June 29, 2009

Six Steps for Success in Small Groups

Last Monday night at our Student Ministry meeting, a place where all the volunteers and I get together, we had a discussion regarding small group discussion. On Wednesday nights, after a couple of hours of food, activities, contests, music and a thought-provoking, side-splitting message we give our students a 1/2 hour of small group time with 2 volunteers.

I had noticed that the small group time had become stagnant in a few of the groups. Just to give you an idea, this is what we do:

- We have no more than 10 students in one group with 2-3 volunteers
- We split middle school boys and girls up into two separate groups
- The high school groups are co-ed
- Each volunteer has questions that are developed from the night's message
- Discussion is made from the responses to these questions

Even though this seems pretty straightforward, I noticed a few things happening in some of the groups:

- Small group time was becoming more instruction time (students talking less, volunteers more)
- Some groups were dwindling in size (especially the group for middle school boys)
- Some volunteers were uncomfortable with silence, which led them to talk more
- Some volunteers would transform open-ended questions and solicit one-word answers (a discussion killer)

In light of these, I gave a few pointers on how I felt we could effectively engage and inspire our students into discussion. Of course, this formula doesn't work overnight, nor does any. However, I truly know that if these principles are in place coupled with spending any time you can with your students then this will work.

I don't believe for a second that we're failing at Forest Park at anything in particular, but with that said, I know there's always room for improvement. And I totally don't have this all figured out. But I do know that, in our college/young adult ministry, discussion makes or breaks an effective interpersonal & relational ministry.

Even though I gave them in less detail last Monday, here are my "pointers":

1) IT IS THE STUDENTS' TIME The time during the message is OUR time to talk. 90% of our instruction is during that time. The small group is the students' chance to respond, complain, express doubts, have the freedom to say anything. Think of it this way. Would you rather your young believers express doubt in the confines of the church around other believers or outside those confines to ones who, most-likely, will confirm and encourage those doubts? If they can't say anything doubtful in church, then what good are we? It ain't like you have it all together, either...

The remaining 10% should be used to coax students into discussion regarding the message and/OR relevant life and faith issues. Coaxing doesn't mean just reading the question and asking, "what do you think?" and especially not asking questions that have a yes or no answer.

2.) BE WILLING TO HUMBLE YOURSELF The 10% of instruction time within a small group discussion is crucial!! You help the students process what they just heard by being transparent, honest and open (all things you want them to be). You can do that by expressing how the message challenges you, makes you think about how you've failed at ____ in the past, how you struggle with ____ continually now, etc.... I don't know exactly why but the culture has changed in the way that being humble and expressing your imperfections has become inspiring and garners respect. I mean, who enjoys a pompous, holier-than-thou anyway, right?

3) BE INTENTIONAL, BUT ALLOW FREEDOM The goal is not mindless chatter but intentional conversation. However, you may have a group of students who seem to never talk. If, on one night, they begin to talk (with you included in the conversation) about a topic that might be a reach from the message, LET THEM TALK!!! It will pay off the next time you meet! The worst thing you can do, with a group that seems to never talk, is to shush them and give the impression that "religious" talk is the only thing you want.

There's no denying that some nights a small group leader will talk more than everyone else, it's fickle that way sometimes. Who knows exactly why they talk sometimes and not others...

4.) BE PATIENT AND COMFORTABLE WITH SILENCE Don't move too quickly from question to question. Too many times I remember being at student meetings being a few seconds away from speaking up, praying aloud, etc but due to the leader's discomfort with silence I was muted at the last second. Don't let that happen! You may mute the one kid who finally surprises you by speaking up!

5.) BE FUNNY, NOT NERVOUS Show me a leader who is nervous and I'll show you two things: the extroverted students who will respond with, "Are you serious? This person is clueless! I'm not talking" and the introverted students who will think, "You think he/she's nervous? I'm now 10x more nervous about saying anything. I'm not talking." All students don't fit snugly into one of these two categories, but most do. What do they have in common? If a leader is nervous, they are less likely to talk.

Be yourself, be genuine. If you are a leader that is concerned about what a student will think about what you have to say, then maybe this ain't your gig...

Laughter will ease the nerves of the introvert and endear you to the extrovert;) Everyone loves to laugh. Try to make that a universal way to keep your students' interest. Do whatever you gotta do! Getting a book of jokes and practicing on your younger siblings, cousins, etc is a good way to start. This book isn't to be recited but to give you ideas about what is funny and what isn't.

Here's an interesting, and nearly universal, truth. If you think about it, it's not that a stretch at all. Everyone wants to hang around with someone that make them laugh. It's what women look for in men and vice versa, the same is true for students in their mentors:)

6.) DON'T SKIP THAT ONE!! The last question that is on the list is definitely the most important question on the handouts. Most discussion guides give the first couple of questions as icebreakers, thought-provokers and questions that reinforce the key phrase of the message. The last question has the meat, the thought that hits you in the gut and keeps it in your mind for the next couple of days. That's the one that if all else fails, bring out all your guns for this one!

I've been there and I still lead discussion groups often. None of these skills are fool-proof as a remedy but I guarantee they will work in the long run.

Invest in yourself so you can effectively endear yourself, facilitate discussion and provoke introspection, life-change and trust in our middle and high school students. By investing in your small group discussion skills, you invest in the lives of those students!

June 12, 2009

I Could use your opinion...

If you look to the bottom of the page there are two designs I have posted of t-shirts for our student ministry at Forest Park Church called THE BRINK.

The black/white is for the guys and the blue/white is for the girls...

The caption on both shirts says, "you pulled me from the brink and away from the edge," which is the Message's version of Psalm 56:12.

My question to you is....would you buy either one of these shirts and think it's stylish enough to wear for the price of, say, $12 - 15?

If no, why? (other than "Im broke")

Either post your opinions here or email me them at tj@forestparkchurch.com.

Thanks;)

June 5, 2009

This certain quarter wasn't worth 25 cents...

So most of my friends in Pasadena know this story but it definitely is great enough to share with all my new friends in Elizabeth City.

2 summers ago I walked down to the bank to get some quarters for the laundry room at Fuller. I noticed immediately that I got a roll of brand new, shiny quarters....no biggie, though.

I got home tore into the plastic that was holding my quarters together and noticed something weird about one quarter in particular. The front looked normal a shiny strike of George Washington but the reverse side of the coin was where the action was at.

The reverse side of the coin was COPPER! No lie! I had never seen one before like this.

I kept the quarter and showed it to about everyone who visited me that week. I came moderately close to giving it away to my roommate's grandfather who stopped by and mentioned, "oh I collect coins just like these," with a definite tone of hint-hint in his voice.

I refrained and thank God I did. I went online and researched other coins like mine. Some dealers were selling quarters with a "layer" missing for $350!! Turns out there is a piece of copper sandwiched between two pieces of silver-like metal to make every quarter. Interesting...

I took my quarter to a local dealer to get it appraised. The dealer was pretty excited about seeing a brand new, uncirculated Washington state quarter with this mint defect. Unfortunately, he was unable to specify with certainty that it was uncirculated so we had to send it back to the mint in Denver to get it appraised by the mint itself, which actually cost $70!!

I was thinking, "this thing better pay itself off!" Oh it did! I got the quarter back a few weeks later, encased in a nice plastic, retangular case with a hologram seal from the mint on the front. Immediately the dealer went into his little song-and-dance.

He told me, "you know, with this grading I don't think you'll get any more than $300-350 for it. Wanna sell it to me today and not worry about advertising for it?"

I actually thought about it for more than a second...but probably only 2 seconds. I told him, "no thanks."

The dealer didn't stop there because he asked, "well could I, at least, help you take pictures of the coin?"

I asked, "how much?" He said, "only $30." I smiled while I replayed his "only $30" in my head, thinking it was ridiculous! I instantly remembered that a friend of mine right across the street was a photographer in the making.

I left that place soon after and didn't waste any time in asking Matthew (his website is matthewcline.net, btw) to take some shots, which he did graciously and FREE OF CHARGE!!

The next day I put the quarter on Ebay with the starting bid for $200. The next day I got an email from Ebay with an offer from a buyer for $1000!!! I told him that I would wait and see how the auction progressed and that I would get back to him.

That evening I got another email from another buyer who offered $1100!!! I told that person the same thing, knowing that I could get some leverage and get a private auction between these two loaded creatures:)

I emailed them back and forth and finally got a selling price of $1250! Glad pops nor the dealer got the better of me:)

I discovered that out of the hundreds of millions of quarters in the USA, there are only approximately 250 like the one I sold!

So, you might ask, "what did you do with the money?" Ehhh...nothing too exciting actually. I paid my car insurance up for 6 months, my rent for 2 months, went out for sushi and bought an Ipod. It was a good week:)

There's my little, non-monotonous story:) Hope you enjoyed it!

Check out the quarter here --> http://viewmorepics.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=viewImage&friendID=38272159&albumID=215414&imageID=12765359

June 1, 2009

The saddest thing I've seen this week so far....

It came to my attention we desperately needed new headphones for the cd demo section in the bookstore, so I offered to run up to Roses to buy a cheapy pair, which I did.

I was at the counter, behind this one gentlemen who didn't particularly smell so fresh so clean, but that's beside the point. I saw this little kid, no more than 2 years old, take his iddy-bitty steps over to a bright yellow and orange squirt gun that was shaped like a pistol.

As his eyes lit up with excitement, he grabbed the package and immediately I saw the index finger on his right hand begin to twitch in anticipation of pulling a trigger. I thought to myself...

"How does a kid that young instinctively know how to pull a trigger and what a gun is?"

Even though I know I played cops and robbers when I was young, I would love and consider my fathering skills acceptable if my 2 year-old would see a gun and say, "what's that? what does it do?" I hope I'm not watching all these shoot-em-ups, having all sorts of guns present around my kids, etc so that they think that guns are made for pointing at people.

Wow, it's like a sport. A sick, twisted, evil-inspired sport that's void of consequences but an avenue to unleash revenge, rage and hatred. It's a modern-day, anything goes, everybody's a player in a gladiator-like sport where anyone can be clipped, whacked, whatever.

This is about as liberal (if that's what you wanna call it) as I get on certain issues, but I don't get the 2nd Amendment. I'd rather have hairy, bear arms than to bear firearms. Statistics show that having a gun in the house prevents less than 10% of all break-ins or attempted murders, anyway. I think gun control is a pro-life issue, actually.

Trust me, this is an issue that even my parents and I disagree on, so I know I'll get some raised eyebrows from my elders. I have no problem with rifles, hunting for sustenance, etc. But I tend to look at it this way...

If you combine the populations of Great Britain, France, Germany, Japan, Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark and Australia, you'll get a population roughly the size of the United States. We had over 40,000 gun deaths last year. They had under 200. Do you think it's because Americans are more homicidal by nature? Or do you think it's because those guys have gun control laws?


Thanks Toby;) Enough said!