“What do we do about our kids?” The group of parents sat together in
my office, wiping their eyes. I’m a high school pastor, but for once,
they weren’t talking about 16-year-olds drinking and partying. Each had a
story to tell about a “good Christian” child, raised in their home and
in our church, who had walked away from the faith during the college
years. These children had come through our church’s youth program, gone
on short-term mission trips, and served in several different ministries
during their teenage years. Now they didn’t want anything to do with it
anymore. And, somehow, these mothers’ ideas for our church to send
college students “care packages” during their freshman year to help them
feel connected to the church didn’t strike me as a solution with quite
enough depth.
The daunting statistics about churchgoing youth keep rolling in. Panic ensues. What are we doing wrong in our churches? In our youth ministries?
It’s hard to sort through the various reports and find the real
story. And there is no one easy solution for bringing all of those
“lost” kids back into the church, other than continuing to pray for them
and speaking the gospel into their lives. However, we can all look at
the 20-somethings in our churches who are engaged and involved in ministry. What is it that sets apart the kids who stay in
the church? Here are just a few observations I have made about such
kids, with a few applications for those of us serving in youth ministry. Keep Reading...
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