Quantcast
The Magazine for Youth Ministry
You Are Here
  HOME  RESOURCES  MINISTRY
YOUTH MINISTRY SEARCH
X
 YOUTH MINISTRY ARCHIVE

Page   1  2  3  4  5  >

  • Ministry with a Lasting Impact: Unleashing God's Word in Youth Ministry
    Barry Shafer
    What are you doing in your student ministry that will outlast you? I remember the first time that question occurred to me. I can’t...
  • Sticking Around: Lasting in Youth Work (part 3)
    Syler Thomas
    U2 is arguably the greatest rock band in the world. In my opinion, no band in history has been able to stay at the cutting edge of...
  • God's Song for Ukraine
    Debbie Meroff
    Saron’s name is in the Bible and means “His Song,” or “God’s Song.” Born to committed Christian parents in Jarrettsville, Md., Saron...
  • A New Movement
    I wrote my first article for YouthWorker Journal in the fall of 1999. It was about an outreach youth ministry I had developed in Ginghamsburg...
  • Deprogramming Our Programming
    Mark Oestreicher
    I’ve been doing a lot of thinking (and writing, and a bit of speaking) in the last few years about needed change in youth ministry....
  • The Trouble with Girls
    Jennifer Bradbury
    Being a teenage girl today is tough. Every day, girls encounter a multitude of conflicting messages about their identity, sexuality...
  • Samaritan's Feet Sponsoring World Walk
    It's an amazingly ambitious, tremendously compelling humanitarian event that's calling America to "walk barefoot" this October to benefit...

Page   1  2  3  4  5  >

Joint Custody: When Your Kids Also Attend Another Group
AVERAGE RATING
RATE THIS ARTICLE
Joint Custody: When Your Kids Also Attend Another Group
By Jennifer Bradbury
Student Ministry Director at Lakeview Church in Palatine, Illinois

Caitlyn is a seventh grader in my youth ministry. Every Sunday, you can find her at our youth worship service, eager to learn and grow in her faith. And every Wednesday, you can find her faithfully attending a different youth worship service at another church.

I felt betrayed when I learned this. I began to wonder, what did I do wrong? What’s our ministry lacking that Caitlyn had to go in search of elsewhere? What could I do to get her back?

Then I realized I was feeling much like a parent caught in a nasty divorce who’s just been awarded visitation rights rather than the sole custody of Caitlyn’s spiritual life that I “rightfully” deserved.
Advertisement

That’s when it occurred to me: I don’t rightfully deserve anything when it comes to Caitlyn or her spiritual life.

Instead, God has graced our ministry with her presence and given me the responsibility to care for and nurture her. That call isn’t dependent on whether I’m the only person—or one of many—God has entrusted with this job.

Praying for the ‘Other Church’

Having recognized this, I’ve begun to approach my ministry to Caitlyn as though I’m a parent diligently working for the best interest of my child where custody is shared jointly between my church and this “other church.”

I have had to realize God is not limited to using me and the other leaders at my church to work in Caitlyn’s life. Instead, He may also choose to use people from other churches and places to work in her life, as well. For this, I should be grateful, not resentful.

Similarly, I cannot be possessive of Caitlyn’s spiritual growth. Rather, I must be willing to acknowledge this “other church” exists, by laying aside my own pride and asking Caitlyn questions about this youth group to help her process her experiences there.

I hope its youth group welcomes, accepts and loves her.

I also hope it doesn’t view Caitlyn as “fresh meat” to steal for its own youth program. I hope instead it will recognize she has a home church that also has an important role in her life.

I also pray this other group, and we, never fall into the comparison game and force Caitlyn to choose between us. Just like in a bitter custody battle, when that happens, everybody loses—especially Caitlyn.

In an ideal world, I also hope one day the youth pastor of this “other church” would have the courage to reach out to me, or I to him, and together we could establish a new friendship based on our mutual desire to see Caitlyn grow in her walk with Christ.

Juggling Visitation Rights

My newfound awareness of Caitlyn’s situation also has caused me to explore how best to minister to kids from other churches who attend my youth ministry.

Take Joanna, whose family regularly attends a nearby church. Unlike Caitlyn’s situation, Joanna’s home church retains “sole custody” while our youth ministry is limited to yearly summer visitations when Joanna joins us for our mission trip.

Page   1  2

WHAT DO YOU THINK?
  • Be the first to comment!
  • YouthWorker.com (Salem All-Pass) registration.
    Salem Forums Users: You do not need to register for a new account; your forums account is part of the "Salem All-Pass."
    Registration is Easy and it's FREE!
    Required fields marked with *
    *Username:
    *Password:
    *Confirm Password:
    *E-mail Address:
    FREE NEWSLETTERS

    Terms of Use / Privacy Policy
Subscribe Today
YOUTHWORKER.COM NEWSYOUTHWORKER.COM NEWS
NUTHIN' BUT NETNOTHIN' BUT NET
SEARCH THE BIBLESEARCH THE BIBLE
Salem Publishing