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STUDENT LED WORSHIP MINISTRY
One of my first memories of youth ministry as a teenager growing up was being a part of a student-led worship team. I can still remember our youth pastor taking a bunch of us out to breakfast one Saturday morning at Tom’s #5 Diner (I think we had waffles) and telling us that he had a vision for students leading music in our youth ministry services during the week. My friends and I were so excited! All of us LOVED playing music, and now we were going to be able to use our gifts on a weekly basis by leading worship at our church. 
Over the next year or so, our youth worker poured time & energy into us, developing us into worship leaders. We learned how to choose songs for the service that would supplement the sermons, we learned how to run rehearsals and put song slides together (back then we used our good ol’ overhead projector). In fact, it was because of the opportunity given to us by our youth pastor that most of us eventually went into ministry in the first place. Our youth pastor saw something in us that we didn’t yet see in ourselves and the rest is history! 
Now back then we had a bunch of students in our ministry who played music. We had guitar players and drummers, keyboardists and singers. But what about smaller youth ministries out there who don’t have very many musicians? Maybe you are in a youth ministry setting where you don’t really have any musicians at all. Maybe the majority of the students in your ministry are into sports. Here is my suggestion: START SMALL! If you want to develop a student worship ministry in your setting, start with what you have. Maybe you only have one student who can sing or play guitar. Start small and start developing them. Ask around and see if anyone in your church is a musician who would be willing to teach students how to play guitar or piano. Ask your worship leader at your church if he/she would have time to help get a student worship team off the ground. Simply figure out what you have and then build slowly from there. Here are just some of the benefits of having students lead worship in your services: 
1) STUDENT BY-IN GOES WAY UP! Even though the quality will always go down when teenagers lead versus adults leading, the teenagers in your ministry will love it WAY more because they get to see their peers serving in the services. 
2) IT’S A HUGE WIN FOR THE LARGER CHURCH. When you begin developing teenagers into worship leaders early on, they have the potential to be great worship leaders by the time they leave your youth ministry. This means that the larger church will have a bigger pool of worship leaders to utilize when they graduate from your ministry.
3) STUDENTS WHO SERVE TEND TO STICK. This principle works for any type of ministry students are involved in, but the truth is that students who are serving will tend to stick around longer in your ministry. Students who serve move from being a spectator to a champion in your youth minsitry.
Maybe your reading this and saying “Yes! I can’t wait to launch a worship ministry for my students!”. If so, I found a GREAT resource to help smaller youth ministries sound awesome in the interim while you get things moving. A company called LOOP COMMUNITY creates professional sounding loops (background tracks of guitar, bass, drums, etc.) that you can use to make your student worship band, or solo singer, sound terrific! You simply choose the worship song, download it and play it through your sound system as your students play along. It’s super simple and they work great. Let me know what you think!

STUDENT LED WORSHIP MINISTRY

One of my first memories of youth ministry as a teenager growing up was being a part of a student-led worship team. I can still remember our youth pastor taking a bunch of us out to breakfast one Saturday morning at Tom’s #5 Diner (I think we had waffles) and telling us that he had a vision for students leading music in our youth ministry services during the week. My friends and I were so excited! All of us LOVED playing music, and now we were going to be able to use our gifts on a weekly basis by leading worship at our church. 

Over the next year or so, our youth worker poured time & energy into us, developing us into worship leaders. We learned how to choose songs for the service that would supplement the sermons, we learned how to run rehearsals and put song slides together (back then we used our good ol’ overhead projector). In fact, it was because of the opportunity given to us by our youth pastor that most of us eventually went into ministry in the first place. Our youth pastor saw something in us that we didn’t yet see in ourselves and the rest is history! 

Now back then we had a bunch of students in our ministry who played music. We had guitar players and drummers, keyboardists and singers. But what about smaller youth ministries out there who don’t have very many musicians? Maybe you are in a youth ministry setting where you don’t really have any musicians at all. Maybe the majority of the students in your ministry are into sports. Here is my suggestion: START SMALL! If you want to develop a student worship ministry in your setting, start with what you have. Maybe you only have one student who can sing or play guitar. Start small and start developing them. Ask around and see if anyone in your church is a musician who would be willing to teach students how to play guitar or piano. Ask your worship leader at your church if he/she would have time to help get a student worship team off the ground. Simply figure out what you have and then build slowly from there. Here are just some of the benefits of having students lead worship in your services: 

1) STUDENT BY-IN GOES WAY UP! Even though the quality will always go down when teenagers lead versus adults leading, the teenagers in your ministry will love it WAY more because they get to see their peers serving in the services. 

2) IT’S A HUGE WIN FOR THE LARGER CHURCH. When you begin developing teenagers into worship leaders early on, they have the potential to be great worship leaders by the time they leave your youth ministry. This means that the larger church will have a bigger pool of worship leaders to utilize when they graduate from your ministry.

3) STUDENTS WHO SERVE TEND TO STICK. This principle works for any type of ministry students are involved in, but the truth is that students who are serving will tend to stick around longer in your ministry. Students who serve move from being a spectator to a champion in your youth minsitry.

Maybe your reading this and saying “Yes! I can’t wait to launch a worship ministry for my students!”. If so, I found a GREAT resource to help smaller youth ministries sound awesome in the interim while you get things moving. A company called LOOP COMMUNITY creates professional sounding loops (background tracks of guitar, bass, drums, etc.) that you can use to make your student worship band, or solo singer, sound terrific! You simply choose the worship song, download it and play it through your sound system as your students play along. It’s super simple and they work great. Let me know what you think!

Youth Ministry Idea: “Photo-booth”

Here’s a quick/fun idea for your next youth ministry event. A couple of weeks ago we set up a simple “photo booth” station in our jr. high service where students could take free pictures of themselves and their friends as we finished up our series on friendships/dating. 

After their picture was taken we had a volunteer edit/touch up the photos and then we gave them away the following weekend for students to take home. It was a big success and I’m sure we will be doing it again soon. Hope this was helpful!

IGNITION Weekend In Review 6/3/12

Series: THE GUY/GIRL THING

Title: “Relationship Q&A”

Sermon In A Sentence: When it comes to relationships…it’s OK to ask QUESTIONS!

MESSAGE SUMMARY: This weekend we wrapped up our 4-week series on friendships/dating/sex/relationships with a “Relationship Q&A Panel”. Instead of a regular message, we had a few married couples (some older, some younger) on stage to answer any/all questions that our jr. highers had about sex, dating, etc. During the panel, students could text in the questions and we would answer them in real time. We also used grade groups this week as a time to collect handwritten questions from the students. Here are a few of the questions that we covered: 

“How do you show a guy you like him without acting kinda weird?”

“How do you move out of the ‘friend zone’?”

“Is it really that important that I date someone who is already a believer?”

“How long were you just friends before you started dating?”

“How do you let your friend know that the person they are dating is kind of a jerk?”

WORSHIP PLAYLIST: ”God Is Able”, “Your Love Never Fails”, “Oh You Bring”, “Take It All”, “Marvelous Light

Youth Ministry Idea: Why I Like jr. High Lock-ins

This morning I finished up our 6th grade boys lock in at the church. It was an awesome (and exhausting) night of junk food, video games, crazy games and great memories. And even though I am basically comatose at this point after getting near to no sleep here are some quick thoughts:

1) Lock-ins’ are powerful. I know that holding a lock in is super hard, very tiring and takes years off of your life…BUT, a good lock-in is the kind of memory maker that sticks with students. They may not remember a word you taught during their junior high years, but they will remember the relationships that we’re developed at a lock in!

2) When it comes to lock-ins, smaller is better. A couple of years ago I started trying out a new idea, where instead of holding a huge lock-in for the entire youth group, I’ve encouraged our jr. High small group leaders to hold “mini lock-ins” with their small groups once a school year. Here are the advantages: less stress, intentional focus on relationship building, easily manageable, etc. PLUS these events bring our small groups closer together super quickly based off of all the shared memories!

3) Use your lock-in to test out your volunteers. Nothing will make a volunteer show their true colors like being locked in a building all night with smelly, energetic teenagers. Last night at our lock-in I had a new volunteer join me to see how he would handle all the controlled chaos/lack of sleep. He did a great job and I got to see how he reacted in a variety of different situations. Now I’m not saying that you should freak out every new volunteer by forcing them to go to your I overnighter’s…but…it is a perfect way to gage how much one of your volunteers likes teenagers!

And then again…it’s an overnighter. With that in mind, here’s a classic from my friend Jake Rutenbar:

Using Adobe Creative Cloud In Your Youth Ministry

Are you a youth worker on a small budget? If you don’t have someone to make graphics/videos for your services, you might want to consider grabbing a subscription to Adobe Creative Cloud. For a cheap subscription you can use all the Adobe software without having to purchase the entire suite.

Here’s my idea:

1) Get an adobe creative cloud subscription

2) Grab a student in your youth ministry who loves creative arts

3) have them come in during the week and design you your graphics/videos/etc. while they get to learn on the best software out there.

Could be a huge win for your youth group & a great way to plug students into ministry. Let me know your thoughts!