Neely McQueenMore PostsAnother reason I love my church…

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Our church is in the middle of a series called Loaded Questions- this past weekend they tackled the question “Why does the church think women should be barefoot and pregnant?”

Great message! Check it out here!

Another reason I love my church…

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Neely McQueenMore PostsWhen They Walk Away…

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It was almost ten years ago at a camp that Sarah had decided that she was choosing Jesus’ ways but she needed help. I agreed to be her mentor. When we got to church after camp I took her home…she had some stuff that she wanted me to help her get rid of…her pipe and her stash of weed. I was young and 5 months pregnant driving home from her house to mine with WEED in my car. I was freaking out…it was a first of me.

We started meeting weekly. We walked through Life Hurts, God Heals together for over a year.

And then she walked away from it all.

It wasn’t the first time…and unfortunately it wasn’t and won’t be the last time a student walks away.

I am guessing you have experienced the same thing at some point.

When this happens…I remind myself of these things:

1. Don’t Give Up

We need to continue to reach out. If they go missing for one week, one month or even a year or more, we keep reaching out. Thanks to social media it isn’t hard to do this with most students. I am also a big fan of snail mail. Everyone LOVES getting mail. We can’t give up.

2. Let Forgiveness Come Easy

I am not sure we are always willing to admit it but students can’t hurt us. Sometimes when they walk away they leave with words that aim to hurt. This is one of those times were we get to be the mature adult believer. (Let’s be honest…this sucks sometimes!) But we need to let forgiveness come easy. Don’t make them work hard to earn it…give it away. Let the same forgiveness that Jesus freely gives to us flow to the students that walk away from us.

3. Keep an Open Door 

Don’t stop at forgiveness- welcome them back. We talk a lot about the front and back doors of our ministries. Here is my concern that our front door stays open even to those who have walked away from us. Don’t judge them when they come back or don’t make them feel like an outsider.

4. Pray for Another to Water 

There are times where we plant the seed and we pray for another to water it. As much as we hope and pray that they will come back to our ministries…we pray that another believer or another youth worker will come into their life and continue point them to Jesus.

5. The Final Word is LOVE

Let’s follow after our Savior and let love win. Let our final word to our students be filled with love. Even when we feel overwhelmed, discouraged and wounded…we choose love. If our students last moments with us are their reminders of who Jesus is…let it be love.

About 8 years later, Sarah showed up at church. It was good to see her. You could tell her life was filled with pain and lots of confusion. She wasn’t back for good but she ran to me and gave me a big hug. I am glad. I hope she remembers a young mom who loved her despite the fact that her life didn’t change like I had hoped…and I hope someday she comes back for good.

What do you do when a student walks away?

 

Neely McQueenMore PostsIf you weren’t a girl…

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This week I got a chance to hear Rachel Held Evans speak at one of the local universities in our area. I appreciate her writing and was excited to hear her. I was surprised by her gentle nature…she’s a fireball in her writing. She started with a story from her teens years that became a defining moment for her journey.

Here’s the deal, I can tell you have heard the same story from  multiple women in their 20′s, 30′s, 40′s and 50′s.  The common themes are mind blowing; they had heard the it from someone when they were a teenager, they were praised for their leadership skills followed by a statement that varies but is something like this…”it’s too bad your a girl and can’t be a pastor/preacher.”

Personally, I never heard that statement but I did hear a variation of it. I grew up in a denomination that ordained women. So, I was told what a great SINGLE missionary I would be some day.

All week I have been thinking about these stories.

And here are the problems with the word CAN’T:

1. Many women who I have encountered with this story have struggled with their faith. They doubt who they are and their place in God’s story. Why would He create them a certain way but not allow them to operate in their gifting.

2. Forgive me for sounding blunt…but maybe they can’t in your church or denomination BUT there are churches/denominations where they CAN. This isn’t about one denomination being better than another – it is just the simple truth that there are places in the church where a girl who is an Apostle or Pastor can be an Apostle or Pastor. I don’t know what it would look like for us to affirm a girl and then point her to another church but I have to believe it would be better than her doubting God and herself. (I am not sure that I could ever imagine this really happening but maybe that points to a bigger issue than just one about gender roles.)

3. “Because your a girl” – this statement makes me so sad because it speaks to the way society and unfortunately the church have devalued females. When we start with this statement as a reason not to be a pastor what we don’t understand (possibly because it is not understandable) is the way in which it gives permission for women to be perceived as less than…and I believe with all my heart that is just not biblical.

I am really not trying to be controversial. I am just grow weary of meeting women who wished someone would have said you can instead of you can’t. Women who doubted Jesus and the church because of a one little statement told to them when they were 15.

I pray that the church is becoming a place where we can dialogue openly and with love. I pray that less people, especially women, would be wounded by the words of those in positions of power in the church. Will you join me in this prayer? Will you join me changing the conversation?

 

 

Neely McQueenMore PostsDC Mission Trip Recap Video

Great video about our Dream Center Mission Trip! Made by a very talented intern on our team!

Comments Add Comment April 29, 2013

Neely McQueenMore PostsStep Into the Mess

Is your  ministry messy? Are your students in the midst of messy stuff right now? Please say yes…so I don’t feel so alone right now.

I am not really sure why it has gotten more messy lately or if we are just finally willing to really step into the mess and embrace it. Nonetheless…it is messy.

Girls struggling with identity issues, lack of confidence and sexual pressures…but dig deeper and we have girls struggling with sexual identity, self-injury, broken families, drug addiction and pregnancies. Heavy…painful…messy.

Today I had a moment of clarity.

I need to face my mess…We need to face our own personal messes. (That includes you…)

Have I taken the steps needed in my life to work through my own mess? Have I done the hard work to overcome habits and hang-ups in my life?

Students in pain or in the midst of mess can trigger our pain and mess. The key is will we recognize our own triggers…either we’ll get hurt or get healing.

Now it’s not that my life is free of mess but I have had to at least be willing to address my mess and start the process of healing before I can really step into our student’s pain.

It will be impossible for me or my leaders to help students find healing if we haven’t done the work in our own lives. We have all heard it said before…we can’t take students where we haven’t been or…in this case, help them find healing when we are stuck in our mess.

So, how to do we embrace our mess?

Get help for ourselves.

Read. Connect with others. Seek professional help. (One or all of them.)

Here are a few books that have helped me with my mess:

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Changes That Heal

listeningtoyourlife

 

Listening to Your Life

wounded healer

 

The Wounded Healer

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The Jesus I Never Knew

What are books that have been helpful to you during difficult times?

Neely McQueenMore PostsGuest Post: Could This Happen At Your Church?

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I was a freshman girl.

They were senior boys.

We had grown up together.  Our families were friends at the church.  We traveled to many camps and retreats together.

We were friends.

I trusted them.

But all that changed after one annual youth group event.

It was tradition, every year on that winter day we had a day off of school, our youth group would journey up the mountain for a day of fun together.  It was a long day and we would head home after dinner, after the sun had long set over the mountains.  We piled into the vans and cars and I choose go in the van with my guy friends for the ride back to the church.  You know one of those large 12+ passenger vans with bucket seats.  We sat all the way in the back because they were the senior boys and that was the cool place to sit.  The leaders were in the front seats unaware of what was about to happen in the back row of the church van.

It had been a long, fun day in the mountains and I was tired, I didn’t think twice about my surroundings and I fell asleep during the long drive back.  It was a week or two later that I found out what happened in the back of that church van when I fell asleep.  One of the boys I knew, I had grown up with, a guy I trusted took advantage of me by fondling me.  The other guys in the back who had not fallen asleep, encouraged this boy to see how long and much he could do to me.

I share my story with you not so we can pick apart my choices as a freshman girl, not to condemn these boys’ choices, not to criticize what my youth leaders did or did not do, but to remind us of the importance we carry as youth leaders of teenage girls in this broken world.

Here are some good reminders for us as female youth leaders:

1.     Truth is even “good Christian” boys are tempted and make poor choices.  We cannot be naive and think that something like this wouldn’t happen in our group.  At the same time it doesn’t mean that we cannot trust our boys either.  Set up safe guards for your girls.

2.     Spread out!  Yes the back of the van, room or wherever is the furthest from adults is going to be the “cool” spot.  But if that spot exists keep an eye on who is there.  If you see that there is one girl with a bunch of guys send a girl student leader to join them, or go hang out in the “cool” spot too.

3.     We need to be AWARE.  Aware of the settings the girls in our groups are placing themselves in while under our care.  Aware of those “dark” corners, or aware when students are missing from the group for a while.  Aware when that flirty, innocent girl is enjoying the attention of the cute boys and caught up in it.

4.     You can never be too safe.  Yes you may need to make a “rule” or decision to remove a girl from an unhealthy setting she has placed herself in.  She will be upset at you for ruining her “opportunity” with those guys. But I wish someone had seen the unhealthy choice I placed myself in and upset me that night by making me ride home somewhere else.

Neely McQueenMore PostsRecap It

Got back on Sunday night from our mission trip to Dream Center. The trip was awesome! Our students were impacted and I believe we helped Dream Center accomplish their mission for the week.

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Here is a few of my highlights from the week:

*Seeing Dream Center was the first highlight. They do amazing ministry and are transforming their community. As far as what you would hope for your students…Dream Center offered it. If you are looking for a place to go- check it out! Many of their staff are people whose lives have been changed by DC – our students got to hang out with ex-gang members who now love Jesus and give their life to his service.

*I had one of my more embarrassing moments in youth ministry. One morning we had a few moments to spare before we started our various ministries. Rory (my co-worker/boss) and I decided to do a little inspirational interpretive dance…to Firework by Katy Perry. It was going well…until I fell from one of my sweet jump dance moves. I landed flat on the ground. It was hilarious and embarrassing.

*KELLY! One of my small groups who has been with me since she was 9th grade and is now a senior had a major moment on this trip. When Kelly joined my group she was an insecure girl who made lots of poor choices with the opposite sex. Over the years, I have watched her grow and struggle to figure out her faith. One day she was with the group that went to serve lunch on Skid Row. While there she painted a few finger nails of some of the ladies. At one point, a lady asked Kelly if she would consider painting her toe nails. The Dream Center staff told Kelly she didn’t need to say yes…but that it was all up to her. She thought about it for one moment. She looked at the lady and told her she would gladly paint them. Kelly washed the lady’s feet and painted her toe nails. As Kelly retold this story to me, we both had began to cry…I told Kelly that in that moment was she never more like Jesus…and I was so proud of her. This is WHY I do youth ministry!

*On the flight home…I got bumped to first class because of my MVP status. 38 students in back of the plane…me in front with my chicken salad. I felt slightly guilty for a minute…and the the minute was over! It was so nice!

That was my week! Loved it!

What do you do for your mission trip?

 

 

Comments Add Comment April 17, 2013

Neely McQueenMore PostsGuest Post: 6 Go To Books For Girls

6 Go-To Books I Recommend to Girls

Below you will find a list of my go-to books that I recommend to high school and college girls along with some of their thoughts of the books.

Before I suggest a book to a girl, I read it.  My goal is that the book will give us opportunity to engage in conversations, so I need to know the content, not just that it is a “good book”.  I want my girls to wrestle with what they believe or have always been told with fresh perspective, so that in the end they will think for themselves and seek God’s word for truth.

Love Does by Bob Goff     

 

Love Does is one of my new favorite books.  In fact it is one that I read with my children.  It is an easy, fun read.  But more than that, Love Does inspires readers to “love completely and unconditionally because of the impact it has on everyone around us!” –sophomore in college

“It [Love Does] inspired me to be more spontaneous in what I did!  I enjoyed it because I loved reading about how amazing his [Bob Goff] life was.” –senior in high school

”I enjoyed reading it because I got to see up close and personal how a one on one relationship with Jesus can affect not only ourselves, but the people we share this earth with.  It inspires me to unlock the boundaries that I put on love and love with all my heart in every moment in all my actions, just like Jesus did!” –freshman in college

 

Crazy Love by Francis Chan

 

I love going through Crazy Love with girls.   This book helps them to view their obedience to God is not as an obligation but in the way that demonstrates our love for Him.  It is exciting to see girls eyes open to this love that God has for them and how they can respond to Him.

“Crazy Love was a great recommendation because it made me realize that I need to take my relationship with God more seriously, not out of guilt but because I want to.  It encouraged me by reminding me that I didn’t want to have an average life; I want to do something amazing for God.” –sophomore in high school

 

His Princess: Love Letters From Your King by Sheri Rose Shepherd

 

His Princess is a book I use a lot.  It is full of “love letters” from God.  There are so many letters that are great for so many seasons of the girl’s lives.   Here is a thought from one of my girls about the letters in this book.

“I like them because I feel like they are written specifically for me and no one else.  They’re personal and written like how I imagine God to talk to me.  They encourage me because it makes me realize that God really is that personal and loving, I’m just not diving deep enough to find out.  They make me long to get to know Him and the other fantastic truths He is waiting to share with me.”  -senior in high school

“I think the love letters help me see my relationship with God in a way that I always have trouble envisioning it. It’s hard for me to view God like a lover because the world has so distorted our views of love. The letters remind me of the way that love is supposed to be; the way God loves us. It reminds me that He is always there for me, has faith in me, and believes that I can do the things that everyone else says I can’t; because with my strength that I receive through Him, anything is possible. They remind me that God is the only one who can fill the holes in my heart. They remind me that He has a plan for me and He knows want I need, and He will provide for me. They show me the model for what the man I give my heart to should strive to be like. I like the letters because they remind me who God is for me.” –junior in high school

 

For Young Girls Only by  Shaunti Feldhahn and Lisa A

 

I use For Young Girls Only in two ways.  One as a resource for preparation of a “boy talk” I do at our girls retreat.  The other is walking through it with mature girls who are ready for the information that this book has.

“I thought that was a great book, it really solidified the fact that boys have WAY different brains than us, and gave me little tips for how to treat guys.  Either in a romantic way or just friendship way.  And I also loved how it was still centered around God and also gave tips to how to encourage them in their faith too.” –sophomore in college

 

Lies Young Girls Believe: And the Truth that Sets Them Free by Nancy Leigh DeMoss and Dannah Gresh

 

Lies Young Women Believe has been a good book to help girls process the lies they believe verses the truth of God’s Word.  The conversations that have I have had from parts of this book have been life changing for some girls as the have realized the lies they were believing.

“This book hit home with a lot of issues I was struggling with at the time and helped a bunch.” –freshman in high school

 

Kisses From Katie by Katie Davis

 

This past summer we had the blessing of leading a student missions trip to Uganda, Africa.  I personally enjoyed reading this book as Katie was able to say so much of what I felt and experienced on that trip

“I like it [Kisses From Katie] because I can relate so much from it.  It encourages me to have more faith in God and trust Him in everything.” –sophomore in high school

 

Other Books Worth Mentioning:  Captivating, And the Bride Wore White, Bad Girls of the Bible, and The Hiding Place.

I’m always looking for new books to share with my girls, what are some recommendations do you have?

 

 

Kim Bowers is an amazing youth worker who is married to a youth pastor in Southern California. She recently wrote some amazing curriculum about the women in the Bible….be sure to check it out!

Comments 1 View Comments April 16, 2013

Neely McQueenMore PostsWhat do you think?

I love students sharing their stories during our services. To my it is one of the highlights of ministry.

Sometimes I wonder…

Am I using their story in unhealthy way?

Should I be incorporating their parents more in the process?

How many details should they include? What’s too much?

How do I make sure their story isn’t a “how to” guide for other students?

Here’s where I would love your thoughts- what do you think? How do you prep a student to share their story? Do you have a process in place? Do you use any tools?

Do you use the 2nd Greatest Story Ever Told? Should I?

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Help a sister out!

 

Neely McQueenMore PostsLove is NOT Abuse

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Love is Not Abuse is a great website with lots of helpful resources. They also have a great iPhone app. Check them out! Get people talking about these important real life issues!

What are other great resources out there? Do you know any thing that is faith based on this topic?