Updated 07:54 am.EST, Mon November 23, 2009

Missions|Sun, Jan. 11 2009 09:06 AM EST

Christian Youth Prepare for Cyber-Missions Trip

By Michelle A. Vu|Christian Post Reporter

Dozens of churches around the world are planning to participate in a special missions trip that involves bringing Christ and His message to a huge community where the Gospel is not the most popular subject.

So far, nearly 2,000 teens have signed up for the “Online Missions Trip” to bombard popular social networking sites with stories about God.

“[T]his is a two-week opportunity for all of us to bombard Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, Twitter, whatever social places you go to online, with the Gospel of Jesus Christ,” explains Tim Schomoyer, the organizer of the missions trip and youth pastor at Alexandria Covenant Church in Minnesota, in the missions trip’s promotional video.

From Feb. 1-14, students from the United States, Canada, Australia, the United Kingdom, Bermuda and elsewhere will use the power of the internet to share Christ with people not only on the other side of the world but across the street and with friends in their school.

Pre-“trip” training on how to effectively get messages about Christ out using social networks begins on Jan. 11 and will continue until Jan. 31.

During the “trip,” participants will upload videos and photos, post links, and use status updates to share what God is doing in their lives. Participants will also write notes, send messages, post blogs, create invitations to their youth group, and do other things that will help bring God up in a conversation online.

Online conversations, however, are only the initial step. The goal is to eventually lead people into face-to-face discussions. Outreach events and new-believer follow-ups will start beginning on Feb. 15 and will include a free four-part series from Lifechurch.tv, entitled “What’s Next?”

“Afterwards, you’ll have maybe some events you’ll be using, like events in Facebook to invite your friends to come to small groups or youth groups,” says Schmoyer.

Alexandria Covenant Church, for example, will be using the youth curriculum “Gospel Journey Maui” by the popular youth ministry Dare 2 Share and send invitations to a large number of young people in the area to discuss what Christians believe and why, as well as what other faiths believe.

The after-“trip” curriculum at Alexandria Covenant Church is slated to span for about another nine weeks after the online missions trip ends.

Schmoyer says he expects more people to register for the trip before it begins in February because Dare 2 Share recently sent out a special email to about 20,000 youth pastors, according to the Evangelical Covenant Church.

Resources and other helpful materials for the “trip” are already available online.

On the Web:

www.onlinemissionstrip.com/

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  • Fri Jan 23, 2009 1:10 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    Go ahead, free speech and all...
    But just so you know, the Pagans are calling dibs on April, they need some volunteers for Beltane.

  • javo »
    Wed Jan 21, 2009 4:41 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 2

    I know this is in reply to a post from several days ago, but I was wanting to share:

    Please be careful about what an on-line group dishes. It might sound like a good idea to have Christians band together and take on the social network-sphere, however, there are lots of security risks involved. For instance, can you take a dose of your own medicine? I mean, do you really want a bunch of other-than-Christian Facebookers approaching YOUR kid, trying to convert him or her to their ways?

    Also, it is important to think about how easily a person can mask his or her true intentions through cyberspace. If a teenager approaches a Youtube "user," who is going to keep him or her from offering potentially harmful information?

    Finally, (snicker) do you have a guardian permission slip? If kids are being sent out into all the cyber-world, it would be wise to have legal guardians be notified. After all, there are real people behind the screennames ;).

  • Mon Jan 12, 2009 5:04 pm Agree: 4   Disagree: 2

    LOL, bombard was a poor word choice here. In this context it could be read as violating various terms of service, if unwanted content is sent to others. youtubers have the choice of clicking on the "missionaries" video posts or not. Tread lightly missonaries, in your face tactics, here may back fire and provide results, the oppisate you are hoping for.

  • Mon Jan 12, 2009 4:58 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 2

    I honestly think it’s disturbing that these churches are using vulnerable children to push their message of religiosity to other children. A child cannot make the distinction between reason and reality, let alone teach it to others. These children have not had the opportunity to learn about Secular Humanism, Buddhism, Islam, Hindu, or any other religion. These children are not Christians – they are the offspring of Christian parents, and nothing more. That does not qualify them to become evangelists for Christ, and requesting them to do so is brainwashing, mental child abuse, and forcible child labor.

    My note to the churches participating in this mass use of child laborers in an effort to increase attendance in church is this: Why don’t you give these children the opportunity to grow up on their own, and instead of scaring them with the notions of Hell and prompting them to make fearful decisions, encourage them to make educated ones?

    Before they go on ‘your mission,’ which they don’t fully understand, let them read ‘The God Delusion’ by Richard Dawkins, or ‘Atheism Advanced’ by David Eller which completely deconstructs all religions piece by piece? Even let them read my blog! Then, when they have obtained equal knowledge on the topics of religion you have pushed on them, let them compare that to the logic of the Holy Bible where things appeared and vanished, based on a god saying “Let there be.”

    This use of child labor is an outrage.

    David Smalley
    http://davidsmalley.blogspot.com

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