Training for Missions (Teen Version)

Monday:Training for Missions
Bible Lesson: Red Cord of Salvation: Rahab was saved because she believed in God, and we are saved the same way.
Memory Verse: Ephesians 2:8-9
Missions Concept: Missionaries Need Training.
Missions Example: Nigeria: Samuel Ngum
Bible Passages: James 3:1, 2nd Timothy 2:1-19
[Distribute Monday's packet, with the map of Cameroon.]
Introduction: Samuel Ngum
Samuel Ngum is from Cameroon, but he wants to be a missionary in Nigeria [Refer to map.]. (Ask for a definition of a missionary. Accept some answers. Discuss.) Missionaries are trained men and women whose job is to take the gospel to the people in an area and start churches.
Before Samuel could go to Nigeria as a missionary, he had to be prepared. He couldn't just leave immediately the first time he thought about doing this. He wasn't prepared.
The Point: Missionaries Need Training
One of the things Samuel needed was good Bible training. If he's going to tell people about Jesus, he'd better know what he's talking about! Just going to church all your life isn't enough. If he's going to start churches, and wants them to have a good start, he should know his Bible inside and out. The Bible says teachers will be held accountable. (Look at James 3 together.) That means if you're going to teach people, you should be responsible to make sure you are teaching them the truth.
Story: Samuel's Studies
Samuel studied at a practorium – a school for pastors and missionaries, run by the church at Keyon in Oku, Cameroon [refer to map].
A practorium is a higher level of education, like seminary: a Master's-level program. In the United States we usually do this sort of thing after college. Samuel had to study hard, do homework, write long papers, ... He learned Greek, Hebrew, Hermeneutics, ... To be a missionary, Samuel needed all the classes that someone has to take to be a pastor. He studied for several years, until he finished all the classes that he needed.
Secondary Point: Language Training
Samuel already speaks English, the major language in Nigeria, so he won't need language classes to go there. But sometimes a missionary has to study language and culture before he can go. How can you tell people the good news of Jesus, if you don't speak their language? Anyone who wants to go as a missionary to a place where they don't speak the same language, needs to learn the language that they speak in that place.
Conclusion: Churches Must Provide Training
Samuel's not the only missionary who needs training. When churches want to send missionaries, one of the things they have to do is find ways to provide that training. The churches in Cameroon have the practorium in Keyon, where Samuel was trained. We have them in the United States too, places where people can study to be pastors and missionaries. Sometimes even Sunday School teachers receive training.
[As time allows, go over the discussion questions together.]
Invitation: Missions Training
Close in prayer and invite any teens who want to consider training for missions, or to help train others, to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.

A Plan for Missions

Friday:A Plan for Missions
Bible Lesson: Prayer Warrior: We should be praying; prayer is effective. (Peter in prison)
Memory Verse: 1st Thessalonians 5:16-18
Missions Concepts: Missionaries must prepare to go and must plan for the work.
Missions Examples: Uberlandia, Brazil: Project Timothy
Bible Passages: Luke 14:25-33
Maps:
Introduction: What to do?
How many of you remember learning about our missionaries in Brazil last year? [show map] We learned about Magno who teaches kids at the schools about Jesus. How do missionaries like Magno decide what they are going to do today? Do they wake up and pack their bags and move to a new city? Do they leave their Bible study and start a new one? How do they choose where to go and when? They have a plan.
Example: Brazil
The Tubelina church in Brazil has a plan. They want to start churches in many neighborhoods all around their big city (Uberlandia). They have men that are studying to be pastors and missionaries in their church, but where will these men go, and who will be a pastor and who will be a missionary? The men and the leaders of the church talk together and pray before anything happens. While the men are still studying, before they are even ready to go, they start praying for the place where they are going to go. Some go home to the neighborhoods they grew up in. Others go to a different neighborhood, or a nearby city (like Magno, who went to Araguari). The church makes a plan so that all the new Pastors have places to go, and so that they don't all go to the same neighborhood!
The Point: Missionaries need a plan.
In the book of Luke, Jesus gives an example. He tells the crowd that if they were going to build a tower it would be a good idea to make sure they have a plan – to know how big they're going to build the tower and how much it will cost – before they start. Otherwise, they might not be able to finish, and people would just laugh at them, and what good would that be? Jesus wasn't just talking about a real tower, though: it's an example. He's really talking about God's work. When we set out to do something, we should make sure we know what we have to do before we start, so that we can finish. We should know how much it is going to cost, so that we can afford to finish. We need to know what we are going to do so that it works out well. If we know how much it costs, we know how much money we need to save up before we start. If we know ahead of time what we have to do, we'll be less likely to forget something important.
Tuesday, we learned that a missionary needs to be approved and sent by a church to do missions. One of the things our Foreign Mission Panel tells missionaries they have to have is a written plan. The plan has to tell where they are going, what they are going to do, and how long they are going to spend on it. The Pastors on the panel are not giving the missionaries homework for no reason. The written plan is important because it helps the churches who are sending the missionaries, praying, and sending money. It helps the churches to know how to pray and where the money is going. It also is important for the missionary himself to have a plan so that he knows what to do every morning. He knows what his goal is and that helps him do a better job.

Support for Missions

Thursday:Support for Missions
Bible Lesson: Good Soldier: We should endure the world's contempt when living and sharing our faith. (Jeremiah and the cistern)
Memory Verse: Romans 1:16
Missions Concepts: Missionaries need prayer and financial support.
Missions Examples: Paul
Bible Passages: Ephesians 6:18-20, Romans 15:23-24, 2nd Corinthians 11:7-12, Philippians 4:14‑19, Colossians 4:2-3, 2nd Thessalonians 3:1-2, Philippians 1:12-14
Introduction: Support
God calls a person to be a missionary. But then what? How does that missionary live while he is doing his job, and how do the people he talks to come to know God and start churches? Two of the most important things a missionary needs are other Christians praying for him and sending money so that he can do God's work where he is. The Bible talks about this in a lot of places. Paul specifically asked churches to pray for him, and sometimes they also sent him money. The Antioch church had sent Saul (whose new name was Paul) to be a missionary, but other churches helped too. The Antioch church was sometimes too far away to help Paul -- they didn't even know what was going on -- but other churches were closer when Paul needed them.
Example: Thessalonica
When Paul went to Thessalonica to start a church, he was far away from Antioch. The church in Philadelphia, which was nearby, sent him money so that he would have food and clothing and whatever he needed. By supporting Paul, they were helping to bring the good news of Jesus to the people in Thessalonica.
Another time Paul was in Rome and wrote to the Christians in Colosse and asked for prayer. He said, Pray that God may open a door for our message so that we may proclaim the mystery of Christ, for which I am in chains. Pray that I may proclaim it clearly as I should. Paul was chained and on house arrest because he was telling people that Jesus had died for everyone, and some people didn't like that. Paul needed prayer so that he would have a chance to tell people about Jesus, because when you're arrested you can't just go wherever you want. Paul needed God to make a way for him to do his job as a missionary. So Paul asked the Colossians to pray.
The Point: Missionaries need prayer and financial support.
Was Paul the only missionary that ever needed money? Do you think other missionaries need the same thing? What about prayer? Do other missionaries need prayer like Paul did? Who is going to pray for and send money to our Grace Brethren missionaries? Will people from other churches do it? (Not likely.) What about people that don't go to church? Will they pray for our missionaries? (Probably not.) They don't even know about them. It is up to us to pray for the Bejenkes, Pastor Meeker, Samuel Ngum, and others. It is up to us to make sure that these missionaries have the money they need to do God's work. If we don't pray and send money, how will they do the work? We don't know if Paul would have had opportunities to lead the guards to Christ if the Christians hadn't prayed. But we do know that God answers prayers.
Invitation: Supporting Missions
Invite any children who want to support our missionaries to bring offering on Friday and to pray for our missionaries.

Opportunity for Missions

Wednesday:Opportunity for Missions
Bible Lesson: Armor of God: Resist temptation using God's word, not human reasoning.
Memory Verse: Ephesians 6:11
Missions Concepts: Missionaries need an opportunity – an invitation or contact in the community.
Missions Examples: South Whitley, IN: Marvin Meeker
Bible Passages: [Needed]
Introduction: Need for Churches
How far did you drive or walk to get to Bible School tonight? Did anyone come more than ten minutes? Do you drive more than ten minutes to get to your own church on Sunday morning? Did you know that some people in the United States live in places where they have to drive half an hour or more just to get to a church that believes the whole Bible? Some towns do not have one church that teaches the whole Bible. Some people in Vermont drive an hour to go to a church that teaches the Bible. Other people in the same communities decide that it's easier to go to a church they know doesn't teach the whole Bible, because it's closer. They think they don't have time to go far enough to get to a better church.
Example: South Whitley, IN
Dave Swensen was from Vermont and went to the Irasburg church but when he and his wife Tonya moved to her hometown of South Whitley, Indiana, they looked for a church there. They had trouble finding a church in their town that taught the whole Bible. Instead of going to a church that left part of the Bible out, they decided to drive twenty miles each way to attend the Lakeland Grace Brethren Church in Warsaw [show map]. That doesn't seem too far, but for a family with young children it was a little much. And if they wanted to invite their friends to church they had to ask them to drive for half an hour to get there. How many people want to drive that far to go to a friend's church. Their kids probably have friends and want to invite them to Bible School. How many of their parents will allow them to go that far to Bible School? It's too far. So, the Swensens wanted to start a new Grace Brethren Church in their own town.
In the Lakeland church there is a retired Pastor named Marvin Meeker. When the Swensens came to the Lakeland Church they met him. So, when they started praying with their church about finding a church in their own town, Pastor Meeker prayed with them. They prayed for a long time that something would happen in South Whitley. Eventually, they decided to start a Bible study to see if there were people in the town who would start a new church. Maybe there were others going to churches that don't teach the whole Bible that would like to find a better church. Maybe there were people who didn't go to church at all or didn't go very often because there was no good church to go to. Maybe some of the Swensens' friends would come. God might have put several families together in South Whitley to start a church there.
The Point: Missionaries Need Contacts
Marvin Meeker wasn't looking for a new town to start a church. That's not why he started a Bible study. People wanted a church in South Whitley, so they started a Bible study there. The Swensen family was already there. Any time a missionary wants to start a new church, he has to make contact with people in the community. That's hard. Sometimes it's very hard, but if you start someplace where you already have contacts, it's a little easier. Marvin Meeker didn't go through the phone book to try to find people to come to the church. The Swensens just started inviting their friends.
Conclusion: South Whitley GBC
Now the group has grown to about twenty people. They have baptized several and have started having Sunday morning services. The Swensens can take their family to church and invite friends. They no longer have to drive to another town to find a good church.

Called, Approved, and Sent

Tuesday:Called, Approved, and Sent
Bible Lesson: Commanding Officer: We should obey Christ. (Centurion's Servant)
Memory Verse: 1st John 5:3-4
Missions Concepts:
Missionaries must be called by God to do missions.
Missionaries must be approved and sent by a church (or group of churches).
Missions Examples: Barnabas and Saul
Bible Passages: Acts 9:26-30, 11:23-26, 13:1-3
Introduction: Barnabas and Saul
How do people know that they are supposed to be missionaries? In the Bible there were two men named Barnabas and Saul and they were sent as missionaries from the church in Antioch [show map]. While they were worshiping the Holy Spirit said to them, "Set apart for me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them." They fasted and prayed and then placed their hands on them and sent them off. Barnabas and Saul went on their missionary journey to Cyprus and what is now the country of Turkey [show map]. How did Barnabas and Saul know that God wanted them to be missionaries? (The Holy Spirit called them and told the whole church that they had been called.)
Background: The Church at Antioch
Now Barnabas and Saul weren't sent as missionaries the first day that the brethren in Antioch met them. Barnabas had arrived there first and was encouraged at the work the church there was doing. So, he went and got Saul and brought him to the church there. For a whole year Saul and Barnabas met with the elders in the church and worshiped with the church body. The people there knew them and they even taught the people in the church. The people had confidence that what Saul and Barnabas were teaching was correct. They were good teachers teaching the truth. They would not teach things that weren't true. Even when they were called, the church prayed about sending them before they would allow them to leave. They wanted to be sure that they were doing what God wanted.
The Point: Missionaries are Called and Sent
Missionaries do not wake up one morning and go start a church on their own. God chooses the people he wants to send and he gives them the help of a church body. Being a missionary is a big decision. Not every Christian is intended to be a full-time missionary. Some Christians need to remain in their local church to teach and do the work. What would happen to our church if everyone left to be a missionary? (It wouldn't be here anymore to lead the people of Galion to the Lord.) So, the church only sends a few people as missionaries. They want to send people they trust and that God has chosen to do that work. It is always nice to have others who agree that you are doing what God wants you to do.
Invitation: Missions
Invite any children who want to consider being ready to hear God's call to missions, to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.

Training for Missions

Monday:Training for Missions
Bible Lesson: Red Cord of Salvation: Rahab was saved because she believed in God, and we are saved the same way.
Memory Verse: Ephesians 2:8-9
Missions Concepts: Missionaries Need Training
Missions Examples: Nigeria: Samuel Ngum
Map: Cameroon and Nigeria, showing Kiyon and Port Harcourt. This map is available in higher resolutions or in vector formats (such as SVG or eps) upon request. See SVG documents.
Bible Passages: James 3:1, 2nd Timothy 2:1-19
[Map: Nigeria and Cameroon]
Introduction: Samuel Ngum
Samuel Ngum is from Cameroon [show map], but he wants to be a missionary. He wants to go to Nigeria [show map] and tell people about the good news of Jesus and start churches there.
Before Samuel could go to Nigeria as a missionary, he had to be prepared. He couldn't just take off walking. It's too big a job for that.
The Point: Missionaries Need Training
One of the things Samuel needed was good Bible training. If he's going to tell people about Jesus, he'd better know what he's talking about! The Bible says teachers will be held accountable. That means if you're going to teach people, you should be responsible to make sure you are teaching them the truth.
Story: Samuel's Studies
Samuel studied at a practorium – a school for pastors and missionaries, run by the church at Keyon in Oku, Cameroon [show map].
Is school always easy? No. Samuel had to study hard, do homework, write papers, ... To be a missionary, Samuel needed all the classes that someone has to take to be a pastor. He studied for several years, until he finished all the classes he needed.
Secondary Point: Language Training
Samuel already speaks English, the major language in Nigeria, so he won't need language classes to go there. But sometimes a missionary has to study language and culture before he can go. How can you tell people the good news of Jesus, if you don't speak their language? Anyone who wants to go as a missionary to a place where they don't speak the same language, needs to learn the language that they speak in that place.
Conclusion: Churches Must Provide Training
Samuel's not the only missionary who needs training. When churches want to send missionaries, one of the things they have to do is find ways to provide that training. The churches in Cameroon have the practorium in Keyon, where Samuel was trained. We have them in the United States too, places where people can study to be pastors and missionaries. Sometimes even Sunday School teachers receive training.
Invitation: Missions Training
Invite any children who want to consider training for missions when they grow up, or to help train others, to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.

Snacks (Soldiers of God)

Monday:Twizzlers and Popcorn
Elementary Lesson: Red Cord of Salvation: Rahab was saved because she believed in God, and we are saved the same way.
Elementary Verse: For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith – and this not from yourselves; it is the gift of God – not by works, so that no one can boast. Ephesians 2:8-9
Preschool Lesson: Joshua and the Walls: We should obey God
(Or Twizzlers and pretzels, or Twizzlers and chips, or something along those lines.)
The Twizzlers resemble the red cord that Rahab hung from her window as an act of faith. Remind the children that Rahab was saved because she believed and put out the cord, even though the cord itself couldn't save her. The popcorn or pretzels or chips are because Twizzlers by themselves wouldn't be much of a snack, especially for the older children. For preschool, you may want to go with just the Twizzlers.

Tuesday: Nacho Chips and Cheese
Elementary Lesson: Commanding Officer: We should obey Christ. (Centurion's Servant)
Elementary Verse: This is love for God: to obey his commands; and his commands are not burdensome. 1st John 5:3-4
Preschool Lesson: Centurion's Servant: Jesus is God
(This snack does not correlate with the lesson, but you can remind the children of the lesson, or ask them questions about it, while they eat.)

Wednesday: Shield Cookies
Elementary Lesson: Armor of God: Resist temptation using God's word, not human reasoning.
Elementary Verse: Put on the full armor of God so that you can take your stand against the devil's schemes. Ephesians 6:11.
Preschool Lesson: David and Goliath: Trust in God
Round cookies, frosted grey, with colored trim, resemble shields.

Thursday: Vanilla Wafers
Elementary Lesson: Good Soldier: We should endure the world's contempt when living and sharing our faith. (Jeremiah and the cistern)
Elementary Verse: I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God for the salvation of everyone who believes: first for the Jew, then for the Gentile. Romans 1:16
Preschool Lesson: The Blind Army: God is very powerful; there is none like him.
(This snack does not correlate with the lesson, but you can remind the children of the lesson, or ask them questions about it, while they eat.)

Friday: Prison-Bar Cupcakes
Elementary Lesson: Prayer Warrior: We should be praying; prayer is effective. (Peter in prison)
Elementary Verse: Be joyful always; pray continually; give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus. 1st Thessalonians 5:16-18
Preschool Lesson:
Cupcakes frosted white with dark stripes to resemble prison bars. Remind the children that Peter was in prison for teaching people about Jesus, but he was freed by an angel when the church prayed for him.

Good Soldier (Interactive Version)

Monday:Good Soldier
Story Passages: Jeremiah 1:7-10, Jeremiah 38
Other Passages: 2nd Timothy 2:3-4, 2nd Chronicles 36:11-20, 2nd Kings 24:18 – 25:26, Matthew 28:18-20, 1st Corinthians 15:1-4, Romans 10:5-13, 2nd Corinthians 5:1
Objective: Children should learn that they should endure the world's contempt when living their faith and when sharing their faith.
Memory Verse: Romans 1:16, I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God for the salvation of everyone who believes: first for the Jew, then for the Gentile.
Visuals: Available
Introduction: Good News
How many of you know where you're going when you die? Where are you going? (Accept answers.) Okay, if you're going to heaven, how many of you know how to get to go to heaven? Good, that's good news. How many know someone who might not be able to go to heaven when they die? Who do you know? Should we go tell these people? Why don't we tell them sometimes? (Accept answers.) There's a man in the Bible named Jeremiah, and there were some reasons why he might not want to tell people what God said he should tell them – but he did anyway.
I'm going to tell the story, and while I'm telling it, I'm going to choose some of you to act it out. Don't raise your hands yet. I'll pick you out as we go.
Story: Jeremiah
God called Jeremiah to be a prophet. What's a prophet? Someone who tells the people what God says to tell them. Sometimes God told a prophet what was going to happen, and the prophet would tell the people, and then later it would happen. Other times, God told a prophet what he wanted people to do, and the prophet had to tell the people. They didn't always want to hear it. God told Jeremiah that he had been made special, from before he was born, to tell the people what God wanted them to hear. [Pick a Jeremiah, have him stand in front of the group, and tell him, "Jeremiah, you are special. You will tell the people God's message."] Jeremiah didn't know what to say, but God told him, "I will put my words in your mouth." [Tell Jeremiah that.] God told Jeremiah not to be afraid of the people, and tell them everything God said, and God would protect him. [Tell Jeremiah that stuff.]
One time, when the people had been worshipping idols (false gods), Jeremiah had to tell them that they'd been faithless to God, and should return to worshiping him only [Pick out two or three kids to be the people, and have them stand in front of the group. Have Jeremiah face the people. Have him tell them, "You've been faithless to God. You should worship only God."]. Do you think they liked hearing that? Would you like being called faithless? [Ask the people if they like being called faithless.]
Another time, he had to tell the people of Judah and Jerusalem that because they had disobeyed God, God was going to bring disaster on them, and they couldn't stop it. [Pick out kids to be people of Judah and Jerusalem. Have them stand in front of the group, and have Jeremiah face them and say, "God is going to bring disaster on you, and you can't stop it!"] Do you think they were happy to hear this message? No, and they blamed Jeremiah and plotted against him. [Give the people of Judah and Jerusalem lines to say, e.g., "It's all his fault", "We have to stop him", etc.] But God kept his word to Jeremiah and always protected him.
God's protection didn't always mean that nothing would happen to Jeremiah. Sometimes things weren't so pleasant. One time, when the city of Jerusalem was about to be taken by the cruel king of Babylon, Jeremiah had to tell the people that they could not save the city. [Pick out a Nebuchadezzar and a couple of Babylonian soldiers. Have them stand facing the Judah and Jerusalem people, a little ways off. Have Jeremiah tell the people, "You can't save the city."] He told them that God said they should go surrender to the king of Babylon, so they could live, because if they stayed to defend the city they would die. [Have Jeremiah say, "God says, surrender to the king of Babylon, or you'll die!"] But the people didn't want to hear it, and some of them blamed Jeremiah. They put him in a dark room that was dug out of the ground to hold water – a cistern [show visual] – and the only way out was through a hole in the ceiling. [Open the baptistry door. Pick out two of the Jerusalem people, and assist them in escourting Jeremiah around the steps and into the baptistry. Have Jermiah stay there and the others come back to the group. Tell the kids to pretend that the "cistern" is down in the ground, and muddy.] This pit didn't have water in it right now, but it was still muddy, and Jeremiah sank into the mud when they put him down there. He didn't have any food or water, and it was dark.
Do you think God rescued him? He did, but it took a while. Ebed-Melech, an official in the royal palace of Judea, felt bad for Jeremiah. [Pick an Ebed-Melech. Have him stand in front of the group and say, "I feel bad for Jeremiah."] He was worried that Jeremiah would starve to death. [Have Ebed-Melech call down to Jeremiah and ask if he's getting hungry down there.] Ebed-Melech got permission from the king of Judea. [Pick a king Zedekiah. Have him stand in front of the group. Have Ebed-Melech ask King Zedekiah for permission to take Jeremiah out of the cistern. Have Zedekiah say "Ok".]
Ebed-Melech took thirty men. [Pick everyone who is left to go with Ebed-Melech]. They lowered ropes down to Jeremiah, and some rags to put under his arms to pad the ropes, and they pulled him out. [Have Jeremiah come out.] We don't know how long he was down there, but God protected him.
[Have all the actors go sit down.]
Jeremiah went on telling people what God had him say. Even though it wasn't fun to be in the pit, Jeremiah knew he had to obey God, and the people needed to hear the message, even if it wasn't a fun message.
Application: Telling Others
We need to obey God too, and God tells us to tell others about Jesus. Now I know that you know people who need to know that Jesus died for their sins, and that he was buried and raised to life three days later, and that he will forgive their sins if they believe, so that they can live forever in heaven with him. So should we be telling them? (Yes, we should.) What if they might not want to hear? What if other people don't want us to tell them? What if people make it hard for us? What if someone teases you? Should you still tell people about Jesus then? (Yes.) What if someone might not be your friend any more? Don't stop telling people that Jesus loves them and that he died for their sins.
Invitation: Commitment
Invite any children who are serious about sharing the good news with their friends to stand and acknowledge that they will do that. Invite anyone who want to accept Jesus to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.