Over the last couple of years we as a church, have had
several discussions regarding student and children’s ministry; and we have
discussed the weaknesses of a segregated student ministry. Likewise, we have discussed the value of each “body
part” of the church and the need to work as one body. I have
written and posted blogs from others regarding student ministry - however, I
posted the blog below and a few others
(to follow) to give us some food for thought. Then, I will take blog and
summarize my thoughts regarding this. I hope it serves as an opportunity for
you to think things through regarding the students in our fellowship:
http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/tgc/2012/04/30/youth-need-the-church-and-the-church-needs-youth/
Youth
Need the Church, and the Church Needs Youth
Editors'
Note: Everyone has an
opinion about youth ministry. Parents, pastors, and the youth themselves have
expectations and demands that don't always overlap. But the rash of dire
statistics about the ineffectiveness of youth ministry has prompted rethinking
in these ranks. So we devote one day per week this month to exploring several
issues in youth ministry, including its history, problems, and biblical
mandate. The Gospel Coalition thanks Cameron Cole and the leadership team of Rooted: A Theology Conference for Student Ministry for their help in compiling this
series. Cathedral Church of the Advent in Birmingham, Alabama, will host their 2012 conference
from August 9 to 11. Speakers Ray Ortlund, Timothy George, and Mary Willson
will expound on the conference theme, "Adopted: The Beauty of Grace."
**********The
current generation of youth is an interesting one.
As I've worked with
and studied about youth today, it seems safe to say that they are not members
of the Enlightenment, nor do they hold the modern notion that Reason can lead
us to all Truth that is just beyond the horizon of our current knowledge.
And yet what do
they as a generation believe?
Though they are
postmodern chronologically, I believe it would also be wrong to say that they
are postmodern. Unlike postmoderns, they are desperate for a grand story to
make sense of the world around them. They want meaning. They are desperate for
a true hope.
But hope is an
elusive target in the world. Many of their parents have put their hope in the
economy, politics, and the military strength of America. Their children,
however, see a failing economy, political unrest, and an ongoing terrorist
threat. The future doesn't seem that rosy. So what's left for them to hope in
if they don't have the future? The moment. And happiness is king of the moment.
Youth pursue
happiness, but the means given by the world---shopping, entertainment, sex,
social media---undermine the very endeavor. Pleasure is fleeting. Relations,
often only surface deep, get messy quickly. Entertainment can't provide lasting
satisfaction. In the end, happiness in the world is little more than momentary
escape from the realities of the world.
Desperately
Searching
Given the
circumstances, it's no surprise that many youth are restless, insecure, jaded,
and desperately searching for meaning to explain all the hurt and suffering
they see around them, meaning for their very existence. Sadly, many within the
church offer nothing more substantive than the vaporous teachings of the world.
In some churches, "youth group" has become synonymous with
over-the-top games, entertainment, and shallow teaching. They are told, yes,
life here on earth is a mess, but don't worry, one day you'll die and go to
heaven. There things will be right. In the meantime, want to see how many
marshmallows I can stick in my mouth?
Do we really
believe the faith of our youth is so pointless that the best God has for them
now is a temporary escape from the world on Wednesday night and Sunday morning?
This sort of ministry just reinforces a belief in the meaninglessness of this
life.
Where are meaning
and hope found? In Jesus.
I am firmly
convinced that what today's youth need most is the gospel of Christ Jesus the
Lord. He is the one in whom the fullness of God is found, and he's the one in
whom we are filled (Col 2:9-10).
Moreover, he is the one who gives meaning to this life.
He didn't come to
escape the world but to redeem it. When you read the Gospels, you see the way
in which Jesus and his kingdom brought redemption to this world by overcoming
physical evil (emotional and physical sickness), metaphysical evil (Satan and
the demons), and moral evil (sin).
And the amazing
message of the gospel is that we are transferred into Jesus' kingdom of
redemption and the forgiveness of sin (Col 1:13-14),
a kingdom we pray comes "on earth as it is in heaven" (Matt 6:10).
It's a kingdom of meaning for today that heals the broken and strengthens the
tempted as they live in the world (but are not of the world).
This is why, then,
Paul pleas for the early Christians in Colossae to "walk in [Jesus],
rooted and built up in him and established in the faith, just as you were
taught, abounding in thanksgiving" (Col 2:7).
But the assumption
Paul makes is that all Christians---including young ones---have been taught
this kingdom-bringing Jesus,the Messiah as presented in the Old and New
Testaments. This is the Jesus in whom youth today can truly root their faith
and be fed, grown, and established.
His
People, the Church
Where is Jesus
found? In the worship of his people, the church. As others have said, the way we come to know Jesus
is through the means he gave us: Scripture, true Christian fellowship, the
sacraments, and prayer. These are the practices that by faith renew their minds
in such a way that enables youth to view and live in the world with purpose and
meaning as followers of Jesus. These are the practices that by faith force
youth from their technologically imposed isolation, discourage their
entitlement, and lead them to a spirit of humility and repentance. These are
the practices that by faith expose their dependence on Jesus and remind them of
their need for grace.
And these are the
practices that are to define our worship as the church. Certainly, some of
these practices can take place in youth-only venues, but at its heart, these
are full-body practices of the corporate church: young and old worshiping
together.
I love youth
ministry, I really do. But the thing is, we have to be sure that we don't
segregate the youth for our sake and theirs. They are part of the body of
Christ too, and no part of the body can remain healthy if one of its members is
cut off and put to the side. If we segregate the youth, not only do we lose all
they have to teach us, but we also inadvertently teach them that the church is
really only for adults---those who are married and have families of their own.
And then we wonder why they don't get involved in church as college students or
young singles, when in reality, we've been telling them all along that the
church isn't yet for them.
My prayer is that
as we minister to a generation starving for meaning, we won't lose sight of the
reality that what these youth need is Jesus, and that he is most fully offered
within the community of the church, of which they are a vital part.