A MEGA practice
Find someone in need. Help them. Do it again next week. That is the whole thing.
Get on the listFour people you'd trust to show up with you. Family, friends, coworkers. Squads of 4–5 are the sweet spot — small enough to know each other, big enough that absences don't kill a mission.
Five matching shirts in the sizes you order + the squad formation guide + the mission brief template. One purchase, one shipment.
Open the mission brief template. Pick someone — a neighbor going through chemo, a single parent juggling three jobs, a shelter that needs hands. One specific need, one specific week.
Do the thing. Take a photo (ask permission). Text each other what you saw. Meet up that Sunday for 15 minutes.
A different mission. Same squad. Same shirts.
Yes, matching shirts are a little weird.
That's the point. Weird gets noticed. Weird creates accountability. Weird turns what would otherwise be a private act of service into a visible one that other people can join.
We don't wear the shirt to be seen doing good. We wear it to be seen going out to do good. The shirt is a commitment made visible. It is a uniform, not a costume.
$55 — one purchase, one shipment
Squad bundles ship later this year. Get on the list and you'll be first to know when the first drop is live — plus the formation guide and mission template as soon as they're ready.
You're on the list. We'll be in touch.
Start with one person who'd say yes. Squads form most often around one person's conviction plus one friend's willingness. The other three show up once the first two set a date.
About two hours a week. One mission (1–2 hours), one 15-minute squad check-in. Missions can be smaller — a phone call, a meal delivery, a ride to an appointment.
Whoever buys the bundle, usually. But leadership can rotate. The formation guide has a "rotating captain" setup that works well.
No. Cross-tradition squads exist and often work best. The common ground is: we all think God is real, and we all think showing up for someone else is worth doing.
Yes, as part of a family squad (parents + kids). The missions may need to adapt, but the practice scales down.
Miss it. Pick up next week. The squad is a practice, not a commitment contract.
Yes. MEGA is the parent movement. God Squad is the community practice. Stand Up With God is the personal practice. You can do either, both, or neither.