Take what you've learned to the nations.
Our teams have prayed for the sick and shared the gospel across nine countries — and there's room for you on the next one.
Nine nations, so far.
The assignment is the same everywhere a team lands: pray for the sick, share the gospel, and honor the church that invited us.
You never go alone.
A mission trip here is the last step of the training, not a vacation with a prayer meeting attached. Here is the shape of it.
A trained team forms
Trips are built from people who have been through the training. Before anyone boards a plane, the team has prayed together and practiced together, and knows how to minister as one.
You minister with cover and honor
On the ground you pray in teams, under leadership, for people who asked — gently, privately, and with dignity. Never spectacle. The local church stays at the center of everything we do.
You come home changed and sent
The trip ends; the assignment doesn't. You come home carrying what you watched God do, and you keep praying for the person in front of you — on your street, in your family, in your city.
Who you'll be praying for.
Ordinary people, in ordinary places — met by a team that came to pray for the person in front of them.






What a trip looks like: Brazil.
A team traveled to three cities — São Luís, Recife, and Rio de Janeiro — to partner with local churches, equip believers, and bring the ministry of healing and evangelism to a nation that is hungry for more of God. This is not a sightseeing trip with ministry on the side. It is a full ministry assignment with some genuinely beautiful moments woven in — because Brazil will take your breath away.
São Luís
Where the team started — partnering with local churches and praying for whoever came.
Recife
More churches, more equipping, more prayer for the sick as the team pressed in.
Rio de Janeiro
Finishing strong in one of Brazil's great cities before heading home.
