Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Thoughts from the Orange Conference - Students

On my personal blog, I will be doing a series of posts on my thoughts from the Orange Conference.  A youth ministry convention I just attended outside Atlanta with 2 of our volunteers.  Here are some of my thoughts from the conference that have to do with 24/7.

I've only given bullet points, because I want you to have to ask questions.  So post a comment, call me or e-mail me if you want to know more.


  • The 4G gospel – we were created “Good” and of great worth to God.  “Guilt” from our sin separates us from that goodness and from God.  “Grace” inspired God to send Jesus to make a way for our relationship with God to be reconciled, and it is “Gratitude” for what God has done that motivates us to turn from evil do good.
  • Set specific goals for each year (ie for the freshmen, for the sophomores, etc…) and communicate those goals to each student, mentor and parent.
  • Connect them to service, not to a person or a program.  People and programs can be taken away, but if they learn to love God through serving others, they can build new relationships and programs.
  • Match-make inter-generational partnerships 1 at a time.
  • Provide them with specific actions they can take to be missionaries at school
  • Invite them to invite others
  • Don’t just assimilate them into the youth ministry; assimilate them out of it as well.
  • When it comes to your program Only do what you can do with excellence
  • When it comes to relationships remember that God is more interested in your availability than in your ability.
  • Teach them how to study the bible; don’t just tell them to do it.  For starters try this: “Pray, Read, Think, Write, Pray.”  Pray – that you will understand what you are about to read, Read – keep it small enough to digest, Think of something you can do with what you've read, Write it down (no longer than a tweet or Facebook status), Pray – that God will help you practice what you've read.
  • Give them goals then can attain.  (one example- Going from 0 bible study to 7 days a week would be great, but they may feel like failures if they don’t meet that, shoot for 4 days for starters, and work up from there)
  • Remember that the lesson isn't over until it has been applied
  • Teach their parents about grace – teen years are when they should be transitioning from doing what is right out of guilt (or fear of punishment) to doing it out of gratitude for the Grace God showed them when he sent Jesus.  Grace will need to be modeled in the home.
  • Change the gauge of success – from results to steps.  (one example: rather than how many friends have gotten saved, to how many times you shared your testimony.)
  • Students won’t believe they are significant until they are given something significant to do.
Now I hope that something you just read provoked some thoughts, and that you will share those thoughts by calling, emailing or posting a comment!

Hopefully we will have blog posts from Jenny and Leigh-anna coming soon.

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