Post your thoughts and ideas below by using the “Comments” or email me at jasonlamb@dare2share.org

Post your thoughts and ideas below by using the “Comments” or email me at jasonlamb@dare2share.org

by Phil Bell of Life Church in Canton, MI.
It stands to reason that it’s not a good idea to buy hair products from someone with no hair. It stands to reason that you should not go to a dentist who has teeth like Austin Powers. It should stand to reason that our students will not likely pursue God passionately if it is not modeled for them. It should also stand to reason that students will not intensely pursue their friends for Jesus if they do not see key people in their lives doing the same. Therefore, If you and I want to see students become passionate about God (Deep) and passionate about reaching their friends for Him (Wide), we need to ask some honest questions of ourselves:
Before I go further, let’s pause for a minute… I want to be clear that you and I ultimately are not the answer to what students need. Jesus is! But we are certainly a guide and shepherd to help them discover and embrace Him. Therefore, do students see someone before them who can be trusted to lead the way? They need someone who will navigate an exciting path with and for them. Do they see passion and authenticity evident in our lives and will they follow us as we follow Jesus?
I believe that when we read 1 Thessalonians Chapter 1, we are given a great picture of the power of example to the students around us:
You know how we lived among you for your sake. 6You became imitators of us and of the Lord; in spite of severe suffering, you welcomed the message with the joy given by the Holy Spirit. 7And so you became a model to all the believers in Macedonia and Achaia. 8The Lord’s message rang out from you not only in Macedonia and Achaia—your faith in God has become known everywhere. – 1 Thessalonians 1:5b-8
In this chapter I am challenged by the idea that faith is caught more than it is taught as students become imitators of us and of the Lord. And the key is not to be their hero or best friend. The key is to be an authentic Christ follower who students want to become like. As you and I imitate Him, our lives become magnetic to them and they begin to discover and embrace Jesus. What’s more important is this: When these students themselves are living out the deep and wide principles, they too begin to impact their friends, families and communities in ways we would never had imagined. Their faith in God will be known everywhere… Can you begin to dream of what that could look like in some of your students lives in the next few years?
So, what kind of imitators are your students becoming? Today, take a look at some areas of your leadership and consider what small and important things you can do to model authentic faith to your students. But most of all, take some time today to allow God to fill you up with His presence. What is God saying to you today about who He wants you to become? How will that impact your students? How will impact God’s Kingdom?
Phil Bell
Pastor of Student Ministries
Life Church
www.youthworktalk.com
So prayer may sound like something that is more focused on worship vs. discipleship or evangelism. And I really wouldn’t argue that point. It does make sense and prayer is definitely a way that we worship God assuming our prayers are interactive (2-way communication) instead of me posting my concerns to God and saying Amen. Prayer is vital to my worship of God.
Prayer is also a powerful tool when it comes to evangelism. I would go so far as to say that evangelism that is not fueled by prayer probably sets the stage for the most ineffective evangelism effort one could pursue. Essentially, you have stacked the cards against yourself. As you continue to push your teens to share their faith and reach their lost friends for Christ, be sure that their efforts are rooted in prayer.
Idea – have your teens start praying for a list of their friends who don’t know Christ. It may just be 1 friend, it could be many more than that. Simply have them start praying for those friends now.
Could you imagine how amazing our Youth Ministries would be and how effective our teens could be if they bathed this next school year, the Dare 2 Share Blaze conference tour, and their friends in prayer starting now?
Pray!
This week’s idea to help you go “Deep” in your Youth Ministry.
I know, this idea seems so basic and elementary, and it totally is. Scripture memorization is so simple, yet it seems like it is a fleeting discipline in most Christian circles, let alone Youth Ministries. Imagine what it would be like if you challenged your teens to memorize one verse a month.
Will all of them memorize every verse? Maybe not. But if a few of them memorized all those verses or even if most of them memorized a several of them, you would have an army of teenagers that could recite one verse out of every book of the Bible. Depending on where you pulled your verses, you could have teens that could recite entire chapters, even books of the Bible! Think about it. How cool would it be if we restored the discipline of scripture memorization back into American Youth Minstries. It could be one step of a journey on the road to changing a generation.
How many verses of the Bible have you memorized? What’s the first one that comes to mind when asked to recite a verse you have memorized? I dare ya’ to share it!

written by John Byrne of the Rock of Southwest in Littleton, CO.
On May 29th my wife and I celebrated our 16th wedding anniversary. It was a good night. Our plans were pretty loose, but we ended up at Olive Garden one of my wife’s favorite places to eat. I enjoy their food as well, but the bread they bring out right when you get there is amazing. If I am not careful I will be full by the time the real food arrives. I have to pace myself, and by that I mean eat one loaf and ask them not to bring another. As I think about taking students deeper into God’s word I often wonder if we spend too much time serving appetizers and not enough time serving the main course. Students may go away full, but have they really been fed?
It is much easier to serve chips and salsa than it is to serve a healthy meal and more often than not that is what the students want. A message built around a cool story with a verse pulled out of context is much easier than taking a passage of scripture and doing old fashioned exegesis. For years I did the cool story bit. Over time I began to realize that I had been taking verses out of context and using them to fit my message. Even when I wasn’t using these verses in the wrong way I was still just serving appetizers.
How do you serve just the right amount of appetizer and make sure students are still hungry for the main meal? It might be easier than you think. Let me suggest a few things:
When I was in Bible college I had professor after professor tell me I needed to have personal study that was different from what I was teaching or preaching on. Fortunately God designed me to be a rebel. I just couldn’t figure out why this was a good idea. Now I study a text and it is both personal and it is what I teach on. This is better because the text hits home with me first before I teach on it. It is better because I am not trying to study two things. I can combine my efforts.
Maybe your students are different than the ones in my youth group, but mine barely know where the New Testament is and they often are confused as to whether a book is in the New or Old Testament. Reading the text and having them actually open their Bibles is important. The word of God is what is sharp, living, and useful. My stories, jokes, and illustrations are only useful as appetizers. God’s word is the main course. If my presentation is terrible, but I got students to open up God’s word and actually read it, that’s a win!
It sounds boring and irrelevant to teach through a book of the Bible. Well, it is old but it is definitely not irrelevant. We make a big mistake if we think we have to make the Bible relevant, it doesn’t need our help. Our job is not to make scripture relevant, but rather to help people understand it so they can see its relevance. Last fall I did a relationship series using the book of Ruth. The students who were there could probably still tell you the basics of that story. Not only did they learn about relationships, they learned God’s word. I just finished up a series on Haggai. Most of them didn’t even know Haggai was book in the Bible and now they can tell you the basic premise of the book and probably a little about its historical context. They are building a foundational knowledge of the Bible and learning to go deep in their faith.
I have not always done a good job of using illustrations. It isn’t because I forgot to use them or I didn’t tell the story well, but because I would find a funny story and force feed it into a message because I wanted to tell the story. If you want to tell funny stories, be a comedian. If you want to preach the word of God, be a pastor. Stories, jokes and illustrations are helpful as long as they don’t become the focus.
As youth leaders we need to always point to Jesus. The writer of Hebrews puts it this way, “Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith…”
John Byrne
Pastor of Student Ministries
The Rock of Southwest
www.pjs-web.net