Sunday School Lesson Plans to download 10 Ways to a Great Youth Group. Volunteer Sunday School Teacher Page Leading a Middle School Youth Group
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This book will give you the fire power to convice your business-as-usuall leadership to make the immediate changes necessary to keep kids interested in church.
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Keeping teenagers interested in attending church is a hot topic among parents, youth group leaders, and pastors (or it should be). Worship services, knowingly or not, target a certain age group. This group is adults. Lets face it, adults are the ones with the money. The sermon is geared for adults. High School age teens are somewhat OK with it too. I am not suggesting that we radically shift the entire focus of the Sunday morning service toward the youth. However, most Sunday morning sermons bore middle school age teens to tears. That's why they don't want to attend. Even the best sermon, if not targeted to that age group, will be way over their heads. Their vocabulary skills and attention span just aren't mature enough yet. By ignoring this subject and just forcing the kids to attend what they perceive is a boring service we are convincing them that ALL CHURCH IS BORING. Is it any wonder that by the time they are college age we never see them in the pew again? There are also those that flee their parents. Here, then, are some suggestions, developed by many contributors at Group Forum, about how to keep teens interested and involved in church: |
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Dismiss the kids to their own Sunday School class during the sermon. Do not lump them in with "Children's Church". Visit my page Growing Your Youth Group for more on this. Teens actually are hungry for Bible study but they need it tailored to their level. The teacher does not necessarily need to be the youth group leader or youth pastor. You may find that you have some talented teachers among your older attendees. Equip them with my lesson plans to make teaching easier. Feed them breakfast or a great snack. Feed them spiritually: Teach them the Bible. That's actually what they come for. They can get games and fun anywhere. Sacraments, Guests, and special events: Let the kids sit together if they want (as long as they behave). The teacher might even join them. |
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Family-Based Youth Ministry![]() After seeing appalling abuses of the term ”family-based”ministry I need to weigh in on the subject. Some churches have actually scrapped their youth ministry and Sunday Schools in preference of their misinterpretation of the concept of a “family-based” ministry. In reality this is actually a reaction to the lack of committed volunteers and/ or their lack of commitment to fund a Youth Pastor staff position. These churches now feel justified in shirking their responsibility to train the youth in Christian principles arguing that these separate classes and groups take the youth out of the life of the church body. In his book, "Family-Based Youth Ministry”, Mark DeVries does make the assertion that the current youth group model we have been following, if that is all a church is doing for it’s youth, fails the youth by not connecting them with adults within the body of the church. Read the rest of this article. | ||||
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Some tips on creating a "YOUTH-FRIENDLY environment in church: If you watch youth and adults interact on a Sunday morning you may notice that even though they are interspersed in the crowd the adults are ignoring the kids. This does happen quite naturally because of several factors: 1. Adults are taller than most kids. They look right over them; 2. People are naturally self-absorbed. If they're not taught the value of relationships with kids they will simply tune them out. Christians must be taught the importance of mentoring kids, all the kids. Older people must learn to pass the torch to the younger generation. The daunting task of changing the culture of an entire congregation must be supported by the senior pastor. Here are the suggestions from some members of Group's web forum on how to do that: Announcements: Do the youth announcements during the main service. Better yet, have the kids do their announcements. The point is to keep them in the face of the grownups. Shoot a 1-minute video of the last fundraiser, tell how it went. Convince the senior pastor to do a sermon on mentoring. Attend your churches leadership board meetings. Give them updates on the youth program, progress and needs every time. Have them pray for the youth. Keep the kids in the front of their minds. If you have a news letter write an article for every issue. Have the kids pass out the bulletins at the door. They could do this with their parents like a team. Let the kids be part of the worship band. This may be a stretch for the worship leader who is more interested in a great performance than ministry. You'll just have to convince them. Let them serve: Kids really want to be involved. Let them help in the kitchen, nursery (accept during class), and maintenance (shoveling, weeding, vacuuming). Encourage them to become active members of these committees with the adults. With the proper attitude from the adults helping the kids feels like full members of the group they will rise to the occasion and really do a good job. Do not have "special" youth Sundays. Special implies special-ed to kids. This does not change the feeling of adults towards the youth. It still causes exclusion of the kids the rest of the time. Youth need to be integrated into the life of the church on a permanent basis not just special days. It needs to be a culture shift. | ||||
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Good Question Sunday School Lessons
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