Archive | January, 2008

Tips for starting out in vocational youth ministry

Posted on 09 January 2008 by Tim Schmoyer

1. Set boundaries. Say things like “no” and “It’s time for you all to go home.” The natural tendency is to become over-involved at the very beginning just because you’re so excited to be there and change lives for Christ. The passion is great, but don’t let it set a work-load precedence you can’t sustain over a period of time. Remember, it’s better to do a few things will than a lot of things half-way.

2. Talk with your supervisor regularly. Whether that be your Sr. Pastor or someone else, make sure you’re communicating often, both when things are going well and when they’re not. I recommend meeting once a week to talk about what’s going on in the youth ministry and how you can work together as a team. It also creates accountability and builds trust, and believe me, you can never have too much trust built when tough times strike.

3. Pray. You cannot serve the Lord without regularly talking with Him about it! Pray for wisdom, guidance, and vision. Pray for students, yourself, your family, and those you serve. Saturate the ministry and prayer. Get others to pray for it, too. You cannot have a successful ministry without His involvement. Period.

4. Study God’s Word. Youth group isn’t just a place to teach scripture to others, it’s one of the few jobs in the world where you actually get paid to study the Bible. How cool is that?! As a leader, you cannot lead people to someplace you’ve never been yourself, so make sure you’re continuing to grow before taking the responsibility to help others grow.

5. Invest into volunteers. If you don’t have adult youth workers yet, get some. Even if your group consists of only 1 student, you need help. If you already have a team of youth leaders in place, invest into them like crazy. Train them, build relationships with them, and include them in all your plans. Without them you’ll make a lot of dumb decisions. Plus, see #1 — don’t attempt to do everything yourself.

6. Spend time with kids, not your office. The temptation is to get the youth ministry organized and all the programming straightened out, but, especially at the beginning, kids don’t care what you do in the office all day. They have a brand new youth pastor and they want to know who you are and what you’re like before they want to know what your organized youth ministry is like. Invite them over to your house or apartment (not alone!), go to their sports games and concerts, go out to eat after school and make yourself available online.

7. Don’t change everything right away. Every youth pastor has their own unique style, giftedness, passion and talents, so every youth ministry will be different. It’s important that you mold the ministry according to how God has created you, but don’t do it all right away. Take at least a year to get to know the people and the ministry before making any major changes. Once you’ve built trust and taken time to know “the system” first, you’ll have much more support to make those big changes later without alienating people from what they’ve already known for so long.

8. Keep your motives in check. There’s a lot of pressure to start your new youth ministry position with a bang. Expectations are high, regardless of whether they’re self-inflicted or from the church itself. It’s important that you keep your motives in check and remember why you’re in ministry in the first place. Don’t plan something big just so it’ll impress people or make them think they have some super-star youth pastor now. Never do ministry to please or impress people. Ministry is always about pleasing and serving God.

9. Be transparent. No one knows everything and no one can have extensive experience in every situation. Admit your weaknesses. Be honest when you’re not sure how to handle a situation. The fear is that it will erode authority and respect, but actually the exact opposite will happen. It’s okay if you don’t have all the answers. The key isn’t being a know-it-all, it’s knowing where to find the answers. Again, that’s why you surround yourself with a team of other youth workers.

10. Stay in shape. Not just because it’s fun to keep up with dodgeball, but because it reduces stress, gives you more energy, and keeps you alert. Seriously, the difference exercise makes in ministry is unbelievable. Yeah, it requires discipline for most of us, but exercising discipline is just as healthy as the actual exercise. Do it if for no other reason than to be a good steward of your temple.

Book recommendation: If you’re starting out in youth ministry, I highly recommend a book by Doug Fields called, “Your first two years in youth ministry.” It covers the essentials of youth ministry, how to handle discouragement, staying spiritually fresh, working with parents, dealing with conflict, building a team of adult youth workers, evaluating your effectiveness, determining realistic expectations and a whole lot more.

Upcoming mentorship program: For those of you who are interested, a reader of Life in Student Ministry suggested that we start a mentorship program for those of you in your first or second year of youth ministry. What a great idea! I’ll work to integrate this with our upcoming online small groups and book studies for youth workers, so stay tuned.

If you have any other ideas for Life in Student Ministry, please post in the comments or let me know directly.

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Time Out: God rewards faithfulness more than fruitfulness

Posted on 06 January 2008 by Tim Schmoyer

Time Out (by Jerry Schmoyer)
Trying to minister for God can be difficult. Just ask Isaiah or Jeremiah or even John the Baptist. Ministering to teens can be even more difficult since they are going through transitions and changes without the maturity they will later attain, so results can be slim. It’s easy to make a splash that seems to full of activity and excitement, but we all know that real change deep in a person’s heart is sometimes a slow process. Often seeds are planted but the results don’t show until years after the teens leave the youth group and move on in life. Discouragement, that often-used weapon of the enemy, can become a constant companion. God, in His mercy, does allow us to see glimpses of change in the lives we touch and that’s great. Often it seems that no one really understands or appreciates what we do except our mates and they often have their own struggles to deal with. It’s important to remember that God knows what we strive to do, even if it doesn’t always seem to succeed. We know in our minds that God just wants us to be faithful in what we do and leave the results to Him. It is His job to change hearts and lives, not ours. We are to faithfully serve, to minister for Him. That’s what He looks at -– our faithfulness. God doesn’t compare us with each other (thankfully!), He just compares us with ourselves. If we are doing our best to faithfully serve Him then He is thrilled with us. God doesn’t evaluate us by the results we produce but by the faithfulness of our service. After all, the servant with two talents received the same “Well done” from the master as the servant with ten! Anyone can serve God when things are going great, but to faithfully serve when we don’t see the results brings greater pleasure to God and reward to us. Write that on a piece of paper and put it over your desk: “God evaluates me by my faithfulness more than my fruitfulness.”

Scripture
Matthew 25:19-23, “After a long time the master of those servants returned and settled accounts with them. The man who had received the five talents brought the other five. ‘Master,’ he said, ‘you entrusted me with five talents. See, I have gained five more.’ “His master replied, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant! You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things. Come and share your master’s happiness!’ “The man with the two talents also came. ‘Master,’ he said, ‘you entrusted me with two talents; see, I have gained two more.’ “His master replied, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant! You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things. Come and share your master’s happiness!’”

Reflect

  • Are you evaluating your effectiveness by the fruit of your ministry?
  • Are you discouraged with what external outcomes you can observe?
  • Thank God for not appraising your effectiveness by visible results but by your faithfulness.
  • Remember those in your own past who faithful service influenced you. Perhaps a thank-you to them would be greatly appreciated.
  • Recommit yourself to faithfully serve Him even when there are no visible results.

Jerry Schmoyer has been a minister in Pennsylvania for over 25 years and has worked with teenagers for 14 years now, ever since I became one myself. He authors the weekly Time Out series here at Life in Student Ministry in hopes to spiritually refresh your soul as you continually pour so much of yourself into students. God bless!

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Freebie Friday #54: CSI Crime Scenes from the Bible

Posted on 04 January 2008 by Tim Schmoyer

Free youth ministry resources every FridayPaul Turner, a youth ministry veteran of over 20 years, graciously provides this week’s Freebie Friday resource. He’s written two CSI style “seasons” for you to freely use in your youth ministries. Each season contains four lessons that include crime scene photos, detailed instructions, and everything else you’ll need to pull off crime scene investigations in scripture.

PDF IconDownload Crime Scenes from the Bible - Part 1

PDF IconDownload Crime Scenes from the Bible - Part 2

CONTRIBUTE TO FREEBIE FRIDAY: If you’ve benefited from others who have freely shared their youth ministry resources online, consider giving back to the community by sharing your own materials here. Send me your donations for review and if I publish them in a Freebie Friday, you’ll receive full credit, a link, lots of gratitude and a warm feeling inside that comes from sharing with others.

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Looking back on “Life in Student Ministry” in 2007

Posted on 03 January 2008 by Tim Schmoyer

Growth in 2007
Every year I’m surprised by the growth taking place here at Life in Student Ministry. It’s very humbling that people would actually want to stick around and read this stuff, but it’s fun that you are. Since this time last year, site traffic is up by 383% (currently 33,000+ hits per month) and subscribers up by 945% (currently fluctuating around 670). There’s no way to predict how long this kind of growth will continue, especially since I don’t do anything special to intentionally generate traffic. Either way, I’m looking forward to continuing what goes on here at Life in Student Ministry as well as adding some new features over the next 12 months.

Looking to 2008
For 2008, my ideas and plans for Life in Student Ministry aren’t so much related to the actual blog as they are to extending its services to form more of an interactive community. Here are a couple ideas I’m currently developing in my free time (as limited as that may be):

  • Weekly spiritual nourishment geared specifically for youth workers (starts next week)
  • Online small groups for youth workers
  • Community book studies
  • Promotional tools for ministry-related web content
  • Adding regular guest bloggers to cover specialized issues
  • Anything else that comes during the year as inspiration strikes

What would you like to see from Life in Student Ministry this coming year?

My favorite posts from 2007
Last year I listed my top posts of 2006 strictly by the number of hits each one received. This year it’s a subjective list of my personal favorites.

January 2007
Dealing with the pressures of church leadership
What I learned from interviewing with churches: There’s no vision
Why do I limit what God wants to do through me?

February 2007
Open the lines for youth group communication
Handling discipline at youth group
How I will crash and burn(out) in ministry
A new identity for our youth group

March 2007
Why volunteers should always go for free
Why church is often a student’s last priority
Focus on the kids who ARE there
Free small group curriculum: My life
How to leave a ministry position and finish well

April 2007
Using cliques to my advantage for small groups
10 things that should be banned from youth ministry
Why do kids come to youth group?
A new name for youth workers

May 2007
Improving my body language with students
Free ebook: 130 Youth Ministry Tips and Ideas
Keeping the vision in sight literally
Imitation is not always flattery
Dealing with drama at youth group

June 2007
Creating intergenerational church services
My evangelism stinks
A welcomed interruption in my office

July 2007
Steve Jobs on youth ministry
Impress teens with your church business card
Podcast: One year wedding anniversary
I hate these conversations

August 2007
My problem with outreach events…
10 Commandments for surviving in youth ministry (5 of 10)

September 2007
10 Commandments for surviving in youth ministry (9 of 10)
I’m running on a treadmill that’s moving faster than I can run
How to grow a youth group
This video reminds me why I’m in youth ministry

October 2007
How to keep up with a growing youth group: You can’t!
Top 10 things you don’t want to hear from your youth pastor
Reward system for youth group attendance
Friends just aren’t what they used to be

November 2007
Video archive of Teen Internet Seminar for Parents
Email is old-school: Three better ideas for communicating with teens
I need to change how I help kids grow in Christ
You might be a youth worker if, redneck style

December 2007
How to make fun video announcements in 3 easy steps
How to help students take ownership over their youth group
The ideal youth ministry starts with the idea leader

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About me: I am married to my beautiful wife, Dana, and together we live in Minnesota where I serve as the youth pastor at our local church. The opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect those of my church. More about me...

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