Wednesday, March 28, 2007

I had always wondered where you understand as a leader the line that needs to be drawn between showing the youth the world around them and exposing them to more of the pain in the world that they needed to see.

On Wendesday we watched a movie from the international justice mission about the slave trade. Youth group wasn't supposed to be centred around this, it just kinda happened because we were talking about the movie "Amazing Grace" and its impact on the current state of the slave trade. As we continued the conversation we began to talk about slaves today and the trade that is out there.

After we watched the movie it was sad to see the moods of the kids. Their moods didn't lift, they were shown what a part of their world looked like and it obviously saddened them quite a bit. I was thankful for the compassion that I saw in their eyes but I knew that seeing this wasn't easy. I thought about it for awhile and I was worried that they had been exposed to the pain of the world to early but then I realized that this is the generation that is going to make a difference. If we don't start knowing what is happening in our worlds then we are never going to know how to fix it. Or how to make the world a better place.

So although sometimes seeing where the world is at, especially the third world countries is sad and heartbreaking I think its important. And its part of the mission of Jesus. To reach the poor and the oppressed, the downtrodden. He told us to go into the WHOLE world and preach the Gospel.

This is the mission that we must continue to hand off to the youth because it was a mission that Jesus gave for everyone. Its hard though as a leader to continually see and encourage this mission to be completed.

Monday, March 19, 2007

Reading

I have been catching up on my reading and I am currently reading through The Church and its Purpose. There are some really interesting points raised in this book, this quote stood out to me: "The purpose of the gospel is not simply that we should believe in the love of God: it is that we should love him and neighbor. Faith in God's love toward man is perfected in man's love to God and neighbor. We love in incompleteness, not as redeemed, not in attainment but in hope" pg. 33. I really like this quote because I think that it signifies something significant in the Church as well as something that is in the Gospel. We follow the Gospel in the Church as a foundational way that has been around since the time of Christ. The purpose of following this is not that we should become tied up in the matters of legalism but instead that we should love God.

That is the purpose of the Church. To love God. And when someone is loving God because of that love there is an over pour of God's love into other areas of their lives. Showing that loving other people requires that we love God.

This isn't easy though, sadly. And even sadder then that although we think that loving people should be easy in Church because that is where we love God, loving people doesn't always happen either. We are as the author of this book puts it, loving in incomplete love. We are not perfect people. But I am not sure that's an excuse. We get to caught in the Gospel and the law then loving God in Church. And because of that it causes us to love incompletely.

Friday, March 16, 2007

This week was rather slow. It snowed again so we didn't have youth group on Wednesday night because school was canceled.

Tuesday was normal staff meeting and then we did some paperwork, especially working on getting things together for the small group that I was leading. It was hard to find a time that would be able to work for all of the girls that we wanted to include in this small group. So we were trying to do as much attention drawing to this group as possible. We sent out postcards to the girls and I personally called each one of them to invite them to come.

It raised the question to me though of the business of schedules. How do you as a leader work through the many different crazy schedules of teenagers? It seems like every teenager has a list of twenty things to do with school and extracuricular activities. Which doesn't leave that much time for Church or Youth Group activities. Its a hard battle. Do you try and work with fifteen kids schedules, trying to plan something that they can all attend? Or do you set something in stone and then just see who shows up?

Personally I would opt for the second option but I am not altogether sure how this would work. I guess you would just have to take the chance that it wouldn't work for every kid. It seems like it is something though that every leader is going to deal with.

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

This week was pretty ordinary but I learned a huge lesson about leadership. I had never thought about how important it was to be able to have the leadership under you a gelled and unified force.

There was more time this week that was spent with the leaders together. After the group had met on Wednesday the leaders spent some time just hanging out and the subject was brought up about fasting together. The purpose would be just to dedicate time and energy into praying for the youth as a whole and the group itself. After talking with everyone about that I spent some time thinking about how amazing it was that a group of leaders had such a similar focus and vision. There has been a lot of work on the end of Tammie to unify the group and bring the leaders together with a similar vision and desire for the hearts of the teenagers.

I really admire the work that Tammie has done with the unifying though because I know that it was not easy to do that. Its a lot of coordination to get leaders all together at one time and then thats not even including bringing all of the youth together at the same time.

I like the way in which the group does work, one leader as a whole with a bunch of leaders underneath her. Its an amazing way of ministry.

Sunday, March 4, 2007

Contemplative Youth Ministry

I finished the book by Mark Yaconelli, "Contemplative Youth Ministry". It was a good book, I liked how Mark tied in the importance of praying and reflecting on the ministry. Its even true in normal life because to often we want to rush ahead and not ponder the moment and what happened in that moment.

These are the main points of the book that I liked and want to take into my own ministry someday:
  • The importance of living life to the abundance. The message in this book was being able to create the hope and that path for the teens to walk in order to see and find that "the glory of God is shown in the man fully alive." This is probably one of the key things that I want tied into my ministry and its purpose/mission. That we are trying to reach teens to show them that there is a better way to life then what our world tells us. With Jesus they can become fully alive.
  • Having relationships with the teens and knowing them not just in youth group. In this mentoring relationship there will be "noticing, naming, and nurturing. This will help the teens be able to express words for God and then developing ways in which they can individually praise and worship God.
  • Having a supportive and encouraging ministry team that works alongside me. I want to have young adults who are going to be active and involved in the youth's lives. I want to include leading and teaching the young adults as well so that not only are they leading kids closer to God but they themselves are knowing and experiencing God on a deeper level.
  • Mark talked about different ways in which we can pray and seek the heart of God. A lot of those practices being around from even the beginning of the Church, I want these practices involved in my own ministry.

This book was great. I whole heatedly recommend it!