Saving Money on Ministry Trips in the U.S. and Overseas!

Does your church send missions teams overseas? Or send staff members on ministry trips within the US? As Director for the ARC and President of The Master's Institute, I have to travel a great deal both with the United States and overseas. Because I want to be the best steward of our finances I can be, I'm always looking to get the best deal I can on travel; as I'm sure you do when you have to travel.
So let me recommend a good friend of mine who is helping make my travel arrangements much easier to set up, and saving me money in the process!
Diane Snyder is the newest staff member of Riverside Travel which has specialized in missions and group travel for over twenty years. Diane is passionate about bringing the love of Christ to a hurting world, whether it’s to a remote location in Africa, or simply across the street.
“Working for Riverside Travel is really a great fit for me,” says Diane. “I’ve always loved to travel, and I wanted my vocation to serve kingdom purposes.” Hearing her clients’ testimonies adds fulfillment to her job. “I remember hearing my very first clients tell about their re-building efforts in Japan. I hung up the phone and realized that was why I took this job."
Diane is no stranger to the ARC. She worked at The Master’s Institute and Lutheran Renewal when the ARC was being formed so was involved with various aspects before it officially began. She has also served on the staffs of North Heights Lutheran Church in Roseville, Minnesota, along with ARC pastors Eric Bluhm, Bob Burmeister, and Marcus Haug; and Trinity Lutheran Church in San Pedro, California, with Paul Anderson, founding pastor of the ARC.
Diane is currently on the leadership teams of Lutheran Evangelistic Movement and Life Together Churches with ARC pastors Peter Churness, Bob Mabry, and Tom Hilpert. As a member of North Heights Lutheran Church, Diane is involved with launching missional communities.
For more information, check out www.rivertrav.com. Or you can contact Diane directly at diane@rivertrav.com, or 651.251.9372.
Growing Our Leaders
By Benjamin Bradley
Your plane has landed. Nairobi, Kenya.
The sky is overcast. It’s crowded. The air smells of car exhaust. You have been traveling for the last twenty-four hours, half-way across the earth. And while you’d like nothing more than to lie down and sleep, the leadership conference you’ll be teaching at is set to begin in only a few hours. My advice for you? Close your eyes. Take a deep breath. Have faith.
Faith that you will say the right words to people who call the slums “home.” Faith that you will have the strength and endurance for vigorous leadership sessions. And, of course, faith that your driver will deliver you safely through the utter chaos that is Nairobi’s rush hour traffic.
Close your eyes. Take a deep breath.
***
In August, the Alliance of Renewal Churches (ARC) had enough faith to send a few of its leaders to Africa. And while the main objective was to teach on leadership and invest in the lives of young leaders along on the trip, the team came prepared to learn from their hosts.
“I want to equip future lead
The team began the
The team, representing several organizations and churches, included leader Dawn Lundgren, an ARC pastor (picture
The lessons learned are certainly difficult to articulate.
Each day was met with the confrontation of a new reality that few Americans can truly comprehend. In Kabiria the houses are nothing more than tin shacks, packed shoulder to shoulder. According to IRIN, a global humanitarian news service, the population density of Nairobi’s slums can reach alarming numbers, with around 2,000 people per hectare (roughly two and a half acres). Trenches are dug along the side of the crowded streets to be filled with human waste and garbage. For many, basic necessities like water must be obtained from boreholes or purchased by water trucks at an inflated price. Although a liter of water can cost only a few cents, every purchase is trying for families whose net income is around thirty dollars a month.
Braman, who has been on several mission trips and four times to Kabiria, paused when asked about the emotional changes she underwent before and after her first trip. “I don’t think we have the capacity to even ask the right questions…coming back, we don’t even understand,” she said. “Maybe it would be better to ask my husband or my family what the difference is [when I came back].”
Yet, while the people of Kabira face many hardships they are not without hope. Kisemei, who lives in Kabiria with his family, stands a true example of leadership. He lives in Kabiria by choice, experiencing the same conditions as his congregation, and does not see esca
By the end of their stay in Kabiria, the ARC team had the privilege of seeing the foundations of a new church building being constructed. Kisemei hopes to raise the rest of the funds needed to finish the project and make room for new members. As the church continues to grow there may be a need for more land as well. The going rate for an acre in their neighborhood is 3.5—4 million Kenya shillings (roughly $43,300 U.S. dollars). In the meantime, his church continues to be a cornerstone of support for the community of Kabiria—a community that is not waiting for the aid of others, but building.
This encouraging image was needed before traveling south, where the team’s work grew more demanding. In the dusty town of Loitokitok, located at the base of Mt. Kilimanjaro, the team only took breaks for their meals. Teaching sessions doubled. Evenings included speaking at crusades, where ARC leaders would preach on stage to the general public, with people coming to faith in Christ each evening. And when the sun had gone, the team would return to the Loitokitok church for one final session before getting some well-deserved sleep. Then they would wake up to do it all over again.
The ARC speakers taught on lessons ranging anywhere from Lundgren’s “Y
Bradley discussed the importance of such cultural validation later, saying that “Unless what you’re teaching can be taught in every culture in the world, it’s not truly Kingdom of God teaching, it’s cultural teaching.” Such opportunities, he said, allow leaders to better understand the core strength of their lessons and build upon them as they return home.
Bradley (pictured
Later, McClure would meet with Bradley to discuss her experiences. “Leaders are not built in a classroom, leaders are built in the context of relationships with experienced leaders,” said Bradley. “Much of leadership is learned in the context of being ‘with’ someone who is a safe place; someone who is whole and healthy enough to share their life experiences of victory and failures…to spend time helping a young leader process and integrate all they’re learning.”
Next year the ARC will be preparing for trips to South Africa, Brazil, and Kenya, where it hopes to continue to offer younger leaders a chance to broaden their global perspective. According to Bradley, these trips “Expand the world view of young leaders,” and lead individuals away from a westernized perspective by bringing them closer to a “biblical worldview.”
Throughout their journey the team had many powerful encounters. They prayed over orphaned children. They r
***
Exhale. Open your eyes.
On the last Sunday service of your trip the clouded sky finally clears. The sun shines down on your shoulders. A cool breeze travels across your neck. And while the church comfortably seats a hundred the service must be held outside. There are simply too many people. Wood columns hold up a make-shift tarp roof, made up of flour bags that are stitched together. A new church is under construction to meet the demands of a growing congregation, the second church you’ve seen being built in two weeks. Nothing looks so promising as the piles of red earth that have been dug up to lay a cement foundation.
And as the lead pastor of the Loitokitok church thanks you and says goodbye, he leaves you with this message from 1 Corinthians 15:58: “Therefore, my dear brothers and sisters, stand firm. Let nothing move you. Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain.”