I am still somewhat new at this whole being a Youth Pastor
thing and because of that I am still learning as I go about some of the ‘nuts
and bolts’ of what its all about. One thing that has been on my heart is
providing places and spaces for students to invite their friends to. But I found
on at least a few occasions, I was ill prepared to reap the harvest and likely
missed a great opportunity. A great example would be our Flashmob event that we
a few years back, the students hyped it, we planned for everything, they
brought tons of their friends, in fact we saw a nearly 50% increase in students
at the event, but I was not prepared to handle that. In light of this, here are
a few things I am wrestling with.
Make it manageable:
We only get one chance to make a first impression, and if someone is an invited
guest in the Church, I would like to make that experience the best I can. If we
host an outreach event with many new students, there is a chance they could not
be personally welcomed, they might feel awkward and this could be the last time
they set foot in the door. Our Flashmob event taught me a great lesson that I
need to take an active role in greeting those new students so that they do feel
welcomed. If you plan and event so that students can bring 10 friends each to, and
they do, you might be doing more harm than good.
Unleash your leaders:
If you don’t have a welcome and greeting team, you need one! This is the best
way to meet students when you cannot do it themselves. This is one of the most
important front line ministries; they are the friendly face of the Youth Group.
Our greeting team has a ’20 questions’ form they hand out with questions
ranging from contact info, to Bieber or Timberlake to Pancakes or Waffles.
These questions are quite strategic in quickly finding if they are from a
Christian home, if they are skater kid or a “Lightsaber kid” with apologies to
Josh, these are the pseudo dorky 8-10th grade boys that grab the
coat rack and pretend it’s a Lightsaber. The purpose is to find a small group
that they will thrive and make meaningful connections with students with
similar interests. On the first night they are there, they will meet at least 3
core students, their new small group leader and myself.
Learn their name: There
is nothing more valuable that learning a student’s name, it says to them that
they belong and that they are memorable. All that contact information we get
from outreach events is entered into our database; they are added on Facebook
that night, invited into our student ministry FB group and added to our SMS
blasts each week. Once they accept a friend request, we print a copy of their Facebook
profile pic, put in on the wall in my office and the next time I see that
student, at their school or at Youth, you better believe I will do everything I
can to remember their name.
Planning an event is easy, engaging, welcoming and retaining
the student influx of students is the difficult part, it takes teamwork,
intentionality, hard work and diligence. Otherwise, these events will be
attendance spikes that will have little long-term value. If your objective is
for big numbers at one off events that is one thing, but if your goal is
creating more disciples, be prepared that when you cast your net, it might come
back full.
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