Intergenerational Ministry, Youth Ministry
Intergenerational Events on Holy Ground
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After twenty-two years of full-time paid youth ministry, I’ve come to realize that I am no longer passionate about youth ministry. I no longer believe that the traditional way of doing youth ministry is a viable model which will instill in our youth and young adults a solid faith or a sense of belonging and community within the church.
What I am passionate about is the intergenerational faith formation of our youth and young adults, and in my church [Calvin Christian Reformed Church], I’ve been given the grace to explore that in various forms, such as:
One way this occurs is a twice yearly soup, buns and games time after our morning service. Watching roughly sixty youth, young adults and older members of our church laugh and have fun together is like walking on holy ground.
Recently we had a couple of our older members join a group of about twenty young adults at our bi-weekly lunch hosted after church. They took some time to share their faith stories. The reactions of our YA was palpable as you can read here.
I am excited about the faith formation exploration we are doing in our church. In the end my hope is that all churches can be a place where a holistic sense of belonging, faith formation, and a connection to a faith community is fostered—a place where young adults will engage in church life because they know they are part of a larger faith community.
Even with a youth group—or young adult group of three—you can do amazing ministry if you begin to think outside the traditional youth ministry box. Come join in the journey and experience that holy ground for yourself.
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Comments
At our church, Calvary CRC we actually have 9 volunteer youth leaders of various ages ( 22-55)who
involve the seniors of our church 4 to 5 times a year. What a blessing to have the opportunity
to mix and learn about faith from each other.We need youth leaders who are not necessarily
trained professionals but need leaders who have a passion for building Faith across generations.
Thanks for sharing the story of what an intergenerational culture looks like at your church, Ron. What a wonderful example of how we can learn from others in different places on their faith journey.
To those readers who are interested in learning more about the kind of intergenerational faith formation Ron is describing--consider attending the Intergenerate Conference next June in Nashville. The Faith Formation Ministries team will be there and we'd love to connect with you!
Thanks Karen.
I plan on being at that Conference. Sounds very interesting.
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