Ezine Archives

eZine 04.01.2008

TheSource4YM.com
Jonathan’s Resource Ezine

Weekly Resources, Ideas and Articles from The Source for Youth Ministry
Tuesday, April 1, 2008

In This Issue

Yes… it’s April Fool’s Day. But no practical jokes from us… just some free resources and ideas you can use, as always!

If you aren’t a subscriber of this EZINE and would like to subscribe – it’s free – just pop on www.TheSource4YM.com and sign up in the upper right hand corner.

Featured: Were the “Kids Choice Awards” Winners Actually… Clean? Jonathan Shares His 2 Cents and Asks for Yours



Miley, Avril, The Jonas Brothers… do these names mean anything to you? Because they mean a lot to our young kids & tweens.

If any of you have young kids that watch TV, last weekend you probably noticed that Nickelodeon’s Kid’s Choice Awards were on Saturday (If you were watching Sponge Bob, you were given glimpses of the Awards at every break).

I’m torn when it comes to these awards. On one side of the spectrum I’m relieved that most of the winners selected are pretty innocent, as today’s culture goes (I’ll list the major winners in a minute and make a few comments). But on the other side of the coin, I’m NOT a big fan of this show. Two reasons:

  1. It’s a bunch of kids trying to grow up WAY too fast (little girls trying to be hoochies and boys copping the attitude of rock stars!)
  2. As innocent as this content is, compared to its older sibling, The Teen Choice Awards (Every year I write an article about these awards as well)… the Kid’s Choice Awards still will award celebrities that are far from positive role models for questionable content.

Right now if you click on the Kid’s Choice Award web site you will hear the live performance of Naked Brothers Band singing “I Don’t Want to Go to School.” (Hey kids, you can have a bad attitude and a hit band before you even hit puberty!) Watching this concert gave me a flashback of Pinocchio’s trip to “Pleasure Island.” (Remember the land where the kids ran free and were allowed to do everything they wanted?)

But I’ll admit, I was pleased with the actual awards they gave out. Some years I’ve cringed at some of the recipients, but this year, with a couple exceptions, they were a pretty clean lot.

Here’s a glimpse of a few of the winners…

Check out Jonathan’s 2 cents on the winners
AND Share your 2 cents by commenting
on Jonathan’s Blog Here!

AND, if you haven’t already…
Subscribe to Jonathan’s Blog HERE

Youth Culture Window: Is God Too Busy for Us? Does He Care? A New Music Discussion Using the Song, “Is God Too Busy”

Even if your group is not a huge fan of country music, this MUSIC DISCUSSION will still speak volumes to your students about the issue of God and human suffering. It gives you the access point for the music video, the song lyrics, small group discussions, and a powerful wrap up that you can use to point your teens to Jesus and His love for them.

Brooks and Dunn – “God Must Be Busy”

Main Point of Discussion: God is never too busy to take care of you

The Music: “God Must Be Busy”

The Music:
Many of you don’t have to like Country music to know who Brooks and Dunn are. These two guys hit the scene way back in 1991 with their first album “Brand New Man,” and for the last 17 years, they have been “Boot Scootin’ Boogie-ing” their way up the charts and into the hearts of millions of fans on every inhabitable continent.

Any listing of Country music’s most music-defining artists would be sorely incomplete without the inclusion of this dynamic duo. Their accolades include “Entertainer of the Year,” two-time holder of Billboard Magazine’s “Country Single of the Year,” and “Country Vocal Duo of the Year” 14 of the last 17 years! Yeah, if you have any country music fans in your youth group, they know these guys.

And now, 13 albums and 20 #1 hits later, they offer the world their latest compilation called “Cowboy Town.” This disc has already landed them a bid for Country music’s “Duo Video of the Year” at the 2008 CMT Music Awards. This album also features a new song called “God Must Be Busy” that is getting a lot of play time right now.

At THE SOURCE FOR YOUTH MINISTRY we like to use pop culture references to start Biblical conversations (just like the Apostle Paul did in Acts 17). This song will provide a great way to start discussion in your group. (iTunes has the song for $0.99, and currently the video is available for viewing on “Brooks and Dunn TV,” hosted at their official website www.brooks-dunn.com.) Print off the lyrics below and give each student a copy to refer to as they listen to the song.

Introducing the Music Video:
Whether you like country or hate it, you can’t deny that the words to this song evoke emotion. The song communicates a feeling that many of us have felt. It asks a question that many of us have asked. Listen for a moment to “God Must Be Busy.”

Lyrics: “God Must Be Busy”

That anchor man
says the fight began
somewhere in the Middle East.
The world prays for peace.
There’s a single mom
just got laid off when she lost a job
to some foreign hands
in some faraway land.
Last night in Oklahoma
some twister took thirteen
and they’re praying that they find
the missing three.
God must be busy.

That highway sign
went from slow ahead
to traffic’s dead.
Thought it couldn’t get worse
than that Amber Alert.
They say she’s 4,
Colorado plates, headed out-of-state
in a Chevy van.
It’s hard to understand.
You can see it in the faces
of all those highway strangers,
they’re praying that God
keeps that girl from danger.
God must be busy.

And I know in the big picture
I’m just a speck of sand
and God’s got better things to do
than look out for one man.
I know he’s heard my prayers
cause he hears everything,
he just ain’t answered back
or he’d bring you back to me.
God must be busy.

That evening news,
Ain’t much changed
pretty much the same
since I left home.
Yeah that war’s still on.
They found that little girl.
She was soaking wet,
half scared to death
on the side of some road.
Them prayers work, you know.
And the Bloods and Cripps are at it,
and there’s a killer drought down south,
and old folks can’t afford the drugs
they can’t live without.
God must be busy.

And I know in the big picture
I’m just a speck of sand
and God’s got better things to do
than look out for one man.
I know he’s heard my prayers
cause he hears everything,
he just ain’t answered back
or he’d bring you back to me.
God must be busy.

That anchorman,
says the fighting’s worse,
cities burn in the Middle East.
The world prays for peace

Transition Statement:
This song describes exactly how lots of people feel when they look at the broken world we live in. Everything from natural disasters, to kidnappings, to war and terror are mentioned in this song. For most, it’s easy to see why Brooks and Dunn think God must be too busy to do anything about the problems we face. But let’s spend some time talking together about this belief and see if it’s really true. Let’s see if God really is too busy for us.

Divide into Small Groups:
Let’s go ahead and split up into our discussion groups, and then afterward we’ll come back together for a final word.

CLICK HERE FOR THE REST OF THIS DISCUSSION INCLUDING SMALL GROUP QUESTIONS, SCRIPTURE AND A WRAP UP

The Source Podcast: Jonathan and David Come Together From Each Coast for a Podcast with Youth Culture, Small Group Helps, and Answers to Your Questions…

In this episode Jonathan and David come together from each coast for a fun podcast filled with youth culture, small group helps, a glimpse of the hot new “A Li’l Bit” podcast, and some answers to questions from the field.

A QUICK EAVESDROP OF
THE SOURCE4YM PODCAST, EPISODE #13


DAVID: … let’s move on to Sin #2.

JONATHAN: Let’s do it.

DAVID: Sin #2 is “Have NO rules for small group management.”

JONATHAN: Ha ha. Another one I think we all do.

DAVID: Yeah, I mean, simple things like, “only one person talking at once,” or “respect everyone’s opinion in the room regardless of how correct or incorrect it may be.” We say, “you can’t say that’s STUPID, and we pretty much outlaw body slamming in the small groups.

We just want to kind of lay down some ground rules to get everybody on the same page so they know what the expectations are during the session together, so that it’s a positive experience for everybody.

JONATHAN: You know what? A lot of our volunteers are GEN Y, and I’m gonna pick on GEN Y for a second. GEN Y is this younger generation of college students all the way up to, I think 27, 28 years old right now. And I think a lot of GEN Y thinks, “Oh, I gotta be these kids’ friends.”

DAVID: Right.

JONATHAN: And you know what, GEN X, and Boomers… all staff do that, but especially GEN Y. I’ve noticed this out of GEN Y. They go, “Oh, I don’t want to come in here and be all ‘up in their face’ coming down on them and saying, ‘here’s the rules!'” So they want to be friends. They don’t want to enforce rules so they allow the kids to just take over the group, talk whenever they want and interrupt each other

DAVID: Yeah. Jonathan, you’re right-great observation. But that comes at a pretty high price. You know, when you got one person who is disobeying the rules or being disrespectful, it’s kind of robbing all the other students in the small group session from having a dynamic conversation with their leader.

JONATHAN: OK. Two weeks ago, I’m sitting in a small group… There’s about 6 kids sitting around and this guy’s leading the small group and he immediately throws out a question and this one kid, the one kid that answers every question, who won’t shut up, is like “yeah, blah blah blah,” and he answers it… another kid is like, “Yeah, well not me!” And these two kids are just taking over the group, arguing back and forth and the guy’s letting them. Meanwhile, all the other kids don’t say anything…

Because the small group leader doesn’t want to interrupt and say, “Come on guys, let’s bring it back.” So these kids are now taking over the group. I sat there for 20 minutes and there were 2 kids who never uttered a word.

DAVID: Yeah, and I don’t “declare” this at any point in our session, but this is kind of an unspoken rule in our small group that we run our small groups by. I want everyone in the small group to talk at least once during our sessions. It’s one of the things we did, one of the strategies we developed to kind of manage the group was…I don’t know anything about “sheeping” or “shepherding” or whatever that verb is, but…

JONATHAN: Sure. I don’t think it’s sheeping! For sure!

DAVID: Ha ha. I don’t think it is either. But you see that biblical, Old Testament passage, or picture of a shepherd that, you know, has got that crook in his hand and he’s kinda giving direction to the sheep. But then you got that sheepdog that’s kinda running around barking, making a lot of noise, kinda keeping everybody in line.

JONATHAN: Sure.

DAVID: And so, what we did at our church, Jonathan, is we said, “OK, if Jonathan is gonna be the small group leader for the day, then I’m gonna be his sheepdog.”

JONATHAN: Oh.

DAVID: So, Jonathan’s got the lesson, he’s got the Scripture, he’s got the wrap up, he’s got the small group q’s, and I’m gonna sit opposite of him and Jonathan is gonna kind of lead the discussion for the whole group, but I’m gonna sit way away from Jonathan, you know, maybe where the troublesome kids are sitting, and I’m gonna be like, “Psst! Hey! Knock it off!” You know, “Be quiet. Pay attention. Focus.”

JONATHAN: Good cop, bad cop.

DAVID: Yeah, or “bad cop, worse cop” depending on who your leaders are. But, yeah, we just called it the shepherd and the sheepdog. We just run a couple of leaders in the room.

JONATHAN: That’s cool. So you have somebody available to basically grab and mug that kid that won’t shut up.

DAVID: Absolutely! Headlocks are completely permitted as long as they’re given by adult leaders.

Click here to listen to this podcast and see what other violent means David and Jonathan employ to run effective small groups.

Episode Highlights:

  • Jonathan and David give you an exclusive peek into the new hit podcast for Teenagers www.Alilbit.com
  • In our YOUTH CULTURE WINDOW section of this podcast we look at bizarre new use for the Nintendo Wii
  • David shares the SEVEN SINS OF LEADING SMALL GROUPS which includes:
    • understanding the function of “shepherds” and “sheep dogs”
    • how to handle the big personalities in the group
    • maximizing the effectiveness of your meeting space, no matter where it is
    • youth leaders being like a fart (yep… we really said that. More on that here.)
  • Plus our HELP ME portion provides some solutions for youth pastors, including advice for those who have teens that use cell phones at all the wrong times!

NOTE: Jump on Jonathan’s Blog page and scroll to the March 25th entry to add your comments or ideas about kids’ cell phone use during youth group time, retreats or camps-as discussed in the HELP ME section of this podcast.


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Jonathan McKee

Jonathan McKee is the author of over twenty books including the brand new The Guy's Guide to FOUR BATTLES Every Young Man Must Face; The Teen’s Guide to Social Media & Mobile Devices; If I Had a Parenting Do Over; and the Amazon Best Seller - The Guy's Guide to God, Girls and the Phone in Your Pocket. He speaks to parents and leaders worldwide, all while providing free resources for youth workers on TheSource4YM.com. Jonathan, his wife Lori, and their three kids live in California.

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