10 Missionary Sending Organizations That Are Changing Lives

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Finding the right missionary sending organization takes more than a quick search—it requires matching your calling, skill set, and availability to an organization that can actually deploy you well. The ten missionary sending organizations below cover medical missions, general missions, and everything in between. This list is not exhaustive—there are many respected sending agencies doing significant medical work that aren't included here. Think of it as a starting point, not a complete picture.

 

Key Takeaways

  • Sending Agencies Bridge the Gap: Missionary sending organizations serve as the practical link between a missionary's calling and the people they're sent to serve.

  • Medical and General Organizations Both Matter: Clinicians and non-medical volunteers often serve side by side, so both types of organizations often have options for medical and non-medical missionaries.

  • What an Organization Offers Varies: Some missionary sending organizations focus on placement and training, while others specialize in resources, networking, or logistical support.

  • Evaluation Matters Before Commitment: Before choosing from a missionary organization list, it's worth asking the right questions about doctrine, financial accountability, and field presence.

  • The Right Fit Requires Honest Self-Assessment: Your location preference, trip length, and professional skills all affect which missionary sending organization is the best match.

 

What Missionary Sending Organizations Do

Missionary sending organizations serve as the bridge between missionaries and the people they serve. Some function primarily as sending agencies—handling placement, training, logistical support, and in some cases fundraising. Others focus more on networking and resources. The distinction matters when you're trying to figure out what kind of support you actually need.

Understanding how missionary agencies differ from one another is a helpful starting point before committing to any one organization. Knowing what a sending agency can and can't do for you sets realistic expectations from the beginning.

One practical note: many medical mission agencies also welcome non-medical volunteers, and many general mission organizations are open to healthcare professionals. So even if an organization isn't primarily focused on medical work, it may still belong on your list.

 

How to Evaluate a Missionary Organization List

Not every organization that calls itself a sending agency operates with the same level of accountability, theological clarity, or field sustainability. Before committing your time—and potentially years of your life—it's worth asking a few direct questions.

First, does the organization's doctrinal statement align with your own convictions? Second, is it financially accountable? Look for membership in a recognized body like the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability (ECFA), or check its rating on Charity Navigator. Third, does it have an ongoing presence in the regions where it works, or does it run occasional drop-in trips with no long-term follow-up? Sustainable missionary sending organizations invest in local relationships and indigenous leadership, not just short-term visibility.

Making a medical mission trip count starts well before you board a plane, and choosing the right organization is one of the most important decisions in that process. 

 

5 Medical Missions Agencies to Consider

If your calling is specifically toward medical work, these missionary sending organizations are reliable starting points.

 

1. Samaritan's Purse

Best known for Operation Christmas Child, Samaritan's Purse also runs a significant medical missions program through World Medical Mission. Doctors and healthcare professionals serve communities dealing with disease, natural disasters, war, and poverty—meeting physical needs as a platform for sharing the gospel. Like the Samaritan in Luke 10, the organization's posture is to serve the overlooked in order to earn a hearing for the gospel.

 

2. MAP International

Medical missionaries often have the skills and the heart but run short on supplies. MAP International fills that gap by providing medicine and equipment to people in need, regardless of background or belief. For medical missionaries working in under-resourced regions, this kind of logistical support can make or break a deployment.

 

3. Blessings International

Like MAP, Blessings International focuses on resourcing medical missionaries. For more than forty years, the organization has operated on the conviction that healthy individuals build healthy communities. By supplying medicine, vitamins, and related resources, Blessings International helps medical professionals serve more effectively in the field.

 

4. Cure International

Cure International works through a network of hospitals in Africa and the Philippines to provide free surgeries for children with treatable conditions—while sharing the gospel with families and communities. For healthcare workers with a heart for pediatric care, Cure is a solid option.

 

5. GO International

GO International specializes in short-term opportunities and works within overseas communities to plan trips that address a range of needs—medical missions, disaster relief, church planting, clean water projects, and children's ministry. It's a strong option for healthcare workers who want structured short-term placements with a clear ministry focus.

 

5 General Missions Agencies to Consider

 

1. Send International

As the name implies, Send International serves as a missionary sending agency that focuses on mobilizing believers and planting healthy churches. In its mission, Send highlights the role of the local church in identifying and commissioning missionaries. They also emphasize cultural and language training so missionaries can live out the gospel in meaningful ways wherever they serve.

 

2. Youth with a Mission (YWAM)

Founded in the early 1960s, YWAM is a non-denominational organization focused on bringing glory to God through global evangelism. In addition to mission trips worldwide, YWAM offers a six-month Discipleship Training School that combines classroom instruction with field experience—particularly relevant for college students and young adults discerning a longer-term calling.

 

3. OM

OM is a global movement built around the conviction that every believer has been uniquely shaped by God to share His love with the world. The organization focuses on reaching the least-reached peoples and offers multiple entry points—career opportunities, short-term teams, and ways to get involved financially. 

 

4. CRU

Originally founded as Campus Crusade for Christ in 1951, CRU now operates in 191 countries. Trips range from a few weeks to several months and connect through shared interests like sports, media, and humanitarian aid. CRU also offers internships, study abroad programs, and career ministry options for those exploring longer-term involvement.

 

5. World Venture

Founded in 1943, World Venture has a long track record among missionary sending organizations. Its work spans church planting, evangelism, sports ministries, education, and marketplace missions—with both short-term and career opportunities available for those ready to commit at different levels.

 

Find Your Next Step

Sometimes, the best way to get your feet wet is by helping in areas that have been devastated by a natural disaster or war. It's a solid short-term experience that can help give you experience of what missionary work can look like in areas that have the greatest needs. If disaster relief is something you're interested in, there are structured opportunities available for both medical and non-medical volunteers. 

 

Related Questions

 

What is the average salary of a missionary?

Missionary compensation varies widely, but in the United States, the average runs around $50,000 per year, with significant variation based on location, family size, and sending organization.

 

How does one become a missionary?

Most missionaries start by identifying a calling, connecting with a local church for affirmation, and then applying through a sending organization that matches their skills and goals.

 

What do missionaries do daily?

Daily life varies by role and location, but most missionaries spend their time in some combination of direct ministry, language and culture learning, relationship-building, and administrative work tied to their organization.

 

What degree do I need to be a missionary?

No single degree is required, though theological training, cross-cultural studies, or a professional credential in a field like healthcare or education can strengthen both your preparation and your placement options.

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  • Ratchel

    Ratchel

    This article was a bit disappointing but perhaps was meant to be more focused than the intro led me to believe. It doesn't make any mention of some well respected longstanding sending agencies that though perhaps not primarily medical in focus, still have a lot of medical work they are doing. I have a lot of respect for many of the orgs mentioned but felt they did not seem to represent even the whole spectrum of types of organizations out there and many of the latter half have many fewer medical opportunities than others unmentioned. If thinking about medical missions or other professions and not just "vocational ministry" (tho I don't agree with that term often), and if thinking long term as well, leaving sending agencies off the list such as SIM or Interserve, or TEAM or others seems like a strange ommission.

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