sending
Building Vision Through
Retreats and Conferences
Think About It
What is it about conferences and retreats that create
life - changing convictions in the life of a student
in a matter of days? Is it the quality and quantity
of material? Does the atmosphere of the event lend itself
toward crucial decisions? Does God bless in an unusual
way when a student takes a step of faith to attend a
conference or retreat?
Heart of the Matter
There are few opportunities where you see such tremendous
building of vision and growth in students in so little
time, especially if it is their first event of this
type. Conferences and retreats help students to make
critical decisions that will deepen their walk and commitment
to the Lord.
Steps to Take
Determine to go. It is crucial that the leadership
of a student movement attend conferences and retreats.
Even veteran conferees, who feel they have heard it
all (which, of course, is not true), can best encourage
others to go if they go themselves. A movement takes
a giant step toward building vision when the leadership
decides to go and then asks themselves: Who can I bring
with me?
Promote. Announce regularly the upcoming retreat
or conference. Freely give out brochures. You might
punctuate its importance by setting up a registration
booth at your weekly meeting. Someone could share briefly
how this conference or retreat affected his or her life.
A skit is another great way to focus attention on the
upcoming event.
Recruit. Posters, videos and brochures are great
recruiting tools but by themselves have little affect
in convincing students to come to a conference. Students
attend conferences because they are personally invited
and because their friends are going. The leaders of
your group will see the greatest success in recruiting
if they take time to individually meet with the students
involved in your movement. Then they can explain more
of the specifics of the conference, deal with any potential
barriers and pray with the potential conferee. Barriers
are inevitable. To help students overcome some barriers
you may want to organize rides for them to get to the
retreat, or consider providing scholarships for those
on a tight budget. You may want to help some students
think through how to talk about the retreat or conference
with their parents.
Build relationships. Once at the retreat, the
leaders need to plan some events the group can do together.
Retreats unify them as a movement and anything you can
do to facilitate that will greatly benefit your ministry.
Students are interested in the cause, but relationships
keep them returning to your group. It is especially
important that Bible study or cell group leaders spend
time with those in their group.
Provide opportunities for future involvement.
You may have heard the phrase "involvement breeds
commitment." Toward the end of the retreat or conference
is a great time to build an opportunity for that future
involvement and sense of vision in the whole group.
Plan to meet together as a campus on the last day of
the event. This provides a great opportunity to do four
things:
-
Have a sharing time so students can hear how God
has worked in each other's lives.
-
Use God's Word to communicate His heart to the
team.
-
Point to the future. Plan an event (usually an
outreach) that will give them an opportunity to
apply what they have learned.
-
Pray together.
Real Life Story
Rick and I seemed to hit it off from the first day
we met. He readily trusted Christ when the gospel was
presented to him. He was very eager to learn about his
new found faith and every time I told Rick about the
next conference or retreat coming up, he appeared excited
about it.
Many times though he would decide at the last minute
to "skip this one" until finally a good friend of his
was going and Rick decide to join him. He was excited
about the conference and felt an extra boost of confidence
knowing that he already had one friend there. Rick had
a life-changing week. He was infused with a vision that
he had never caught before. Soon after the event, he
was one of the key leaders of the movement. He led both
his roommates to the Lord. He also designed a number
of evangelistic strategies that were used by the movement
to more effectively reach students for Christ.
Two years after graduation, Rick left his position
in one of the top advertising firms in the world to
join the staff of Campus Crusade. Today, the Lord is
using him to create and develop campus movements all
over the United States.
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