Quantcast
Channel: Youth Specialties
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1924

Leading Without Power in Youth Ministry (Part 2)

$
0
0

We’re excited to have Marko as one of our NYWC speakers. This blog post is a great start to the conversations he’ll be navigating in his seminar: Leading Without Power. Check out more information HERE. And be sure to read Part 1 of this short series if you missed it last week. 


A few years ago I was struggling—obsessing, really—with my income. Being self-employed can have that impact. In my 3½ years of self-employment, I’d yet to have a significant financial problem; but that didn’t keep me from freaking out from time to time. I looked at my little tracking spreadsheet, and my mind started to wander down completely useless and unhelpful pathways.

I’m not going to have enough money. How will I pay my kid’s college tuition? What if this is the beginning of the end? We’re going to be living in the gutter soon!

But there I was, a month later, realizing that God provided, yet again. It wasn’t one of those dramatic stories I’ve often heard of an anonymous envelope of cash in the post. Instead, it was through the most regular and mundane of provisions: some projects I’d been working on came together.

And I was reminded of a connection that I’ve learned many times. I’ve been speaking and writing a bit on the subject of biblical hope for the last few years. And one of the points I always make is that hope isn’t something we can make. I can’t bear down and try harder and suddenly have more hope.

Instead, hope (not optimism!) is a gift from God.

Hope comes to me, usually in the midst of suffering, dissatisfaction with the way things are, and an honest cry out to God.

When I talk to teenagers about the Fruit of the Spirit, I try to make a similar point. We don’t choose to be fruity. Fruit is a result of a life connected to the Spirit. It’s a gift, really. And our all the effort in the world, even with the correct leverage, won’t suddenly result in love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,  faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Effort might give me hemorrhoids, but not much else.

There’s so much I try to control. Finances, hope, and spiritual fruit are only three of a very, very long list. And I think I’m learning that my open hands toward God—a position of release and request—is the stance that ultimately gives me what I truly long for.

This is true in every aspect of youth ministry also.

So many of our youth ministry efforts are about control. We try to control the behavior of teenagers. We position ourselves in an attempt to control church leader’s opinions of us and our work. We control programs like lab scientists, as if the perfect mix of this and that will necessarily result in engagement, attendance, compliance and spiritual growth.

But, ultimately, we all know that it’s God who brings about transformation in the lives of teenagers, not our crafty talks or hipster songs or The Best Game Ever.

So then: what role do I play?

I mean: I’m supposed to do something, right? Whether in my own interior life or my family’s well being or the spiritual formation of the teenagers in my ministry: I’m not just supposed to sit and wait, believing that God will do something, right?

That’s the tension there for me. Part of me believes that a little more sitting and waiting on God is exactly what’s called for, and just might be the antidote to my ongoing forays into control and manipulation.

But I also believe that God invites me to play an active role. I get to participate!

I need to be reminded that my active participation with God looks like me being the kid with the weird lunch at the miraculous feeding of the 5000. 

Could Jesus have fed the crowd without the kid’s participation? Sure.

Was the kid necessary for the will of God to happen that day? Not really. 

Would the miracle have happened were it not for the kid’s involvement? We don’t know.

But we can be confident about this: that kid would never have been the same. You know he told that story to his grandkids.

My personal finances. The hope in my heart. The fruit of the Spirit in my life. The spiritual growth of the teenagers in my charge. They all beckon with the same invitation: Step up, open up your hands, release control, and give your “lunch.”


markoMark Oestreicher (Marko) is a veteran youth worker and founding partner in The Youth Cartel, providing resources, training and coaching for church youth workers. The author of dozens of books, including Youth Ministry 3.0, and Hopecasting: Finding, Keeping and Sharing the Things Unseen, Marko is a sought after speaker, writer and consultant. Marko lives in San Diego with his wife Jeannie and young adult and teenage children, Riley and Max. Marko’s blog: whyismarko.com.

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1924

Trending Articles