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Emmaus Ministries takes a different approach to recruitment than many church-related efforts. For its Walk to Emmaus, Emmaus uses a one-on-one method that is more consistent with the movement’s message: sponsorship.
Emmaus Community members want to share the gift of their Emmaus Ministries experience with others; sponsorship provides them a caring, disciplined way to do so, enabling God’s gift of grace to be passed on through the Emmaus movement. The fact that the Emmaus experience passes from person to person reflects the relational nature of God and the manner in which God purposefully reaches out to people through people. The personal character of sponsorship underlines God’s personal care and commitment to each participant. Sponsors help make the Emmaus experience an act of sacrificial love from beginning to end—something more than the usual church retreat or religious education function.

Most Communities take sponsorship for granted; the members assume that everyone knows the how and why of sponsorship. Often Communities fail to discuss sponsorship except in reference to the number of participants signed up for an event. Yet sponsorship is the most important job in Emmaus, and all members take responsibility for this area of ministry. It involves more than simply signing up people. The Community leaders cannot overemphasize the significance of educating its Community about good sponsorship. The quality of sponsorship influences the participants, the health of the Emmaus movement, and the churches affected by the movement.
A sponsor does not aim to “get all my friends to go,” to fill up the event roster, to fix people’s problems, or to reproduce his or her religious experience in others. Rather, the sponsor aims to bring spiritual revitalization to Christians who, in turn, will bring new life and vision to the work of the church in their congregations, homes, schools, workplaces, and Communities. Sponsorship supports the church’s efforts to help Christians, young and old alike, grow spiritually—to build up the body of Christ. Sponsors need to evaluate their motive for sponsoring to ensure its consistency with this aim.

Community members’ awareness of and commitment to the purpose of Emmaus influences whom they choose to sponsor and how they sponsor.
The Walk to Emmaus is for active Christians and church members whose personal renewal will bring fresh energy, commitment, and vision to the church and everyday environments for Christ’s sake. Those sponsored could include the following:
An Emmaus Ministries event is right for many people—but not for everyone. The religious background or emotional condition of some people may make Emmaus an unwise discipleship tool for them. Other persons may lack suitability for sponsorship to an Emmaus Ministries event because of the negative effect they might have on the event or the divisive influence they could bring to the church. Sponsorship requires sensitivity to these factors. Some examples of questionable sponsorship are these:
The Emmaus Sponsorship book contains a chapter on “Responsibilities of the Sponsor.” That chapter elaborates on these steps in sponsoring a prospective participant:
Sponsorship is an act of love for God, for the participants, for the Emmaus Community, and for the church. It is a living demonstration of agape love. Through sponsorship, we become instruments of God’s design and prevenient grace.
Any person who has participated in an Emmaus ministry or other recognized three-day movement event can sponsor a person to any Emmaus ministry event so long as he or she (1) understands the aim and responsibilities of sponsorship and (2) can fulfill them for the person he or she would sponsor.
After the Send-Off, once the participants have left the assembly room to begin their event, the sponsors and others present gather in the chapel for a time of prayer for the participants and their experience. The Community Spiritual Director or a board member leads Sponsors’ Hour or arranges for someone in the community to lead it.
This brief service consists of prayer for each of the participants by name. The leader may read aloud the name of each participant. As a name is read, his or her sponsor walks to the front where the participants’ crosses are draped across the altar. The sponsor takes a cross for his or her participant and hangs it across the arm of a large standing cross. The individual crosses will remain there throughout the event as a symbolic focus of prayer in the Prayer Chapel. Those gathered pray silently for each participant as his or her cross is carried forward. If a sponsor is not present and did not arrange for a proxy, any Community member may spontaneously stand in for the sponsor and carry the cross forward.

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