I Will Go event in Chile connects and inspires participants from 26 countries.
Ocober 29, 2025 | Brazil |Felipe Lemos, South American Division, and Adventist Review
For the past 15 years the South American Division (SAD) has been motivating and training young people for mission through its regional Adventist Volunteer Service (AVS). This service has encouraged young Adventists to travel away from their homes in order to serve and share the gospel in different places and cultures.
The I Will Go convention focuses on training new volunteers, and this year it took place at Chile Adventist University in Chillán. From October 22 to 25 more than 4,200 people came together from 26 countries. Under the theme “Light up!” the event called young men and women to step out of their comfort zones and embrace cross-cultural mission.

A group of young people from Chile are dedicated at the opening of the event. They will serve in several South American countries, the United States, and Spain in 2026 as volunteers. [Photo: Chile Adventist University]
Her friend, 18-year-old Gabriela Gamin, attended this event for the first time. She is a university student who works for two advertising agencies but is interested in being a volunteer in the mission field. Gamin attended the convention in Chile to better understand how Adventist projects work for young people like her, who are willing to go share their faith to people in different places.
Both the young women and another friend put ideas into practice even before the event. Since October 13 the trio got involved in a local evangelistic meeting and helped renovate a church building in the nearby city of Chiguayante.

Eduarda Perszel Ribeiro, Gabriela Gamin, and their friend, from Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, pose for a picture during the I Will Go event in Chile. [Photo: Felipe Lemos]
Stanley Arco, SAD president, opened the convention, highlighting the regional contribution to world missions. Arco also reminded participants of the stories of Adventist pioneers who experienced challenging circumstances to bring the biblical message to such countries as Peru, Chile, Paraguay, Ecuador, Bolivia, Uruguay, Argentina, and Brazil.
Arco invited participants to commit to mission service. “If you have come this far, understand that you are responding to a call to mission,” he said.
Elbert Kuhn, General Conference AVS director, stated that South American Adventists have the opportunity to volunteer and to be missionaries to countries where Christianity is a minority. “The I Will Go program is a constant reminder of the call to the South American church, because mission is the best medicine for spiritual illnesses,” he said.

Stanley Arco, South American Division president, encourages participants to keep the missionary momentum of Adventist pioneers. [Photo: Chile Adventist University]
The convention offered participants plenary presentations and training workshops. In addition, there were booths that showcased mission and volunteer opportunities.
Dieter Bruns, the SAD AVS director, emphasized the importance of the initiative. “We bring together young people and adults interested to serve as missionaries,” he said. “The idea is to multiply the concept of mission beyond borders.”
The original version of this story was posted on the South American Division Portuguese-language news site.