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It was mid-summer and Jim, the church's two year veteran youth pastor, still hadn't finished recruiting his volunteers for the fall. He hadn't had time to make a personal connection with the new 7th graders and their families. And he still had no clear youth ministry calendar for the coming year.
But one thing he wouldn't give up: Writing all the curriculum to be used by his volunteers. After all, he reasoned, all the curriculum resources out there are mediocre at best, and they all require leaders to spend far too much time making those resources useable.
Jim was right on at least one front: Youth ministry curriculum generally falls into one of two categories: Mediocre or Worse.
But on another front, Jim was forgetting a few foundational facts:
It was mid-summer and Jim, the church's two year veteran youth pastor, still hadn't finished recruiting his volunteers for the fall. He hadn't had time to make a personal connection with the new 7th graders and their families. And he still had no clear youth ministry calendar for the coming year.
Don't get me wrong: It's not youth workers should never write their own curriculum. But until the first foundational priorities are taken care of, spending time on sideways priorities (like writing curriculum) always hinder strategic progress. C.S. Lewis was right (again):
You can't get second things by putting them first; you can get second things only by putting first things first. ... What is the first thing? The only reply I can offer here is that if we do not know, then the first, and only practical thing, is to set about finding out. - C. S. Lewis, God in the Dock
With this article, I'm beginning a new series called "Recipes for Distraction." In each article, I'll try to keep youth ministers and youth ministry search teams away from the red herrings that can take their attention away from first-level priorities, in hopes of moving from erratic activity to deliberate progress.
Mark DeVries, founder of Youth Ministry Architects (www.ymarchitects.com), a youth pastor in Nashville Tennessee, and writes a mediocre youth ministry curriculum called Spice Rack.
Click here to download the introduction to Mark's new book
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