Comments on: When Parents Don’t Like Who’s in Your Youth Group https://youthministry.com/parents-dont-like-whos-youth-group/ Daily Wisdom for Youth Workers. Wed, 14 Oct 2015 15:17:32 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 By: Mitch https://youthministry.com/parents-dont-like-whos-youth-group/#comment-368469 Wed, 14 Oct 2015 15:17:32 +0000 http://youthmindev.wpengine.com/?p=54654#comment-368469 Hi Theresa,

Thanks for your article. I particularly liked how you said this, “We are called to reach out to people and introduce them to Jesus. We have to stop worrying so much about the negative impact young believers or unbelievers will have on us, and start considering the positive and eternal impact we can have with the help and through the love of God.” Because in reality that is what we are doing in youth ministry doing. Meeting the teenagers where they are at, showing them Jesus.

I’m ministering to youth in Sydney, both in public schools and at church. One thing that came to my mind when I read your article was a time when a big group of public school teenagers came to the youth group for the first time. The youth who attended regularly found it really hard to engage with this group of boys who acted so differently to them. It was a real goal of mine that night to speak to each of the regulars and encourage them not to back away from the opportunity to witness to this group of non-believers, in our church walls.

I know that it can be intimidating for parents to think of their children mixing with other children who don’t have the same values, as they do, but it is really such a blessing. I think your three points were really helpful and agree that we should be encouraging both the youth and the parents to be more prayerful and active in this area 🙂

In Christ,

Mitch Hamilton
http://www.hamiltonatural.com

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By: Zachary https://youthministry.com/parents-dont-like-whos-youth-group/#comment-368361 Tue, 13 Oct 2015 14:03:26 +0000 http://youthmindev.wpengine.com/?p=54654#comment-368361 I am currently dealing with something like this in my ministry and I need some help. I have a parent who is very protective of their daughter. A situation happened where the mother decided that youth group may not be a safe place for her daughter because of a student that she sees as a negative influence. The mother has met the student that she sees as being a negative influence. We have talked about her rules and expectations (her 2 sons still attend our youth group). And she has sat in on our youth group before to see what we talk about and how our ministry runs.

Currently, she is not allowing her daughter to come to youth group despite all of these approaches. I am on 25 and not a parent so I can’t comment on her parenting, but at the same time I feel like she is doing something wrong. I have talked with my Sr Pastor about this as well as my mentor in youth ministry and one thinks I should say something and the other thinks I should see how it plays out in the long run. Does anybody have any insight into how I should handle this?

~Zach

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By: Bible Missionary https://youthministry.com/parents-dont-like-whos-youth-group/#comment-368317 Tue, 13 Oct 2015 03:53:05 +0000 http://youthmindev.wpengine.com/?p=54654#comment-368317 I have observed 2 issues with trouble youth within the church fellowship —

1) Generic misbehavior or attitudes.

2) Sexual identity concerns.

Both matters require different approaches. The sexual ID crisis casues me the most concern for younger, vulnerable children in the congregation who become targets and are “groomed”.

We are to be wise as serpents and harmless as doves. Matthew 10:16

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By: Theresa Mazza https://youthministry.com/parents-dont-like-whos-youth-group/#comment-368071 Sat, 10 Oct 2015 22:18:33 +0000 http://youthmindev.wpengine.com/?p=54654#comment-368071 In reply to John Mulholland.

Thanks John. I’d venture to say, although no one likes when parents pull a student from youth group, that if they are leaving for a safer ministry environment, they have a pretty solid support system at home. That is wonderful. The kids we need to reach usually don’t have a solid support system and they don’t have their pick of youth groups to go to. So I pray we find these kids in our churches!!!!!

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By: John Mulholland https://youthministry.com/parents-dont-like-whos-youth-group/#comment-368062 Sat, 10 Oct 2015 19:11:12 +0000 http://youthmindev.wpengine.com/?p=54654#comment-368062 Theresa-

I’ve dealt with this issue in 2 of 3 ministries- I’m so thankful that you made your response a simple “gospel matter.” While I understand the fear and questions that parents express, this gets to the heart of Jesus.

And I rarely had success in getting parents to understand- mostly, they just left for the “safer” church and ministry down the road.

Thanks for writing it.

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By: Theresa Mazza https://youthministry.com/parents-dont-like-whos-youth-group/#comment-367917 Fri, 09 Oct 2015 20:47:30 +0000 http://youthmindev.wpengine.com/?p=54654#comment-367917 In reply to Lisa.

Lisa this is a great question and concern. Christian has a lot good points.
I’m so sorry there was a misunderstanding between you and this student. You are right, we want student’s who need Jesus to come to youth group. But that doesn’t always mean that youth group is what they need most. Youth group can be a place where they are accepted and loved. But they might have needs that aren’t met at youth group. Here’s the part I love. Any time a student graces youth group with their presence you have a chance to engage and evaluate there needs. As a church we aren’t just trying to gain well behaved students. Hopefully our heart is to serve people, meet their needs, and introduce them to Jesus through amazing acts of love. During the time this student was attending I’m sure you recognized some needs. Maybe one frustration is that you feel she didn’t stay involved long enough for those needs to be addressed. But we can’t always address a students needs during youth group or youth programs. Some students need one on one mentoring much more than they need youth group. Or they need youth group to be paired with mentoring. One question that might be great for you to think about: When you have a student who has needs beyond your training, who do you go to? Having a list of resources and partners you can refer students and parents to is great. But these people can also help you understand the needs of students better and help you have more fruitful interactions with them. I rely heavily on a few friends in the counseling field.

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By: Christian https://youthministry.com/parents-dont-like-whos-youth-group/#comment-367904 Fri, 09 Oct 2015 18:00:23 +0000 http://youthmindev.wpengine.com/?p=54654#comment-367904 In reply to Lisa.

If someone will not listen, then they may not really be benefiting from being involved. And if they are being distracting, they may be having a negative impact on others ability to benefit. I think we can be open to having all types of kids attend but also have expectations or groundrules that we ask teens to follow to make the time beneficial for everyone. We can have grace and patience as we ask them to follow the ground rules (and explain the importance), but if they don’t want to respect you or the group, then are we really helping them or others by having them be there?

Jesus modeled being a friend to sinners. But he came to seek and save them. The goal is to help them see their need for Jesus’ salvation and a right relationship with God.

I wonder if the best thing to do in your case would be to pray for her and see if a way would come for you or someone else to minister and connect with her in a meaningful way outside of youth group. And, then if she is receptive, perhaps she could plug back into youth group at some point.

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By: Lisa https://youthministry.com/parents-dont-like-whos-youth-group/#comment-367903 Fri, 09 Oct 2015 17:10:44 +0000 http://youthmindev.wpengine.com/?p=54654#comment-367903 What do you do when you (the youth director) is concerned over the influence a particular student is having that is not positive? We had a girl when came from a questionable background (parents divorced, mom living with another man). She was very verbal. Her answer to most questions was “Hot Men.” She saw nothing wrong with this, nor other behavior. I felt like I was beating my head against a wall. She simply would not listen to anything positive I had to say.
Unfortunately we had a misunderstanding and she quit youth group and will not even talk to me.
I know that she was the student that needed youth group the most, but I felt very ill equipped to handle her and her actions.

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