KurtMore PostsFailure To Launch

I never saw the movie, but I like the phrase. Mostly because I’m an ideas guy and have grown quite comfortable with “failure to launch” being a normal part of my experience. For many people dreaming, asking “what if”, imagineeering and pie-in-the-sky thinking is frustrating and even pointless because it isn’t reality based and seldom yields results.

I disagree. I think that type of thinking almost always yields results. The results may not always be what you originally hoped for or expected, but bold, outlandish, unrealistic thinking typically spurs on conversations that result in tangible progress that helps you move forward. In my ministry career, I have had dozens….scratch that; HUNDREDS of “failure to launch” ideas that, although they didn’t come to fruition, spurred our ministry toward other fantastic opportunities.

Don’t let the fear of failure keep you from dreaming!

Comments 1 View Comments April 22, 2010

KurtMore PostsThinking About Evangelism

The fact that one of the chapters in my upcoming book discusses the topic of evangelism, and having just spent half a day with Greg Steir at our annual junior high Summit really has me thinking A LOT about the topic lately. Here are some things that have been bouncing around in my head:

- How do we continue to create a sense of evangelistic urgency in our students?

- Why have we (by “we” I mean most of the youth workers I have talked to, including myself) seemingly completely abandoned a more traditional proclamation of the gospel in so much of our methodology?

- How are we equipping our students to share their faith, be salt and light, live missionally etc.?

I have other thoughts, but those are the big ones I have been writing about, talking about with others and thinking about.

Comments 3 View Comments April 16, 2010

KurtMore PostsRandom Randomness

- Finally finished the manuscript for The 9….Best Practices of Youth Ministry! I’m sure there will be some re-writes, but feels wonderful to be done with the majority of the project.

- Have spent the last two days at GROUP Publishing in Colorado with at the annual junior high pastor “Summit”. Each year, for the past eight, a group of about 20 of us gather together to talk shop, sharpen and challenge each other, pray and hang out. This year was different because we are missing several of our regulars, but it has been a fantastic time.

- Saw Date Night the other night….I was pleasantly suprised. Not going to win any awards, but enjoyable.

- Today my son, Cole, turns 13 and in a couple months my daughter, Kayla, will turn 16. I’m still 30.

Comments 1 View Comments April 14, 2010

KurtMore PostsSome Differences Between Jr. High & High School Ministry

Last night my wife and I had dinner with some friends who are getting ready to start a full-time middle school position at a church in the D.C. area. It is is his first full-time position and, up until now, he has only worked with high school aged students as a volunteer. He asked me what some of the differences are. There are many, but here are a few of the biggies:

- Your ministry is almost as much to parents as it is to junior highers. You have to keep them informed, you have to keep them excited about your ministry, you have to stay in their favor etc. Because they don’t drive, and because JH ministry does so much more “extra curricular” stuff than a typical children’s ministry, mom and dad’s willingness to shuttle their kids to and from your program is a major factor. You also have an incredible opportunity to provide a little bit of hope and help to parents who are new to raising a young teen.

- Lessons: Keep them short, simple and highly tangible.

- Relational time: You just can’t expect the same depthof conversation, “give and take” etc. when you are spending time with a junior higher.

- Building trust: It’s much easier with junior highers. In fact, it takes almost no time at all.Most of the time, if a junior higher feels like you like them and are interested in them, they will like you back and instantly begin to trust you.

- “Preventing” Vs. “Fixing”: Those aren’t the best words to describe it, but junior high ministry is on the front end of so many of the struggles teenagers go through, and we get a chance to help them learn to make wise choices, etc. and prevent a lot of the pitfalls of the teen years. High school ministry often plays the role of coming along and helpingstudents who have already made some really poor decisions.

There are lots more…..add one or two!

Comments 9 View Comments March 30, 2010

KurtMore PostsMy Blog, LIVE Curriculum For JH, I’m A Mutt…..and other stuff

- My blog isn’t dead, just slowing down for now. Partly because we are in the long, slow process of creating a new “Simply Junior High” blog that will include additional contributors, some fun special features etc. The process isn’t “long and slow” because the blog is so amazing it’s taking a long time to create, but because the good folks at Simply Youth Ministry are swamped right now.

- Part of what is keeping Simply Youth Ministry so busy is that they are putting a ton of energy into a new resource that we are SUPER excited about. If you are familiar with the LIVE small group curriculum, you will be glad to hear that we are gearing up to release a junior high version tht includes two full years of online, downloadable, customizable small group curriculum written specifically for young teens.

- I’m still up early every day with a goal of spending three hours working on The 9….Best Practices of Youth Ministry. I think it’s shaping up to become a book that will spur lots of great youth ministry thinking. This is largely due to the subject matter as well as the really, really good contributions of my co-author, and long time friend, Tim Levert. Tim has a PhD in Youth Ministry and serves in a United Methodist church outside Columbus, Ohio. Melding our two minds has been an interesting proposition at times! You know how it is; some people have the brains and others have the looks.

- My church has been takingsome heat for having the Jona’s Brothers,as musical guests at our Easter Service. My response to the numerous critics I have talked to is usually a simple one: 1) Our pastor has an evangelistic heart and wants to reach out to as many non-believers in our community as possible on Easter. This should help that effort. 2) The Jona’s Brothers offered to play for FREE because they want to be part of our Easter celebration. Cetainly some churches would turn down that offer, but my hunch is most (including those led by some criticizing the decision) would welcome the rare opportunity.

- Years ago, my wife and I made a prayerful and strategic ministry decision: Instead of being loyal to a denomination, we would be loyal to Jesus and would serve in any setting we felt He was being glorified and lost people were being reached. As a result we have served in an Assemblies of God setting, a Presbyterian setting, a Wesleyan setting and a Southern Baptist setting (yes, Saddleback is Southern Baptist!). I am a theological “mutt” who really just wants to see the name of Jesus lifted higher and most of the other stuff minimized. Luke 19:10 is one of my favorite verses, “For the son of man came to seek and save those who are lost.”

- With only six more episodes of Lost, we are FINALLY getting somewhere!

Comments 6 View Comments March 25, 2010

KurtMore PostsRandom Randomness

9YMBestPractices_COV4b_lr

-Just settled on final title and (almost) final cover design of new book. Actual release date is still several months away.

- I have been reminded the past couple of weeks how quickly negativity spreads. Sarcasm, bitterness etc. can quickly poison the well.

- I filled my NCAA tournament bracket out in approximately 53 seconds (right before the deadline). Sadly, the early results reflect this.

- Next month, I speak at the Southern California District of the Assemblies of God annual gathering. The audience will be comprised mostly of Sr. Pastors. I’m excited (and more than a little nervous) to share my heart with them.

- The Broncos recently acquired quarterback Brady Quinn. Here is a text message exchange I had with my friend:

Dan: “What do you think of Brady Quinn?”

Kurt: “I try not to.”

Comments 1 View Comments March 19, 2010

KurtMore PostsWhy Having Quality Volunteers Makes Your Ministry So Much Stronger:

Below is email one of our small group leaders recently sent to a parent who was upset about her son getting injured while playing a game during small group.She had sent a scathing email accusing him of negligence, etc. He had tried to call her several times but wasunable to get ahold of her. I’m not sure there is a “professional” youth worker on the planet who could have written a better email to a concerned parent.

Dear Mrs. XXXX,
Thanks for letting me know about what’s going on with XXXXX. I’m so sorry to have left you feeling like there wasn’t adequate supervision at last night’s C Group. I’ve been leading small groups with students for about 10 years now, and I always try hard to provide a safe, healthy environment. That being said, I can never completely remove the possibility of an accident happening, and I think this is what happened last night. The game we were playing was not dangerous, butXXXX had an accident and got injured. Had I known more clearly the extent of his injury, I CERTAINLY would have contacted you immediately. When I asked him if he was OK, he assured me more than once that he was fine and never mentioned feeling dizzy or not being able to see. Please letXXXX know that in the future he can always tell me if he is not feeling well or is injured, and I will do everything possible to contact you immediately.

For the future, XXXXXX, I hope you’ll feel comfortable thatXXXX will be well taken care of and provided a safe environment at C Group. I’ll continue to run C Group as I always have, with time for deeper learning and other time for fun and games. Like I said before, I cannot promise you (or any parent, for that matter) that accidents won’t happen, but I can promise, now that I understand your expectation a little better, that you will always be immediately contacted in case of an injury. I fully respect your role as XXXX’s parent and understand if you feel you need to make other arrangements for him for C Group, but I hope you’ll allow him to continue to be a part of my group.

Please feel free to call me at XXX-XXX-XXXX if you have any further concerns that I can talk through with you. Please letXXXX know I have added him to my prayer list today and I hope he feels better soon.

Danny

Comments 5 View Comments March 16, 2010

KurtMore PostsRandom Randomness

- After spending the better part of 3 days with middle school youth workers at SYMC, I am (once again) convinced that many of the sharpest minds in youth ministry are found in middle school ministry!

- At a conference like SYMC (or YS or any other large gathering of youth workers) you meet lots and lots of people. It’s always such a great reminder to me that God uses an amazingly vast array of people to pour into students. I’m so thankful that the stereotypical youth worker (young, cool, plays guitar, surfs, rides skateboards, has a tattoo….) is no longer the “norm”.

- We are starting a 3-week series this weekend called “STUFF”. We are using household stuff as object lessons to teach a biblical truth. It’s a series we have done once before with great success. This week’s lesson: Take Out The Trash!

- Quite a few people tracked me down at the conference to ask me about regional campuses (basically church plants that are still part of the mother ship). Questions about how we structure etc. My simple answer: “Treat them like a franchise with freedom” They are a franchise in that there are certainly some things that they have to do in line with the main campus because they are the same church. But there shouldn’t be an overly large amount of control…they need freedom to tweak the ministry to their context.

- Dear Denver Broncos, Please get rid of Brandon Marshall.

- Dear senate and house leadership, Please either sign a health care bill or put the thing to rest. Filibusters, reconciliation threats, back room deals, political manuevering…I think we are beginning to tire of the whole game.

Comments 2 View Comments March 5, 2010

KurtMore PostsPodcast Future

As many of you who read this blog know, I have had a junior high-themed video podcast for a few years. If you’ve never seen one of them, you can check out the archive right here.

As I get ready to “crank up” the frequency of the podcast, I would love to have your input into what it looks like as it moves forward. Here are a few options (I would put a slick survey tool here but don’t know how!):

1. Keep it as it is: Me in front of a camera talking about one topic for 10 minutes. Short, sweet and to the point.

2. Kurt and Guest: Me and a guest in front of a camera talking about one topic for 10 minutes. Short, sweet, to the point with one other perspective.

3. “Steal” the Simply Youth Ministry Podcast format: Create a 3-4 person team and make the podcast more like a radio show lasting about 30 minutes focusing purely on Junior High topics(the SYM podcast is typically about an hour).

4. Keep us guessing: Make it a random mash-up of all of the above.

Would love your thoughts in the comment section or you can email them to me at kurtj@saddleback.com

KurtMore PostsRandom Randomness

- LATELY, I have been thinking quite a bit about the need for junior high youth workers to be willing to do the tough work of getting into the minds of our kids instead of asking students to get into our minds. It seems that we often try to get students to laugh at what we think is funny, go “wow” at what we think is cool, want to talk about topics we find interesting etc. It’s easier to minister that way, but it’s not as effective. As adults, we need to be willing to go to their level instead of hoping they will come to ours.

- QUESTION: Do you know your teaching style? Andy Stanley posed this same question to a group of pastors a few weeks ago and it has stuck with me ever since. While I definitely seem to have a style, I’m not sure I have ever really dissected it to see if it’s the most effective style for communicating to junior highers. I am in that process now. Note: this feels much more important when I take seriously the whole “Me entering their minds instead of expecting them toenter mine” idea.

- FINGERS; I’m glad I have ten of them. I am spending a few days with my good friend Scott Rubin, and yesterday I had the first-time experience of operating a snow blower to clear his driveway and sidewalks. I naively assumed that a snow blower was just a big vacuum that somehow sucked the snow into the machine and blew it out the chute. What I didn’t know was that there is a big “fan/chopper/swirly thing” that serves to break the snow up before it shoots it out. At one point the chute got clogged and I reached way down into it to clear the snow only to have my finger get caught briefly in the “fan/chopper/swirly thing”. Luckily I had gloves on and the snow blower was idling so no damage was done. Just a little bit of pain and a whole lot of “Scott…why didn’t you tell this California kid that snow blowers are also finger choppers!” It never crossed his mind that he had to warn me not to jab my whole hand down the snow blower chute. After all, he has been around snow blowers for years, while it was a foreign experience for me.

- ASSUMPTIONS. The snow blower incident and Scott’s assumption that I understood the inherent dangers posed got me wondering how often do we as junior high youth workers assume certain things about our students. Many of us have been around junior high ministry for years and so much of what it entails has become second nature to us. But, it’s completely different for our students! They are first-time travelers on the road of early adolescence…it’s foreign to them. Far too often, I’m afraid, I assume things about them that I shouldn’t. Note: again, this goes back to that whole “entering their minds instead of expecting them to enter mine” thing.

Comments 5 View Comments February 23, 2010