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Parents, You Are Amazing!

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In this article I wrestled with what to say and how to end 2010.  When I thought about the birth of Jesus, the season of Advent and the parents of Jesus, it came to me.  The people that we talk about today, the people who were actively involved in the development of Jesus, the man, were his parents.  What a joy it must have been to know that Jesus was going to transform the world we live in.  Mary and Joseph didn’t know how He would impact the world but they sure knew that He was important. 
Your teens, although at times misguided and challenging, are going to impact the world.  They will have a powerful influence over people they meet, places they go, the colleges they attend, future work environments they will work in.  The possible places of their influence is endless.  Eighty years from now, if we were to look back on your child’s life, the people we would be talking about who had the most influence on his or her life would be you, the parents.  While I strongly believe in the LOFT and the ministries at FUMC Plant City, I also know that you, the parents, will have the greatest impact of your child’s faith. 
With the knowledge that your teen will make some kind of impact on the world, whether positive or negative, I would like to thank you, praise you and also challenge you.  First thank you for being the incredible parent you are.  Thank you for getting up early on a Saturday to attend your child’s event, being a chauffeur everyday of the week, providing for your child, being there when your child has had a bad day and everything else you do.  You are amazing!  I praise you for the effort you put into your child’s life.  Everything you do, say and teach your child will stick with them for the rest of their lives, even if they will not admit it. 
Lastly, I would like to challenge you.  Are you being the parent that God has called you to be? Look up Deuteronomy 6:4-9.  Do you regularly pray with your child?  Do you regularly read Scripture with your child?  If not, then make this Advent season a time when you will begin.  Start small, maybe pray with your teen in the car as soon as you pick them up from something.  Tell them you love them, care about them and want to pray with them.  They may just surprise you with their response.  Use the season of Advent as a starting place by reading the Christmas story together.  More than anything, just do something because you will impact your child and your child will impact the world.  Will it be for God?


Difficult People and Hopeless Cases?

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"The Bible tells me that God can make a human being out of a pile of dirt, that God can make a barren old couple the proud parents of a chosen people, that God can heal the sick and feed the hungry and raise the dead. If I believe that, then I cannot also believe myself or anyone else to be a lost cause" -The Preaching Life by Barbara Brown Taylor. 

What an incredible quote.  Sometimes it gets so difficult to deal with people.  People hurt us, anger us and then of course there is always that one person who knows how to get under your skin.  There are moments when you minister to someone, you share life and Christ with them but it seems you can never get through to their heart.  In this quote Taylor challenges us, more precisely me, to not give up.  If I believe in the history of God and the hope of the future then I should know that God can get through to someone and help me deal with a difficult person.  I hope this quote encourages you not to give up on someone and to always know that the person who angers you the most may just be a person that God is using you to resurrect.

My Heart for Youth Ministry

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Below is a letter I once wrote to share my vision for youth ministry.  This letter really reflects my heart and how I perceive youth ministry.  I have made once specific locations and names generic for the purpose of this post.
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Dear Church,

I have heard from your Senior Pastor of the great faith and hope that you have in Jesus.  I am greatly encouraged to also hear of the investment you have made and the desire you have for a strong youth ministry.  The developing Young Adult ministry is also a great encouragement.  Your desire to impact younger generations are one that I hope to be a part of.  Through this letter it is my hope that you see what my heart longs for in ministry and the vision I hold for these ministries.
Today I watched a student play the greatest game of baseball in his life.  In fact he may receive a scholarship after a game like today.  You should have seen the excitement on his face and the proud look his parents had. 
Last week, sitting in Wendy’s across the table from a student who was struggling with the separation of her parents, I was at a loss for words.  If only you could have seen the tears, and all I wanted to do was tell her that everything was going to be ok and that her parents were going to be together again but I couldn’t. Not knowing if her family would ever be the same again all I could do was be there for her and pray with her.   
The above stories, while mostly fiction, are examples of the powerful impact living life together can have.  Being there has an amazing way of showing the incredible love that we have for students and subsequently shows the great love God has for them.  A willingness to be involved in a student’s life is, I believe, essential to the development of a growing relationship with God.  Everyone wants to feel like they belong, like people want them to be around and everyone wants to feel like someone cares about them.  These types of relationships are what I see this ministry revolving around.
Developing strong relationships with the volunteers, parents and students would be my first priority in my vision.  I would hope to get together, away from distractions, with the volunteer team to create a vision for the next three years with checkpoints at every year.  Moving beyond the vision are the events and methods of creating this ministry with these types of relationships.  Some of our possible events to be attractive are those of paintball, camps, retreats, house parties, mission trips, girl’s night out, guy’s night out, around town scavenger hunts, lock-ins and concerts.  For relationship development and discipleship we may have: small groups, worship experiences, breakfast or lunch with students, occasionally attending student’s activities, one on one mentoring, service projects, mission trips, camps and retreats.  The previous lists are not all the activities but are a small sampling of some of the possibilities.    
My hopes are that this group would become a group that when students walk in they walk in as friends, but when they leave they leave as part of the family.  I envision a group that has a great time together while creating strong disciples of Jesus.  I also see a group that grows not only by attractive events, but more importantly, by the love that they see our students having for each other and Jesus.
As I begin to close this small abstract of what I hope to see in the youth ministry at your Church, I would like to say a few more specific words to a few people:
First to the parent, in a world of constantly changing culture, technology and media it can be a challenge just to keep up.  I hope through time you will allow me to be on your side, partnering with you to keep you up to date on the latest trends and hopefully answer the all important question of ‘what is a tweet?’.
To the volunteer, I am anxiously awaiting the day that we can join together as a team and dream where God would have the youth ministry go. May your love for students shine through the bonds and friendships you create with them.  My hope and prayer is that you would find five students who you can deeply connect with and pour your life into, that you can bring the best out of them.  I pray that by your life, they would come to know and grow in faith through Jesus.
Last and most definitely not least, to the students, I am extremely excited about the fun times we are going to have together from shooting paintball at one another to praying with each other, from screaming together on the newest rollercoaster or yelling and raising our hands at a concert, from running around town for clues to standing in anticipation as you prepare to throw a pie at me.  In all of this I am most excited about getting to know you where you are and exactly for who you are, the way God has designed you to be.  My hope is that you would see the greatness of God and His strong desire to be a part of your life.
I close with this; Jesus had twelve disciples, whom he spent at least three years of his life with.  Jesus ate with them, taught them, slept in a boat beside them, fed them and was even betrayed by one of them.  Yet in all of this, He still loved them and us.  I only hope that we can in a small way show the students in your area this kind of love, a love that Jesus was willing to die for.
My wife, Ashley, and I are greatly looking forward to getting the opportunity to meet everyone!
May the grace and peace of Jesus be upon you,
Brian Lawson
 

Delegation

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What a great bunch of students!  We had several of our LOFT family members over today to celebrate all the hard work they have put in this past year.  The students we had over were all apart of our student worship band.  Although we were missing a few of them we still had a great time sharing a meal, playing some Rock band and praying over James.  James is the youth intern we have serving at our church and he is taking charge of the student band.  I believe he will take our worship band to a whole new level.  I’m so excited about their future! 


Since this is under the category of church leadership, I felt the need to insert some information regarding church leadership.  James is taking over the LOFT worship band, a task that I have been doing since we began the band in January.  While I saw the band through the formation period, it was time for me to hand the group off.  God has called me to lead this ministry and pastor these students but not micromanage all aspects.  God has gifted individuals with different abilities and although I like to be involved in everything, I must believe that God has brought all adults to our ministry for different reasons.  Delegation can be the hardest challenge for leaders but we must learn to delegate in order to use all the gifts God has blessed the ministry with, including all adults God has blessed us with.