Josh GriffinMore PostsVader, Did You Know?

Speechless. Perfection.

Thanks to D. Scott for thinking of me and sending it my way!

JG

Josh GriffinMore PostsThe Landing “You Are Not Alone” Video

This weekend we played a new promo video for The Landing that was made entirely by students. It was incredible! Probably one of the best videos to come out of our whole church in a while honestly, I was blown away by how it was made. I’ve asked the volunteer who led the student project to share more about the making of the video which hopefully I’ll be able to post later this week, too. If you’re interested in learning more about The Landing program for your church, click right on over here.

Designed for junior high and high school students, The Landing give you everything you need to lead young people in making Jesus the foundation of their lives, avoiding or breaking cycles of dysfunction, and experiencing God’s incredible forgiveness and healing.

JG

Josh GriffinMore PostsSaddleback Church Adult Services Announcement Video

Our adult services have started to do weekend announcements via video this weekend – this week’s featured HSM students packing shoeboxes! Wanted to give you an idea of how our big church is doing announcements these days, too!

JG

Comments 3 View Comments December 7, 2011

Josh GriffinMore Posts4 Reasons Why We Have Youth Group on the Weekend

I get asked a lot why we have youth group on the weekend – and honestly it is a good question since even context I’ve experiences both as a teenager and as a youth pastor before Saddleback was that we did youth group in the middle of the week. So why don’t we, and what are some things you should consider about moving to the weekend? I was answering just that question to a youth pastor over email this week and thought I should expand on those thoughts here on the blog.

Here’s the top 4 reasons that HSM has chosen a weekend service over services another night of the week:

… to make space for adults services
From what I understand historically (I wasn’t at Saddleback when this happened) Pastor Rick asked HSM to free up seats in the worship center for adults and to have youth group meeting simultaneously to the adult services. The main reason we shifted was basically to help the church accommodate significant growth and give it room to keep moving forward.

… Sunday is when visitors attend anyhow
If you don’t have youth services or a presence of some sort on the weekend – you are missing out on a potential audience. We’ve found that if a family is going to visit it is during Sunday services, so having youth group then gives us the chance to meet/connect them right from their first time through the doors.

… to offer youth group at a convenient time for parents
Without a doubt the best time for students to attend youth group is while their parents are already doing something at the church, too. I talked to a youth worker this week who was struggling with youth group meeting on Wednesday nights for this very reason. As students get older and can drive this becomes less of a big deal, but it at least is a factor in our decision when to have services, too.

… to not take out students out another night of the week
This one is similar to the one above, but tweaked a little. Everyone is super busy – me included! Having youth group as part of our church services help consolodate the ask that is made for time during the week.

I’ve done youth group on Wednesday nights, Saturday nights, Sunday mornings, Sunday night – they all work! But hoope these few reasons why we landed on the weekend helps your processing and vision, too!

JG

Josh GriffinMore PostsThis is Church Video

Pastor Rick used this video in his message in our adults services this weekend. Looks like an organization called Get Out The Box made it, good message!

JG

Josh GriffinMore PostsHSM Weekend in Review: Volume 163

Weekend Teaching Series: Stories Weekend (1-off)
Sermon in a Sentence: Students share their lives, experiences and faith with their peers.
Service Length: 80 minutes

Understandable Message: This weekend we didn’t have a typical message – it was time for another Stories weekend. This weekend 6 students shared their stories combined with great music made for an awesome weekend. The students shared on many topics drawn from their experiences, including eating disorders, self-image, faith, loves, abuse, sumer camp highs, salvation, walk with God, worship, serving and much more. The stories were inspiring and incredible – I would highly recommend you trying out a service like this in your youth group!

Element of Fun/Positive Environment: This weekend we played a modified version of this “no services” video that played great as well as a new video promoting The Landing (Celebrate Recovery for students). The opener this week was a super fun rendition of the 12 Days of Christmas with a whole group of energetic students on stage, too. Students in the band, did lights, sound, cameras, control room, greeting and speaking!

Music Playlist: 12 Days of Christmas, I Found a Love, Hosanna, Burning Ones, With Everything

Favorite Moment: Without a doubt it is the students sharing – the attention when a student takes the stage is absolutely incredible. There was no pastor on stage this weekend, but there was plenty of preaching!

Up next: Good Neighbor Weekend (no HSM services – more details later this week)

Josh GriffinMore PostsHSM Weekend in Review: Volume 162

Weekend Teaching Series: Thankfulness (Thanksgiving 1-off)
Sermon in a Sentence: Fix our eyes on Jesus – and be thankful for everything.
Service Length: 62 minutes

Message: this weekend I thought it might be fun to change up the format and let you SEE part of the weekend service instead of just hearing about it. Here are two clips of Jessica teaching over Thanksgiving weekend in HSM:


Fix your eyes on something solid… like God! from HSM on Vimeo.


Stop the winky faces!!! from HSM on Vimeo.

Favorite Moment: Jessica is a great speaker – she doesn’t get to speak too often in HSM and that needs to change!

Up next: STORIES (1-off)

Josh GriffinMore PostsPOLL: Bus Driver’s License


This week’s poll isn’t for everyone – but I’m curious whether or not you can drive a bus. In my first church, I was asked by the leadership to get a Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) to drive the church bus for big events and camps – I ended up driving it for everyone and everything! Where I serve now it isn’t a necessity so I let it lapse. How about you? Just curious!

JG

Josh GriffinMore PostsInterview with Rick Lawrence About Sifted

1. Many books have been written on the topic of pain and suffering. How does your book differ from the others?
Well, you can find the “scandal” in Jesus’ response to Peter right here: “Satan has demanded to sift you like wheat, but I have prayed for you….” Like a violent assault that’s too hard to watch, we turn our attention from Jesus’ “but” because the impact of it is hard to swallow. Satan asks permission to sift, and the Trinity gives it. If God is a co-conspirator in our pain, then what hope do we have? In the end, Sifted is a bait-and-switch sort of book–it’s a book about the pain we experience in life, but it’s really a book about the glory of God and His “beyond category” love for us. There are many mysteries about God and His movement in our life, but sometimes we use “mystery” as an excuse to not drill down into His beauty more deeply until our understanding of Him compels us to worship Him. The story of Sifted is not an answer to our pain–it is moving the blockage of our pain away from our lips so we can drink deeply the Living Water.

2. What was it about these verses in Luke 22 that jumped out to you? Why did you decide to make them a focus of your study?
The older I get, the slower I read the Bible. Most of us miss who Jesus really is because, simply, we read too fast. We assume we understand what He says, what He does, and how others react to Him. But mostly, we’re functionally skipping over His essence in our impatient commute through the stories that chronicle His life. So I read the Bible very slowly now. And one day, while reading slowly, I rammed right into this little vignette that happens at the end of the Last Supper–it’s so short and odd that it’s easy to skip over. But when I stopped to ask myself if I understood what was really happening here, the story seemed like a grenade with its pin pulled. I saw something of God’s glory, and my own story, in this little interchange. God’s goodness surpasses our definitions because we’re hampered by our own limitations–but when we “taste and see” that God is good we’re forever longing to live in that taste.

3. Do you believe that all Christians will go through a sifting process?
Sifting comes in many forms, and from many sources. Simply because we’re alive, we will be sifted–whether from our own choices, or from living in a fallen and broken world, or from Satan demanding permission to mess with our life. Sifting is a reality for everyone, everywhere. But sifting–it means we are beaten, separated, and revealed–is a process that’s, in a way, neutral. I mean, the outcome of the experience can either destroy us or strengthen us. Satan intends to destroy when he sifts, and God (who makes beauty out of ugly) intends to reveal His glory in us. If God is merely the god of “good outcomes,” then our faith in Him is purely circumstantial. But if God is merely good, then our faith in Him is like Job’s–”Though He slay me, I will love Him.” This is the kind of love that leaves no leverage–no ledge to stand on–for the Enemy. And this is the kind of love that is our chief end in life.

4. Why do other Christians so easily judge those who are experiencing hardships?
In the end, the reason we judge others who are in the throes of sifting is the same reason why Job’s friends hammered away at him–we believe that bad things ultimately happen to people who deserve them. In our heads, that’s our insurance policy against tragedy and crisis and disappointment in life–as long as we assess ourselves as basically “good people” we should not be a viable target for suffering, or at least unjust suffering. We would never say that repeated experiences of suffering are a marker for hidden sin in a person’s life, or for God’s vote of un-confidence, but that’s how we act when we encounter people who have more than their fair share of suffering. We make assumptions about people who suffer because, we believe, we are judging them the way God judges them. We are wrong about this, just as Job’s friends were wrong about what was happening to him.

5. Peter did not make the right choice when he was first tempted, yet his experience still brought a change in his life. Does the process itself bring about change even when our initial reactions are wrong?
The short answer to this is embedded in God’s habitual behavior: “[He] causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose” (Romans 8:28). No matter what we give Him to work with, He is always using our “raw material” like a master sculptor would–making something beautiful out of something ugly. And, as Paul reminds us in Romans, we do not use this character trait against Him. No one who truly loves another takes their beloved for granted or abuses their grace. But it’s the grace and artistry of the Sculptor that draws out of us our only rational response–worship.

6. How can we be better prepared for the pain and suffering that will come?
Understanding the depth and breadth and height of God’s love for us is the only rampart against the destructive power of pain. The way we “better prepare” ourselves for pain and suffering is to orient our whole life toward “tasting and seeing that God is good.” And His goodness is better than we can dream–we know this because Jesus is a perfect reflection of that goodness, and Jesus is good beyond measure.

You can pick up a copy of Sifted right here! To find out more about the book, also visit the official website for Sifted is http://www.siftedbook.com/, and you can also follow Rick Lawrence on Twitter.

Josh GriffinMore PostsXbox 360 Gamerscore Shoots to 52,006

Another 1,000 point increase in my Xbox360 Gamerscore means another blog post documenting the joirney. Here are some super quick letter grade reviews of the games conquered to get the aciehevement increase: Sonic Generations (B), Bulletstorm (B+), Ice Age: Age of the Dinosaur (C+) and Modern Warfare 3 (A+). Solid month of gaming, done in bursts because of the busy fall. Excited about more gaming as we slow down over the holidays!

JG