Sometimes I wonder how I ever even made it as a youth minister
through my emerging adulthood years (think: Dr. Jeffrey Arnett and his
book, Emerging Adulthood: The Winding Road From Late Teens Through The
Twenties). The first position I held as a "solo" youth minister I was
only 22 years old. Those years were largely a time that I would
characterize my life's experiences as experimental and transitory and
my inner life as self-absorbed, unbalanced and stuck.
Disclaimer: I
am not generalizing about a stage of life here; I am telling you who I
was and at times, still am.
I
took a call today from a youth minister in the Midwest who sounded a
whole lot like I did when I was his age (25) and in my first few years
of youth ministry; energetic, idealistic, optimistic, self-assured, and
fearless. The conversation was frightening in the sense that it took
me back to mistakes I had made over a decade ago, words I had spoken in
absolute certainty that I wish I could take back and statements I made
to myself like, "I can handle this" or "I don't need any help".
The difference between the youth minister I spoke to today and me at his age is this; he knows enough to long for and look for a mentor,
I thought I could do it all on my own. The problem this minister is
having is that he can't find one--maybe he isn't looking that hard or
looking in the wrong places. I don't think that is the issue however,
as today's conversation was one of a dozen or so I have had over the
last year.
I certainly don't have anything against a 25 year old
being a youth minister and being called on to guide the spiritual
formation of a dozen or sometimes ten dozen teenagers. Much of my life
is spent training and equipping 25-year olds. What I do have a
problem with, however, is what I perceive as the outright neglect of
older more mature men and women to mentor the emerging adults.
Am
I the only one who sees a huge gap between the expectations we place on
the lives of emerging adults to lead our youth ministry's and the
mentoring those ministers are getting? Is it that youth ministers
don't want to be mentored? Is it that others (church boards, pastors,
etc.) won't take seriously the role of mentoring?
I had and
currently have wonderful mentors in my life. I must say that the
mentors who have taken their role with me seriously have undoubtedly
changed and continue to change the way that I live, pray, work, play,
etc. I continue to wonder if much of what concerns us about youth
ministry today isn't at the very least reduced by commitments to
mentoring. What would youth ministry be like if the churches who
hired emerging adults to lead their youth ministry's were as passionate
about mentoring the minister as they were about the minister mentoring
the students?
Maybe I am trying to tackle an issue that
really isn't all that noticeable to anyone but me, that is possible.
I'd love to hear from all of you on this, however, I'd especially love
to hear from some of you who are youth ministers and would be
classified as an emerging adult (late teens through the twenties). What
do you think? Do you think a mentor might help you be a better youth
minister? Do you already have a mentor? If so, is it working? Why or
Why not? Are you looking for a mentor and can't find one?
By Chris Folmsbee
originally appeared at http://blog.beliefnet.com/jesuscreed/
Barefoot Training Articles
Archive

Subscribe to Barefoot Training Articles by Email
Tags
christian formation NYWC youth ministry student ministry christian education youth culture youth worker training Immerse barefoot training missional community barefoot ministries small group leader youth workers training formation youth formation youth worker missional youth ministry Pew Research youth ministry training Family small group youth pastor teen culture narrative youth ministry faith formation U.S. Religious Knowledge Survey
We encourage you to explore our workshops and find out how you can join or host a training in your community.
Read what we've been thinking lately
Barefoot Training is designed to inspire, challenge, and equip you to guide your students into Christian formation for the mission of God. Each training experience offers an interactive environment where you are able to design, create, and nurture a biblically based, Christ-centered youth ministry in your church and community.














Comments
Post has no comments.