middle school missions week

 

  This week we had our middle school missions week in our hometown. It was intentional for us to have our middle school students awaken to how God is at work in their own city. We stayed overnight in a downtown church gymnasium and then would disperse teams of 7-12 students per group to serve across the city doing various ministry assignments ranging from helping set up apartments for refugees, working with homeless, painting, and working with children.

One of my favorite moments was watching a group of 8th grade girls bond and share stories from their site. I loved seeing them make connections to little moments and realizing that God was at work In that moment. For these girls, they were assigned an inner city daycare library that had no system in place to find books. One girl felt that they should group the books by topic. She told the other girls that she would find all the dinosaur books and put them together. At the end of the day they found out that a teacher needed all the dinosaur books because she was beginning a dinosaur series with her class. The students were ecstatic. Wow! How cool that God prompted them to do something that they had no idea would give them an opportunity to point that teacher to God. Matthew 5:16 says “Let your light so shine before men so that they may see your good deeds and give glory to your Father in Heaven.”

Make sure you are providing opportunities for your girls to let their light shine. And as you do, place adults around them calling attention to those moments and helping the girls see How God is orchestrating moments they sometimes can’t even see. Miss Chris is one of the leaders that poured her life into these girls this week. She served in the role of Eli this week but helping these girls to identify God’s voice and respond to it. As a result, we have a group of 8th grade girls on fire to make Him known.

Your turn:
What are some mission activities you have done to help your girls to Let their light shine?
What has been the result?

Visual graph displaying info on Teens and cellphones

Flowtown put together a visual graphic communicating data regarding the use of cellphones when intersected with the life of a teen. It’s not totally surprising, but it is very interesting. Below is a screenshot of  a visual graphic. Some of the informataion that I took note of for future communication are the following facts: Teenage boys send an average of 30 text messages per day and girls send an average of 80 messages a day.  Also the data tells us that email is declining continuously among students.  If email is declining among teens and texting is increasing, its interesting to imagine what kind of world will they experience and shape when they come into the work force.

It says the next activity students use their phone for other than making calls or texts is for taking pictures.  That’s always a problem we battle when we tell students they can’t have their cellphones, because they quickly point out that they won’t have a camera to document their experiences.

Look at the data by clicking on the picture and let me know what your observations were as you saw the visual graph.

cellphone

Knowing your Strength

This past Saturday I ran in my first 1/2 marathon. Perhaps I should explain that this is the furthest I have ever run at one time in my life, and I need to clarify that I have dumb feet.  I am the recipient of feet that my doctor says “belong to that of a 60 year old woman”.  I’ve had double foot surgery but the pain is still there after all I put them through with College soccer and Highschool track.  So for me to complete this 1/2 was a great achievement, and I didn’t do it alone.   As I was running I had friends running with me. The most influential friend was Amy. Amy is pictured to the left with the white hat on.  Amy never complained or seemed to have  a difficult mile as we raced together. Instead, she continually encouraged, pointed out things about the course I didn’t know, and gave me things to look out for as we raced together.  For example, there was an incline that was particularly causing the joy to leave my life and Amy heard me sigh. Her response: “How we doin’ friend? You know this incline ends after 5 houses. Let’s count them together. 1-2-3-4-5. There. It’s flattened out. ”   At another place in the race, there were people passing out fruit from the sidelines. I asked if we should get some. Her response: “No, we don’t take anything we didn’t train with. You don’t know what your body will do. Oh, and people throw their peels down so watch the road as you run, you don’t want to slip on a peel.”  It was like this the whole way.  As we neared the last 2 miles, she would begin to say, “2 more miles. You’ve got this. ”  My response, “Um not sure that I do.” Her response: “You know what my dad says?  He says, you never regret pushing yourself harder, but you always regret quitting.”  The last mile came and I wanted that finish line.  Amy’s response: “We’ve got 10 minutes left.  You know what my dad says?  He says you can do anything for 10 minutes.”    And I am proud to say that we both finished the race in 2 hours and 20 minutes!

As I reflect on that race, I reflected on how the Holy Spirit works in our lives. The person of the Holy Spirit is alive and at work within us as we minister to girls and their families. When it gets hard—He encourages.  When we need clarity of His word—He helps shed light on the scripture path.  When we need His strength for a task—He gives us His power to bring glory to God.

3 things to remember about The HOLY SPIRIT as we do ministry:

1. He’s intelligent and knows things we don’t know: (1 Co 2:10–11) The Spirit knows the things of God and translates that to us. We know that there is a“mind of the Spirit” (Ro 8:27).
2. He possesses emotion. It is possible to grieve the Spirit (Eph 4:30)  This moved me to know that The Spirit gets moved emotionally regarding the things of God.

3. The Spirit has a will. It is the Spirit who distributes spiritual gifts “as he wills” (1 Co 12:11). The phrase might even be translated “as he purposes,” because it shows a definite act of the will.

My pastor Mike Glenn taught us about the word Comforter which is the name given by Christ to the Holy Spirit. (John 14:16)  It translates in the greek as “paraclete” and means first Advocate, a defender, helper, strengthener, as well as comforter.
(Smith, W. (1997). Smith’s Bible dictionary. Nashville: Thomas Nelson.) It also means “one who comes alongside”.

The word Comforter in its Latin derivation means “with strength.”

So as you are running that race in ministry life…remember you’re not running alone. You have “with strength” running alongside of you.

SPRING MEETINGS: staying in touch with your volunteers

springmeetingsThis week our student ministry will be beginning our “SPRING MEETINGS” with volunteers. This is a new thing we are doing and I’m excited about it. Our 3 ministers took all the names of every volunteer small group leader and Sunday School teacher, then we divided the list up among the three of us. This will be a intentional 45-60 minute check in with every leader asking them key questions so that we can know how God is at work in and through their volunteer position. In addition, it allows us to know if they will be a leader in the fall, if there are dynamics that have cropped up during the last few months that they haven’t had a chance to let us know about, it helps us know how to pray for them personally, and to hear those stories that are victories God has done in their group that we may not have had the chance to celebrate with them. As a girls minister, it is my job to check in with all of our girl groups regularly and encourage our girls leaders specifically. I try to schedule ongoing coffee’s, lunches, and breakfasts with our leaders all throughout the year, but there are times when it is difficult to get to everyone. Knowing that we have 3 weeks to connect with all of our leaders regarding the same questions will truly be healthy and give us a pulse of what has been going on that we may not be seeing. It’s one more way to care for our leaders and really care for our students. I had my first spring meeting this week and it was such a blessing. Can’t wait to meet with my other assigned leaders. We are using TUNGLE to schedule all of these meetings and so far it has been going well. If you have missed what Tungle is…click here for my article discussing it. Now all of our student ministry staff have tungle pages!

So what do you talk about during Spring meetings?

Our team came up with some questions that we will use with all of our volunteers:

Check in with them to find out how their “7 ports of life” are doing. What are the 7 ports of life?

1. Family
2. recreation/entertainment
3. spiritual
4. work
5. social/ friends
6. self development
7. community/civic duty

What are some of the victories you have experienced this past year in your volunteer position?

How is your group doing in welcoming/ contacting members and guests?
(Open chair principle)

Do you have an associate teacher/ apprentice?  Do you have any you can recommend?

How can we help you be a better small group leader/ volunteer. what are the needs?

Are there any natural “healthy clusters” in your group that could help us identify how to multiply your group into another smallgroup? (Multiplication)

Do you feel led to lead a group next year?

Were you able to get to know the parents of your smallgroup students?


SHARE WITH US: what questions or checkin conversations do you have with your volunteers?

Guest blog from Tiffany part 2: after you return home from summer camp

Today we welcome Tiffany Haynes back for part 2 of her guest blog series on moving students from the Summer Camp High to a practical relationship with Christ in the day to day. If you missed her first post you can find it: here

Overcoming Insanity (the “after” step).

Albert Einstein was a smart cookie. He once said the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. If you were a church camper once, you remember it well. Every year you’d go to camp, get hyped up on sugar, pumped up on Jesus, and then pack up and head back to reality. Same thing happens to students today (and that’s not a bad thing!). The bad part is – reality isn’t always fun to come home to (especially when the home life is rocky).
One thing we can do to counteract the post-camp slump is to help our girls develop fresh, godly habits. Routine ruts suck the joy from people. When we sense students falling prey to the “old life” or simply sense a downer day, we can help by introducing them to a new challenge. If you have student resources at your fingertips – scan through some books or material and see if anything jumps out at you to share with your girl, check and see if the camp speaker has podcasts that you could send to remind your girl to stay in the Word, or ask God to show you a verse to share with them. Whatever you do in relation to girls ministry, let God lead and remember that tiny sparks can ignite titanic fires. Be a sparker.

Thanks Tiffany for sharing from your heart this week. A great resource I have been talking about is Haley Dimarco’s “God Girl” and “God Guy”. It would be a great after camp read as it really lays out what it looks like to be a girl or a guy that is abiding in Christ. In addition, to get students into the habit of daily reading get their hands on either the message remix PAUSE or The message remix SOLO.  The pause leads students through the bilical text and then asks them some key questions regarding it. The Solo is a lectio divina tool in getting your students to READ THINK PRAY LIVE the text.  What about you readers?  What are some tools you like to put into the hands of students after a mountain top experience like summer camp?

31v6du7e6kl_bo2204203200_pisitb-sticker-arrow-clicktopright35-76_aa300_sh20_ou01_31i1fvhncxl_bo2204203200_pisitb-sticker-arrow-clicktopright35-76_aa300_sh20_ou01_

GUEST BLOGGER: Moving students beyond the God-fling at summer camp

I’ve had the chance to meet Tiffany Haynes on www.mygirlsministry.com which is the social network for those who work with girls in their churches. I asked Tiffany to share a little about herself and this is what she told me:

Born a Kansan but now residing in southwest Missouri, Tiffany Haynes is a student ministry volunteer at First Baptist Church (FBC) of Cassville, Missouri.  Tiffany has a thirst to communicate God’s nature to students through a raw and Biblical approach.
In 2008, she married Christopher Haynes who keeps her centered and reminds her that – at least once a day – you should laugh so hard that you get a stitch in your side.  When Tiffany isn’t spending time with her hubby or the FBC girls, you can find her chatting it up with God on the road while she runs (and then enjoying that post-run latte!).

This week, Tiffany will be sharing two guest posts talking about the importance of moving your students from summer camp experiences to a deeper place of practically knowing God in the everyday normal routines of life.  We’re excited to introduce you to each other. If you want to get to know her better, sign up at www.mygirlsministry.com and “Friend” her.


93 GUEST BLOGGER: Tiffany Haynes

Experiences are addictive.  Shopping sprees, the latest tech-buy, the emotional rush from your latest crush, a    job    promotion… the list continues! Marketing gurus spend millions creating experiences for consumers to indulge in – just check out the latest advertisements, movies, and television shows.  Pictures of ecstasy are painted so delicately that we often forget the reality of reality.

Summer church camp can be just another experience for our girls if we’re not cautious.  While we want our students to participate in Christian-driven events and set aside time to recharge, we don’t want them to become addicted to the feeling of camp and forget the function.

The big question:  how do we create an environment of knowing God instead of just experiencing Him?  God created warm fuzzies for a purpose and I’ll be the first to admit that the days when I experience those fuzzies are fantabulous; but, most days we just live life.  We wake up, scrutinize ourselves in the mirror while getting ready, head to class (or work), participate in extra-curricular activities (or kiss boo-boos and pay bills), and come home.  In a culture that is drowning in “feel goods”, how can we steer our girls away from craving an experiential high and navigate them towards the God who truly satisfies?

Below is a tip to help you grease those church-camp wheels before summer camps hit and also how to keep them oiled once camps have passed…

Dig Deep Roots (the “before” step).

If you ask girls why they like church camp so much, you’ll probably hear that they like being away from home, the praise and worship is stellar (have you noticed no one ever runs up to the stage when the speaker walks out?), or they like chillaxing with new friends.  But when you crack the shell, it comes down to this:  they love the high.  Jesus does too – He is the Most High, after all.  But He’s also a God of tremendous depth and we need to ensure we’re sufficiently communicating to girls the intimate depth of God’s nature.

One way we can approach this is simply by asking students, one-on-one, what God is revealing to them.  If they mutter the typical, “I dunno.” then they are either too shy to respond, have no flippin’ clue, or aren’t sitting still long enough to actually discover what God might be saying.  Regardless of the reason, you can apply these steps:

  1. Make note of their response.  Either jot down a note on a piece of paper, use your handy-dandy iPhone, or text yourself.   That way you’ll remember their name and their response.
  2. Pray for them.  Try as we may, we cannot do the job of the Holy Spirit.  Meaning, we can’t create in others an appetite for God’s word; however, we can consistently pray the Holy Spirit work in that student’s life and that we be used to sharpen them (Proverbs 27:17).
  3. Follow-up.  Invest in several follow-ups with your girl.  It could simply be an encouraging Facebook posting letting them know you’re praying for them, a note you slip into their Bible during small group, or just sitting down with them over a Slurpee and talking between the brain freezes.  Whatever route you choose, be consistent and ask open-ended questions like, “So, last week you said you were having trouble getting along with _____.  How’s that going?”

By applying these steps over time (one hit wonders won’t work, by the way), you’ll build a stronger relationship with your girl and have the privilege of watching them bloom as they lay open their heart to you.

Tune in later this week for Tiffany’s continued thoughts on moving students from an experience to a practical relationship in the everyday rhythms of life after summer camp.

Girls Ministry top picks in resources

I’m gearing up to lead a conference this weekend in Gatlinburg for TN WMU and another friend of mine @bruceedwardstn asked me for what resources I tend to use within our girlsministry. So here is a quick place to send people: www.shelfari.com/amyjogirardier There are some other resources I use that aren’t on shelfari right now: Jimmie Davis’s Girls ministry book from Lifeway is a great resource and she is a great friend. But you can find several books that I use on a regular basis on that site. So here is my bookshelf favorites. And you can go to www.shelfari.com/amyjogirardier to see my other book lists as well. Let me know what’s on your “shelf” in the comments.

Shelfari: Book reviews on your book blog

Guest bloggers for girlsminister.com

guestbloggerI am looking for some guest bloggers to be a part of girlsminister.com. If you are interested, I’ve put together a document to give some guidelines and direction to help in determining if your content is best for this site. Feel free to download it and give me a shout out if this is something you would be interested in being a part of. CLICK THE FOLLOWING LINK: girlsministercom-content-guide

Tigertext: helping teens and adults cover their tracks

tiger This is a new app only available on iphones right now but it allows a person to erase texts you’ve sent on another person’s cell phone. Interestingly named Tigertext.  The company that released it promises that it was not named after Tiger Woods but ironically it would have been a program he would’ve benefitted from.  I think this is not something that teaches teens how to use their phones. It bypasses consequences and moves straight to covering up their actions. I will never have this on my phone because I try to create boundaries in my phone useage that would never put me in a place that would cause me to send something I would want to have retracted.  Not using my text messaging past certain hours. My question is: can this really delete poor texting decisions a teen or adult makes? Does the text still get documented somewhere that the authorities could trace it down. I would like to know more information—otherwise we will now have more Sexters unaccountable for their actions.  Shane Hipps makes mention that when you bring in a technology into your life, you gain and you lose.  What do you see the advantages of this technology being and what do you see the disadvantage of this technology being if it were to be introduced into your life or the life of your teens?

Visual Prayer reminders for our girls retreat

photo-6

Prayer is important. I want to remember that as I get caught up in the details of planning for Snowball. So I took the time to make some visual prayer reminders on my hands. I see my hands all the time, and I want to remember to “be still (stop striving) and know that He is God.”  So what have I written on my hands?  (Do you like my “wonder twins-unite” picture that displays my prayer reminders?)

Romans 8:26 In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groans that words cannot express.

1 John 5:14-15 This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us. 15And if we know that he hears us—whatever we ask—we know that we have what we asked of him.

What prayer reminders do you need to cling to in the midst of the week?