All in the family
Christian Century, April 18, 2001 by Pamela Smith McCall
Don't isolate youth in `youth programs'
WHAT KIND OF RELATIONSHIP do you want to have with your teen in five years?" Tim Tahtinen, youth leader at the United Methodist Church of Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin, likes to pose that question to parents and then add, "What's your plan? I have a plan that works."
Instead of segregating youth from their parents in a "youth" program, Tahtinen says, churches should focus their energies on putting parents and youth together in family-based youth ministry. He wants to make use of the power that parents have to nurture and influence their teens toward maturity in faith.
Tahtinen's family-based program grew out of Faith Incubators (FINK), a Lutheran organization started by Rich Melheim. Melheim began Faith Incubators after a tragic experience as a youth pastor. Two young men he had pastored through high school committed suicide after their first year in college. The tragedies convinced Melheim that he had to do something differently--that the Pied Piper method of youth pastoring wasn't working anymore. He needed "more help, a better network of care. A relationship with him [as youth pastor] wasn't enough."
Melheim knew that parents were more committed to their children than anyone else could be. He decided to give a gift to parents--more time with their children to build strong relationships. If he could foster sharing between the two groups, he reasoned, he could "build commitment and relationships brick by brick."
He developed a confirmation curriculum that keeps parents and teens together, then an educational curriculum called Total Sunday School (TSS). Instead of isolating teens from the rest of the church community, TSS places each teen in a small group of people of different ages. It extends the popular concept of building relationship and accountability through small groups, but emphasizes the inclusion of young people.
FINK has sold licenses for use of its curriculum materials to 2,000 churches in Lutheran, United Methodist, Episcopal and Presbyterian denominations. "FINKthink" material, for example, presents itself as teaching "head to heart" instead of "head to head." FINKthink is "community instead of classroom," and "opening up the kid instead of the book."
FINK parents are expected to show up and participate with their teens in everything from teen-style praise and worship to Bible studies and personal sharing to camping trips. According to youth pastor Debbie Streicher at Abiding Presence Lutheran Church in Burke, Virginia, teens don't mind having their parents present--as long as other parents are on hand too.
Another organization that is promoting family ministry is the Youth and Family Institute at Augsburg College in Minneapolis. David Anderson, director of faith formation, says the main focus is the "wholeness of the church as the body of Christ." The concept of family is larger than the traditional nuclear family. "No matter what the type of family, it can be included in this ministry," Anderson emphasizes.
He and other youth leaders are basing their work on research reports from the Search Institute of Minneapolis focused on faith formation. Search has endorsed the notion that families, particularly parents, are the primary source of faith development.
Youth pastor Mark Devries of the First Presbyterian Church in Nashville, Tennessee, author of Family-Based Youth Ministry, believes that the long-term effectiveness of youth ministry depends upon families. He's convinced that any youth program that has long-term effectiveness is doing family-based ministry "whether they know it or not."
Devries notes that evangelicals have been slow to adopt family-based ministry, perhaps because they don't want to return to routines that bore teens, "like sitting in pews with their parents." Mark Watson of El Montecito Presbyterian Church in California suggests that leaders of megachurch youth ministries are reluctant to try family-based programs because they have had phenomenal short-term success with their age-specific programs and are reluctant to change that formula. Many leaders believe they must keep the teen programs filled with plenty of "teen-specific" entertainment." But DeVries claims that when teens graduate from these youth-centered ministries, they often graduate from God as well.
Youth leader and writer Mike Yaconelli explains that he is reluctant to adopt the family-based approach because there aren't enough parents available who place their faith high as a top priority for their children. They are in favor of Christianity, he says, as long as they think it is going to make their kid into a nice person. But as soon as it becomes genuine Christian faith, they start to worry. This generation of parents is ambitious for its children, and can't let anything get in the way of their future "success."
RICK HARMON, who works with a family-friendly youth group in Vandalia, Ohio, has fewer reservations about the family approach. The family is already fragmented," Harmon says, "and then we bring them to church, the one place we expect to bring families together, and we separate them." That does not happen in his church. Harmon tells parents, "I will never try to take your place."
Most Recent Reference Articles
- ARAB EUROPEAN RELATIONS - Dec 22 - Russia Denies Selling Missile System To Iran
- EGYPT - Dec 29 - Opposition Says Mubarak Blessed Israeli Attacks
- ARAB AFFAIRS - Dec 22 - Syria Will Eventually Move To Direct Talks With Israel
- ARAB AFFAIRS - Dec 30 - GCC Denounces Massacre
- ARAB ISRAELI RELATIONS - Israel Issues An Appeal To Palestinians In Gaza
Most Recent Reference Publications
Most Popular Reference Articles
- The Greek chorus, Jimmy the Greek got it wrong but so did his critics - Jimmy Snyder and his views on pro sports and race
- How Tyler Perry rose from homelessness to a $5 million mansion
- 9 questions to ask your new lover: what you were afraid to ask, but always wanted to know
- Vickie Winans: at home with the gospel star who lost 75 pounds and reenergized her career
- The widow's hand




