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Jonathan's Resource Ezine |
Weekly Resources, Ideas and Articles from The Source for Youth Ministry
Tuesday, August 5, 2003
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YOUR MINISTRY MISTAKES. Take a look at some of the costly mistakes and their unforseen consequences that you shared with us. "Learn from the mistakes of others"
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By Jonathan McKee
August 5, 2003
It was fun reading the responses that you all sent in. I think I would divide the
results into 3 different catagories:
- Actual unforseen consequences . . . "Whoa, now I know not to do that again!"
- Ooops . . . "I should have known that in the first place!"
- People sometimes complain, whine, or get angry even when we DON'T make a mistake!
I'll let you decide which belong to which category. Here's a few, followed by a link
to a bunch more:
PYRO YOUTH LEADER
I have been the regular, unofficial, volunteer youth pastor for seven years now. I
like to call it my spare time job, and unfortunately, the administration and management
of the group falls into this category too. I took my kids on a campout about four years
ago (one of the first campouts in this spare-time ministry). By the Holy Spirit's
leading, or just an excuse to spend some money on the youth, I went ahead and purchased
a first-aid kit, thinking, "Hmmm, the church could sure use one of these." Well, wouldn't
you know . . . we got carried away in the moment trying to get the uncooperative campfire
started, we decided to try using some of the Coleman fuel. Very bad idea. The volunteer
leader, the former boy scout, thought it might work. Well, one thing led to another, the
campfire lit, the fire climbed up the fuel that we were tossing on it, the can caught
fire. It got thrown to the ground, spraying drops of lit fuel around the campsite, which
by the way, was surrounded by twenty excited, on looking youth. One girl got a small
burn, but enough to scare our britches off! Thank the Lord we had a first-aid kit!
Needless to say, safety became one of the highest priorities for all activities real
quick, and thus began the process of medical releases for our little spare-time,
unofficial ministry. ~David~ Dallas, TX
LESSON LEARNED: Don't light a campfire with fuel!!! And always have the following:
permission slips, first aid kid, youth leaders without a death wish . . .
THE SOURCE RESOURCES: Check out a sample permission slip on our "Logistical
Crud" page: http://www.thesource4ym.com/logicrud/
HORNDOG STUDENT LEADER
We took a bunch of high school students to "Creationfest" and had a young man who we
took as a "student leader". When we got there he turned into a "women seeking missile"
and all of our talks with all the kids about no public diplays of affection (PDA) went
right out the window. Kids were asking, "If the student leader is doing it, why can't
I"? The girl he ended up with was a "Hooter girl" and quite proudly displayed half nude
pictures of her and an x-boyfriend. ~Kelly~ Juneau, AK.
LESSON LEARNED: Screen student leaders better. Spend time talking to student
leaders about the importance of living our lives as an example to other students.
THE SOURCE RESOURCES: Check out sample student leader application, commitment sheets
and mentor application on our "Logistical Crud" page:
http://www.thesource4ym.com/logicrud/
Check out Jonathan's book for an entire chapter on developing student leaders:
http://www.thesource4ym.com/book.asp
DO YOU NEED A HAND?
As a junior high youth pastor finding games that are new and exciting is a constant
challenge. I thought I had found a great game using one of the most useful tools
around, duct tape. I now don't even remember what the object of the game was, I
just remember that they were to tape two of their team mates together back to back.
I explained the rules of the game and left one of my other leaders to supervise while
I got the next game organized. My mistake was that I forgot to tell that leader to
remind the kids not to tape down their team mates arms, and to just tape their bodies
together. Well, my mistake resulted in a broken jaw, when one of the pairs toppled
over and the girl didn't have any arms to stop herself. My mistake resulted in a VERY
angry mom, and the loss of both that girl and her group of friends who were no longer
able to attend. ~Brandi~ Brampton, Ontario
LESSON LEARNED: Don't put kids in situations where their "hands are tied."
Literally!
DON'T YOU FORGET ABOUT ME!
I was taking the leaders from the youth group to a leadership camp like I have every
summer for the past 3 summers. This year was a little different because I had to send
one of my students to wk 1 while the rest of us went to wk 2 due to a conflict with her
schedule. I knew for a fact that the camp was over on Friday yet someone in the church
told me they were positive without a shadow of a doubt that the camp was over on Sat.
So I, for some reason, took their word w/o question. When Friday rolled around at 2 p.m.
I had a girl on the other end of the phone crying her eyes out because she was the only
one at the camp and she had been forgotten. I also had a mom who was wondering where
her daughter was and why I allowed such a tragedy to happen. I truly felt like trash
and will carry that experience with me for the rest of my life. I am still working on
her mom, as she was not a happy camper, understandably. ~Zac~ Ada, Oklahoma
LESSON LEARNED: When in doubt, check it out. (I kinda sounded like Johnny Cochran
right there huh?)
MOM SAID I COULD!
We planned a trip to downtown Portland to tour a mission ship that was there. Our
mistake was in not getting permission slips from the kids. We picked one girl up at
her apartment and we all had a great and safe time downtown. When we got back to the
church a pair of irate parents were waiting. They saw a flier about the activity in
their daughter's room. Turns out the girl got another of our girls to lie for her about
where we were going and she was not allowed to go downtown because of some past problems.
I had an angry father both in my face and the face of the girl who had lied (totally out
of character for her). The girl whose parents showed up never came back to our youth
group.
Always talk to parents and get permission slips! (especially new kids and where you
don't know the parents!) ~Shirley~ Milwaukie, Oregon
LESSON LEARNED: Get permission slips every time you go anywhere other than your
weekly meeting place.
THE SOURCE RESOURCES: Check out a sample permission slip on our "Logistical
Crud" page: http://www.thesource4ym.com/logicrud/
THE "UNFORESEEN" VIOLATION OF 23 TRAFFIC LAWS
Soon after arriving into my first full time ministry position, I scheduled an
all-nighter. On the way to our second activity, I thought it would be fun to race
another youth worker, with youth in our cars (no church vans). I ended up running a
red light and was furiously chased by another car. I figured the car was an off-duty
cop or some super-citizen. For several miles I tried to lose the car, (slowing
down-speeding up-sudden turns-fake turn offs), but this car was determined. I realized
that the driver wasn't a super-citizen when he tried to run me off the road. After a
mile of this, he stayed within inches of my door, rolled down his window and started
trying to punch through our window. I wasn't sure what would happen next, so I had the
other youth worker in my car start praying. About 5 seconds later, they drove off and
we were able to join the rest of our group. I often think about what the youth in my
car were thinking as I was breaking law after law. Through this I definitely learned
how to be responsible and accountable for someone other than myself. I just soiled
myself in the process. ~Nick~ Colorado
LESSON LEARNED: Don't violate traffic laws, get in car chases, and endanger the
lives of everyone in the car! And . . . prayer works, even when we're idiots!
THE SOURCE RESOURCES: Now that you need a new job, check out Chicago's classifieds . . .
under "cab driver!"
CHASING THIRD DAY, AND GETTING THE THIRD DEGREE!
I took a group of kids to a Third Day concert, and afterward we were trying to meet the
band. It was just me with three students--a freshman, a sophomore, and an 8th grader.
After waiting outside for a while, the security there convinced us that the band had
left in an SUV that had just pulled away. They gave us the name of the hotel the band
was staying in and wished us luck. We decided, what the heck.
Our adventure took us to a fast-food-place, a supermarket where we saw an SUV, and
finally the hotel where two of us checked out different floors while two kids stayed
in the van and ate. Of course, we did not find anyone. So we left and I dropped each
student off at their home before returning the van and going home myself.
The next morning at church, I was pulled aside by "my boss," who informed me that he
had a phone call from very angry parents that morning about the night's activities.
The story he got was that we were "carousing hotels in the city" (we live in a rural
farming area an hour from the arena) and that I had left the "children" unattended in
the van while "running through hotels."
I spoke with the parents who were upset, and they informed me they had no longer had
any trust in me because their child could have been "snatched" while I was "chasing
my fantasy." (I am a 30-something married female.) I apologized, told them I was sorry
for any lost trust, and that I would never knowingly place any of my students in danger.
I also told them it was a mistake, not my first and certainly not my last. They said all
was forgiven, but it would take a while for them to have trust in me again in situations
like this.
Incidentally, the other two sets of parents were totally fine with what happened. The
8th grader's parents said it was like an adventure for him, and he had a riot.
What I learned from this experience is that not everyone sees things from the same
perspective. What was intended to be a little adventuresome fun could, in fact, have
turned out differently. I'm fortunate and thankful that it didn't! ~Youth Gal from
Michigan~
LESSON LEARNED: Phone parents for permission before altering the agenda of the
original activity (because, yes, different parents do see things from different
perspectives). Also, keep the group together in public places.
NO BACK UP PLAN
I had been working at a church (my first church I might add) for about 4 months. It was
finally warming up and we decided to do an outdoor activity. The plan, we would leave
right after church on Sunday morning...We were going to go get pizza at a local
restaurant and then go ride go-karts after that...pretty plain and simple right? Well
you know the saying, when it rains, it pours. It rained all morning and continued to
rain throughout the day. We went to eat hoping it would stop raining enough to go ride
the karts...no go. So we decided for plan B...go to see a movie.
Well we got there right after the afternoon matinee had started, and we knew we couldn't
wait until the next showing of The Lion King started...Oh wait, there was one more movie
playing...and it's star, Robin Williams...I thought, hey, Robin Williams, good clean
fun right? I never thought to look at the rating...DUH!! So needless to say, we paid our
fee bought our popcorn and headed inside... and the rest is history. BAD FILM!
I went back and humbly told the senior pastor what we did (did I mention groveled and
begged for forgiveness) and what was his response. He laughed about it and said just
be more careful next time...You gotta love rookie mistakes! ~Matt~ Jackson, OH
LESSON LEARNED: Don't take kids to movies you haven't screened.
RESOURCE: www.screenit.com
BAD ILLUSTRATION
While teaching the High School Sunday School class I made the mistake of using one of
the student' s parents as a hypothetical example. I said, "Suzy, Imagine having to live
in a situation where your dad was beating your mom..." That afternoon the phone rang and
"mom" gave me one of the worse verbal "beatings" I have ever received. She was afraid
that rumors would start that she was being abused and told me they would never again
attend our church. After 30 minutes of begging, pleading, and crying, the parents
forgave me. ~P.C.~ Illinois
LESSON LEARNED: Use hypotheticals for stories.
FAREWELL TO ARMS
A couple years ago, we were hanging around waiting for more kids to arrive at youth
group, when one of my leaders had a great idea. He set up some plastic toy bowling
pins, and grabbed one of the kids' skateboards. "Human bowling!", he shouted, and
proceeded to lay on the board and push his way towards the pins. The kids thought
it was pretty funny, so one of them asked to try it. Under my breath I commented
that maybe this was something we should do downstairs in the gymnasium. Meanwhile
my leader says, "watch this" as he gives the boy on the board a mighty push towards
the pins. As if in slow motion, we all realized at the same time that there was a pair
of glass doors only a couple feet beyond the pins. The kid wiped out the pins (strike!),
then put out his arms to brace the impact with the doors.
His arms broke the glass and went through. But the glass above which had not been
broken, slid down the door frame like a guillotine towards his exposed arms. It
stopped in the frame just as it reached his limbs. We were all frozen, but miraculously
(of course) the boy was not harmed at all. We could have cut off his arms at the elbows
that night, but he was perfectly fine. ~Dairn~ Burnaby, BC
LESSON LEARNED: Look around for potential "breakables" before doing
physical activities.
NOTE FROM JONATHAN: Was it just me, or did you almost soil yourself when you read
about the glass coming down!!!! Oh man!!!!
SHARING TOO MUCH
The biggest mistake I've made so far was requesting prayer on our church's e-mail
circle for some personal financial problems my husband and I have been having. This
wasn't wrong in and of itself, but I went into WAY too much detail, and I did it in
panic mode! Now people are saying "They can't even handle their personal finances!"
I made myself and my husband look bad, as if we are setting a bad example of leadership
by not being good stewards of our money, and as if our board can't select good leadership
according to I Timothy 3.
What I've learned from this, first of all, is that as LEADERSHIP, we can't just blurt
our problems out there to just anybody. Next time, I will go privately to the Pastor
himself or to our Leadership Committee and ONLY request prayer from them - and nobody
else needs to know anything about our personal situation. ~Tonya Berry~ Columbus, OH
LESSON LEARNED: Use discretion when bearing your personal details to all. And don't
send emails when in "panic" mode.
WRONG GUESS
Last Summer in Moose Jaw Saskatchewan in Canada, I asked my Senior Pastor if the
church could pay for half the ticket price of a school play that was a fund raiser.
He agreed and asked how much will it cost. The tickets are $8 per person and
approximately 20 teens with attend that night for a total of $80 the church would
cover.
That Friday we announced the play and the discount. 54 teens showed up and we had to
cover more then $250. Despite the good attendance, our Pastor was not impressed.
~Joel~ Moose Jaw, CANADA
NOTE FROM JONATHAN: I don't know if I'd call this a mistake. I had a buddy who
volunteered for a church. He did pretty well financially, so he wasn't worried about
a few bucks here and there. That's why he told the "approximately 20 kids in his
youth group" that he'd pay for any of their friends that they brought to an
upcoming outreach event. He had a heart for evangelism and wanted to see a bunch of
outreach kids there. 94 kids showed up! Yes, it cost him $1480 dollars. But they all
heard the Gospel that night and a few gave their lives to Christ.
LOST JOSH
Any time our group goes walking downtown in a big city, I always make sure I post a
sponsor at the back of the group to make sure we don't have any kids lagging behind.
I never forget to do this -- until this year in Atlanta. We were moving through a crowd
of hundreds (maybe thousands) of commuters. I counted several times to make sure we had
everyone. But I kept coming up one short. Laura, a sponsor standing beside me, assured
me I must be counting wrong. About 3-4 blocks later we arrived at the bus and counted
with everyone standing still. We were one short. Who were we missing. And then I heard
the name -- Josh.
Ugh! Of all kids, the youngest most easily distracted student in the group (and the one
whose parents would most likely kill me). I ran down the streets of Atlanta as fast as I
could, endangering myself and the other sponsor who was trying to keep up with me. I
came to a standstill at a major road and scanned the crowd. Then Laura spotted him
standing in the middle of a crowd on the opposite side of the street. He couldn't hear
our yelling because of the traffic, but we caught up with him when the light finally
changed.
He explained that he got into a conversation with the back of someone's head. He thought
it was his friend Austin, until the kid turned around and he realized the rest of the
group was nowhere to be found. To his credit, he talked with a policeman and ultimately
decided it was best to stand and wait in the place where he lost the group until we came
back to get him. Whew, a close shave, and another one that multiplied horror in the
retelling when he returned home. But, at least I survived. ~Pete~
LESSON LEARNED: One staff in the front, one staff in the back. And if you come up
short on a count- count again!!!
Also- have an emergency number the kids can call. In this day and age of cell phones,
we should have one on us, and every kid should have the number.
MAD MALL MOM
On a Tuesday morning, 9:00 a.m. we left in three vehicles (church van, and two parents
driving mini vans) to go to the "big cool mall" in downtown Houston, which was about 45
minutes away from the church. We went to the mall, wandered, etc. Everyone was supposed
to meet back at the vans or the mall entrance (and then walk across the street where we
were parked) at 3:00 p.m. for the return trip. My two adults had all their kids, I looked
around in my van and asked if everyone was here and got a "yes, everyone's here" reply. We
headed back.
About halfway back, I got a call on my cell phone from the parent of one of the kids
(a 6th grade boy who had brought a friend and first-time visitor along with him) asking
where they were supposed to meet us. After the moment of panic passed, I was taking the
next exit to turn around and get them. The mother was too panicky herself to be mad at
that point.
The friend who came with the kid I left, his mom worked at the mall, so they had gone
to her store when they couldn't find us. That's where all the calls had originated from.
The end result was that the mom took off work an hour early to take the kids home because
they had to be at a ball game before I could have gotten back to pick him up and get back
to the church. When I got back to the church, basically everyone knew what had happened
(word travels fast in a small church) and most of the parents were laughing at me. A
couple said "if it had been any other kid, it wouldn't be a big deal." A couple said
"I kind of wish it had been my kid you left..."
It gets worse. The next morning the mom came in to find out how it happened. After
literally 30 minutes of non-stop raving where she basically attacked every detail of
the event from parking across the street and crossing what she termed "the most dangerous
intersection in Houston" and several other details, she was completely unhappy with any
apology or explanation I could give her. She and her husband wrote a complaint letter to
the personnel committee which resulted in a new "permission slip" for any activity away
from the church. ~Rob~
LESSON LEARNED: Have a buddy system and count kids before leaving a trip. Double
protection.
WHAT? YOU DON'T LIKE MY UNDIES?
Two years ago we took our youth on a mission's trip to Mexico. It was a great adventure
for the Lord and we all had a wonderful time. To our surprise we had awesome
accommodations. The boys in our group stayed at the church they had an upstairs apartment
with shower and all amenities. My wife and I with another couple to our surprise got to
stay in a very nice villa style home with all the girls. So far it sounds like everything
is just wonderful!
Well to our surprise again, we were sharing the house with a team of guys from Norway.
What could be so wrong with that you say? They were all good looking young men with
personalities to match. Needless to say our girls were very impressed.
I thought things would be okay since they were on the fist floor and we were on the
second with everything we needed to make living there complete. Did I mention they were
from Norway? Although they had a wonderful love and passion for the Lord, they also had
their customs. One morning I heard this shriek that sent me running out of our room to
see which girl had fallen down the stairs or what huge bug had crawled in through the
window. To what did my wondering eyes appear but 4 Norwegian boys in their underwear!
I quickly had my girls back in their rooms and asked the leaders of their team to have
them be a little more modest for the girl's sake. He told me that for them it was normal
and it was no big deal for them to run from room to room, even in mixed company.
So when you find yourself with some other teams from other countries ask about their
customs and make sure you understand how they plan to work with you and yours. ~Larry~
Tacoma, WA.
LESSON LEARNED: Don't let your guys stay with the Norwegian girls! (Seriously
though, any of our Norwegian readers care to comment? I'm sure that American boys
never do anything wrong!) :)
CUSTOM PAINT JOB
I recently took our youth on a Mission Trip to New Orleans. We were doing some much
needed painting inside of a local church. I was so proud to see our students giving of
their time to go and serve others. Then I got the dreaded "Let me show you something"
from the church maintenance man. As we walked outside, I thought he was going to show
me some more areas that needed painting. Wrong. He did, however, show some things to me
that were painted that shouldn't have been. LIKE HIS NICE CHEVY TRUCK!!!
You see, I had instructed them to go out to the middle of the back parking lot and shake
the excess water from their brushes/rollers after cleaning them off. What they actually
did was walk out the back door, slam their brushes against a stairwell support beam,
flinging paint (which wasn't cleaned out of the rollers) all over the church and all over
the maintenance man's nice Chevy truck (God bless you, Jerry). He graciously told me it
was no big deal and that he might be able to clean it off. He wanted the students to see
what happened when they didn't follow instructions. The guilty students apologized and I
repeatedly apologized (the whole time we were there).
Fortunately, all of the paint cleaned off with some denatured alcohol. The lesson I
learned - be very detailed in your instructions and walk them through the thing you are
instructing them to do. Then make sure they are doing what you asked. Don't assume they
will do just as you asked. ~Andy~ Tennessee
LESSON LEARNED: You said it well Andy. When it comes to paint, walk them through
what you're instructing them to do.
RSVP? WHAT'S THAT
This could be considered a good news/bad news situation. . . When planning some fun
events for our Summer program, we decided to do a day trip to a water park in a city
about one and one-half hours away. Since all during the year I had about 12-15 students
show up each week, and prior Summers the same or less, I assumed we would have maybe 10
students at the most. Our Church van was being used by another Ministry, so I had to
rent a van. . .
Well, even with RSVP's, etc, I was totally unprepared for the 25 students that showed up.
Altho' I had charged enough per student to cover the cost of admission and one van -
the extra cost for renting another van (plus gas) and covering the chaperones (luckily,
we had enough adults) - put us "in the hole" financially. PS Altho' we only had the
vans for one day - the rental company was trying to charge us for two. . . .We took the
vans on Saturday, and the company is closed on Sunday - I should have clarified that we
only needed the vans on Sunday.
Moral: Stick to an RSVP date - maybe get deposits ahead of time from students AND be
sure you are clear on ALL the details when renting vehicles!! ~Michelle~ Tucson, AZ
LESSON LEARNED: RSVP for all activities that require renting of vehicles, big budget,
etc. And always triple communicate with rental companies about return times.
THAT'S IT. LESSONS THAT SOMEONE ELSE LEARNED FOR US . . . THE HARD WAY!
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NEW URL. Did you notice our new URL?
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If you've been by our web site lately, you might have noticed that we are sporting a new
web address. Don't worry, the old one still works, but everything is going to be
pointing to our new URL: www.TheSource4YM.com
If you link us or have us bookmarked- note the new URL.
If you have any other youth ministry ideas you want to share, please email me
at jon@thesource4ym.com
ENJOY JONATHAN AS A SPEAKER FOR YOUR NEXT CAMP, EVENT, OR CONFERENCE
Jonathan speaks at schools, camps, and youth events all over the U.S. He also trains
youth workers and student leaders at national conferences and seminars. Check out
Jonathan's speaker page and who's recommending him!
http://www.thesource4ym.com/speakers/jonathan.asp
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to find even more free resources at www.TheSource4YM.com
KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK!
God Bless,
Jonathan R. McKee
THE SOURCE
for Youth Ministry
www.TheSource4YM.com
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