Monday, March 25, 2013

Parents Ministry Resource Table

To expand on my post on "More than Dodgeball" I'll give my readers backstage access to my parents resource set up.

First up is my Parents Resource table. I keep it outside my office which is on one of the main thoroughfares in our church. I previously kept in in the church foyer, but the resources were never taken. I believe it's for want of anonymity when taking a resource, but for what ever reason they get taken better outside my office.




On the table we keep the entire "Parents Guide" series by MarkO and Simply. These are by far my best resources. The parents love them and I've had great follow up conversations with parents about them. We also have "99 Thoughts for Parents of Teenagers" by Walt Mueller. Speaking of Walt, we also have a ton of CPYU print outs.

On this table we also keep a display that shows our current sermon series for our High School and Middle School Worship services (we use the same theme in both just adjust the content) and also in our Small Groups.

Beside the display to the right are our current calendar, we usually put one out every 3 months, but they are out there two months ahead of time. Our current newsletter and a printed copy of each of our Small Groups parents letters. We send a copy home with each student but we also give our parents the option of getting a copy here since we know how often students give their parents take homes!

This is a great look at our physical resources. We also have a online parents only website that houses our ROPE from ParentMinistry.net and our online content from them. Below are some close up pictures of our table.

Just Keep Swimming!








Location:Messamore Rd,Dawson Springs,United States

Sunday, March 17, 2013

YouthPastorDiet.com Results

I forgot to update everyone on the diet competition! I've been still coming down from the high that is SYMC, add to that finals week, spring break, and my oldest daughter getting save and I'm beat! But I got the following email earlier today and it jogged my memory!


CONGRATULATIONS KEVIN!!

You WON 3rd Place in the Youth Pastor Diet Competition!

The loot coming your way includes: 25lbs of SYM Resources aka $100.

I’m connecting you with Jake- He’ll be able to get you hooked up with some good stuff!

Enjoy!

And congratulations again!

-The SYM Team J

I got third place! I started at 230 lbs in November. By the beginning of March I was down to 181 lbs! I lost 49 lbs and 21.3% of my body weight!

I actually intend on gaining a little back. I want to get to 185 - 188 but I'm starting a regime to tone up. I've only been doing cardio to lose the weight and I need muscles! lol! I am planning on running a 5K in April with my wife and two of our students. It was a wild ride during that weight loss competition but it was a blast! I had a great time encouraging and being encouraged by the YouthPastorDiet.com group. Josh is planning to do another competition soon and I plan on sticking around to provide some motivation. Cannot wait for season 2!

Just Keep Swimming!

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

SYMC Ten Way to Bless (and not curse) Your Ministry's Parents Part 2

Sorry about taking so long to post part two to this. Had finals a week ago and honestly this week, I've taken some time to focus on my family this week. But here is the long awaited Part 2 to SYMC's Ten Way to Bless and Not Cure Your Ministry's Parents!

#5: Create Spiritual Conversations in the Home
-See yourself as the spiritual matchmaker between parents and their students.

-let your parents know what their teens are learning at church. Not a huge list of Scriptures and sermon notes that they won't read.

-(Kevin) the way we integrate this in our ministry. We use SYM's LIVE curriculum for small groups, this has a parents email, which we print off and give to our parents. This gives them questions to ask their students to continue the conversation at home that go directly with our lesson. We are also working on take homes for our missions trip, DNow, and other events such as 30 Hour Famine to give parents more involvement.

#4: Serve Parents by being their Resource Broker

-Set aside some time in your schedule to mine really rich parenting resources and pass the nuggets to the parents in your ministry.

-Check out great sites like: Homeword, CPYU, Sticky Faith, Parentzilla, Mashable.com

#3: Help teenagers honor their parents
-Teach teenagers the power of honoring their parents and help them do it.

-Students don't do this naturally! (AMEN!)
-Treat parents better then they deserve, some students parents...well..aren't that great of parents, but they deserve to be treated good.

Ideas:
-awards night for parents
-video booth (have students record why they love their parents)
-Parent of the month: Have students write in why their parent deserves to be parent of the month. Show up at work with balloons, sweets, etc. Film it all and post it up on the net.

#2: Help parents spiritually lead their teenager
-teach parents their role as the greatest spiritual influencer in the life of their teenagers.

#1: Harness the power of symbols and ceremonies.
- In the Old and New Testament, God used symbols and ceremonies to pass down faith. You can help parents do the same.

-(Kevin) as a note on this idea and to tell you why this means so much to me. I didn't grow up Southern Baptist. The church I grew up in, when I was baptized, while I was still in the baptistry, your parents gave you your first communion (the cup was an olivewood one that I still have to this day) and prayed a blessing over you in front of the church. I remember this to this day. It's one of the fondest memories I have growing up. I can't remember what my dad prayed during the blessing, but I remembered they did it.

Parent Ministry is something that I'm really focusing on and really learning about. Expect a lot more to come on this subject.


Just Keep Swimming!

Monday, March 4, 2013

SYMC Ten Way to Bless (and not curse) Your Ministry's Parents Part 1

What an awesome conference! And how do you close out a awesome experience like this? With a great workshop with Jeremy Lee from ParentMinistry.net. I've been checking out this site and they are legit!

Background before I get started, when I started at the church I am currently serving, God laid it on my heart that there had to be something I could do to assist our parents in fulfilling their commitment in Deuteronomy 6. We have done various things to resource our parents, one of which can be seen here on a guest post I made on More Than Dodge Ball.

http://www.morethandodgeball.com/2013/02/24/guest-post-parent-ministry-resources/

But I also have a great appreciation of Rites of Passage. The church I grew up in, when I was baptized, after I was brought out of the water. You toweled off your face and while still in the water, my parents gave me my first communion and prayed a blessing over me. This is a vivid memory of mine and is something that meant a lot to me. So I know the power that Rites of Passage moments can have. But enough of me plugging that, I will have WAY more on that in the future.

So what are ten ideas to bless and not curse your ministry parents?

10: Give them your attention!
-Let the students and volunteers in your ministry share the stage with parents.

-If parents, according to Deuteronomy 6, are the primary discipler of their children then:

-They can't be ignored, we aren't loving students well if we don't don't seek to influence those who influence them the most!

-They can't be leftovers! What would change if we moved from offering parents our scraps to giving them a seat at the table of our main course?

-They need to be in the spot light.

-They need our attention! So much of parents ministry is just simply noticing the family dynamics in your ministry!

-The first step you can take to bless parents is to intentionally notice them!

-Gather information from your students on who comes from a home with spiritual support and who does not.

*Student Questionair*
1: Are you a Christian?
2: Do your parents go to church here or some where else?
3: Are you parents Christians?
Note: I would also add, with my group anyway, do you and your parents discuss spiritual things at home?

-Fear does not motivate parents use kind, gentle, affirming tones.

9: Give the parents in your ministry an encourager not an expert.
-You got into this ministry position to encourage the discouraged. This is true for both students and their parents.

-Your default setting when you start a conversation with a parent should be to start with a genuine compliment of their teenager. You don't have to lie, but do the best you can to give them insight into their teen.

-There is power to listening and offering prayer.

-Your office should be the safest place outside their living room where they can come and vent.

8: Create a safe environment.
-Earn the trust of the parents you serve by creating an environment that is trustworthy!

-Have a church nursery perspective. Put patents at ease that its safe.

-Keep your environment clean and organized.

-Make sure you are free from responsibility during pick up, drop off, and event registration to be available to parents.

-Use licensed and bonded bus drivers. Bring security volunteers.

-Make decisions as if you were sitting in court ready to testify.

-Use diligence to create a trust worthy environment.

-Explain CLEARLY the steps you will take to take care of those students.

7: Provide guests with great information.
-Make it EXTREMELY easy for a new family to engage your student ministry, with clear promotional material.

-Have a parent of a teen who is not a member of your church check out the website and bring their student to church. Get their feedback.

-website content should be gear to parents NOT teens. Teens do not engage your website, they engage via social media.

-Parents will visit contact page and staff page first. Make sure contact info is good, up to date and clear. Make sure staff bios lend to their credibility. Saying "Uh my favorite movie is Ironman" does not lend to credibility but "Pastor Kevin has been doing youth ministry for 5 years. He has a youth ministry certificate from YouthSphere.com and has a clear calling from God to equip teenagers to be better followers of Christ." does lend to credibility.

6: Open lines of communication.
-Do your part to begin ongoing conversations with the parents you serve.

-Send emails regularly (Jeremy said once a week. For me that might be excessive since I have great face to face time usually once every sunday) to a parent. It's better to give them a hand written note.

-write emails for skimming not reading. Most people just skim emails. Bullet points with links to more info are effective. Keep subject line to 27 characters or less. Most email services cut off at 27.

I'll be back later this week with the rest!


Just Keep Swimming!

Sunday, March 3, 2013

SYMC Boot Camp for the Bi-Vocational Youth Worker

Another awesome workshop! Danette Matty is awesome! I follow her on Twitter and can connect with her sense of humor on there and in the class. This class also relied heavy on crowd participation as well which was awesome. Here are some of the thoughts that I had during this worshop.

-John 5: 19-20
-"The crux of youth ministry is a caring adult in the life of a student." Danette Matty

-After the comment another youth worker made about doing small groups every other week instead of every week this idea sprang to life in my mind.
"Does my youth ministry have to look 'normal'? ie Wednesday night youth group, Sunday school sunday morning. What is 'normal anyway, but what works for your group." Discipleship on the go fits that, instead of having a structured lesson just have the students over for dinner and talk.

-Don't get stuck in the "it's just a season mentality." You are always in a season.

-What are my top 5 youth ministry priorities? And focus on making those great. They should line up with capability, gifting, time, and resources.

-Does something always have to suffer? ie family, my workplace job, my ministry etc. No but I may have to let go or redefine what I'm looking for.

-Artful ways to say "No!"
1: Affirmation: Always affirm by saying something like "I really am flattered you think I would be great for that, but I'm going to have to say no."
2: Let your yes be yes and your no be no: If your going to say no, don't lead them along, just say no.
3: Recruit: Recruit them to head the idea up.
4: Up front communication
5: Availability is an issue.
6: Filter it through the spouse
7: Vision casting: Routinely cast your ministries vision to the church. If it doesn't line up with your ministries vision then say so!
8: Always explain why, don't just say no and leave it at that.

-Always take a time inventory

Tips for Bi-Vocational Youth Workers:
1: Recruit temporary help. Even if its only for a month, end of summer, end of school year etc.

2: Pick and chose what events you can and cannot attend.

3: Pick and chose what to say yes and no to on behalf of your youth.

4: Simplify your messages and programs. Don't be afraid to use other peoples material and curriculum.

5: Don't sacrifice prayer for prep. (Guilty!)

6: Take one night off every three months and make your volunteers take one night off every three months.

7: What do I want my life/marriage/relationships to look like?

8: Be a wise steward of your time and health. That does not mean be lazy or selfish.

9: Always remember what matters most. Your relationship with Jesus.

Just Keep Swimming!

Location:W Washington St,Indianapolis,United States

Saturday, March 2, 2013

SYMC Using Service to Create a Servants Heart

Once again, another great workshop at SYMC! Toby and Jeff, who work for Group Mission Trips, were awesome! This class was a lot different than the other workshops so far, but different (and awkward) are awesome! This class was reflection and discussion based. I'm usually fairly introverted but even I found myself participating in the discussion. If you have never checked them out, Group Missions is an outstanding organization within the Group/SYM umbrella. Our group has done Big Day of Serving and are going back this year, we are also participating in Week of Hope. Here are some of my take aways from the workshop.

-Knowing Jesus is the end game of youth ministry.
-All thriving youth ministries are Jesus centered and Others focused.

-The "How" of youth ministry missions are:
1: Exposure
-Matthew 9:36
-Get the students to see the "crowds"
-What can we do to get students in front of the crowd, so they will come away with compassion for what they see?
-Exposure does not mean doing anything, just taking the students out to see the crowds, bringing them back, and letting them unpack.
-Everyone has compassion for lost children, we would go to great lengths to help them find their parents. Help kids see the crowds as lost children and not poor, homeless, special needs, orphans, etc.

Application Ideas:
-spend the night in a park.
-take students to a park in the bad area of town, let them sit in van and observe.
-Drive through a needy area, tell everyone to sit on the outside seats (not in the middle) no talking, and everyone must look outside the windows. When you get back to the church let them unpack what they saw.
-Ask the students how are these people like me or you?
-This does not need to be a 7 point bible study, just ask them good questions.

2: Experience
-Luke 10:1-2
-The actually mission trip or event.
-What if we had no midweek meetings, but small groups of students just went out and served?
-Short term missions trips = mountain top experiences.

3: Expertise
-Luke 10: 17
-expertise is "getting better at following Jesus"
-This is phase where students own their own missions experience and are fully knowledgable and invested in it. They truly know the heart of God.


Just Keep Swimming!

Location:W Washington St,Indianapolis,United States

SYMC 25 lessons from 25 years in Youth Ministry

Kurt Johnston is one of my favorite speakers. One, I feel more connected with Middle School Ministry so we share the same passion in our soul and two, I feel like I would be a lot like Kurt had I been born in Cali. Enjoy the coffee Kurt!

So here are the 25 lessons, as always check back after the conference for more detailed notes.

1: Every church has "unwritten rules".
2: It's a Chips game.
-all about earning and losing trust.
3: Attach myself to someone who is a few steps ahead.
4: The grass is always greener where I water it.
5: Eventually the squeaky wheel get's replaced.
6: Most of my relationships are situational
-if the situation changes the relationship changes or ceases to exhist.
7: The Power of Nice (or don't be a tool)
8: Leave the wanting more
-shorter messages, shorter stories, don't overplay a game.
9: My kids didn't pick this way of life.
-way more on this coming, I'm actually doing a personal post on this.
10: Balance is a myth!
-we need to redefine balance.
-when Kurt talked about this the image I had was of a plate spinner.
11: Leadership is liquid
12: The comparison game is a killer.
13: It all starts with fun.
14: It's about them (teens) not me.
15: Some times the SR Pastor NOT thinking about me is a good idea.
-if your Pastor wakes up a 2 AM and your the first thing on their mind, your in trouble.
16: Strategize, Baby!
17: It's about people, not programs.
18: Don't let my supervisor be surprised.
19: My primary role: Equip, Empower, and Encourage my team.
20: Numbers matter (to someone).
21: Parents matter....a lot!
22: Neglect my weaknesses!
23: I CAN fake it.
24: The pendulum always swings back.
25: There will always be someone unhappy with me.

Just Keep Swimming!

Location:W Washington St,Indianapolis,United States

Friday, March 1, 2013

Teaching the Bible to Teenagers Pt 2

Sessions 3 and 4 with Duffy touched on Creatively Teaching the Bible to students. Some of my take away from that session:

3 Obstacles that prevent the stickiness of a lesson:
1: Selective Attention
-they chose not to hear us, due to the other things in life that are fighting them for attention.
-You can break through this by knowing your audience.

2: Miscomprehension
-They heard what we said but didn't understand it.
-Its not about what we say but what they heard.

3: Selective Forgetting
-like the name implies they just forgot what we said.

Creativity:
1: Creativity is taking something old and making it new.
2: Creativity is thinking in a completely new way.
-Lateral vs Vertical thinking
a: Vertical thinking is thinking in logical, predictable steps.
b: Lateral thinking tries to move us away from where we've always been to where we need to go.
c: Both thinking types complement each other, they should not compete.

Basic Rule: You do not have to be creative to be creative, you just need to learn how to copy right.

3 Keys to copying right:
1: You need to find a good resource to copy
-don't copy bad ideas
2: You need to make sure to copy well
-Take into account the:
-personality of your group
-size of your group
-level of commitment
-ambiance of the setting
-execution of the idea
3: Brainstorm

4 Basic learning styles:
1: Imaginative learner:
-likes to experience things. Feelings are very important.
-likes to share ideas, likes to talk.
-thrives in small groups.
-place and ambiance is very important

2: Analytical learner:
-observer
-facts based, wants to know what the experts say.
-loves to take notes and make models.
-usually will leave during small groups.
-likes watching and listening.

3: Common sense learner:
-Very practical
-how does it work
-are the ideas logical and do they make sense.
-How does it apply to my life?

4: Dynamic learner:
-Wants to do something
-Risk taker, try's things out
-Pushy and impulsive
-"Ready, Fire, Aim" mentality

3 things to remember:
1: Everyone is different when it comes to learning.
2: Fight the urge to program in the style in which we learn, and not how the students learn.
3: If we want to maximize the students experience, we need to utilize all four teaching styles.


Just Keep Swimming!

Location:W Washington St,Indianapolis,United States

Teaching the Bible to Teenagers Pre-Conference

Duffy Robbins has to be one of the best speakers ever. When I took my YouthSphere certification his classes were always the best. His combination of comedy, improve, and solid principles make all of his teachings easy to retain and learn.

Some of the best take aways from this session so far are:
1: With Biblical Interpretation, if we do not pay attention, when we read scripture the lens of our own experience and our own culture will cause us to see things in scripture that apply to ourselves. However, it will also cause us to look over things that may not apply.

Duffy used an illustration of the Prodigal Son story. In American we see the blowing his money part. but we often over look or underemphasize the famine portion of the story. Because in America one of the worst things you can do is waste your money.

2: The plain meaning of scripture is clear.
We do not need a fancy degree or vast knowledge to interpret plain meaning. However, we do not all understand with equal clarity and it does not give us license to distort the meaning. Also we are fools if we only read scripture, even pastors learn from other pastors, (ie commentaries, etc)

3: Hook, Book, Look, and Took.
Great principle and I actually use an outline of this while preparing sermons. I am actually planning an entire post on this so stay tuned for it in the near future.

Hook:
How do I get their attention? Pay attention to the fact that all students are at different places in life. (ie crowd, congregation, and core students)

Book:
What does the text say?

Look:
What does the text mean?

Took:
What is the take away? Application.

4: 7 Laws of Learning (Duffy condenses to 6 Laws)
1: You can't teach what you don't know.
-You wouldn't take navigation advice from the captain of the Titanic.
-We must live lives that reflect the text.

2: You can lead a horse to water...
-The learner must be interested, or made to be interested, in the truth to be learned.
-What am I doing to engage my listeners?

3: You cannot learn what you cannot understand.
-The language must be common between teacher and student.
-Use easy to understand terms, may have to explain things like sin to a new believer or a lost student.

4: You cannot learn what you've never heard.
-Every truth to be learned must be learned through a truth thats already known.
-If a student does not know Jesus then the Spiritual Fruits do not mean a lot to that student.

5: We learn best what we learn ourselves.
-You learn not top touch a hot stove by touching a hot stove.
-Experiential Learning

6: We learn best what we can apply.
-Students have no time for concepts. They need application for the concept to make sense.

Thats some of my take away from the first session, stay tuned for the second session and follow my blog after the conference for my complete notes.

Just Keep Swimming!

Location:W Maryland St,Indianapolis,United States

SYMC Check-in!

SYMC Check in is here! Simply could not have picked a better place to host the conference. JW Marriott is a top notch hotel and is super nice. Since http://www.youthpastordiet.com competition is still ongoing, I worked out in the hotel gym last night and the fitness center is awesome.

Checked in for the Pre-Conference this morning and the staff has been great! Very helpful and any question I had was answered. So great! If you are a youth worker and have never been to SYMC, you need to figure out how to attend one!

More to come today from the conference! Check back later for a recap of "Teaching the Bible to Teenagers" by Duffy Robbins and a recap of the General Session. Plus you'll you'll find out how I did in the weight loss competition. Also SYMC is streaming live tonight and every night at
http://www.simplyyouthministry.tv check it out!!

Just Keep Swimming!

Location:W Washington St,Indianapolis,United States