How to get people to “join the dance” of girls ministry

This past week I ran across a youtube video that was being discussed on Seth Godin’s website. He was discussing this video in the context of tribes. As I watched it, I couldn’t help but see girls ministers. Sure the video starts with one crazy dancing guy. Then finally another crazy guy joins him. It takes about a minute before a 3rd crazy dancing guy joins…but this guy is when a spontaneous movement begins. As you watch this video, see the beginning of a movement take shape, and then I want to begin a conversation about how we invite people to “join the dance” of girls ministry.

So as you watched this video, maybe you feel like the 1st guy…God has completely caught your heart and planted the vision for girls ministry in you but no one around you is joining you or supporting you. But you just keep on dancing.

For you that are reading this and feel like the crazy dancing guy…I want to tell you to keep dancing and pray that God will send you some other people that share the mission and vision of helping teenaged girls and families of teenaged girls. Pray that God will send you someone else to “dance it out”. 🙂

Imagine how that crazy dancing guy felt when his passion caught the attention of someone else. All of a sudden, he wasn’t alone anymore. YOU NEED ANOTHER CRAZY DANCING GUY! In fact, you need to surround yourself with them. Start sharing the mission and call that God has placed on your heart with friends and family. Share your prayers for girls in your church with your pastors, your youth minister, your women’s minister. Usually, when someone does this in our church, they get pointed to me—why? because people have heard my heart for girls ministry so much that they know this person and I belong with each other because we’re dancing the same dance.
So keep on dancing, but don’t try to do it on your own. You will tire and quit the dance. You need a dance mob—not a spotlight.

Finally a 3rd dancer joins after about a minute. And when he joins, something happens—the movement really begins. People rush from all areas of the place to get involved and join the dance. So in this analogy—whose your 3rd dancer? When I watch this video I can’t help but think that God is the 3rd dancer. I’m so guilty of forgetting that God created the dance…and I often times leave Him sitting on the sidelines…I sometimes think that my frantic dancing will be enough to get a movement started. All it will do will burn myself and my 2nd crazy dancer to a tired mess.

I wish that girls ministry and movements in general happened as fast as this…and then again–I know that the infrastructure to continue to grow is important to build in order to support all that God wants to do. God knows and will provide the infrastructure of leaders and parents if we continue to rely on Him and include Him in the dance. Perhaps I’m being overly spiritual with this video but I know from our own experience with girls ministry that movements of leaders and depth within our students truly begins and expands when we lay our plans before God and ask that He move in the hearts of girls…parents…and leaders.

My prayer is that girls ministers everywhere would keep dancing even though sometimes they may feel alone. No matter what happens…keep asking God to send people your way and just be prepared that when the crowd comes…they may not be what you expected and they may not dance where you want them to dance…but ask God to help shape you to be the girls minister He needs in order to grow a meaningful movement that truly nurtures teenaged girls to be healthy women now so they are not broken later.

Now get to dancing!

Girlsminister.com: Let’s talk volunteers part1

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Let’s talk Volunteers: Part 1

Some of you may be thinking about volunteer recruitment for the fall.  This is usually a good time to let someone get their feet wet in your ministry without the heavy commitment.  It’s a great time to have people chaperone and get to know some of the students in your group and see how they connect and love on students.  I want to do a couple of VOLUNTEER posts so today we will cover the types of volunteers to surround yourself with.

I have had an “ah-ha” moment this past year. I thought I would share this with you as you begin to recruit more volunteers into your girls ministries. I have had some pretty draining moments this month that have required me to shift my regular schedule often. These situations were never planned, but they require professionalism and careful procedure. I often felt like a surgeon as I delicately probed,observed and asked God for guidance. As I was doing this, other projects that I would have needed to be doing were having to be passed off to others. One of the things I found during this time was how appreciative I am of “BRIDGE people” and how I need more “BRIDGE people” to surround me in ministry. What does that mean?
I realized one day that a volunteer named Liz was like a Bridge. Every time I came to her with an idea, a dream, or a need…she went to work building a bridge to get our girls ministry or myself to that realized idea, dream or met need. I started realizing that once I said something…bridge work was happening.
It was an amazing blessing when last week, Liz made our mentoring recruitment party happen. She was able to get my scattered brain focused long enough to get the details she needed and then she was off. The Mentoring party would not have happened without Liz.

Unfortunately there are other people that God sometimes allows in our path. Sometimes circumstances or communication problems create a temporary condition or perhaps it’s on-going but regardless the condition is called a “BRICK WALL person”. This is the type of person who seems to stop you with negative comments. This is the type of person who constantly says, “that’s not going to work” or “people won’t like that”. This is the type of person that is determined to block you no matter what.(Sometimes we can even be “brick wall people” to ourself)

Brick walls hurt when you constantly run into them. Bridges are beautiful because they allow you to go over gaps that you would not have otherwise travelled without the Bridge.

I hope and pray that you surround yourself with lots of BRIDGE people. I hope and pray that we guard our hearts from becoming BRICK WALLS.

Maybe this illustration will prove useful as you have to discuss with a difficult volunteer or leader the way they are coming across. In Exodus 17 there is a powerful story of God calling Moses to a task. He has to hold God’s staff up in order for a battle to be successful. But his arms get tired. As a result, men come to get a rock for him to sit on and they hold Moses’s arms up with God’s staff and God gives them a victory. I love this passage in Exodus that shows a beautiful image of people coming alongside of Moses to help him in his weakness. I love that God provided these men to literally hold Mose’s arms up. As you lead, you need people to come alongside you and help. Your small group leaders need someone to come alongside of them and support them. We cannot do girls ministry on our own. If we do, we will burn out.

May God send many bridge people your way and may you be looking for those who can support you. May you also be discovering new ways to support your volunteers as they love on girls and parents in the trenches of girls ministry.

  • What are some ways you have been encouraged or supported by a volunteer?
  • What are some ways you have encouraged or supported your volunteers?

GO AHEAD…let the bragging begin 🙂

Girls ministry tips for surviving graduation celebrations.

So you have some upcoming graduations? Some of you have already gone through this…others may be having graduation celebrations this week and next…so what are some tips if you have several graduations and multiple parties? Girlsminister.com has some quick tips on surviving graduation day as a girls minister.

Girls Minister on the road: The Graduation day Survival guide from Amy Jo Girardier on Vimeo.

Girlsminister.com: Do We Have a Princess Perception Problem In the Church?

princess

I read an interesting article that a friend had sent to me this week.  I have had several conversations with those I trust, regarding an observation that I believe is influencing girls ministry and the future of women’s ministry. I realize that in even beginning this conversation that I will receive some flack, but this is just something that I want us to talk about.

So without further ado, I will just stop beating around the bush.  I’m concerned with the unbalanced perspective that the church and home is presenting to our daughters regarding their identity in Christ.  I’m concerned that we have for so long been concerned with the self-esteem of girls that we have told them they are princesses of the King without sharing the big picture.  I have heard this message taught over and over again but the world is telling them they are princesses as well and I don’t think we are helping our daughters understand the difference.  In fact, the way I have seen some churches and resources talk to girls about their identity in Christ has been heavily presented as a Princess in a very Disney like manner.  I have been to girls conferences where every girl was given a tiara and a scepter at the end of the conference.  Really?  That seems to fly in the face of Philippians 2 where we are told to be like minded with Christ.

Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others better than yourselves. 4Each of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to the interests of others.  5Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus:

6Who, being in very nature[a] God,
did not consider equality with God something to be grasped,
7but made himself nothing,
taking the very nature[b] of a servant,
being made in human likeness.
8And being found in appearance as a man,
he humbled himself
and became obedient to death—
even death on a cross!

I am concerned that we are focusing so much on helping girls know their value that we end up giving them plastic tiaras and scepters and manicures all in the name of Christ.  but is it possible that we are only creating some princess perception problems that are growing into narcissism and entitlement among our girls?  Why aren’t we seeing more resources for girls being written on “following our shepherd”  or “knowing our potter”.  Do a quick search of some of the publishing companies and resources for churches and you will quickly find items for sale like: God’s little princess feathered Boa and The Princess Bible.

Here’s what I’m not saying:  I’m not saying that it isn’t important for girls who have accepted Christ into their lives to hear that they are daughters of The King of Kings.  But perhaps they should be finding out more about The King and His character and less about the plastic tiara they think He would put on her.  Perhaps our daughters should hear more about these verses:

1 Corinthians 6:20   ( not your own. you were bought with a price)
Colossians 3:3 (you died and your life is hidden with Christ)
Phil. 1:6 (God will complete the good work He started in me)
Ephesians 1:5 (I am adopted as His Child)
Ephesians 2:10 (We are God’s workmanship created in christ Jesus to do good works…)
Ephesians 2:19 (we are fellow citizens with God’s people and members of God’s household)
Ephesians 3:12 (We may approach God with freedom and confidence)
Ephesians 2:22 (I am a dwelling in which God lives)
Gal. 2:20 (I am crucified with Christ)
2 Cor. 5:17 ( I am a new creation)
Romans 8:2 (set free from sin)

If Esther were not a princess would we quote: For such a time as this…quite as much? What if Rahab were a princess or Dorcas or Deborah—would our daughters be able to know their stories more?  All I am suggesting, is that we may be presenting only part of the story to our daughters.  And because of it, they may be developing a bit of a “I-sight” problem.

It appears that this is happening in the secular world too so I wonder if this is where a little of the infiltration is coming from.

Read this excerpt from:

Princess pedestal: How many girls are on one?

All the pink, frilly and sparkly — from the princess dresses to the four-foot-high pink castle in the playroom — isn’t necessarily what Caroline Morris would choose for her eldest daughter.

She doesn’t want to stop her 6-year-old from being who she is. But as princess fever has reached a new high with this generation of girls, she and other parents are feeling the urge to rein in the would-be reigning ones, just a little.

That’s especially true in tough economic times, when more parents are focusing on messages of frugality and humility that, they say, just don’t fit with the princess mentality that has become a rite of passage for many girls.

Morris knows, of course, that some parents think such worries are ridiculous.

“But what happens when our daughters get to adulthood and they realize that the world isn’t a fairy tale?” asks Morris, who lives in suburban Atlanta and insists she doesn’t mind imaginative play. She just wants her girls to strive for something beyond being “pretty and glamorous.”

The debate has been around for a long time, says Dr. Ken Haller, a pediatrician at Cardinal Glennon Children’s Medical Center in St. Louis. But as princess paraphernalia becomes all but unavoidable, he says he’s seeing more parents struggling with it and “questioning whether the princess message is a good thing.”

These days, that message begins practically at birth with everything from princess baby shirts and “her royal highness” bibs to princess-themed photo albums and picture frames for baby girls. By the time those girls are toddlers, many are drawn to the princess dresses, glittery crowns and even makeup.

And it goes on and on. Barbie has many princess-oriented items, including a top-selling “Princess and the Pauper” DVD. Even seemingly tougher girls like Dora the Explorer occasionally don crowns, too. And then, of course, there’s the undisputed leader in all things princess: The Walt Disney Co.

In 2000, Disney began grouping several of its female movie characters together as the “Disney Princesses” — from “Sleeping Beauty” to the more recent “Mulan.” Since then, executives there say that part the entertainment mogul’s business has grown from $300 million that first year to an anticipated $4 billion internationally this year. And at the end of the year, they will debut an African-American princess, Tiana, and the movie “The Princess and the Frog.”

All of it, Haller says, constitutes a brilliant marketing move that targets a normal stage of child development. By age 3, kids are beginning to define themselves, both with gender and as individuals. They’re also big-time into fantasy play, which for boys, often manifests itself in super heroes.

But somehow, the princess phenomenon has become way more loaded.

“It just encourages parents who put their kids on a pedestal — and who encourage their kids a lot and rarely criticize,” says Jean Twenge, an associate professor of psychology at San Diego State who’s done research on the way parenting affects children. “You could label that kind of parenting ‘princess parenting.'”

Twenge, who is herself the mom of a young daughter, talks about some of this in her new book “The Narcissism Epidemic: Living in the Age of Entitlement.”

Among other things, she and co-author W. Keith Campbell found the rate that college-age women were developing narcissistic traits was four times that of men, when analyzing surveys taken from 2002 through 2007.

For the rest of the article, click this link.

As I have been pondering this, praying about how we address this with our girls ministry, and continuing to have dialogue with others who influence girls ministry and/or have daughters in their home, I wrote out the introduction to a “private” document that I write on every once in awhile.  The working title is: “Tossing my tiara—a lesson in leaving entitlement behind.”

Here is a snippet discussing where I believe the root of this princess syndrome begins for all of us:

She kneels on the ground with a half-eaten apple only inches from her hand.  She made a choice.  She chose the fruit.  She discovered shame instead of power.  Her paradise has ended.  Their maker has made provisions for them but everything has changed.  She stares into the night sky and wonders what she has done.  The battle for “More” has begun.  The battle for “entitlement” started.  It’s now in our blood.  It’s now in our story.  We have painted pictures of who we are in Christ to our daughters with bedazzled tiaras and beautiful scepters claiming this speaks to the value and significance of WHOSE we are, but do our daughters see His Kingdom as it is supposed to be or have we just planted seeds in their heart that will grow into The Privileged Tree?

May we continue to share with our daughters, that they are daughters of a King…but may we also help them to realize that the crown looks different than disney’s.  May they not grow up to ask a mirror on the wall whose the fairest of them all, but may they reflect their very Creator-Father-Shepherd-King to a world that needs to know Him.

Psalm 103:4
who redeems your life from the pit and crowns you with love and compassion,

Girlsminister.com features last freebie song from Sara Beth.

picture-2Today is our last time to feature a new song from Sara Beth Geoghegan .  Sara Beth thanks so much for sharing these songs with us.  If you have enjoyed them on here but want to have them to take with you, then you will rejoice in knowing Sara Beth is on itunes. Click here to launch her itunes page .

Here is Sara Beth one final time to share her heart about one of her new songs:

Other Side of the Cloud:  I was taking a walk with a good friend in New
Orleans at Audubon Park.  It is a beautiful park across the street from my
grandparents house, so it feels like home to me. However, I had just
broken off an engagement and was having a severe crisis of faith and
identity.  I asked my friend Toy if I would ever emerge from the heavy
darkness I had recently entered into.  She told me the story a mentor had
told her when she had been in her own intense darkness, doubting that she
would ever be “normal” again.  There was a bird in the middle of a stormy
cloud.  She was lost.  She was fumbling around for light.  She felt
oppressed by the dark cloud.  She spent some time in the cloud, learning
how to navigate when there wasn’t much visually to see.  Everything felt
confusing and hard, but she kept going.  When she finally reached the end
of the cloud, she burst out into the light.  And the sky was more
beautiful for the time she was in the dark cloud.  She flew higher and the
sun felt warmer, she was ABLE to really experience life as a result of the
dark.  After Toy told me the story, we continued to walk, and I began to
BELIEVE I would emerge on the other side of the cloud…

Thanks Sara Beth!  I know there are times when it is hard to imagine that the cloud will pass in our lives.  I know that in my life the cloud was darkest when my father passed away.  In the midst of the cloud, I think I even felt like God had cut Himself off from me even though I knew that was not possible.  Still I just began to get angry with Him and numb towards everything else, until the day the cloud began to have rays of sunshine break through.  It was almost 5 months of the cloud, and then I simply spoke to God about how angry I was.  That was the first step.  Then the healing began.  The warmth of better days called to me and I knew there was still life to be lived.  And now looking back, this side of the cloud is much brighter, more vivid, and my understanding of God’s love and healing more felt—more real—more needed.  Thanks Sara Beth for helping put music to a powerful picture of healing and moving forward in life.  You are  a blessing.
[mp3]https://girlsminister.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/04-other-side-of-the-cloud1.mp3[/mp3]Click on the player to hear Sara Beth Geoghegan’s song “Other Side of The Cloud”.

A Girls Ministry top 5 “need to know” list:

top5list

Every once in awhile we will be posting some list posts that we think you need to know about in regards to girls ministry. Today’s list post is for women leaders in your church that are trying to figure out how to raise these young women to take their places.

So here it is: 5 things women leaders need to know in order to raise young women to take their places.

1. Pray for girls in your church. Remember what it was like to be a girl, and know that even with all the technology and advancement that these girls are familiar with—they still need the same basic things you did when you were their age. They need to belong. They need to be loved. They need to know God has a plan for their lives even when they don’t have the attention of the cool crowd or the boy they are crushing on. They need to know their identity, significance, and purpose through Christ. Before you say one thing to mentor a girl, speak her name in prayer to God—and commit to continuing to be her secret prayer warrior.

2. To commit themselves to walk along-side of girls in your church for a consistent amount of their teen-aged journey.
The reasons that I am doing what I am doing now is a direct result of the influence of my mother, and 3 key women leaders who committed to walk alongside of me through life, speak God’s truth into my life, and encourage me while challenging me to be the woman God was calling me to be.

3. Give them opportunities. When you spend time with girls, you will begin to see characteristics and gifts beginning to emerge that may seem rough at first, but if they are given opportunities to lead and try out those gifts, they can begin to see how God made them that way for a purpose. It saddens me greatly that some of our schools allow students more opportunities than our churches. Sure they will mess up, but don’t we? Sure they will need direction, but so do we. If we can build leaders now, they will be able to seize opportunities on their own upon graduation and beyond.

4. Invite them into your world. Do not be afraid of these girls, or belittle yourself because of your age. They need you! I cannot tell you how many girls have told me that they want to hang out with another older woman so that they can see what a Christian home looks like, or to hang out with a solid Christian College student so they can figure out how to live boldly on their campus when they get ready to go to college, or to spend time with a Career woman who is a Christian. They want to know what to prepare for. They want role models, and we need to be those for them or else they will find them in worldly examples.

5. Equip their mothers. Find ways to support and encourage the mothers of girls, long before the girls become teenagers. When they do become mothers of teenagers, connect them with a mother who has been there/done that for support. Pray for the moms as this is the primary Girls Minister.

A song for rough days…

Today was a day that you don’t want to have in ministry. Today was a day when our student ministry received news concerning a 16 year old student who passed away after a battle with leukemia. Today was a day when about 170 students and leaders found their way to church to make sense of all that was going on. Today was a day where hope was spoken of often as tears ran down faces. Today was a day of celebrating that the one who had passed was no longer in pain and was in the presence of God in Heaven. But today was a rough day…a tough day. I heard some of my friends say to each other…”I can’t imagine having to go through this day without having the hope of Christ at work in all of this.” And even though I don’t have all the answers for the tough days…I do know that Christ is the hope and power that is at work in all of this.
It felt like the right time to share another one of Sara Beth’s songs. It’s called “Ooh, We Need Jesus”
Here’s what she has to say about it:

I was taking a walk in my neighborhood and looking at all the trees. It was early fall so the leaves were just beginning to change color. I started thinking of life as seasons. And the thought: “I’m living in the fall, the fall of us all” came into my brain, using the word fall as both a season and the fall of man. I was eager to get home because I wanted to start writing this song. When I finally got back, I picked up my guitar and wrote the whole thing. It’s a song about the gospel, and it’s not complicated. It’s just truth. We Need Jesus.

[mp3]https://girlsminister.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/03-ooh-we-need-jesus.mp3[/mp3]Click on the arrow to hear Sara Beth Geoghegan’s song “Oooh, We need Jesus”.

GIRLS MINISTER POP CULTURE MOMENT: if you seek amy, you won’t find her.

images2Well Britney has done it again. It was earlier this month that I was working out at the gym with my bootcamp friends and our trainer turned on a song.  Chris, one of the guys, commented on the song to divert us from the pain we were experiencing during our weight lifting.  He said—“what does this song even mean, and why is she looking for amy?”.  At that moment, Christy gasped and said “OH…this is that song with the secret vulgar message in the chorus.”  She told us to repeat the chorus “If you seek Amy” rapidly over and over again and we would know what Britney was wanting us to hear.  It was a sentence expressing a sexual advance.  The chorus doesn’t make sense—all of the boys and all of the girls are begging to if you seek amy.  (The F bomb+ me is the hint if you still are at a loss.)

Britney has gotten a lot of flack and also some praise with her witty hide and seek lyric game.  Britney has gone through a lot and so this post is not an attempt to slam her.  I do think that it is interesting that while her songs and antics continue to get her attention, she is still playing her own hide and seek game with her identity.  She hasn’t found it in a career. She hasn’t found it in a relationship.  She hasn’t found it in being a mother.  All of those things can be good things, but for anyone these good things will unravel if we put our identity into them.  I love what St. Augustine says:

You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in Thee.

It is my prayer that for Britney and girls everywhere, that they will find rest and completeness when they place their hearts in God’s care.  It is my prayer that they will seek their Identity, Significance, and Purpose through His eyes and not fill their lives with empty relationships, dreams, and throw-away moments.

Check out Vicki Courtney’s post about this song and more.

Join the Social Beta Community At www.mygirlsministry.com

socialbeta
We are so excited at girlsminister.com to announce the launch of our beta girls ministry social network. We hope that this place will continue to grow with people like you who pour into the lives of teenaged girls. We invite you to come connect, swap stories and resources. We’ve even installed an opportunity for you to connect live via web cam through a tokbox program.
If you want to connect with a girls minister or a mom or a counselor who contributes to our site, you can request a meet-up through this online community. We also are creating a resource swapbox where you can get ideas and give ideas. Got some great ideas for some girl nights? Great—share them here. Got a great idea for a biblestudy that discusses purity? Awesome—share it with the community. Need to see if there are some forms for starting that mentoring program—yep they are already there. So what are you waiting for—REQUEST TO JOIN THE SOCIAL at www.mygirlsministry.com.
See you there.

moo-card art by Anna Johnson…

n736899510_1342910_7675529This is Anna…she is a junior and she is a doodler. I have asked her to use her power of doodle for good and not evil—here is a snippet of what Anna can do in her classes with colored pens and paper. Anna  doodled art for a girlsminister.com moo-card.   Thanks Anna for sharing. I’m sure we’ll be seeing more from Anna in the weeks to come, but probably not this weekend as I believe she is going to Prom tomorrow night :).  minicard-31