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MAY 2017 STUDENT MINISTRY

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Dear Church Family,

   One thing that I have noticed in student ministry is how unique our place in history is. We live in a season of time where the younger generation and the older generation have virtually distinct experiences of life growing up. The older generation can remember a time when social media consisted of note passing in class. The younger generation thinks that notes is an app on the Iphone. We are in a unique place in time where human interaction and everyday life looks completely
different for one generation than it did for the other. This makes raising children complicated. It is difficult for a person to identify with the issues their child is going through when their life experiences growing up were of a completely different nature than that of their child. But, it is not because the issues are actually different. It is because the issues simply look different and are much more prevalent.

What I mean by this is not that the human heart has changed from one generation to the next. People are still born with a nature and inclination towards sin. But, the ways that sin can be achieved has changed drastically. Such much so that it almost seems like the youth of our time are experiencing life in a completely different way. The way this life is lived is through entertainment. Think about how much time this generation spends being entertained. In fact, I would argue that all the generations currently living are surrounded by and being overcome by a culture dedicated to entertainment. From young to old, who does not have a smart phone with a facebook account and youtube?  There are a few, but the vast majority of us are overwhelmed by entertainment.

But why is that bad? Well, entertainment itself is not bad, but what is being communicated through so much media and entertainment is. Consider the access to ungodly things that such high quantities of media grants to anyone with a smart phone or TV. Consider these statistics from BBC, (http://www.bbc.com/news/education-36527681):

 

The researchers questioned 1,001 children aged 11 to 16 and found 65% of 15- to 16-year-olds reported seeing pornography, as did 28% of 11- to 12-year-olds. They also discovered that it was more likely for the youngsters to find material accidentally (28%), for example via a pop-up advertisement, than to specifically seek it out (19%).

 

This is not to mention the worldviews that are being expressed and triumphed in almost every popular TV show and youtuber there is. What does this mean? Entertainment is discipling our students. And not in a good way, but rather it is teaching them how to be more and more like the world, and less and less like Christ.

So what does this mean for a parent? Throw away all access to any media? No! Well, not necessarily. Do what it takes to help your student fight against sin. If they need entertainment taken away for the sake of their eternal soul; well I think the decision is obvious, even though it may not be easy. But really what this means for a parent is that you need to know what your student is watching, reading, looking at, and posting. They may not be doing anything unhealthy for them; but if they are, they will need your help to overcome it. If you know how they are being entertained, then you can talk with them about what is Christ honoring and what is not. You may have to restrict some things! But that is just like keeping a toddler from touching a hot stove. Parenting has not ended just because they are older. It just looks more like conversations than the word “no.” Finally, do not assume that your student is not being enculturated by media. From middle school and up, if they spend any time with people their age, then they are certainly being exposed to worldviews and content that is competing with their devotion to Christ. But with this knowledge and with Christ on our side, we can make disciples of this generation who will be well prepared to reach the lost in their own and in the next generation.

In Christ,  Brian Van Doren 

 

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April 2017 Student Ministry

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Dear Church Family,

         The Student Ministry just got back from our retreat this year, and it was a blast! We spent much of our time just hanging out and playing games. We played some archery-tag in the mud and played some extreme capture-the-flag! And the lip-sync battle was an amazing show! I loved how fully our students threw themselves into this weekend. And it wasn’t only for the games. During our worship sessions, they were very responsive and were taking notes the entire time. Their small-group times at night showed us leaders that the Lord was definitely working. 

Our theme was “The Fulcrum.” Our sessions focused on Jesus being the center, or fulcrum, of our lives (Psalm 119:165-166), our universe (Colossians 1:17), our identity (Romans 8:1-4), and our hope (John 15:4-5). Jesus is the one who balances our lives for us by paying for our sin and inability to keep the law and saving us, making us “not-condemned” before God. We are new people who walk through this life in the power of the Spirit, blameless before God because of Christ’s righteousness in us! And our hope is abiding in Christ. I think this weekend was a turning point in some of our student’s lives, and I am so excited to see what the Lord will do in and through them. But with all of the positives about this weekend, there is a potential danger for which I want to be on the look-out.

My prayer is that the things that happened this weekend would not simply be seed scattered on rocky ground, which immediately springs up, but is then scorched by the sun. I am overwhelmingly thankful for the fruit that can already be witnessed in our students’ lives, but I want to see long-lasting fruit. We must not turn away from the plow, but we must continue to preach the gospel and abide in Christ. That was our last session; that they would abide in Christ, and He in them, and He will grow the fruit in their lives! Abiding in Christ is a spiritual and physical battle. It requires one to reject the distractions of this world and carve out time to spend with the Lord and His people. It requires that the Lord be protecting us and helping and guiding us back to Him daily. With these things being true, I have some requests to make of you, our church family:

Please pray for our students. They need your prayers. Pray that God would churn their hearts and sink the gospel deep down into them. That He would protect them from the world and from the distractions keeping them from growing in their faith. Pray that they would strive to abide in Christ, and that He would abide in them when they fail. Please pray for our
students.

Please talk to them about their relationships with God. They need people asking them how they are doing in their walk now that they are back from a retreat. They need encouragement and accountability to stay on track and keep Christ at the center. Please talk to them about their relationships with God.

Finally, thank the Lord for what He has done. Ultimately, I am abundantly thankful for what He has done and is doing in our youth group. He is certainly working, which is very good, because “unless the Lord builds, the builder builds in vain.” Ask the Lord to continue working in and through our church. That is the best thing you can do for our students. 

Sincerely,
Brian Van Doren

 

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