The Well is dry, the pool is gone.

Author: Ken Moser
Date: 01 Dec 2011

This post is going to be slightly bleak. Well, in all honesty it may be a downright ‘bleakfest’. It is not that I’m in a bad mood or tend to be a negative person. Far from it in fact. There is beautiful snow on the ground, the day is bright and sunny and the Christmas break is right around the corner.

However, I think today’s post will still be bleak.

We’ve always had a pool. We could rely on this pool. Whenever, things looked a bit grim, we could rely on this pool to bring us support and refreshment. However, this pool is drying up. The well has run dry.

Translation: I grew up with a culture that supported Christianity. In fact, it was expected that you were a Christian, with the exception of my many Jewish friends. We were all ‘god fearers’. Very few people that I knew had no religion or one of those religions from “over there” (far away). This type of culture meant that we had a large pool of support for church and especially youth ministry. In those days you could put on almost anything and youth would show up.

The well has run dry and the pool is now filled with skaters

With Christianity in the culture there is goodwill (everyone’s parents/grandparents go or went to church). Those days are gone, long gone. This means that this mythical well where we could always count on support is now dry. In fact, in many places the culture is downright hostile to our faith and our pool, which was once cool and refreshing, is dry and filled with skaters (not that I’m knocking skaters, it just made for a good metaphor!).

In Australia, kids used to flock to the children’s programs on a Sunday morning. That, in the most part, is no longer part of society. However, Sydney is in revival mode when you compare it to Vancouver or the other major Canadian centers. Youth aren’t flocking to youth events. You can’t put on any activity and count on the support from parents, grandparents and the surrounding culture. The goodwill we once had is long gone.

But you know what? - that ain’t such a bad thing. I can’t help but wonder if our previous ‘success’ was nothing more than culture merely showing us its hand. It was acceptable to believe in God, go to Christian events and participate in a youth group. However, was our success really all that successful? (Think Christian Smith’s “Moral Therapeutic Deism”- is that what we produced?)

When we look to markings of success, we tend to look to the amount of youth who come to our groups, go on our camps/mission trips, get baptized or confirmed or simply raise their hands or go forward at a youth event.

The real marks of success are longevity. Do our kids go the distance? Do we develop leaders coming from within the group who can carry it on? Do we have youth moving to other places and stay strong and bless their new community while away from home?

With the pool drying up, we now have to rethink the way we do youth ministry. We no longer have the backing we once had. This means we must change. This may/should/could also mean that we become much more effective in what we do.


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Ken
Posts: 3
Comment
Groshana's question
Reply #3 on : Thu January 19, 2012, 10:12:28
Grosh,
Good questions. Isn't the answer "what it always is"? We ask "what does the Word tell us to do?" and "How do we do this with young people today?" We then go back to the basics of good, instructive Bible teaching that captures the hearts and minds of our youth.
We also must go back to thinking a bit smaller than we are used to- the answer does not lay in the crowds we get or the size of the youth group, but the size of Jesus in the kids of our group. In other words, a smaller (numerical) group but larger spiritually. This is the best way forward.

Dump the dreams given to us by the USA mega church and go New Testament.

So- you must be discipling a group of younger girls. Take them through the scriptures for as many years as possible and then they do the same with another group(s) of youth etc. etc.

Thoughts????
groshana
Posts: 3
Comment
biblical illiteracy running the well dry?
Reply #2 on : Thu January 19, 2012, 02:24:53
Ken, your comments here reminded me of my homiletics class today. While this is a bunny-trail thought, this idea of the pool gone dry however reminded me of an important note we covered. we discussed the fact that upcoming generations are increasingly becoming biblically illiterate. i really wanted to know what your thoughts are on this.
also, the point that came up in class, and id like to ask you the same is, as ministers, (future or curent) what do we do about it? how can we change this reality?
if there was someway that we could raise the biblical literacy of culture and believers specifically, do you think it could result in "water" in your "well"?
Jordy
Posts: 3
Comment
Re:
Reply #1 on : Fri December 02, 2011, 10:50:20
I cannot agree with you more Ken. When I think of youth not wanting to come to youth group, bible studies, or church events, I think of the passage where Jesus talks about separating the sheep from the goats. The youth who do show up for youth, probably take their faith seriously. Those who do not, probably do not. Those who are serious about their faith, no matter how busy they are, will make time to come. We also cannot label the youth group as successful based on numbers, as long as we are doing what God set us out to do then we are doing our jobs. If God gives us a few youth to minister at a time, then we must be gracious for what we been given. The pools are drying up, but it may require a drastic change of heart for the pools to be full again.