Profession of Faith - the Next Generation

I’m really old.  So when I made profession of faith, I decided it was time, alerted somebody at church, and then stood before the consistory while they quizzed me mostly on my faith but with just a bit of Bible trivia as well.  Once I was approved, I stood before the church, said “I do” after the pastor read a long liturgy, and then I was a member of the church.

Thank goodness times have changed. I am just fine with the process I went through, but I don’t think back on it fondly.  It was rather emotionless from a public perspective. My youngest son went through the process of professing his faith a few years ago.  I had the honor of walking through the process with him and it was a humbling and emotional experience for both of us.

We call the process of making profession of faith, “Young Seekers.” It involves pairing up each student with a mentor.  It can be a parent, youth leader, or any professing member of the church.  Mentors and students meet a couple times a week and use a variety of resources to explore faith and church membership. We also include service projects in the process.  On the Sunday when the youths and mentors stand before the congregation, we have a church-wide celebration. I wish I had gone through a similar process when I made profession of faith. I’m thrilled that youth leaders, church educators, and pastors are willing to try new options in the Profession of Faith process.

How do you help students walk through their profession of faith at your church? Can you share examples of what has worked well and what hasn’t worked well?  For such an important and memorable moment in the lives of our children, how are you making it a blessing for the student and for the congregation?

0
Your rating: None

Comments

Albert Huizing IV's picture

I like this concept a great deal but to still keep the one on one with the pastor is important too. But this approach really makes it a more community-minded process....

I'd like to pursue for our church this if there is a resource for questions to discuss while in mentoring sessions.

I think that would go a long way to coaching the mentors and making them feel comfortable  with it.

Post new comment

Login using social networks

You may login with either your assigned username or your e-mail address.
The password field is case sensitive. Don't remember your password? Click here to request a new one.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <strike> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <br> <p>
  • You may quote other posts using [quote] tags.

More information about formatting options

By submitting this form, you accept the Mollom privacy policy.
Post new comment


Comment Policy

Subscribe to:

X [Close]

Just click to subscribe to email notifications for this:
- Post (i.e. all new comments in this discussion)
- Author (i.e. anything posted by this person)
- Forum (i.e. all new discussions in this forum)
- Network (i.e. weekly summary of new articles and blogs)

You can choose to get notified instantly when something is posted or on a daily/weekly basis.

Notifications can be adjusted or removed any time. To do so, go to the "Notifications" tab of your Network profile or use the link at the bottom of the emails.



Add a Comment
Rate

Latest Comments

Get The Network weekly email!

Don‘t miss the latest blogs, articles, and news from The Network.

Get our weekly recap, delivered right to your inbox every Tuesday.

We will not share your e-mail address with anyone for any reason.