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

Sara Beth Goeghegan: An artist we had to introduce you to.

picture-2
Sara Beth Geoghegan has been back in the studio writing some amazing new songs. She is not a stranger among the girls ministry and student ministry circles in the South and we think that she is someone to keep an eye on as well as add to your girls ministry playlist. We got ahold of Sara Beth this week and asked if we could debut some of her songs on Girlsminister.com. She not only provided us with 3 tracks but also gave us a “behind-the-music” insight into why she wrote what she wrote.

As a girlsminister, I listened to “I’m a dreamer” coming home from church today and I had snapshots of girls faces flicker in and out of my memory. I repeated conversations in my mind that I had with some of those girls and longed for conversations with others that I hadn’t been able to get to. I found myself praying the chorus over their lives and then I realized that this was a prayer I needed to have for myself as well. I needed to rest in God’s grace. I needed to not only extend grace to them but also to realize that I couldn’t be everything to each of them. But I could love them the best way I could and pray that He shines brightest in my weakness. Well here’s what Sara Beth says about her song…the link is at the end. Let us know what you think! We’ll post the other 2 songs throughout the upcoming weeks. If you want to find out more about Sara Beth…go to her website her myspace page

I’m a Dreamer: I thought about a tree… about how it sleeps in the
winter, it experiences a sort of death with losing all of it’s leaves, and
how vulnerable it looks all naked like that. I thought how odd it was
that a big beautiful oak tree in the summer could turn into a skinny,
timid looking skeleton in the winter. And it made me think about myself
because I was experiencing a sort of winter from within. There was so
much longing to be someone different, coveting really, and I came to terms
with the line in the song “i’m an oak tree in midwinter, i’m struggling to
breathe and stay alive. i am mighty in the summer, but to live it means
in seasons i must die…” That there was purpose for this season, and
that it was ok, that God is sovereign over the oak tree when it’s big and
green and full of life, and He is sovereign over the oak tree when it is
withered and barren and silhouetted by a gray, winter sky…

[mp3]https://girlsminister.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/10-im-a-dreamer.mp3[/mp3]Click the arrow on the player to hear “I’m a dreamer” by Sara Beth Goeghegan

Girlsminister.com Interview with Melissa Trevathan & Sissy Goff

2_smOne of the books I continually recommend to moms and those who work with girls is Raising Girls by Melissa Trevathan & Sissy Goff. It is an amazing read and a great reference when talking with moms about some of the stages they can expect to see their daughter experience physically, emotionally, and spiritually. I have had the opportunity to be a conference leader at a couple of girls events that Melissa and Sissy have led. As I have gotten to hear their heart for girls not only just in their books but in conversation, I knew that they were two people that the Girlsminister.com community needed to hear from as well. Below is an email interview that Sissy dialogued with me on. I know you will find it as insightful as I did.

Sissy and Melissa,
I have some moms, leaders, and teenaged girls that are doing a blog project with me to help bring
about some key conversations.
We are working to create some healthy dialogue among those who pour into the lives of
teenaged girls and their families. The intention of these conversations is that they would
help shape the way that the home and the church intentionally and strategically raises
Godly young women to know their identity, significance, and purpose is rooted in Christ. I have come up with 5 questions to begin that conversation with you. Thanks for your thoughts in advance and for all you do to help shape this conversation:
1. Girls ministry is a buzzword in and among churches right now. It seems that
churches are recognizing that girls need to be recognized and cared for differently. How
is that impacting the ministry you have to girls and their families?

We are really excited that churches are recognizing that girls are different and need to be cared for differently. We would say that girls are being reached more “where they are”…both understood and taught in a way that reaches to the hearts of who they are and what they really do need. It seems to be helping them gain confidence in who they are and who God has created them to be, as well.

2. One of the things that we keep hearing back from those who have heard you speak on
developmental stages was: “It was so encouraging to hear about the different things
happening in our brains that cause disruptions in our normal thinking patterns.” It
seems that this sort of knowledge of developmental stages among girls was helpful to
not only moms but also teenaged girls. Is this something you incorporate into your
ministry to girls and families? If so, how have you seen this help through the stages
where girls and their moms may not know how to communicate anymore?

We definitely are trying to get the word out about developmental stages not just to parents, but to girls as well. It is a huge part of why we have written two books for girls: Mirrors and Maps for 11-14 year-olds and Growing Up Without Getting Lost for 15-19 year-olds. So often, the default thinking with girls whenever they are wrestling with something is that “something is wrong with me.” We have seen the relief the developmental information provides girls in our counseling offices. One girl met with us and said, “Do you remember how you told me my brain was going to change and mess up my confidence? Well, it’s happening.” It was so encouraging to us to hear that she knew it was a part of her physical development, rather than a flaw in who she is. We have also seen this information help girls and moms with communication. Especially during the teenage years, there are a lot of communication struggles for moms and girls. To know that it is a very NORMAL part of development can not only help girls understand that what they are going through is normal, but can help moms’ realize that the lack of communication is not due to their failure as a parent. It has more to do with a daughter’s need to develop her independence and, because she has been closest to her mom, it is often her mom she feels the need to push away the most.

3. What would you suggest to a mother and daughter that are wanting to have the
ability to not only communicate during these tough teen years but to also take away
some good memories?

Find places, activities and time you can enjoy together. And, to the moms, that means time where you are not teaching, instructing or correcting. Your daughter needs to know that you are spending time with her for the sheer purpose of enjoying her (which can be difficult during those teen years). Dig into her culture. Find things she loves–find out why she loves those things. Watch a silly television show with her. Go on walks. Ask her about her friends. Take a mother/daughter trip. Read a book together. Watch home movies. Anything you can do to connect. Don’t put pressure on each other to have a heart-to-heart each time. It can even be singing motown songs in the car. Just find ways to connect with laughter and enjoyment. Girls who are delighted in feel more delightful, and this is a tremendous gift you can offer your daughter at any age.

4. What advice and/or encouragement would you give to those who minister to teen girls
and their families?

For most of us as adults, adolescents can feel like a lifetime ago. It is easy to forget how difficult those years were. Parents need help understanding life from the perspective of their girls–education as to what is happening inside of them, and outside from a cultural perspective. And girls need help knowing that, although their friends are a huge part of their life, their families are important and have a lot to offer them, as well. Helping them find places to connect–and even giving them opportunities to do so is huge!

5. What is something you love about working with teen girls and their families?

To see when parents and girls do connect…when girls can let go of the “they don’t understand” and see their parents as people who not only understand but truly love and have a vision for who God is creating their girls to be.

THANKS Melissa and Sissy for taking the time to share!
Make sure and check them out on their blog at:

  • http://www.melissatrevathansissygoff.blogspot.com
  • 3 Things To Think About When Ministering To Girls…

    The thinkerI have a lot of lunches and coffees with adults who want to minister to teenaged girls. A lot of time, they haven’t thought through some important things before wanting to jump in. As a girls minister, I have to be protective of not only what curriculum comes through our doors into the lives of these girls but also who we are allowing to nurture, mentor and model Christ to these young ladies. As a result, I meet with each female leader that wants to be involved with the lives of girls. Here are 3 things I wish every person who wants to pour into girls lives would consider and think about before jumping in to serve:
    1. What is my motivation to be involved with a teenaged girl or group of teenaged girls?
    So often as I hear from people, and I ask the “why” question, I hear their hearts respond with the following answer: “Because I experienced {insert personal pain here}. While God does use the experiences we have had to minister to others, this is not the key place we should seek to pull our motivation from in deciding to walk alongside of someone. Often times if we are ministering out of the overflow of our personal pain, we end up using mentoring times unconsciously as therapy sessions. This doesn’t mean that we have to have to be “wound free” and “baggage free” to minister. It just means we need to have some accountability and mentoring of our own to help check our motivations. It’s okay for a paramedic to arrive on the scene with some deep scars from a situation but for them to arrive on the scene with a bleeding wound would not be allowed. They need to be attended to before they can help other injured persons.
    2. Am I willing to journey with a crockpot and leave the microwave?
    One of the things that I can’t reiterate enough is the fact that ministry to teen girls is like cooking in a crockpot—it takes time and consistency. So often we think if we just spend a retreat weekend or a camp week with a bunch of girls that we have earned the right to speak into their lives. Remember—they are not microwaves. They may think you are cool and worth getting to know if you spend a camp week with them but they will guard their hearts until they know you are not going anywhere. They want to trust their hearts to a crockpot leader—not a microwave leader.
    3. Even Cyndi Lauper had to grow up—I know that “Girls just wanna have fun” but you will be having to model for teenaged girls not only how to have fun but what it looks like to be a Godly woman. You may be their best signpost for what direction their life needs to take. If you are constantly trying to be a teenager again, they won’t think there’s a point in growing up. One of the things I know that is important for the girls I minister to is to invite them to see and hear what a Christian marriage looks like. They still know I can be silly, but they also know that I have responsibilities as a wife and adult. There are boundaries that I have to keep intact as I minister to them. They don’t want me to be just like them—they want to see a snapshot of what it looks like to be down the road a little bit. It’s okay to have fun—but don’t forget that you are the adult.

    These are just some things to consider as you begin to think about journeying with girls. I hope these help you sort through some important decisions: What’s my motivation, Am I willing to put in the time, and what am I modeling to girls are all important questions to give thought to before you commit to girls ministry.

    Twilight: a discussion for moms and daughters.

    Every girl needs a vampire?

    MOMS, HERE ARE SOME DISCUSSIONS YOU NEED TO HAVE WITH YOUR DAUGHTERS THAT ARE READING THE TWILIGHT SERIES:

    As I write this, I just finished book 3 of The Twilight series written by Stephanie Meyers. I am aware that I am not a teenaged girl and so some of you may be asking why I am spending my time consumed with these books of almost 500 pages each that girls across the country are reading over and over again. It’s for that exact reason that I am reading them. I found myself on the outside of conversations that girls were having concerning this fantasy lovestory that they were reading 5 and 7 times. See I am a girlsminister and I have some amazing girls and moms that I care for very much who have had some conversations with me about this book series. I have hated not being able to enter into the conversation and so after getting my Kindle, I decided it was time to download these books and read them.

    The following is the part 1 of a series I will use to create some conversations among moms of teenaged girls.

    As I finished book 3 today in a matter of 2 weeks, I found myself caught up in the storyline of a Highschool Jr named Bella who finds herself in a lovestory with an unlikely character—a vampire. It was easy to read the story and allow Bella’s story to become my own as you read the narrative through her eyes. You begin to find yourself in her situations, and I would even say most teenaged girls are pretending in some way that Bella is them as they read this book. As a married woman and I read these thoughts and vivid descriptions of Bella’s emotions it is easy for me to recall and reflect on those ushy gushy feelings of infatuation and the “my breath just caught in my throat” kisses that I shared with my then fiance and my now husband of 9 years next month. The story of the vampire family and the werewolves are not the storyline that teenaged girls are enthralled with. The reason they are reading the books 5 and 7 times is not because they are intrigued with the fantasy of vampires and werewolves. They aren’t going goth! They are reading the books over and over again because of the descriptive pre-harlequin lovestory scenes that happen between Bella and her vampire Edward and later her best-friend turned werewolf Jacob who also loves Bella. I know right?!?!
    *NOTE:The movie leaves out the sexual tension discussions that make up a large portion of the books.

    So if your daughter is reading these books over and over again, and you have sat them down to talk with them about it but have not read it, you probably have heard these statements from their mouth and thought it was okay for you not to have to endure the reading of this series on your own time:

    Statement 1:
    Mom, it’s just this lovestory between Bella and Edward but it’s really good because they practice abstinence and do not have sex until they are married. That’s what you are trying to teach me right?

    This is partially true. However, you need to not assume that is all that is going on. Edward the vampire is teaching your daughter a lot more about purity than that. And Bella is never the one who abstains except 1 time and it’s not because of her choice for purity but because it’s not convenient to her plans.

    Some questions to ask your daughter in regards to this statement:
    QUESTION 1:
    How do Edward and Bella show restraint? And if they show restraint, why are they doing so?
    A: Edward makes the comment that he can’t have sex with Bella because in her human fraility he would kill her due to his vampire strength. (The actual reference says he would crush her skull because he is so strong.)
    In addition, not only is Edward capable of harming Bella during sex, but because he is a vampire he also strongly desires her blood and he is not sure that he would be able to resist this urge to kill her for her blood as he becomes physical with her.
    Later in book 3 Edward does make references to being old-fashioned and having morals and not wanting to have pre-marital sex because he is worried about Bella’s soul and doing the right thing.

    So in the book, we constantly hear of “Edward’s rules” but we don’t ever have those rules defined. One of the things my mother and I talked about with a group of my girlfriends when I was in highschool were the dating rules we had to ensure purity before marriage. As a result, my friends and I created our own purity rules that we held each other accountable for. Some of these were rules that were obvious…and some of these were rules that pertained to beyond my highschool career as I had my mom’s rules at home that would have made some of these null and void anyway.
    Here were just a few of the rules that we agreed to:
    Not lying down horizontally with a boy.
    Not allowing articles of clothing to be removed.
    Not being alone with a boy in a room.
    Not hanging out with a boy past midnight.

    My husband and I added our own rules to our own list when we were dating and then engaged because it was becoming easier for us to think we already belonged to each other.

    I include these in here to say that we never hear anything about what Bella and Edward were using as their rules to guard their purity and Bella’s life.
    What we do see is that Edward constantly spends the night in Bella’s room and leaves in the morning so that Bella’s dad is unaware of what is going on up there.
    We do see that Bella intentionally seduces Edward on several occassions and if not for Edward constantly pushing Bella away and telling her to “Be good” then they would have had sex.

    QUESTION 2: Discuss with your daughter the entanglement of The Physical Appetite and The Sexual Appetite that moves throughout the series. Discuss the reason why Edward and Bella get as close as they can to feeding their appetites.

    Ecclesiastes 6:7 All man’s efforts are for his mouth, yet his appetite is never satisfied.
    I think it is interesting that appetite is discussed so much throughout this series. Edward has found a way to supress his appetite for human blood by eating animals but Bella refuses to find a way to supress her sexual appetite. In fact she will go so far as to consider becoming a vampire (I haven’t finished book 4 yet so it could happen) in order to quench her appetite for Edward. Interesting that the character aches that deeply for this boy and will give up all other ambitions and dreams because without him her life has no purpose.

    QUESTION 3: Discuss with your daughter how Bella may have gotten swept into this lovestory because she was in a place she hated, her flighty mother was choosing her own interests over her daughters as she lived out her days with her new husband on the road, she had a father she barely knew that didn’t know how to tell her he loved her, and she was in new school where she was the center-of-attention and had her pick of the guys except for one beautiful pale boy who seemed angry with her. Was Bella drawn to Edward for the right reasons? Are we sometimes looking for our lovestory to happen because we are lonely, not fitting in, wanting to feel loved, wanting to experience physical touch and willing to be swept away into a relationship that takes our lifestory in a different direction?

    QUESTION 4: Your daughter will probably defend Edward strongly and she should. He is a vampire that has been 17 years old for over 90 years. He was born at the turn of the 19th century. He is an “old-soul” and exhibits moral traits from the years of his human youth most of the time. He is very calming. He is very protective. He is my favorite character in the story. Bella is the irresponsible one in most cases. And while Edward is someone that you fall in love with as you read the story, he is not reality.
    For many of the readers, Edward may become their first understanding of a boyfriend. Use Edward as a discussion point for what are good attributes and what are unrealistic to expect of your future husband.

    For example: 1 myth that Edward may have girls believing: Guys don’t live to hear girls answers to every detail of their life all the time. Guys may have moments where they are intuned to you more than another time but they tend to be the less “I just want to talk all night with you” sort of people. They are more into physical touch. More into just being with you without the talky talk. You hear more frequently the words: “Tell me what you’re thinking” from a female. Edward asks this question over and over of Bella throughout the series.

    Another myth that girls may believe and expect of their future husband: He should live to keep me happy. He only thinks about me all the time. He will drop anything to come to my rescue. His life has no purpose without me.

    HERE ARE SOME THINGS TO CELEBRATE ABOUT TWILIGHT:

    • The vampires are monogamous. Edward values marriage. Bella doesn’t but is willing to considered it.
    • Restraint from sex is a part of the story. It may only be because death is the immediate consequence but it is practiced.

    That leads to a QUESTION 5: In the story of Bella and Edward, the consequence of immediate death is what causes the restraint in their activity. How would that change the restraints or lack of restraints we have in dealing with our temptations?

    • Another thing to celebrate is that Bella does exhibit some self-less acts. She moves to Forks because she realizes her mother wants to have this ability to travel with her new husband and she can’t if Bella stays with her in Phoenix.
    • The Vampire Parent figures are very strong and responsible in the story. However, Bella’s parental figures are very negligent and even seem child-like. Bella constantly has to take care of them in cooking for them, cleaning for them, and helping them think through life details.

    These are just some beginning talking points that I am having with girls and other women I know that have read these books. I would be interested to add some of your questions  to this if you have been able to talk with your daughter or someone you mentor concerning this book. I will continue to add some more discussions as I continue to process the series.

    FINAL ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: I do want to acknowledge that I realize this is a fictional book and that Stephanie Meyers in no way is trying to mentor teenaged girls but she is just simply telling a lovestory. However, if our teenaged girls are becoming so wrapped up into this story, we need to make sure that we as girlsministers, mom, mentors, and youthworkers are there to have the conversations with our girls about purity and about lovestories and not just leave it up to a vampire named Edward. So mom’s, it’s time for you to ask your daughter to introduce you to Edward the un-edited version.
    COMING SOON: PART2—If I were Bella’s girlsminister this is what I’d say.

    L.Y.L.A.S Girl Night Activity

    17401942258749

    Click the link that follows for a instruction download for a L.Y.L.A.S girl party!
    lylas_sister_party_idea

    Remember back in the day when you would sign each other’s yearbooks in letters like L.Y.L.A.S (Love ya like a sister)? Well we’re bring it back here at girlsminister.com. We are offering you a tried and true hour long activity that you can use for girls in your student ministry. We encourage you to randomly select girls from ages 6-12 and create “sisterhood clusters” that go through these activities together. It creates some memorable moments that girls in a girlsministry I know are still talking about. ENJOY and let us know how you revised it or share your own ideas. Feel free to email me your activities and we can submit them on here for others to use as well!

    Girls ministry should begin at home…

    mothers are the first girls minister
    Girls ministry is a big buzz word right now. It’s not a new concept but here at girlsminister.com we are trying to help shape the conversation that is going on in our churches regarding how to minister to girls. In short, the first girlsminister should be the mother! We recognize that not all mothers have embraced this role for their daughters and we recognize that there are other Godly women that God draws around a teenaged girl to help model for her what a christ-follower looks like…but for those girls who do have a Godly mom who recognizes her role as the primary girlsminister—then this t-shirt is for you:)

    Mentoring…there are no short-cuts.

    mentoringI have had many conversations about mentoring between girls and women. It’s so important! However there are no short-cuts. It takes prayer, time, commitment…it’s a journey.  I love the picture in this post that has a tender plant growing in the hands of two women. It’s fragile work much like gardening—which I have very little luck with since I am constantly unable to set aside time to weed, water, or watch the plant that I want to grow. As a result, my planting does not survive.  Below is a post I wrote that really was more of a rant, but it’s just a reminder that mentoring takes time much like gardening…there are no short-cuts.

    previously posted by Amy-Jo Girardier on amyjogirardier.com on 01/14/08

    I have heard and seen a lot of things as I have worked with girls and parents of girls. I am concerned with the quick fix mentality that some people have in the Church as a whole in regards to ministering among and to girls. If we see a modesty problem among our young ladies the quick fix is a suggested fashion show or an event that tells girls what they should wear. In my experience these seem like a good idea until you realize that you are creating a 3-D magazine of the “immodest” outfits that have simply been modified with leggings, layers, and larger sizes.
    I have searched scripture to find out how women told girls how they are to dress and live their lives to honor the God they serve and follow. Ironically I have yet to find a scripture that says, “and so elder women gathered the girls to sit at the feet of the prettiest women in the village who had modified the fashions of the day to adequately cover their bodies in a trendier way.” Instead I find scripture that says the following:

    Titus 2:4-8 Then they can train the younger women to love their husbands and children, to be self-controlled and pure, to be busy at home, to be kind, and to be subject to their husbands, so that no one will malign the word of God.Similarly, encourage the young men to be self-controlled. In everything set them an example by doing what is good. In your teaching show integrity, seriousness and soundness of speech that cannot be condemned, so that those who oppose you may be ashamed because they have nothing bad to say about us.

    The word “train”, I have a feeling, has a more long-term involvement then an event or fashion show. I will do some logos bible software research on that tomorrow but until then, I feel certain that the idea in terms of ministering to girls in biblical times took a life long approach of journeying with young girls for longer than a couple hours or even a weekend event. It called for sacrifice. It called for investment. It called for a denying of self. It’s hard to give up our lives and time for others. But I wonder what would happen to the lives we pour Christ into and I wonder what happens to our lives when we empty ourselves and welcome Christ to be poured through us into others? I’m thankful for the women who do this in my life—for the mom who loves me sacrificially…for the women who claimed me for their own to mentor…for the women who saw something in me when I saw nothing in myself…for the girlfriends that even now hold my hand in prayer literally when my husband is travelling and can’t be there to hold my hand…for the girlfriends I have who model for me what it looks like to love your family…for the co-workers I have who are women and teach me how to be a better nurturer…a better listener. THANK YOU to those of you who model for me the opposite of a quick fix in ministry. I pray that I may continually turn my head from the QUICK FIX of ministry and choose instead the long obedience of pouring my life in the lives of those around me. God I pray that more women in our church will see this as an opportunity and responsibility to journey alongside girls. If they need some direction I have some sunday school classrooms and smallgroups that need a leader and an apprentice leader. These spots remain vacant until someone answers the call to journey alongside of girls in our place of ministry.
    And I step off of my soapbox to go to bed.