Are We Playing It Safe In Youth Ministry?

September 27, 2009 at 3:24 pm (Uncategorized)

This post is from the Rethinking Youth Ministry blog.  Written by Brian Kirk, I found his insights to be interesting and challenging for us today.

Mark

meek%20mildMy old ritual, as youth group would wrap-up on Sunday evenings and the young’ns were heading home, was to say to them “Be Safe.” Isn’t that a strange way to say goodbye? Of course, all I meant was “Have a good week and come back in one piece” but is that really the best advice we have to give to our youth? They live in a world of school violence, AIDS, drugs, computer predators, terrorism. Is being safe all it’s cracked up to be? What about when it comes to our faith? Is teaching our youth to “play it safe” our best option? Probably not, but are we willing to lead youth ministries that encourage real risk?

One of my favorite passages in C.S. Lewis’ The Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe finds the young protagonists chatting with Mr. and Mrs. Beaver. The Beavers are trying to describe Aslan, the Lion (a metaphorical stand-in for Christ in the story). Lucy, taken aback by the notion of meeting a lion, asks, “But is he safe?” Mr. Beaver replies. “Safe? Who said anything about safe? ‘Course he isn’t. But he’s good.”

Do our youth ministries too often offer a Jesus who is “safe?” A Jesus who asks little of us beyond giving intellectual assent to a list of religious beliefs? A Jesus who says, “Just agree that I’m your Lord and Savior and then I’ll leave you alone to your video game nights and your road trips and your skateboard parks?” We know that for the early church, following Jesus was not just about committing to a list of do’s and don’ts or pledging allegiance to religious dogma. For them following Jesus meant walking through life the way he walked, living and loving as he lived and loved. Theologian Paul Tillich describes this as making the spirit of Christ a reality by “participating in his very being.” In other words, following Christ is not primarily about abstract belief but about a way of being in the world.

And if we dared to do this in our youth ministry, we’d better be prepared for trouble. Because following Jesus with our youth — really following Jesus — will be anything but safe. Because here is what it would look like:

  • Radically re-visioning the world in which we live — even though it’s a world in which we are pretty comfortable (Do our youth rooms really need a mini-fridge and an Xbox or should our priorities be elsewhere?).
  • Letting go of all our old distinctions of rich/poor, male/female, gay/straight, young/old, powerful/powerless, respected/shamed, cool/uncool, popular/unpopular (Who is not in your youth group because they don’t think they’d be welcome in the church? What are you doing to extend to them the hand of Christian hospitality?)
  • Opposing violence and working for peace (Is it time for a protest march?)
  • Deciding that sharing our faith means more than convincing other people of our religious point of view or showing publicly that we are more pious than the next person. It’s about how we live and love in this world. (“Preach the Gospel always and, if necessary, use words.”)
  • Speaking out against intolerance and injustice and calling on the Church to do the same. (How do your youth see the intersection of their faith and their attitudes about healthcare, poverty, AIDS, abortion, the death penalty, racism, etc.?)
  • Leaving the comfort of our youth rooms to go out and literally feed the poor, clothe the naked, care for the lonely, heal the sick. (Can we do this every Sunday and not just on the yearly mission trip?)

Of course, none of this stuff is safe. Some of it may even be dangerous. Some of your teens will jump at the chance to be world-changers. Some will leave and find a youth group that is more entertaining and less challenging. And know that when you start messing with the present order of things, those who benefit from that order will always see what you are doing as a threat. Perhaps this is why churches work so hard to keep youth pacified with video games and big screen TVs and trips to Six Flags and their own rooms far, far away from everyone else. We figure if we keep them distracted enough, they might not notice that this Jesus guy really is a radical, dangerous troublemaker calling us to overturn the tables of the world and work for something completely different.

So, how do you know if your group is following the radical Jesus or just playing it safe? Ask yourself: Is our ministry meeting any resistance from those, youth and adults alike, who are happy with the cultural status quo? Have we confused the gospel with our culture’s recipe for respectability, comfortableness, safety? Does the Jesus we follow demand anything of our youth other than being members in the “nice people” club? Is the Jesus we share with our youth more like a kitty cat or Aslan the Lion?

I know many of you out there are leading “dangerous” youth ministries. We’d like to hear from you and know what you’re doing. You may just inspire the rest of us to stop playing it safe.

–Brian

2 Comments

  1. Nellie Seigneur said,

    I like much of this and it is good to ask questions as Rilke said. . . I especially like the challenge of “Leaving the comfort of our youth rooms to go out and literally feed the poor, clothe the naked, care for the lonely, heal the sick. (Can we do this every Sunday and not just on the yearly mission trip?) ” – kids are ready to serve and providing opportunities can kick start so many students’ faith, you see it on large mission trips and i look forward to smaller local ones. . .when we took some high school kids to north portland to help with the sudan families, they were impacted, that whole idea of faith into action. I remember Tony Campolo challenging us in the late 80s with this idea of getting kids in our youth groups to serve outside of the boxes of their churches and now 20 years later, it is still an issue and becoming more recognized…
    Great reminders…

    cornelia seigneur
    west linn, oregon

  2. Brian Kirk said,

    Hi. Glad you found our post helpful. Hopefully we will see some shifts in the coming decade that will engage youth more meaningfully in the life of the whole Church, and not just the isolated activities of the youth room. Peace, Brian Kirk

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