Sellers enthusiastically recruited and sent missionaries throughout the island of Cuba, and served as the church's spiritual leader during the remainder of his life.
They traveled across the globe many times recruiting missionaries and visiting mission stations in China.
Later the Mission recruited German-speaking missionaries.
Four years later he returned to Northern France and the Netherlands for an extended visit to raise money for his China mission and to recruit missionaries.
In 1835, he returned to the United States to recruit additional missionaries from his church to work overseas.
Bishop Loras traveled to France to recruit missionaries and gather funds for his diocese.
He only returned to Britain once, although he did visit the USA and Australia to recruit missionaries and obtain funding.
The society had to deal with tensions between the church and the colonial authorities, and had to recruit missionaries with the same nationality as the local colonial power.
As the Norse in mainland Scandinavia started to convert, many mainland rulers recruited missionaries from England to assist in the process.
He had been four months short of 30, the minimum age for consecration, and while waiting until that time he recruited missionaries to work with him in the West.