully for them or a bus worker who brought
them to church through rain or shine.
Remember, they must talk about lay-people and
their Godly influence on their lives in the past. It cannot be about
pastors, evangelists, camp speakers, or missionaries. That defeats
the purpose. So what is the purpose of this activity?
The purpose is to encourage your lay-people in
their own specific ministry to the younger generation in your church
who one day may be missionaries. One never knows who is sitting
in front of them; it may be the next great soul-winner missionary
to China in the making.
Hearing missionaries talk about the effect of
the lives of lay-people in their own lives is a wonderful motivator
to those in your church who may think that their ministry is not
very important or may presently be discouraged by a lack of expected
results.
Now that is not all. There is more. Read on.
The pastor, or other responsible person, should
then take note of the names of these “un-famous” lay-people
and make up certificates of honor in the names of those spoken about
by the missionaries. These certificates are then placed on the wall
of the church to remind the folks of the humble service rendered
by some dear saint years ago who had a tremendous impact on this
one who is now a missionary!
We suggest that a banner of some type be prepared
and placed on the wall above the certificates. This banner could
read: Wall of Fame.
The pastor then has a wonderful opportunity to
encourage all the church people in their present ministries to keep
doing their faithful and humble duties because one day missionaries
will go out from their classes and bus routes to serve the Lord
as missionaries.
At the end of the conference, you may want to
keep the Wall of Fame for a reminder to your people of their importance.
At some point, you may desire to remove the certificates and send
them or give them to the missionaries to be distributed to those
lay-people who are still alive and would be blessed to know their
lives were honored in your missionary conference.
14. Christian School Classes/Chapel
If your church has a Christian school, it is highly
recommended that you take advantage of your missionaries and strive
to build a missions burden into the lives of your students. Probably,
many of your students are members of other churches and will not
receive the benefit of your missions conference unless you schedule
activities for the missionaries with the school. Here are some ideas.
A. Schedule the missionaries to speak in the
individual classrooms to the students. Some classes may be combined,
if desired. Both missionary men and women may be used to speak.
It would be wise to ask each missionary couple about this before
scheduling. In addition, some missionary kids, MKs, are very good
speakers and can relate to your students at different levels.
Some MKs tend to relate life on the mission field to the students
better than their parents can.
B. Schedule the missionaries to speak in your
chapel period each day. Experienced missionaries have more stories
to tell than they have time to tell them in your conference. Give
them the opportunity to share those stories with your students.
Their parents may not have the benefit of hearing those stories
personally from the missionaries but, who knows, maybe that afternoon
your students may be relating all kinds of missionary stories
they heard in school to their parents.
C. Have your students prepare a special program
to present to the missionaries. One school divides the missionaries
among the older classes. Each class is responsible to build a
float that is decorated to represent the country to which the
missionary was called. Chairs for the missionaries are set on
the float. During a chapel period, either in the parking lot or
in the gymnasium, the missionaries are asked to occupy the appropriate
float decorated for them. Some students from each class pull the
cart-float around the area while the students sitting or standing
around throw confetti on the
missionaries. The missionaries are treated as heroes and the students
learn the importance of serving God and treating God’s servants
with honors.
One must be creative to come up with an idea
of what to use for a float. Some carts used for stacking chairs
make for good floats. Some churches have farmers who have tractors
and trailers that can be used as floats in the parking lot.
D. One school had different classes prepare
a meal for different missionary families: one missionary family
per class. Special music was prepared to present for the missionaries.
The classrooms were decorated for missions conference. It was
a blessing! Of course, the missionaries ate together with
the children.
E. Train your students to carry international
flags and have a flag parade at the beginning of each chapel period
or evening service.
F. Classes may be asked to do a special project
relating to a foreign country. This project may be presented in
a chapel period during the conference or even the week before,
in preparation for the conference. Projects may include flags,
maps, population, capital and major cities, currency, living
conditions, and other pertinent facts. Be sure to include the
names of the missionaries the church supports in that country.
Classes may want to write ahead of time and get information about
the works from the missionaries themselves.
G. Missionaries often speak about “inflation”
and the loss of support. However, few students understand the
true effect inflation has on the native church or on the missionary
enterprise. Request a missionary or two to do a special
class on the subject, giving details, and examples of how it works.
Give the students a test on the subject. (This may also be something
you should consider doing with the adults of your church. A special
time slot could be scheduled just for this.)
15. Goodwill Missionary Distribution Center
Missionaries love stores like Goodwill and Salvation
Army. One church asked everyone to bring to church everything that
they might sell in a yard sale or donate to Goodwill.
A team of trustworthy volunteers was established
to receive the goods and evaluate the items as to their usefulness
and appropriateness. That which was worth offering to the missionaries
during the conference was kept. Other things were then taken to
a donation center or thrown away. (One would think that no trash
would be brought to the church for distribution but different people
value different items in different
ways. That is one reason for the evaluation team.)
Everything that was worth offering to the missionaries
was made clean and presentable. A room at church was designated
to become the “Goodwill” distribution center for the
missionaries during the conference.
Some things were placed on tables while other things were hung up.
Some remained on the floor or were placed on sheets laid out on
the floor. One would almost think he/she was inside a real “Goodwill”
store. The missionaries were then allowed to make appointments and
go through the “store” and take anything they needed
for personal and family use.
Once the missionaries had all shopped once, then
a second round was allowed for those who wanted to take things for
their national people. (Not all missionaries need to do this while
some from poorer countries love to take things back to their national
pastors and Bible School students. Let them take as much as they
can haul away and use on their field.)
At the end off the conference make a final donation
of everything left over to the Goodwill or Salvation Army in your
area. That way you do not have to store anything until next year.
16. Your creative conference idea may
fit right here.
Other ideas are in the making by people just like
you. I am now waiting to hear from you, and others, with new and
fresh ideas to be added to these pages. Please, take time to help
us to be a help to others who are seeking creative ideas for their
annual missions conference.
In case you desire to write me, you can send
me an email. If you prefer to call me, my phone number is (803)
230-0653.
God bless you as you seek to promote missions for
the glory of Him Who is the Lord of the harvest.
If you have any
questions or comments regarding the program ideas presented here,
please, feel free to write or call. We are here to serve you and will
do whatever we can to help you to make your missions conference a
spiritual success. |