Tag Archives: youth ministry

I Want to Follow God Throughout My Summer…

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Tonight our youth discussed “How to Follow God Through the Summer…And How to Make That Relationship Meaningful.” Sarah and I prepared the lesson and I was pleased with the response from the students.  I thought I’d post the slides below, although all the stories and points in between are really what make it interesting.  My hope and prayer for the students (and for you too now that you’ve joined the conversation) was that they would intentionally think about how they were spending their time and who they were hanging out with this summer, as their structure of their day looks much different.  The phrase the students kept repeating was “Garbage in, Garbage out” (meaning whatever junk you put in will come out in your words and actions).  I liked it.

First, I always start youth group with a funny or interesting video, so I’ll let you check out OK GO’s song and Rube Goldberg video. If you haven’t seen it yet, it’s incredible.

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*Each student had to write at least one thing they were committing to for the summer off of the list.  One girl said since she loved drawing she would read a portion of Scripture and turn it into an interesting visual on a regular basis.  Pretty sweet way to connect with God, if you ask me.

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So what did I miss?  What connected with you?

Saved by Whaaa? – A Discussion of Faith and Works

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Our youth group tonight studied Galatians 3, which you can read online here.  I wanted to jot down a few thoughts, as well as our discussion questions for the night.  If you are a youth leader and need a lesson, always feel free to stop by here and take any thoughts.  Before I share parts of the lesson, I want to show this incredibly awesome video explaining the concept of faith and works, which is a lot of what Paul focuses on for Galatians 3.

That video is just fantastic.  If you want to purchase it, go to Image Vine.

“For you are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus.” Gal 3:26

The youth listed off ways we have heard of explaining how to attain salvation, other than through Jesus of Nazareth.  We talked about most world religions teaching that it is by how good of a person someone is, whereas Jesus says it is about faith.

We defined works as things you do.

We defined faith as what you believe.

Then we had a brief history lesson on Martin Luther, and how he got so upset with the people of the church selling what were called “indulgences” – where people could pay money for their sins to attain salvation.  It was a bad period for the church, to say the least.  Luther also put the Bible into the language of the people, and made it accessible for everyone, not just the main pastor/priest.  We also clarified that Martin Luther is different from MLK Jr.  Good distinction for 7th graders. :)

Then we talked about failure.  What it feels like.  How we all have failed.  Then we looked at Romans 3:23, which says that everyone who does something wrong falls short of God’s glory.  We discussed that even the best of people could not make it without Jesus.  A few of the kids had never heard this.  That is always exciting for me to share.

It’s so basic, but so huge.

Sarah proceeded to talk about John Newton and the story of Amazing Grace.  John Newton did some horrible, horrible things (like participate in chaining up slaves from Africa, participating in the killing of African babies, and many more inhumane treatment of people).  Of course, John Newton goes on to write about he was the lowest “wretch”, but that God’s grace saved him from that.

We concluded with the video I posted at the start of this post (we actually started with a funny, edited version of “100 Greatest Hits of Youtube Videos in 4 Minutes“) and focused in on the line:

We are saved by faith alone, but the faith that saves is never alone.

I really liked how the video distinguished faith and works, and how that relates to our salvation.

What we do matters a LOT, but it’s faith in Jesus that saves you.  Doing good for the world though has to be a part of a vibrant faith.  This is an important distinction.

Here were our discussion questions.  Feel free to add your two cents or thoughts on these:

- Have you ever struggled with not thinking you weren’t “good” enough to be saved?

- Do you really believe that we’re saved by faith?

- Does the idea of people who have done awful things going to heaven b/c of their faith in Jesus bother you?  What about people who do good things not being saved because they don’t believe in Jesus?

- The final verse in Galatians 3 says there is ‘neither Jew nor Greek, male or female, slave nor free, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.’  What does this mean?  What doesn’t this mean?

Questions raised by the students:

- What about people who have never heard about Jesus?

- What about people with mental health problems who are not fully functioning?

- What about babies who die and never hear about Christ?

We concluded by understanding that we have a ridiculously gracious God and that God doesn’t give us every single answer.  It was a good night.

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What are your thoughts on these questions?  Anything to add to these?

FCWC Video and Statistics

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Here is the link for the Flower City Work Camp Video I created telling of our amazing week:

Here are some of facts / statistics from this years Flower City Work Camp:

- Over 65 churches from all different denominations

- Over 650 students from across Rochester city gave up their Spring Break to serve others

- 53 houses renovated, all of which hung a sign to say it was because of the love of Jesus

- 1,000 kids came to participate at the sidewalk clubs over the course of the week!

- Close to 200 kids made first time commitments to Christ!

- Calvary Assembly had 15 kids, over 15 adults, plus parents, from our church which was a HUGE first year response!

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As I shared at church on Sunday morning, my personal favorite part was seeing the balance between serving others, while also learning and growing individually.  The FCWC experience is holistic: serving and discipleship.  Our night sessions and “cabin time talks” were some of the best I’ve had with the students here.

I also wrote more about FCWC in another post before the week if you would like to find out more.

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Here is another great highlight video made by someone else:

Praise be to God for being active in our city!

Flower City Work Camp: What is it?

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Do you remember what you used to do for Spring Break in middle school and high school?

I know the answer for most of us is not that we gave up our whole break to go help people in need.  But that is exactly what is happening all throughout Rochester, New York this week!

Over 650 students from over 65 churches will be coming together to help those that are less fortunate.  With over 1,000 participants, Flower City Work Camp is one of the most impressive movements I have ever been a part of.  The reason I call it a movement, rather than an organization, is because absolutely no one is paid!  Everything is volunteer based.  From the day time leaders who take off work to supervise the students, to the overnight leaders, to the worship leaders and pastors, to the top executive team who works on this week all year long – everyone does it because they want the city to see Jesus.

There are three different opportunities taking place all over the city this week.  The first is that over 50 homes are being renovated by the students who are participating in the work sites.  These students will be helping in all sorts of basic construction projects, with “roving experts” coming around to fix people’s plumbing, electrical, and other needs.

One parent from our home church, Calvary Assembly, told me of a conversation she had with a co-worker at the hospital this week.  As she was describing what her kids would be doing, this woman shared the following our student’s parent (paraphrase):

I am a single mother with four children.  I was working multiple jobs to be able to pay the bills.  My house needed painted so badly and one of our toilets was broken.  By the time the students left, our toilet was fixed and the front of my house was looking great again!  That was such an answer to prayer and such a blessing for my family and I.

Isn’t that fantastic?  I always tell our students that loving God requires loving other people, and that love requires sacrifice. I’ve told them time and time again, and I can’t articulate it enough, how inspirational it is to see so many of them step up to serve.  This is Calvary Assembly’s first year participating (mine too!) with 15 students from our church and over 35 people involved with all the different aspects of work camp (preparing/delivering lunches, overnight leaders, daytime leaders, roving experts, security, etc.).  Unbelievable!

The other two opportunities of FCWC include running a basketball camp for other kids in the city, as well as multiple vacation Bible schools for younger kids.  The students do the dramas, the teaching, and coordinate many other parts of the day with their adult leaders.

We have the opportunity to be people’s answers to prayers by being the hands and feet of Jesus this week.  My hope and prayer is that every single person involved will be able to experience God in an incredible way this week.  I am also excited to be able to process what my students are learning and seeing throughout their days each night.

What a unique and incredible way to demonstrate the body of Christ – to see churches unite from all over the city to bless others.

I leave you with the words of Jesus:

Whatever you did for the least of these, you have done for me.

Who is willing to pray for our safety and blessing this week?

Flip the Perspective: Don’t complain? Really?

The following was a bulletin insert for the young people at Calvary Assembly on the topic of complaining. It is filed under the Creative Commons license, meaning you can take it, use it, and remix it. Just give me a thanks if you do.

…A Word from Jonathan

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There is nothing better in the morning than taking a nice, long, hot shower.  This morning, I woke up frustrated, as the water for my shower was cold.  Not freezing cold, but cold enough to make me uncomfortable.  I don’t know if it was because it was a colder night and the pipes were cold, or what the problem was, but it was an unpleasant way to start my day.

I wanted to call my landlord and tell him to get it fixed, but it seemed a bit too soon.  Yes, I do pay my rent and heating bill on time every month, and I had a whole host of reasons as to why I should have hot water every morning.

As I was standing in the cold shower, attempting to wash myself quicker than normal, I thought back to the verse found in Philippians 2:14 that says, “Do everything without complaining or arguing.”  To me, this seems like a ridiculous standard.  Really? Everything without complaining?  Think of the irony – I’m actually complaining about this being too high of a standard!

Then I thought about putting my complaint into perspective.  According to a recent health care statistic, over 884 million people around the world do not have access to clean drinking water.  For us, we can drink the water we bathe in.  Others can’t even find safe water to drink!  To think how insanely blessed we are can go a long way in helping to stop our useless complaining.

Maybe you complain about school because your teacher is treating you unfairly or you feel you are receiving too much homework.  But if you flip your perspective, you can be thankful that you are getting a solid education that will provide you a variety of opportunities for your future.  Maybe you complain because your parents seem like ridiculous human beings.  Next time it seems this way, think of how many times you have acted irrationally and maybe this can help allow you to give some grace to your parents.

As for me, I think I’ll go downstairs and turn the water heater up a notch and leave my landlord out of it.  Complaining without first trying to help the solution on our own usually doesn’t help anyone.

Thoughts?

Book Reflection: “Youth Ministry in Small Churches”

youth-min-small-churchesToday I read “Youth Ministry in Small Churches” by Rick Chromey (1990, Zondervan) and took away a lot of valuable, foundational information.  Below are the points that I took away and have adapted for my own understanding.  Hopefully if you are involved in youth ministry this can be of some value to you.

Small Churches vs. Larger Churches Characteristics

Small churches generally make it easier to make close relationships.  I would advocate to utilize this as a strength and don’t let it become a weakness.  Small churches are intergenerational, whereas larger churches have specified demographics (ex/ all church picnic vs. young adult picnic).  Small churches follow a different calendar.  To plan for 100 kids to go on a canoe trip, you need much more time planning out food, lodging, and other details, whereas a youth group of 10 kids can plan that same trip in a couple of days.

Helping Teenagers Become Leaders

The fifth chapter of the book explores many ways of helping to create leaders not only for the youth group, but for the entire church.  There are a list of excuses that youth leaders say as to why this cannot happen, such as, “We just don’t have any kids who can lead worship or teach Sunday school.”  Chromey argues that this is a limited view of leadership and to do the hard work in finding out the real gifts and interests of the students.  Three other excuses include: “But if we let the kids do it, they’ll mess up. Older church members won’t accept the kids’ leadership. Our kids aren’t spiritually mature.”  To this, Chromey responds that there will be mistakes from the students, but if the kids are trying to serve in a variety of capacities, this can also help bring the older saints to being more open to kids helping.  Personally, I think this type of resistance is only seen in unhealthy situations, but I have seen it frequently from older church members.  If the youth are not spiritually mature, part of the problem could be that they have not been thrown into leadership!  A kid cannot learn to swim unless you throw him in the pool.

Chromey goes on by looking at Jesus’ leadership model (which is fairly overused, but was helpful for me in this case).  He advocates that Jesus developed leadership by using everyone, not just a few.  He also realized that there were all different types of people and met them where they were at.  Jesus made leadership fun (fed the 5,000 people) and encouraged his disciples when they did it right.  Finally, Chromey says that Jesus allowed his leaders to fail (ex/ Peter gets out and tries to walk on water).  This is a huge concept, as it can be so frustrating when you put the ball in someone else’s hands and they drop it.  I think this is a balance, as you do not want to continue to give opportunities to an unreliable person, but second chances are important.

Six step process for giving youth responsibility in the church:

1. Identify Needed Gifts. Sometimes it can be tempting to give away the jobs that simply need done.  Make sure that the person fits the job, or the results will be discouraging for everyone.

2. Recruit Young People.

- Can this young person do the job effectively?

- Is the young person reliable enough for the job?

- Is this responsibility the best way to use the young person’s gifts?

- What factors might make it unwise to give this responsibility to this young person?

Rick Chromey goes on to give creative examples of service outside of the typical “usher” or “tear down” (not to minimize those roles) to suggesting that if someone is interested in agriculture, let them get involved with mowing the grass and doing the landscaping.  If they like cars, have them change oil for needy church attenders.  If they are artistic, have them draw some designs for a sermon series.  Putting people in the right place is crucial to the success for everyone. (Again, these are Rick’s thoughts adapted by me).

3. Plan Together. I have noticed personally that whenever I am involved in the planning stages, I feel much more involved and therefore want to make sure I do this in my ministry.  The more people feel they are involved, the more they will invest.

4. Train the Young Person.

5. Support and Consult.

6. Evaluate.

Recruiting Volunteers

Something I found to be a very important thought was to remember to allow other leaders to take leadership, as opposed to just doing it myself.  I could definitely see this becoming a weakness, but I want to create a culture where leaders are trusted, developed, and given the opportunity to step up and…lead!

As far as the actual recruitment process, Chromey identifies how much work it is to try and get people to give their time and talents.  Sometimes they just need to be asked, but other times you really have to hound them.  However, it can not be that annoying hounding, but consistency with getting people excited about the mission is crucial.

There were a bunch of ideas as to actually recruiting the volunteers, but the one that I liked was the “come and try it out” method.  “Just come and join us this week for the youth group meeting.  If you don’t feel comfortable after watching a meeting, I’ll leave you alone.  But I think you’d be great for the group.”

Budgeting for Your Youth Ministry

Finally, the best chapter of the book was on budgeting including how to prepare one, the benefits of doing it, and budget savers.  I won’t get too detailed into this chapter, as I feel it is better just for reference, but page 106 includes some great “Tips for Successful Fund Raisers”.  He advocates that car washes are just overdone, but gift wrapping at the mall during the Christmas season could be much more profitable.  He also says that the fundraisers should be service-oriented.  Donations for baby sitting is a much better idea than a bake sale where the parents end up doing all the cooking.  He also suggested doing a “Trash-a-thon” where church members make pledges for every bag of trash that is picked up (plus, it helps clean up the area and help the environment!).  The final thought that was good to remember was to choose the fundraisers carefully and sparingly.

Final Thoughts

So, overall the book was a really quick read with a solid bunch of nuggets for youth ministries.  The back of the book also has 18 game ideas, which can also be a helpful reference.  If you are a part-time youth leader or new to the ministry, the foundations and reference from “Youth Ministry in Small Churches” is a worthwhile use of a Saturday while watching college football. :)