GUEST POST: Keeping the Faith
One of the main worries of youth pastors and Christian parents is that their youth will run away from God shortly after leaving high school. This topic has been touched on a lot and mentioned even more. However, lately I have been really thinking over why some Christian kids, stay Christian and why others decide Christ was just something from their childhood.
As youth pastors it’s a huge deal that we all have to face and that I think to some degree can be prevented. While most people that have written or talked on this topic took the angle of why students LEAVE but I am going to relate reasons why I think they will STAY:
Students who stay Christians are:
1. Involved in Ministry
2. Have Strong Spiritual Leaders
3. Have experienced God (and hold on to their experience of God)
4. Receiving Positive Messages (in and out of sermons)
5. Are Seeing God Work
Now, I know this list isn’t a comprehensive list nor do I claim that it is the only reasons, but from my life experiences and from the life of youth I have seen grow up in the church and either STAY or LEAVE. This seems to be a fair list.
Then, the question becomes, as a youth pastor how are you doing on this? Are your youth involved with ministry in your church AND in your youth ministry? Do your youth have strong spiritual leaders that can help them push themselves and grow? Have your youth had the chance to experience God on their own or do they just hear about it from you? Do they hold on to that experience, remembering it and cherishing it? Are they receiving positive messages? Both from sermons and from 1 on 1 time with them? Are they seeing God work in your life? In the church? In the world?
I am going to admit I am not perfect at this in fact I am developing ways right now that I can involve my youth more. I am trying to create places and ways for them to see and feel the experience of God.
Join with me as we help youth become Christians and STAY Christians.
Mark Knight is the Youth Pastor at Burien Free Methodist. Follow him on Twitter @youthpastormark or read his blog http://youthpastormark.blogspot.com.






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