Friday, March 25, 2011

Behavioural Modification



I’ve got a confession…

I’m not always the best behavioural analysist…

As a youth worker, a part of our job is to see the behaviour of our teens and understand why they do the things that they do.

And I’m sure you’re great at it… Sometimes I am… Sometime’s I’m way off…

I remember a kid who came out about 3 years ago who acted out because he was looking for attention he wasn’t receiving from any other adult… that one was pretty straight forwards.

I also remember some kids who I thought I knew where they were coming from and I was totally wrong.

It happens when you work with adolescents. Sometime’s you’re right, sometime’s you’re wrong… and it’s okay to be wrong sometimes…

One thing that has been on my mind is the way in which we seek to modify the behaviour of our teens. If you’re a youth worker in the context of a faith based organization, you know exactly what I mean. Perhaps you even plan a conversation around these four goals

1. What do I want them to know
2. What do I want them to feel
3. What do I want them to do
4. How would I like to see them behave over time

These questions aren’t new. They’re right out of the textbooks you most likely used in your training as a youth worker…

When I started here at LRC, I understood this to mean that it was my job to change the behaviour of our teens. If they were talking in church, it meant that I wasn’t doing my job. If they talked through Sunday’s sermon, it meant that I wasn’t teaching them to listen. And if cursed like sailors (which some of our kids do), it meant that I wasn’t doing my job as their youth pastor.

I think you could answer either way with valid points. But let me ask a few more questions to consider as you look at behaviour modification…

What if our role was to enable our teens to follow Jesus Christ within the context that they lived in… meaning we weren’t telling them ditch their schoolmates and only hang out with Christian friends…

What if our role wasn’t to focus on the language they used that was “bad” (and I know we’re all sick of the mom jokes); but to enable them to communicate their faith in which would bring a change in their friends lives?

What if our job was not to turn them into their parents, but to help them find out who God created them to be… even if it means that they’re rough around the edges?

Just some things that have been on my mind lately…

Till next time…

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Knowing vs Believing


This month in our student ministries we've been teaching about biblical wisdom. Using the basic definition of wisdom: Knowledge Applied; we've been looking at Matt 7:24-27, Judges 13, etc.

One theme that seems to be surfacing over and over again seems to be the difference between knowledge and wisdom.

Knowledge: would mean an objective understanding of a specific topic. I know that africa exists. I've seen it on a map. I know people who have come from africa. I know it's hot, has both rainforests and deserts and is a massive land.

Wisdom: in a sense, would mean a subjective experience within that specific topic. As I know that a place like africa exists, I would then visit it to get to know the people, the faces, the stories and walk the land.

Through the exercise of wisdom, I would then come to a real belief that africa is a beautiful place. Not only would I have seen it on a map, but i could point out where I have been, what I like about the place and why it has a special place in my heart.

Maybe this is what the disciple whom Jesus loved (John) was getting at when he wrote the gospel of John. To john, belief was so much more than simply knowing the truth. Belief was all about that which we have touched, seen, spoke with, walked with, risked with...

The hurdle now for us as youth workers is to actively believe in a God who makes contact every day with us as adults in the real world. And as we model it for our students, to encourage them not in knowing about a God who will change their lives; but to come to a solid belief after they have themselves had seen, spoke with, walked with and risked with the very same God who we have devoted our lives to chasing after will journey with them as He had journied with us in the past.

If you are a youth worker and you are reading this now, I pray that you will experience the same joy that I do as we reach our kids for the Kingdom and not just know, but believe that He will make a huge difference through you.

Until next time,