Tuesday

The Future of Youth Ministry



There's been some conversation about the future of youth ministry.
What it looked like in the past, it's current state, the trends of the future.
I enjoy these conversations and contribute to them.

But...

(There's always a big but somewhere, right?)

I woke up with a thought about what the future of youth ministry is (and what it has always been) and maybe there are moments when I forget this truth.

The future of youth ministry sits in your junior high Sunday school rooms.
It dwells with the youngest person in your care. It smells of body odor and
freshly squeezed juicy fruit.

The future of youth ministry depends on what we do with the middle schooler sitting in the chairs every weekend. I know this as I woke up thinking about a core group of kids who I connected with during my first year at Highland Park.

Caroline was in the 7th grade. So were all of her friends. I had wondered what they would be like when they graduated from high school. Now they are graduating. And what are they doing? They're working at camps serving teens with special needs. They're dedicating their undergraduate degrees to learning about social justice. They're finding ways to help children with their reading and their speech. They've become state champs in track & field, and given their summers to loving others. They, even before the diploma is in their hands, are asking me, "how can I help you in youth ministry." Alyssa told me how much she cares for the middle schoolers. Kyle is hooked, he's a sophomore. Somewhere along they line, they received the gift that comes in youth ministry and want to return it

It's why I'm a youth pastor.
It's why I said yes.
It's why I'll keep saying yes because I know that the work of God is to believe in the one He has sent.

Take a look at those seats, there sit the future of youth ministry.
They will be our volunteer leaders.
They will create things that we can't dream up.
They will risk more than we have.
They will ask hard questions.
They will take our place.

Look in the mirror.
Ask yourself, who am I investing in to do this (and more) in the next 7-10 years?
Then look into your youth group, to the smallest and "least of these" and continue to pour into them everything you've got.

Congratulations Class of 2012. You did it.





Saturday

Thursday

words to build a life on (or, at least a few months on)



The past couple of months have been filled with some roller-coasting, stomach dropping, fear gripping, excitement inducing, heart palpitating, adrenaline pumping, life-loving laugh worthy moments.

How is it possible to feel so wonderful and afraid and excited at the same time? While the ride is creepishly fun, the exhale that comes when the ride is over is worth the price of admission.

I felt like I stepped off of the coaster yesterday, onto the solid ground of peace. The crazy part is that it left me wanting more of this faith that has GROWN larger because of the ride. Did I really just write that? That I want to ride again? Maybe not tomorrow. But I really do look forward to the next time that my faith can grow in ways I didn't think possible.

I've always loved music and it's been my close friend lately. Thanks to my Spotify app, I could pull up so many anthems and prayers in a moment and go there... to a place of prayer or abandonment or questioning or crying out or tear-filled celebrating. It happened on beaches, in the sun, in the rain, on treadmills, in my office, on my bike, in my bed, in swimming pools, on trails, in the wild, and in the quiet of my closet.

I started sharing some of what I was listening to with friends so that they could listen in words that weren't my own, words that in many moments fit my feelings so well. They could sit with me (even across the miles), they could pray, they could look at me in wide eyed bewilderment when Jekyll and Hyde took over, they would laugh-snort with me, remind me, speak truth, and lend me their hearts when mine didn't seem like it was big enough.

I give these songs to the beautifully messy and wonderful people called friends. Someday, I will get all of you together in one room, gather you up from the coasts and everywhere in between for a festivus like no other. And we'll dance....and laugh and the memories will be smeared over table linens and photos we edited on our iPhones.

For you: one gloriously schizophrenic playlist.

We Will All Be Changed: Seryn
Awake My Soul: Mumford & Sons
Eyes Wide Open: Gotye
Spark: City Harmonic
Mountaintop: City Harmonic
All of Me: Matt Hammitt
Let Go: Matt Hammitt
Oh Great God Give Us Rest: David Crowder Band
I Am Set Free: All Sons & Daughters
Man In The Mirror: Michael Jackson
Wonderall: Oasis
I'm Coming Out: Diana Ross
Put Your Arms Around Me: The Hawk In Paris
Something Beautiful: Need to Breathe
Banana Pancakes: Jack Johnson




Tuesday

A teenagers heart.


I took some time today to record prayer requests that were written down at a prayer station we made for middle schoolers a few weeks ago. They were breaking our hearts as we read them. Some of them made our jaws hurt from the smiles they triggered. All of them caused us to believe in the work we get to do even more.

I'm grateful for our church who made some extra room for us to grow on Wednesday nights.
If you don't have a teenager in your life right now, find one and know that many of them are going through similar things. Love them like your own and be the church God has called you to be.

They are praying for siblings to stop smoking.
They are praying for their parents job situations.
They wish they could see their parents MORE.
They are praying for their friends who don't have their hearts close to the Lords heart.
They are asking for help with their words (gossiping and judging).
They pray for friends and family BY NAME.
They cry out to God for their dads to love Jesus as much as they do.
They want their moms and dads to know that God loves them so much.

They ask for strength.
They give their worries about their grandparents dying to God.
They don't understand heart attacks.
They pray for the drama to stop.
They pray for people to be nice.
They pray for their brothers and sisters to start coming to church too.
They lift of their moms and ask for God to be real in their lives.
They don't want to be in trouble.

They love cats.
They ask Jesus to help them not to have a negative attitude.
They are coping with death.
They pray for their field trips.
They deal with the reality of cancer and ask God WHY?
They want to be a light in their friend groups.
They want to be able to find a home just as much as their parents do.

They pray for their friends grandmothers.
They pray to be liked, loved, noticed.
They realize that their imagination is getting out of hand.
They ask for healing.
They forgive people.
They ask for God to make them shine brighter.
They hope that their friends aren't pregnant.

They lift up distant family. Aunts, uncles, cousins...
They miss their grandmas and grandpas.
They are praying to be home-schooled.
They don't want to be treated like their ideas are a joke.
They feel the pain of their parents injuries.
They are scared about big family moves across oceans and away from security.
They pray for their parents who serve in the military.

They'd love some help with temptation.
They don't want to believe lies or negative things.
They need help at school.
They pray for God to make tough things easier.
They want to stop worrying so much.
They love their Nana's and don't want them to be sick.
They pray for people that don't have friends.
They like turtles.

They are obsessed with a boy.
They need help focusing.
They used to not like girls, now they do, and they're not so sure what to feel about that.
They feel like middle school is unbearable.
They feel like middle school is awesome and don't want to leave.
They are scared to go to high school.
They can't wait to get to middle school.

They feel each others pain.
They hurt when their friends hurt.
They ask big questions.
They feel more comfortable telling their parents sorry over text than talking to them face to face.
They ask for forgiveness.
They hand over their fears.
They don't want to be afraid of the guy at school that bothers them.
They want to be pure.
They want to know what their purpose is.

They want to have fun.
They ask God to help them have fun.
They worry about not having fun.

They are sorry for some choices they've made.
They love their families and wish they didn't treat them poorly.
They pray for family members and friends to be free from addiction.
They don't want to be tempted by porn.
They are bullied.
They are tired of being a bully.
They had sex.
They need answers.
They want to stop getting questioned. They want to be heard.

Praying for you friends. We love you and thank God for your amazing hearts--growing up in Jesus.

Monday

Holiness: Loving those who quietly struggle.

For a long time I've been working through what it means to love those in our community who quietly struggle with their sexual orientation. I wrote a blog about it a few weeks ago for Slant33. It was published today if you'd like to read three perspectives. I would love to have more people sharing their hearts, experiences, insights, and thoughts on this.

How a smile grows.


Self-reflection has been as much a part of my life as breathing. In the past two months I've had to dig down deep to find out what was at the core of this person that I perceive to be me, but suddenly wasn't so sure about.

Life does this to us. We can never know what tomorrow holds. (Maybe why Jesus told us not to try to wrap our minds around it.) But we do have this moment. And my moment, the one I'm living now as I type out an unfiltered post is full of confidence.

In the past (and by "past" I'm thinking everyday before yesterday) I felt a little ashamed for being confident. When I take personality assessments they describe  me "type A", "high D", "extrovert", "otter". When stuff like this rolls out I wrestle with the results because I feel very opposite of these things a lot of the time and I wonder if the results are what I have adapted to be or what I really am.

Regardless, I'm waiting for the day when I take one of these assessments and it gets me right.
Congratulations, you really aren't sure about yourself, and either are we. Good job. You're just like everyone else who has taken this test.

Words on my most recent DISC insight tell me that I can be "driving", "daring",  "determined", "Persuasive", "inspiring", "Poised", "Outgoing", "Active", "Independent. Not so bad.

But words like "self-involved", "restless" "careless",  aren't really happy words or words I wish to become incarnate. Some thoughts surrounding these "possibilities" mess with my head.  They cause me to doubt. They make me miss the person who used to be and resent the person I am becoming.

Enter life. The layers of our life in the last few weeks have been so complex. The opportunity for relational investment and potential for change has been so thick that I started to feel paralyzed under twenty mattresses.

Every where I turned I was faced with identity questions. When I asked God for answers. His only answer was "look at me." When I plead, tell me how to handle this, tell me how to love, show me what I should be doing, give me a sign. I heard nothing but "look at me." So I kept looking. Reading. Praying. Wandering around outside. Singing songs. Cleaning out closets. Finishing stuff. Having difficult conversations. Facing my giants. Asking for help. Looking literally anywhere and everywhere for a burning bush moment when I would see and understand who I am and what I'm to be. Still waiting.

Here's what's happening. As I was looking for answers. God was revealing his nature. As I was hard pressed and feeling suffocated. He was relieving my burdens. When I felt misunderstood and broken, I saw him as misunderstood and broken. When I felt the fire of a revolutionary burning in me. I saw the fire that was first in our Lord, the greatest revolutionary of us all.

Replacement. It's what's happening to me.
In 2007, when my first daughter was born, my first book was also born. It was a banner year when I felt like I was flying, all of my dreams coming true all at once. It was overwhelming to think that I could be blessed with double miracles. Just days after her birth, pain set in, circumstances that fought to steal my joy and completely break me.

What would I have done without a surrogate family who took us in, tended to us, passed our new little girl around, fed us guacamole and let us cry over their dinner table? What would I have done as the reality of my pain sunk deep into the shifting sands of my thoughts about our future? It was at that time when I knew for certain that I had no power in my own strength. There was none.

The irony is nestled in the first book I wrote to teenage girls--on the joy of replacement. When we take the lies of the world and replace them with the truth of the Word. I have shared about this process and about how it has the power to transform us.

Was I listening? Maybe I believed it. But living it is something else altogether. It's like talking about how good it is to exercise. But deep down I realize that it I believe it's better to eat ice cream.

Here I am six years after writing the words I need to hear and speaking them just about everywhere I get invited, I'm finally hearing them.What I didn't know was how uncomfortable it is to replace things. When my soul seems opened and bare it's more than vulnerable. It's pure nakedness.

We've all been in a restroom and the door doesn't have a lock. Someone unknowingly comes in as you're taking care of business. The shock that comes next is too hard to write about. You blush. You shriek. The person opening the door is just as mortified.

And this is what happens when we ask to be changed. God changes us. And it starts with taking an inventory with what's inside. Ughhhhhhh. It's my turn. Except there's no surprise on God's face. Only do we in our ashamedness (thanks Adam. thanks Eve.) want to run and hide under a rock.

To put flesh on this idea of someone loving us deeply and unconditionally I believe God gave us each other. Beautiful human people who are all being changed. I recently went through a rough spot with a friend where I had to face some of my fears, ask hard questions, listen and try to understand. It was a situation where it would have been easier to just get out, call it a day, and move on. But it's not how it's supposed to be. That's not how love works. Love is patient, it is kind, it forgives, it sees you naked and doesn't shriek and run away (although it may laugh with you about it later).

Scalpel please. I am opened.

What's inside is a mix of all of the good and the bad and the messy and disgusting things that make me who I am. As I am opened and letting God take out the trash. The trash fights back and grabs onto anything it can in an attempt to stick around longer. Like that smelly cat who just won't go away because you've been feeding it way to long. When we try to catch one and take it to the SPCA to get some love from a real family it lashes at you with razor sharp claws and ruins your new dress. Stupid cat, why did I let you keep coming around here anyway?

As I've worked through some things these last few weeks I've let some of the cats loose. I got rid of the food and decided to not be a cat lady anymore. I want to be whole.

I want my relationships to be beautifully messy and awkward and just as open as I am. Because we need each other. I want God's sweet spirit to be my greatest assessment that trumps all of the labels that become mine when I live and breathe and speak.

I read something last night in a book I'm reading called, Bloom. I immediately stopped reading at a paragraph about confidence. This was it. This is why I feel so broken in my confidence. Why I feel like a fraud most of the time. Why I am still wondering how the heck I got to be the way that I am.

"Confidence doesn't always come in surges. Sometimes--lots of times--it brews unbeknownst to us, building during the times we feel least confident--through the tears, the questioning, the self-doubt, the begging God to make it better. Confidence, like contentment, is earned, paved stone by stone until you finally turn back and realize it has all be pieced together to creative something strong. Confidence is a process."

When people ask me how I can be so confident, they must know, that it has come to me this way--in my questioning, in my crying out for help, in quiet tears and broken pieces. Stone by stone a path is forming and I am excited about it.

I smile as I write this knowing that an influx of confidence is mine today, not because I'm so incredible but because I've learned through some not-so-incredible moments that I am ok. I am defined by another measure--the measure of Christ. Perfection.

Ah, what a relief as I love and am loved by my kids. What a relief as I love and am loved by my husband. What a relief as I love and am loved by my friends. What a relief as I love and am loved by our ministry leaders. It's liberating to know the deep and encompassing love of Christ as it give us confidence to smile--even when the cats try to creep back in.

I hope to write more in the coming months. But from the very beginning. Instead of tip-toeing around things that made me want to throw forks at people (I'm a sissy, knives would never be an option), or things that shattered my heart into a million pieces, or things that I saw in others that I just couldn't bare to accept because I felt responsible somehow. I want to share about how I grew up and how I got messed up. How I found hope and what hope leads me now. I feel like I've sort of been doing this--but guardedly as if some big green monster was going to get me if I got too close to the truth.

But just as I know Santa isn't real, I know that the defeat that pushes me from being open is also a lie. And I don't have to listen to lies anymore.

Here I am. Smiling. Confident. And thankful for all of the moments, from simple to profound, that have made me this way.

Wednesday

When My Children Walk With Jesus, I'll Thank You Again: Insights on Raising Your Kids in the Church


Last week I spent an hour with Bill Hybels and his daughter Shauna Niequist. She shared some things her parents did to help her have what we might call "sticky faith" as an adult. She didn't always want to live the way her parents had modeled or asked (does anyone ever do this?) and their journey was revealing and helpful to see how a child can boomerang back with a zeal for the things she once tried to walk away from. Her insights were pure and spot on. His responses to her insights were wildly transparent, honest, and honoring to his daughter, son, and wife.

I've been thinking about it for over a week. It's hit me at a time in my life when I'm weighing the importance of certain things over others. Because of some of the stories they shared, my view of parenting as a leader in the church needs to be adjusted. I'm grateful for the way they shared. So grateful for the body of Christ.

Some things I'm going to adjust and some things I want to start doing:

1) Put the fire out.

Seriously, my hair is on fire most of the time. It's time to take a calmer approach to parenting and realize that it's ok to not be perfect. It's ok to not get some things right sometimes. And it's better to realize and accept these things in conversations with our families in stead of trying to cover them up, band-aid, or fan the flames.

2) Make it clear that my children are not employees of the church.

They are members of our family. They are members of the community of faith. I would love for them to feel that way more than they feel like they have to be involved because we are involved.

3) Make our house a shelter.

It's important to me to let there be more private moments that are cherished between us--making our house a sanctuary and a safe place to live and grow. (Feeling that one on the Facebook/ twitter/ Instagram front...ouch)

4) Give my kids some space to walk their own spiritual paths.

I feel like I do this when I don't make Kirra pray at night. Often times she doesn't want to, so I don't make her. I want to give her and Mya space to learn and grow at their own pace. She'll learn to pray as she watches us, and she'll figure it out in her own way.

5) I don't ever want to say "what will the church think"?

I hope that my children know that I'm willing to do life with them on their terms. I don't want to ever break relationship with my children when they struggle. What Bible tells us to yell, throw tantrums, slam doors, refuse to talk to each other, avoid hard conversations, ignore one another? I really don't want any of this to happen in our house. And I need community to help me stay away from the default mode of isolation in this. Ah, how I ruin progress so often with self-inflicted murmuring. I want to be a part of a community that will help me push through on this, not give up, and have conversations with us.

6) Always talk about the joys and privileges of being a part of the church.

I want the positives they hear to outweigh the garbage. I want that "extra vacation" week the day after Christmas (thank you church!) to be what Bill and his family liked to call "sweet revenge". When we're right there in the middle of intense ministry times, when every weekend before Christmas is spent, and when my kids are lending me out to other church kids. I hope we can say, as we float away on rafts in the gulf of Mexico, that yes, revenge is sweet!

7) Make traditions.

I've always been a big fan of celebrating BIG on birthdays. I guess because there were a few birthdays when I felt invisible. I want to celebrate with my children. Pray with them. Laugh so hard that we pee a little. New Year's Eve will be a time when we rally together and share the blessings of our year. I love the thought of sitting down together when they are older and rallying around all that God has done in our lives each year. Thanksgiving will be better for it. Vacation will be better for it. We'll all be healthier, happier, holier for it.

Thank you Bill and Shauna. Thank you for giving me a glimpse into the future to see what we could have. Thank you for setting an example for us, sharing your experiences so we wouldn't be at the end of our ropes. I want to tell a story like yours. When I'm decades into ministry and both of our daughters are joyfully serving Christ. I'll say, thank you Lord for people who were willing to be vulnerable, transparent, and honest about what it's like and how we might be able to learn from it. Thank you from my heart for this special gift.

Btw, I WILL be reading these books (Bittersweet & Cold Tangerines) this month.

Love what Anne Lammott says about books.


“For some of us, books are as important as almost anything else on earth. What a miracle it is that out of these small, flat, rigid squares of paper unfolds world after world after world, worlds that sing to you, comfort and quiet or excite you. Books help us understand who we are and how we are to behave. They show us what community and friendship mean; they show us how to live and die.” 
 Anne Lamott, Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life


Looking forward to learning more on how to behave from Shauna. Life is sweet.