Ok, so that was just a provactive title to get you here. I’d like to start off saying I don’t have all the answers. I’m only 23, I don’t have a masters in theology, and I’m not a youth pastor. I have been in youth ministry leadership for a number of years, have had the opportunity to meet and dialogue with some forward thinking and innovative Christian leaders, and have been a “youth group kid” since puberty first reeled its awkward head in my life.
In my conversations with people who are thinking about ways to aid and engage the next generation, the same theme always seems to permeate our dialogue:
We need to move away from creating systems and events and begin seeing people more as individuals. In short, mentorship is a much more effective way to foster and grow young Christians….but it’s also a greater sacrifice.
Think about someone you know who’s just a stellar Christian. They’re passionate, live a life of integrity, and allow that life to spill generously to others. Maybe that’s you. I’ll bet you anything they attribute their lifestyle to someone that once stepped outside their busy schedule and personally invested in them, someone they could tell anything to (even their deepest, darkest junk). I have a friend who told me with a straight face once that she felt so comfortable around her mentor that she could tell her something as horrible as she just murdered someone without feeling judged or condemned.
So after all these conversations, here’s a summary of what I’m starting to believe:
Perhaps the reason why youth ministry can often be
ineffective is that it emphasizes “the event” far more than it
understands the importance of mentorship. We go to Christian camps,
host Christian concerts, invest in Christian coffee houses… all safe
alternatives to the drug and alcohol driven events most high schoolers
attend on the weekends. The tendency is to create this safe playpen for
churched teenagers that doesn’t allow them to realistically engage the
outside world with their faith (the world they have to live in the
majority of the time they’re not sitting in youth group).
I’ve grown so tired of the “just try harder” talk from
speakers at youth camp. “You know, last year at camp you probably
decided to get right with God, but I’m guessing you’ve done some
backsliding since. Well, now it’s time to get right again. As the
worship band comes up….etc, etc.”
Of course they’ve “done some backsliding!” Have you been to high school lately?! You got to be Rambo to survive. David Kinnaman calls it “the fractured generation.” Kids are cutting themselves, killing themselves, having casual sex in the bathroom, throwing up in the bathroom so they can look attractive enough for the causal sex they’re going to have later, taking advantage of the porn available to them on their cell phones,
experimenting, tormenting, struggling, abusing, all the while
desperately hanging on without a seatbelt to a chaotic hormonal
rollercoaster.
We can’t keep spending money on blow-up games and new wings in our churches for coffee houses cleverly titled “Higher Grounds” without backing it all up with some serious substance. We all need people in our lives older
and wiser than us: people who won’t BS us, people who will kick our
butts when we need it (never when we’re down), people who refuse to
give up on us, and people who will constantly point us toward Jesus.
...And that takes effort, investment, sacrifice, space, and time... .all those things we love to hear we need more of.
Those of you who know me know I’m REALLY good at doing all that above stuff.
But I’m going to start making this a priority. Maybe you’re thinking
you can’t mentor someone because you don’t have your own stuff
together. I used to think that for a long time, but then I look at
every leader in the Bible (Moses, David, Peter, Paul to name a few) and
all their screw-ups and I’m encouraged.
A pretty successful author/speaker/pastor recently told me that on a particular day, he had the opportunity to either speak to 1,000 people about his new book or hang out with a couple of young guys at Starbucks just to talk and be available….he chose the latter….We need more guys like that... a lot more.
People and Organizations Committed to Mentoring the Next Generation:
Donald Miller: The Mentorship Project
Deadly Viper Character Assassins
Project Hangout
Comments
Interesting post CJ. I also saw the comment on your facebook about the myth of adolescence and thought it brought up some interesting points. But the fact is that we do have adolescence right now so how do we address the problem of our youth?
I didn't grow up in the church and I attended "youth group" when I was already in college, so I'm not exactly an expert on area this either. It may sound cliche, but I think that ideally the job of mentoring and discipleship should start with the parents. I know in our culture today it is incredibly hard for parents to provide a safe and stable home while at the same time be present with their kids through all of life. That could be another discussion altogether, but I am becoming convinced more and more that parents should be the ones that are parenting their kids hearts and providing a safe place for kids to share their "junk."
I think it is the opposite now, where parents are anything but safe and demand obedience and conformity from their kids otherwise incredible shame and guilt will be placed upon them (unless the parents are abusive or absent altogether). But this sin is not just with parents, it's a generational and pervasive thing that can be broken though.
With youth groups, I think that they can be great places where youths can gather and interact with one another in healthy, God-honoring ways that will promote a more open and more communal way of living for their future, rather than our private, guarded lives that we live today. But this must be done in conjunction with an already ongoing discipleship with parents or a mentor. I know that not all youth group kids come from Christian homes, so the model you proposed could be an effective way to grow those kids.
Thoughts?
agreed man. agreed. It should start with parents. The reality is, they're usually not around or willing to be honest...some are and that's great. The bigger question is why aren't these parents around and why can't they be transparent with their kids? What are we doing to change this?
I believe the problem with the Church is the same as the rest of society - as we compromise the faith in order to appeal to unbelievers. We are losing/ignoring our elders for the false assumption that our youth are our leaders. For a couple of generations now our society has neglected to intentionally teach our children (as we are instructed in the book of Deuteronomy), and they have grown/are growing up believing they know so much more than the generation above. Parents now do not know how to Biblically parent, and our children know very little of obedience and self-discipline.
Unless the Church allows the older to teach the younger, as described in Titus 2, the 'problems' with our youth groups will never change. We need to do what is unpopular and non-politically correct - as Jesus did.
Hi CJ,
I agree with you that our youth ministries need to move toward a mentorship model. I was the model Jesus used with his disciples and followers. However, the theology and culture in many youth ministries and youth resources can be a roadblock. Mentorship means discipleship, which implies a process and journey. Much youth ministry theology, at least in my experience, emphasizes "getting people into heaven." Furthermore, there is often undue focus on creating a one-time emotional experience, which is intension with the longer processes a mentorship/discipleship model. So I'm not sure which has to change first - the theology or the methodology. Perhaps both will evolve at the same time and inform each other.
Peace,
Don
Sorry - that should have read "It was the model used by Jesus..." Didn't mean to imply "I" was :-)
Good points, CJ. For so many youth groups, it's just a numbers game. The problem is, most of the big youth groups aren't big because they're doing a good job at discipleship, but rather because someone happens to be a good event planner or marketer.
I wish my youth group had been a bit less focused on drawing a crowd a mile wide and an inch deep, and more focused on investing deeply in the handful of kids who wanted to get serious about their faith. Building into a few kids would have spread the discipleship fervor throughout the whole group.
Love this CJ. I am really giving all you said a lot of thought. I honestly have not considered it all and want to invest some time in this. I also think that mentoring IS the way to go. Yes, huge events, etc. do bring in the kids who may not ever even step into a church but to keep these kids there HAS to be some bridges built that our kids can remain true to their beliefs and LIVE in this world. Thanks for your insights.
CJ, as a parent of two public schooled daughters (18 and 15), I was so glad and encouraged to read your post. By God's grace, we found a "youth pastor" with the same approach you describe. He has made all the difference in my girls lives.
I think the same issues are now being applied to Christian Higher Ed. We are trying to attract students by being, essentially, youth group for credit. Not surprising that enrollments are going down at many Christian Colleges.
What's funny is that so many will point to declining youth groups or Christian colleges and say it's the fault of the culture, or media persecution, or that everything went to hell after Obama became president. Actually, it's because of our own ignorance and inability to listen.
wow...word. I completely agree Mark. I think we could do a whole other blog on Christian colleges.