National youth ministry announces
increased emphasis on

ministry to children

By Ted Johnston
National youth ministry
development team co-director

CANTON, Ohio—Proverbs 22:6 makes this observation: “Train children in the right way, and when old, they will not stray” (NRSV).

In his book Transforming Your Children Into Spiritual Champions, George Barna presents research that confirms this timeless principle. That research indicates that a person’s lifelong behaviors and beliefs are generally developed when they are young—particularly before their teenage years. More specifically, Barna notes the following:

1. A person’s moral foundations are generally in place by age 9. After that age, most people simply refine their views.

2. A person’s response to Jesus (and the gospel concerning his life, death and resurrection) is usually determined before age 18. For most Americans, the response is set by age 12.

3. A person’s spiritual beliefs are set in place when they are preteens. Those beliefs include the nature of God, the existence of Satan, the reliability of the Bible, the afterlife, Jesus Christ, the means of gaining God’s favor, and the influence of spiritual forces in a person’s life.

“In essence,” the book notes, “what you believe by the time you are 13 is what you will die believing. Of course, there are many individuals who go through life-changing experiences in which their beliefs are altered, or instances in which a concentrated body of religious teaching changes one or more core beliefs.

“However, most people’s minds are made up and they believe they know what they need to know spiritually by age 13. Their focus in absorbing religious teaching after that age is to gain reassurance and confirmation of their existing beliefs rather than to glean new insights that will redefine their foundations.”

4. Adult church leaders usually had significant involvement in the church when they were child­ren. Thus, those who will become the church’s leaders 20 years from now are probably active in children’s church programs today.

This research should be a wake-up call for all parents of children and for the church at large. The spiritual education of our children must be a top priority—with parents and the church working in partnership.

The most important role in this partnership is that of the parents. This was underscored in a survey of 10,000 young Christians who were asked to identify the influences in their lives that helped them deepen their commitment to Christ. While they listed such influences as friends, church youth leaders and personal struggles, by far the most significant influence was that of their parents.

Because parents are the strongest influence in a child’s life, the church must support and otherwise partner with parents in ministering to child­ren. Barna notes: “In situations where children became mature Christians we usually found a symbiotic partnership between their parents and their church.... The church encouraged parents to prioritize the spiritual development of their children and worked hard to equip them for that challenge.

“Parents, for their part, raised their children in the context of a faith-based community that provided security, belonging, spiritual and moral education, and accountability. Neither the parents nor the church could have done it alone.”

Barna adds that it’s not the size or diversity of the church’s children’s ministry programs that are the most important factors in the church’s success in helping parents nurture their children’s spiritual develop­ment. Rather, he notes that “the most important resource ... was the amazing amount of prayer for children and parents....

“Some money is required to see serious life change happen, but the more important re­source is the commitment of adults to the spiritual wholeness of the children—which means sacrificing some of the emphasis upon the ministry to adults.”

The issue is one of priorities. We simply must put ministry to children at the top of our list of priorities in our homes and our congregations.

If we don’t, we’re robbing our children of their greatest opportunity to come into a lifelong, saving relationship with their Savior and Lord. If we don’t, we’re missing out on the most significant opportunity we have to multiply lifelong disciples of Jesus. If we don’t, we’re failing to follow Jesus’ command to minister to the “least of these.” We simply must emphasize ministry to the children of our members and other children within the reach of our membership.

Barna’s personal view of children’s ministry was altered by his research. He writes: “Since I became a Christian two decades ago, I have always accepted the dominant notion: the most important ministry is that conducted among adults. But the overwhelming evidence we have seen of the huge impact in the lives of kids and the relatively limited changes in the lives of adults has completely revolutionized my view of ministry.

“I have concluded that children are the single most important population group for the church to focus upon. Many churches may not go that far, but I do hope that they will at least consider the research findings and place a greater emphasis upon children.

“Such a shift in priorities could well bring about the spiritual renaissance that many church leaders have long been praying for.”

In the Worldwide Church of God, our views concerning children’s ministry are being more clearly focused. Though we have always valued children, we seek to be more active and effective in ministering to them and to their parents.

Our overall approach at the national and district levels will be to encourage and equip the parents of children and the children’s ministry leaders and workers in our congregations. To do so more effectively and proactively, we are initiating the following.

1. We are segmenting national youth ministry into three related departments: children’s ministry, teen ministry and young adult ministry.

Each department will have its own coordinator and distinct programs.

I (Ted Johnston) will coordinate the children’s ministry department.

Jeb Egbert will coordinate the teen ministry department, and Jeb will coordinate the young adult ministry department with assistance from Greg Williams (Greg is the district youth ministry coordinator in the Mid-Atlantic district).

2. Beginning with this issue, the WCG News will include a Children’s Ministry column, which will appear in most WN issues.

The purpose of the column is to provide encouragement, instruction, ideas and other resources for parents of children and for the children’s ministry leaders and workers serving in our congregations and in our denominational programs including our camps.

If you would like to contribute to this column, send your suggestions, questions, and proposals to write articles to Ted.Johnston@gci.org. I would be delighted to have guest columnists contribute to this effort.

3. This summer we will have children’s tracks at several of our regional Spiritual Enrichment Program (SEP) camps so that the camp experience is available to children as well as teens.

Camps that offer a children’s track are SEP-California (ages 8-11), SEP-Colorado (ages 10-12), SEP-Connecticut (ages 7-12), SEP-Illinois (ages 10-12), SEP-Ohio (ages 8-12), SEP-Washington (ages 7-12).

Please help us with this emphasis on ministering to children through our SEP camps by sending your children or grandchildren to camp and by asking others in your congregation to do likewise.

As we launch into this new emphasis on children’s ministry, I also ask for your prayers for our children, for their parents, for our children’s ministry leaders and workers and for me. Let us partner together to reach the next generation for Christ.

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