Tag Archive | "Humor"

Tags:

Comedian Thor Ramsey wants your youth ministry stories

Posted on 27 February 2008 by Tim Schmoyer

Comedian Thor Ramsey is doing a story on youth ministry and contacted me asking for my most humorous and/or most touching moments in youth ministry.

I have a couple great stories, but the one that stands out in my mind happened last year in the airport on our way home from a missions trip. I had the game Catch Phrase with me to help us pass the time on our flight. While standing at the luggage claim, it started beeping in my backpack. Of course, as Catch Phrase does, the beeping got faster and faster. All the strangers standing around immediately gave me nervous looks and quickly backed away! I franticly tried to dig the game out my bag and as I did so, the beeping also got louder and louder. Finally I reached it and took the batteries out so it wouldn’t beep again, but whew, I fully expected the bomb squad to tackle me at any moment! The expressions on the faces of other travelers was priceless! lol

Thor would love to hear your most humorous, dramatic and touching moments in youth ministry, too. Post ‘em in the comments below.

Comments

Tags:

You might be a youth worker if, redneck style

Posted on 26 November 2007 by Tim Schmoyer

The “Top 10 Things You Don’t Want to Hear from your Youth Pastor” went over so well that I thought we’d do it again.

We’ve all heard Jeff Foxworthy’s “You might be a redneck if…” but let’s do it youth-worker-style. List your ideas in the comments below for, “You might be a youth worker if…” The people with the top 3 spots out of 10 as determined by me and my wife will each win 10 free music downloads from artists like Kutless, Hawk Nelson, Jeremy Camp, Thousand Foot Krutch, Falling Up and many new artists (provided by Tooth and Nail, BEC and Solid State Records). That’s a potential of three winners here! The contest ends Thursday, November 29, at 11:59 PM.

Here’s a couple I came up with to get you all started:

  • If you know what a blue flame is and think it’s fun, you might be a youth worker.
  • If you’ve heard these words from a Sr. Pastor, “Son, step into my office. We need to talk,” you might be a youth worker.
  • If you think jr. high lock-ins are a form of entertainment, you might be a youth worker.

Comments

Tags:

Top 10 things you don’t want to hear from your youth pastor

Posted on 11 October 2007 by Tim Schmoyer

I have a 6-month premium subscription to Sky.fm to give away to whoever comes up with the funniest line for this list. I am the only judge, so even if no one else thinks it’s funny, that’s okay! Enter as many times as you’d like. The contest ends this Sunday, October 14, at 11:59 PM. I will contact the winner by email and will also congratulate the winner in a comment here just so everyone else knows. Have fun!

Comments

Tags:

The Church Office – youth ministry episodes

Posted on 16 July 2007 by Tim Schmoyer

Saw these over on Steve’s blog and thought they were funny! Then I noticed on YouTube that these videos have already circulated and that I’m kinda late with this. Oh well. I also noticed there’s a whole series of The Church Office videos.

Episode #1
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=75TtP144fHE[/youtube]

Episode #2
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpwR3LpRi8A[/youtube]

Comments

Tags:

David Crowder launches squirrel into space!

Posted on 07 May 2007 by Tim Schmoyer

OK, maybe not all the way into space, but in case you’ve missed the last two videos David Crowder posted on his blog, you definitely need to check them out. This guy cracks me up!

Evil Squirrel: Part 1
[youtube]LSTfgsjmiW8[/youtube]

Squirrel-pult: Part 2
[youtube]0k21ncDn9Lo[/youtube]

I’m looking forward to part 3, hopefully soon!

[tags]David Crowder[/tags]

Comments

Tags:

The Simpsons on American Idol

Posted on 26 April 2007 by Tim Schmoyer

Man, I love this! When it came on American Idol tonight, Dana and I both laughed out loud!

[youtube]05tCuwILYhk[/youtube]

[tags]American Idol, The Simpsons[/tags]

Comments

Tags:

10 things that should be banned from youth ministry

Posted on 06 April 2007 by Tim Schmoyer

I was thinking about this earlier and thought it might be fun to come up with a list of things that should be banned from youth ministry.

Sweatpants with words written across the butt

  1. Sweatpants with words written across the butt.
  2. Gossip and rumors.
  3. Farts during a serious lesson (both loud and silent!).
  4. Lock-ins.
  5. Random donations that make my office look like a thrift shop.
  6. Fundraisers.
  7. P.D.A.
  8. Mountain Dew and red Kool-aid for Jr. Highers.
  9. “We’ve always done it this way…”
  10. Smelly broken couches from the ’60s.

What other ideas do you have to add to this list? :)

Comments

Tags:

What an accomplishment!

Posted on 22 March 2007 by Tim Schmoyer

Woah, who would sign up to be the judge of this?!

(ht to “To know God less“)

Comments

Tags:

Top 10 ways to loose your job in youth ministry

Posted on 19 March 2007 by Tim Schmoyer

How to lose your job in youth ministryI don’t know where I originally got this. I was looking for something else on my computer when I stumbled across an old Word document from 2001 that contained this list. Thought might be a good way to start your Monday. :)

Top 10 Ways to Lose Your Job in Youth Ministry

If your going to lose your job, lose it in one of the top 10 ways!

10. Play Peanut Butter Chubby Bunnies to test the theory of this whole “Chubby Bunny” debate!

9. Leave your Pastor’s kid at an orphanage in Mexico on your annual mission trip.

8. Replace the grape juice with actual wine during communion (this would only really affect Baptists).

7. Teach girls how to smoke cigars and gamble their babysitting money in a game of poker at the girls junior high Bible Study (teaching them to tithe their winnings of course!).

6. Cut up the church’s choir robes to make flags for a capture the flag game.

5. Give your Sr. Pastor a free subscription to the Victoria Secret Catalog, sent to the church address!

4. Start a food fight at the annual church spaghetti feed!

3. Start a food fight during communion!

2. Finance the down-payment of your new mustang convertible through your youth petty cash fund.

1. Bring Bill Clinton out to speak at your True Love Waits Rally.

Comments

Tags: , , ,

Ten easy steps to guarantee a successful youth ministry

Posted on 11 December 2006 by Tim Schmoyer

10 easy steps to guarantee a successful youth ministryUPDATE: Please read the comments below. This is not a serious post. It’s satirical sarcasm and does not contain a hint of truth. It’s a joke written by the founder of Youth Specialties describing in exact opposite terms what NOT to do. Do NOT run your youth ministry this way! This is written to such an extreme in order to point out the absurdity of running a youth ministry this way. It’s only a joke. Please don’t take this seriously or think that this is my personal philosophy of ministry. It definitely is NOT.

Ten Easy Steps to Guarantee a Successful Youth Ministry!
by Mike Yaconelli

1. Dumb Down the Gospel. Employ attractive phrases such as, “Since I’ve known Jesus I’m happier, getting better grades, and captain of the football team!” Even better, reduce the complexity of the gospel into group cheers (i.e., “Give me a J!”) or simple worship choruses like, “God is so good…blah blah blah.” (Try singing those words in Ethiopia.) Or even better, try out some hip slang (i.e., God is “phat”; Jesus is a “hottie”).

2. Count. Constantly make everyone aware of your group’s attendance figures and the increases in attendance. Make numbers an issue by setting attendance goals for each activity and reward the group for reaching those goals. Spend lots of time throwing pies at the leaders if goals are reached.

3. Put Your Students on Display. As soon as kids become Christians or rededicate their lives or show real growth, put them in front of the group and have them share their testimonies—especially if they’re physically attractive. Let young people talk about their faith as much as possible and don’t worry about the fact that most young people have no clue how complicated and rough the real world is with or without Jesus.

4. Don’t Allow Down Time. Hey, kids today are MTV kids! They can’t sit still for any length of time. Silence, solitude, prayer, meditation, fasting? All totally lame in the eyes of this generation! Nope, keep ‘em busy, active, noisy, and shuttling from one Christian rock concert to another. Fill every moment of your program with something to do—otherwise you’ll lose their attention (which would be disastrous because then they’d have to pay attention to God and their souls).

5. Stay on the Technological Cutting Edge. What would Jesus do? Are you kidding? Jesus would have the best sound system you ever heard, along with a DVD player, the Internet, instant messaging, the coolest Web site, and of course a digital TV. Show your kids that when it comes to the latest technology, Christians are right there! I mean, who needs to read when you can watch?

6. Create Celebrities. Make sure your young people get an earful and eyeful of the latest Christian music stars, video stars, and NFL players who profess their faith in Jesus on national television. Encourage your young people to worship, idolize, and live under the illusion that these people are somehow better, deeper, more Christian, more together, and more dedicated than them. Let them believe that the marketed images of these celebrities are completely representative of them—even though you know it isn’t true.

7. Let Youth Group Take the Place of Church. Oh sure, encourage your kids to attend the contemporary service—even though you know most of them never will because church is “boring,” filled with “dull, old people,” and the music “sucks.” Whatever you do, though, don’t suggest that worshiping with people they don’t like and connecting with people who are older and wiser just might save them when their adolescent view of the world is shattered. Just keep convincing your students that youth group is a good substitute for church.

8. Tow the Parental Line. Whatever you do, don’t cause friction with parents by suggesting to their kids that grades, SAT scores, financial security, college degrees, and athletic scholarships really don’t matter. Just accept the fact that most parents want their children to attend youth group as long as it doesn’t interfere with hockey, football, ice skating, tennis, ballet, or baseball practice. And don’t encourage young people to resist their parents’ attempts to smother the call of God on their lives, either. After all, you could get fired!

9. Ignore the Arts. Never encourage painting, dance, sculpture, writing, poetry, ballet, or trips to the museum, symphony, and opera. Stick with activities that rock! The WWF rules!

10. Live in the Now! Verify the success of your ministry by visible, measurable, observable results you see now. Don’t waste your time worrying about lasting results. Who can wait?! Go for the instant return. Hey, once your kids leave youth group, you aren’t responsible for what happens to them anyway, right?

11. “Us” Versus “Them.” (Yeah, yeah, I know I said “Ten Steps”—sue me.) Convince your kids that the only way Christians can make a difference is through public, physical confrontation with the “world.” Explain that this “world” is “them,” and Christians—the good guys—are “us.” And since it’s us against them, we have to “stand up for our faith.” Encourage them to march in rallies, wear slogan-filled T-shirts, hang banners, and do whatever it takes to get in the world’s face. Convince them that the Devil and his demons are running around, wreaking havoc—and the only way to deal with the Devil is to confront and “bind him.” Don’t let them believe that evil is much more seductive, much more camouflaged and tricky than they could ever imagine. And whatever you do, don’t start getting into Jesus’ strategy of powerlessness.

Now go get ‘em!

(ht jacob)

Comments

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...

Training video see most recent

Post a commentSubscribe in iTunesDownload the videoView on YouTube
Weekly LIVE online discussions among youth workers

MinistryQuestions.com From Ministry Questions.com...


My Other Projects


MinistryWebsites.biz

OnlineMissionsTrip.com

MinistryQuestions.com