In a perfect world students from all different backgrounds and schools would come together at a weekly meeting to love and encourage each other. If this were true monkeys could fly and youth pastors would make $100,000 per year. The truth is youth groups are divided by things not under the control of the youth pastor; schools, sport teams and past relationships. So how can a youth pastor create unity inside his or her youth ministry? I have two practical ideas that you can use.
1. Shared Experience:
Bring a small number of disengaged students to a neural but fun experience. For guys I would suggest a sporting event, maybe a hockey game or professional football game. For gals have a professional cosmetologist come in and give a presentation on the latest makeovers. Make sure it’s an event that they have never done before. This works best if you pick students that are core influencers. Allow them to share an experience beyond themselves and their differences. It will also give them a platform for building strong relationships.
2. Get them out of their comfort zone:
When students move outside of their comfort zone they tend to band together with others who are making the same move. Take your students to a battered women’s shelter or to a refugee processing center. Have them run a VBS type program at an apartment complex full of people from other countries. Take them on a challenging wilderness trip. Push them to their limits and put them back together again as a unified team.
A large part of youth group management is creating an atmosphere of unity. Youth group management is the ability to create the intangibles of love, student encouragement of students, momentum, identity and a “we can do anything” attitude. Just hoping it will happen won’t make it happen. Intentional actions designed to create unity will change the focus of your youth ministry and change its impact.
My name is Doug Franklin and I serve youth workers through a ministry called LeaderTreks. I love youth ministry and the people who serve in it. I work with an incredible team creating tools and resources enabling youth workers to develop students into leaders. I want to influence youth workers to challenge students and prepare them for leadership in the kingdom of God.
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Matt Gooch
February 1st, 2010 at 9:56 am
Great post, Doug. Our youth group consists of students not only from our small town and multiple denominations, but also the remnants of two youth groups from the county seat that is only a few miles away. Bonding the different elements within the group has been very difficult (we’ve failed a lot).
These are great suggestions, and I’m going to try them out.
Appreciate the wisdom as always.