I. FOUNDATION of an Effective Student Ministry
Biblical Philosophy
- The Great Commandment (Matt. 22:37-40 CSB)
- The Great Commission (Matt. 28:18-20 CSB)
Ministry Philosophy
- Vision & Mission Statement…as well as the Core Values
- Should answer the questions, “Who we are. What we believe. Why do we exist?”
- Should be concise, clear, and easily repeatable.
II. PILLARS of an Effective Student Ministry
Equipping (Eph. 4:12) – Critical Question: How are we equipping the saints for the work of the ministry, so we can build up the body of Christ?
- Ministry Team(s)
- Adult Volunteers
- Student Leaders
- Parents Engagement and Involvement
- You should be the best resource for your parents.
- 5 Cs (By Dr. Allen Jackson – Former Youth Ministry Professor at NOTBS)
- Communicate everything.
- Calendar with families in mind
- Counsel by mostly listening.
- Connect families with resources.
- Call parents to become disciple-makers. (Deut. 6 says so)
Programming
- Shape your programs, events, gathers, and activities around your vision, mission, and core values.
- If it doesn’t fit those statements and values, then you shouldn’t do it. That’s called FOCUS.
- The tension in programming – Attractiveness vs. Authenticity
- It’s not “either” or, it’s “both” “and”
- Strategic Planning
- Short-Term (3 months out)
- Long-Term (6-12 months out)
- Future Outlook (2-3 years)
- Use the calendar to your advantage.
- Seasons
- Holidays
- Established Events (Community-wide, School, City-wide)
- Budgeting
- ·Your budget should reflect your strategic plan, not a wish list.
- Start conversations on your budget 4-6 months prior to the church’s new calendar year.
- Use wise financial people to help craft the budget.
III. PROCESS OF DISCIPLESHIP within an effective student ministry
- There must be a scope and sequence of students growing into fully devoted followers of Jesus Christ.
- Peter Drucker said, “You can’t manage what you can’t measure.”
- Your process of Discipleship should influence your programs and activities.
- Student Ministry cannot be a holding pattern; there must be movement.
IV. PARTNERSHIPS necessary for an effective student ministry
- Internal
- Senior Pastor
- Other Ministry Leaders
- Parents
- External
- Other student ministries in your city
- Local Non-Profits & para-church organizations that can serve your ministry.
- Local Non-Profits & para-church organizations that that can be served by your ministry
V. PERSONAL GROWTH as the leader of an effective student ministry
Personal Devotional Life
- Conferences/Seminars/Events
- Mentorship with an elder in student ministry
- Fellowship with other youth ministers
- Reading/Subscribing to great ministry books and resources.