Editors' Note: Everyone has an opinion about youth
ministry. Parents, pastors, and the youth themselves have expectations
and demands that don't always overlap. But the rash of dire statistics
about the ineffectiveness of youth ministry has prompted rethinking in
these ranks. So we devote one day per week this month to exploring
several issues in youth ministry, including its history, problems, and
biblical mandate. The Gospel Coalition thanks Cameron Cole and the
leadership team of Rooted: A Theology Conference for Student Ministry for their help in compiling this series. Cathedral Church of the Advent in Birmingham, Alabama, will host their 2012 conference
from August 9 to 11. Speakers Ray Ortlund, Timothy George, and Mary
Willson will expound on the conference theme, "Adopted: The Beauty of
Grace."
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Everyone knows the stereotype of the youth minister as a big kid with
an expertise in games and an affinity for creative facial hair and body
piercings. Despite the stereotype, many youth pastors are passionate
and intelligent. Yet youth ministry has a reputation for not
doing serious theology. In the book The Theological Turn in Youth Ministry,
Andrew Root describes a discussion about a PhD program for youth
ministry at his seminary. A biblical scholar asked, "Who is going to
teach the seminar on group mixers?" Root goes on to describe the
perception of youth ministers as theologically "lightweight." The National Study of Youth and Religion
notes, "The vast majority of teens, who call themselves Christians,
haven't been well educated in religious doctrine and, therefore, really
don't know what they believe." Certainly, these results, at least to
some degree, reflect the typically shallow theological culture of youth
ministry. Why, then, does there seem to be a gap between youth ministry
and theology? Continue at Cameron Cole and Dave Wright
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