Josh GriffinMore PostsRiding All of the Rides at Disneyland

disney_ride_list_excelsheet
We will ride every ride in the park in 2010!

We got Disneyland annual passes from my parents this Christmas, and we’ve decided to put them to good use. Our family fun day goal is to ride every ride in the park at least once before our passes expire. I found a list of all of the Disneyland (and California Adventure) attractions, and converted it all into an Excel sheet that will track our progress. Excited to balance out the frantic pace of ministry with turn-off-the-phone-family-fun in 2010.

JG

PS: If you want to download it, go ahead.

Comments 4 View Comments January 11, 2010

Josh GriffinMore Posts3 Thoughts on Connecting with Students in Your Small Group

So you just signed up to be a small group leader. You got a little training, probably from someone who is just a little older than your children – and the first meeting of your small group is next week. This might help get you thinking about the kids God has trusted to you in this next season. I want to highlight a way of connecting with students – my mentor Doug Fields‘ always called it the 5-3-1 Rule. Here’s my take on it:

Care for all
You’ve been given somewhere between 5 and 12 students — and we’re asking you to care for all of them. Simple stuff really, just know their names, be involved in their life and connect with them on a weekly basis. We divide up the large group into small groups so all can be cared for. This is where you come in – be a minister, think of yourself as the pastor of this little church within a church.

Pour into a few
There’s a few of the students in your small group you immediately connect with. Maybe it is a share interest or a similar story — either way, you just click with them. So pour into them a little more than the others. When you’re running an errand, ask one of them to join you so you can turn the mundane into ministry. When you happen on a day you can sneak away from the office, try to sneak by and catch the end of their swim meet or pick them up for a life conversation over a Coke.

Mentor one
After a few weeks, ask God to show you the student who you believe He is calling you to mentor. Pray for them, give them extra challenges, ask them to step up and lead the group one night when you’re gone. Connect with them outside of group, meet regularly and share what God is teaching you. Allow God to speak through you to shape them into a great minister and future small group leader. Maybe it’ll be the church kid who needs you, maybe it’ll be the unexpected fringe kid. You’ll know!

Blessing as you serve students in your small group!

JG

Some suggested youth ministry resources to help small group leaders:

sg_bundle small_groups_leadertreks

Josh GriffinMore PostsSuper Sweet Star Wars Opening Crawl

A fun little opening video from our Super Sweet Leaders Night this week.

JG

A few resources that might help youth ministry volunteers:

training_onthego pdym_trainingkit

Josh GriffinMore PostsHSM Weekend in Review: Volume 81

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Weekend Teaching Series: Step by Step (week 2 of 3)

Sermon in a Sentence: Spiritual growth comes from taking steps forward in your walk with God – to grow on your own, to share life in community, to serve others and spread the Good News.
Service Length: 77 minutes
Bible: Acts 8:26-40

Understandable Message: This week Jason talked about the story of Philip and the Ethopian Eunuch from two perspectives – 1) from Philip, on being prepared to share your faith and grow on your own, and 2) from the Eunuch’s perspecive of searching out what God is pressing on your heart. Good applications for all types of students that attended our entry-level service this weekend.

Volunteer/Student Involvement: Ministry team students ran lights, camera, sound, band, control room, and student leaders owned greeting in the services. Limited volunteer involvement on Saturday night, but good the rest of the weekend. Lots of students involved for sure!

Element of Fun/Positive Environment: Jake reprised his character of Dr. Eugene Henry, an overly-excited Southern evangelist who likes to take pop culture songs and put God’s Word to music. This week’s story of Noah set to Sweet Dreams by Beyonce – totally brilliant. We also had Not Fair rolling during the countdown which got a solid response, too.

Music Playlist: We Shine, Count Me In, Hosanna, Tell the World

Favorite Moment: For sure the best moment in the service was the live baptism – the story from Acts ends with a baptism, so we did a live baptism on stage to finish, too. We played a quick little interview with each person (a different student was baptized at each service) and students cheered and loved it. We usually do baptisms once a month after services, but these were special for sure. Awesome!

Up Next: Step by Step (series finale, week 3 of 3)

Josh GriffinMore PostsSimply Youth Ministry Podcast: Episode 123

The latest episode of the Simply Youth Ministry Podcast … episode 123!

JG

TagsComments Add Comment January 10, 2010

Josh GriffinMore PostsPOLL: Youth Ministry Fundraisers

Thinking about youth ministry fundraisers – are they working well for you? I’ve never served in a church where it was allowed, but curious how it worked for you!

JG

TagsComments 2 View Comments January 10, 2010

Josh GriffinMore PostsHumility Always Wins

Talk about a first-class response – Colt McCoy after Texas’ loss in the National Championship game. Would make a GREAT illustration of humility/trust in God in a youth talk.

JG

Comments 6 View Comments January 8, 2010

Josh GriffinMore PostsSenior Pastor: Friend or Foe

An article I did for Sermon Central went live this week – it deals with the relationships of senior pastors and youth workers.

A few years back, at one of Saddleback’s youth worker conferences, we offered a workshop called Senior Pastor: Friend or Foe.

Unfortunately, it was a really popular seminar.

It seems that youth pastors deal in extremes in many ways–not just in the lives of students at a critical and often misunderstood age, but extremes in their relationships with their supervisor. No matter how good or bad your relationship is with the lead youth worker in your church, I applaud you for reading the title of this article and at least being mildly interested in the perspective of a guy who’s played number two his whole career.

I’ve sat in my church office (which was located in the basement, though I’m sure that fact was no reflection on my value), completely frustrated with my leader. Wrongly, I’ve done youth ministry all alone, frustrated by the lack of camaraderie with my boss. I’ve dug myself into some pretty terrific pits in my time as a youth pastor, too many without the confidence of a trusted partner in ministry. Someone on your team might be thinking or feeling this way right now … in their basement office.

The relationship between the church staff team has to be effortless. But it takes a ton of effort. When people look at a great marriage, they may not realize the arduous amount of hard work that it takes–and your staff is like a second spouse. (I’m just being figurative here, in case you felt like I was endorsing concubines.) You’ve carefully invested day after day in your marriage and built up trust; the same has to be true with that guy sitting in the basement.

I want someone to offer a workshop for pastors on how to partner with your youth pastor–the room would be packed! And I want that person to be you. In order for the relationship to change, there will have to be some game-changing effort put into it. Here are a few first steps to challenge you, the senior pastor, to make the first bold move”

Take them out for lunch
My love language is food, but beyond that, it’s always easier to talk to someone over food–your treat (hey, you get paid wayyyy more than we do). And don’t let your youth pastor choose the place to eat, either. Our cars will autopilot us straight to Taco Bell, so make sure you have a nicer place in mind when you make the ask. And offer to drive, too–no senior pastor should ever have to experience the disaster of the passenger seat of a youth worker’s car. It could take them a half-hour just to make room for you to sit down. Once you’re there, spend time communicating and developing that all-important relationship with one of the key leaders in your ministry. Bonus: Even if they can’t make it to lunch that day, you’ll still get major credit.

Spontaneously buy them a gift
When your youth pastor walks into their office (or is starting the trek downstairs to find it), they’ll be greeted by voicemails, a mountain of email and a list of items to respond to, all with varying urgency. But also waiting for them is a little gift from you. And while thoughtful, it isn’t a gift-with-a-hidden-meaning, like a book on better time management or a polo shirt as a subtle reminder to dress up a bit. Here’s a little gift equation as a guide: A little thought + unexpected – agenda = super meaningful. Something little could be really big.

Invite them to speak in the adult services
I knew this one would be tough; that’s why I put it in the middle where it wouldn’t shock you as much. Go ahead–take the risk and let them speak every once in a while. You know you could use the break, and we always talk about God’s Spirit showing up when the pastor speaks, so why not give it a shot? You could start by giving them the Sunday night message, I suppose, but we both know that doesn’t really count.

Offer to cover for a getaway weekend
This shows you care about your youth worker beyond the workplace. Think of how valuable it would be if someone on the elder board did it for you (I may have just stumbled on my next article). Offer to give them a break, and once you’re there, (with the youth leader’s permission) cast the vision of the church and clearly show how students fit into that plan. Be sure to brag on the youth worker when they’re gone.

Just drop by youth group for no reason
When my senior pastor does this, I totally freak out. I immediately begin to come up with excuses why attendance is off a bit and come up with plausible explanations for the mysterious new hole in the drywall by the drinking fountain. It would be tragic for the only time the senior pastor enters the youth room is when there is a problem. So make it normal for you to drop in. Become the youth group’s unofficial cheerleader, and your youth pastor will take the ball further down the field than you ever imagined she could.

Let me wrap up with a single suggestion: Put one of these ideas into action this week; it could change your church staff relational culture overnight.

JG

Josh GriffinMore PostsYoostar and Youth Ministry

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We’ve been talking about this for a while since it was featured in Wired Magazine – HSM just picked up Yoostar green-screen system to create some fun announcement and welcome videos for our youth ministry weekend services. It’ll get its first test today for a video for our leaders appreciation evening called Super Sweet Leader Night. I’ll give you a full review of it next week and throw out some examples of ones we made. Fun possibilities!

JG

Comments 4 View Comments January 6, 2010

Josh GriffinMore PostsParty in the USA – Sign Language

Video we played behind the band doing the cover song, Party in the USA. Fun!

JG

Comments 4 View Comments January 4, 2010