This morning, my daughter, Kat, headed out of the house to get her cap & gown pictures and to start her last week of early band at Har-Ber High School. How can this be? Didn’t I just graduate from high school last year? Wasn’t she born a couple of days ago? As a student pastor, I have seen parents go through this process time and time again. In fact, I faced it two years ago when my son started his senior year at Har-Ber. The difference is this is the last time for so many things with us… Last first day of Early Week, Last first day of school, Last first game to march at. Well, you get the idea. As she embraces her “lasts,” we will be there with her in a different way than we were with our son. In just 9 short months, she will be walking across a stage and accepting her diploma. She will have graduated from high school and so will we.
As my daughter’s youth pastor AND her parent I ask myself a lot of questions about how we have invested in her. Did we teach her the right things? Will she be ready for the world that awaits her after high school? Will she continue serving and loving God even when she is away at college? My prayer is that there is a resounding “Yes!” to all of those questions. However, it is important for me to continually ask.
While we can’t fix many of the issues that students in our ministry face at home, we can have a plan for their time with us in student ministry. We need to paint a picture of what we want that student to look like at the end of their time in our ministry. Whether it is my daughter, Kat, or any other student in the ministry at Calvary, here are a few of the things that I hope our students will be characterized
as.
1. A Christ Follower.
While we love having students come to our meetings, student ministry should never be just about the numbers we run. And in the same way, attendance from a student to youth group is not an indicator that they are a Christ follower. We must share Jesus with them and help them embrace the idea of accepting Jesus as Savior and Lord. They must realize their sin state and turn to the one that can fix it. This must be our primary goal. There are a lot of great things you can share with your students. Your love will help them in dark times. Your support will lift them up. Your lessons may inspire them to greater service. BUT, if you haven’t introduced them to Jesus along the way, then you have missed the mark. Notice, I didn’t say, “If they aren’t saved, you have failed.” Our job is to faithfully share Jesus with them. Our prayer and goal is that they become Christ followers, but that is not up to us.
2. A Reader of the Word.
After salvation, engagement in God’s Word is one of the most important things that Christian can do. Jana MacGruber of Lifeway reports in her book, Nothing Less, that the “single greatest contribution to raising fully-devoted Christ-following young adults is
regular
Bible reading” (pg.52). It is our job as student ministry workers to point our students toward the inerrant, infallible, eternal Word of God. We may need help finding good resources, but nothing beats making sure they have a Bible in their hands. While at Temple Baptist Church of Rogers, we bought enough extra Bibles that we could give a Bible to every student and every guest that came through our student ministry.
3. A Committed Church Member.
Our students need to understand that church involvement is not just for old people. As saved, baptized believers, they have a responsibility to be involved with their local body. They can find love and support in ways that they don’t even understand. While in high school, my family didn’t attend church. However, my faith family cheered me on as I pursued God with my whole heart. My physical family supported and loved me, but my church was there as I was learning to exercise my ministry gifts. That can’t just be done with your youth group. It is accomplished best and fully when the church comes together.
4. A Mission Minded Servant.
It has always been my prayer that every student that goes through our student ministry will experience a mission trip at least once before they graduate or head off to college. This can take on all sorts of forms, but it is important for our students to see God working outside of their local context. The mission trip might be a “local” trip in their community. However, there is nothing quite like standing with those that are on the front lines of ministry around the world and see their faith and trust in a God that provides and moves.
While this isn’t an all-inclusive list, it is a place to start as we try to evaluate our student ministry and the impact that we are having on our students. Is my daughter all of these things? For the most part. She is like all teenagers, in a state of growth and change. I pray that I have done my part in pointing her toward Jesus. I am praying that God is using you to do that same in your local church with the students that God has placed under your care.