By Brent Lacy
Small churches sometimes feel like they cannot afford to care about missions.
The budget is tight. The volunteers are stretched. The local needs are pressing. Global missions can feel like a luxury for larger churches with more resources.
That is a mistake. And it is a costly one.
A church that is not engaged in missions is a church that is turned inward. And a church turned inward eventually turns on itself.
Why Missions Matters for Small Churches
The Great Commission was not given to large churches. It was given to the church. All of it. Including yours.
A small church that gives sacrificially to missions, prays consistently for missionaries, and sends members on short-term trips is participating in the global mission of God in ways that matter eternally.
And practically speaking, a church with a missions vision is a church with a reason to exist beyond its own comfort. That outward focus is one of the most powerful antidotes to the inward drift that kills small churches.
Start with One Missionary
Do not try to support 20 missionaries at $25 each. Support one missionary well.
Find a missionary your church can genuinely connect with. Someone with a personal connection to your congregation, or someone serving in a context that resonates with your people. Commit to supporting them at a meaningful level, corresponding with them regularly, and praying for them by name.
A church that knows one missionary personally will give more, pray more, and care more than a church that has a list of names on a bulletin board.
Building a Missions Culture
A missions culture is not built by a missions committee. It is built from the pulpit, in the prayer meeting, and in the stories you tell.
Preach missions.
Regularly preach from the missionary passages of Scripture. Acts. Romans 10. Matthew 28. Isaiah 6. Let the congregation hear that missions is not a program. It is the heartbeat of God.
Pray for missionaries by name.
Include missionary prayer requests in every Sunday service. Not a generic “pray for missionaries” but specific names, specific situations, specific needs. When people pray for someone by name, they begin to care about them.
Tell missionary stories.
Invite missionaries to speak when they are on furlough. Share their prayer letters from the pulpit. Show photos and videos from the field. Make the mission field feel real and close.
Send people.
Short-term mission trips change people. A church member who has served in another country comes home with a different perspective on the world and on their own faith. Even a small church can send one or two people on a short-term trip each year.
Missions on a Small Church Budget
You do not need a large budget to have a significant missions impact. Here are practical ways to give to missions even with limited resources.
- Designate a percentage of the budget to missions. Even 5 to 10 percent of a $60,000 budget is $3,000 to $6,000 per year. That is meaningful support for a national missionary or a small field project.
- Take a special offering. An annual missions offering, separate from the regular budget, can raise significant funds when the congregation understands what it is for.
- Support national missionaries. National missionaries, those serving in their own country through established mission agencies, typically need $200 to $600 per month in total support. A small church contributing $100 to $200 per month is a meaningful partnership.
- Partner with other small churches. Pool resources with one or two other small churches to support a missionary or fund a project that none of you could support alone.
Free Resource: Missions Ministry Resources
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